Watching endless hours of TV.
Withdrawing from friends or partners or, conversely jumping into a frenzied social life to avoid facing problems.
Overeating or weight gain.
Undereating or weight loss.
Sleeping too much.
Drinking too much alcohol.
Lashing out at others in emotionally or physically violent outbursts.
It is true that being able to perform well in a high pressure situation is a natural stress response that releases extra hormones.
Answer:
The volume of a gas will decrease.
Let's think of some good examples. How about an air tank? Its volume is very small but the gas it contains could easily fill a small room. How is the volume so small, then? Because the gas is under extremely high pressure.
Okay so intuition from every day life tells us increase in pressure means decrease in volume.
Examples of temperature? A hot air balloon is filled by a flame that heats the gas inside it. The balloon gets bigger - the volume rises. This is an especially relevant example since the hot air balloon rises due to buoyancy, meaning the air inside it is less dense than the air outside it.
Less dense means there is less mass per volume inside it, so again we know that the gas inside the balloon has undergone an increase in volume in response to being heated.
So increase of temperature means an increase of volume.
The answer to your question, then, is that the volume will decrease (which is actually kinda difficult to do sometimes...but still a theoretical fact).
For further reading and understanding, see "Ideal gas law".
Explanation:
A group of cells that performs<span> a similar </span>function<span> is known as a tissue. Multicellular organisms such as animals all contain differentiated </span>cells<span> that have adapted to </span>perform<span> specific </span>functions<span>. These differentiated </span>cells group<span> together to form tissues.</span>
A group of hormones that are released when we are stressed are called glucocorticoids. These glucocorticoids remain in the blood for a significant time after the stressor is removed. Put a person under chronic stress and they will have constantly high amounts of glucocorticoids in their blood.
The glucocorticoids initiate the release of corticotrophin-releasing factor (CRF) which is a key player in our stress response. They also increase our cravings for sugary foods and they also act directly on increasing abdominal fat storage