「sensor Y」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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fatigue is an example of neural adaptation or | sensory adaptation. |
He was also one of the initiators of | sensory analysis and was therefore well regarded by f |
It is mainly for | sensory analysis purposes. |
apply tools suited to | sensory analysis and other techniques related to unde |
ridge School at the RIDBC for students with a | sensory and intellectual disability is named in her h |
en Lodge School for the Blind is a specialist | sensory and physical college located in Wimbledon, So |
results in a transformation of the emotional, | sensory, and cognitive components of the memory so th |
ipheral nervous system, causing a progressive | sensory and motorial polyneuropathy. |
for employing colors is to enhance the visual | sensory and illuminate the fundamental cohesiveness o |
fans, Claus and Lars from Intromental, Ken at | Sensory and Olivier at Replica for all the great time |
section (the nectosome) as well as long thin | sensory and stinging organs (the siphosome). |
efined as the point of reflection between the | sensory and motor nerves. |
rior inferior cerebellar artery, resulting in | sensory and sympathetic disturbances, cerebellar atax |
Sensory and Motor Systems | |
It promotes | sensory and cognitive development, as well as protect |
the phasmids which are the posterior glandulo | sensory and excretory structure. |
transcortical motor aphasia and transcortical | sensory aphasia, respectively). |
Transcortical | Sensory Aphasia, or TSA, is a type of Aphasia where s |
'All | sensory appearances are not other than the ground of |
by the structure of the crista (a sclerotized | sensory area located at the highest point of the body |
in the brain and spatial distribution of the | sensory areas of the cerebral cortex in different ani |
Sensory areas of the head, showing the general distri | |
The vampires' greatest | sensory asset, however, is the "hive mind" that all n |
The unsteadiness with eyes closed ( | sensory ataxia), relates to loss of sense of position |
e children to taste, he developed a method of | sensory awakening, that has been used in classrooms s |
feelings such as joy, anger, fear, etc., and | sensory awareness, it is one of the few aspects of th |
It later becomes | sensory axon part of the spinal cord. |
xercise intolerance, cataracts, hearing loss, | sensory axonal neuropathy, ataxia, clinical depressio |
le McLuhan separated media according to their | sensory bias, Innis examined a different set of inter |
• | Sensory booths for sensory and computer-based cogniti |
Later, | Sensory bought up the remains of many old speech synt |
ior ethmoidal nerve is a nerve which provides | sensory branches to the nasal cavity. |
that these work by inhibiting the response of | sensory C fibres to the irritant capsaicin, inhibitin |
The | sensory canals of the lateral lines are especially co |
es, blood sampling systems, angiography kits, | sensory catheters, pulmonary artery thermodilution ca |
e, perhaps caused by non-symmetric motions of | sensory cells resulting in non-symmetric motions of t |
er person received by other than the ordinary | sensory channels, i.e. by (I) a sensory hallucination |
g with dreams, allowing them to unfold in all | sensory channels, not only visual. |
ommunicate research into wine composition and | sensory characteristics |
e to minute basis, throughout the night, much | sensory communication is occurring between them.":195 |
rows, pharynx, tentacles (if present) and the | sensory complex furthest from the mouth. |
ey are known to have muscular, glandular, and | sensory components thought to play some role in blood |
Her captors plan to use her | sensory condition to help extract the information tha |
is a portion of the cerebrum which serves as | sensory cortex for the sense of taste. |
here A is the association cortex and S is the | sensory cortex. |
een raised that caffeine can mask some of the | sensory cues individuals might normally rely on to de |
He suffered | sensory damage, particularly to his hearing. |
rcial aircraft which delivers OOOI data using | sensory data, but in the general aviation market some |
e mother ship to provide forward navigational | sensory data, map a safe flight path, and to provide |
eing tortured for information with the use of | sensory deprivation for weeks at a time. |
or detachment, occipital lobe infarction and | sensory deprivation (ophthalmopathic hallucinations). |
films, flashing lights, mirrors, eye-wear and | sensory deprivation tanks. |
either be left bound in a state of effective | sensory deprivation for a period of time, or sensuall |
llen Memorial into an elaborate isolation and | sensory deprivation chamber which he kept patients lo |
Sensory Deprivation Chamber Quartet Dwarf (1989) Glas | |
bound to the heads of the test subjects (for | sensory deprivation purposes). |
As a | sensory deprivation tool in meditation (to focus atte |
political prison that practiced isolation and | sensory deprivation . |
The dimness represents a form of visual | sensory deprivation, a condition helpful to trance in |
spanking, sensual massage, drumming fingers, | sensory deprivation, soft music, candle light, and a |
of research included electroencephalography, | sensory deprivation, alcoholism, suicide and other cl |
ons of torture during internment in 1971 (See | Sensory deprivation, Uses of torture in recent times# |
political prison that practiced isolation and | sensory deprivation. |
Sensory Deprivation: A Symposium (1961) (editor) OCLC | |
for improved motor skills and an increase in | sensory development. |
