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1 in and 10 indicating "pain as bad as you can imagine").
2  from 0=no pain to 10=pain as bad as you can imagine).
3 (FRM), and Institut des Maladies Genetiques (IMAGINE).
4 cal motion language (without instructions to imagine).
5 l and to move to advances that we cannot yet imagine.
6 rding to inherited polymorphisms as so often imagined.
7  interpreting space and time than heretofore imagined.
8 ribed to be far more complex than originally imagined.
9 lf are much more complex and dynamic than we imagined.
10 no pain and 10 representing as bad as can be imagined.
11 WH2 domains are more complex than originally imagined.
12 matopoiesis are more complex than previously imagined.
13 an occur even when its consumption is merely imagined.
14 hromatin is far more complex than previously imagined.
15 rt and enthusiasm for these disciplines, are imagined.
16 ins might be more simplistic than previously imagined.
17 being a scientist far richer than I can have imagined.
18 nd apoptosis is more complex than previously imagined.
19  signaling events is broader than previously imagined.
20 of labour are more pervasive than previously imagined.
21  benefits may be more complex than currently imagined.
22  control of signaling events than previously imagined.
23 lantibiotics is much broader than previously imagined.
24 es that could be more diverse than currently imagined.
25 s on target networks than had initially been imagined.
26 metabolisms could be simpler than previously imagined.
27 eceptors is far more complex than previously imagined.
28            However, alternative paths can be imagined.
29 ented simultaneously and when AM is visually imagined.
30 le brain using functional magnetic resonance imagining.
31 s, supports both past remembering and future imagining.
32 orms and structures unlike anything we could imagine?
33                       BACKGROUND & AIMS: The IMAgINE 1 study (NCT00409682) evaluated the safety and e
34 s raised by experimentalists, and then 4) to imagine a future in which teams of experimentalists and
35                           It is difficult to imagine a greater challenge to the transplantation of ha
36                                              Imagine a scenario where personal belongings such as pen
37                                           To imagine a structure and then express it in material form
38  pace of change is faster than we could have imagined a decade ago.
39 n Blaaderen in 2003 and the patchy particles imagined a few years later.
40  scan fully hydrated participants while they imagined a state of intense thirst and while they imagin
41                             Either seeing or imagining a specific pattern could strongly bias which o
42 inciples for so long that it is hard even to imagine alternative ways to formalize probabilities.
43 ental representation of reality to create an imagined alternative, and they compare alternative repre
44                   The loss of the ability to imagine alternatives as a result of injuries to the pref
45  two tasks: imagine walking in a hallway and imagine an object moving along the same hallway.
46 epicting another person's plight, the act of imagining an event of helping the person or remembering
47  disorder provides an orthogonal strategy to imagine and discover new phases of crystalline matter an
48 s a central role in our ability to remember, imagine and dream.
49 ws the consequences of new experiences to be imagined and acted on.
50 amined the causal impact of such thoughts on imagined and actual moral behavior.
51 articipants, activation during lip purse and imagined and executed movement of the non-dominant hand
52 e found that finger tapping preceded by both imagined and executed movements showed a reduced respons
53 e representations depend on the object being imagined and on individual differences in style and repo
54 a nucleosome is more plastic than previously imagined and that octamer deformation plays different ro
55 hanism is more sophisticated than previously imagined and that some CDCs are employed in pore-indepen
56 nducted an fMRI experiment in which subjects imagined and then viewed hundreds of spatially varying n
57 the deteriorating status of the patient; (D) imagining and acting on moral possibilities for end of l
58 stic Computer tomography, magnetic resonance imagining and angiography, identified an oval-shaped mas
59 us replication and pathogenesis by live cell imagining and suggest that rotaviruses will prove useful
60 0 ("no pain") to 10 ("pain as bad as you can imagine") and for which a 1-point change is considered c
61 human participants with tetraplegia observe, imagine, and attempt to produce three discrete hand gras
62                  Humans can easily describe, imagine, and, crucially, predict a wide variety of behav
63 pin more of social cognition than previously imagined, and, in particular, that motor representations
64         Recall is necessary for planning and imagining, and it can increase the flexibility of naviga
65  these conditions than in the task involving imagining another person).
66 ignal in nuclei, but these were likely to be imagining artifacts.
67            Although DNA replication is often imagined as a regular and continuous process, the DNA po
68 is considerably more complex than previously imagined, as well as the emerging regulatory importance
69 l sciences in ways which could not have been imagined at the time.
