Not exact matches
Why «morningness» might be associated with greater positive emotion in all age groups is related to the concept of «
social jet lag» — the idea that people who
tend to stay up later for work or play develop sleep
patterns that don't mesh well with the typical 9 - to - 5 cycle of work or school.
Social patterns from everyday life
tend to be taken for granted in worship; i.e., what is normal in daily life becomes normal in worship.
In canids, they found that species that sport complex chest
patterns — like the Ethiopian wolf (Canis simensis), with a striking white bow tie across its chest, contrasting a tawny coat —
tend to be more
social, hunting and spending more time in large groups.
«To date, research into resilience has
tended to take into account a very extensive range of
social, psychological, and even genetic factors that positively influence mental flexibility, such as
social support, certain personality traits, and typical behavior
patterns,» explained Professor Raffael Kalisch, one of the authors of the current publication and the director of the Neuroimaging Center, a central research platform of the Mainz University Medical Center and the Research Center on Translational Neurosciences.
«What we found is that there's this
pattern, where dogs who are good at one of these
social things
tend to be good at lots of the related
social things, and that's the same thing you find in kids, but you don't find it in chimpanzees,» he said.
The research also suggests that people have distinct
social «signatures,» or
patterns of intimacy with others, which they
tend to maintain over time.
Although adolescent mothers with more education, less parenting stress, and higher
social support satisfaction are more likely to have secure attachment
patterns with their children (Emery, Pacquette, & Bigras, 2008), evidence suggests that in general, young mothers
tend to be less responsive to their infants than older mothers, have fewer positive interactions, and vocalize less with their infants (Borkowski, Farris, Whitman, Carothers, Weed, & Keogh, 2007; Culp, Appelbaum, Osofsky, & Levy, 1988; Tarabulsy, Moran, Pederson, Provost, & Larose, 2011).