compensatory behavior
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Author(s):  
Martin Aranguren

Abstract Background In the context of the COVID-19 emergency, the concern has been raised that people may compensate the reduction in risk ensured by mask use with an increase in risk induced by lower adherence to physical distancing rules. Purpose The paper investigates if people compensate risk in this manner when their interaction partner wears a face mask, examining if risk compensation further depends on gender, signaled social status and perceived race. Methods An experiment was conducted in two waves (June, n = 1396 and September 2020, n = 1326) in front of the traffic lights of four busy roads in Paris. A confederate asked a randomly selected pedestrian for directions following a script and keeping the recommended distance. Confederates were locally recognizable as Blacks or Whites and alternatively presented themselves with a costume indicative of high or low social status. An observer recorded whether the pedestrian kept the recommended distance. Results Both in June and September, men are less likely to comply with the distancing rule when the confederate wears the face mask, and particularly so when the confederate signals high status. When the confederate wears the mask, female pedestrians observe less the one-meter rule in September than in June. Conclusions Men’s risk compensatory behavior is constant over time. In contrast, women’s depends on the time period.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Santander ◽  
Allison Bush ◽  
Nicholas Kramer ◽  
John McCarthy

ABSTRACT Constipation commonly affects adults and most often results from benign conditions. Certain associated symptoms (e.g., rectal bleeding or weight loss) raise concern for structural pathology and prompt further evaluation. Intussusception uncommonly affects adults and typically presents with abdominal pain and vomiting. Rarely, intussusception manifests with constipation as the primary symptom. We present a case of a patient with new onset constipation who was only able to induce bowel movements after exercising, a compensatory behavior in the setting of recurrent intussusception because of a Vanek tumor.


Author(s):  
Heather Thompson-Brenner ◽  
Melanie Smith ◽  
Gayle Brooks ◽  
Rebecca Berman ◽  
Angela Kaloudis ◽  
...  

The session covered in this chapter looks at the three components of emotions, which are thoughts, physical sensations, and behaviors/urges. These components interact and unfold over time. With regard to thoughts, clients frequently know that they have thoughts, but they have difficulty putting the thoughts into specific words. With regard to physical sensations, clients are often least familiar with thinking about physical sensations as a part of emotion. With regard to behaviors, it is useful to think of urges as well as behaviors, and also to broaden thinking to a wide range of behaviors, including not doing certain things. It is particularly useful to identify the three components of emotion in different, recent situations where they experienced strong emotion or behavioral symptoms, such as binge eating, compensatory behavior, driven exercise, body checking, or skipping a meal.


Appetite ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 156 ◽  
pp. 104975
Author(s):  
Cynthia Sob ◽  
Michael Siegrist ◽  
Désirée Hagmann ◽  
Christina Hartmann

2020 ◽  
pp. 194855062096615
Author(s):  
Willem W. A. Sleegers ◽  
Travis Proulx ◽  
Ilja van Beest

According to violation–compensation models of cognitive conflict, experiences that violate expected associations evoke a common, biologically based syndrome of aversive arousal, which in turn motivates compensation efforts to relieve this arousal. However, while substantial research shows that people indeed respond with increased arousal to expectancy violating events, evidence for the motivating role of arousal is rarely found. In two within-subjects studies ( N = 44 and N = 50), we demonstrate evidence for the motivating role of arousal in this violation–compensation process among university students. Using pupillometry and the hindsight bias phenomenon, we show that people respond with greater arousal when presented with expectancy violating information. In turn, we show that the pupillary response is positively related to the amount of hindsight bias being displayed. These findings provide further insights into the process underlying the hindsight bias and, crucially, support key predictions following from threat–compensation models.


Appetite ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 104881
Author(s):  
Cynthia Sob ◽  
Christina Hartmann ◽  
Désirée Hagmann ◽  
Michael Siegrist

2020 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 528-545 ◽  
Author(s):  
Terrence H. Witkowski

The overcompensation thesis posits that men react to gender insecurities by demonstrating their masculinity in extreme ways, some of which include highly gendered forms of consumer behavior known as male compensatory consumption. Though such consumption can be relatively benign, even healthy and positive, several forms of male compensatory behavior might harm public safety, the environment, and social accord. Support for the thesis exists, but is not overwhelming and further research is needed. This article approaches compensatory consumption in the United States from a historical perspective. It presents evidence from four separate periods – circa 1900, the 1930s, the 1950s, and circa 2000 – showing cultural continuities and change in the meaning of masculinity, but also similarities and differences in the perceived threats, the groups of men most affected, and their responses. These historical findings provide macromarketing insights into the societal consequences of market behavior.


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