Well the strap can slip or the eyelet rings can break, and the whole lot hits the floor unless you have lightning reflexes. |
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The first two, habituation and respondent learning are specific to behaviors called reflexes. |
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A bundle of giant nerve fibres tied to the mantle give them very rapid reflexes. |
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Respiratory criteria, such as spontaneous respiratory rate, thinness of secretions, and cough and swallow reflexes, were evaluated. |
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These reflexes are initiated by the excitation of duodenal mucosal chemoreceptors to acid, fats, and osmotic pressure in the luminal contents. |
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His reflexes seemed a shade slower than his days in Toronto, and his mellow personality differed from Hasek's intense persona. |
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Portuguese and Dutch, both important colonial languages of the region, left no reflexes in Tok Pisin. |
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Impulses include what we would call today drives, appetites, instincts, and unconditioned reflexes. |
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This was well established through analysis of reflexes in crayfish abdominal musculature. |
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Your baby is born with reflexes, some of which disappear within a few days or weeks. |
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Only the reflexes and natural ability that years of practice had given him was keeping him close. |
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Her involuntary reflexes kicked in, and she threw out her arms, managing to break his fall. |
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In hypoxia also, they initiate vasoconstrictive reflexes which act to maintain the arterial blood pressure. |
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Continuous acquisition and measurement of vestibulo-ocular reflexes can be realised real-time by eye-tracking. |
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This light-headedness could indirectly have effects of vestibulo-spinal and vestibulo-ocular reflexes. |
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Hitting a speed bag correctly takes time and practice but pays off in sharper timing and reflexes. |
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As spittle from her mouth hit his face, his reflexes made him blink at the sudden feelings of the droplets falling onto his skin. |
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Bunker qualified ninth and 11th for the two races, but jumped five positions with fast reflexes in the standing start of each race. |
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The fact that he could not hit the net even once was down to the reflexes of the one-time York stopper. |
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In fact, games like five stones are excellent for developing reflexes while a game like Paandi or hopscotch inculcates a sense of balance. |
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He said swimming was a technical sport which required swimmers to be taught certain reflexes while still young in order to be top-class swimmers. |
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She had quick reflexes, however, kicking him off of her and swiping at him with her knife. |
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From then on, Denis and I diligently hunted for evidence that human beings were something more than the sum of their conditioned reflexes. |
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Physical examination revealed pale skin and mucous membranes, as well as bilaterally decreased patellar and Achilles tendon reflexes. |
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Driving in an intoxicated state makes a person prone to accidents as alcohol impairs judgement and slows reflexes. |
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According to a Chinese Psychological Society report, Pavlov's theory of conditioned reflexes dominated in this period. |
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Your balancing reflexes can't kick in unless your leg muscles are strong enough and your joints flexible enough to respond. |
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Because four years of mind-numbing lectures have dulled my mental reflexes, I momentarily floundered in a sea of possible replies. |
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The mouth and throat are numbed up or frozen with a local anesthetic until all cough and gag reflexes are gone. |
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But few other games really engage the intellect, instead of just the reflexes. |
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He knows where to be, has the ability to deflect a shot coming in and has the quick reflexes to pounce on rebounds. |
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Displaying cat-like reflexes, Beene proved she was as adept at frustrating the world's most prolific goal scorers as her more famous rival. |
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It took both reflexes acting in concert to deliver the people of the Chagos archipelago into exile. |
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He's a brilliant goalminder whose reflexes have shown he has the quality to gain national team colours by now. |
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However he is more famous for his subsequent studies on reflexes and for laying the foundations of the field of behavioural psychology. |
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A good puzzle game tests logic, reflexes and wit in the act of problem solving. |
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Cough is mediated by the interaction of sensory afferent nerves, central cough reflexes, and local axon reflexes. |
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Families frequently misdiagnose their loved ones' involuntary muscle reflexes as consciousness. |
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He saw people as conditioned reflexes, not souls with intentions, willpower and choice. |
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Neurologic examination revealed symmetric reflexes with normal sensation and strength. |
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Pavlov's studies investigated the way in which environmental stimuli inspired biological reflexes in animals. |
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These are inhibitory reflexes, excited by deglutition, by gastric distension, and by intestinal dilatation. |
