Sensory Sentence Examples

sensory
  • There is also in some genera a median retractile sensory papilla on the dorsal posterior surface above the rectum, not covered by the cuticle.

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  • His deduction is logical; but he has forgotten to prove the assumption, and now confuses sensory operation with sensible object.

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  • They may perhaps be considered as sensory.

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  • The arrival of these texts—as well as Byzantium's own architecture, science, and art—triggered a sensory and intellectual explosion, which became the cultural movement we now call the Renaissance.

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  • The Ego he considers not an entity sharply distinguished from the Non-ego, but merely, as it were, a medium of continuity of sensory impressions.

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  • The discoveries of the separate paths of sensory and motor impulses in the spinal cord, and consequently of the laws of reflex action, by Charles Bell and Marshall Hall respectively, in their illumination of the phenomena of nervous function, may be compared with the discovery in the region of the vascular system of the circulation of the blood; for therein a key to large classes of normal and aberrant functions and a fertile principle of interpretation were obtained.

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  • Yes, rejoins Lange, but Kant has proved that material are merely mental phenomena; so that the more the materialist proves his case the more surely he is playing into the hands of the idealist - an answer which would be complete if it did not turn on the equivocation of the word " phenomenon," which in science means any positive fact, and not a mere appearance, much less a mental appearance, to sense and sensory experience.

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  • As a rule, a longer time is required to restore the motor than the sensory functions of a nerve trunk.

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  • Sensorimotor-Relating to the combination of sensory and motor coordination.

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  • The statocysts present in general the structure of either a knob or a closed vesicle, composed of (I) indifferent supporting epithelium; (2) sensory, so-called auditory epithelium of slender cells, each.

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  • Here the pits split into two, one part ending in a sac lined with sensory epithelium, and embedded in nervous tissue, the other projecting backwards as a long, glandular, blind canal.

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  • Near the base of the ctenidium is a patch of sensory epithelium innervated from the branchial nerve, forming a sense-organ called the osphradium, whose function is to test the water entering the branchial cavity.

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  • Sense, then, outer and inner, or sensation and consciousness, is the origin of sensory judgments which are true categorical beliefs in the existence of sensible things; and primary judgments are such true categorical sensory beliefs that things exist, and neither require conception nor are combinations of conceptions.

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  • Again, since sense is the origin of memory and experience, memorial and experiential judgments are categorical and existential judgments, which so far as they report sensory judgments are always true.

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  • Finally, since sense, memory and experience are the origin of inference, primary inference is categorical and existential, starting from sensory, memorial and experiential judgments as premises, and proceeding to inferential judgments as conclusions, which are categorical and existential, and are true, so far as they depend on sense, memory and experience.

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  • So sense, memory and experience, the sum of sense and memory, though requiring conception, are the causes of the experiential judgment that there exist and have existed many similar, sensible things, and these sensory, memorial and experiential judgments about the existence of past and present sensible things beyond conceived ideas become the particular premises of primary inference.

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  • Moreover, as it becomes more deductive, and causes conclusions further from sensory experience, these inferential judgments become causes of inferential conceptions.

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  • The conceptual logic supposes that conception always precedes judgment; but the truth is that sensory judgment begins and inferential judgment ends by preceding conception.

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  • The real order is sensation and sensory judgment, conception, memory and memorial judgment, experience and experiential judgment, inference, inferential judgment, inferential conception.

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  • Locally applied they depress the terminations of sensory nerves, and may thereby lessen pain.

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  • The visual system is the most complex sensory system in the human body.

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  • It is a matter of words whether or not we should call this sensory belief a judgment; but it is no matter of choice to the logician, who regards all the constituents of inference as judgments; for the fundamental constituents are sensory beliefs, which are therefore judgments in the logical sense.

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  • Sense is the evidence of inference; directly of analogical and inductive, directly or indirectly of deductive, inference; and therefore, if logic refuses to include sensory beliefs among judgments, it will omit the fundamental constituents of inference, inference will no longer consist of judgments but of sensory beliefs plus judgments, and the second part of logic, the logic of judgment, the purpose of which is to investigate the constituents of inference, will be like Hamlet without the prince of Denmark.

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  • Beyond the parapodia are four pairs of organs, often called suckers, but probably of sensory nature, and comparable to the lateral sense organs of Capitellids (Wheeler).

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  • The chief action of cocaine from a practical point of view is its power of paralysing the terminations of sensory nerves.

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  • The dorsal horns are where sensory neurons enter the spinal cord.

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  • Space probes, electron tunneling microscopes extend our sensory range.

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  • In the next stage of complication, seen in the supernumerary (seventh) ocellus of Charybdaea, the patch of pigmented and sensory epithelium is pushed in to form a little pit, in the T Aurelia aurita.

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  • When specialized as bearers of sensory (olfactory or tactile) organs, the rami are generally elongated, many-jointed and flagelliform.

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  • In the great majority of Crustacea the antennules are purely sensory in function and carry numerous " olfactory " hairs.

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  • In the Malacostraca they are chiefly sensory, the endopodite forming a long flagellum, while the exopodite may form a lamellar " scale," probably useful as a balancer in swimming, or may disappear altogether.

