15 Facts About Social rejection

1.

Social rejection occurs when an individual is deliberately excluded from a social relationship or social interaction.

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2.

Furthermore, Social rejection can be either active, by bullying, teasing, or ridiculing, or passive, by ignoring a person, or giving the "silent treatment".

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3.

Nevertheless, Social rejection can become a problem when it is prolonged or consistent, when the relationship is important, or when the individual is highly sensitive to Social rejection.

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4.

Specifically, fear of Social rejection leads to conformity to peer pressure, and compliance to the demands of others.

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5.

Peer Social rejection has been measured using sociometry and other rating methods.

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6.

Children who are at risk for Social rejection are more likely to barge in disruptively, or hang back without joining at all.

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7.

Peer Social rejection, once established, tends to be stable over time, and thus difficult for a child to overcome.

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8.

Researchers have found that active Social rejection is more stable, more harmful, and more likely to persist after a child transfers to another school, than simple neglect.

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9.

Peer Social rejection is believed to be less damaging for children with at least one close friend.

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10.

The authors stated that although it is likely that the Social rejection experiences contributed to the school shootings, other factors were present, such as depression, poor impulse control, and other psychopathology.

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11.

Study at Miami University indicated that individuals who recently experienced social rejection were better than both accepted and control participants in their ability to discriminate between real and fake smiles.

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12.

Romantic Social rejection is a painful, emotional experience that appears to trigger a response in the caudate nucleus of the brain, and associated dopamine and cortisol activity.

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13.

Social rejection's suggested that it is a component of the neurotic personality, and that it is a tendency to feel deep anxiety and humiliation at the slightest rebuff.

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14.

One study by Cole, Kemeny, and Taylor investigated the differences in the disease progression of HIV positive gay men who were sensitive to Social rejection compared to those who were not considered Social rejection sensitive.

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15.

MacDonald and Leary theorize that Social rejection and exclusion cause physical pain because that pain is a warning sign to support human survival.

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