From a technical standpoint, a brain tumor removal operation is called a craniotomy. |
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And that is all that's registered in my brain during fifth period math class. |
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Few sporadic reports describe post-mortem changes in human brain of heat stress victims. |
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Since the majority of brain development happens post-natally, an infant's experience of the physical world is especially formative, Painter says. |
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And your brain is putting out follicle stimulating hormone, trying to get the ovary to respond. |
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Many philosophers treat the beliefs and desires postulated by folk psychology as brain states with symbolic contents. |
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The parents of a teenage girl who died after battling a brain tumour for seven years have spoken of her courage. |
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Researchers believe these synaptic changes, called long-term potentiation or LTP, are the basis for learning in the brain. |
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There were no significant skull fractures and so this really is a case of the brain rattling within the cranium. |
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Occasionally, tumors may develop in the brain, on cranial nerves, or on the spinal cord. |
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From the brain stem emerge pairs of cranial nerves, analogous to the spinal nerves that innervate the limbs and trunk. |
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She had to undergo an emergency craniotomy to remove blood clots in her brain. |
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For brain aneurysms, a specialised surgical procedure called a craniotomy is carried out to open the head. |
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He had been diagnosed with a brain tumour in 2003 after passing out at the wheel of his car. |
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During these periods of intense cravings there can be bouts of rage, brain fog and fatigue. |
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I say the problem lies with the late introduction of English language which is delayed until the child's brain fossilises. |
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The brain of the creodonts was generally of relatively small size and their intelligence presumably low. |
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This person has maps on the brain and can be a fount of obscure geographical and cultural knowledge. |
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And you can see that these crinkles in the outer layer of the brain in Alzheimer's Disease have taken on a very kind of moth-eaten appearance. |
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The distinct morphology of this and other brain cacti, known as cristate or crested growth, is caused by an apical meristem gone awry. |
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Many of the critical periods for early brain development are over by the time a child is six years old. |
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From late pregnancy through the second year of life, the human brain experiences a critical period of accelerated growth. |
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If cross eyes are not treated, your child's brain will not use his weaker eye. |
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This isn't a record that will help clear a party, but it will still fry your brain. |
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All the drugs he had taken in his lifetime had fried his brain too far for serious conversations. |
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The painful cry of some one nearly having their brain cells fried gave her the distraction she needed. |
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It would fry my little brain and suck out what little creativity I have left Thanks. |
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There are great commercials out there, but I don't know if kids are listening to the commercials about frying your brain. |
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She was very understanding and said she would rather have one of her good workers take the time off than keep going and completely fry her brain. |
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After two fairly ghastly days at work, a dose of high culture was exactly what my frazzled out little brain was crying out for. |
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Computed tomography of his brain showed that his frontal lobe and a large portion of his parietal and temporal lobes were missing. |
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Caressing, hugging, stroking, and cuddling all send a chain reaction of chemicals to signal your brain that this is pleasurable. |
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This must be one of the questions with which he has been cudgelling his brain over the last twelve months or so. |
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Something that will let me do a bit of much-needed spring cleaning in my fuddled brain. |
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I was worried about leaving Rob with them, in case his simple brain was fuddled by their complex arguments of Just Because, All Right? |
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The cannabis debate can fuddle the brain almost as much as the drug itself. |
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Laboratory tests found that drinking regular cuppas inhibits the activity of certain enzymes in the brain. |
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As the curtain rose on the stage, Evan's brain actually functioned the way he had wanted it to for so long. |
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There don't seem to be any spaces after full stops and all the abbreviations make my brain hurt. |
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This remodeling probably underpins functionally useful retraining techniques after brain injury. |
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But I haven't had any fights with the editor yet, and about all that remains is to remap the function key shortcuts in my brain. |
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The steep, slimy furrows might be an image of the surface of your brain, covered by the infected membrane. |
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The second most obvious difference is that folds and furrows mark the surface of the human brain, while the surface of the mouse brain is smooth. |
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People with severe brain damage are not the only ones futilitarians want to push out of the life boat. |
