Yet, people are more prone to make mistakes when sleep deprivation and all the other perplexities of the race take their accumulative toll. |
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Ministry of Interior officials were responsible for most incidents of abuse of prisoners, including beatings, whippings, and sleep deprivation. |
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Few expected the ravages of war, and none expected the deprivation of imprisonment. |
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He would be aghast at the spread of materialism and greed, and angry at our indifference to poverty and deprivation. |
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But the painted kerbing and the gaily-coloured banners can't disguise the extent of the social and educational deprivation of this community. |
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The area of Govan, in which the building is situated, is known for its social and spiritual deprivation. |
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I assume the method works better if it is used after serious sleep deprivation. |
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The first lesson to draw from the study is that the longer the children were exposed to deprivation, the worse was their adjustment. |
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It should also have a healthy and vibrant economy with low levels of unemployment and deprivation, with an increase in quality homes. |
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Are images of Yardies, guns and deprivation really a depiction of normal life in London? |
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My results therefore seem to support the idea that absolute deprivation rather than relative deprivation is important for influencing mortality. |
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Is Channel 4's new sleep deprivation game show a danger to health or just a big yawn? |
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Post-war deprivation was over and the young were allowed to be youthful and unafraid. |
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The greater the sleep deprivation the higher the need for overnight respite care. |
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The light deprivation leads to a sweeter rhubarb than the summer variety and it has become the connoisseurs' choice for sweet and savoury dishes. |
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The applicants have claimed that their removal and detention constituted wrongful imprisonment and deprivation of liberty. |
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There may be a crime against humanity where there is a serious deprivation of physical liberty short of imprisonment. |
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Dieticians say the survey shows the clear link between obesity and deprivation. |
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Until reality can catch up with aspirations, this emotional deprivation will continue. |
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Within this story of denial and deprivation is interwoven the larger story of Assamese women losing a traditional support base of income. |
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The cumulative deprivation that would be offset by reparations is the maldistribution of wealth between blacks and whites. |
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It was also to remember her journey through pain, sorrow, loss and deprivation. |
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Phenomena like sleepwalking and dream deprivation have baffled scientists for years. |
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For example, barnacles may be more susceptible to short-term food deprivation than mussels because of their small size. |
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This is not about poverty, deprivation or cultural dislocation of second-generation immigrants. |
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She captures the seediness, deprivation and violence on the mean streets of Bradford well in her assured but frill-free prose. |
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The hallway stretched out before her, an infinite tunnel of grey sterility and mechanical deprivation. |
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In complete silence, I meditated and fought off the frightening hallucinations which often happen in the face of sensory deprivation. |
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Amid the ever-changing scenery, the two men undergo their journeys of self-discovery, confronted by inequality and deprivation. |
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States should also take steps to ensure that any deprivation of life is fully investigated in an open and transparent way. |
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The oxygen deprivation and the whole shock of the experience has left him believing he is still in Belgium and that his family are alive. |
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Newborns with monocular congenital or dense cataracts are at risk for developing deprivation amblyopia. |
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Glasgow's high-rise social housing had become synonymous with urban blight and social deprivation. |
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The army has performed extensive studies to determine the effects of sleep deprivation on the human mind. |
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Gripped by a palpable fatigue due to work pressure, he remains eloquent and sweetly amusing, despite complaining of sleep deprivation. |
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From the time they are microscopic, solid tumors contain regions of severe hypoxia, unphysiologically low pH, and nutrient deprivation. |
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The abuse of power is rooted in the abusive family member's extreme emotional deprivation and neediness. |
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At the end of the food deprivation period, we removed all nestlings from their nests and put them in a cloth bag. |
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After years of cruel deprivation they seemed to be very contented in a grouchy, ursine, way. |
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There, the standard punishment was transfer to solitary confinement in the sensory deprivation isolation wing. |
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Research has linked noise pollution with a range of health problems including sleep deprivation, high blood pressure and hearing loss. |
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The properties of plasma membrane vesicles from wheat roots are also affected by deprivation of the intact plants. |
