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1 ession, somatic complaints, and motor/mental slowness.
2 beneath the same region also have anomalous slowness.
3 l hallucinations (15 [46.9%] vs 42 [11.6%]), slowness (23 [71.9%] vs 95 [26.2%]), apathy (23 [71.9%]
5 inally, we investigate the trade-off between slowness and sparseness when combined in one objective f
6 In contrast to this claim, we here show that slowness and sparsity drive the representations towards
7 43), dissociative phenomena (34), cognitive 'slowness' and excessive effort (26), communication diffi
8 movement difficulty (eg, tremor, stiffness, slowness), and psychological or cognitive problems (eg,
9 ness), cognitive symptoms (mental fogginess, slowness), and symptoms of hyperacusis (sensitivity to l
10 partial inactivation might produce weakness, slowness, and loss of independence of one or two adjacen
11 tion might produce dissociation of weakness, slowness, and relative independence of movement, and whi
14 le mass, exhaustion, low energy expenditure, slowness, and weakness) was obtained for participants.
17 eria (weight loss, exhaustion, low activity, slowness) at >/=2 visits, or at 1 visit with >/=1 criter
18 aDBS algorithm intended to mitigate movement slowness by delivering targeted stimulation increases du
19 device tracked frailty markers like cadence (slowness), daily steps (inactivity), postural transition
20 indings; other possible explanations include slowness due to comorbidities misinterpreted as bradykin
22 like phenotypes with dystonia, vertical gaze slowness, dysexecutive syndrome, predominant axial rigid
24 5]) of five frailty components (weight loss, slowness, exhaustion, weakness, and low physical activit
25 by resting tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia or slowness, gait disturbance, and postural instability.
28 ite [enjoyment of food, food responsiveness, slowness in eating (SE), satiety responsiveness (SR), an
29 "enjoyment of food," "food responsiveness," "slowness in eating," and "satiety responsiveness." Herit
30 mmarize behavioural observations of movement slowness in Parkinson's disease and discuss these findin
32 ing of lysozyme arises not from any inherent slowness in the formation of the native structure but ra
37 cale cubically with the RNA length, and this slowness limits their use in genome-wide applications.
38 la, and the Mid-Atlantic Ridge have observed slownesses more than 64 percent greater than predicted b
40 otection is also poor because of the extreme slowness of an intramolecular Galpha refolding step (iso
47 Parkinson's disease defines bradykinesia as 'slowness of initiation with progressive reduction in spe
49 se: an age-dependent and levodopa-responsive slowness of movement associated with diminished dopamine
50 n understanding the exact mechanisms driving slowness of movement has been impeded due to the heterog
52 cardinal motor symptoms of tremor, rigidity, slowness of movement, and impairments of posture, gait,
54 afflicts patients later in life with tremor, slowness of movement, gait instability, and rigidity.
56 Parkinson's disease, including the hallmark slowness of movement, termed bradykinesia, were describe
61 mechanistic insights on the counterintuitive slowness of PT at water-hydrophobe boundaries and its re
62 ral experiments in which cannabinoid-related slowness of purposeful movements was reverted by cannabi
65 ver, appear too insignificant to explain the slowness of the beta-octabromination protocols, which se
67 n intersystem barrier and is responsible for slowness of the spin-forbidden deprotonation of (1)HNO b
68 signal-to-noise phase, the arrival time and slowness of which agree with theoretical predictions for
69 PAs are an emergent phenomenon in which the "slowness" of the network is due to interactions between
71 , known PD motor deficits characterized by a slowness or inability to switch between motor programs.
72 ve the conflict it emerges from (despite its slowness), or does it operate on future conflicts that i
74 zophrenia is a consequence of depression and slowness, rather than a primary feature of the disease.
76 's disease, bradykinesia is characterized by slowness, the reduced amplitude of movement, and sequenc
78 also could produce dissociated weakness and slowness versus loss of independence in a given finger m
80 teria-defined bradykinesia, characterized by slowness with progressive reduction in amplitude and spe