Definition of Ergograms

1. ergogram [n] - See also: ergogram

Lexicographical Neighbors of Ergograms

ergocalciferols
ergocornine
ergocriptine
ergocristine
ergocryptine
ergodic
ergodic regime
ergodically
ergodicities
ergodicity
ergodynamograph
ergoesthesiograph
ergogenic
ergogenics
ergogram
ergograms (current term)
ergograph
ergographic
ergographs
ergoline
ergolines
ergolinic
ergology
ergoloid mesylates
ergomania
ergometer
ergometers
ergometric
ergometries
ergometrine

Literary usage of Ergograms

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The British Journal of Psychology by British Psychological Society (1913)
"The latter has shown that even in a state of pronounced mental fatigue he could execute ergograms distinctly above the average. Dr Rivers usually obtained ..."

2. A Text-book of Experimental Psychology by Charles Samuel Myers (1909)
"155), and it corresponds to the curve of work calculated from each of a series of ergograms, when the weight lifted is constant, a sufficient interval of ..."

3. Review of Neurology and Psychiatry (1905)
"Thus if the pressure used in the experiment referred to above is prolonged from 20 to 40 seconds, the ergograms decrease to 2'58 and 247. ..."

4. The Human Motor, Or, The Scientific Foundations of Labour and Industry: With by Jules Amar, Elsie Mary Butterworth, George E. Wright (1920)
"135 shows two of these traces or ergograms. ... ergograms have led to the following conclusions :—Each muscular group produces its maximum work for a ..."

5. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1904)
"In the illustrations the following ergograms are given: hysteria without any particular motor symptoms, neurasthenia, multiple sclerosis with one-sided ..."

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