Advanced search×

Regulation: proactive or reactive?

Aust N Z J Public Health 27(3):263-4 (2003) PMID 14705277

DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-842X.2003.tb00390.x
Version: za2963e q8zae q8zb6 q8zc0 q8zd3 q8zef q8zf3 q8zg6

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Coupling between stress coping style and time of emergence from spawning nests in salmonid fishes; evidence from selected rainbow trout stra...

    Physiol Behav (2013) PMID 23535245

    Correlations between behavioral and physiological traits, often referred to as stress coping styles, have been demonstrated in numerous animal groups. Such trait variation often cluster in two contrasting styles, with animals characterized as either proactive or reactive. In natural...
  2. Toward a Conceptual Model of Motive and Self-Control in Cyber-Aggression: Rage, Revenge, Reward, and Recreation.

    J Youth Adolesc (2013) PMID 23526207

    Despite widespread public attention to cyberbullying, online aggression and victimization have received scant conceptual development. This article focuses on how opportunities for aggression are distinct online from those of offline social contexts. The model developed here is inform...
  3. Substance abuse and criminal thinking: Testing the countervailing, mediation, and specificity hypotheses.

    Law Hum Behav 36(6):506-12 (2012) PMID 22251242

    These results suggest that reactive criminal thinking plays a potentially important role in the drug-crime relationship. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)....