Excessive sensitivity of an organ or body part.
1 Moreover, the increased M1 excitability correlated with the benefit of interleaved practice.
2 These properties condition the level of excitability of local pools of neurons.
3 Changes in the phosphene threshold provide a measure of visual cortex excitability .
4 And yet the nervous excitability , and even irritability, of musicians is proverbial.
5 In man, a condition of nervous over - excitability has been described as tetany.
6 A curious and tragic instance of this excitability occurred some years ago.
7 Phosphorylation of neurotransmitter receptors can modify their activity and regulate neuronal excitability .
8 The excitability , irritation, and recklessness which had previously characterized them had disappeared.
9 He became very obese, and his nervous excitability to an extent subsided.
10 He maintains that, above all, these cases show instability and psychic excitability .
11 These findings suggest that BAK inhibits cell death by modifying neuronal excitability .
12 The level of cortical excitability has been shown to change during motor learning.
13 Picador's advance publicity for this, only his second collection, betrays a certain excitability .
14 It is unknown whether changes in corticomotor excitability follow exercise in healthy humans.
15 It was the exquisite excitability that for the moment he controlled and owned.
16 No wonder then if his natural excitability was often morbidly increased.
Другие примеры для термина "excitability"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Translations for excitability
Excitability в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки