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  1. Dictionary
    proneness
    /ˈprəʊnnəs/

    noun

    • 1. liability to suffer from or experience something disagreeable; susceptibility: "his proneness to injury will seriously mar a promising career"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 4 days ago · The meaning of PRONE is having a tendency or inclination : being likely —often used with to—often used in combination. How to use prone in a sentence.

  3. 2 days ago · adjective. capable of making an error. synonyms: erring. fallible. likely to fail or make errors. Cite this entry. Style: MLA. "Error-prone." Vocabulary.com Dictionary, Vocabulary.com, https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/error-prone. Accessed 24 Jun. 2024. Copy citation. Examples from books and articles. loading examples... Word Family.

  4. 5 days ago · Background. Irritability is a transdiagnostic psychiatric phenotype defined as an increased proneness to anger relative to peers. Trauma is defined as actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence while adversity more broadly describes difficult or challenging situations including abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction.

  5. 3 days ago · Our data indicate that anger expression proneness is associated with high executive dysfunction, alexithymia, and anger rumination only in patients who have experienced some form of brain damage. However, the calculation of moderation models revealed that anger expression was only linked to executive dysfunctions, specifically among patients with brain damage who scored high in alexithymia.

  6. 3 days ago · We defined the following research questions to achieve our research objectives: RQ1: Is the risk of bugs higher in files with multi-language smells in comparison with those without smells? Several existing studies investigated the impact of design smells on bug-proneness but primarily in mono-language systems.

  7. 1 day ago · The study was designed to test the hypothesis, that 1) both PWE and PWFS would experience high levels of shame, but PWFS would experience more shame proneness, shame aversion, somatic symptoms, anxiety, and depression, than PWE; and 2) shame aversion and shame proneness would predict anxiety, depression, somatic symptoms, seizure severity and seizure frequency in both groups, but we expected ...

  8. 3 days ago · Of the 354 studies initially found in the cited databases, a sample of 33 studies was reached that matched the election criteria. A final sample of 16 studies was defined, mainly articles. Studies purely epidemiological or non related to health professionals were excluded.