proaction
English
Noun
proaction (countable and uncountable, plural proactions)
- Proactive behavior or influence.
- 2013, Daniel S. Newman, Demystifying the School Psychology Internship, →ISBN:
- However, there are also numerous actions supervisors can take in order to encourage intern proaction.
- 2014, Michael S. DeVivo, Leadership in American Academic Geography, →ISBN:
- Those twenty-two that have been classified as transformational leaders all showed evidence of high levels of inspiration, integrity, selflessness, scholarship, and proaction.
- 2017, Alessandro Grecucci, Remo Job, Jon J. Frederickson, Advances in Emotion Regulation: From Neuroscience to Psychotherapy, →ISBN:
- The goal of this part of the treatment involves the client's ability to use mindful emotion regulation skills that facilitate taking proactions that reflect a meaningful and rewarding life path.
- 2017, Donald K. Routh, The Experimental Psychology of Mental Retardation, →ISBN, page 111:
- Klinman (1964) reported much greater proaction for "component testing" designs than for problems in which the redundant training stimuli and test-trial stimuli were identical. This suggests that retroaction and proaction have greater effects when training and test items are not identical.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.