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  2. Active Student Response Techniques - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_Student_Response...

    Choral responding is useful for reviewing subject matter, solving problems, or spelling words. It may be used to review previously covered content or provide feedback throughout a class period. [ 8 ] Choral responding is effective in both small- and whole-group instruction, for students from preschool through secondary grades, in both general ...

  3. Emotional responsivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_responsivity

    A study involving fMRI techniques and 40 students demonstrates that people with math anxiety have increased emotional responsivity to math stimuli. The study suggests that when exposed to math-related stimuli, amygdala activity increases in participants' brain, which lowers the threshold of responding to a potential threat.

  4. Emotional self-regulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_self-regulation

    The self-regulation of emotion or emotion regulation is the ability to respond to the ongoing demands of experience with the range of emotions in a manner that is socially tolerable and sufficiently flexible to permit spontaneous reactions as well as the ability to delay spontaneous reactions as needed. [1]

  5. Reflective listening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflective_listening

    Reflective listening arose from Carl Rogers's school of client-centered therapy in counseling theory. [1]It is a practice of expressing genuine understanding in response to a speaker as opposed to word-for-word regurgitation. [1]

  6. Stimulus (physiology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stimulus_(physiology)

    In order for a stimulus to be detected with high probability, its level of strength must exceed the absolute threshold; if a signal does reach threshold, the information is transmitted to the central nervous system (CNS), where it is integrated and a decision on how to react is made. Although stimuli commonly cause the body to respond, it is ...

  7. Proactivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proactivity

    The use of the word proactive (or pro-active) was limited to the domain of experimental psychology in the 1930s, and used with a different meaning. [3] Oxford English Dictionary (OED) [4] credits Paul Whiteley and Gerald Blankfort, citing their 1933 paper discussing proactive inhibition as the "impairment or retardation of learning or of the remembering of what is learned by effects that ...

  8. Orienting response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orienting_response

    The orienting response (OR), also called orienting reflex, is an organism's immediate response to a change in its environment, when that change is not sudden enough to elicit the startle reflex.

  9. Emotional dysregulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_dysregulation

    The word dysregulation is a neologism created by combining the prefix dys-to regulation.According to Webster's Dictionary, dys-has various roots and is of Greek origin. With Latin and Greek roots, it is akin to Old English tō-, te-'apart' and Sanskrit dus-'bad, difficult'.