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Realising that deprivation was getting him nowhere, the Buddha broke his fast and ate. |
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This deprivation of culture, of identity, is the missing link in Africa's development equation. |
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Researchers are discovering that chronic sleep deprivation harms health, promoting weight gain and diabetes and reducing immunity. |
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The exceptional case made for Hastings is that it is the poorest town in the region with pockets of severe deprivation. |
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This kind of sleep deprivation and dedication usually shows up in students only when term projects and finals are upon us. |
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Both strabismic and deprivation amblyopia occur as a result of abnormal visual experience during development. |
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But the research evidence linking actual deprivation with the later development of oral behaviour or character is weak. |
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Even in a sensory deprivation chamber, we'll turn in on ourselves for input, taking it from our own subconscious stores of data. |
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First, sleep deprivation lowers levels of the hormone leptin, an absence of which can trigger the overconsumption of carbohydrates. |
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The heady mixture of sleep deprivation, adrenaline, and substance P plus or minus caffeine makes for a euphoric, addictive cocktail. |
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This may be because the area has generally low levels of deprivation and historically low death rates. |
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After years of deprivation, building a comfortable home life and raising one's standard of living became all-consuming tasks. |
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The humiliation and emotional deprivation suffered by the girls makes everyone else's horror school stories pale into insignificance. |
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Research shows that there is a strong association between socio-economic deprivation and parasuicide. |
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But the symptoms of deprivation are much the same as those of excess, and I am left weak and drained, an empty husk until I take another dose. |
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Sleep deprivation, even if it's just for one night, can alter your perception of the world entirely. |
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There is also an element of loneliness, but again it is not based on deprivation, inadequacy or rejection. |
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Many of these surplus places are in the inner-city area with the highest levels of social deprivation. |
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The sudden sensory deprivation is not going to render a grown man or even small child insensible and throw them into fits of panic. |
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Understanding of the role that deprivation has in epilepsy gives insight into its aetiology and management. |
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A new survey says insomniacs suffer from an abundance of happiness or creativity, but sleep deprivation isn't usually a reason to be cheerful. |
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Deficiency of information and lack of social connectedness are two main reasons for human deprivation. |
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Oxygen deprivation causes tiny blood vessels to grow into the clear tissue of your cornea. |
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Among the items on the second list were stress positions for up to 45 minutes, sleep deprivation for up to 72 hours and use of muzzled dogs. |
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And yet, through the fog of sleep deprivation, I did manage to laugh a little at the stylized comedy of Lemoine and Dean. |
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The lower middle class experiences deprivation relative to the new middle class fractions above them in terms of wealth, power, and prestige. |
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Alongside the criticisms of fraternizers and materialism existed a strong admiration for U.S. efforts to alleviate German deprivation. |
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But on the margin, it prevents a lot of people from taking steps that might lead to bankruptcy and deprivation. |
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Such headaches, for me, are provoked by stress, sleep deprivation, and dehydration. |
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If this sort of relationship did not happen then maternal deprivation resulted which could lead to crime and delinquency. |
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He claimed that he and his new bride Dymphna suffered material deprivation when they were first in England. |
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The analysis of 32,482 neighbourhoods used 37 deprivation indicators to calculate the quality of life. |
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However, the condition was held to be unreasonable because it amounted to the deprivation of property without proper compensation. |
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A fear of water deprivation or perhaps the memory of the effects of drought-induced scarcity underpinned many of the documented water disputes. |
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The women experienced food deprivation, beatings, physical restraint and were forced to live in guarded barracks. |
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The group supports the view that nature deprivation is at the root of an increasing number of mental disorders today. |
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A combination of severe resource deprivation and military conservatism inhibited the army from developing a modern force. |
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Because they're designed for automobiles, today's cities are leading to a life-threatening level of exercise deprivation. |
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The condition causes the excretion of calcium and potassium in the urine and may harm the bones and kidneys if carb deprivation is unchecked. |
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For example, one grantee is studying how developing nerve cells in the fetal brain respond to prolonged oxygen deprivation. |
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Short-term food deprivation both standardized and maximized the motivation of individuals to compete for food resources during dominance trials. |