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  • In the Phyllopoda they are for the most part all alike, though one or two of the anterior pairs may be specialized as sensory (Apus) or grasping (Estheriidae) organs.

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  • As in Arthropoda, the hairs or setae on the surface of the body are important organs of sense and are variously modified for special sensory functions.

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  • Another modification of sensory setae is supposed to be associated with the sense of smell.

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  • A pair of frontal papillae or filaments, probably sensory, are commonly present.

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  • Each contains a terminal ganglion connected with sensory cells in the lateral pit.

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  • He discovered that in the nervous trunks there are special sensory filaments, the office of which is to transmit impressions from the periphery of the body to the sensorium, and special motor filaments which convey motor impressions from the brain or other nerve centre to the muscles.

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  • He also showed that some nerves consist entirely of sensory filaments and are therefore sensory nerves, that others are composed of motor filaments and are therefore motor nerves, whilst a third variety contains both kinds of filaments and are therefore to be regarded as sensory-motor.

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  • Lastly, he showed, both from theoretical considerations and from the result of actual experiment on the living animal, that the anterior roots of the spinal nerves are motor, while the posterior are sensory.

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  • The circumoesophageal water-ring may lose its connexion with the exterior medium; the podia (absent only in some exceptional forms) may be locomotor, respiratory or sensory in function, but usually are locomotor tube-feet.

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  • In other instances, notably in the lemurs, but also in certain carnivora, rodents and marsupials, they occupy a position on the fore-arm near the wrist, in connexion with glands, and receive sensory powers from the radial nerve.

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  • The parapodia of Chaetopoda are never coated with dense chitin, and are, therefore, never converted into jaws; the primitive " head-lobe " or prostomium persists, and frequently carries eyes and sensory tentacles.

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  • Here he stated the principle, not before recognized, that the kind of sensation following stimulation of a sensory nerve does not depend on the mode of stimulation but upon the nature of the sense-organ.

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  • But sooner or later peripheral neuritis develops, usually beginning with sensory disturbances, tingling, numbness, formication and occasionally cutaneous anaesthesia.

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  • As in fishes also, the sensory canal system must have been highly developed on the skulls of many labyrinthodonts, and the impressions left by these canals have been utilized by morphologists for homologizing the various elements of the cranial roof with those of Crossopterygians.

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  • He'd taken the time to appreciate every inch of her body with his mouth and hands, all the while driving her into a haze of such yearning and sensory overload, it was almost dreamlike.

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  • It cannot be demanded that the objective accusative of religious experiences occupy the spatial dimensions, since being spatial entails having sensory qualities.

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  • The cell body of a sensory nerve has two axons.

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  • In the absence of these embryonic growth cues adult sensory axons make major growth errors at key choice points.

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  • Like all neurones, the sensory neuron has a cell body, an axon, dendrites and axon terminals.

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  • For example, spasticity can be aggravated by sensory stimulation from a pressure sore or a distended bladder or rectum.

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  • In this state of sensory deprivation the bard would seek inspiration.

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  • The picture on the cover shows a scanning electron micrograph of sensory neurons from the olfactory epithelium of an adult mouse.

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  • In the face of this constant sensory assault, the things Paul's talking about can seem very far-off and vague to us.

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  • Further sensory features such as windchimes were added and an existing raised fishpond and waterfall were incorporated into the patio area.

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  • The cell bodies of these sensory nerves are grouped together in a small swelling called the dorsal root ganglion.

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  • If you think all grappa tastes the same think again, this is a wonderful sensory experience.

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  • The sensory garden will be wonderfully inviting and a fairly intimate area for everybody who visits the park.

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  • Looking at the horizon confirms movement and resolves the sensory mismatch.

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  • Sensory nerve cells carry information about muscle tension and body position to motor nerve cells in the spinal cord to control muscle contraction.

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  • The enteric nervous system controls the gut functions and sensory neuron transmitters all over the body relay message back to these systems.

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  • The brain and its reaction controls every function of the body, triggered by the sensory nervous system.

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  • The skin is the largest sensory organ in the body, covered in receptors of varying densities.

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  • The sensory overload will keep them quiet for hours.

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  • We are using FES assisted cycling to study possible mechanisms of motor and sensory recovery in incomplete paraplegia.

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  • This creamy infusion is deliciously scented with Amazonian maracuja passionflower to transform your bathing experience into an exotic sensory adventure.

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  • Although both mind and the sensory faculty receive their correlative forms when perceiving or thinking, neither is wholly passive in its defining activity.

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  • Sensory Fusion Present each eye with different stimulus If sensory fusion intact - patient will report a combined percept.

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  • Include this program in your sensory room, or use for fun wet playtime or end of term activities.

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  • Another project was a sensory garden, which was created in the school's quadrangle for pupils with Additional Support Needs.

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  • A vesicular rash restricted to the distribution of a single sensory nerve is the classic skin lesion of shingles.

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  • There is evidently no change in the purely sensory experience, i.e., in the sensory stimulus to the organism.

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  • Feast your eyes on the stunning color display that gives you a truly sensory experience with the video playback feature.

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  • Artaud's criterion of spectacle is sensory violence, not sensory enchantment; beauty is a notion he never entertains.

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  • The attitude of people with other impairments, especially sensory, is often depressed.