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Olney, who was instrumental in banning the use of cyclamates, warned that aspartame had brain damaging properties. |
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The brain lesion was subsequently biopsied and diagnosed as metastatic adenoid cystic carcinoma. |
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The brain is subdivided into areas of similarity to form a cytoarchitectonic map. |
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We demonstrate the complex cytoarchitecture of the planarian brain, despite the simple superficiality of the morphology. |
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Casey's brain kicked into gear, her inner daemons flagging something from an old puzzle book. |
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The whinnying was becoming louder, and the marching was practically drumming through her brain, it was so close. |
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My brain is still spinning from ETech, where we were eating our own dog food all week trying out social software during the show. |
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He galumphs on as though his brain and limbs are still sounding each other out. |
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Mr Smith said severe physical illness had resulted in physical damage to the brain. |
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If this condition persists too long the baby suffers irreparable brain damage. |
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Wayne hit the windscreen of a car in the smash, severely damaging his brain. |
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All in all, the indications are that the research might tell us something about how the brain behaves when gaming. |
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In normal circumstances, nerve cells in the part of the brain called the basal ganglia produce the chemical dopamine. |
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Occurrence of neurodegeneration was indicated by the vacuolar appearance of neural tissues of the brain or ganglia. |
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Sugar feeds the brain, and fluctuations in the level of this fuel can lead to precipitous changes in a child's mood. |
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How can a bird with such a small brain remember the precise locations of so many food caches? |
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Previous studies indicate that expanded brain volume in predatory mammals leaves less room for jaw muscles. |
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It also cares for people with brain injuries and stroke victims, and provides respite and day care services. |
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The plush red-velvet setting is just right for an evening that has an extravagant peacock gaudiness but no discernible heart or brain. |
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The premotor cortex and other brain regions associated with motor representations also became more active. |
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The only tools he needs to conduct business are a daytimer, a typewriter and his brain. |
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It is said that certain music will deactivate brain cells, which is the root cause of negative thoughts. |
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The vertebrates are characterized by the presence of a bony skeleton and a brain. |
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It was then that other emotions thundered into her brain, clouded her vision and deafened her to the sounds of the birds and windsong. |
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In around one in a thousand cases, measles can cause a serious brain condition which can lead to brain damage and deafness. |
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The deaminated H3-metabolites of tyramine were isolated and identified in different regions of the brain. |
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Eventually, over a period of many generations, the remainder of the brain capacity will be utilised. |
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If you have too much cell death at the wrong time, then that results in disturbed brain development. |
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Whoever had the 'genius' idea to make Cole Porter 'hip with the kids' needs a brain transplant. |
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Ever since I was a wee lad of five, it's been imprinted on my brain to be chivalrous and gentlemanly. |
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The team found that the brain connections deteriorated three times as fast in the genu compared to the splenium. |
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Dr. Just said that the brain could interpret letters either spatially, as geometric shapes, or linguistically, by the names of the letters. |
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Innateness is about the extent to which the brain is prewired, plasticity about the extent to which it can be rewired. |
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Animals were killed by decapitation and destruction of the brain and spinal cord. |
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The wind rushed through the holes in the booth, prickling my skin like wisps of memories flooding my quivering brain. |
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Twisted forms of brain proteins called prions spread the disease, making normal proteins misfold. |
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Dr. Doshi explained the effectiveness of deep brain stimulation surgery during his presentation. |
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The procedure, called deep brain stimulation, has been used for other movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease. |
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About 90 percent of children with the most severe form of spina bifida develop hydrocephalus, or fluid on the brain. |
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The HIV virus promotes dementia, then the brain activity becomes hyperactive. |
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Studies looking at pathological or brain imaging data would be needed to address these possibilities. |
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Hyperactivity of noradrenaline in the brain has been found to correlate with aggressive behaviour in humans. |
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Because the area was hyperesthetic and because he feared damaging his brain he was afraid to wash or even touch this skin. |
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Pathologists have identified degenerative changes in brain samples of diseased cattle similar to scrapie-infected sheep brain. |