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Nutrition deprivation also works wonders on making people more open to suggestion. |
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Sleep and food deprivation, along with the forced adoption of extremely uncomfortable postures for hours on end, do the trick. |
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A fast is food deprivation for a set amount of time, and no one is supposed to die. |
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The sensory deprivation provided by the loss of any visual data can be unnerving. |
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Cornelius was put to the torture and on August 19 sentenced to deprivation of his offices and banishment. |
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In 1619 he narrowly escaped deprivation of his office for not taking the sacrament in conformity to the five articles of Perth. |
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The suspension of his pay and subsistence was no deprivation of his office, any more than shaking off the apples is cutting down the tree. |
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In one-third of families where the child was classified as emotionally deprived there was considerable material deprivation as well. |
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Pregnancy rates among teenagers increased differentially from the 1980s to the 1990s, according to the level of local deprivation. |
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Nutritional deprivation in patients who have elective gastrointestinal surgical procedures is a normal practice. |
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As specified by deprivation theory, people who feel powerless and dispossessed are especially likely to look to religion for compensation. |
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The muse may crave a spot of deprivation and misery every now and then to spark the old imagination, but there are limits. |
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This is about the link between criminality and deprivation, family dysfunction and poor education. |
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Our sense of deprivation is unbearable, but we also know the Algeria we are exiled from is not the haven it was. |
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Addicts will also suffer medical conditions bought on by constantly being on the internet such as eye strain, back ache and sleep deprivation. |
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Though his vital signs returned to normal, the abiding fear was that oxygen deprivation had caused permanent kidney or brain damage. |
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In general, schools with higher levels of deprivation had higher levels of absenteeism. |
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As far as I can tell you are attempting to redefine torture to exclude waterboarding and sleep deprivation. |
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The Court considers on balance that the present case is to be regarded as one involving deprivation of liberty. |
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The abattoir worker's wife may be a prematurely raddled crone, but the horror she arouses is horror at the extent of her deprivation. |
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There, to the side of the conservation area of elegant Victorian villas, lie the town's large housing estates whose social statistics read like an index of deprivation. |
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But, crucially, it follows a similar logic of putting the responsibility on to parents to break cycles of deprivation through the sheer force of their parenting skills. |
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With trains passing every hour and a half, it had the great advantage that sleep deprivation forced unwelcome visitors to stay no more than two days. |
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He found that people who suffered from sleep deprivation were as bad as, or worse than, those over the legal limit for alcohol when faced with standard driving ability tests. |
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On returning from maternity leave, she will be experiencing sleep deprivation and re-entry shock, and some initial flexibility will make for a smoother transition. |
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Charles Kennedy may have slipped up on a tax question at their policy briefing, but this was probably down to sleep deprivation after the birth of his new baby son! |
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In the case of fixed nitrogen deprivation the bacteria will produce heterocysts at regular intervals, usually around ten cells apart, along the filament. |
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For those who escape direct physical injury, there remain the ill effects of displacement and deprivation. |
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The bequiffed, vegan bard of misery is most definitely the son and heir of the bald, bicycle-clipped poet of deprivation. |
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And when Barbara was taken from us, it was no deprivation to Barbara when my father devoted that same ardor to Nancy. |
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Dogs absorb death, deprivation, and random gunfire as acutely as any soldier. |
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In both, neighbourhoods of incredible luxury and stylishness exist alongside areas of urban deprivation, with all the attendant social ills you would expect. |
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Children born into trauma, loss, deprivation and neglect, begin this way. |
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It has been an agricultural annus horribilis of unprecedented proportions, devilishly embellished with animal suffering, human stress and financial deprivation. |
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Sleep deprivation lowers leptin, a blood protein that suppresses appetite and seems to affect how the brain senses when the body has had enough food. |
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Androgen deprivation did not prove beneficial and has adverse effects such as osteoporosis, weight gain, hot flushes, gynecomastia, impotence and loss of libido. |
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Patients also felt they had been injured as a result of inequity of access to healthcare due to the high cost of primary care and social deprivation. |
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There is evidence that compositional and functional properties of bone are affected by boron status, with a worsening under circumstances of boron deprivation. |
