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Roy's Adaptation Model
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Health: process of being and becoming integrated; ineffective or maladapative responses do not contribute to health.
Focal: the internal or external stimuli most immediately confronting the person and contributing to behavior.
Contextual: all other internal or external stimuli present.
Residual: beliefs, attitudes, or traits having an indeterminate effect on the person's behavior but whose effects are not validated.
Processes: control mechanisms that a person uses as an adaptive system.
Effectors: refer to the physiological function, self-concept, and role function involved in adaptation.
Output: refers to the individual's behaviors, which can either be adaptive responses promoting the system's integrity or ineffective responses, such as not following a prescribed therapy.
Primary: subsystem that is a functional or internal control process that consists of the regulator and the cognator.
Regulator: processes input automatically through neural-chemical-endocrine channels.
Cognator: processes input through cognitive pathways, such as perception, information processing, learning, judgment, and emotion.
Secondary: subsystem that is an effector system that manifests cognator and regulator activity.
Roy's Adaptation Model
Across:7. | refers to the individual's behaviors, which can either be adaptive responses promoting the system's integrity or ineffective responses, such as not following a prescribed therapy. | 8. | subsystem that is an effector system that manifests cognator and regulator activity. |
| 10. | all other internal or external stimuli present. | 11. | beliefs, attitudes, or traits having an indeterminate effect on the person's behavior but whose effects are not validated. |
| | Down:1. | processes input automatically through neural-chemical-endocrine channels. | 2. | refer to the physiological function, self-concept, and role function involved in adaptation. | 3. | processes input through cognitive pathways, such as perception, information processing, learning, judgment, and emotion. | 4. | process of being and becoming integrated; ineffective or maladapative responses do not contribute to health. |
| 5. | the internal or external stimuli most immediately confronting the person and contributing to behavior. | 6. | control mechanisms that a person uses as an adaptive system. | 9. | subsystem that is a functional or internal control process that consists of the regulator and the cognator. |
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© 2012
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Roy's Adaptation Model
Across:7. | refers to the individual's behaviors, which can either be adaptive responses promoting the system's integrity or ineffective responses, such as not following a prescribed therapy. | 8. | subsystem that is an effector system that manifests cognator and regulator activity. |
| 10. | all other internal or external stimuli present. | 11. | beliefs, attitudes, or traits having an indeterminate effect on the person's behavior but whose effects are not validated. |
| | Down:1. | processes input automatically through neural-chemical-endocrine channels. | 2. | refer to the physiological function, self-concept, and role function involved in adaptation. | 3. | processes input through cognitive pathways, such as perception, information processing, learning, judgment, and emotion. | 4. | process of being and becoming integrated; ineffective or maladapative responses do not contribute to health. |
| 5. | the internal or external stimuli most immediately confronting the person and contributing to behavior. | 6. | control mechanisms that a person uses as an adaptive system. | 9. | subsystem that is a functional or internal control process that consists of the regulator and the cognator. |
| |
© 2012
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only