Just as a baby has a short attention span, so is the case for your young animal. |
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Hollywood then takes this basic premise, amplifies it to the max, and time-compresses the results to fit their typical short attention span. |
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Ask this person if your child has a short attention span or is hard to control. |
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It wasn't that his attention span was short, it was just that it focused on much bigger, more important things. |
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There are probably three great albums in here, but in itself it is too long for someone with my short attention span. |
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The children were compared for attention span, hyperactivity, and impulsivity. |
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He has a very short attention span and unless something interests him he doesn't want to know. |
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His attention span was short, though, and even loneliness did not bother him for long. |
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The biggest problem is the short attention span demonstrated by children and pets. |
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The filmmakers often operate as if they believe the audience has the collective attention span of a gnat. |
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If the abscess is in the frontal lobes of the brain, it may cause loss of memory and reduced attention span, and dysphasia. |
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It's all micromoments and fleeting glimpses, perfect for the short attention span. |
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This breed had a short attention span and would attack whatever made the most noise. |
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He was not particularly intelligent, had a short attention span, and was easily bored. |
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The film first panders to your short attention span, and then hits you with emotional baggage. |
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All these demanded concentration and a longer attention span than computer games. |
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This economy has, as its constitutive elements, such factors as attention span, pleasure, ratio of novelty to repetition. |
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It portrays Martin as a befuddled individual with a short attention span and a weight problem, who exhibits no sign of remorse. |
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A short attention span is causing international support for a war crimes tribunal to wane. |
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Our attention span is very short and we are always looking for the next big thing. |
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Moreover, the attention span of the average reader too has grown shorter over the years, Daruwalla said. |
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While Zippy has the attention span of a goldfish, his wife has the focus of an electron microscope. |
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Later there will be no need for an explanation since everybody knows that the public attention span is short and the media will have moved on. |
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I often felt he was treating readers as if they had almost no attention span or were mnemonically challenged. |
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I had the attention span of a punch-drunk goldfish with Alzheimer's and Bob was scratching his bonce and looking into his beer for inspiration. |
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Anybody who thinks that young people have a short attention span has never watched them hooked into a movie or a game. |
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The combination of stress and fatigue can also result in further impairing working memory and narrowing attention span. |
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Be aware of their attention span, nutritional requirements and body functions. |
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The number of interviews should be as limited as possible and their length should be adapted to the child's age and attention span. |
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Among other things, alcohol impairs your coordination, attention span and decision-making skills. |
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When kids are feeling hungry, their attention span is shorter and their ability to concentrate is reduced. |
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The public is not only fickle, but has a extremely short attention span. |
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Is it due to the short attention span of her intended audience. |
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The more interactive the medium, the more it will stunt the attention span. |
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And so the apparent solution struck at the RNC is to skip over the facts as if we all have the attention span of gnats. |
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The mission of the press is to spread culture while destroying the attention span. |
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It's garage punk with a longer attention span, math rock with a human soul, and prog without the self-indulgence. |
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While children without this experience can often cope in playgroups and primary school, there may be concerns about attention span and disruptive behaviour. |
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Engagement and attention span reports summarize viewed minutes and dropoff rates. |
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For the Queen Mother, two minutes of BBC radio silence were ordained, reduced to one for listeners to Radio 1, out of respect for their limited attention span. |
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You have to oversimplify because the judge's attention span is not especially great. |
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With a gift to write short prose and an exceedingly short attention span, he seemed a natural for social media. |
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Moreover, the message of the UNCAC does not suggest that the solution is either simple or requiring only a short attention span. |
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The child's short attention span for tasks initiated by others and resistance to change in routines can also interfere with learning. |
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The short attention span of today's consumers of news leads its purveyors to treat follies in particular contexts, as if they were unique. |
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They may be excessively active with a short attention span or they may be indifferent, apathetic or absent-minded. |
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For example, a student with a short attention span may have difficulty sitting quietly for a long time. |
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He was manifesting an increasing number of problems: spells of staring, a short attention span, aggressive behaviour, and bedwetting. |
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Most of us have a short attention span and can't handle a lot of information at once, especially when we're younger. |
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Confusing or long-winded directions can make a child with a short attention span shut down. |