a Japanese sensor which is one of five remote | sensory devices on board the Terra satellite launched |
s to the Internet of Living Things of natural | sensory devices. |
physical disabilities, learning disabilities, | sensory disabilities or mental health needs. |
entation of altered mental states, similar to | sensory distortions produced by recreational drugs. |
ters warn their meditating students to ignore | sensory distortions. |
trophic neuropathy characterised by motor and | sensory disturbance in the limbs commencing in childh |
hyl homologue of LSD has more of somatic than | sensory effect, has fewer visuals and is less well ac |
effects (such as skeletons in cupboards) and | sensory effects (such as spongy floors). |
s, topography, picking, fermentation, and the | sensory effects, so it could be a big article. |
innovative state-of-the-art visual, audio and | sensory effects. |
sures to supply the general body muscular and | sensory ending. |
The cirrus and vagina are innervated, and | sensory endings around the genital pore are more plen |
They are present in | sensory epithelia of the inner ear and are responsibl |
e the otolith volumes and areas of associated | sensory epithelia. |
is probably due to the specializations of its | sensory equipment. |
In 2008, it introduced a new | Sensory Evaluation course for food tasters. |
Powers's research was food processing and | sensory evaluation. |
eptors are one of the first components in the | sensory excitation and adaptation responses in bacter |
Sensient enhances the | SENSory experience of its customers' products by usin |
A pseudohallucination is an involuntary | sensory experience vivid enough to be regarded as a h |
ren't made of: Why wake-state and dream-state | sensory experiences differ." |
haeology, phenomenology applies to the use of | sensory experiences to view and interpret an archaeol |
mpus rooms' to provide pupils with additional | sensory experiences. |
for processing them are formed solely by our | sensory experiences. |
part of the spindle is innervated by type Ia | sensory fiber that go on to synapse with alpha-motone |
Type II | sensory fiber (group Aβ) is a type of sensory fiber, |
in only motor fibers and posterior roots only | sensory fibers and that nerve impulses are conducted |
Sensory function includes both tactoreception and che | |
He then worked on | sensory function of skin, particularly related to pai |
hat provide light-dependent ion transport and | sensory functions to a family of halophilic and other |
Sensory Funhouse - Interactive playground | |
Sensory ganglia of the fifth, seventh, ninth and tent | |
n neuroanatomy, the cranial nerve ganglia are | sensory ganglia of the cranial nerves. |
It also contains a butterfly plant garden, | sensory garden with Braille signs, and natural area w |
nal in partnership with Council has created a | sensory garden for people with disabilities to explor |
The view from | sensory garden |
A braille sign in the | sensory garden |
Lord Cavendish opened the school's new | Sensory Garden in 2003. |
As well as a | Sensory Garden for the less abled. |
once a rose garden, but was transformed to a | sensory garden before opening on 6 June 2004. |
ens include a Hummingbird & Butterfly Island, | Sensory Garden, and Wildlife Garden. |
A | sensory garden, designed to stimulate the five senses |
as the construction of new play spaces and a | sensory garden. |
ist individuals living with dementia, such as | sensory gardens and contrasting colour schemes. |
6 has seen the creation of a new Heritage and | Sensory Gardens (St Johns Gardens) in the lower end o |
ounds the mechanosensitive stereocilia of the | sensory hair cells that make hearing possible. |
ised mass (statolith) and numerous innervated | sensory hairs (setae). |
Visual, auditory, or other | sensory hallucinations |
urgical patients to investigate the motor and | sensory homunculus (the representation of the body in |
nd art are transposed by invited artists into | sensory images to experience. |
She also trained actors | sensory imagination to help make the characters' expe |
des services to meet the educational needs of | sensory impaired children from birth through twenty-o |
Gastropods hosting select species suffer from | sensory impairment due to infestation. |
r, for children, young people and adults with | sensory impairment, Profound & Multiple Learning Diff |
bilities such as cerebral palsy, epilepsy and | sensory impairment. |
pils may have additional medical, physical or | sensory impairments or emotional and behavioural diff |
asal ganglia, and had the abililty to reflect | sensory impressions into the motor nervous system by |
ut gradually decreases over time, whereas the | sensory impulses passing along the nerves from the po |
ation of general somatic and general visceral | sensory impulses. |
of the above systems to receive and integrate | sensory information contributes to poor balance in ol |
ertebrates, nerve signals from the brain pass | sensory information to the hypothalamus about seasona |
is responsible for appropriating responses to | sensory information from chemoreceptors and mechanore |
link, is able to send and receive thought and | sensory information to and from their Ancient progeni |
hat the cause was inefficient organization of | sensory information within the nervous system. |
This | sensory information is transmitted by the posterior c |
as Purkinje cells, are now thought to receive | sensory information from the vestibular system of the |
rt is a technology sold by Wicab Inc. whereby | sensory information can be sent to one's brain via a |
"Why does awareness of | sensory information exist at all?" |
es the feeling which accompanies awareness of | sensory information exist at all?" in both The Consci |
