Border Collies have a high startle reflex, which can sometimes endanger their lives. |
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His hands found the zipper at the back of her dress and slowly inched it down, not wanting to startle her. |
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I startle myself when I wrap my arms around Shane's neck, pulling myself forward towards the edge of the car as I do so. |
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It would also be useful for future research to include paradigms involving startle modification by inhibitory and facilitatory prestimulation. |
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There are deer we are not interested in, a hind and her calf, but we cannot afford to startle them, as they will alert others to our presence. |
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As always, I approached silently, hoping to startle them with a sudden intrusion. |
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Wendy had just lifted her foot to step over to the next joist, and the sudden noise made her startle badly. |
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Reining his horse up beside Barranca he ground hitched him hoping that nothing would startle the gelding. |
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For one thing, their slow motion doesn't startle sea life, such as the pods of whales that sometimes splash alongside. |
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It's a scary movie that doesn't so much try to scare you as it tries to startle you. |
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The timbre and cadence of his drawling voice startle at first and the listener becomes absorbed by his speech rhythms, pauses, and inflections. |
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There are Omega 3s galore, fish for brain food, selenium and lesser known minerals to startle a recumbent form into activity. |
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Like all reflexes, the startle reflects activity of the brain stem, the most primitive, reptilian part of the brain. |
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They also have an extreme startle response to unexpected stimuli associated with the traumatic event. |
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That night, on a hunch, he returns with a flashlight, and, proving once again why he was made head gardener, manages to startle a gorging gray horde of sweet-toothed woodmice. |
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The effects of unpleasant stimulation are presumed to enhance the startle reflex through evocation of learned or innate responses in the amygdala. |
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Sudden cuts into scenes and abrupt reorientation of the camera angle are used to startle and disorient the viewer. |
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Of all the statistics and numbers that we throw around at the office-we are bankers, remember-these are the ones that always startle people. |
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Again, you'll find a list in our presentation today that might startle you. |
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He also said that times had changed and the evolving media world would startle the journalists of yesteryear. |
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Three years later, she still suffers stress, has nightmares and startle responses, and has a very difficult time at school. |
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Secondary behaviours such as alarm calls or other startle response by the incubating adults were also recorded. |
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Quail are capable of extremely rapid startle responses, which can lead to head injuries. |
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This manoeuvre is often accompanied by an audible roaring sound that is possibly used to startle the fish. |
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The intensity of the startle response is reduced when the burst of noise is preceded by a weak and brief noise. |
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Occasionally she would startle the odd angler who, looking up from his or her rod, would find themselves in the company of royalty. |
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They startle viewers, rouse viewers, occasionally put off and occasionally turn on viewers. |
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The first delicate white toothworts appear in the woods at the end of January, and the bold yellow acacia blooms suddenly startle us in the first days of February. |
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It was feared the turbine could startle horses and riders and frighten livestock, and set a precedent for mobile phone company masts to be put up. |
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Marinism, a reaction against classicism, was marked by extravagant metaphors, hyperbole, fantastic word play, and original myths, all written with great sonority and sensuality, and with the aim to startle. |
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Where fitted, and deemed suitable, consider the immediate use of 'remotely operated' ship searchlights, if suspicious activity around the vessel is observed, the use of searchlights may startle and deter a potential attack. |
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Others numb themselves emotionally, startle easily, are plagued by general anxiety, inability to sleep, poor memory, difficulty concentrating or completing tasks and feel guilty about their own survival. |
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The first parameter is a Leq measurement over a time period of 1 hour, expressed in dBA, to which is added a penalty of between 5 dB and 12 dB to compensate for the startle characteristic of impulsive noise. |
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Problematic prepositions, unfortunate neologisms, split infinitives and misplaced modifiers constantly startle the reader. |
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The high frequency sounds PWC produce in air and water also startle birds. |
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If natural light is totally excluded, low level night lighting should be provided to allow animals to retain some vision and to take account of their startle reflex. |
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On the way I shall startle deer in the forest, and as I park I shall hear an owl at my neighbour's and hear the sheep on the hill opposite the house. |
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Nothing could startle her, make her scold or make her cry. She did not complain, she did not rebel. |
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The supposition, at least, that angels do sometimes assume bodies need not startle us. |
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So the entire policymaking apparatus of the European political-economic world at the moment is focused on how not to startle the wisents. This makes me nervous. |
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When non-disabled actors play disabled people, they love to squirm, startle and speak as if they were drunk In Fraser's fantasy disabled family, we eat alone as we have no friends. |
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Such a headline of course would not startle many Torontonians, who have long been chided by other Canadians for their un-Canadian lack of modesty about their city. |
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Individual differences in the activation and control of affective race bias as assessed by startle eyeblink response and self-report. |
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During the briefing, the pilot was cautioned by the CN member present to be judicious in his choice of altitude when overflying the train as they did not want to startle the train crew. |
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But if habituation is not always the same phenomenon, it is possible that different processes may underlie the habituation of the startle response to a loud noise in an intact mammal. |
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The light intensity is lessened and, therefore, will not startle you. |
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Animals will startle when exposed to a loud an unexpected burst of noise. |
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Sudden and extensive disappearings and fresh appearings would startle and confound us, and if continued, would shatter our sense of personality out of us. |
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I suppose a party popper might, at a pinch, startle a police horse. |
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