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self-differentiation

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self-differentiation

[¦self ‚dif·ə‚ren·chē¦ā·shən]
(physiology)
The differentiation of a tissue, even when isolated, solely as a result of intrinsic factors after determination.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
References in periodicals archive
Additionally, each student employs study strategies tailored specifically to her unique academic needs, a technique that I call self-differentiation.
The present study is aimed to survey the relationship between self-differentiation, preliminary maladaptive schemas, and attachment styles on one hand and quality of life on the other hand.
It describes practical strategies for coping with and reforming bullying behaviour in the workplace and explores the concept of "self-differentiation" as an antidote to the extreme emotional disturbances that can surface during bullying incidents.
The study, which was conducted on the mental health and self-differentiation the results of the study showed that people who have high levels of differentiation had less avoidance and distrust [15], Psychological distress [16,17] dysfunction ,anxiety and depression(18,19,20,21,22).
He considers Nietzsche on self-differentiation and genealogy, the incorporation of truth and the symbiosis of truth and life, the self-becoming of the world and the incompleteness of being, the origin of truth, existential reductions and the object of truth, and Merleau-Ponty's soft ontology of truth as falsification.
The freedom of choice and in-group favoritism can satisfy the needs of self-differentiation. In the model I have presented in this study, connecting self-directive value and satisfaction of sociability needs in spectator sports, I have provided empirical evidence for self-directive people in the collectivistic society of Taiwan using spectator sports as a possible forum to balance the need for belonging with the need for being different.
This correlational study examined perceived personal growth among couples who recently became grandparents, investigating its association with attachment style, self-differentiation, and the perceived growth of the spouse.
The event of the unfolding of these various forms of differentiation, its unfolding in each case as an ongoing process of self-differentiation, self-unfolding, and self-renewal across time, de Warren says, is what Husserl calls the transcendental "life" of the subject.
The last three chapters of the book concern communities that are engaged in initiatives of political and cultural self-determination and self-differentiation. Yitzhak Schichor's chapter (16) on the uyghur digital diaspora is a sobering assessment of the possibilities and limits of new media in sustaining a viable project of achieving national sovereignty and political independence.
Couple forgiveness, self-differentiation and secondary traumatization among wives of former POWs.
Amrani proposed to the participants to think about a possible sub-regional approach within the framework of the MD involving the Maghreb countries, while preserving the basic principles of self-differentiation and non-discrimination to meet security challenges.
Schnarch (1991) identifies Jesus as an example of a highly differentiated individual: "His life, recorded by both disciples and foes, represents one of the superlative acts of self-differentiation from his prevailing culture.
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