Sentences with phrase «more social rejection»

Kids who feel rejected by peers become less motivated at school, which can lead to a downward spiral of lower achievement, increased behavior problems, and even more social rejection.

Not exact matches

The problem is much more radical: the modern West's rejection of objective morality, grounded in divine wisdom and intrinsic to human nature, the knowing and following of which is the only path to individual happiness and a just social order.
Rejection and shunning by the life - long source of one's psychological and social support can be a fate more painful to contemplate than death, a sort of living death.
I just wish there was more acknowledgement that sometimes children (and their parents) who perceive that they are being bullied are in fact inviting social rejection through their own behaviours.
Exposure to (more) rejection won't help children gain social confidence.
Such initiatives have also been interspersed with attention to moderate social reforms, including gun control and paid family leave, dappled with more progressive policies like protections for transgender residents and a rejection of fracking.
On the one hand, the results can help to develop more effective medication to treat psychiatric disorders which are characterized by an increased reactivity to social rejection, such as depression or borderline personality disorder.
«Children with ADHD are more likely to experience social rejection in childhood,» Cabrera said.
More specifically, the findings suggest that perimenopausal estradiol fluctuation may increase women's sensitivity to social rejection, and when this sensitivity is combined with psycho - social stressors such as divorce or bereavement, women are particularly vulnerable to developing clinically significant depressive symptoms.
Consultancies that deal with workplace or school bullying should pay more attention to whether people are being ignored by others, as social rejection can have psychological consequences as negative as those of active aggression or bullying.
This need to deal with rejection - via - social - media also can hit us on a more personal level.
Craig Lancaster talks about his surprise success, what he learned from his most memorable rejection, why he gets so personal on social media, and more.
Issue salience, I'm told over and over by social scientists, is the factor politicians watch — much more than answers to questions related to basic acceptance or rejection of the science.
The green stimulus, the Clean Power Plan, the regulations on new power plants, the rejection of Keystone XL, more stringent regulations on vehicles, reliance on the social cost of carbon and the Paris Protocol, these have all been done in the name of global warming.
The sharing of information between law firm clients has become far more widespread (intensified by social media) so that emerging client buying patterns such as the rejection of hourly billing become more adopted more quickly
As girls move through puberty, social relationships become more important, and consequently, the intensity with which they perceive peer rejection increases as well.
For a young girl and a young boy with externalizing problems, the resulting peer rejection is likely to affect the girl more strongly, because she values social relationships more highly than the boy does.
They demonstrate less concern about loneliness and social rejection than do insecurely attached adolescents and they display more adaptive coping strategies 1,12.
As children watch more violent television, they become more aggressive and exhibit fewer positive social behaviors.16 - 18 Aggressive behaviors have been associated with peer rejection and less popularity.20, 21,39 Increased aggression influenced by viewing violent television may prompt peers to reject and socially isolate the aggressive child.
Social ostracism or self - imposed isolation my also become a more important determinant of peer rejection during adolescence than at younger ages.
Children who have ADHD have fewer friends, are less likely to be accepted by their peers, and are more likely to experience social rejection during their teenage years, regardless of whether or not their symptoms of ADHD continue.
We further hypothesized that youth more advanced in pubertal development would show increased neural response to peer rejection and acceptance (above and beyond the effects of age) in regions involved in social and affective processing.
Taken together, these findings suggest that people who are more sensitive to rejection or who have lower levels of (perceived) social support display higher levels of activity in brain regions involved in processing the distress caused by social exclusion.
Although aggression is robustly (and very rapidly) linked to peer rejection among children with ADHD, social isolation and lack of prosocial behavior may also predict children being less liked and more disliked by their peers [13, 15].
Shyness on the other hand is said to be related to poorer social competence, lower self - esteem, anxiety and peer rejection, which may be more reflective of the children who score in the abnormal range on the pro-social scale and also on the unpopularity scale.
Consistent with previous studies, we found that (a) being less prosocial and more physically aggressive at age 10 was characteristic of those children with the high rejection trajectory; (b) being less attractive was related to higher peer rejection from age 10 to 14; and (c) boys with a high rejection trajectory showed high levels of delinquency and anxiety - depression and low levels of academic aspiration at age 16 — 17, whereas girls with a high rejection trajectory showed low levels of academic aspiration and social competence at age 16 — 17.
That is, higher levels of ACC activity during social exclusion have been observed in adolescents who reported to be more sensitive to rejection (Masten et al. 2009) and in adults with an anxious attachment style characterized by a vigilance to cues of rejection (DeWall et al. 2012).
Preoccupied attachment is characterized by a «hyperactive» attachment system [17; 39], that is oversensitive to signs of potential rejection, and shows stronger neural activation to rejection in brain regions implicated in processing social rejection (i.e., dACC, anterior insula; [40]; ACC, [36]; amygdala, [38]-RRB-, more intense behavioral responses to rejection [34], greater negative emotions and lower self - esteem [41].
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