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Inhibition - Definition of Inhibition at Dictionary.com a free online dictionary with pronunciation, synonyms, and translation of Inhibition. Look it up now! ... Enzyme inhibition...
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Latent inhibition - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Latent inhibition is a process by which exposure to a stimulus of apparently little or no consequence prevents conditioned associations with that stimulus from being formed. This tendency to disregar...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latent_inhibition |
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Social inhibition - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Social inhibition is a conscious or unconscious constraint or curtailment by a person of a process or behaviour that the person may consider objectionable in a social setting. Inhibitions can serve n...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_inhibition |
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(later sections may not yet be loaded) ... Most drugs are enzyme inhibitors. ... Competitive inhibition is a class of reversible inhibition.
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Dogs normally learn bite inhibition by 4 and a half months of age. Dunbar believes it's the single most important thing that dogs learn. So try to teach your dogs bite inhibition by age three months and reinforce throughout their lives.
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Free Online Library: Molecular Basis of Flame Inhibition [*]. by "Journal of Research of the National Institute of Standards and Technology"; Chemistry Physics Science and technology, general Fireproofing agents ... For the present discussion we will be concerned only with the chemical aspects of flame inhibition.
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Hutchinson encyclopedia article about migration inhibition test. migration inhibition test. Information about migration inhibition test in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. ... (redirected from migration inhibition test)
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Lateral inhibition helps to explain a number of "optical illusions" and, more importantly, provides an excellent example of how the brain is organized to ... To understand lateral inhibition networks and their function, one needs to know a bit about the gross anatomy, optics, and initial neural signals of the eye.
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Jordan Peterson of the University of Toronto and colleages at Harvard University have found that decreased latent inhibition of environmental stimuli appears to correlate with greater creativity among people with high IQ. (same press release available here and here)
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