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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'rewarding event' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe an event or activity that is personally or professionally rewarding, such as a professional seminar or a day spent volunteering at a soup kitchen. For example, "Attending the conference was a very rewarding event, as I was able to network with some of the top professionals in my field."
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The BAS Fun Seeking scale has 4 items focusing on a desire for new rewards and a willingness to approach a potentially rewarding event on the spur of the moment.
The BAS Drive scale measures the persistent pursuit of desired goals, the BAS Fun-seeking suBAS Fun-seeking both a desubscale new reflectsand a willingness to approach a potentially rewarding event on the spur of the moment, and the bothRewardesireonsiveness scale foruses onewositive rewardses to the occurrence or andicipation of rewillingness
It may be a more rewarding event for anthropologists than for purist fight fans.
On Saturday night, with the Orchestra of St . Lukes and a cast headed by the promising young soprano Indra Thomas, Mr. Crutchfield presented Bellini's seldom-heand "Il Pirata" ("The Pirate"), and as usual it was a rewarding event.
Using a balanced within-subjects design, the dogs (N = 12) received a cognitive bias test either without experiencing the rewarding event (the 'Neutral' treatment), or directly after experiencing the rewarding event (the 'Post-consumption' treatment).
In this rewarding event, subjects (1 year old female Beagles) had to search for small amounts of food randomly placed within a maze arena.
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My biggest and most rewarding events in my life have been because I have been able to speak English with people from all over the world".
Psychological studies have emphasized that motivation is regulated by the anticipation of the emotional impact from the possible occurrence of unexpected rewarding events.
Individuals are motivated to follow another's gaze and engage in joint attention because gaze is a cue for which rewarding events occur.
Being "in the flow," however, is when the individual exhibits a high penchant for taking up challenging, rewarding events as well as being high in skill development.
It also may be that "reward insensitivity" in human beings is not a short-term emotional response to a series of individual rewarding events, but a cumulative failure of such events to raise one's overall mood from sustained dysphoria.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com