Emotional possession refers to experiences wherein impulses which are ordinarily restrained are strongly stimulated. |
|
He also argued that economic depressions stimulated goldmining by lowering costs and releasing labour for prospecting. |
|
These photons would continue to multiply as they interacted with additional excited atoms through the process of stimulated emission. |
|
When a laser light source is used to stimulate the release of electrons, the process is called optically stimulated luminescence. |
|
Debate over the ethics of human research was stimulated by antivivisectionists in the nineteenth century. |
|
This was the first inter-state trust, which stimulated antitrust legislation. |
|
The urbanism of Northern dynasts was stimulated by this Mediterranean heritage, transmitted through the genre of Italian view painting. |
|
Of course, they put in one that when stimulated, made the rat experience feelings of euphoria. |
|
She began investing everything in her music which stimulated and energized her. |
|
Olfactory or smell nerve cells are stimulated by the odors around us, whereas gustatory or taste cells react to food and beverages. |
|
His grandfather was a gunsmith who stimulated his interest in firearms at an early age. |
|
Fear, whether it is quelled or stimulated, provides the capacity to both control and manipulate a variety of social and political discourses. |
|
Lowering the water levels in spring stimulated emergent vegetation and raising levels in late summer maintained waterfowl feeding areas. |
|
Next, the points were stimulated with an ear probe to elicit a positive reaction. |
|
Wires are placed on the scalp and the arms or legs are stimulated with a mild electric current. |
|
The carve-up in the 1880s and 1890s of Africa and much of Asia by the great powers stimulated national rivalries and promoted racism. |
|
The object is being stimulated by jets from a rapidly spinning neutron star called a pulsar. |
|
This was a most provoking part of the conference and stimulated a lengthy debate afterwards. |
|
If the soil in the immediate environment is disturbed, as by excessive erosion, positive geotropic growth is stimulated within these lignotubers. |
|
For those who might be stimulated by this letter to try gentian violet for impetigo, the agent must be kept away from the cornea. |
|
|
In both the cases, oocytes were exposed to the cytostatic chemical, nocodazole, from the time of hormonally stimulated resumption of meiosis. |
|
In many similar cases, it has been possible to determine the actual transient absorption spectrum after correction for the stimulated emission. |
|
Stimulants, in the form of turpentine emulsion and doses of ipecacuanha, reinforced the weak pulse rate and stimulated blood flow. |
|
Acupuncture points lie on meridians and are stimulated by the insertion of thin, fine needles at various points. |
|
It also stimulated debate on modernism and tradition, on commercialism and social ideology. |
|
Twenty-four hours after transfection, cells were stimulated with ionomycin, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, and calcium chloride. |
|
It is a fact that the male brain is particularly responsive to and stimulated by visual imagery. |
|
The amino acid L-theanine, found in black, green, oohlong, and pekoe teas, stimulated T-cells, the body's first line of defense. |
|
Expression of McHAK2 and McHAK3 was stimulated in leaves of the ice plant in response to high salinity. |
|
Cells were quiesced for 48 h and stimulated with either hyperlipemic or normolipemic sera. |
|
When the resting cells are stimulated, they begin multiplying again, synthesizing RNA and protein. |
|
Travellers often want to be constantly stimulated by the world around them and are genuinely fascinated by the diversity of human civilization. |
|
We idled over a structure loaded with kings stimulated into a feeding frenzy by generous helpings of chum. |
|
The chronaxies of the directly stimulated elements mediating the delay ranged from 0.13 to 0.24 ms. |
|
The gene makes a receptor protein that is stimulated by a brain hormone called vasopressin. |
|
Neural and hormonal mechanisms mediate this tachycardia after arterial baroreceptors are stimulated. |
|
Housing reform and home buying with mortgage loans have also stimulated market demand. |
|
Today, however, our imaginations are stimulated, possibly overstimulated, by dystopic images and scenarios. |
|
It produces heat-resistant spores which may even be stimulated by high temperatures, causing the spores to germinate further. |
|
The paramedic said the trio took turns giving the man heart massage and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, which stimulated vital oxygen to his brain. |
|
|
The quality content has left me feeling mentally stimulated and with heartfelt hope. |
|
Moves in interest rates are always stimulated by the cost of housing in the south east. |
