Combat Physiology
Cross-source consensus on Combat Physiology from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
How it works
Preparation
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Common combat effects include tunnel vision, auditory exclusion, slow-motion time, and memory disturbances. — Combat, Killing, Media Violence, and Sleep Deprivation
- Combat can produce intense physiological and perceptual effects that may destabilize people who are not prepared for them. — Combat, Killing, Media Violence, and Sleep Deprivation
- The article distinguishes combat stress responses from psychosis when they occur during life-threatening events. — Combat, Killing, Media Violence, and Sleep Deprivation
- Fear and pain are described as creating strong hardwired learning. — Combat, Killing, Media Violence, and Sleep Deprivation
- Preparation and post-event instruction are presented as reducing the chance that reactions become overwhelming or pathological. — Combat, Killing, Media Violence, and Sleep Deprivation
- A lethal-force encounter can create intense learning similar to painful fear learning. — Combat, Killing, Media Violence, and Sleep Deprivation