As the brain system underlying effortful control develops, so does the ability to maintain focused attention for longer periods of time. |
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For instance, developing effortful control in the early years leads to advantages later in childhood and beyond. |
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Dyer on a bad day is still more profound, and more polished, than most writers at their effortful best. |
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Children who develop effortful control tend to be more compliant, and develop empathy, guilt or shame earlier. |
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At first, pranayama is delibarate and effortful, but only when it becomes effortless have we achieved mastery. |
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But Mapplethorpe's photographs of celebrities often feel effortful and anxious. |
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While children develop effortful control at their own pace and show variations in the levels they achieve, there is a general pattern that most will follow. |
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Another aspect of temperament that emerges late in the first year of life, in response to brain development, is effortful control, one important dimension of self-regulation, or the ability to manage one's own impulses. |
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Infants in their first year, who begin to learn to sustain attention and refrain from touching a prohibited toy, are likely to have effortful control at 22 months. |
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A child with a high amount of effortful control early in life is typically more compliant and will likely also develop a sense of empathy, shame, and guilt relatively earlier. |
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Referrals may be recommended when the students are having difficulties in any of the academic areas or when the performance is inconsistent or effortful. |
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When MS results in weakness, ataxia, spasticity, urinary frequency, and other symptoms, it forces patients to adopt less efficient and more effortful approaches to accomplishing routine daily tasks. |
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The techniques that Foer describes are as effortful as they are old. |
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The central route involves an extensive and effortful cognitive activity, whereas the peripheral route needs fewer cognitive resources. |
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The company's mission is to make exercise feel less effortful and more enjoyable using music. |
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However extraverted children with low effortful control have a greater risk of developing behaviour problems and asocial profiles. intensity, mood, distractibility, and attention span-persistence. |
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Indeed yes: when people are led to think that effortful tasks will invigorate rather than drain them, they improve their performance on a later task. |
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The most controversial scene in The Killer Inside Me – the effortful and horribly extended sequence in which the sheriff sets out to beat his lover to death – is appalling. |
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Tyler is a clever but effortful rapper, working hard to squeeze jokes and ideas into his lyrics, and harder still to push his lyrics out with his inflamed bronchia. |
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Sebold's fixation on terror retains its hold, though sometimes the sheer profusion of dysfunction feels improvised and the more macabre touches effortful. |
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Caregivers can nurture the development of effortful control in all children by providing warmth and support and avoiding a caregiving style that is overly cold, directive, and controlling. |
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That means that for some students, access to word meanings is slow and effortful. |
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Type 2, or slow thinking, involves more open-minded, rational, deliberate, and effortful thinking. |
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Performing your daily activities is more effortful when you are carrying more weight, and it will be more difficult to care for your growing child. |
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Monitoring Affect During Effortful Problem Solving Activities. |
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