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1 cing synchronized movements resembling human dance.
2 coding and evaluating the information in the dance.
3 sual arts, reading and creative writing, and dance.
4 eals a surprising link between imitation and dance.
5 re parsimonious account for the evolution of dance.
6 encing of the different types of movement in dance.
7 Indian dance, or "novices" who never watched dance.
8  performances: ballet, Indian dance, and non-dance.
9 r MEPs were in the arms when watching Indian dance.
10 unteract the positive feedback of the waggle dance.
11 syrup feeders than do colonies with oriented dances.
12   We examined how hive mates interpret these dances.
13  information to food sources in their waggle dances.
14 or attacks upon foragers and inhibits waggle dancing.
15 and were more effective at inhibiting waggle dancing.
16 timulus, as in music-induced foot tapping or dancing.
17 Here we report that fibulin-5 (also known as DANCE), a recently discovered integrin ligand, is an ess
18                                   The waggle dance, a unique behavior performed by successful forager
19 g positive associations between symmetry and dancing ability, and these associations were stronger in
20 e same population evaluated these videos for dancing ability.
21                    Tethered midbody remnants dancing across apical microvilli, encountering the centr
22 ess knowledge of how the physical demands of dance affect the performer's body.
23                                              Dance also has been reported in a small number of non-hu
24 " song is usually accompanied by a courtship dance and is addressed almost exclusively to females.
25  "Undirected" song is not accompanied by the dance and is produced when the male is in the presence o
26 ion also plays a central role in learning to dance and the acquisition of the long sequences of chore
27 ause the hand is specifically used in Indian dance and the arm is frequently engaged in ballet dance
28  Unlike SS forager, SS nest were targeted at dancing and non-dancing foragers and had the common effe
29 ommunication that was known to reduce waggle dancing and recruitment but lacked a clear natural trigg
30 on using a symbolic 'language' (the honeybee dance) and the rapid spread of chemosensory preferences
31 , bridge, physics, sports, typing, juggling, dance, and music reveal maximal adaptations of experts t
32 live solo dance performances: ballet, Indian dance, and non-dance.
33 oducing waggle dances, causing them to cease dancing, and each scout targets scouts' reporting sites
34 nchronized human behavior, such as chanting, dancing, and singing, are cultural universals with funct
35 e, unusually, both males and females perform dances apparently to attract mates.
36 the signals involved in this axon-glial cell dance are beginning to be elucidated.
37 collect food in a short, narrow tunnel, they dance as if the food source were much farther away.
38 m behavioral and neurobiological research on dance behavior in humans and rhythmic behavior in other
39 neurovascular coupling involves an elaborate dance between axon terminals, presynaptic and postsynapt
40 ate this response, resulting in an intricate dance between hosts and their pathogens to achieve an op
41 ided insight into an amazingly choreographed dance between the proteins in the kinetochore and their
42 oding the molecular basis of the underground dance between trees and their favorite fungal partners.
43                         Furthermore, a smart dancing blanket is designed to simultaneously convert bi
44                      In addition, women rate dances by symmetrical men relatively more positively tha
45 )) as measures of the swarm's sensitivity to dancing by a single bee.
46 rience has on motor simulation when watching dance, by measuring changes in corticospinal excitabilit
47 top signals to other scouts producing waggle dances, causing them to cease dancing, and each scout ta
48                                         Each dance class lasted 75 minutes and the focus was on the j
49                   The intervention comprised dance classes twice weekly during 8 months.
50       In its full cultural complexity, human dance clearly has no direct analog in animal behavior.
51 ly referred to as ecstasy) is popular in the dance club, rave, and circuit party scenes.
52                      These data suggest that dance clubs or discos may be a focus of transmission of
53  gay and bisexual men at three New York City dance clubs.
54 tion in dance communication, (b) the role of dance communication in regulating the recruitment of wor
55 ing the processing of spatial information in dance communication, (b) the role of dance communication
56 vide a broad synthesis of recent research on dance communication, concentrating on the areas that are
57 ee dance language, in which foragers perform dances containing information about the distance and dir
58      Reported racial differences in honeybee dances could have arisen merely from differences in the
59 s, cooperate for obligate dual-male song and dance courtship displays.
