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stimulus
(redirected from eliciting stimulus)

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stimulus

Change in the environment of an organism that the organism can detect and respond to. These changes may be noise, light, heat, or pressure. The changes are detected by specialized cells called receptors. The skin contains many receptors for heat, touch, pressure, and pain. Sometimes the receptors are found in an organ which is so specialized for this purpose it is called a sense organ – for example the eye. See sensitivity.



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The hallmark of IEED is episodes of crying or laughing that are unrelated to or out of proportion with the eliciting stimulus.
Cessation of the original or eliciting stimulus, which results in the complete reduction in the a process, creates a potential for affective change because the b process does not immediately return to baseline levels; thus, an affective state emerges.
Yet, in the case of dreaming, the eliciting stimulus is not present.
 
 
 
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