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We could not adjust for deprivation as the ethical considerations meant that we were not allowed to extract strong patient identifiers, such as postcodes. |
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It would be a time when free thought solved medical and social problems, ending oppression and deprivation. |
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The argumentative tradition, if used with deliberation and commitment, can also be extremely important in resisting social inequalities and removing poverty and deprivation. |
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He points out that where such extreme early deprivation is followed by nurturant care there is some improvement in speech, intelligence and social skills. |
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The 32 measures included sleep and sensory deprivation, the use of military dogs to terrify prisoners, temperature extremes and diets of bread and water. |
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How can humans tolerate extreme oxygen deprivation at very high altitudes? |
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He was slapped, grabbed in the face, placed in stress positions, placed in standing sleep deprivation, and doused with water. |
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She had to wonder whether food deprivation had maddened her slightly. |
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Sleep deprivation resulting from multiple, erratic awakenings may produce a very different effect compared to controlled and predictable sleep deprivation. |
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Moreover, a preparatory nap counteracts the effects of sleep deprivation better than a nap taken after the missed sleep. |
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I had got up early, rejuvenated at last from the sleep deprivation of Greece, and tiptoed downstairs to make a cup of coffee. |
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How do we attack the complex problem of deprivation when poverty is scattered throughout a region rather than concentrated in one, relatively treatable area? |
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The signs of urban deprivation are easiest to see in Prospecthill Circus, the sprawling scheme in which Toryglen's share of asylum seekers have been housed. |
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The non-professional cast of mostly children assembled for Turtles Can Fly, many of whom bear the scars of real war and deprivation, is uniformly astonishing. |
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The resulting interviews document the women's experiences of wartime deprivation, courtship and marriage, immigration, and adaptation to American life. |
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On the one side, there is envy, shame, inadequacy, longing, deprivation, and a sense of being left out. |
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Zubaydah and two other detainees were subsequently waterboarded, and subjected to other methods including sleep deprivation. |
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He notes a case where a user inhaled the gas from a mask directly attached to a medical gas tank, lost consciousness, and subsequently died from oxygen deprivation. |
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Sleep deprivation really kicked in, and I started to actually hallucinate! |
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They are fleeing persecution, civil wars and grinding deprivation. |
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When it comes to deprivation, Bexley sits fairly comfortably in the middle ranks of the country but the Government-compiled figures mask a harsh reality. |
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However, the state of deprivation of his possessions has continued. |
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It wasn't the smell of dirt and grime and gunk and deprivation. |
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Bioregionalism is not about deprivation or severely limiting your choices. |
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To some degree, the general improvement of the housing stock that has taken place in recent years has mitigated some of the worst features of physical deprivation. |
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That they persevered in the face of freezing cold, starvation and deprivation to win the struggle is one of the salient epic turning points of history. |
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His suit was filed under section 1983, a federal statute that gives a remedy for the deprivation of constitutional rights by officials acting under color of state law. |
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The 84-acre Brookfields Park site will be a mix of office and industrial space to create new business opportunities in an area once blighted by deprivation. |
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Detainees there were subject to sleep deprivation, shackled to bars with their hands above their heads. |
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For me I'm a little bit claustrophobic, so whenever I've had the sensory deprivation, the gags and the blindfolds and of course the heat I would get panicked. |
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It says they were exposed to beating, sleep deprivation and waterboarding. |
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Although billed as the ultimate exercise in sleep deprivation, shattered competitors have been allowed occasional catnaps agreed by the producers. |
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He thought her inability to recall the circumstances of the killing was likely to have been impaired by substance abuse and consequent sleep deprivation. |
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He suffers from sleep deprivation and it is beginning to affect his work. |
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And, of course, the sleep deprivation time bomb caused by all these time bombs ticking away. |
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In times of water deprivation, urine electrolyte and osmotic concentration increases while urination rate decreases. |
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Several prisoners detained in 2012 complained of sleep deprivation, extreme temperatures, and solitary confinement. |
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About 300 people were killed in the camp itself, with at least 98 of them dying from deprivation or torture. |
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Eventually his conscience gets the better of him during a pointless sensory deprivation experiment on a monkey. |
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Neurons begin to die within four to six minutes of oxygen deprivation. |
