First Sentence:
To this British observer, the term "post-traumatic stress disorder" springs from the pages of the DSM-III like some newly found tropical flower, previously undescribed, yet clearly present in its full-blooded maturity for any onlooker to see.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs):
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individual trauma approach, social sponge approach, other stressor categories, different stressor events, moderately high distress, general distress reaction, era stress inventory, psychoformative processes, core personality processes, low distress group, numb families, stress recovery process, recent rape victims, collective stress situations, disaster behavior, following victimization, elicited cues, stressor category, disaster agent, distress groups, intrusive imagery, stressor variables, land use projects, implosive therapy, boredom susceptibility
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs):
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New York, American Psychiatric Association, Buffalo Creek, United States, Distress Index, Journal of Social Issues, Archives of General Psychiatry, Basic Books, San Francisco, Veterans Administration, Legacies of Vietnam, World War, Government Printing Office, People Against Nuclear Energy, Academic Press, Beverly Hills, Nazi Holocaust, International Universities Press, Mass Emergencies, American Psychological Association, Disaster Research Center, Journal of Abnormal Psychology, Free Press, Journal of Community Psychology, National Institute of Mental Health
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