70 y of ecosystem webs is far less than usually imagined, because most ecosystem networks consist of a m
71                                   Humans can imagine both the solution to a problem and the stages al
72                                        While imagining both interpersonal rejection and acting out ag
73 inematic tuning features whether movement is imagined by humans with tetraplegia, or is performed as
74 talo Calvino describes a series of fantastic imagined cities that fulfill core human needs that remai
75                 It is therefore difficult to imagine commercially viable production methods based on
76                                     Visually imagined contents subjectively mimic perceived contents,
77 ences with respect to our human capacity for imagining, creating, and adapting to novel environments.
78 sychological disturbances related to real or imagined delusional experiences underlying the importanc
79 ide evidence for representations of absolute imagined direction at a resolution of 30 degrees in the
80                                 Participants imagined directions between building locations in a larg
81 heir thumb and forefinger together or simply imagined doing so.
82 lly, the beta-power decrease associated with imagined downbeats (the count "one") was larger than tha
83 ned a state of intense thirst and while they imagined drinking to satiate thirst.
84 he insula during imagined thirst relative to imagined drinking, implying functional connectivity betw
85 ous brain regions were also activated during imagined drinking, suggesting the neural representation
86 ly higher for imagining thirst compared with imagining drinking or baseline, revealing a successful d
87 es, rating them for perceived effectiveness, imagined ease-of-insertion and willingness-to-try on vis
88 a different food (such as candy), or did not imagine eating a food.
89 tedly imagined eating that food fewer times, imagined eating a different food (such as candy), or did
90 xperiments showed that people who repeatedly imagined eating a food (such as cheese) many times subse
91 imagined food than did people who repeatedly imagined eating that food fewer times, imagined eating a
92                  Subjects were then asked to imagine either wrist flexion or extension movements duri
93 e in age (e.g., at ages 29, 39, 49, etc.) or imagine entering a new epoch, which leads them to behave
94 Activation reflected the reward magnitude of imagined episodes, and greater reward sensitivity was re
95 ns' ability to construct episodes by vividly imagining (episodic simulation) or remembering (episodic
96  movement and create a selective benefit for imagining, evaluating, and selecting among possible futu
97 n-related differences in the construction of imagined events in the left anterior hippocampus and rig
98 e network regions during the construction of imagined events over object comparisons, including the l
99 elated differences in the episodic detail of imagined events significantly modulated induction-relate
100 emporal and emotional characteristics of the imagined experiences.
101 odels can quantify individual-differences in imagined experiences.
102                                 For example, imagining faces or places differentially activates visua
103 et been tested whether these individuals can imagine facial expressions, a process also hypothesized
104 novel fMRI paradigm in which subjects had to imagine fictitious experiences.
105 f the past and future, create daydreams, and imagine fictitious scenarios.
106                          By using previously imagined fictitious experiences as a comparison for epis
107 many times subsequently consumed less of the imagined food than did people who repeatedly imagined ea
108 ison to the bristlelike configurations often imagined for bottlebrush polymers.
109 y a more sophisticated means than previously imagined for removing the detritus left by more primary
110 more neural activity compared to observed or imagined force production.
111 attempted forces (but not always observed or imagined forces) could be decoded significantly above ch
112 FICANCE STATEMENT Humans have the ability to imagine future episodes (i.e., episodic simulation) and
113 gate, to form and recollect memories, and to imagine future experiences.
114 x is critical for integrating information to imagine future outcomes.
115 membered past events (recent and remote) and imagined future events (near and distant).
116 ieved the loss of their 'previous life' and 'imagined future' but, beyond the understanding of close
117 ut the self, the perspective of others, when imagining future and past events, and during mind wander
118                                              Imagining future events conveys adaptive benefits, yet r
119                                 By one view, imagining future events relies on MTL mechanisms that al
120 s that rely on episodic retrieval, including imagining future experiences, solving open-ended problem
121  core network of brain regions that supports imagining future experiences.
122 reas related to these motivational concerns: imagining future-self inner states, managing how others
123                                 Finally, the imagined futures of bioinformatic work suggest that bioi
124                                              Imagine Genghis Khan, Aretha Franklin, and the Cleveland
125 ded from these neural populations, including imagined goals, trajectories, and types of movement.
126            On this basis, it is difficult to imagine graphene-a material composed of only carbon atom
127 atory power while healthy human participants imagined grasping a cylinder oriented at different angle
128 ons are activated for the visual cue and the imagined hand shape.
