adaptational การใช้
- Adaptational ( psychological phenomena as it relates to the external world ).
- Rather, the present species is closely related to the adaptational autapomorphies.
- Under these years adaptational comics were made in great numbers.
- "All of these collapses weren't adaptational failures,"
- Adaptational comics, what started out as a trick, became dominant for decades.
- It is still unclear how these substances activate the sweet receptors and what adaptational significance this has had.
- But Pinker and Bloom argue that the organic nature of language strongly suggests that it has an adaptational origin.
- Pinker, though he mostly agrees with Noam Chomsky, a linguist and organic nature of language strongly suggests that it has an adaptational origin.
- Due to the adaptational requirements of the independently acquired long-distance migrant lifestyle, several apparent morphological similarities between supposedly related species are actually due to convergent evolution.
- Such natural genome editing agents can ( re ) combine and ( re ) regulate host genome content according to context-dependent ( i . e . adaptational ) purposes.
- Adaptational changes at the GABA A benzodiazepine receptor complex do not fully explain receptor uncoupling, may play a more important role in the development of benzodiazepine dependence; this may lead to prolonged comformational changes in the receptors or altered subunit composition of the receptors.
- Within the framework of transactional analysis, more recent transactional analysts have developed different and overlapping theories of transactional analysis : cognitive, behavioural, relational, redecision, integrative, constructivist, narrative, body-work, positive psychological, personality adaptational, self-reparenting, psychodynamic and neuroconstructivist ..
- At times he would also term the approach " adaptational-interactional, " again focusing on ( 1 ) the adaptive character of psychic experiences and ( 2 ) the communication of the meaning of those experiences in therapy, via Type 2 derivatives, which are in part based on the interaction between patient and therapist.