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When the nervous system becomes involved, the muscle tendon bundles remain hypertonic and pain reflexes in the area are activated. |
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The reflexes in the feet are stimulated with various massage techniques to promote healing in the body. |
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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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Deep tendon reflexes disappear within the first few days of symptom onset. |
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Secretion into the bloodstream is increased by the presence of food, particularly protein, in the stomach, and is also stimulated by neural reflexes. |
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Last but not least, caffeinated coffee helps improve one's reflexes. |
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Active mobility, reflexes and epicritic sensory testing were normal. |
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The first place I found was this tiny medical supply company that sold scalpels, surgical clamps, bone saws and that little hammer they test your reflexes with. |
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The use of induction agents, such as thiopentone, and muscle relaxants when a patient's airway reflexes are still present, can counteract these effects. |
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The patient should be tested for deep tendon reflexes and clonus. |
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In the new age of fluidly changing computer skills it is the kids, reflexes honed by years of electronic games, who lead the field, not the greybeards. |
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The manner in which fragments of motor patterns or autonomic reflexes are transformed into social signals are described in part by the evolutionary process of ritualization. |
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With its high-tech materials, quick reflexes and smooth ride, this bike feels every bit as responsive as any of the big-buck superbikes on the market. |
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Monitor urine output, deep tendon reflexes and serum levels. |
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Most of his movements are uncoordinated or involuntary reflexes. |
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Situations involving involuntary movements of the head where vestibulo-ocular reflexes are important to control eye position are given in section 5 above. |
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Deep tendon reflexes of the patellar and Achilles tendon were normal. |
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In fact, many of the words for which Gerritsen suggests Dutch ancestry are reflexes of the most basic Pama-Nyungan vocabulary. |
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If these reflexes have no time to respond, the vibrations will damage the delicate hair cells in the cochlea and can rupture the eardrum. |
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No Brainer 2D is based on the popular online game that tests brainpower and reflexes by a series of quickfire questions. |
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Lower abdominal and cremasteric reflexes were lost and plantar reflexes were bilaterally extensor. |
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The birds lacked papillary reflexes to light, and there were no gross lesions in the eyes. |
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Contrary to what may be popularly assumed, racing drivers as a group do not have unusually good reflexes. |
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It is a progressive neurodegenerative disease characterized by muscle atrophy, weakness, fasciculations, and hyperactive reflexes. |
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Civitas was a popular and widely used word in ancient Rome, with reflexes in modern times. |
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Under that last meaning some places took on the name, civitas, or incorporated it into their name, with the later civita or civida as reflexes. |
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I have the laggardly reflexes of a sleep-deprived 42-year-old who needs but vainly refuses to purchase eyeglasses. |
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Research has shown that Class II malocclusion can result in hypotonia of the orofacial musculature, causing tongue thrusting, poor swallowing reflexes and mouth breathing. |
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Weighing in at 218, Louis was still strong, but his reflexes were gone. |
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Because they stimulate the retropharynx and promote gagging, oral airways must not be used in alert patients or in those with intact gag reflexes. |
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The keeper then seemed to claw it out with fabulous reflexes only for TV replays to show the ball had most probably crossed the line before Forster had shovelled it away. |
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Peripheral neuropathy in patients with CKD can manifest as paraesthesias, weakness, muscle wasting, reduced or absent tendon reflexes or impaired sense of vibration. |
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Examples of vestigial structures in humans include wisdom teeth, the coccyx, the vermiform appendix, and other behavioural vestiges such as goose bumps and primitive reflexes. |
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Symptoms such as shuffling gait, loss of dexterity, festination, freezing of gait, hypophonia and loss of articulation, and falls because of loss of postural reflexes. |
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Second, she cites two examples to show that animal behavior is not always a matter of mechanistically explainable reflexes because it is often too flexible and complex. |
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The other brainstem reflexes were all intact and there was no meningism. |
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The patient's neurological examination revealed left homonymous hemianopia, mild hemiparesis of distal upper extremities and globally hyperactive deep tendon reflexes. |
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To be truly successful using this style they must have good reflexes, a high level of prediction and awareness, pinpoint accuracy and speed, both in striking and in footwork. |
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