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Fight-or-flight response
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==Further reading== * [[Robert Sapolsky|Sapolsky, Robert M.]], 1994. Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers. W.H. Freeman and Company. * {{USGovernment|url=http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/mentalhealth/chapter4/sec2_1.html}} * Arun, C. P. (2004). Fight or flight, forbearance and fortitude: the spectrum of actions of the catecholamines and their cousins. ''Annals of the New York Academy of sciences'', ''1018''(1), 137-140. * Seng, J., & Group, C. (2019). From Fight or Flight, Freeze or Faint, to “Flow”: Identifying a Concept to Express a Positive Embodied Outcome of Trauma Recovery. ''Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association'', ''25''(3), 200-207. * Katz, Carmit., Tsur, Noga., Talmon, Anat., and Nicolet, Racheli, (2021). Beyond fight, flight, and freeze: Towards a new conceptualization of peritraumatic responses to child sexual abuse based on retrospective accounts of adult survivors. ''Child Abuse and Neglect, 112''(1), 1-12 * O’Dea, Connor., Castro Bueno, Angelica M., and Saucier, Donald A, (2017). Fight or flight: Perceptions of men who confront versus ignore threats to themselves and others. ''Personality and Individual Differences, 104''(1), 345-351.
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