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Incoming data from our senses travel on these neural pathways on the way to interpretation in the brain. |
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The brain is a physical entity filled with cells that interact chemically via biochemical pathways. |
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Seasonal Affective Disorder patients tend to exhibit hyperphagia and carbohydrate cravings, symptoms typical of inadequate brain serotonin. |
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In hypertonic syndromes the brain compensates by increasing osmoles in the brain cells. |
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We may suppose that the brain revives after clinical death and goes through the basic stages that it had experienced while dying. |
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A near death experience involves people who suffer a short period of clinical death, when heart or brain functioning stops. |
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Refreshing your brain can sometimes be a little hard, but in the long run it always pays off. |
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The internal carotid artery supplies blood to the middle ear, brain, hypophysis, orbit, and choroid plexus of the lateral ventricle. |
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The brain also links with endocrine gland chemical messengers through the hypothalamus and pituitary gland. |
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The central structure of the brain contains the thalamus, hypothalamus, and pituitary gland. |
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One theory is that light stimulates a part of the brain called the hypothalamus, which controls mood, appetite, and sleep. |
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Like others of these peptides, glucagon is expressed in the brain stem and hypothalamic neurons. |
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Congenital hypothyroidism is a thyroid hormone deficiency that retards growth and brain development. |
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Adverse outcomes during sedation usually have hypoxemia as a common pathway after hypoventilation or apnea leading to brain injury or death. |
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The human brain is made up of molecules that are woven together in incredibly complex strands and ribbons of clumpy gray goo. |
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Trotsky was eventually discovered in a hotel in Mexico where Stalin's agent killed him by plunging an ice pick into his brain. |
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On August 20, 1940, at his exile retreat in Coyoacan, Mexico, a Stalinist police agent plunged an ice pick into Trotsky's brain. |
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In this procedure, the frontal lobe of the brain was surgically destroyed with a tool like an ice pick. |
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He died April 17 from brain injuries suffered in a fall on an icy Manhattan sidewalk. |
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The infected cells stick together, forming clots in the fine blood vessels of the brain. |
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Stroke is caused by a clot which prevents blood from reaching the brain and is one of the single biggest killers behind cancer and heart disease. |
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The thickened blood may clot in the fingers and toes, causing numbness, or in the brain, causing dizziness and confusion. |
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But her brain soon caught up with her feelings, and she rounded on him, intense anger now clouding her face. |
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She's peeved, and you're left wondering if she's having a brain lapse or something. |
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A hallmark of Alzheimer's is the buildup of clumps of proteins in the brain. |
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The mutant protein in each of these conditions is prone to clump together, forming aggregates, which appear to damage brain tissue. |
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People having abdominal, pelvic, or brain scans may be given special instructions in advance about eating and drinking. |
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Complex nerve messages are sent between the brain, the bladder, and the pelvic floor muscles. |
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Experts on dreams say that your dreams and visions are your mind's way of cleaning out the clutter in your brain. |
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The penetrating whine of the fighter-bombers and the blast of the missiles overwhelm my brain, robbing me of both understanding and psyche. |
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Meditation is by no means easy listening, but if it's a spiritual experience you're after then this'll blow the cobwebs from your brain for good. |
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In the cochlea in the inner ear, the vibrations are changed into electric signals that move along the nerves to the brain. |
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This is because hearing is not a property of the ear but a property of the brain as a machinery that converts noise into meaningful percepts. |
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Once he has satisfied the creative side of his brain, the pragmatic side takes over and he meticulously fabricates and assembles his knives. |
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I was wearing a helmet, full face guard and everything, but my head hit the ice and I kind of felt my brain shake a little bit. |
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When disaster happens in a surgery, the staff are ill-equipped in every way to deal with a situation where brain death is four minutes away. |
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Purge the brain of factoids and start real life again, get with some real writing, read a real book. |
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The same is true for visual illusions, hypoxia and other factors affecting interpretation as the brain receives information from the eyes. |
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The idea is that when children use tactile, visual and auditory faculties simultaneously, brain activity is at its fullest. |
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The brain requires practice at forming those mental images in order to absorb increasingly complex or abstract ideas in later life. |
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In some cases, the blood vessels of the heart, brain, lungs and legs can be imaged without invasive procedures. |
