The term anxiety is currently used in psychology and psychiatry to refer to at least three related, yet logically different, constructs. Although most commonly used to describe an unpleasant emotional state or condition, anxiety also denotes a complex...
Anxiety A condition of persistent nervousness, stress, and worry that is triggered by anticipation of future events, memories of past events, or ruminations about the self Stimulated by real or imagined dangers, anxiety affects people of all ages and...
A term to describe the physiological and psychological response to a perceived threat that can represent either a biologically appropriate adaptive response to impending challenge or a pathological state whereby there is a contextually and temporally...
Anxiety refers to an unpleasant emotional state, a response to anticipated threat or to specific psychiatric disorders. In anxiety, the anticipated threat is often imagined. Anxiety consists of physiological and psychological features. The...
Anxiety refers to an unpleasant, but normal, emotional state. If you are suffering from anxiety, you may feel nervous or fearful. You may even notice physical symptoms such as shortness of breath, sweating, and diarrhea. Anxiety is also a specific...
A hundred years of fretting will not pay a cent of debt. (French) A man’s life is scarcely a hundred years, yet he worries enough for a thousand. (Chinese) A pretty basket does not prevent worries. (African) Do not worry about tomorrow, because...
1. Complex emotional experience, often unconscious in origin, with fear or dread as its most notable characteristic. 2. A general state of stress or unease. 3. In learning theory, the term refers to a conditioned drive that functions to motivate...
Anxious about the shoe, but careless about the foot. (Roman) Dreadful is the state of that mind that is anxious about the future. (Roman) The tiger and the leopard are likewise anxious....
Anxiety is a physiological state characterized by cognitive, somatic, emotional, and behavioral components (Seligman, Walker & Rosenhan, 2001). These components combine to create the feelings that we typically recognize as fear, apprehension, or...