A new study finds that even mild stress can affect your ability to control your emotions. A team of neuroscientists at New York University say that their findings suggest that certain (1) that teach people how to better control their emotions—such as those used to treat social anxiety and phobias—may not work as well during stressful situations.
"We have long suspected that stress can (2) our ability to control our emotions, but this is the first study to document how even mild stress can undercut therapies designed to keep our emotions in (3) ," said senior author and psychology professor Elizabeth Phelps. "In other words, what you learn in the clinic may not be as (4) in the real world when you’re stressed."
To help patients learn to (5) their emotional impairment, therapists sometimes use cognitive restructuring techniques encouraging p
A. check
B. regulate
C. eventually
D. consequences
E. impair
F. stimulus
G. bleak
H. enlisted
I. relevant
J. prescribed
K. therapies
L. confined
M. incidentally
N. intense
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