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  2. Kleptomania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleptomania

    People diagnosed with kleptomania often have other types of disorders involving mood, anxiety, eating, impulse control, and drug use. They also have great levels of stress, guilt, and remorse, and privacy issues accompanying the act of stealing. These signs are considered to either cause or intensify general comorbid disorders.

  3. Psychology of collecting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychology_of_collecting

    The psychology of collecting is an area of study that seeks to understand the motivating factors explaining why people devote time, money, and energy making and maintaining collections. There exist a variety of theories for why collecting behavior occurs, including consumerism, materialism, neurobiology and psychoanalytic theory.

  4. Shoplifting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoplifting

    People of all races shoplift equally, and poor people shoplift only slightly more than rich people. [19] Men tend to shoplift using bags, and women using strollers. [ 11 ] [ 28 ] When caught, a shoplifter has on average $200 worth of unpaid merchandise.

  5. You see, I don’t even see it as shoplifting: people like me don’t do that. I’m a nice middle-class woman with young children! I am entirely unextraordinary – we’re not on the breadline ...

  6. Former Victoria's Secret manager explains why you ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/entertainment/former-victorias...

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  7. Pyromania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyromania

    Pyromania is an impulse control disorder in which individuals repeatedly fail to resist impulses to deliberately start fires, [1] to relieve some tension or for instant gratification.

  8. The psychology of food aversions: Why some people don't grow ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/psychology-food-aversions...

    People with food aversions usually have a strong reaction when they see, smell or taste foods they don't like, Boswell says. "Some people will cough, gag or vomit when exposed to these foods," she ...

  9. Techniques of neutralization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Techniques_of_neutralization

    The offender will argue how she, he, people close to him or his ethnic group were under threat or have suffered loss by a third party (e.g., in the case of the Rwandan genocide, the Tutsi). Kaptein and van Helvoort propose an ‘amoralization alarm clock’ to explain all such amoralizations or neutralizations. [5]