单词 | electrobiology |
释义 | electrobiologyn. 1. A branch of biology which deals with electrical phenomena in living organisms. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > study > [noun] > biology > branches of biology micrography1658 micrology1848 biostatics1849 electrobiology1849 biotechnics1852 human biology1860 phylogeny1872 developmental biology1877 psychobiology1879 microbiology1880 biokinetics1883 bacteriology1884 geratology1884 thremmatology1888 cell biology1889 biophysics1892 biomechanics1899 pathobiology1900 biometry1901 biometrics1902 metabiology1906 bioenergetics1907 radiobiology1919 biomedicine1922 photobiology1923 virology1935 sociobiology1946 space biology1955 prebiology1963 chronobiology1969 glycobiology1988 1849 A. Smee (title) Elements of electro-biology, or the voltaic mechanism of Man. 1881 Nature 12 May 39/1 [The first number of L'Électricien contains] an interesting article on electrobiology. 1913 Proc. Royal Soc. B. 86 215 Neither the recent work on electrobiology by Bernstein, nor that on the hydrogen ion in biological processes by Sorensen, contains any reference to the measurements of ions in tissues during rest or activity. 1953 Electroencephalogr. & Clin. Neurophysiol. 5 109/1 To distinguish between these two different kinds of potentials, noise and signal, is a common problem in many fields; in the field of electrobiology it is of particular importance. 1997 Bioelectrochem. & Bioenergetics 44 89/1 To study the relationships between the response and physiological characters of living cells, and to find biological applications of the relationships are the areas of continuing interests [sic] for electrobiology. 2. Mesmerism, esp. as inducing a state of suggestibility or as attributed to an electro-vital force.Originally applied to a form of mesmerism in which a state of hypnotic suggestibility was induced by asking the subject to hold and gaze at a small disc of copper and zinc. ΘΚΠ the world > the supernatural > the paranormal > [noun] > mesmerism animal magnetism1784 magnetism1784 mesmerism1784 magnetizing1787 magnetization1801 zoomagnetism1824 tellurism1832 hypnotism1842 pathetism1843 zoistic magnetism1849 electrobiology1850 electropsychology1850 biologism1852 statuvolism1871 statuvolence1873 braidism1882 hypnosis1882 biomagnetism1887 the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > physical insensibility > hypnotic state > [noun] > forms of hypnotism mesmerism1784 biology1850 electrobiology1850 braidism1882 1850 W. Gregory Lett. Animal Magn. 74 All the phenomena of the conscious state in..electro biology..can be produced..by the older mesmeric or magnetic..methods. 1851 W. B. Carpenter Let. 27 June in Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc. (1963) 53 118/2 We have been considerably astonished by some of the phenomena exhibited by two Americans, Messrs. Darling and Stone, under the designation of Electro-Biology. 1853 Q. Rev. Sept. 504 ‘Electro-biology’, or ‘Biology’ (as it was commonly designated), now became a fashionable amusement, at evening parties. 1874 W. B. Carpenter Princ. Mental Physiol. (1879) ii. xiv. 550 Who styled themselves ‘professors’ of a new art which they termed Electro-Biology. 1900 J. Jastrow Fact & Fable in Psychol. 220 ‘Electro-biology’ made its way into England, and there found a place among the endless forms of absurdity and pseudo-science then prevalent. 1996 Nineteenth Cent. Lit. 50 507 By the 1840s and early 1850s specialist and generalist periodicals were filled with one curious manifestation of the vitalism-materialism debate: mesmerism, also called electro-biology. Derivatives electrobioˈlogical adj. of or relating to electrobiology. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > physical sensibility > physical insensibility > hypnotic state > [adjective] hypnotic1843 electrobiological1849 biomagnetic?1882 cataplectic1883 1849 T. B. Macaulay Jrnl. 13 May (MS) I fought a mesmeric and electro-biological battle. 1856 R. A. Vaughan Hours with Mystics (1860) II. 109 The real combat was one of spirit against spirit..what would now be called electro-biological. 1933 Science 7 July Suppl. 11/2 Professor Herrick ventured the prediction that ‘the electro-biological era now beginning will yield as revolutionary changes in our conceptions of the physiology of the nervous system as the invention of the microscope inaugurated in anatomy’. 1954 Science 23 July 152/1 In electrobiological work, it is often convenient to use two or more electrodes separated by a known, small distance. 2005 Behavioural Brain Res. 164 42/1 We showed that these episodes were marked by electrobiological rhythms in the 25-45 Hz frequency band in several distinct cortical zones. electrobiˈologist n. (a) a believer in or practitioner of electrobiology (sense 2) (now historical); (b) an expert or specialist in electrobiology (sense 1) (rare). ΘΚΠ the world > health and disease > healing > healer > alternative practitioner > [noun] > others electrobiologist1852 kinesipath1860 Ayurvedist1950 orgonomist1950 traditional healer1958 1852 J. Braid Magic (ed. 3) 105 I am led to infer that my subjective or personal theory is..somewhat nearer the truth than the theories of the mesmerists and electro-biologists. 1879 J. Hands New Views Matter 338 The electrobiologist by projecting his vital animal magnetic fluid from his system can make certain sensitive or susceptible individuals perform any movements he pleases. 1969 PMLA 84 536/2 The so-called ‘electro-biologists,’..used the metaphor—which they took quite literally—of positive electric charges in the strong-willed operator and negative in the weak-willed subject. 1996 FT Energy Newslett. (Power Energy) (Nexis) 4 Oct. 24 Adopting the 100 Nanotesla (nT) limit recommended by certain electrobiologists would make Switzerland a ‘laughing stock’ in the rest of Europe. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < |
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