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单词 dissociation
释义

Definition of dissociation in English:

dissociation

noun dɪˌsəʊsɪˈeɪʃ(ə)ndɪˌsəʊʃɪˈeɪʃ(ə)n
mass noun
  • 1The action of disconnecting or separating or the state of being disconnected.

    we in the West honour a long-standing dissociation between church and state
    Example sentencesExamples
    • This dissociation between the strength of the regional identity and its expression on the ideological plane is the locus of the flexibility and endurance of the movement.
    • I wonder at Julian's severe dissociation of mind and body.
    • Can we drop the alibi of ignorance - the endless insistence that we did not know - and resist the seductive lures of solipsism, of denial, of dissociation?
    • In Hobsbawm's case, its interest lies not in any dissociation, but in the connection between political loyalty and social accommodation.
    • It's true that the blockades are exciting, but what is truly exiting about the organization is that it brooks no dissociation between that excitement and our everyday lives.
    • It is that dissociation that has so troubled us, so alienated us.
    • For simplicity, the times separating association and dissociation events of the transcription factors are modeled as a random variable that follows a Poisson distribution.
    • Single stomach smooth muscle cells were isolated by enzymatic dissociation with trypsin and collagenase as described previously.
    • That complete dissociation from one's old life I found appalling.
    • By this method, they were able to measure separately the formation and dissociation rates for a few applied voltages.
    • Such judgment is a kind of abstract dissociation from experience that directs our emotions into proper channels like a letter of complaint that defuses itself by its own propriety.
    • But California's decades of dissociation from reality are catching up with it.
    • What Shiang herself experiences in Paris, as an almost accidental tourist who doesn't speak French, is severe dislocation and even dissociation.
    • We were surprised to be able to distinguish the dissociation of fibers, as the fluorescence signal from fibers is only 9% of the total fluorescence from the virus.
    • The oscillating effect necessarily draws upon all that is absent, creating an inevitable and disturbing condition of dissociation.
    • Evidence of Amis' complete dissociation from contemporary culture has played out lately amid his spacy declarations concerning the internet.
    • The latter term is in dissociation from those scientific strategies which might be designated as statistical analysis of experimental behavior.
    Synonyms
    separation, disconnection, detachment, severance, divorce, uncoupling, split, setting apart
    segregation, distinction, division
    isolation, alienation, distancing
    literary sundering
    rare disseverment
    1. 1.1Chemistry The splitting of a molecule into smaller molecules, atoms, or ions, especially by a reversible process.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In the case of diatomic molecules, the dissociation energy refers to the energy required to break the gaseous molecules into their constituent atoms.
      • These phenomena ultimately depend on the molecular association and dissociation rate constants.
      • Wigner's thesis contains the first theory of the rates of association and dissociation of molecules.
      • The energy required for a chemical reaction depends on the bond dissociation energy of the atoms comprising the molecules.
      • The presented study has revealed single-molecule dissociation data for RNA molecules of increasing structural complexity.
    2. 1.2Psychiatry Separation of normally related mental processes, resulting in one group functioning independently from the rest, leading in extreme cases to disorders such as multiple personality.
      count noun the dissociations that one can observe in neuropsychological patients
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A social judgement task was used to index dissociations between implicit and explicit memory.
      • More recent thinking, again of researchers working with adults, has raised questions about the meaning of explicit-implicit dissociations in directed forgetting.
      • Even when the corpus callosum is intact, striking dissociations of consciousness can be demonstrated.
      • Two separate dissociations occurred in Experiments 1 and 2 involving repetition priming in the context of a trivia paradigm.
      • Dissociative experiences are considered to range from the minor dissociations of everyday life to dissociative psychopathology, with higher scores on the DES indicating a greater degree of dissociation.
 
 

Definition of dissociation in US English:

dissociation

noun
  • 1The disconnection or separation of something from something else or the state of being disconnected.

    the dissociation between the executive and the judiciary is the legacy of the Act of Settlement
    Example sentencesExamples
    • We were surprised to be able to distinguish the dissociation of fibers, as the fluorescence signal from fibers is only 9% of the total fluorescence from the virus.
    • This dissociation between the strength of the regional identity and its expression on the ideological plane is the locus of the flexibility and endurance of the movement.
    • What Shiang herself experiences in Paris, as an almost accidental tourist who doesn't speak French, is severe dislocation and even dissociation.
    • That complete dissociation from one's old life I found appalling.
    • The latter term is in dissociation from those scientific strategies which might be designated as statistical analysis of experimental behavior.
    • Can we drop the alibi of ignorance - the endless insistence that we did not know - and resist the seductive lures of solipsism, of denial, of dissociation?
    • It is that dissociation that has so troubled us, so alienated us.
    • Single stomach smooth muscle cells were isolated by enzymatic dissociation with trypsin and collagenase as described previously.
    • In Hobsbawm's case, its interest lies not in any dissociation, but in the connection between political loyalty and social accommodation.
    • Evidence of Amis' complete dissociation from contemporary culture has played out lately amid his spacy declarations concerning the internet.
    • The oscillating effect necessarily draws upon all that is absent, creating an inevitable and disturbing condition of dissociation.
    • Such judgment is a kind of abstract dissociation from experience that directs our emotions into proper channels like a letter of complaint that defuses itself by its own propriety.
    • I wonder at Julian's severe dissociation of mind and body.
    • By this method, they were able to measure separately the formation and dissociation rates for a few applied voltages.
    • But California's decades of dissociation from reality are catching up with it.
    • For simplicity, the times separating association and dissociation events of the transcription factors are modeled as a random variable that follows a Poisson distribution.
    • It's true that the blockades are exciting, but what is truly exiting about the organization is that it brooks no dissociation between that excitement and our everyday lives.
    Synonyms
    separation, disconnection, detachment, severance, divorce, uncoupling, split, setting apart
    1. 1.1Chemistry The splitting of a molecule into smaller molecules, atoms, or ions, especially by a reversible process.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Wigner's thesis contains the first theory of the rates of association and dissociation of molecules.
      • In the case of diatomic molecules, the dissociation energy refers to the energy required to break the gaseous molecules into their constituent atoms.
      • These phenomena ultimately depend on the molecular association and dissociation rate constants.
      • The energy required for a chemical reaction depends on the bond dissociation energy of the atoms comprising the molecules.
      • The presented study has revealed single-molecule dissociation data for RNA molecules of increasing structural complexity.
    2. 1.2Psychiatry Separation of normally related mental processes, resulting in one group functioning independently from the rest, leading in extreme cases to disorders such as multiple personality.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Dissociative experiences are considered to range from the minor dissociations of everyday life to dissociative psychopathology, with higher scores on the DES indicating a greater degree of dissociation.
      • A social judgement task was used to index dissociations between implicit and explicit memory.
      • Even when the corpus callosum is intact, striking dissociations of consciousness can be demonstrated.
      • More recent thinking, again of researchers working with adults, has raised questions about the meaning of explicit-implicit dissociations in directed forgetting.
      • Two separate dissociations occurred in Experiments 1 and 2 involving repetition priming in the context of a trivia paradigm.
 
 
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更新时间:2025/1/27 22:21:10