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The Search for the Inner Landscape : The Inner landscape as a source of freedom in the novel Fear of FlyingHolmes, John January 2011 (has links)
This essay focuses on the idea of the inner landscape as a source of artistic and creative freedom in the mind of the protagonist of the novel Fear of flying, Isadora Wing. Isadora wishes to be a writer but is hindered by the imposing wills of family, society, cultural norms and her own feelings of inadequacy. In order to free herself from these wills she goes through a cathartic journey which involves an extra-marital affair and culminates in finding peace of mind. This essay analyses how the novel portrays how one can be a creative force in spite of conflicting impositions that would stop one from being a writer.
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Memory modulation produced by post-training exposure to an aversive conditioned stimulusHolahan, Matthew R. January 1999 (has links)
Separate groups of rats were trained to enter one arm of a Y-Maze for food. They were then exposed to footshock, cues previously paired with footshock (CS), or neutral cues. When tested on the Y-Maze 24 hours later, rats that received post-training shock exhibited improved performance compared to rats that received no shock. Immediate post-training CS exposure improved performance compared to rats that were previously shocked but exposed to neutral cues as the post-training treatment. Delayed (2 hours) post-training presentation of the CS did not improve Y-Maze performance compared to immediate post-training presentation of the CS. Post-training exposure to the individual CSs (context or tone) improved Y-Maze performance relative to the neutral cues but not to the combination of cues. / Conditioned freezing and place avoidance in the presence of the CS were two other conditioned responses measured. No correlation was found between any of the responses measured. These findings suggest that conditioned "fear" (an internal affective state) may function independently from observable behavioral measures.
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Le thème de la peur dans la vie et dans l'oeuvre de Guy de Maupassant /Doummar, Farid A. January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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The behavioural expression of fear in young childrenGilbert-MacLeod, Cheryl A. 11 1900 (has links)
Children, over the course of development, experience numerous situations
capable of eliciting fear; however, the behaviours which children exhibit in these
situations remain unclear. The investigation presented here pursued the question "how
do young children express fear in a non-painful medical situation where they perceive
threat from physical harm?". It is important to note that this study differentiated between
fear and anxiety, however it did not examine differences between these two emotions.
116 children, between the ages of 12 and 87 months, and their parents participated in the
study. Children's fine-grained behavioural responses, (i.e., facial activity) and broader
behavioural displays (e.g., crying, protective behaviours) were examined during a fearful
situation. The specific threat used to provoke fear was orthopedic cast removal with an
oscillating saw. Few people, including adults, who have had a cast removed would
challenge the notion that the oscillating saw can effectively elicit fear. Facial activity
was measured with the Baby-FACS coding system and global behaviours were assessed
with the Observational Scale of Behavioral Distress. Results demonstrated the existence
of a constellation of facial actions and a group of more global behaviours indicative of
fear in young children. The facial actions and global behaviours identified in the total
sample were examined on a subset of the children who were rated as displaying clinically
significant fear. The same 13 facial actions were found to cluster together in the sample
of children displaying clinically significant fear. Further, global behaviours occurred
with a higher frequency in this sub-sample. Age and cast location were found to predict
children's fear for both classes of behaviour in that younger children and children with
casts on their legs had higher facial action factor scores and OSBD scale scores than
older children or those with arm casts. Finally, facial activity and global behaviours
appeared to be valid measures of fear as they were both correlated to an independent
observer's and the cast technician's ratings of fear. Results are discussed in relation to
current theories of emotional development and implications for clinical applications are
reviewed.
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Fear of Guilt in Obsessive-Compulsive DisorderChiang, Brenda January 2013 (has links)
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a significantly impairing anxiety disorder for which the most successful treatment, cognitive behaviour therapy, has 50-60% success rates, taking into account treatment refusals and dropout rates (Fisher & Wells, 2005). Thus, factors that contribute to the persistence of OCD and interfere with treatment are likely being overlooked. Indeed, Mancini and Gangemi (2004) have proposed that individuals with OCD have greater fear of guilt than others; that is, they dread being judged as guilty for not having done everything in their power to prevent some negative outcome. This fear of guilt fuels obsessions and compulsions as individuals attempt to prevent, avoid, or neutralise the feared guilt. However, few studies have explored fear of guilt in OCD, and no scales exist to measure this construct. The role of fear of guilt in OCD was therefore examined across two studies.
Study 1 explored the core features of fear of guilt in OCD, as well as the validity and reliability of the Fear of Guilt Scale (FOGS), a measure developed specifically to assess levels of trait fear of guilt in OCD. Results indicate that the FOGS is a valid and reliable, two-factor measure, and greater FOGS scores significantly predict more severe OCD symptoms among nonclinical participants. Study 2 aimed to determine whether fear of guilt evokes caution and feelings of doubt during the decision-making process, thereby making it more difficult to know when to stop and explaining perseveratory behaviour, such as compulsions in OCD. Findings suggest that greater fear of guilt does not predict more time taken or information needed to make decisions, but higher fear of guilt predicts feelings of uncertainty when deliberating, as indicated by ratings of greater difficulty making decisions, lower confidence in having made the right decisions, and less satisfaction with decisions made. Implications of these findings and the role that fear of guilt may play in the development and persistence of OCD are discussed.
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The Roles of Mineralocorticoid and GABAA Receptors in Anxiety and Fear MemoryMcEown, Kristopher Scott Unknown Date
No description available.
