Examples of personal space in the following topics:
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- Personal space is the region surrounding people that they regard as psychologically their own.
- An example of the cultural determination of personal space is how urbanites accept the psychological discomfort of someone intruding upon their personal space more readily than someone unused to urban life.
- Living in the city alters the development of one's sense of personal space.
- Most people value their personal space and feel discomfort, anger, or anxiety when that space is encroached.
- Permitting a person to enter personal space and entering somebody else's personal space are indicators of how the two people view their relationship.
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- To sustain human life, certain physiological needs include air, water, food, shelter, sanitation, touch, sleep and personal space.
- These are: air, water, food, shelter, sanitation, sleep, space, and touch.
- Space: As humans, we require personal space.
- In addition to the requirement for shelter, or suitable indoor living space, humans need outdoor space, to avoid overcrowding and chaos.
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- Personalized Learning is the tailoring of pedagogy, curriculum, and learning environments to meet the needs of individual learners.
- Typically technology is used to facilitate personalized learning environments.
- Personal Learning Environments (PLE) are systems that help learners take control of and manage their own learning.
- PLE puts the individual learner at the center, connecting him or her to both information and to communities to: "... provide personal spaces, which belong to and are controlled by the user, [and also provide] a social context by offering means to connect with other personal spaces for effective knowledge sharing and collaborative knowledge creation. " emphasis on community, conceptualizing it in terms of "groups," "networks" and "collectives" (2007) and thereby achieve learning goals.
- Some criticisms of personalized learning warn that the approach often discounts the highly relational and socially-constructed space well-defined in the research on learning.
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- Cubicle – A semi-enclosed space for one person, suitable for activities that demand medium concentration and medium interaction
- Study booth – An enclosed space for one person, suitable for short-term activities that demand concentration or confidentiality
- Small meeting room – An enclosed space for two to four persons, suitable for both formal and informal interaction
- Small meeting space – An open or semi-open space for two to four persons, suitable for short, informal interaction
- Locker area – An open or semi-open space where employees can store their personal belongings
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- Social distance between people is reliably correlated with physical distance: intimate, personal, social and public.
- Hall, are unintentional reactions to sensory fluctuations or shifts, such as subtle changes in the sound and pitch of a person's voice.
- Social distance between people is reliably correlated with physical distance, as are intimate and personal distance, according to the delineations below.
- According to Hall in his book, The Hidden Dimension, space in nonverbal communication may be divided into four main categories: intimate, social, personal, and public space .
- But, going beyond the basic considerations, the speaker may want to consider strategies for making the public space more social and personal to achieve conversational goals.
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- P(person is a car phone user OR person had no violation in the last year) =
- (The sample space is reduced to the number of persons who had a violation. )
- P(person had no violation last year GIVEN person was not a car phone user) =
- $\frac{405}{450}$(The sample space is reduced to the number of persons who were not car phone users. )
- Is the sample space for this problem all 100 hikers?
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- Space is the area provided for a particular purpose.
- There are two types of space: positive and negative space.
- Positive space refers to the space of a shape representing the subject matter, while negative space refers to the space around and between the subject matter.
- Shape pertains to the use of areas in two dimensional space that can be defined by edges, setting one flat specific space apart from another.
- This can be achieved, for instance, by leaving white space in the direction the eyes of a portrayed person are looking, or, when picturing a runner, adding white space in front of him rather than behind him to indicate movement.
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- Cardinal trait: A trait that dominates and shapes a person's behavior.
- Central trait: A general characteristic that every person has to some degree.
- Hans Eysenck rejected the idea that there are "tiers" of personality traits, theorizing instead that there are just three traits that describe human personality.
- Extroversion and neuroticism provide a two-dimensional space to describe individual differences in behavior.
- These three personality trait theories, among others, are used to describe and define personalities today in psychology and in organizational behavior.
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- Pneumothorax, or collapsed lung, is an abnormal collection of air or gas in the pleural space of the lung that interferes with breathing.
- On physical examination, breath sounds may be diminished on the affected side because air in the pleural space dampens the transmission of sound.
- This rupture allows blood to spill into the pleural space, equalizing the pressures between it and the lungs.
- Blood loss may be massive in people with these conditions because each side of the chest can hold 30–40% of a person's total blood volume.
- CT scan of the chest showing a pneumothorax on the person's left side (right side on the image).
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