aversive造句1. Do not use any aversive imagery at this time, and explain this to your client in advance.
2. But here again the gain in freedom from aversive stimulation may compensate for any loss of admiration.
3. The identified dopamine neurons were inhibited by aversive stimulus.
4. The identified dopamine neurons were inhibited by the aversive stimulus.
5. This uses electro-shock and behavior modification with an aversive conditioning of the old and a reward conditioning of the desired personality.
6. Mixing the aversive with the appetitive sends conflicting information to the brain, and confusion is what the senses are trying to avoid as they supply you with useful, lifesaving information.
7. When the form of aversive stimulation is unpleasant mental imagery the technique is known as covert.
8. Objective: To compare the analgesic effects and aversive side effects of ropivacaine combined with pethidine, morphine or tramadol for postoperative patient control epidural analgesia(PCEA).
9. Inappropriate, excessive or capricious administration of aversive stimulation has led to scandals, lawsuits and prohibitions.
10. That sensation of disembodiment—pleasurable during a kiss, aversive when you first suffer the death of a loved one—is common in first experiences, as are feelings of heightened reality or unreality.
11. Aversive events produce different, mostly slower, electrophysiological dopamine responses that consist predominantly of depressions.
12. We have already discussed the problem of making deferred aversive consequences effective.
13. For operant conditioning to work, at least some stimuli must be reinforcing, and others aversive, without previous training.
14. While it is not physically painful it is certainly psychologically aversive.
15. However, in these scenes you will present the non-drinking alternatives prior to the client experiencing any significant uncomfortable or aversive reactions.
16. The stimuli are usually mild[/aversive.html], but they are effective if they have been associated in the past with stronger aversive consequences.
17. The fact that you have not made the progress you aimed for is punishing enough without adding more aversive consequences.
18. A type of conditioning in which the subject must learn to make some response to avoid a noxious or aversive stimulus.
19. Paradoxically, between 3 and 49 % of presumed dopamine neurons are excited aversive stimuli.