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Being outside and active all the time is perfect for my short attention span and restlessness. |
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Activities are planned keeping in mind the short attention span of this age group? |
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Her weaknesses include distractibility, short attention span, weak memory, poor auditory analytic skills, over-focusing, and slow processing. |
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Because fashion's goldfish attention span is antithetical to the lasting power of great music, few worthwhile bands have come up from the catwalk rather than the street. |
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They study a job from five different angles before tackling it or they flit from one task to another as their attention span wavers. |
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Moreover, the voters plainly have the attention span of a bluebottle adjudicating on a handball in the Manchester United penalty area. |
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I think it's down to a short attention span and too many pouts and cleavages distract-ing them to actually follow through with a conversation. |
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The attention span and true commitment of politicians all too often varies with the most recent pressure applied to them. |
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They may have learning difficulties as a result of their reduced attention span. |
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Short-term effects include: anaemia, a decrease in the attention span and learning ability of children, and increased blood pressure in adults. |
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Generally the attention span of a human being is of limited length, and most people notice that they require breaks to maintain focus. |
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Remember the effect of stress and fatigue on interpreters, as well as delegate attention span. |
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And when he was fretting over a deal he had the attention span of a gnat. |
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The human attention span is evolving in such a way that they can skip around. |
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Maybe she just, as you said, had the attention span of a thunderbolt. |
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Like most martial arts movies, this action thriller is full of bad dialogue, hopeless acting and plenty of biffo for anyone with a short attention span. |
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When you seem to be pandering to an audience with a slender attention span, then it's unrealistic to expect character development, clever plot twists or edge-of-seat tension. |
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Recommended if there is a demand for the author or an established, patient readership with a good attention span. |
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And, she said with a chuckle, he has an attention span of 11 minutes. |
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And even the most mature attention span can quickly be tossed into the nearest trash receptacle if a young viewer isn't enjoying the product. |
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Despite what you hear about web visitors having the attention span of a gnat, longer copy will still sell better than short. |
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People appreciate it, but I don't know if the general populous has that kind of an attention span. |
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Benzodiazepines mainly used for anxiolysis are burdened by sedation, decreased attention span, memory deficits, addiction, and abuse potential. |
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An analysis of the results from these studies does not support the hypothesis that sucrose affects hyperactivity or adversely influences attention span or cognitive performance in children. |
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Does fast-paced content affect kids' attention span? |
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Moreover, according to the level of instruction at which the textbook is to be used, consideration must be given to the attention span and concentration of the young reader. |
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The introduction of modern techniques has brought considerable change to the journalist's professional environment and greater challenges to the media who require a longer attention span from the public. |
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Cannabis impairs depth perception, attention span and concentration, slows reaction time, and decreases muscle strength and hand steadiness-all of which can affect a person's ability to drive safely. |
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Hesitant that perhaps some of our children like Jacqueline or Kaki would not have the attention span to sit through a concert rehearsal, we sat them up in the last row of the balcony. |
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The most serious problem appears to be a very short attention span. |
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Luis von Ahn has a lofty vision and a short attention span. |
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Web surfers have an extremely short attention span and often something as simple as an unclear navigation will become too frustrating and a potential client is lost. |
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Such media review and prompt response is an expensive and labour-intensive exercise, but an indispensable one in any media age, especially today's media with its rapid news cycle and short attention span. |
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Even with this openness, however, engaging the public may be one of the more difficult tasks, in that western society seems almost defined by a short attention span. |
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We need the depth of spirit that literature provides in the midst of a culture that has a short attention span and is inclined towards the superficial. |
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I've the short attention span of the urbanite. |
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Did Bernie Madoff siphon off too much money and attention span? |
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This is known by the common term short attention span. |
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There is some bad language, and the stories require a greater attention span than your average junior high schooler possesses. |
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Consider our short attention span for Ebola. |
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Symptoms may include insomnia, irritability, restlessness, poor attention span, loss of memory, headaches, anemia, muscle tremors and stomach cramps. |
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He has learning difficulties because of his short attention span. |
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Children with foetal alcohol syndrome have behaviour problems including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, learning and memory difficulties and short attention span. |
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Beginning in the 1970s, deficits in attention span and distractibility have supplanted motor overactivity, and they have become the defining feature of the disorder. |
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A survey of 1,000 adults by Lloyds TSB showed that the average attention span had fallen from more than 12 minutes a decade ago to five minutes and seven seconds now. |
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