Not exact matches
According to a 1977 paper in the journal
Psychological Bulletin, «there is remarkably little
evidence for any association of left - handedness with deficit, as has often been
suggested».
All of the archeological, sociological,
psychological evidence strongly
suggests that religion is a construct of man.
Empirical
evidence through individual case studies and
psychological research
suggests that the appetite for increased wealth, and associated characteristics of greed, ego, arrogance and the like burdens the mind with anxiety and frustration.
A growing body of
evidence suggests that
psychological factors play an important role in determining whether an athlete makes a successful return to sport following injury.
In a classic report in Perspectives on
Psychological Science (vol 2, p 53) Scott Lilienfeld of Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, details a number of therapies which
evidence suggests are harmful.
Experimental
evidence confirms what surveys have long
suggested: Physicians are more likely to prescribe antibiotics when they believe there is a high expectation of it from their patients, even if they think the probability of bacterial infection is low and antibiotics would not be effective, according to a study published by the American
Psychological Association.
Despite the promising early results, there is currently no
evidence to
suggest that using apps alone can outperform standard
psychological therapies, or reduce the need for antidepressant medications.
In fact, much of the
evidence suggests that the only real benefits to ice baths are
psychological.
Much of the
evidence suggests that the biggest benefit of ice baths is
psychological.
According to the American
Psychological Association, «
evidence suggests that both pleasure and reproductive motives may influence these sexual patterns, as seen in participants» reactions following uncommitted sex.»
Lavender (Unrated)
Psychological thriller about a photographer (Abbie Cornish) suffering from amnesia who finds
evidence in her portfolio
suggesting she might have murdered relatives she never knew she had.
There's
psychological evidence that
suggests it's human nature to become more risk averse after a series of losing trades and less risk averse after a series of winning trades, but that doesn't mean the risk of any one trade becomes more or less simply because you lost or won on your previous trade.
This project provides accumulating
evidence for many findings in
psychological research and
suggests that there is still more work to do to verify whether we know what we think we know.
Each component
suggests three actions to consider (based on research,
evidence and best practices in the field of
psychological health and safety).
According to another article on The Conversation, there is growing
evidence to
suggest that bad moods have
psychological benefits such as better memory, more accurate judgement, motivation, better communication and increased fairness.
Evidence linking
psychological stress to asthma continues to grow with our increased understanding of the natural history of asthma and the neurobiology underlying stress vulnerability.1 - 3 Stress exposure during infancy and early childhood may exert particularly robust effects on the physiological systems that respond to stress.4 - 6
Evidence from animal and human studies strongly
suggests that early life adversity shapes stress neurobiology, 7 resulting in disturbed regulation of endocrine and autonomic processes (eg, hypothalamic - pituitary - adrenal [HPA] axis, sympathetic - adrenal - medullary system).
The
evidence to date
suggests that body psychotherapy provides improvements in general
psychological functioning rather than changes in specific habits or behaviors.
Review: limited
evidence suggests mental health literacy interventions may improve help - seeking attitudes for depression, anxiety and general
psychological distress
There is increasing
evidence to
suggest, however, that the
psychological aspects of injury are of crucial importance in understanding recovery and the return to normal functioning1.
The mean relapse rate is 50 % at one year and over 70 % at four years.1 A recent prospective twelve year follow - up study showed that individuals with bipolar disorder were symptomatic for 47 % of the time.2 This poor outcome in naturalistic settings
suggests an efficacy effectiveness gap for mood stabilisers that has resulted in a re-assessment of the role of adjunctive
psychological therapies in bipolar disorder.3 Recent randomised controlled trials show that the combination of pharmacotherapy and about 20 — 25 sessions of an
evidence - based manualised therapy such as individual cognitive behaviour therapy4 or family focused therapy5 may reduce relapse rates in comparison to a control intervention (mainly treatment as usual) in currently euthymic people with bipolar disorder.
What I am saying is that there is
evidence suggesting that the
psychological processes currently being manifested through an attachment - based model of «parental alienation» could very possibly represent the trans - generational iteration of prior sexual abuse victimization that occurred a generation or two earlier, and that is continuing to severely distort parent - child relationship processes through the influence of pathogenic «source code» contained in the internal working models of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent's attachment system
Dyadic developmental psychotherapy is an
evidence - based treatment (classed as an acceptable and supported
psychological / psychotherapy intervention under the criteria
suggested by Saunders, Berliner, & Hanson (2004)[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] approach for the treatment of attachment disorder, Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, and reactive attachment disorder.
(Corvo, Dutton & Chen, 2008)
Evidence suggests that violent husbands show more
psychological distress, more tendencies to personality disorders, more attachment / dependency issues, a higher tendency towards anger and hostility and more alcohol problems than non-violent men.
Postpartum depression and parenting distress are the most common
psychological disturbances and a growing scientific
evidence suggests that both mothers and fathers are involved in this developmental crisis.