|
This problem has stimulated interest in electronic methods of organising and accessing information. |
|
Curiously enough, Clark's cricket coaching stimulated his interest in Australian history. |
|
The unexpected discovery of this cycle has stimulated much interest in the field as well as in the popular press. |
|
Her infectious enthusiasm and personal encouragement stimulated many younger scientists to work in the field. |
|
German restaurants have encouraged the move to drier wines and have stimulated an interest in food and wine matching. |
|
The competition was promoting contemporary music, and that may have been one of the experiences that stimulated my interest in new music. |
|
This stimulated the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system to reduce intravascular volume via diuresis. |
|
They found that cathine and norephedrine significantly stimulated capacitation in mouse sperm, while preventing the acrosome reaction. |
|
Cathine also stimulated the production of cAMP in uncapacitated sperm whilst inhibiting it in capacitated sperm. |
|
A good dose of caffeine stimulated just the right amount of thought, he figured. |
|
The word laser is an acronym for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation. |
|
Slow circulation leads to a build-up of waste products, but can be stimulated with dry skin brushing. |
|
When stimulated by a magnetic field, Terfenol-D expands and contracts at very high frequency with dramatic force. |
|
Once one oyster begins spawning, the others, stimulated by the hormones released, also spawn. |
|
The alkaloids stimulated the vasomotor and respiratory centers in the brain stem of dogs. |
|
If you use the same room that you use for nightmarishly boring status meetings, don't expect people to be stimulated by the surroundings. |
|
For Isabel, I prepared a mixture of oils which not only soothed the pain and relaxed her, but also stimulated the uterus and brought on labour. |
|
The foot has many thousands of nerve endings which are stimulated during a massage. |
|
|
There are many nerve endings or ganglia near the body surface which can be stimulated to influence some physiological functions. |
|
Once upon an era, batters cheated by corking their bats or taking uppers to keep themselves stimulated. |
|
The profile parallels that observed for bradykinin stimulated smooth muscle cells. |
|
The test was used to compare the number of apoptotic cells in unstimulated versus stimulated lymphocytes. |
|
The pattern of DNA fragmentation is qualitatively the same in both stimulated and unstimulated cells. |
|
For growth measurements, data from stimulated and unstimulated controls did not differ and were combined for each genotype. |
|
Calcareous nannoplankton, although stimulated toward diversification, was obviously less efficient in calcification. |
|
They experience pain, transgress borders and limits, and come into existence in situations that are stimulated by pain. |
|
Once extracted, they can be stimulated in a laboratory to develop into any type of body cell or organ including bone, muscle and body tissue. |
|
They took turns giving the man heart massage and mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, which stimulated vital oxygen to his brain. |
|
The river is brown, sinewy, convulsing like electrically stimulated muscle. |
|
Both showed that the biomaterials stimulated stem cells, producing new bone tissue and fully repairing the rats' bones. |
|
Subsequently, recombination was also shown to be stimulated by RNA polymerase II-driven transcription. |
|
When the male's body shivers the female is stimulated and the eggs and milt are released. |
|
When O2 is supplied to the cells under the microaerophilic conditions, the aerobic respiration will be stimulated. |
|
Growing overseas commerce with colonies stimulated merchants to provide ships, as well as goods for expanding settler societies. |
|
The challenges stimulated more work on genres, like melodrama, that addressed women. |
|
All the three proteoglycans stimulated mice thymocyte and splenocyte proliferation and elevated cell cytotoxicity. |
|
There is a threshold of ATP concentration which stimulated the binding remarkably. |
|
In addition, qualitative analysis of callus indicated that both strains stimulated cell proliferation in the cobiotic cultures. |
|
|
The most potent driving force for this is material aspiration, stimulated by open exchanges with other societies. |
|
The T cell will then be stimulated to respond and initiate the primary immune response. |
|
Patients with wasting diseases were revitalised by drugs which stimulated the synthesis of protein, the key ingredient of muscle, bone and skin. |
|
The observation that stimulated my thinking on this topic was of a humble grammatical phenomenon. |
|