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  • A predominantly sensory peripheral polyneuropathy has been observed in patients receiving long-term phenytoin therapy.

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  • The former is the condition when the mechanism by which the brain damps down sensory input is not working properly.

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  • This marker can be used to differentiate sensory neurons from adjacent spinal cord or sympathetic neurons.

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  • Fitzgerald, M. and Fulton, B.P. (1992) The physiological properties of developing sensory neurons.

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  • Pressure to the cement gland excites trigeminal sensory neurons.

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  • The results of these studies suggest that a sensitization of primary nociceptive sensory neurons is responsible for this hyperalgesia.

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  • The artist invites the participant one at a time to a sensory experience involving a rhythmic time cycle involved in Indian tabla drumming.

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  • Carole Hackney and Dave Furness are studying the ultrastructure of the hair cells and their sensory hair bundle.

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  • Physical signs may include muscle wasting and sensory loss.

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  • Many points in the development and mechanism of the nematocyst are disputed, but it is tolerably certain (I) that the cnidocil is of sensory nature, and that stimulation, by contact with prey or in other ways, causes a reflex discharge of the nematocyst; (2) that the discharge is an explosive change whereby the in-turned thread is suddenly everted and turned inside out, being thus shot through the opening in the outer wall of the capsule, and forced violently into the tissues of the prey, or, it may be, of an enemy; (3) that the thread inflicts not merely a mechanical wound, but instils an irritant poison, numbing and paralysing in its action.

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  • All tadpoles are provided with more or less distinct lines of muciferous sensory crypts or canals, which stand in immediate relation to the nerve branches and are regarded as organs of a special sense possessed by aquatic vertebrates, feeling, in its broadest sense, having been admitted as their possible use, and the function of determining waves of vibration in the aqueous medium having been suggested.

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  • The feelers are generally simple in type, rarely showing serrations or prominent appendages; but one or two basal segments are frequently differentiated to form an elongate " scape," the remaining segments - carried at an elbowed angle to the scapemaking up the " flagellum "; the segments of the flagellum often bear complex sensory organs.

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  • Apart from the activity of the self or subject in sensory reaction, memory and association, imagination, judgment and inference, there can be no world of objects.

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  • The first antennae, according to the family, may assist in walking, swimming, burrowing, climbing, grasping, and besides they carry sensory setae, and sometimes they have suckers on their setae (see Brady and Norman on Cypridina norvegica).

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  • In the first place, he displays in its most naked form the common but unproved idealistic paradox of a sense of sensations, according to which touch apprehends not pressure but a sensation of pressure, sight apprehends not colour but a sensation of colour, and there is no difference between the sensory operation and the sensible object apprehended by any sense, even within the sentient organism.

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  • Consideration will also be given to facilities for pupils with sensory impairment.

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  • Another project was a sensory garden, which was created in the school 's quadrangle for pupils with Additional Support Needs.

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  • You may have unwittingly connected these sensory cues every time you followed eating savory food with a sweet food.

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  • People with sensory impairments, eg people who have sight loss, a hearing loss, or perhaps both.

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  • The Rainbow Room gives children of all needs the chance of sensory stimulation or alternatively a relaxed environment in which to relax.

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  • Artaud 's criterion of spectacle is sensory violence, not sensory enchantment; beauty is a notion he never entertains.

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  • Activity dependent excitability changes of nociceptors and mechanoreceptors Sensory neurons of the dorsal root ganglion are functionally heterogeneous.

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  • I require knowledge to compliment the luxurious sensory overload as I sip from a strong cup of Earl Gray.

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  • It 's a thoroughly disgusting sensory story about a depraved little so-and-so called Sydney who collects his nasal excretions to make a Boogeyman.

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  • Having an unusual response to sensory stimuli â i.e. sound, light, smell, shadows.

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  • These neurons are involved in sensory processing in weakly electric fish.

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  • For older toddlers exploring shape, texture and dimension, try the Edushape Sensory Puzzle Cube.

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  • The Edushape Sensory Puzzle Cube can be found at Teach Children and Strollers.com.

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  • Along with motor skills, sensory skills develop upon a foundation of natural abilities.

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  • A part of both sensory and motor skills are determined by genetics, and another part is learned through repetitive interaction.

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  • I have written four books on parenting from a sensory perspective, three of which are best sellers.

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  • We like to think of the approach we use as sensible sensory parenting.

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  • Cats love sensory stimulation and the Cat Spa certainly provides it.

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  • Cayenne is being used to treat sensory nerve fiber disorders that occur with arthritis, psoriasis and other inflammatory conditions in the body.

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  • Encouraging your child to delve into art projects will also strengthen her cognitive and problem-solving skills, her sensory abilities, and her fine motor skills.

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  • Put on a favorite soothing CD and light scented candles, such as lavender or chamomile, to increase your sensory pleasures and reduce the built up stress.Another great place to soak away your tension is in a hot tub.

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  • Children can have sensory processing differences.

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  • The AquaSpa by Elemis is an exclusive spa facility offering a range of complete sensory treatments, including aromatherapy hot stone massages, Egyptian milk baths, acupuncture, and a saltwater jetted thalassotherapy pool.

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  • Sensory nerves return information to the brain.

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  • This is the most common time for serious symptoms to appear such as confusion, poor coordination and sensory disturbances.