des before he was forced to retire due to the | sensory injuries he had sustained in Brighton. |
It provides | sensory innervation for the skin over parotid gland a |
Motor and | sensory innervation depends on the number and complex |
There will be no | sensory input or muscle contractions which would have |
f subjective experience from various forms of | sensory input stimuli. |
ed to help focus higher attention on relevant | sensory input and help block out behaviorally irrelev |
rk that inputs basic education through direct | sensory input to the brain. |
nscious and unconscious responses to specific | sensory inputs, as images, colors, textures, sounds, |
as there are no longer any other significant | sensory inputs, when the mind gets tired of hearing, |
l as well as giving emotional significance to | sensory inputs. |
nd has a natural tendency to roam between the | sensory inputs. |
ly important in assigning emotional values to | sensory inputs. |
tion and hyperactive problems, social skills, | sensory integration dysfunction, social communication |
ch Institute, where her interest and study of | sensory integration dysfunction began. |
for dance, gymnastics, fitness work including | sensory integration with sound, lighting, and space. |
ties including, play, music, art, sports, and | sensory integration for children with autism and thei |
al Communication Across Disciplines: Culture, | Sensory Interaction, Speech, Conversation, John Benja |
hich subjects could float for long periods in | sensory isolation. |
It is a | sensory journey with images that shows two parallel a |
divine origin" of music to earthly beauty and | sensory joy. |
ley could be interesting and effective on the | sensory level. |
These conclusions lead to the idea of a | sensory map, called the homunculus, in the somatosens |
s remembered for his work involving cutaneous | sensory mechanoreceptors. |
the human organism; drive, motor, perceptual, | sensory, memory and cognitive, but is seen as the cen |
Sensory memory up to 1 s. | |
-cultural differences are noted by Al-Issa in | sensory modalities most commonly encountered in hallu |
e integration of information across different | sensory modalities. |
Sensory modality is the channel or conduit for the in | |
vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision | sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of li |
rapy is integrated throughout the program and | sensory motor strategies are implemented into the sch |
He kept a journal of his son's | sensory, motor, language, and cognitive behavior duri |
Other health, including | sensory, musculo-skeletal, and digestive |
chool is a specialist school for physical and | sensory need and is for pupils with physical disabili |
th a range of physical, learning, medical and | sensory needs who come from North and Central Staffor |
Rather, they consist of a collection of many | sensory nerve fibers that extend from the olfactory e |
wall and the lemnisci (which are a bundle of | sensory nerve fibers), which have nuclei that divide |
ion type nicotinic receptors and also affects | sensory nerve terminals |
Small unmyelinated | sensory nerve terminals in the skin also express NMDA |
ellular communication, and is concentrated in | sensory nerve structures of both humans and animals. |
The snout has numerous | sensory nerve endings, and is used to find food such |
es, macrophages, and structural cells such as | sensory nerves and epithelial cells. |
e with the Monster's blood and won't feed his | sensory nerves as the Monster's blood is actually the |
Vitamin B6 toxicity can damage | sensory nerves, leading to numbness in the hands and |
muscular contractions and does not affect the | sensory nerves. |
On January 7, 2009, Mick Johnson of | Sensory Networks announced that they are “looking at |
r and, on contact with the eye, it stimulates | sensory neurons creating a stinging, painful sensatio |
In mammals, the | sensory neurons of the vomeronasal organ detect non-v |
s; GDF7 specifically induces the formation of | sensory neurons in the dorsal spinal cord from neural |
The nerve endings of | sensory neurons that respond preferentially to coolin |
eive afferent input from dorsal root ganglion | sensory neurons subserving the lower trunk and limbs, |
The | sensory neurons expressing Or67d send projections to |
Each amphid is made up of 12 | sensory neurons with ciliated dendrites. |
be mediated by opioid receptors on peripheral | sensory neurons, particularly in inflammatory conditi |
differentiation of sympathetic and embryonic | sensory neurons. |
for squamous cell epithelioma and hereditary | sensory neuropathy type I. |
y, mental retardation, degeneration of axons, | sensory neuropathy, tremors, demyelinization, gray ma |
s pigmentosa, hereditary motor neuropathy and | sensory neuropathy. |
that thoughts can occur without a particular | sensory or imaginal content. |
sensory or afferent neurons- carry impulses from sens | |
to exploit previously existing biases in the | sensory, or recognition, systems of their receivers, |
ies that cannot be explained by intellectual, | sensory, or health factors (academically performing b |
l infinite in other human contexts, the human | sensory order being necessarily finite. |
Hancock's organ is a lateral | sensory organ of gastropods, a sense organ found in s |
The crista ampullaris is the | sensory organ of rotation located in the semicircular |
icate that Greererpeton had a lateral line, a | sensory organ commonly found only in fish. |
the possession of Von Vaupel Klein's organ, a | sensory organ near the base of the first swimming leg |
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