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... melodrama and histrionics. Intellect. Clinical meaning: A conscious function of intelligence focusing on calculation and analysis, measurable by IQ tests, enabled mainly by one of six brain ...
2. IMMMUN chapter 6
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... to decline or prompts emotional imbalance (and the resulting sentimental 'soap-opera melodrama' behaviors) that cause relationship troubles. If either or both of you don't pay enough regular attention ...
3. IMMMUN chapter 5
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... fact and portrayed fiction. We become very good at modeling fake, often melodramatic sentiments, and we call them emotional responses. They aren't.  It may feel to you as if you just have to ...
4. IMMMUN chapter 4
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... ever doubt the value of practice as experience, consider how much a single sensory experience affects gene expression in the brain. Research reveals even a single sensory input causes a dramatic and diverse ...
5. IMMMUN chapter 3
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... functions that influence behaviors such as defense, awareness of danger, and responses to environmentally induced stress, all attributes which are dramatically affected by domestication.[33]   ...
6. IMMMUN Appendix 1
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... home, or even go outside. Mild cases feel anxious doing so.  People stuck in M3: Relate everything to: Emotion and imagination (melodrama, superstition, magic, religion, fiction, sentiment). ...
7. IMMMUN Chapter 1
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... panic, hassle, fear, melodrama, anxiety, trauma, dysfunction and unhappiness in people's lives, stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of reality - or should I say of the reality of nature ...
... 'mutants') will adapt better, overtake the original population, and their epigenetic changes will appear in their offspring. Epigenetic mechanisms directly regulate genetic processes and can be dramatically ...
... bees. The lifespan of queen bees is typically 20 times longer than that of worker bees. Epigenetics is responsible for these dramatic differences. Both queen and worker bee larvae are initially fed ...
... citizens; so help me god, -and, incidentally, in control of public media. 'Creative people' although often viewed privately as 'someone to coerce into making what we want', were framed publicly as melodramatic, ...
... Media Coverage of Neuroscience (2000-2010) The paper concludes that the media has used neuroscience research “applied out of context to create dramatic headlines, push thinly disguised ideological ...
... dude called Rama [3] outlined his research into the links between brain structure and function. He describes the phenomena of “synesthesia” in which people experience, for example, sounds in ...
13. Toxins in food - Aspartame - info 1981-2013
(Neurohacking/Lifestyle & Nutrition)
... that fed them.       One female rat developed a tumor so large she often used it as a pillow.     The fact that the European Union can discredit the Ramazzini ...
... has important implications for changes that take place in depression or traumatic brain injury, where we sometimes see dramatic changes in motivation in humans. To look at this, they had rats perform ...
15. Emotion - disorders of emotion
(Neurohacking/Theory & Research)
... protein known to dramatically enhance tPA activity33, in the pathogenesis of depression34. Antidepressant treatment leads to p11 upregulation, whereas transgenics overexpressing p11 behave similarly to ...
16. CR - Intermittent Fasting research
(Neurohacking/Lifestyle & Nutrition)
... of blood sugar levels. For some, 'fasting' does not mean abstaining from ALL food, but rather a dramatic reduction of calorie intake. We should of course continue to drink water when fasting. Some of ...
... context of the big picture'; not with my eyes but from my inner point of view. For example, we say someone should 'get a sense of perspective' when they are overly dramatic or hysterical about a trivial ...
18. Deschooling essays by John Taylor Gatto
(Homeworld/School & Work Alternatives)
... are numbered so that if any get away they can be returned to the right class. Over the years the variety of ways children are numbered has increased dramatically, until it is hard to see the human being ...
19. Sakiro's Hackipedia Volume 1
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... try to memorize it: Yoko Ramani 1643 Broadsway Crescent, Kenmare, Eire. 3. [Type/write in your answer ‘Y’ or ‘N’.] Have you had more trouble than usual remembering what ...
... of Genetics, Charles Darwin: Darwin noticed thet the emotional behavior in animals (for example, alarm calls, status/sexual displays or defensive posturing) seemed often a lot more melodramatic or 'intense' ...
...    the parietal lobe Sits on top of the occipital lobe, at the rear of the brain. The parietal lobe assists with verbal and visual short term memory and damage to the supramarginal gyrus causes ...
  “The Tell Tale Brain” by V. S. Ramachandran   http://www.amazon.com/Tell-Tale-Brain-Neuroscientists-Quest-Makes/dp/0393077829   Reviews of “The Tell Tale Brain” ...
  “The Tell Tale Brain” by V. S. Ramachandran   http://www.amazon.com/Tell-Tale-Brain-Neuroscientists-Quest-Makes/dp/0393077829   Reviews of “The Tell Tale Brain” ...
24. Passages in the Void
(Workshop/Stuff by Members)
... There were arcs of color everywhere. Although I understood the general theory I had never seen quite such a dramatic display of the phenomenon.  "It's your sign!"  "What?"  ...
25. Physiological methods - Epigenetics - Hacking the genome
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... and/or a mutation in one or two genes that control the storage of nutrients and resistance to cell damage (RAS2 and SCH9), resulted in a dramatically extended life span; up to six times longer than normal ...
26. Preliminary Statement
(Workshop/Pillars Of Nobility)
... another hand, the number of times I've begun to write a story is... substantial (and this is just not to use 'stunning', 'astounding', or yet 'dramatic'...). And this kind of lucidity upon myself didn't ...
... melodrama and histrionics. Intellect. Clinical meaning: A conscious function of intelligence focusing on calculation and analysis, measurable by IQ tests, enabled mainly by one of six brain ...
28. Play: Big Pharma
(Neurohacking/Resources)
... is the condition of “social anxiety disorder,” which is diagnosed in a poor, unemployed woman who is having trouble with job interviews (16). Berry dramatizes the solution—prescribe an ...
29. Glutamate & Empathy
(Neurohacking/Drugs & Chemicals)
... minds–a biological basis. Science 286: 1692–1695. Ochsner KN, Knierim K, Ludlow DH, Hanelin J, Ramachandran T, et al. (2004) Reflecting upon feelings: an fMRI study of neural systems ...
30. Methods & Technology Intro - Part II: Technology
(Neurohacking/Methods & Technology)
... as the result of various experiences   (1990) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) relies on the paramagnetic properties of oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin to see images of ...
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