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proprioception (Q1129066)

From Wikidata
sense of the relative position of one's own parts of the body and strength of effort being employed in movement
  • deep sensation
  • bathyesthesia
  • GO:0019230
  • kinesthesia
  • proprioceptive impulses
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    English
    proprioception
    sense of the relative position of one's own parts of the body and strength of effort being employed in movement
    • deep sensation
    • bathyesthesia
    • GO:0019230
    • kinesthesia
    • proprioceptive impulses

    Statements

    proprioceptive impulses
    1 reference
    Developments in the study of thought / Elements of thought / The logical ... / Evident in ... it held that thinking depends on events in the musculature: these events, known as proprioceptive impulses (i.e., impulses arising in response to physical position, posture, equilibrium, or internal condition), ... (English)
    proprioceptive impulses
    Proprioception image-01.jpg
    1,270 × 1,930; 1.05 MB
    0 references
    1 reference
    In 1906, Charles Scott Sherrington published a landmark work that introduced the terms "proprioception", "interoception", and "exteroception". (English)

    Identifiers

    Proprioception
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