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  • They do this by decreasing the individual's sensory abilities.

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  • Through this study and other dream research, scientists have many reasons to believe that sensory experiences in dreams are perhaps more common than people realize.

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  • This looping steel roller coaster stands 150 feet tall and treats patrons to an "unprecedented sensory experience" as they listen to the rock band's hit single Whole Lotta Love play throughout the ride.

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  • After a full day of sampling video games and viewing demos, I was in sensory overload!!

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  • The more wines you try, the better you'll get at the sensory evaluation part.

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  • The brief neurological exam includes a review of the patient's mental status, motor and sensory system, deep tendon reflexes, coordination, and walking pattern (gait).

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  • Although pain syndromes may be dissimilar, the common factor is a sensory pathway from the affected organ to the brain.

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  • These are the nerves throughout the body that communicate motor and sensory information to and from the spinal cord.

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  • It is also known as hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy and is sometimes called peroneal muscular atrophy, referring to the muscles in the leg that are often affected.

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  • Therefore, people with CMT also have sensory loss.

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  • Fever and asymmetric flaccid paralysis without sensory loss in a child or young adult almost always indicate poliomyelitis.

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  • Wounds to the face and neck, even small ones, should always be examined and treated by a doctor to preserve sensory function and minimize scarring.

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  • Spasticity may increase with anxiety, emotions, pain, or sensory stimulation.

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  • By cutting the sensory nerve rootlets that cause the spasticity, muscle stiffness is decreased while other functions are maintained.

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  • Therapy for infants and young children may also include sensory stimulation programs.

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  • Treatment programs to help increase muscle strength and sensory stimulation programs are developed once the cause of the child's hypotonia is established.

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  • The cornea is normally devoid of blood vessels yet has many sensory nerves.

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  • Numbness and tingling are decreased or abnormal sensations caused by altered sensory nerve function.

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  • Paresthesias are caused by disturbances in the function of neurons in the sensory pathway.

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  • Sensory nerves supply or innervate particular regions of the body.

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  • For instance, weakness may accompany damage to nerves that carry both sensory and motor neurons.

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  • Sensory, motor, and autonomic nerves are included.

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  • Sensory nerves-Sensory or afferent nerves carry impulses of sensation from the periphery or outward parts of the body to the brain and spinal cord.

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  • Herpes zoster virus-Acute inflammatory virus that attacks the nerve cells on the root of each spinal nerve with skin eruptions along a sensory nerve ending.

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  • It consists of several comprehensive and in-depth assessments of mental status, cranial nerves, motor abilities, reflexes, sensory acuity, and posture and walking (gait) abilities.

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  • Perception assessment examines the individual's sensory ability to hear, see, touch, taste, and smell.

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  • Although an essential component of the NE, the sensory examination is the least informative and least exacting since it requires patient concentration and cooperation.

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  • Patients who have sensory abnormalities may have a lesion above the thalamus.

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  • Fragile X syndrome-A genetic condition related to the X chromosome that affects mental, physical, and sensory development.

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  • A fingertip is a highly complex structure, with many specialized features, one of which is a rich network of sensory nerves.

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  • Nerves are examined for sensory (feeling sensations) and motor (movement) function.

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  • Sensory tics are less common than either motor or vocal tics.

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  • A phantom tic is an out-of-body variation of a sensory tic in which the person feels a sensation in other people or objects.

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  • Other psychiatric problems that often coexist with tics and tic disorders include learning disorders, impulse control disorders, school phobia, sensory hypersensitivity, and rage attacks.

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  • Motion sickness is connected to the role of the sensory organs.

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  • The sensory organs control a body's sense of balance by telling the brain what direction the body is pointing, the direction it is moving, and if it is standing still or turning.

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  • While all of the body's sensory organs contribute to motion sickness, excess stimulation to the vestibular system within the inner ear (the body's balance center) has been shown to be one of the primary reasons for this condition.

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  • For everyone, a degree of sensory loss lasting at least four years, and sometimes a lifetime, is inevitable.

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  • Nystagmus can be sensory and develop as a result of poor vision, or it can be motor and develop as a result of a neurological problem.

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  • A stimulus, such as a light tap with a rubber hammer, causes sensory neurons (nerve cells) to send signals to the spinal cord.

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  • Creange. "Neurophysiological testing correlates with clinical examination according to fiber type involvement and severity in sensory neuropathy."

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  • There is a close association among social and affective abilities and cognitive, sensory, and language development.

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  • Cranial nerves-The set of twelve nerves found on each side of the head and neck that control the sensory and muscle functions of the eyes, nose, tongue, face, and throat.

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  • Children with this problem have difficulty processing the sensory input they receive, specifically sight and sound information.

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  • These sophisticated electrical and mechanical devices connect with the nervous system to supplement or replace lost motor and sensory functions.

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  • Sensory information provides critical input on the current position and velocity of body parts, and spinal nerve cells (neurons) help prevent opposing muscle groups from contracting at the same time.

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  • Once the movement of the arm is initiated, sensory information is needed to guide the finger to its precise destination.

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  • In addition to sight, the most important source of information comes from the "position sense" provided by the many sensory neurons located within the limbs (proprioception).

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  • Evoked potentials record the response of the brain to a sensory, visual, or auditory stimulus.