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He will engage in meditation while having his brain scanned by state-of-the-art brain imaging devices. |
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It is a fact that the male brain is particularly responsive to and stimulated by visual imagery. |
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Some studies suggest that tamoxifen interferes with brain metabolism and cognitive function. |
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The cognitive mechanisms in his brain had ground to a halt, as had everything else. |
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You don't need to know all of neuroscience, cognitive psychology and so on to know how your brain works. |
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His research is a serious scientific enterprise and it combines brain scan technology, cognitive science, and philosophical reasoning. |
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It is also necessary to exclude reversible causes of failure of brain function, including depressant drugs and hypothermia. |
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The cogwheels in my brain started churning as I scrubbed my hands under the tap. |
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When blood pressure drops, less blood flows to the brain, leading to fainting. |
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Adults, who were shy as toddlers, had stronger brain activity in a part of the brain associated with coyness. |
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There was no brain death, no persistent vegetative state, no transplantation. |
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This is the most extreme form of brain damage and is called a persistent vegetative state. |
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Doctors saved her life, but she suffered brain damage and lapsed into a persistent vegetative state. |
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She is brain damaged and remains in what appears to be a persistent vegetative state. |
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He is in a persistent vegetative state which means he is paralysed and has suffered brain damage. |
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For example, a person in a persistent vegetative state has a working brain stem, but the higher levels of the brain may have been destroyed. |
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One of the major consequences of stroke is immobility, as the parts of the brain involved in controlling movement are damaged. |
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The body's immune system responds by creating a membrane around this infected portion of the brain. |
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A British study found that chronic jet lag causes the brain to shrink, impairing memory. |
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It includes specialist guides for example, on working with people with brain injuries or visual impairment. |
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Later, it was said that they affected the brain and could cause memory impairment. |
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The words were still imprinted in my brain, something I always believed I could forget but never could. |
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You can't relax your brain even for a second, otherwise you will lose a lot of notes doing those fast coloraturas. |
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Accidents or strokes that damage the retina or affect particular areas of the brain can cause colour blindness. |
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My whole brain seemed to fizz and the world appeared to be a brighter, more colourful place. |
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The majority of dancers, in an attempt to obscure the reality, push this theme to some faraway corner of the brain. |
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Nerve impulses created by this process travel to the brain via the optic nerve. |
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Neurotransmitters are the chemicals used by the nervous system to transmit nerve impulses to and from the brain. |
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The modules will be linked to retinal nerves that will then send electrical impulses to the brain for processing. |
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Removing the cat's cortex guaranteed that there would be no neural impulses from its higher brain. |
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The inner ear then contains hair cells that respond to the fluid movement and then generate an electrical impulse that goes to the brain. |
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The modules will be linked to existing retinal nerves that will send electrical impulses to the brain for processing. |
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The scientific explanation for addictive personality places importance on that fact that the frontal lobes in the brain may underlie impulsivity. |
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A large pulse through his brain sent him into a deep coma in which he slept for days. |
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More recently, some clinicians have tried to induce comas in patients whose brain damage doesn't come from a head injury. |
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He had been in a deep coma at the Royal Hospital for Neurodisability after suffering severe brain damage. |
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The executive areas of the brain, which are responsible for your, oftentimes, inattention to detail. |
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A few reactors in her brain decided to give up the ghost, and she simply stared, incapable of speech or action. |
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It mimics the effect heroin has on receptors in the brain, reducing the cravings addicts experience when coming off the drug. |
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When you put an array of electrodes on the visual cortex of the brain, each electrode produces a small spot of light called a phosphene. |
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Caffeine prevents mental and physical fatigue by blocking receptors that notify the brain of low energy levels. |
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And recent tests in the North East on a group of coach potato schoolchildren appeared to confirm that this is indeed the stuff of brain power. |
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Phylogenically old structures, such as the brain stem, are considered more resistant to gene-environment influence. |
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The lateral part of the anterior commissure traverses the inferior part of the brain. |
