Lexicographical Neighbors of Interoceptors
Literary usage of Interoceptors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Chapters in General Psychology by Stevenson Smith, Edwin Ray Guthrie (1921)
"THE interoceptors Taste Organs. The receptors for taste are situated on the upper
surface and the margin of the tongue, a few occuring on the uvula, ..."
2. An Introduction to Neurology by Charles Judson Herrick (1922)
"Those related with the first group are the typical proprioceptors; those of the
second group are clearly interoceptors. The striated muscles of the third ..."
3. An Elementary Manual of Physiology for Colleges, Schools of Nursing, of by Russell Burton-Opitz (1922)
"General interoceptors which mediate the sensations of hunger, thirst, nausea,
visceral pain, ... Special interoceptors which embrace the end- organs for ..."
4. Human Psychology by Howard Crosby Warren (1919)
"They are called interoceptors. (8) The third class of receptors lie in proximity
to the motor organs and are stimulated when the muscles contract.1 These ..."
5. The Journal of Comparative Neurology and Psychology by Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology (1908)
"(3) interoceptors, organs set to to guard the receptive surfaces of the ...
The taste buds lying within the mouth of vertebrates are typical interoceptors, ..."
6. International Medical and Surgical Surveyby American Institute of Medicine by American Institute of Medicine (1922)
"The interoceptors and related neuromuscular apparatus, on the other hand, are
primarily concerned with internal adjustments of the body, its conservation ..."
7. A History of the Association Psychology by Howard Crosby Warren (1921)
"These three classes correspond roughly to the recent division into interoceptors,
proprioceptors, ..."
8. The Elements of Scientific Psychology by Knight Dunlap (1922)
"... interoceptors and proprio- ceptors respectively. The exteroceptive senses
include the modal senses of vision, audition and olfaction, and the regional ..."