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affective Pertaining to mood, emotion, feeling, sensibility, or a mental state.
(05 Mar 2000)
affective disorders A class of mental disorder's characterised by a disturbance in mood.
(05 Mar 2000)
affective disorders, psychotic Disorders in which the essential feature is a severe disturbance in mood (depression, anxiety, elation, and excitement) accompanied by psychotic symptoms such as delusions, hallucinations, gross impairment in reality testing, etc.
(12 Dec 1998)
affective personality disorder A disturbance of feelings or mood expressed as a milder form of depression and related emotional features that colour the whole psychic life and for which psychosocial stressors are believed to play the major role.
(05 Mar 2000)
affective psychosis Psychosis with predominant affective features.
Synonym: manic psychosis.
(05 Mar 2000)
affective symptoms Mood or emotional responses dissonant with or inappropriate to the behaviour and/or stimulus.
(12 Dec 1998)
affective tone The mental state (pleasure, repugnance, etc.) that accompanies every act or thought.
Synonym: affective tone, emotional tone, affectivity.
Fundamental tone, the component of lowest frequency in a complex tone.
(05 Mar 2000)
schizo-affective Having an admixture of symptoms suggestive of both schizophrenia and affective (mood) disorder.
(05 Mar 2000)
schizo-affective psychosis Psychotic disturbance in which there is a mixture of schizophrenic and manic-depressive symptoms.
(05 Mar 2000)
seasonal affective disorder A syndrome characterised by depressions that recur annually at the same time each year, usually during the winter months. Other symptoms include anxiety, irritability, decreased energy, increased appetite (carbohydrate cravings), increased duration of sleep, and weight gain. Sad (seasonal affective disorder) can be treated by daily exposure to bright artificial lights (phototherapy), during the season of recurrence.
(12 Dec 1998)
ambisense expression strategy <molecular biology> The coding of viral proteins in both the sense (coding) and antisense (noncoding) strands of complementary mRNA, so that the viral proteins are produced no matter which strand gets translated.
(09 Oct 1997)
mammalian expression vector <molecular biology> A vector that will produce large amounts of eukaryotic protein taxonomy notwithstanding, and not necessarily a protein from a mammal.
(20 Mar 1998)
gene expression <molecular biology> The full use of the information in a gene via transcription and translation leading to production of a protein and hence the appearance of the phenotype determined by that gene. Gene expression is assumed to be controlled at various points in the sequence leading to protein synthesis and this control is thought to be the major determinant of cellular differentiation in eukaryotes.
(18 Nov 1997)
gene expression regulation Any of the processes by which nuclear, cytoplasmic, or intercellular factors influence the differential control of gene action at the level of transcription or translation. These processes include gene activation and genetic induction.
(12 Dec 1998)
gene expression regulation, archaeal Any of the processes by which cytoplasmic or intercellular factors influence the differential control of gene action in archaea.
(12 Dec 1998)
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