The skin conductance response to electric shock stimuli does not habituate, even after many trials. |
|
Unlike other birds that live on the forest floor, trumpeters are not particularly shy and readily habituate to the presence of humans. |
|
Typically what you habituate to are stimuli of no proven consequence like the clothes on your body or the ticking of the clock. |
|
A basis for such abnormality has been identified in a defective ability to habituate to repetitive sensorial stimulation. |
|
It's true they habituate to pallets, to the fish feed, and herring will grow up in the fish pens. |
|
Western gorillas are widely acknowledged to be difficult to habituate to human presence, thereby limiting tourism potential. |
|
There is a large body of anecdotal evidence to suggest that elephants habituate to gunshots if exposed to them for a prolonged period of time. |
|
Even so, black bears habituate quickly to handouts given by tourists, and this lack of fear of humans often leads to conflicts. |
|
Every hour we hear tweeters remonstrating with the very site they habituate. |
|
To be an addict, by definition, is to habituate to something compulsively or obsessively. |
|
Prompts can be used to habituate people to the new behaviour over time until it becomes automatic. |
|
Stress, however, may affect breeding success and the decision to habituate breeding females should be made with caution. |
|
Coyotes generally fear and avoid humans, but they habituate well to human presence in parks and cities and are found with regularity in urban settings such as Chicago and Los Angeles. |
|
For example, a tendency to respond to an attractive food odour will decline if the food is out of reach, and many animals habituate to flavours that are mildly distasteful on first encounter. |
|
Some habituate relatively easily while others do not. |
|
The ease with which one can habituate to even the most striking of stimuli became clear to him when he and his wife were driving through the mountains of Canada. |
|
At first this huge machine will obviously come out as unusual and unattractive to the animals and will require a lot of patience in order to habituate them. |
|
For an introvert trying to navigate social situations that demand extraverted qualities, it might be helpful to habituate oneself to an upright, 'extraverted' posture during those times. |
|
Mountain gorillas have not been hunted for food, and their more open habitat can allow visual contact over hundreds of meters, so they have been relatively easy to habituate to close human presence. |
|
With a persistent compound the insects would be in a continual state of alarm or would habituate to the odour, thus reducing its value as an alarm pheromone. |
|
|
Habituation to the signal may also have been an issue, as the nerve cells of noctuids previously have been shown to habituate to a continuous ultrasonic tone. |
|