60 a engage in a stereotyped "dance," that this dance culminates in proper spindle positioning and orien
61 how an unexpected morphological disparity in dancing damselfly leg structure, and shed new light on m
62               After correcting for distance, dances demonstrate that honeybees possess a significant
63 ide, resulted in an efficient tandem halogen-dance dimerization process which afforded 7,7'-bis(((die
64 ved 357 intentional, rhythmic, and nonverbal dance displays performed by four adult female cao vit gi
65 appendages of males highlight their song-and-dance displays.
66 otype of chromosomes undergoing the meiotic 'dance' either in pairs or individually.
67 ld be predicted by different combinations of dance features.
68     A newly described species of empidid or 'dance fly' shows a bizarre polymorphism in their foreleg
69 age, and (d) the adaptive fine-tuning of the dance for efficient spatial communication.
70 er, SS nest were targeted at dancing and non-dancing foragers and had the common effect, tuned to hor
71  sexual access to the male by an increase in dancing frequency.
72 erns over two years by decoding 5,484 waggle dances from bees located in the center of a mixed, urban
73 uit unemployed hive mates to food sources by dances from which a human observer can read the distance
74 ributed independently to high-quality female dance: greater hip swing, more asymmetric movements of t
75                                              Dance has representational properties that rely on the d
76 oth for music production and for coordinated dance, has been repeatedly highlighted as uniquely human
77 gs of rhythmic behavior, including music and dance, have been studied using the synchronization-conti
78 el for examining the origin and evolution of dance in humans and other apes.
79                                  In summary, dance in Jamaica seems to show evidence of sexual select
80 as independently associated with attending a dance in the building (MOR, 7.5; 95% CI, 1.4-41.2), hand
81                           Given that gibbons dance in various behavioral contexts, and appears to ser
82 er the two agents interacted (by fighting or dancing) in a meaningful synchronized fashion that allow
83                          Most definitions of dance include the consistent production of movement sequ
84 he dancer, involving a team of orthopedists, dance instructors, and physical therapists familiar with
85        A total of 91% of the girls rated the dance intervention as a positive experience.
86                                   An 8-month dance intervention can improve self-rated health for ado
87 an score on a 5-point scale was 3.32 for the dance intervention group and 3.75 for the control group.
88                                          The dance intervention group improved their self-rated healt
89 fectively recruits translate the code in the dance into flight to their destinations.
90                                              Dance is a universal art form practiced by all human soc
91                                              Dance is a universal human behaviour that is observed pa
92                                              Dance is believed to be important in the courtship of a
93  and orientation, and that completion of the dance is linked to anaphase onset.
94         The food-location information in the dance is presumably important when food sources are hard
95 ogists have taken up the question of whether dance is reliant on unique human adaptations, or whether
96 ng and interaction' hypothesis suggests that dance is scaffolded off of broadly conserved timing mech
97  since 1996 in a society (Jamaican) in which dancing is important in the lives of both sexes.
98 at (e.g., via head bobbing, foot tapping, or dance) is a human universal [1] yet is not commonly obse
99                Fibulin-5 (also known as EVEC/DANCE) is an extracellular matrix protein abundantly exp
100 onized behavior (chanting, singing, praying, dancing) is found in all human cultures and is central t
101 ation that encodes food location, the waggle dance, is therefore matched with an inhibitory/alarm sig
102  Here we show that colonies with disoriented dances (lacking direction information) recruit less effe
103  to entrainment and social features of human dance, Laland and colleagues [2] have suggested that dan
104                                          The dance language has been hypothesized, but not shown, to
105                                          The dance language has been the subject of controversy, and
106 fying the condition-dependent payoffs of the dance language provides new insight into its function in
107                                      In the 'dance language' of honeybees, the dancer generates a spe
108 in the environment, (c) the evolution of the dance language, and (d) the adaptive fine-tuning of the
109                                 The honeybee dance language, in which foragers perform dances contain
110 aland and colleagues [2] have suggested that dance may be an incidental byproduct of adaptations supp
111 ese and other lines of evidence suggest that dancing may only be possible for humans because its perf
112 ctors, and physical therapists familiar with dance mechanics, has been developed to facilitate recogn
113                     While not sufficient for dance, modes of auditory-motor timing, such as synchroni
114 timuli (in the form of videos) that isolated dance movements from all other aspects of visual appeara
115 rwent fMRI scanning while viewing whole-body dance movements that varied in terms of their familiarit
116  and the arm is frequently engaged in ballet dance movements.
