height-fear
See also: height fear
English
Alternative forms
Noun
height-fear (countable and uncountable, plural height-fears)
- The fear of being in a high location or position; fear of heights.
- 2012, Allan V. Horwitz, PhD, Jerome C. Wakefield, All We Have to Fear:
- For example, while we have seen that height fear is universal, its extent varies substantially among individuals.
- 2013, Stekel, W, Conditions Of Nervous Anxiety And Their Treatment:
- From this point of view we shall more readily understand many cases of height-dizziness and height-fear.
- 2013, Steven Hyman, Fear and Anxiety: The Science of Mental Health:
- Height fear emerges in infants shortly before they start crawling at six months (Scan: and Salapatek 1970) and rises with crawling experience (Berthenthal et al. 1983). As the two-year-old child explores further afield, animal fears emerge.
- 2015, Irena Milosevic Ph.D., Randi E. McCabe Ph.D., Phobias: The Psychology of Irrational Fear:
- Results indicated that individuals high in height fear made greater estimations of the balcony's height, even when taking into account measures of cognitive bias.
- 2012, Allan V. Horwitz, PhD, Jerome C. Wakefield, All We Have to Fear:
Synonyms
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.