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Sex differences in children's play : boys' and girls' responses to vulnerability / Responses to vulnerability in children's playDel Bianco, Réjeanne January 1996 (has links)
In Experiment 1 preschool children were videotaped playing in groups of same-sex friends. Responses to Vulnerability were coded and content analyzed. Sex differences were examined to explore whether girls display more responses to Vulnerability than boys and whether girls and boys differ in Responses to Vulnerability in their play. No sex differences were found in amount of time responding to Vulnerability; however, some support was found for sex differences in types of Responses to Vulnerability. / Experiment 2 experimentally examined girls' and boys' preferences for vignettes representing Categories of Response to the same Vulnerability Situation: Dominant Mastery, Nurturant Mastery, and Sharing Problems. Preferences for two Vulnerability Situations were examined. Boys were expected to show a preference for Dominant Mastery responses and girls a preference for Sharing Problems as well as Nurturant Mastery responses. Several marginally significant results were found. Discussion focuses on adult consequences and implications for later male and female interactions.
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Hazardous work, fear of injury, and safety voice: the role of invulnerability among young workersDueck, Paul M. 26 August 2013 (has links)
This paper investigates in 2 studies the role of invulnerability in predicting young workers’ intentions to speak up about hazards. I propose a model in which perceptions of hazardous work are related to safety voice intentions via fear of injury, and that higher invulnerability buffers (a) the extent to which potential hazards generate fear of injury and (b) the extent to which fear of injury motivates voice. In Study 1, I randomly assigned participants (n = 115, aged 15-25) to an unsafe or safe scenario. Participants with lower invulnerability reported higher safety voice intentions across all levels of fear of injury. Participants with higher invulnerability reported as high safety voice intentions only when fear of injury was high, and reported much lower safety voice intentions than those with low invulnerability when fear of injury was low. Study 2 replicates this model using field data from young workers (n = 67).
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The involvement of the neuropeptides orexins (hypocretins) in fear and anxiety in rats exposed to a single episode of footshocksChen, Xiaoyu 08 1900 (has links)
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a psychiatric condition that can develop when people experience a stressful and life-threatening event. Clinical research indicates that the presence of a state of hyperarousal after a traumatic experience is the best predictor of a subsequent diagnosis of PTSD. The role of arousal peptides called orexins (hypocretins) in a PTSD-like condition produced by exposing rats to a single episode of footshocks (5× 2 s episodes of 1.5 mA) was investigated in this thesis. The first part of my thesis involves the characterization of the footshock model of PTSD and the second part examines the involvement of orexins in this footshock model. The following findings are reported. First, shock rats that exhibited a high level of anxiety to a novel tone (high responders, HR) the day after the footshock exposure subsequently displayed more avoidance when compared to shock rats that exhibited a low level of anxiety (low responders, LR). These results highlight the importance of individual differences in the reaction to a strong fear-inducing experience. Second, the orexin precursor peptide prepro-orexin (ppOX) mRNA was found to be elevated in rats at 6 and 14 days after exposure to footshocks. In addition, ppOX mRNA levels were found to be positively correlated with anxiety at 14 days post-shock. Third, pre-shock injections of the corticotropin releasing factor receptor antagonist antalarmin were found to attenuate the anxiety expressed to the shock chamber and eliminate the correlation between ppOX mRNA levels and anxiety. Fourth, systemic injections of the nonselective orexin receptor antagonist TCS-1102 was found to attenuate the anxiety expressed in rats at 14 days post-shock. Fifth, TCS-1102 was found to have anxiolytic effects that were specific for the HR. The results of these experiments provide evidence linking the orexin system to the anxiety produced by exposure of rats to footshocks. They also provide preclinical evidence in support of the use of orexin antagonists for the treatment of anxiety in PTSD.
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Gender, social desirability, and fear of crime: are women really more afraid?Derksen, Syras Wade 12 September 2012 (has links)
Fear of crime influences people’s daily habits (Lavrakas, 1982), as well as entire communities’ feelings of safety and cohesion (Gates, 1987). Gender has been identified as the strongest and most consistent predictor of fear of crime (for a review, see Hale, 1996). The literature consistently finds that women report greater fear of crime than do men. This finding is paradoxical when compared with the concurrent finding that men experience greater criminal victimization than do women. This phenomenon is referred to as the fear victimization paradox (Rennison, 2000). At first, it was accepted that women were more afraid of crime than were men and investigators offered many different theories to explain the paradox (e.g., Fisher & Sloan, 2003, Killias & Clerici, 2000, & Sacco, 1990). However, Sutton and Farrall (2005) investigated the possibility that masculinity was creating a social desirability bias in men’s reporting of fear of crime and when they accounted for this social desirability bias, they found that men actually experienced greater fear of crime than did women. The current investigation replicated and extended this research with 1009 university students and 508 Winnipeg residents. It extended Sutton and Farrall’s study by including measures of fear of crime and social desirability that have greater validity and by testing whether the findings apply differentially to fear of sexual versus non-sexual types of criminal victimization. The influence of age, location of residence within the city of Winnipeg, history of victimization, and masculinity on fear of crime was explored. This investigation was able to replicate Sutton and Farrall’s finding, but only in the community sample. The findings from this investigation suggest that there is a shift as men leave university from actually being less afraid of crime than women to being more afraid of crime. However, despite their increased fear, men in the community seem to maintain the façade of fearlessness. It was also found that women were consistently more afraid of sexual victimization than men, regardless of the influence of social desirability. Masculinity and social desirability had similar negative relationships to fear of crime and the implications of this are discussed.
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