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Journal ArticleDOI

Individuality in Pain and Suffering

J. W. C. Fox
- 01 May 1968 - 
- Vol. 29, Iss: 3, pp 611-611
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TLDR
From the combination of knowledge and actions, someone can improve their skill and ability and this will lead them to live and work much better.
Abstract
From the combination of knowledge and actions, someone can improve their skill and ability. It will lead them to live and work much better. This is why, the students, workers, or even employers should have reading habit for books. Any book will give certain knowledge to take all benefits. This is what this individuality in pain and suffering tells you. It will add more knowledge of you to life and work better. Try it and prove it.

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Citations
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Approach, avoidance, and coping with stress.

TL;DR: The case for utilizing the concepts of approach and avoidance to provide a theoretical structure to the understanding of coping with stress is presented, followed by a brief review of the coping effectiveness literature.
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Assessment of chronic pain. I. Aspects of the reliability and validity of the visual analogue scale

TL;DR: The absolute type of VAS seems to be less sensitive to bias than the comparative one and is therefore preferable for general clinical use and should be paid to several complementary indices of pain relief as well as to the individual's tendency to bias his estimates.
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Sensory Processing Sensitivity A Review in the Light of the Evolution of Biological Responsivity

TL;DR: This article reviews the literature on sensory processing sensitivity in light of growing evidence from evolutionary biology that many personality differences in nonhuman species involve being more or less responsive, reactive, flexible, or sensitive to the environment.
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Hypochondriasis and Somatosensory Amplification

TL;DR: A self-report questionnaire completed by 177 out-patients showed that hypochondriasis and amplification had a zero-order correlation and amplification was more powerful in women than in men and was also a significant correlate of somatisation, explaining 12% of the variance.
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Human pain responsivity in a tonic pain model: Psychological determinants

TL;DR: This tonic pain model indeed offers a succinct empirical paradigm to study human pain responsivity in general, and its generality for clinical pain, as well as the basic model of the cold‐pressor test for human tonicPain responsivity are considered.