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We in the West don't know what material deprivation is because of pandemic, disordered acquisitiveness. |
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Nor is it calorie deprivation alone that can harm the developing fetus. |
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This chiasmic image of the subject's imperviousness suggests a sensory deprivation beyond sublimity, like that of abacinated anti-epistemology. |
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Thus, global neoliberalism systematically causes relative deprivation as well as absolute immiseration of masses of people. |
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They whine that they are suffering sleep deprivation because of the do-gooders who come around during the night trying to give them food. |
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Just prior to their article publication, we described a similar case of epithelioid hemangioma with painful erections and sleep deprivation. |
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Counterpose this with the high rates of deprivation in the city, as recent national government evidence highlights. |
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Monoglots who share Mr Griffiths'' outlook should stop trying to make their own linguistic deprivation the gold standard for the rest of us. |
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But delay hurts, deprivation is unfair, and waiting matters. |
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Secobarbital attenuates excitotoxicity but potentiates oxygen glucose deprivation neuronal injury in cortical cell culture. |
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It really brings home the amount of deprivation you lived through, and it's very common for grief to come up like this. |
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The Church of England set up the Church Urban Fund in the 1980s to tackle poverty and deprivation. |
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The relative amount of deprivation is similar to the East Midlands, except the South West has much fewer deprived areas. |
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Evacuation during the course of the war also revealed, to more prosperous Britons, the extent of deprivation in society. |
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At this time when poverty, deprivation and neglect seem to have got worse we should do more. |
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A more extensive system of social welfare benefits was established by the Attlee Government, which did much to reduce acute social deprivation. |
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Despite Glasgow's economic renaissance, the East End of the city remains the focus of social deprivation. |
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The stark exception is the village of Jaywick, which suffers from extremely high levels of deprivation. |
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Most minority ethnic groups experience greater material deprivation than the white majority but social participation is, on average, higher. |
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He considers that everyone has the right to use any means necessary to prevent deprivation of their civil liberties and force could be necessary. |
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Although deprivation in Brighton is distributed across the whole of the city it is more concentrated in some areas than others. |
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Having less sleep than this is common among humans, even though sleep deprivation can have negative health effects. |
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Ships losses should not be confused with crew losses from disease, deprivation, accident, combat and desertion. |
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In group B, the esophagostoma of one patient was harvested and then the patient was administrated with fasting and water deprivation and neoplasty and got a good outcome. |
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The disciplinary regulations for bhikkhus and bhikkhunis are intended to create a life that is simple and focused, rather than one of deprivation or severe asceticism. |
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Galeano is facing prosecution for illegal deprivation of liberty, extortion, instigation of perjury, and embezzlement in connection with the AMIA lawsuit. |
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The region, from studies of multiple deprivation, shows similarities with Yorkshire and the Humber, and is more deprived than the neighbouring East Midlands. |
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Sleep deprivation is one of the most powerful tools with which to break someone's will and is used by interrogators the world over to disorientate their victims. |
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In Givon prison the authorities tried to disorientate us through sleep deprivation and the removal of our watches and the prison clock recording the wrong time. |
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The psychotomimetic effects of short-term sensory deprivation. |
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Key and quick statistics tables for households, health and deprivation. |
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An area of greater deprivation extends to the west of the city. |
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After this mournful deprivation, I was, for a long time, ravenless. |
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More common techniques used to provoke all patients with seizures include hyperventilation, photic stimulation, sleep deprivation, and AED withdrawal. |
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Heart-warming and tear-jerking, The Fifteen Streets sees its romantic love story play out against a vivid backdrop of social deprivation and class divides. |
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In the early 1950s, it was believed by numerous people that poverty had been all but abolished from Britain, with only a few isolated pockets of deprivation still remaining. |
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The hypoxic chambers and sleep deprivation suite cost around pounds 250,000 and received a pounds 200,000 grant from the Higher Education Funding Council. |
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Following 48 hours of sleep deprivation, 12 young male volunteers showed marked reductions of DNA synthesis after stimulation with phytohemagglutinin. |
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But wait, here we go, flotation therapy, deprivation of the senses. |
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