There is increasing support for the idea that in asthma the efferent and afferent nerve fibers may be changed in their capacity to be stimulated. |
|
In addition, cholinergic afferents can be stimulated by a variety of mediators involved in allergen-induced airway inflammation. |
|
I think having stimulated the females to come in season, we actually had two calves this year. |
|
Newly formed edge epithelium, often violaceous in color, indicates stimulated healing. |
|
A long-lasting birefringence change was found to be produced in a tetanically stimulated squid giant axon. |
|
Dietary coriander and onion prominently stimulated the activities of the disaccharidases sucrase, lactase and maltase of intestinal mucosa. |
|
Although expression of carotenoid genes does occur in etiolated plants, their synthesis is stimulated on transfer to light. |
|
The reflexes in the feet are stimulated with various massage techniques to promote healing in the body. |
|
Foreign policy concerns in the 1930s centered on Soviet and German expansionism, which stimulated abortive efforts at Nordic defense cooperation. |
|
Patients in the acupuncture group received therapy in which the acupuncture points related to relaxation and anxiety were stimulated. |
|
Artists were stimulated by Pliny's descriptions of painted grapes so magically real that the birds pecked at them. |
|
First, they stimulated the T-cells strongly enough to prompt the cell to express latent virus but not to trigger other cellular functions. |
|
The phenomenon of helping in cooperative breeding animals has stimulated a great deal of research. |
|
His interest in mathematics was stimulated during his school years in Izmir by a teacher who encouraged him to solve problems in euclidean geometry. |
|
London's economic expansion and the aggregation of so many and varied social elements stimulated the cultural development expressed in Elizabethan and Jacobean theatre. |
|
It has stimulated the opening of other biennials in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, thus reaffirming Cuba's position as a cultural leader within the Third World. |
|
|
Secretion into the bloodstream is increased by the presence of food, particularly protein, in the stomach, and is also stimulated by neural reflexes. |
|
Since alloxan destroys pancreatic beta-cells, it was presumed that fenugreek either stimulated insulin release from remaining beta-cells or had insulin-receptor activity. |
|
In conditions of volume depletion or hypertonicity, secretion of antidiuretic hormone is stimulated, water is reabsorbed, and a concentrated urine is excreted. |
|
And his succulent sausages and lip-smacking rindless unsmoked back bacon have stimulated taste buds in Cuba, where British meat products are banned. |
|
Polyembryonic seeds can arise through several developmental pathways and in some cases may involve apomixis stimulated by fertilization of nearby ovules. |
|
I asked the students to consider the courtyard space, and stimulated thought about guard houses, archways, entrance ways, lower courtyards, moats and drawbridges. |
|
The brain actually atrophies when it isn't stimulated enough. |
|
At the same time, the U.K has adopted policies that have stimulated growth. |
|
The focus is on the revelations and how the reporting enhanced public understanding and stimulated public discussion. |
|
Melodramatic telenovelas have helped bring down the birth rate and stimulated literacy in Mexico and Brazil. |
|
The cheaper yen, off 22 percent against the dollar in the past 12 months, has stimulated higher exports. |
|
And then we transcribed it and discussed it, and it stimulated my thinking and their thinking. |
|
Finally, the structural and metabolic characteristics of the tetanically stimulated muscles are restored to values that allow electrically supported standing up and standing. |
|
The production and distribution of modified, thermostable, brightly fluorescent GFPs suitable for expression in plant cells has stimulated many experiments with plant systems. |
|
Some investigators have claimed that lead affects both peripheral thyroid hormone levels and basal and stimulated thyrotrophin levels in lead-exposed males. |
|
Granted, I was still stimulated, but by much different things, such as the sight of a tree, naked of its leaves, bullied by the biting afternoon gusts. |
|
Precocious foragers-bees stimulated to forage early-also have significantly higher brain levels of the gene's messenger RNA and four-fold higher levels of the enzyme. |
|
He's very monosyllabic, and could put to sleep an over stimulated mule. |
|
Muscles are stimulated by signals from nerve cells called motor neurons. |
|
He developed a scholarly training program and stimulated the growth of museum collections and the fields of anthropology, art history, and museology in Belgium. |
|
|
Growth rate data from stimulated and unstimulated seedlings were not significantly different and were therefore combined to evaluate differences between genotypes. |