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  • Sensory seizures cause numbness or tingling in one area.

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  • Aveda has hundreds of locations around the world, and each is designed to provide consumers with a vivid sensory experience.

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  • You might run across an Aveda Experience Center, which carries the complete lineup of products and offers consumers complimentary Sensory Rituals.

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  • The problems can affect metabolism, sensory processing, the brain and nervous system.

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  • The de Young Museum of Art is a sensory smorgasbord for art lovers.

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  • Moon sand provides numerous opportunities for sensory integration activities, which is great for all kids but particularly important to special needs children.

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  • Make sure your stories are full of vivid sensory details.

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  • The typical classroom has tables and chairs, a reading or circle time area, pretend play areas (such as a kitchen area and dress up clothes), area for building, and a sensory table.

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  • Toys that require sensory input are usually popular choices.

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  • They learn music, develop cognitive skills, enhance motor skills and stimulate sensory skills.

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  • While some children have great interest in sports, reading or writing, others love to experiment with the sensory and creative experience found in cooking.

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  • In addition, she can make a play dough recipe with the dry and wet ingredients and add some food coloring and essential oils for a sensory experience.

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  • Deprived of the sensory input of sound, your visual acuity becomes more finely tuned as you search for evidence of ghosts on your computer screen.

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  • Just as paranormal investigators remove sensory stimuli when reviewing evidence of their ghost hunts, you can also benefit from the removal of external stimuli such as ambient light and background noise.

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  • Sounds, voices and even entire scenes may flash across the psychic's mind complete with sensory perception that the owner of the object was having at the time her emotions were imprinted on the object.

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  • Or, they can be 4-D adventures, which combine 3-D images and other sensory special effects to help bring the show to life.

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  • Marked deficits in social skills, repetitive behaviors, and sensory processing issues are common symptoms of autistic disorder.

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  • Sensory issues are often present, causing some to be overly sensitive to sounds, lights, smells, and textures.

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  • Others may be the opposite, not noticing sensory input like pain or discomfort,and some will display over sensitivity in certain areas and under sensitivity in others.

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  • Those affected may show any combination of the typical symptoms of autism, from sensory issues to communication and social interaction deficits, repetitive behaviors to narrow interests and obsessive routines.

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  • Sensory issues are quite common with autism, and playtime can be used as an opportunity to address these needs with toys that integrate several types of sensory input.

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  • Alternating reading with sensory integration activities can help some children on the spectrum stay focused.

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  • These include relationship development intervention (RDI), and sensory integration therapy.

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  • Children with autism do not only show behavioral abnormalities, but may also be overly sensitive to sensory inputs such as hearing, touch, smell, and taste.

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  • Some components that factor into behaviors include sensory problems, sleep disturbances and mental processing.

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  • Problems with sensory processing can be very uncomfortable.

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  • The sensory problems can lead to unusual repetitive movements, or self-stimulatory behaviors.

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  • Some individuals diagnosed in the autism spectrum of disorders call self-stimulatory behaviors self-regulatory behaviors because they help to reduce the discomfort caused by poor sensory processing.

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  • Outdoor activities can play an important role in sensory integration therapy.

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  • Used primarily by occupational therapists to address the sensory issues common to autism, sensory integration therapy is used to improve the ability of the brain to process sensory information.

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  • Jazz prodigy Matt Savage was diagnosed with Pervasive Developmental Disorder - Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS) at the age of three and suffered from severe sensory processing challenges, particularly to auditory stimuli.

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  • Another symptom common to high function autism is sensory dysfunction.

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  • Such sensory overload can lead to behaviors such as rocking, twirling, hand flapping, or repetitive sounds.

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  • Hypo-sensitivity is also a common sensory problem in autistic individuals, with some individuals indifferent to sensory stimulus like cold, heat, discomfort, or pain.

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  • Among those common to autism disorder, which is the most common ASD and among those with the potential to be most severe, are sensory issues.

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  • Children with autism disorder, also known as classic autism or Kanner's autism, can be less responsive than the average child to some forms of sensory input, while being oversensitive to others.

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  • Among the basic interventions provided to most children with autism are speech and language therapy, occupational and sensory integration therapy, physical therapy, and behavioral therapy.

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  • This genetic disorder can manifest itself in a wide range of signs and symptoms that include physical, social, mental, and sensory characteristics.

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  • Among these are speech and language delays or abnormalities, communication and interaction difficulties, marked social anxiety, repetitive behaviors, sensory issues, and a strong preference for structure and routine.

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  • Sensory Environments - Physical sensation is a very large part of dealing with the positive and negative aspects of autism.

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  • A glaring trait of many people on the autism spectrum is difficulty with sensory processing.

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  • Nearly everyone can relate to feeling physically uncomfortable due to sensory input.

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  • Loud noises, distracting lights, and itchy materials can be very bothersome to anyone but they can be painful for a child with sensory problem.

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  • Sensory processing disorder can be confused with autism because individuals who have this condition often engage in the stereotypical repetitive movements often seen in cases of autism.

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  • Sensory processing problems can also lead to unusual behaviors.

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  • An AS person's sensory system can be hyper or hyposensitive, either taking in too much or too little information.

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  • The sensory problems can lead to self-stimulatory behaviors that block input or create more input to create balance.

