Reaction Deviations

Title: The Wonderful World of Reflexes: The Deviation Reaction

The **Deflection Response** is a complex mechanism that regulates the balance and coordination of our body's movements. This is a reflex that is one of the most important for maintaining the health of our physical and mental sphere. It reacts to changes in the body's position in space and helps maintain balance. This article will talk about what the deviation reaction is and what opportunities it provides for studying its nature and application in various fields, ranging from science and medicine to sports.

Features of the deviation reaction The deviation reaction has two main features. Firstly, it is a **fast and accurate reaction** that occurs in response to changes in the position or movement of our body. For example, when we lean forward or backward, the brain sends signals to the leg muscles, which instantly adjust the body position to maintain balance. The second feature is the ability to respond only to **adequate changes,** that is, changes that occur within a certain zone. If the stimulus goes outside this zone, the rejection response does not fire.

Through a process that occurs in the brain, the deflection response helps maintain balance and coordination in our body and brain. In addition, this mechanism can be used in sports and medicine to improve performance and restore health. For example, professional athletes often use the deflection response to improve their performance.



A person controls most reactions consciously and subconsciously. To a greater extent, this applies to the manifestation of positive emotions, since they imply the interaction of a person and the environment. To a lesser extent, this concerns the emergence of inhibitory mechanisms in behavior. For example, “freeze”, a person, making a decision, chose to avoid aggressive or unpleasant words in a conversation.

When negative emotions are formed in the human body, similar reactions occur, but there are some differences. When pain occurs, a person has a natural reaction to it, avoidance or relaxation (acceptance).

The process of formation of negative emotions is irreversible. They can accumulate and provoke more severe conditions, depending on gender and age. In men, sharp manifestations of emotions can cause pathological insomnia, depression, nervous tics, self-doubt, and weakness of character. Since the male body is structured much stronger than the female, it tolerates even strong shocks better. Women, on the other hand, are capable of experiencing many more types of negative experiences due to the large number of social connections and the influence of hormonal levels (most negative feelings in her are associated with personal experiences



Deviation reaction

Man, like any other animal, is constantly moving in the world around him. Our sensations from our sensory organs are continuously transformed into various signals. And only in very rare cases can our organs of hearing, vision, touch and other senses make mistakes. Usually all the data coincides, and only then does consciousness interpret it as a whole picture. If there is even the slightest deviation in the perception of signals from these organs, then this causes mistrust on the part of our consciousness. At this moment, the person’s **rejection reaction** is activated. A person’s behavior changes - he withdraws his hand from the fire, moves his chair away from the table, reacts to incorrectly pronounced words (even if it was not a cruel joke on the part of the interlocutor) or simply bypasses a person with a dull look. The reaction is rejected only on the basis of external embarrassment, which is typical for us when we perceive unreliable information through the senses. In addition to the mechanism described above, there is also a separate way of influencing the **rejection reaction**, which is already embedded in a person’s subconscious. It's a feeling of fear. That is, a person may not see danger, but unconsciously feel it and without