In fact, PTSD can occur in individuals who have been exposed indirectly to a traumatic stressor. |
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For example, stress can impair acquisition of a conditioned response in female rats while the same stressor facilitates learning in males. |
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I'm in my last semester of college, so I am wondering if his moving in is just an additional stressor that's getting me all bent out of shape. |
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Significantly, even continuous low-level noise can be an insidious stressor. |
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The alarm reaction occurs when a stressor is first detected and activates a brain structure called the hypothalamus. |
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During this stage the ability to fight off the stressor is high and may remain so for considerable periods of time. |
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We are particularly conscious of it when we sense that the stressor concerned could do us harm. |
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Task-Oriented techniques focus on doing something to change yourself, the stressor, or the situation, so that it is no longer stressful. |
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The following issues may present a significant stressor for call centre personnel leading to increased risk of mental health issues. |
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I also argued that the quality of the stressors was significantly different as a result of the added stressor of chronic fatigue. |
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When mitigation measures cannot be applied, or cannot fully address a stressor, the remaining effect is referred to as a residual effect. |
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Diagrams are prepared that show how each stressor is linked to parts of the water environment that could be affected. |
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Pain as a stressor activates the sympathetic nervous system. |
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In a sense, victimization is a developmental process where an individual must adjust to an external stressor. |
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This emphasizes isoform-specific functions in relation to tissue water permeation or growth as well as differential responses to varying extents of the same abiotic stressor. |
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All these hormones are secreted into the bloodstream and have the effect of mobilizing the body to deal with the stressor. |
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Often there is no stressor in the air at all: it exists only as a conjecture about what might happen. |
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Being involved in a shooting has been ranked by officers as the highest inherent police stressor. |
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The ultimate non-chemical stressor is the economy, since all stressors result from human economic activity. |
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This aggregate score is then used to provide a ranking of sensitivity to that particular stressor. |
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It also indicates a tendency for coping strategies in which there is a distancing from a stressor as opposed to active problem-solving. |
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The see-saw relationship between resilience and hardship, parallels that of coping and stress or stressor, as well as risk and hazard. |
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Furthermore, the model acknowledges that being a victim of crime is an external and unpredictable stressor that is far-reaching. |
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Today, it is assumed that motherhood is a stressor and that the demands of parenting are likely to tip formerly well-balanced women over the edge. |
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Selye proposed that if the stressor is not quickly defeated during this last stage, the individual can become withdrawn, maladjusted, and even die. |
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Individual plants adapt to any stressor, mechanical or chemical, and gradually become the predominant biotype. |
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We used skydiving as our real-world stressor because it is an activity that does pose a genuine risk to safety and survival. |
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Another top stressor is unreasonable workload, with 14 percent saying they had too much to do, up from 9 percent last year. |
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Pathophysiologically, frailty represents a state of increased vulnerability to poor resolution of altered homoeostasis after a stressor event. |
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The alarm reaction often succeeds in changing the situation so that the stressor is no longer present, as would be the case, for example, if one were to run away from a physical threat. |
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Sometimes the stressor is not necessarily the deployment. |
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Remember that what is a stressor for one employee can energize another. |
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This three-part mechanism for coping with a stressor is called the general adaptation syndrome and appears to have evolved primarily to deal with systemic stressors. |
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The first step in obtaining data for an economic estimate of work-life conflict is to select the stressor and the specific consequences of interest from the wide range of potential consequences that exist. |
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Additionally, a stressor can vary in degree of perceived stressfulness, which, in turn, affects the coping response. |
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Once coral bleaching begins, corals tend to continue to bleach even if the stressor is removed. |
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This signal prompts the adrenal cortex to create corticoids another hormone, and disperse them in the body for use in the various stages of defense against a stressor. |
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These children are constitutionally sad. Other children, like Luke, develop depressive feelings out of the blue or in response to some mild stressor. |
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