|
In 1910 he went to Paris, where the influence of cubism stimulated the development of his geometric, nonobjective style, which he called neoplasticism. |
|
This inhibition was observed in both the directly and indirectly stimulated contractions, and was not changed by addition of neostigmine, an acetylcholine esterase inhibitor. |
|
Out in the wider world, public opinion stirred, especially in the cities, stimulated by the pamphlets and broadsheets which printing made possible. |
|
Further interest in primary-source Roman Antiquity was stimulated by the excavations which revealed Campanian art and architecture to an excited generation. |
|
They suggested that the color change is stimulated by perception of the background color by the larval ocelli and effected by a neurophysiological pathway. |
|
The time he spent in Switzerland in 1824, and his journey along the Rhine in 1825, may also have stimulated his considerable interest in mineralogy. |
|
Teachers presented ideas that stimulated their students' interests. |
|
The higher than normal turnover has stimulated a healthy competition from challengers who sense a greater opportunity of winning in a fight between two new contestants. |
|
Muscle spindles and Golgi tendon organs are receptor organs found inside skeletal muscle, which are stimulated by stretch of the muscle or tension on the tendon. |
|
When fatty food passes from the stomach into the intestine, the gall bladder is stimulated to contract by cholecystokinin, a hormone released from the lining of the intestine. |
|
These seeds are green and photosynthetically active, and lipid synthesis has been shown to be stimulated in response to light in developing rape seeds. |
|
Having partaken heartily of frozen pemmican, I stuffed my pocket, bundled the rest into a bag on the sledge, and started off in high glee, stimulated in body and mind. |
|
Neither the philosophical content of the 12th century book nor the religious content of the law codex stimulated the creation of such a decoration program. |
|
The North American imagists, although stimulated by French symbolism, tended to use the metaphor sparingly and relied on a poetry of understatement. |
|
Neutrophils stimulated to respiratory burst by phorbol myristate acetate activate IQ, and inhibitor studies have identified myeloperoxidase as the enzyme responsible. |
|
Romantic interest in classical statuary seems to have stimulated this growing interest in physical culture and in an association of a sound body with morality. |
|
Their activities stimulated and maintained the coastal and inland transport infrastructure at the local level, and facilitated the growth of trade and enterprise. |
|
Slices of rat hippocampus were stimulated with electrical signals, millions of times over, until they could be sure which electrical input produces a corresponding output. |
|
Because of the considerable impact of distribution costs on the aggregate cost price, it seems important that competition between dealers should also be stimulated. |
|
|
And the vibrant images from the 19th-century post-Impressionist master's canvases stimulated their imagination to the full, resulting in a multi-coloured eyecatching display. |
|
Unfamiliar objects, camera gantries, floodlights and trails of wire stimulated considerable interest among the population of boarding students staying at the school. |
|
The rest of us successful Stone-Age types get hungry two hours after 1,500 calories of pasta primavera, because our insulin is stimulated and lowers blood sugar. |
|
We found corroborative evidence that neutrophils are stimulated to degranulate and produce reactive oxidants in the airways of children with Cystic Fibrosis. |
|
Then electroconvulsive therapy, developed in the 1930s for treatment of depression, showed that the brain could be stimulated by applying electric current through the skull. |
|
In view of the parliamentary elections in June 2005, growth is stimulated by expansionary fiscal and wage policies and could show some signs of overheating. |
|
Glandular secretion is stimulated with no alteration in plasma exudation. |
|
The stimulated macrophages secrete chemotactic factors such as lymphokines, which then attract T-helper lymphocytes. |
|
Philosophical discourse was stimulated by the rediscovery of Aristotle and his emphasis on empiricism and rationalism. |
|
Microseismic provides critical information about the completion process, such as stimulated reservoir volume and a fracture's azimuth. |
|
Cajeput oil soothed and stimulated, petitgrain was balanced as well as calming and sweet orange oil detoxified and cleansed. |
|
A device of molecular dimensions moves like a simple machine when stimulated by light, according to a new study. |
|
The next step, says Hulvat, will be to produce an actual organic light-emitting diode, which glows when stimulated electrically. |