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It is also high in vitamins, minerals, protein, phytochemicals and chlorophyll, and it may work as a cancer preventative and brain booster. |
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The innermost layer is the pia mater, a delicate vascular layer adherent to the surface of the brain and spinal cord. |
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But most of the evidence is indirect, because it's not possible to examine the brain tissue of people directly. |
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The quiz master joined us and we tried to pick his brain about where he gets his questions from. |
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Since I was not even remotely interested in purchasing comics, I spent the next hour picking his brain. |
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They provide easy pickings and a good source of revenue and it doesn't require too much brain power. |
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They reduced this activity by applying a source of magnetic stimulation to the head, inducing an electric current in the brain. |
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One thing is certain, the language was ineffaceably stamped upon my brain, though for a long time no one knew it, least of all myself. |
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Scott didn't seem to get the picture, his brain still working on understanding what Jesse had just told him. |
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Injury to the brain in infancy or early childhood can also cause cerebral palsy. |
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They caution that brain fingerprinting is in its infant stage and may never result in a reliable polygraph. |
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There are plenty of bright shiny colors to keep baby's infantile brain firing on all ten billion synapses until the juice box kicks in. |
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Complications include diarrhoea, pneumonia, ear infection and inflammation of the brain. |
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We are surrounded by sound all the time and it's a lot of info to process in one brain with no relief. |
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There seems to be an endless stream of business ideas flowing from the fertile brain of Sir Iain Noble. |
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Aminolaevulinic acid can cross the placenta and possibly cause toxicity to the developing fetal brain. |
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He devised a computer model and used it to match musical notes to brain patterns. |
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He somehow ingested all the information that's available to him in his brain. |
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Once I've got that, I repeat the number of yards to myself three or four times, ingraining it in my brain. |
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She is the brain behind the conceptualization of this latest gallery that promises to showcase new media art. |
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From the e18 conceptuses, brain, liver, and the placenta were dissected for methylation analysis. |
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The pineal gland in the brain secretes melatonin, which has been linked to depression. |
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These are extremely rare benign tumours which develop from the pineal gland situated between the two halves of the brain. |
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Melatonin is a hormone that is naturally secreted in the evening from the pineal gland in the brain and tells the brain it is time to sleep. |
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Apparently, psychoactive substances stimulate the pineal gland in the brain. |
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In the human body there is a gland called the pineal gland located in the brain almost in the centre of the head. |
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I'm glad you found it funny, it shows that maybe I do have the remote inkling of a sense of humour hidden somewhere in my tiny brain. |
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She would concoct stories in her brain about each picture, the plot taking her wherever it may. |
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The two concoctions were viable elements for either permanent brain damage or death. |
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The two images are slightly different, but the observer's brain stitches them together into a single 3D image field. |
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Valerian also inhibits the enzyme-induced breakdown of GABA in the brain, with concomitant sedation. |
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You'll get a glassful of heart and brain benefits from either French red wine or American Concord grape juice. |
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Most of these have to do with problems of the inner ear or of the brain stem or cerebellum. |
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Keeping your sense of balance depends on your brain processing a variety of information from your eyes, your nervous system and your inner ears. |
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The thing is that the nerve connecting the inner ear and the hearing center in the brain usually has only one thread. |
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In later research, the group established that synesthesia is not only consistent across time but also concretely measurable in the brain. |
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Medical staff concluded he was concussed but there was no lasting brain damage. |
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Rocket propelled grenades, mortars, and other explosive devices cause concussive shock blasts damaging to the brain. |
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The portion of the brain that processes visual input and interprets the messages that the eye sends is called the visual cortex. |
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The testing involves a model of a human head filled with a liquid designed to have similar conductive properties to the brain. |
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An animal's brain distinguishes among colors by comparing the signals it receives from cones containing different opsins. |
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An electrode is inserted into the brain to stimulate either the thalamic nuclei or the subthalamic nuclei. |
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Now, some people will insist that massive strokes leave irreparable injuries to the brain. |
