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Total: 45 results found.

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...  Stress. Clinical meaning: A specific (beneficial) response by the body to a challenging physical, emotional or mental stimulus, including the release of hormones & neurotransmitters according to ...
2. IMMMUN chapter 8
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... in keeping our circadian clocks aligned for producing hormones necessary for healthy wakefulness and sleep. Morning light also ensures healthy levels of cortisol. Nighttime exposure to blue light should ...
3. IMMMUN Chapter 7
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... bind to proteins and this alter the activity of those proteins.   Each brain cell ‘translates’ signals of chemical information about its context (neurotransmission, nutrients, hormones, ...
4. IMMMUN chapter 6
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
...  Playfulness is important in all close relationships; it encourages the experience of positive emotions and also relates to biological processes such as the activation of 'feelgood' hormones and neurotransmitters.  ...
5. IMMMUN chapter 5
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... some more complex behaviors require learned patterns, and some behaviors need both.  Emotion uses neurotransmitters to tell the brain what to do, and hormones to tell the body what to do at ...
6. IMMMUN chapter 3
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... bored, tired, depressed, apathetic, irritable, pressured, annoyed and anxious. If things do not improve long term, our immune system will start to go down, our hormones and neurotransmitters will drift ...
7. IMMMUN chapter 2
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... modality fundamentally affects the immediate systems we are embedded in; our brains and bodies, through our hormones and neurotransmitters controlling our emotions and behavior; resulting in the system ...
8. IMMMUN Chapter 1
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... similar to that of other mammals; we share exactly the same hormones with many species simply because 'biology works that way'. Same magic tricks, different stage.   The thing that makes us ...
9. Subject Index for Archives
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... chemicals 3.301 hormones androgens    ...
... effects of epigenetics - the same genes could make a person feel happy or depressed, the same hormones could make us feel excited or anxious - depending on our environment and ability to interact.[89] ...
... about what is going on shape our emotional states too, and affect our behavior accordingly. We already know that our thoughts and perceptions powerfully affect our physiology via hormones and emotions ...
12. Sakiro's Hackipedia Volume 3
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... stupidly simple, but it's proven effective in a variety of studies and settings. It works because the chemistry of desire and excitement utilize some of the same neurotransmitters and hormones as the chemistry ...
... higher exposure), but there is more to hormesis than meets the eye. It is not true, for example, that if we experience small amounts of stress hormones as youngsters we will adapt more easily to stressful ...
... get there, and that means there can be no anxiety (because frontal-lobe blood flow is precisely what anxiety hormones shut down). Anxiety also prevents nutrient digestion. Yet again, 'doing things in the ...
15. Toxins in food - Aspartame - info 1981-2013
(Neurohacking/Lifestyle & Nutrition)
... of insulin and leptin; two hormones that are intricately involved with satiety and fat storage. Insulin and leptin are also the primary hormones that regulate your metabolism. So although you’re ...
16. CR - Intermittent Fasting research
(Neurohacking/Lifestyle & Nutrition)
... brain cells and make them more resilient against stress. This protective effect is in part due to fasting's effect on leptin and ghrelin; two hormones involved in appetite regulation. These hormones are ...
17. Sakiro's Hackipedia Volume 1
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... our brain begins a kind of functioning that’s similar to sleep, but carries some added benefits we can’t achieve as well in any other state, including the release of certain hormones that promote ...
... behaviors. The concrete processes that maintain internal homeostasis use 'drives' such as hunger or sex to motivate behavioral changes, signaling with neurotransmitters and hormones to muscles and bones ...
... with a big “NO!!!” associated with it, closely followed by the associated concept “run your ass off”; and the weighting signal to flood your body with hormones that can coordinate ...
20. Memory - memory editing update, 2004-2011
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... and this emotional significance is overexpressed biologically through anxiety hormones, particularly cortisol, epinephrine and norepinephrine. Propranolol is one of the beta blockers that enters brain ...
... even the people you socialize with, can all affect the levels of anxiety hormones in your bloodstream and can slow you down and even damage your brain without you consciously noticing. So it’s up ...
22. Understanding nutrition - Simple Guide to Food chemistry
(Neurohacking/Lifestyle & Nutrition)
...    estrogen hormones Protein provides the building blocks for body building, growth & repair.    ...
...  Stress. Clinical meaning: A specific (beneficial) response by the body to a challenging physical, emotional or mental stimulus, including the release of hormones & neurotransmitters according to ...
24. Methods & Technology Intro - Part II: Technology
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... of the body, e.g., hormones and neurotransmitters. Other chemicals, known as breakdown products, or metabolites, give an indication of which chemicals have been used in the brain, just as wrappers in the ...
25. Methods & Technology Intro - Part I: Methods
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... that bright light therapy may activate the production of reproductive hormones.   Music therapy Helps improve your observable level of functioning and self-reported quality of life in various ...
... power to shape your health and impact your longevity. This makes all the sense in the world when you consider that long-term exposure to anxiety hormones eventually takes its toll on your biological ...
... it needs enough to function at its best. Longer term, even slight dehydration can raise stress hormones, damaging your brain over time. Consult the Nutrition section of the library to learn more about ...
... of two hormones, epinephrine [adrenalin] and norepinephrine [noradrenaline], that produce the physical symptoms of anxiety, reducing heart rate and muscle tremor. Buspirone is less addictive than the ...
  Drugs & Chemicals Intro & Tutorial   Part 1: Introduction and Indigenous chemicals (neurotransmitters & hormones)   Introduction A ‘drug’ is usually ...
... through shock, and many prescription drugs taken exactly as directed have killed people via ‘side effects’. These days, hormones and even neurotransmitters are used as drugs, both in the medicinal ...
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