... same nerve further from the muscle, it can be shown that rapid electric alternations, if entirely unaccompanied by static charge or by resultant algebraic electric transmission, evoke no excitatory response until they are so violent as to give rise... Nature - Side 134redigert av - 1894Uten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1896 - 758 sider
...response until they are so violent as to give rise to secondary effects such as heat or mechanical shock. Yet, notwithstanding this inaction they gradually...portion of the nerve to which they are applied, so that tho nerve impulso excited by the feeble, just perceptible -pj^-volt stimulus above is gradually throttled... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1894 - 792 sider
...algebraic electric transmission, evoke no excitatory response until they are so violent as to give rise to secondary effects such as heat or mechan ical...nerve impulse excited by the feeble just perceptible l/iooth volt stimulus above is gradually throttled on its way down to the muscle, and remains so throttled... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1896 - 740 sider
...response until they are so violent as to give rise to secondary effects such as heat or mechanical shock. Yet, notwithstanding this inaction they gradually...nerve impulse excited by the feeble, just perceptible T^-volt stimulus above is gradually throttled on its way down to the muscle, and remains so throttled... | |
| Sir Oliver Lodge - 1900 - 164 sider
...response until they are so violent as to give rise to secondary effects such as heat or mechanical shock. Yet, notwithstanding this inaction, they gradually...nerve impulse excited by the feeble just perceptible yj^thvolts stimulus above is gradually throttled on its way down to the muscle, and remains so throttled... | |
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