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1 ollowed by tailored advice would modify help-seeking behaviour.
2 tegic social behaviour rather than dominance seeking behaviour.
3 size also predicted male aggression and mate-seeking behaviour.
4 examined its potential association with drug-seeking behaviour.
5 specific transmission channels in human host-seeking behaviour.
6 exin neurons reinstates an extinguished drug-seeking behaviour.
7 iscomfort, the precursor to engaging in cool-seeking behaviour.
8 heir optogenetic activation can drive reward-seeking behaviour.
9 rescribing behaviour, or young people's help-seeking behaviour.
10 ) ) limits, with and without shade- or water-seeking behaviours.
11 cortex stimulation decreased compulsive drug-seeking behaviours.
12 provide an explanation for parent's helping seeking behaviours.
13 erties of these inputs in controlling reward-seeking behaviours.
14 ard system, which is thought to guide reward-seeking behaviours.
15 e that coincided with the initiation of drug-seeking behaviours.
16 ined attention, working memory and sensation-seeking behaviours.
17 red confounding effects, such as health-care-seeking behaviours.
18 striatal neurons promotes conditioned reward-seeking behaviour after learning, while activity in cort
19 ding of the factors influencing intervention-seeking behaviours among women who screened positive for
20 mals, such cues can induce and maintain drug-seeking behaviour and also reinstate drug-seeking after
21 ceptual distinctions between compulsive drug-seeking behaviour and compulsive drug-taking behaviour (
22 ew approaches are emerging to treat the drug seeking behaviour and craving associated with relapse.
24 ample of this is a dissociation between food-seeking behaviour and metabolic needs, a notoriously dif
25 al tegmental area (VTA), that control reward-seeking behaviour and participate in depressive disorder
28 eural plasticity, reduce alcohol- and heroin-seeking behaviour, and produce antidepressant-like effec
29 ecific data-the incidence of disease, health-seeking behaviour, and the capacity of the healthcare sy
30 ing reports, population biases in the health-seeking behaviour, and the lack of a common definition o
35 as candidates for use in disruption of host-seeking behaviour, as well as an odour that evokes CO(2)
36 tions addressing health knowledge and health seeking behaviour, buttressing existing health services,
37 omote improved home-based practices and care-seeking behaviour can have a large impact on maternal an
38 ing mechanisms that mediate conditioned drug-seeking behaviour, craving and long-lasting susceptibili
40 pendent contribution of skin wetness to cool-seeking behaviour during heat stress has never been esta
41 demonstrate that skin wetness augments cool-seeking behaviour during passive heat stress independent
46 he neural mechanisms that modulate cued food-seeking behaviour during varying metabolic (i.e., hungry
47 entions to enhance insight may decrease drug-seeking behaviour, especially in urine negative cocaine
48 ulation, and significant shifts in treatment-seeking behaviour following implementation of a new anti
49 s on the factors associated with health care seeking behaviour for primary symptoms of colorectal can
51 rulus significantly enhances long-range host-seeking behaviour in a wind tunnel, recapitulating prefe
52 to determine whether abnormalities in reward-seeking behaviour in behavioural variant frontotemporal
53 d from each study area to investigate health-seeking behaviour in cases of self-reported fever lastin
54 eir potential to disrupt CO(2)-mediated host-seeking behaviour in disease-carrying insects like mosqu
59 improve early detection is to monitor health-seeking behaviour in the form of queries to online searc
60 rmation may be a key component of the reward-seeking behaviours in behavioural variant frontotemporal
61 message might have a positive effect on help-seeking behaviours in older adults (age >=50 years).
62 ctural factors that contribute to low health-seeking behaviours in populations of MSM in many parts o
65 rces also shape patterns of exposure, health-seeking behaviour, infection outcomes, the likelihood of
67 ge in any discussion of abnormal health-care-seeking behaviour is the extent to which a person's repo
69 night-time lighting exhibited natural refuge-seeking behaviour less often compared to control animals
70 anonical GABA co-release and enhances reward-seeking behaviour measured by optical self-stimulation.
71 sm resource) endorsed and destigmatised help-seeking behaviour (mechanism reasoning) and facilitated
72 pite the fact that our knowledge of the host-seeking behaviour of filariasis infected mosquitoes is l
73 there has been an improvement in the health-seeking behaviour of people living in Enugu and this may
77 ns in asthma severity, differences in health-seeking behaviour, or difficulties in accessing high-qua
78 ta on human health, antibiotic usage, health-seeking behaviours, structural and behavioural environme
80 ortical structures that contribute to reward-seeking behaviours, such as the ventral striatum and mid
82 r population growth and changes in treatment-seeking behaviour, the incidence of P. falciparum malari
83 now seen as key to natural rewards and drug-seeking behaviour, though perhaps having less of a role
84 tal circuitry can dynamically control reward-seeking behaviour through the opposing activities of pro
85 b) has been implicated in regulation of drug-seeking behaviours through aversion-mediated learning.
86 b) has been implicated in regulation of drug-seeking behaviours through aversion-mediated learning.
87 indicates that skin wetness stimulates cool-seeking behaviour to a greater extent than increases in
90 -dependent valence switch that promotes food-seeking behaviours under cold but not warm conditions.
93 hat infected mosquitoes exhibit altered host-seeking behaviours, with suppression and activation of b
94 d amphetamine on dopamine responses and drug-seeking behaviours, without altering cocaine effects.
95 on of LC neurons during extinction of a food-seeking behaviour would enhance extinction evidenced by