117 ing structural similarities (e.g., different dancing movements, or different sword techniques), new t
118                                        Thus, dances must convey information about the direction of th
119 ic abilities heighten motor resonance during dance observation.
120 ce free energy, is a version of the "camphor dance" observed on liquid surfaces, and should be a gene
121 tasks consists of an intricately coordinated dance of cognitive, perceptual, and motor activities.
122 dimensional silica glass-revealing a complex dance of elastic and plastic deformations, phase transit
123           Here, we will discuss this complex dance of intra- and intercellular responses that are reg
124             Fibulin-5 (FBLN-5; also known as DANCE or EVEC) is an integrin-binding extracellular matr
125                             As one learns to dance or play tennis, the desired somatosensory state is
126 monitor and children in high action, such as dancing or doing yoga, on the other.
127  the music, either through movement (such as dancing) or through reverie (such as trance), it is usua
128 requent dance spectators of ballet or Indian dance, or "novices" who never watched dance.
129 or example, those who partake in gymnastics, dance, or wrestling.
130      Use of illicit drugs in clubs and large dance parties (so-called raves) is a burgeoning cultural
131 ce when watching more complex actions, as in dance performances.
132 xperimental setting, we used three live solo dance performances: ballet, Indian dance, and non-dance.
133 are extremely common in the high-performance dance population.
134 ly increase their foraging frequency, waggle dancing probability and frequency, and persistency and s
135         We also found that the same level of dance quality could be predicted by different combinatio
136                                         Does dance quality reveal FA to the observer and is the effec
137 clips of 39 resultant avatars were rated for dance quality, and those ratings were compared to quanti
138 point the movements that discriminate female dance quality.
139                  This example of the halogen dance reaction resulted in the formation of a series of
140 etails our studies on the use of the halogen dance reaction to prepare the desired thiazole.
141                              Various halogen dance reactions on thizoles are described, including a n
142 and colony-wide rates of foraging and waggle-dance recruitment.
143 er away from tensions of the day to singing, dancing, religious ceremonies, and enthralling stories,
144 dence problem central to imitation research, dance requires mapping across sensory modalities and the
145  properly accomplish this elegant chromosome dance result in aneuploidy, a major cause of miscarriage
146 ding humans, but nothing is known about what dance reveals about the underlying phenotypic--or genoty
147  foundation of human behaviors as diverse as dance, romance, lullabies, and the military march.
148            Participants were either frequent dance spectators of ballet or Indian dance, or "novices"
149         We also found that the higher Indian dance spectators scored on the fantasy subscale of the I
150 ctators had been physically trained in these dance styles.
151 s occurring among attendees of a high school dance team banquet.
152          The pasta was prepared at home by a dance team member parent; both parent and child reported
153 indles in epithelia engage in a stereotyped "dance," that this dance culminates in proper spindle pos
154 n any sensory experience: the movements of a dance, the rhythm of a piece of music, the words of a sp
155  on two significant aspects of this delicate dance: the host's initial innate response and the mature
156   We learn complex skills such as speech and dance through a gradual process of trial and error.
157 y bees use positive feedback from the waggle dance to allocate colony foraging effort.
158                           Honey bee foragers dance to communicate the spatial location of food and ot
159                                 Females used dance to solicit copulations, as well as to promote a so
160 motion-capture we recorded women whilst they danced to a basic rhythm.
161 d we observed how they oriented their waggle dances to indicate their direction of flight relative to
162                                              Dancing to music involves synchronized movements, which
163 m cell movement, the bacterial equivalent of dancing toward an exit in a very dense crowd of moving b
164 isch concluded that bees 'recruited' by this dance used the information encoded in it to guide them d
165 oard games, playing musical instruments, and dancing were associated with a reduced risk of dementia.
166 ragers and receivers, performing recruitment dances when appropriate.

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