129 e PPC of humans are selective for particular imagined hand shapes independent of graspable objects.
130                                              Imagining hand movements could stimulate restitution and
131 d strangers who were low in humanity if they imagined harming them for immoral behavior, but not mone
132 pontaneously dehumanized strangers when they imagined harming them for money, but not when they imagi
133 ed harming them for money, but not when they imagined harming them for their immoral behavior.
134                             Advanced medical imagining has enabled early-stage identification of canc
135 and to lightly touch, forcefully support, or imagine holding each object, while 15 joint angles were
136 F-actin, in part because it would be hard to imagine how a single-stranded filament would be stable a
137 f early genetic systems make it difficult to imagine how a stable RNA genome may have functioned and
138 rom a mechanistic perspective, it is easy to imagine how activation of NMDA receptors may trigger cel
139                         It is challenging to imagine how DNA and RNA polymerases with their associate
140                                              Imagine how flicking through your photo album and seeing
141                           It is difficult to imagine how mammalian hosts have kept pace in the evolut
142                  However, it is difficult to imagine how nucleic acid polymers first appeared, as the
143 y when they think "if only" or "what if" and imagine how the past could have been different.
144  been applied to analyze this circuitry, and imagines how it might be further developed in future stu
145        Humans have the adaptive capacity for imagining hypothetical episodes.
146 sing the Genomic Impact on Neurodevelopment (IMAGINE-ID) study.
147 possibly pushed far beyond what people could imagine in the beginning.
148                            The many pathways imagined in the model are not observed in the structure-
149 d a multicentre randomised controlled trial (IMAGINE) in 11 hospitals in the Netherlands.
150 uity is less problematic than one would have imagined; indeed, it opens new therapeutic opportunities
151                                              Imagine instead a carbon-fluorine (C-F) bond positioned
152                                          The IMAGINE is a post hoc image analysis and cytokine expres
153 ffects; we account for the human capacity to imagine later socioeconomic outcomes and to anticipate t
154 istorical success makes it very difficult to imagine life without effective antibacterials; however,
155  is a key candidate for where the process of imagining likely outcomes occurs; however, its precise r
156            Behavioral results indicated that imagined location and facing direction were represented
157 ult in the latter case is reconstructing the imagined mechanism before looking carefully at the real
158       In two experiments, we demonstrate how imagining meeting liked versus disliked people (uncondit
159 s neuroscience research concerning false and imagined memories, misinformation effects and reconsolid
160  of biliary dilatation is possible when this imagining method is combined with ERCP and additional te
161 ether acoustically accented and subjectively imagined metric processing in march and waltz contexts d
162                Nowadays, it is impossible to imagine modern cancer treatment without targeted therapi
163 ebrate, in the sense that it is difficult to imagine modern neuroscience without brain imaging.
164 y research fields, and it is not possible to imagine modern transition metal and main group element c
165                                Intentionally imagining motion produced reliable MAEs.
166 articipants who showed the largest MAEs from imagining motion) were more likely to show an MAE in the
167  by the strength of an individual's MAE from imagining motion.
168                         The human ability to imagine motor actions without executing them (i.e., moto
169 s in humans also represent information about imagined movement and spatial orienting, suggesting that
170                          In addition, during imagined movement of the phantom hand, and executed move
171 eir current body posture is congruent to the imagined movement).
172 ibute to mental simulation in the absence of imagined movement.
173 ve for the muscles primarily involved in the imagined movement.
174 lts provide evidence for a mechanism whereby imagined movements can directly affect motor performance
175 vioral findings suggest the possibility that imagined movements directly influence primary motor cort
176 tput to the spinal cord to support movement, imagined movements evoked responses in superficial corti
177 of motor cortex neurons related to actual or imagined movements has been used to control computer cur
178  dynamic conditions (voluntary, passive, and imagined movements) and we found that, on equal hand pos
179 ty related to behaviours, including real and imagined movements, cognitive imagery and shifts of atte
180 o control computers and robotic arms through imagined movements.
181 equency bands is modulated during actual and imagined movements.
182   Musical imagery is the human experience of imagining music without actually hearing it.
183 participants listened to metronome beats and imagined musical meters such as a march and waltz.
184 al cortex during both virtual navigation and imagined navigation of the same paths.
185 e human entorhinal cortex during virtual and imagined navigation.
186    Positive and negative social expectancies-imagining new social interactions to be rewarding versus
187 eard notes (bottom-up task) or a sequence of imagined notes (top-down task).