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  • In addition, the child may need to develop better sensory strategies.

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  • The mysterious conditions are neurological in nature, affecting mental, sensory and emotional processing.

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  • Social skill activities are important aspects of many treatment plans, and addressing self stimulatory behaviors through sensory integration therapy for autism can be effective in redirecting repetitive movements.

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  • Empathy for the individual's needs, sensory processing problems, and need for routine is of great benefit.

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  • Some cases may include other symptoms such as sensory issues.

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  • A dysfunction in sensory integration can cause a person to have problems processing sensory information, which can present itself in a preference for unusual colors and repetitive behavior such as flapping hands for self-stimulation.

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  • Remember that autistic children may be hypersensitive to certain sensory stimuli.

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  • Children with autism can improve sensory integration problems with sensory integration therapy administered by a specialist.

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  • There are swings designed specifically for sensory processing therapy in both indoor and outdoor designs.

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  • Parents can build sensory rooms in their homes designed for their child's specific needs with the help from a licensed therapist.

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  • Self-stimulating or stimming behavior is related to sensory processing and can include hand flapping, licking objects or rocking back and forth.

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  • Categories to consider include sensory integration, balance and movement, equilibrium, social skills, and creativity.

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  • This helps with sensory integration and provides a safe opportunity to teach him the difference between warm and cool.

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  • Many children with autism suffer from sensory issues that make life difficult to enjoy.

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  • For older children, toys with flashing lights, bright pictures, flashcards, and even the wooden alphabet blocks help promote visual sensory integration.

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  • The autistic brain seems to process information and sensory input differently than typical brains do.

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  • Interventions include behavioral therapy, sensory integration, speech and occupational therapies.

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  • The first addresses sensory integration disorder and the second game focuses on improving social and communication skills.

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  • Individuals on the spectrum often have trouble processing sensory input, information and communication.

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  • Services for treating autism typically include applied behavioral analysis (ABA), play therapy like Floortime, sensory integration as well as other therapies and interventions determined by the child's treatment plan.

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  • His communication difficulties and any repetitive or sensory issues may create workplace conflicts.

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  • Interventions can provide help for sensory problems as well.

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  • Occupational therapy, physical therapy and sensory integration activities can help improve motor skills and coordination.

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  • Having sensory issues and exhibiting unusual reactions to certain tastes, sights, textures and sounds.

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  • Problems with processing movement and sensory input can lead to awkwardness and clumsiness.

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  • Physical therapy and occupational therapy can overlap with sensory integration therapy.

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  • Processing sensory information can be challenging for a person on the autism spectrum.

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  • Sensory integration works by helping the individual manage sensory input while providing a release.

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  • Sensory integration techniques depend on the person's symptoms and self-stimulatory behaviors.

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  • Related conditions include sensory integration disorder, among others.

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  • With high-tech options like a sensory gym, an innovative orthotics department and an adaptive aquatics center, the MCH Dan Merino Center is as fun as it is functional.

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  • The programs work by using data-based Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) in conjunction with speech therapy, sensory integration services and occupational therapy.

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  • Other educational components include sensory integration, fine motor activities, speech therapy and social skill building.

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  • Autistic people may have more trouble filtering out extraneous sensory information.

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  • He is getting sensory flashes, apparently hearing things too faint to be heard, seeing things at a great distance.

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  • Puppeteers possess two independent heads with the usual sensory apparatus (eyes, nose, mouth)and three hooved legs; their brains are safely stored in the body cavity.

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  • These next generation future robotic pets are retrofitted with numerous sensors throughout the body in order to read in sensory input and provide the sort of output actions and sounds that children come to expect from their regular pets.

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  • This first mobile robot had the ability to take in sensory information and model its environment.

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  • Also, avoid sensory overload since sites that are loaded with glitter and excessive animation are hostile to the eye.

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  • When the nematocyst is completely developed, the cnidoblast passes outwards so as to occupy a superficial position in the ectoderm, and a delicate protoplasmic process of sensory nature, termed the cnidocil (cn) projects from the cnidoblast like a fine hair or cilium.

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  • The sensory cells are slender epithelial cells, often with a cilium or stiff protoplasmic process, and should perhaps be regarded as the only ectoderm-cells which retain the primitive ciliation of the larval ectoderm, otherwise lost in all Hydrozoa.

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  • The sense-cells form, in the first place, a diffuse system of scattered sensory cells, as in the polyp, developed chiefly on the manubrium, the tentacles and the margin of the umbrella, where they form a sensory ciliated epithelium covering the nerve-centres; in the second place, the sense-cells are concentrated to form definite sense-organs, situated always at the margin of the umbrella, hence often termed " marginal bodies."

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  • By means of vibrations or shocks transmitted through the - Sub water, or by displacements in the balance or position of the animal, the otoliths are caused to impinge against the bristles of the sensory cells, now on one side, now on the other, causing shocks or stimuli which are transmitted by the basal nerve-fibre to the central nervous system.

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  • Brooks regards these organs as sensory, serving for the sense of balance, and representing a primitive stage of the tentaculocysts of Trachylinae; Linko, on the other hand, finding no nerve-elements connected with them, regards them as digestive (?) in function.

