Living SystemsMcGraw-Hill, 1978 - 1102 pagina's |
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Pagina 426
... activity of the fingers , for example . A monkey with its pyramidal tract transected can climb and hang on the wires of its cage but may have trouble in letting go . Bilateral removal of the area around the precentral gyrus of the ...
... activity of the fingers , for example . A monkey with its pyramidal tract transected can climb and hang on the wires of its cage but may have trouble in letting go . Bilateral removal of the area around the precentral gyrus of the ...
Pagina 462
... activity . Glucose is drawn from storage tissues and distributed preferen- tially to the muscles . Prolonged muscular activity usually increases eating , as weight - watchers can prove . The total mass of muscle grows if the high rate ...
... activity . Glucose is drawn from storage tissues and distributed preferen- tially to the muscles . Prolonged muscular activity usually increases eating , as weight - watchers can prove . The total mass of muscle grows if the high rate ...
Pagina 585
... activity , or some similiar activity , now . [ 2 ] The more often within a given period of time a man's activity rewards the activity of another , the more often the other will emit the activity . [ 3 ] The more valuable to a man a unit ...
... activity , or some similiar activity , now . [ 2 ] The more often within a given period of time a man's activity rewards the activity of another , the more often the other will emit the activity . [ 3 ] The more valuable to a man a unit ...
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acid activity adjustment processes amino acids animals associated axon behavior bits blood boundary brain carry cell membrane cellular central nervous system cerebral cortex cesses changes channel capacity chemical complex cortex cross-level cytoplasm decision decoding decrease echelons encoding energy environment enzyme error Example experimental experiments extruder feedback fibers function genetic glands glucose higher hormones human HYPOTHESIS increased information input information output information processing input rate input transducer internal transducer learning living systems markers mation matter-energy memory ment microtubules mitochondria mitosis molecules motor nerve nervous system neural neurons nucleus occur organelles organism level organism's output rate output transducer oxygen patterns percent produce protein Psychol pulses receptor cells relationships Reprinted by permission response retina sensory signals simulation species storage stored stress structure subjects substances suprasystem synapses synthesis theory tion tissue transmission transmitted types variables various visual