188 s during decision-making, planning, and when imagining novel scenarios.
189 he left wrist posture, so as to maintain the imagined object in its proper spatial orientation.
190 aging in isolated kidney glomeruli, and live imagining of podocyte actin dynamics, we determined that
191 eigenvector (self eigenmode) associated with imagining oneself executing a specific motor act.
192  is core to reasoning about other people and imagining oneself in different states.
193 sks to the donor, a sense of moral duty, and imagining oneself in the position of the recipient.
194 ience is unavailable, animals and humans can imagine or infer the future to guide decisions.
195 e rewards is the quality with which they are imagined or estimated in the present.
196 magnetic resonance imaging while they either imagined or executed a finger-thumb opposition sequence.
197  never be experienced at the time of choice, imagining or simulating the benefits of a future reward
198 imilarities between remembering the past and imagining or simulating the future, including the findin
199 l state (VoS), namely, whether one observes, imagines, or attempts an action.
200 tives: a) imagining the patient's feelings ('imagine other'), or b) imagining to be in the patient's
201               If we are, like Jonas Salk, to imagine ourselves as a virus, what kind of world would w
202                As humans, we can consciously imagine ourselves at a different time (mental time trave
203                   Insight, or the ability to imagine outcomes, is evident when outcomes have not been
204 eceived can also influence learning if those imagined outcomes are not received.
205 scan the strengths of social epidemiology to imagine paths forward that will make the field distinct
206 nts are inexpensive and one might be able to imagine paying out of pocket.
207 rom the remote past, the recent past, and to imagine plausible episodes in the near future.
208 n the rostral anterior cingulate cortex when imagining positive future events relative to negative on
209                           Humans can vividly imagine possible future events.
210 ative Essay explores the consequences of the imagined premature death of Oswald Avery, who in 1944 pr
211  an individual's neural representation of an imagined primary reward predicts the degree to which the
212 ntromedial prefrontal cortex response during imagined primary reward receipt was correlated with redu
213  intangible, we can make it more concrete by imagining prospective events.
214 s were asked to perform two different tasks: imagined pursuit tracking of a cursor moving on a comput
215 hat response preparation is mediated via the imagined rotation of a movement vector.
216 ltrasound (US) system, Aixplorer (SuperSonic Imagine S.A., Aix-en-Provence, France), TE using FibroSc
217 r when an SC6-1 probe (Aixplorer; SuperSonic Imagine SA, Aix-enProvence, France) was used than when a
218 th the number of enclosing boundaries in the imagined scene.
219 ional theta coherence also predicted whether imagined scenes were subsequently remembered.
220        We tasked male and female humans with imagining scenes and single isolated objects in response
221 aris oculi region which was specific to the 'imagine self' perspective.
222  b) imagining to be in the patient's place ('imagine self').
223 lar to those emerging from the literature on imagined (simulated) bodily movements.
224 owledge are linked to a person's tendency to imagine situations that transcend the here and now.
225 diverse and more interesting than is usually imagined, so that our understanding of the later stages
226      Aversive emotional reactions to real or imagined social harms infuse moral judgment and motivate
227 t side of the transition series than one has imagined, some ligands are sigma-noninnocent.
228 , it is hard to keep one's mouth closed when imagining someone yawning, or not feeling distressed whi
229 ial frequencies and that receptive fields in imagined space are larger than in visual space.
230 n and size of receptive fields in visual and imagined space.
231 on, showing that, in low-level visual areas, imagined spatial frequencies in individual voxels are re
232 compare, for every voxel, tuning to seen and imagined spatial frequencies, as well as the location an
233 l hippocampal damage and amnesia, who cannot imagine spatially coherent scenes, displayed attenuated
234 gn of these studies required participants to imagine speaking or generating nonverbal vocalizations i
235                   Our ability to remember or imagine specific events involves the construction of com
236                          Participants either imagined specific events of spending money (e.g., pound
237 ies indicate that episodic simulation (i.e., imagining specific future experiences) and episodic memo
238  ability to classify individual words during imagined speech from electrocorticographic signals.
239 lso compared classification accuracy between imagined speech, overt speech and listening.
240 dels accurately predicted brain responses to imagined stimuli and enabled accurate decoding of their
241 ion factor is more extensive than previously imagined, suggesting that evolutionary plasticity may be
242 avirus biology and pathogenesis by live cell imagining techniques.