|
The 100 per cent tax shelter stimulated production and the following two years saw a resurgence of feature filmmaking. |
|
Even those who think he overstresses this covenant narrative that under-evaluates the new in Paul will be stimulated by this book. |
|
This growth process is stimulated by somatotrophin released by the anterior pituitary gland. |
|
Hedgehog morphogens are associated with MPs shed from the plasma membrane of apoptotic stimulated T cells. |
|
Suitably stimulated, Superfag turns on his platforms and dances off through the empty hallways, his henchboys behind. |
|
In recent decades, the republication of almost all her writing has stimulated a new recognition of its value. |
|
It stimulated the demand for further reform throughout Ireland, especially in Ulster. |
|
|
It stimulated local production of foodstuffs, rough textiles, and other products for a mass market. |
|
The e-boutique has to engage them in an elevated way and they have to be stimulated by the virtual surroundings. |
|
It is a supremely sensitive part of the custard cannon and can be tenderly stimulated with licking and kissing. |
|
His journey stimulated Dutch interest, and the area became known as New Netherland. |
|
Motor activity in the colon is strongly stimulated following ingestion of a meal via the gastrocolic reflex. |
|
The linguistic apriorism of Chomsky has stimulated some psychologists to search for nonlinguistic roots of language development. |
|
It happens when microscopic marineanimals in bright red algae reacts when stimulated by the crashing waves. |
|
The apocrine glands are mainly found in hair follicles and are stimulated by emotion, which makes them secrete a thicker, fattier substance. |
|
The increased population growth rate was stimulated by Mughal agrarian reforms that intensified agricultural production. |
|
A refreshing, amber fluid with a light, natural fragrance that stimulated the skin. |
|
High clinical demand for donated platelets has stimulated interest in generating renewable sources of transfusable platelets. |
|
Heart beats in all mammals are stimulated by the binding of catecholamine to beta adrenergic receptors in these cardiac cells. |
|
In 16th century China, the Ming Dynasty's economy was stimulated by maritime trade with the Portuguese, Spanish, and Dutch. |
|
Innocent VIII lent credibility to the actual existence of undeads, an action that perpetuated, and even stimulated, vampire hysteria. |
|
Alexander sent back vast sums from his conquest, which stimulated the economy and increased trade across his empire. |
|
When these taste hairs are stimulated, they send nerve impulses to your brain. |
|
From 1850 to 1880 the Norwegian shipping industry enjoyed a large boom, stimulated by the abolishing of the British Navigation Acts. |
|
In Letter Ruling 9316033, the Service ruled that gas produced from a coal seam perforated, stimulated and brought into production after Dec. |
|
Along with Maecenas, he stimulated patriotic poems, as Virgil's epic Aeneid and also historiographical works, like those of Livy. |
|
Once stimulated, nociceptors fife action potentials that travel along the nociceptor fibre to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. |
|
|
The government stimulated the process through the creation of the Mortgage Bank in 1851 and the State Agricultural College eight years later. |
|
The gold brought home from Guinea stimulated the commercial energy of the Portuguese, and its European neighbours, especially Spain. |
|
The Huns may have stimulated the Great Migration, a contributing factor in the collapse of the Western Roman Empire. |
|
The introduction of foreign metals, silks, and spices stimulated great commercial activity in European societies. |
|
The Hanseatic League stimulated trade in the region, and the period saw the erection of many Gothic cathedrals and city halls. |
|
Cells are stimulated by a variety of signals, and together referred to as a remodeling unit. |
|
The two Dewhurst wellbores are parallel to one another and were hydraulically stimulated at the same time. |
|
Influence of vitamin C nutriture and inanition on ACTH stimulated release of adrenal corticosteroids in guinea pigs. |
|
Changes in general and specific protein synthesis that accompany ecdysteroid synthesis in stimulated prothoracic glands of Manduca sexta. |
|
Nor yet can you lay down the gentleman's service when stimulated by prolonged incompatibility on the part of cooks, and take up Waitering. |
|
England was stimulated to create its own colonies, with an emphasis on the West Indies rather than in North America. |
|
The development of the seaside resort abroad was stimulated by the well developed English love of the beach. |
|
The implementation of mechanical harvesting is often stimulated by changes in labor laws, labor shortages, and bureaucratic complications. |
|