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Why the brain stimulates and confabulates just the memories it does remains a mystery, though there are several plausible explanations. |
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The onset is more insidious in brain tumors and the progress to vomiting is gradual. |
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Cattle are humanely stunned with a captive bolt stunner that penetrates or piths the brain rendering the animal unable to feel pain. |
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People with this condition may also have abnormalities of the brain and pituitary gland. |
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This hormone stimulates the pituitary, another endocrine gland near the brain, to secrete adrenocorticotropic hormone. |
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High correlations were found between the confusability of object categories and the confusability of brain activity maps. |
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This piece of implausible tripe is an insult to the intelligence of even the most brain dead of Sunday night viewers. |
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The former Republican congresswoman from Florida, who specialized in defense issues, died today of complications from a brain hemorrhage. |
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Although her brain was intact, she could just about blink and could barely speak. |
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Shown are conjunctional clusters in different groups of subjects, superimposed on the standard brain. |
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The connections between items correlates with brain research that emphasizes connection-building to increase learning. |
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Glutamate is an important neurotransmitter in the brain, and can be released in large amounts during intense neural activity. |
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Oxytocin had profound effects on the brain, changing the way nerves interacted and altering the brain's physical structure. |
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But he developed brain damage, failed to regain consciousness and died three days after the crash. |
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Instead, the brain is plastic, and our quota of happiness can be enhanced through mental training. |
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So for us this has demonstrated to us a degree of plasticity that we have never known before the brain capable of. |
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Thus, the brain shows considerable plasticity for development of language capacity in young children. |
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Once trained, they go on to produce face parts for burns and cancer victims as well as steel plates for patients undergoing brain surgery. |
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Not that it was any worse than countless other nights there, but maybe my brain has had its fill, maybe I've reached a plateau. |
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Overclocking my brain, so that a mass of thoughts could present themselves on the internal television where my mind decides what to do. |
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Looks to me like your fantastic mother of a brain is interpolating multimodal evidence as to the physical air-blockage position in realtime. |
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There's finally a contact sport that's interested in blending brain and brawn. |
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They kind of ease back to first gear and switch off different parts of the brain in sequence. |
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But a vaccine against nicotine could help reduce withdrawal symptoms and cravings by interrupting the addictive process in the brain. |
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The treatment, called vascular and interventional radiology, aims to help prevent strokes by reducing the chance of brain aneurysms rupturing. |
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Caffeine has a stimulating effect on the brain and nerves, the heart and circulatory system, the stomach and intestines. |
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Scientists now know that's not true, and the brain continually rewires and adapts itself even in old age. |
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I am melting my brain with data entry that has been sat in my in tray accusing me for the past two days. |
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The classic contrecoup contusion has minimal brain injury at the site of impact and contusion in the opposite side of the brain. |
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Doctors introduce the device through a small puncture in the groin area before entering the Merci Retriever into an artery leading to the brain. |
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Barely two months later, the insidious disease had invaded Carol's lungs and brain. |
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There was a strong relationship between this individual invariability in suppressing memory and the degree of brain activation. |
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Various brain regions are connected in the same way as they are in humans and identical neurotransmitters are employed in conveyance of data. |
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Many parents' dread of fevers has to do with the fear of fever convulsions or brain damage. |
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Swelling also may occur in the brain and can cause emergency symptoms such as seizures or convulsions. |
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If treatment is not immediate, the victim's condition can deteriorate to convulsions, brain damage, and eventual death. |
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The involuntary muscles are controlled by structures deep within the brain and the upper part of the spinal cord called the brain stem. |
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The cool and refreshing water caressed his lips, he drank but as he swallowed, his throat sent searing pain to his brain. |
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It is as if a flashbulb suddenly clicked brightly inside his dark, dark brain. |
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In addition to a headache, brain tumors almost always cause problems with coordination, balance, speech, sight, and walking. |
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What a pleasure it was to see an intelligent, meaningful editorial instead of the usual monthly brain flatulence. |
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The brain benefits of grape juice stem from its flavonoids, natural plant chemicals that act as antioxidants. |
