A study published in the February online journal of Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience shows that students raised in low - income homes have
stronger fear reactions — with potential consequences for concentration.»
She would not bite someone unless she had
a strong fear reaction — but I have no doubt there are situations in which she would bite.
Not exact matches
Their
strong reaction to inclusiveness demonstrates a great deal of
fear.
It's natural for your kids»
strong reactions to trigger your own feelings of
fear, anger, and uncertainty — causing you to get upset, too.
You may feel
strong emotions — such as anger, sadness, or
fear — which is a normal
reaction to an unexpected and challenging life event.
Of all the mediating factors analysed, the researchers found that a reduction in
fear avoidance beliefs (
fears that exercise or activity will make symptoms worse, which is an understandable
reaction to having CFS) was the
strongest, accounting for up to 60 % of the overall effect of CBT and GET on outcomes.
It implies that market prices need not always reflect all available information, but can deviate from rational pricing relations from time to time because of
strong emotional
reactions like
fear and greed.
* Problem
reactions would include unprovoked and unwarranted aggression, extreme resource - guarding behavior, difficulty to recover after panicking, and
strong avoidance,
fear or aggressive tendencies towards things that would be common to everyday environments.
Frankness and patience are important in helping them cope and minimize what are sometimes
strong fears and very complex
reactions.
A stimulus gradient means that you will present outside stimuli from the least
fear provoking, and gradually graduate to stimuli that typically causes a
strong reaction from your cats.
Like my colleague Andrew Russeth noted in his Gal / erist NY review, my initial
reaction when I heard about the one - floor - per - curator wheeze was dread, while on opening day my
fear had subsided into mere disappointment, perhaps because the biennial's scale and wildly divergent quality made it seem pointless to have any
strong view at all.
These intrusive experiences mimic the emotional and physical
reaction the person had during the traumatic event (for example, a heightened state of
fear and sense of danger, or a
strong urge to flee or take self - protective actions).
Differing views of financial outcomes often provoke
strong emotional
reactions from the parties, for example,
fear and vulnerability on the part of the party with fewer financial resources and anxiety about loss of resources on the part of the party with greater financial resources.