Unstimulated and stimulated cells were fixed and permeabelized to allow intracellular staining of phosphorylated signaling molecules. |
|
Although dissolved following the rebellion of 1857, it stimulated the growth of the British Empire. |
|
Dreaming is stimulated by the pons and mostly occurs during the REM phase of sleep. |
|
Legalisation stimulated domestic Chinese opium production and increased the importation of opium from Turkey and Persia. |
|
Two optically stimulated luminescence age estimates place the Arabian Nubian Complex at approximately 106,000 years old. |
|
Discovery of the new, massive oilfields in the area stimulated an influx of foreign investments. |
|
This stimulated a vast network of extraction and supply, which formed part of royal monopolies in southern Germany and Austria. |
|
|
The IT sector has been stimulated by new Egyptian entrepreneurs with government encouragement. |
|
Despite Priestley's reduced scientific output, his presence stimulated American interest in chemistry. |
|
The positive controls CPT as well as the detergence Triton-X 100 significantly reduced the viability as compared to stimulated cells alone. |
|
At the same time, larger ships and economic growth in Lancashire stimulated the growth of Liverpool. |
|
At home I lay down and sank into a not unpleasant intoxicatedlike condition, characterized by an extremely stimulated imagination. |
|
The need for metal ores stimulated trade, as many of the areas of early human settlement were lacking in ores. |
|
Interest was stimulated by the discovery in 1850 of the Tara Brooch, which was seen in London and Paris over the next decades. |
|
The expectation of higher future income and higher future inflation stimulated demand and investments. |
|
Their discussion stimulated him to research the subject more. |
|
They stimulated interregional trade via a tribute system controlled by the manikongo. |
|
A fringe benefit of cross training is that it allows new eyes to look at existing processes so that innovation is stimulated. |
|
New packing plants in the 1980s stimulated a large increase in cattle weights. |
|
The phasing out of the linen export bounty between 1825 and 1832 stimulated demand for cheaper textiles, particularly for cheaper, tough fabrics. |
|
The ulnar nerve is being stimulated where it passes through the cubital tunnel. |
|
The Celtic Revival stimulated a new appreciation of traditional Irish literature. |
|
This stimulated sales and suited the needs of small manufacturers in the Midland city, who could not afford to trade on credit. |
|
Swedenborg was stimulated by the alchemystical notions of both men, and he began to move beyond the natural to the supernatural sciences. |
|
These policies stimulated a rapid growth in productivity and a significant army without much burden on the state treasury. |
|
The sea at Weymouth and Brighton stimulated Constable to develop new techniques of brilliant colour and vivacious brushwork. |
|
In England, Sir Richard Bentley's Proposal for Building a Royal Library published in 1694 stimulated renewed interest in the subject. |
|
|
Economic prosperity in the 1920s stimulated tourism to Florida and related development of hotels and resort communities. |
|
Identification of the molecular species of lysophosphatidic acid produced when platelets are stimulated by thrombin. |
|
Public interest in Delius's life was stimulated in the UK in 1968, with the showing of the Ken Russell film Song of Summer on BBC Television. |
|
Edward I further stimulated the city's economy by using the city as a base for his war in Scotland. |
|
When people recall experiences, they stimulate certain previous experiences until they have stimulated the one that was needed. |
|
When electrodes stimulated a part of the brain stem called the mesencephalic locomotor region, the rats began walking almost normally. |
|
Synesthetes are people who associate with one kind of sensory impression when a different sense is stimulated. |
|
Accumulation of low density lipoproteins in stimulated rat serosal mast cells during recovery from degranulation. |
|
While Coleridge was intellectually stimulated by the journey, its main effect on Wordsworth was to produce homesickness. |
|
New furnace technology stimulated further growth in the early 17th century, but this hastened the extinction of the business as the mines were worked out. |
|
In the 1920s, his concepts stimulated the development of Surrealism. |
|
Geologists in the past speculated that the melting of such ice at the end of the glacial epoch could have stimulated volcanic eruptions by unweighting the crust. |
|
No differences were found in the mounting behavior of anogenitally stimulated females and their controls, and none of the females showed the ejaculatory response. |
|
Kapp not only did internationally recognized work in palynology, but published on and stimulated much interest in the mastodonts and mammoths of the state. |