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  • Elaboration in the form of the feelers, often a secondary sexual character in male insects, may result from a distal broadening of the segments, so that the appendage becomes serrate, or from the development of processes bearing sensory organs, so that the structure is pinnate or feather-like.

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  • S.N., Nerves to sensory apparatus.

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  • In addition to the nerves starting from the brain-lobes just now especially mentioned, there is a double apparatus which can hardly be treated of in conjunction with the sense organs, because its sensory functions have not been sufficiently made out, and which will therefore rather be considered along with the brain and central nervous system.

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  • Remaining pairs of appendages with their basal segments immovably fixed to the sternal surface, similar in form, the posterior three pairs furnished with two claws supported on long stalks; the basal segments of the 6th pair bearing five pairs of tactile sensory organs or malleoli.

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  • The ectoderm retains its ciliation only in the sensory organs.

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  • Sensory Automatism is the term given by students of psychical research to a centrally initiated hallucination.

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  • Near the termination of a fatal case there is a paralysis of the sensory columns of the cord, so that general sensibility is lowered.

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  • He holds, like Hume, that nothing is real except our sensations and complexes of sensory elements; that the ego is not a definite, unalterable, sharply bounded unity, but its continuity alone is important; and that we know no real causes at all, much less real causes of our sensations; or, as he expresses it, bodies do not produce sensations, but complexes of sensations form bodies.

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  • His philosophy, therefore, is that all known things are sensations and complexes of sensory elements, supplemented by an economy of thinking which cannot carry us beyond ideas to real things, or beyond relations of dependency to real causes.

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  • The distinction, therefore, between the movement of the eyeballs, elicited from the occipital (visual) cortex, and that of the hand, elicited from the cortex in the region of the central sulcus (somaesthetic), is not a difference between motor and sensory, for both are sensori-motor in the nature of their reactions; the difference is only a difference between the kind of sense and sense-organ in the two cases, the muscular apparatus in each case being an appanage of the sensual.

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  • In man, actually gross sensory defects follow even limited lesions of the cortex.

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  • Lastly, all the authors of the above-quoted theories err in supposing that all judgment requires conception; for even Mill thinks a combination of ideas necessary, and Brentano, who comes still nearer to the nature of sensory judgment when he says, " Every perception counts for a judgment," yet thinks that an idea is necessary at the same time in order to understand the thing judged.

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  • The sensory judgment then, which is nothing but a belief that at the moment of sense something sensible exists, is a proof that not all judgment requires conception, or synthesis or analysis of ideas, or decision about the content, or about the validity, of ideas, or reference of an ideal content to reality, as commonly, though variously, supposed in the logic of our day.

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  • Originally such judgments arise from sensory judgments followed by ideas, and are judgments of memory after sense that something sensible existed, e.g.

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  • These are conclusions which primarily are inferred from sensory and memorial judgments; and so far as inference starts from sense of something sensible in the present, and from memory after sense of something sensible in the past, and concludes similar things, inferential judgments are indirect beliefs in being and in existence beyond ideas.

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  • There are indeed differences between primary judgments, in that the sensory is a belief in present, the memorial in past, and the inferential in present, past and future existence.

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  • This makes them omit sensory judgments, and count only those which require ideas, and even general ideas expressed in general terms. Sigwart, for example, gives as instances of our most elementary judgments, " This is Socrates," " This is snow "- beliefs in things existing beyond ourselves which require considerable inferences from many previous judgments of sense and memory.

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  • Moreover, as we have shown, our primary judgments of sense are beliefs founded on sensations without requiring ideas, and are beliefs, not merely that something is determined, but that it is determined as existing; and, accordingly, our primary inferences from these sensory judgments of existence are inferences that other things beyond sense are similarly determined as existing.

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  • But, as the science of inference, it can make sure that inference, on the one hand, starts from sensory judgments about sensible things and logically proceeds to inferential judgments about similar things beyond sense, and, on the other hand, cannot logically go beyond the similar.

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  • The aim of logic in general is to find the laws of all inference, which, so far as it obeys those laws, is always consistent, but is true or false according to its data as well as its consistency; and the aim of the special logic of knowledge is to find the laws of direct and indirect inferences from sense, because as sense produces sensory judgments which are always true of the sensible things actually perceived, inference from sense produces inferential judgments which, so far as they are consequent on sensory judgments, are always true of things similar to sensible things, by the very consistency of inference, or, as we say, by parity of reasoning.

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  • Corresponding with each pair of myotomes, and subject to the same alternation, two pairs of spinal nerves arise from the neurochord, namely, a right and left pair of compact dorsal sensory roots without ganglionic enlargement, and a right and left pair of ventral motor roots composed of loose fibres issuing separately from the neurochord and passing directly to their termination on the muscle-plates of the myotomes.

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  • In many genera of springtails a curious post-antennal organ, consisting of sensory structures (often complex in form) surrounded by a firm ring, is to be noticed on the cuticle of the head between the eyes and the feelers.

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  • He studied the nature of muscular contraction, causing a muscle to record its movements on a smoked glass plate, and he worked out the problem of the velocity of the nervous impulse both in the motor nerves of the frog and in the sensory nerves of man.

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  • Irritation of sensory nerves tends to cause contraction of the vessels, and to raise the blood pressure, and where pain is ffi, present opium or morphine is the most efficient sedative.

