¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Excitations
1. excitation [n] - See also: excitation
Lexicographical Neighbors of Excitations
Literary usage of Excitations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Principles of Physiological Psychology by Wilhelm Max Wundt (1904)
"Thus, excitations of the vascular centre, which inhibit the circulation of blood
in the brain, are probably, in many instances, the cause of general ..."
2. Irritability: A Physiological Analysis of the General Effect of Stimuli in by Max Verworn (1913)
"Tonic excitations. Conditions of inhibition. Various types of inhibition. ...
Here we found a case of interference of individual excitations. ..."
3. An American Text-book of Physiology by William Henry Howell (1900)
"The muscles of marmots during the winter sleep can be tetanized by 5 excitations
per second (Patrizi). Tetanus of the red (slowly contracting) striated ..."
4. The Fundamental Laws of Human Behavior: Lectures on the Foundations of Any by Max Friedrich Meyer (1911)
"Rhythm equals subjective grouping of objectively uniform excitations. Habits of
performing group motions consisting of one chief and one or several ..."
5. Proceedings: Comptes-rendus (1901)
"Un signe général, essentiel pour les excitations qui produisent de la douleur et
qui les diffère des excitations produisant des sentiments qui ne se ..."
6. Psychology Applied to the Art of Teaching by Joseph Baldwin (1895)
"With sensor-excitations in the cerebral ganglia the physical series of cause and
effect ... Self transforms these sensor-excitations into sensations, ..."