243 ovements, it does not seem to be too much to imagine that determining the structural basis for every
244 ne way to reconcile these observations is to imagine that evolution proceeds in pulses, rather than i
245  loss in cave fishes: "As it is difficult to imagine that eyes, although useless, could be in any way
246                      It is thus difficult to imagine that for much of the early 20th century, the rea
247 ng stimulus on a computer screen and told to imagine that the displayed body part was part of a stand
248                   In 2018 it is difficult to imagine that there is any uncharted backyard left in the
249 in online material used by MSM were asked to imagine that they were at risk of HIV infection and to c
250                                           We imagine that TMT reactions could find wide application f
251                                              Imagine that you are blindfolded inside an unknown room.
252 r existed on our planet, it is reasonable to imagine that, once deposited on the surface of the ocean
253 ecoming a cell biologist, I would have never imagined that it would lead to a career in molecular ani
254                                           To imagine the abiotic assembly of such an overall system,
255 nction of the brain is to plan, predict, and imagine the effect of movement in a dynamically changing
256 sical problem solving rests on an ability to imagine the effects of hypothesized actions, while the e
257                                          Now imagine the engine fueled the human mind.
258 nt memory, and also had an intact ability to imagine the future.
259 ired recent memory, and an intact ability to imagine the future.
260  real-time cue for musicians to continuously imagine the music for repeated and synchronized sessions
261  draw on loosely related events to infer and imagine the outcome of entirely novel choices.
262 showed overlap when EA was asked to mentally imagine the pictures he had to draw (albeit to a lesser
263 data of the prefrontal cortex while subjects imagine the pleasure they would derive from items belong
264 sense to take for granted and the easiest to imagine the possibility of living without.
265 lt odyssey of my early years, who could have imagined the incredible and successful journey that cons
266 in the absence of prior experience by merely imagining the consequences of a new experience.
267 e nature and necessity of MTL involvement in imagining the future and tested the novel hypothesis tha
268                                              Imagining the future biased subsequent monetary decision
269   The findings suggest that the capacity for imagining the future, like the capacity for remembering
270 differences between remembering the past and imagining the future, the identification of component pr
271 formation were activated while subjects were imagining the object moving fast.
272  watched using two distinct perspectives: a) imagining the patient's feelings ('imagine other'), or b
273 e complexity nor to increasing difficulty of imagining the scenes in general.
274                                   People can imagine their future selves without taking future-focuse
275    In this help reception task, participants imagined them in a situation where they need financial a
276 ciously project themselves in the future and imagine themselves at different places.
277 Here, we asked 100 healthy adults to vividly imagine themselves in a novel self-relevant event that w
278 l Magnetic Resonance Imaging as they vividly imagined themselves personally experiencing 20 common sc
279                       Invitees were asked to imagine they had been diagnosed with intermediate-risk a
280                                          The imagine thirst condition activated brain regions similar
281 ting a similar neural network underlies both imagined thirst and physiologically evoked thirst.
282 nctional connectivity with the insula during imagined thirst relative to imagined drinking, implying
283 ings of thirst were significantly higher for imagining thirst compared with imagining drinking or bas
284  with brain imaging data recorded while they imagined those events, both before, and after, choosing
285 principal) and control (n = 76) participants imagined threatening and neutral events while acoustic s
286 onscious state caused by exposure to real or imagined threats that trigger stress responses that affe
287                   One of the two radicals is imagined to react with a paramagnetic scavenger via spin
288  patient's feelings ('imagine other'), or b) imagining to be in the patient's place ('imagine self').
289                            We used multiview imagining to reconstruct a three-dimensional model of a
290 issing fundamental in complex tones, and for imagined tones.
291  unmet needs of the biomedical community and imagine unorthodox institutes designed to fulfill these
292                      Participants repeatedly imagined upsetting episodes that they feared might happe
293 e temporal association cortex in integrating imagined visual stimuli with real auditory stimuli, and
294 calizing auditory stimuli in the presence of imagined visual stimuli.
295 ded healthy volunteers performing two tasks: imagine walking in a hallway and imagine an object movin
296 ilar life experiences to derive estimates or imagine what might happen next.
297 spectrum of clinical PDT far beyond what was imagined when that sentinel manuscript was written.
298                        Future directions are imagined, where the diverse capabilities laid out are co
299 ide evidence for a neural representation for imagined words in the temporal lobe, frontal lobe and se
300                                              Imagine you were asked to investigate the workings of an

 
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