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  • The sensation of pain is felt in the brain, and the cause of it may be in the sensory centres of the brain alone, as in cases of hysterical pain, with no lesion to cause it.

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  • Ordinarily, however, it is due to some peripheral irritation which is conducted by sensory nerves to the spinal cord and thence up to the sensory centre in the brain.

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  • Each nerve-centre controls its own antimere or segment of the body, receiving sensory impressions from the tentaculocyst and innervating its special subdivision of the muscular system.

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  • This being apprehended by the sensory mouths.

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  • For example the free swimming cercaria and miracidia use highly specialized sensory organelles to locate their hosts.

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  • Anchors occur throughout all of our sensory channels in a potentially infinite number of ways.

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  • It is also richly innervated (supplied with nerves) and very well endowed with sensory receptors.

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  • All human beings can read the sensory input around them.

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  • We conclude that from their early functioning, synapses from sensory neurons are strong and from sensory pathway interneurons are weak.

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  • As has been described above, the endoderm may also contribute to the sense-organs, but such contributions are always of an accessory nature, for instance, concrement-cells in the otocysts, pigment in the ocelli, and never of sensory nature, sense-cells being Hydromedusae are of separate sexes, the only known exception being Amphogona apsteini, one of the Trachomedusae (Browne [9]).

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  • As the name implies, it is a parenting book that addresses the common issues of parenting (from sleep to calming) from a sensory perspective.

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  • B, Section through compound eye (after Miall and Denny); C, organs of smell in cockchafer; (after Kraepelin); D, a, b, sensory pits on cercopods of golden-eye fly; c, sensory pit on palp of stone-fly (after Packard); E, sensory hair (after Miall and Denny); F, ear of long-horned grasshopper; a, Front shin showing outer opening and air-tube; b, section (after Graber); G, ear of locust from within (after Graber).

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  • Whether in the Metanemertines, where the blood fluid is often provided with haemoglobiniferous disks, the chief functions of the side organs may not rather be a sensory one needs further investigation.

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  • Now, Kant and his followers start from this second and narrower meaning, and usually narrow it still more by assuming that what appears to the senses is as mental as the sensation, being undistinguishable from it or from the idea of it, and that an appearance is a mental idea(Vorstellung) of sense; and then they conclude that we can know by inference nothing but such mental appearances, actual and possible, and therefore nothing beyond sensory experience.

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  • When rubbed into the skin with such substances as alcohol or glycerine, which are absorbed, atropine is carried through the epidermis with them, and in this manner - or when simply applied to a raw surface - it paralyses the terminals of the pain-conducting sensory nerves.

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  • A further stage in evolution is that the muscle-cells lose their connexion with the epithelium and come to lie entirely beneath it, forming a sub-epithelial contractile layer, developed chiefly in the tentacles of the polyp. The of the evolution of the ganglioncells is probably similar; an epithelial cell develops processes of nervous nature from the base, which come into connexion with the bases of the sensory cells, with the muscular cells, and with the similar processes of other nerve-cells; next the nerve-cell loses its connexion with the outer epithelium and becomes a sub-epithelial ganglion-cell which is closely connected with the muscular layer, conveying stimuli from the sensory cells to the contractile elements.

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  • Other sensory cells with long cilia cover a sort of cushion (n.c.) at the base of the club; the club may be long and the cushion small, or the...

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  • Aconite further depresses the activity of all nerve-terminals, the sensory being affected before the motor.

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  • That they are in some cases produced by physical or sensory stimuli does not constitute them irrational, and it is purely arbitrary to confine the word pleasure to those cases in which such stimuli are the proximate causes.

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  • Additional paired antennae may occur within the coronal surface, which is the seat of the sensory styles, of less complex structure, which occur in many genera.

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  • In the former it means that Nature is .mental phenomena, actual and possible, of sensory experience; in the latter it means that Nature is positive facts, either experienced or inferred.

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  • The stimulus of water on the breast may be regarded as a sensory presentation which is followed by a definite and adaptive application of behaviour.

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  • The sense organs are eyes, antennae, sensory styles and a statocyst in a few species.

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  • In some species there are also sensory papillae comparable to the aesthetes of Chitons.

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  • The air-bladder may be so reduced as to lose its hydrostatic function and become subservient to a sensory organ, its outer exposed surface being connected with the skin by a meatus between the bands of muscle, and conveying the thermobarometrical impressions to the auditory nerves.

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  • If the sensory nerves of the extensor muscle be severed, the "jerk" is lost.

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  • The acid is capable of passing through the unbroken skin, whereupon it instantly paralyses the sensory nerves.

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  • In this tribe the males have both antennae of the first pair as sensory organs.

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  • Within the limits of these supposed sensory elements he accords more than many psychologists do to sense; because, following the nativists, Johannes Muller and Hering, he includes sensations of time and space, which, however, are not to be regarded as " pure intuitions " in the style of Kant.

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  • The nerve cell just prior to sleep is still well capable of response to stimuli, although perhaps the threshold-value of the stimulus has become rather high, whereas after entrance upon sleep and continuance of sleep for several hours, and more, when all spur to the dissimilation process has been long withheld, the threshold-value of the sensory stimulus becomes enormously higher than before.

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