| sensation |
(sen
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| sense |
(sense) (sens) [L. sensus, from sentire to perceive, feel] 1. any of the physical processes by which stimuli are received, transduced, and conducted as impulses to be interpreted in the brain; they may be classified as either special s's or somatic s's. 2. pertaining to the sense strand of a of a nucleic acid; see under strand.
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| sensibility |
(sen
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| sensibilization |
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| sensible |
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| SENS | an area of the cortex including the precentral gyrus and the postcentral gyrus and combining sensory and motor functions |
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| SENS | of or relating to the neural process of sensation |
| SENS | hearing loss due to failure of the auditory nerve |
| SENS | of a nerve fiber or impulse originating outside and passing toward the central nervous system |
| SENS | involving or derived from the senses |
| SENS | relating to or concerned in sensation |
| SENS | activity intended to achieve a particular sensory result |
| SENS | aphasia characterized by fluent but meaningless speech and severe impairment of the ability understand spoken or written words |
| SENS | focal epilepsy initiated by somatosensory phenomena |
| SENS | the faculty through which the external world is apprehended |
| SENS | a long stiff hair growing from the snout or brow of most mammals as e.g. a cat |
| SENS | a nerve that leads from receptors to the central nervous system |
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