Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In any event, technophobia can lead to good writing.
But there was a whiff of technophobia at the show, particularly among the 20-somethings who haven't spent their whole lives doing basic research.
It's also partly about the technophobia of teachers, local councillors and officials.
Even as a child, Sarah has an intense technophobia.
This is not technophobia but a bare fact attested to by security specialists and computer scientists.
Uncritical acceptance of the technology is a great risk, but so is technophobia.
Technophobia and culture lag just aren't the problems.
But the integration of computers in the classroom is still slow, often because of technophobia among teachers.
The story centers around the technophobia that surrounds robots, and how it is misplaced.
So the next day, I took a deep breath, stifled my technophobia and started scouring the ads.
Technophobia began to gain national and international attention as a movement with the dawn of the Industrial Revolution.
She argues that we can not, either with technophilia or technophobia, view technological change as "inevitable."
Technophilia and technophobia are the two extremes of the relationship between technology and society.
The platform: strong ambivalence toward technology, shunning of both technophobia and technophilia.
Although there are numerous interpretations of technophobia, they seem to become more complex as technology continues to evolve at such an unstoppable rate.
On a psychodynamic level, technophilia generates the expression of its opposite, technophobia.
She serves to counter his technophobia and is a rare adult female role model for the young women in Buffy's circle.
In this sense, chemophobia is akin to technophobia.
Stemming from bad experiences with the modern world, Gnarrk suffers from a major technophobia.
The term is used in sociology when examining the interaction of individuals with their society, especially contrasted with technophobia.
Poorly trained managers who found themselves faced with new, rapidly changing technologies developed technophobia out of fear of things they did not understand.
An early example of technophobia in fiction and popular culture is Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.
Brosnan, M. (1998) Technophobia: The psychological impact of information technology.
First receiving widespread notice during the Industrial Revolution, technophobia has been observed to affect various societies and communities throughout the world.
He found a new direction with Bass Reaction "Technophobia" (1993); another production from Brown.