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"perseverate" Definitions
  1. to recur or repeat continually
  2. to intently focus one's attention on a thought or thoughts : FIXATE
  3. [psychology] to have or display an involuntary repetitive behavior or thought : to exhibit perseveration
"perseverate" Antonyms

12 Sentences With "perseverate"

How to use perseverate in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "perseverate" and check conjugation/comparative form for "perseverate". Mastering all the usages of "perseverate" from sentence examples published by news publications.

He would break things — "usually a lamp" — and perseverate on what seemed to him a streak of awful luck.
This is Second Order Theory of Mind, and it is the root of most of our neuroses and perseverate thinking.
As the human brain evolved and increased in complexity, we've developed the ability to worry and perseverate on events, which creates frequent experiences of prolonged stress.
Research shows that in relationships, you need five positive interactions to counterbalance every negative one because our brains are hardwired to seek threats, and we perseverate on the bad instead of the good.
"I believe that women's fear of fraudulence is similar to men's, but with an added feature: not only do we tend to perseverate over our inadequacies, we also often denigrate our strengths," she observed.
Manguso's need to write short has sharpened her lines into diamonds, but it has also driven her slightly mad, and it has caused her to perseverate over words to the detriment of her happiness and, as she admits, her health.
In psychology, rigidity or mental rigidity refers to an obstinate inability to yield or a refusal to appreciate another person's viewpoint or emotions characterized by a lack of empathy. It can also refer to the tendency to perseverate, which is the inability to change habits and the inability to modify concepts and attitudes once developed. A specific example of rigidity is functional fixedness, which is a difficulty conceiving new uses for familiar objects.
Either they will replace the desired word with another that sounds or looks like the original one or has some other connection or they will replace it with sounds. As such, people with jargon aphasia often use neologisms, and may perseverate if they try to replace the words they cannot find with sounds. Substitutions commonly involve picking another (actual) word starting with the same sound (e.g., clocktower - colander), picking another semantically related to the first (e.g.
The perseverative cognition hypothesis holds that stressful events begin to affect people's health when they think about them repetitively or continuously (that is, 'perseverate cognitively'). Stressful events themselves are often too short, as are the physiological responses to them. Therefore the physiological responses during these stressors are unlikely to cause bodily harm. More importantly, many stressful events are merely worried about, or feared in the future, while they often do not happen or do not have the feared consequences.
Patients with OFC dysfunction, however, continue to perseverate with the bad decks, sometimes even though they know that they are losing money overall. Concurrent measurement of galvanic skin response shows that healthy participants show a "stress" reaction to hovering over the bad decks after only 10 trials, long before conscious sensation that the decks are bad. By contrast, patients with OFC dysfunction never develop this physiological reaction to impending punishment. Bechara and his colleagues explain this in terms of the somatic marker hypothesis.
Jargon aphasia is a type of fluent aphasia in which an individual's speech is incomprehensible, but appears to make sense to the individual. Persons experiencing this condition will either replace a desired word with another that sounds or looks like the original one, or has some other connection to it, or they will replace it with random sounds. Accordingly, persons with jargon aphasia often use neologisms, and may perseverate if they try to replace the words they can not find with sounds.
Dictionary of Biological Psychology - p.595 The primary definition of perseveration in biology and clinical psychiatry involves some form of response repetition or the inability to undertake set shifting (changing of goals, tasks or activities) as required, and is usually evidenced by behaviours such as words and gestures continuing to be repeated despite absence or cessation of a stimulus. More broadly in clinical psychology, it describes mental or physical behaviours which are not excessive in terms of quantity but are apparently both functionless and involve a narrow range of behaviours. In etymology, the term derives from "persevere", meaning "to continue determinedly", from Latin "perseverare", meaning "to persist": to persist with clear intentions is said "to persevere", but when those intentions are lost and only the persistence remains, one is said "to perseverate".

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