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The future effects are unknown, but drug experts fear they may include irreversible brain damage or mental illness. |
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It's a masterwork of narrative mutation, of horrendous flights of fatal fantasy locked inside the brain of a truly troubled soul. |
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When I'm flying, I can feel that part of my brain, like a switch, being flipped on and off. |
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The conception of cornhusking as a sport rather than a chore sprang from the fertile brain of Henry Agard Wallace. |
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This fact confirms directly the concept of higher responsiveness of brain regions to acupuncture of auricular versus corporal points. |
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This is important because if asymptomatic chronic hyponatremia is not corrected, the brain system can be damaged irreversibly. |
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The eye has been compared to a camera due to its ability to process images for interpretation by the occipital cortex of the brain. |
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Such memories are thought to be stored in cortical areas more toward the back of the brain. |
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This work has determined that separate cortical areas of the brain are responsive to different kinds of visual information. |
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It had found another boy whose meningitis had been misdiagnosed as flu and who was now brain damaged. |
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During the experiment, state-of-the-art neuro-imaging technology will be used to monitor the brain activity of a supposedly possessed man. |
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In soccer and boxing there is also the possibility of brain damage due to repeated blows to the head. |
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Apparently, according to this report, I may be more likely to suffer from memory loss and possibly even brain shrinkage in my old age. |
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Meduna identified six patients with focal seizures in whom the brain focus was surgically excised. |
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Peter heard Marc's words through the fog in his brain but the substance of it was clear enough. |
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He sighed, leaning back into the chair and raising his hands to his eyes, as if trying to clear the fog from his brain. |
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Letting out a sigh, Cheryl climbed out of her bed and tried to clear the fog out of her brain. |
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Victor sat down, shaking his head in an attempt to clear the fog overwhelming his brain. |
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What little of it that can get in through my malfunctioning airways brings a fog to my brain. |
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I asked, confused, shaking my head to try to clear the fog that was setting in on my brain. |
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Suddenly the fog cleared from his brain and he heard what the voice was saying. |
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Confusion was fogging my brain up to the point that I couldn't think, I could only feel. |
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The biggest puffer in this Parliament has started to talk about how great the sense of having one's brain fogged up is for one. |
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My brain was so fogged, my memory so poor and my concentration so fleeting that it would take me the entire morning to eke out a paragraph. |
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She groaned and stood up, staggering a bit as sleep continued to fog her brain. |
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He tried to ignore them, but found it extremely difficult when pain filled his thought process, fogging his brain. |
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I asked, trying to keep my voice calm, even though panic was fogging my brain. |
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This was a mild insult between Guardians, to imply that one's brain has been fogged. |
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Confusion and uncertainty fogged Drillian's brain as he shifted uncomfortably, unsure of what to do. |
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Jake's brain was fogged, but he knew well enough that he had been thrown onto his back and the women of his dreams was pinning him down. |
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It acts as a counterirritant that stimulates nerve endings, helping to reduce the number of pain messages that reach the brain. |
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It was developed to provide a greater degree of control in the use of hydrocephalic shunting, a technique for draining the excess fluid from the brain. |
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Scientists are using brain imaging to pinpoint the circuits that are active and connecting when Tibetan Buddhists meditate and Franciscan nuns pray. |
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Melatonin is a hormone secreted at night by the pineal gland of the brain. |
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There's no telling what fiendish acts I may now commit based upon post-hypnotic suggestion that he may or may not have planted in my tender brain. |
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It's probably a delusion, but landscapes clearly correspond to something in the way the brain works, and art is clearly a response to landscape, and the unities. |
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While the situations for each are different, they all illustrate a discrepancy between the sensory input and how the brain interprets the information. |
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Not everyone can have my cool clear-headed rational brain I guess. |
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Keep them away from me, their prissiness is getting to my brain. |
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Though she eventually recovered consciousness, she was left with a speech impediment and the part of the brain that controls emotions was impaired. |
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With visions of poisonous spiders and fanged monsters lurking in hollow trees creeping around in my brain, I tentatively put my hand into the hole. |
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In other words, I switch off my brain and stop interpreting. |
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