Psychological Stress
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A Psychological Stress is a emotional feeling of strain and pressure.
- See: Motivation, Anxiety, Psychology.
References
2018
- (Wikipedia, 2018) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/psychological_stress Retrieved:2018-1-24.
- In psychology, stress is a feeling of strain and pressure. Also this is one type of psychological pain. [1] Small amounts of stress may be desired, beneficial, and even healthy. Positive stress helps improve athletic performance. It also plays a factor in motivation, adaptation, and reaction to the environment. Excessive amounts of stress, however, may lead to bodily harm. Stress can increase the risk of strokes, heart attacks, ulcers, dwarfism, and mental illnesses such as depression. Stress can be external and related to the environment, [2] but may also be created by internal perceptions that cause an individual to experience anxiety or other negative emotions surrounding a situation, such as pressure, discomfort, etc., which they then deem stressful. Humans experience stress, or perceive things as threatening, when they do not believe that their resources for coping with obstacles (stimuli, people, situations, etc.) are enough for what the circumstances demand. When people think the demands being placed on them exceed their ability to cope, they then perceive stress.[3]
- ↑ Simandan, D., 2010. On how much one can take: relocating exploitation and exclusion within the broader framework of allostatic load theory. Health & Place, 16(6), pp. 1291–1293. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2010.08.009
- ↑ Fiona Jones, Jim Bright, Angela Clow, Stress: myth, theory, and research, Pearson Education, 2001, p.4
- ↑ Folkman, S., 2013. Stress: appraisal and coping. In Encyclopedia of behavioral medicine (pp. 1913–1915). Springer New York.