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The phrase "avoid negative outcomes" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when discussing strategies or actions aimed at preventing undesirable results in various contexts, such as business, personal development, or risk management.
Example: "To ensure the success of the project, we must identify potential risks and take steps to avoid negative outcomes."
Alternatives: "prevent adverse results" or "steer clear of unfavorable consequences."
Exact(14)
The reason we need sustainability is to avoid negative outcomes, but the lesson from Coke is that consumer behaviour can be better affected by positive messages.
My hope is that responsible researchers in the field work with those who raise such concerns, so we can avoid negative outcomes, like exempting yourself from social interactions and bonding only with machines.
In the current study, age had a significant effect on the bias to avoid negative outcomes: Older seniors showed an enhanced tendency to learn from negative compared with positive consequences of their decisions.
These results demonstrate that hydrological impacts of land use change can propagate through subsurface flow to indirectly impact surrounding ecosystems, and these subsurface connections should be considered when planning land use at a landscape scale to avoid negative outcomes associated with land use change.
Alternative future visions enable us to discover the requirements and tools we need to implement today tomorroww) to attain the preferred future or avoid negative outcomes.
The second one, Ought-to L2 Self, is related to the attributes that one perceives s/he ought to have, in order to satisfy expectations and to avoid negative outcomes; which is equivalent to more extrinsic types of instrumental motives.
Similar(46)
Research in diverse domains of psychology has independently identified two behavioral systems, one concerned with obtaining positive outcomes, the other concerned with avoiding negative outcomes.
According to their model, our feelings affect behavior along a continuum between, on one end, something they term "generativeness" (that is, how likely you are to explore something that may end up having a good result, if doing so involves risk) and, on the other, "defensiveness" (when you are focussed on avoiding negative outcomes, forgoing opportunities in the process).
We looked at whether their responses were more aligned with a "promotion focus" mindset (which past research has linked to risk-taking and means one is more focused on achieving ideal outcomes) or more aligned with a "prevention focus" mindset (which means one is most concerned with avoiding negative outcomes).
It has been suggested that serotonin is involved in processing and avoiding negative outcomes (Rogers et al. 2003; Tanaka et al. 2009), predicting future punishment (Crockett et al. 2012), and loss aversion (Cools et al. 2008).
There is a large body of evidence indicating that adolescents are especially unlikely to be motivated by avoiding negative outcomes, but are instead more oriented toward taking risks to receive an immediate or proximal reward (Steinberg 2006; Steinberg 2008; Steinberg 2005).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com