|
The presence of the dockyard, the arsenal and other military institutions stimulated economic growth in other areas, notably in commercial activities and entertainment. |
|
An antibiological bias... was stimulated by a flood of popular and scholarly books in the 1960s and 1970s saying that male domination was natural and inevitable. |
|
This stimulated the development of culture of the common folks. |
|
Ashwood and colleagues isolated and stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells for 48 hours with phytohemagglutinin, lipopolysaccharide, and vaccine antigens. |
|
Here, millions of tiny hair cells are stimulated to release glutamate at synapses with the auditory nerve, triggering impulses to fire along the auditory nerve to the brain. |
|
The growth of the city of Aoudaghost, founded in the 5th century BCE, was stimulated by its position at the southern end of a trans Saharan trade route. |
|
|
Kublai built schools for Confucian scholars, issued paper money, revived Chinese rituals, and endorsed policies that stimulated agricultural and commercial growth. |
|
In the present study, BPA transactivated the promoter sequence of c-FOS, EGR-1, and CTGF, and accordingly stimulated mRNA expression of these genes. |
|
Osteoblasts can also be stimulated to increase bone mass through increased secretion of osteoid and by inhibiting the ability of osteoclasts to break down osseous tissue. |
|
For instance, the neurons stimulated in the wrist belong to a class of proprioceptor sensors that helps individuals identify a limb's position in space. |
|
Macro algal blooms cause the decline and eradication of seagrasses throughout areas where nutrient loading or other sources of stimulated algal growth exist. |
|
During the last sixty years or so it has attained a remarkably high artistic standard, stimulated by domestic as well as external influences and experiences. |
|
In professional training programs, our strivings for omniscience, omnipotence, and omnisentience are stimulated, reinforced, and rewarded by the programs' faculties. |
|
The thermally stimulated currents measured in hexagonal and cubic BaTiO3, however, show that both materials exhibit noncentric macroscopic symmetry. |
|
This stimulated the domestication of local European wild boar resulting in a third domestication event with the Near Eastern genes dying out in European pig stock. |
|
This stimulated a shift in construction from drystone and other related materials to coral stone, sundried bricks, and the widespread use of limestone in Somali architecture. |
|
Next, to investigate the degree of stimulated lipolysis, isoproterenol was injected interperitoneally and serum FFAs were measured before and 6 hours after the injection. |
|
Church reforms during the 12th century via the Cistercians stimulated continental influence, with the Romanesque styled Mellifont, Boyle and Tintern abbeys. |
|
The old feelings, so religiously held in check, were stimulated to rebelliousness, though they did not show themselves in any direct manner as yet. |
|
It was these concerns that stimulated Chaplin to develop his new film. |
|
Insulin sensitiser drugs such as metformin can help the ovaries to be stimulated and monitored to produce ovulation and help with getting pregnant. |
|
All parameters and sample were taken just before stimulated microgravity were followed before HDT, throughout the time course of the HDT experiment, and during recovery. |
|
When the researchers cut off the end of a toe, signals from the regrowing nail stimulated the tissue underneath to form new bone, the authors report June 12 in Nature. |
|
If you live or train for sports at high altitude where oxygen levels are lower, the production of Epo is stimulated and your blood contains more red cells. |
|
Rural poverty stimulated the migration of population to urban centers until the early 2nd century when the urban population stopped growing and started to decline. |
|
For instance, the investigators had no data refecting how much caregivers interacted with and stimulated the children, which can influence a child's intelligence. |
|
|
Using multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells from rats, they also showed that FM550 and its constituent triphenyl phosphate stimulated formation of fat cells. |
|
The mycoflora was also stimulated, but less than the bacteria. |
|
The arrival of Afghan refugees in the western provinces has stimulated interest in Pashto music, although there has been intolerance of it in some places. |
|
Studies on connective tissue have produced valuable data, which have stimulated the creation of treatments for preventive and rejuvenative healthcare. |
|
Historically a part of Westmorland, Windermere town was known as Birthwaite prior to the arrival of the Kendal and Windermere Railway, which stimulated its development. |
|