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31 Sentences With "biorhythms"

How to use biorhythms in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "biorhythms" and check conjugation/comparative form for "biorhythms". Mastering all the usages of "biorhythms" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But like so many living with Alzheimer's, Mom's biorhythms were upside down.
Still, the sport has its own biorhythms, and the Ivy's unique calendar can require adjustments.
In separate elaborations they process and integrate sensory inputs and unify worldly orientation, managing biorhythms and hormones.
Meditation is one of the most effective ways to counter stress, normalize biorhythms and rebalance the body and mind.
Bleak it may be, but it is Effie's fief, where she lives to intimidate, get blitzed and get lucky, her biorhythms dictated by cycles of harrowingly described hangovers.
If you need a boost of energy throughout the day, you can put on the mask and indulge in 20 minutes of light-spectrum therapy to readjust your body's biorhythms.
Astronauts on the International Space Station loop around our planet so fast it creates a cycle of light and dark that's disruptive enough to an astronaut's biorhythms to send them teetering into insomnia or exhaustion.
Dyson's trial lighting and fan system "Take lighting...it makes sense that when you get home after an evening it recognises your face, your voice and...responds to your biorhythms," said Chief Operating Officer Jim Rowan.
"In addition to disrupting natural biorhythms -- including our own -- light pollution really messes up firefly mating rituals," said Avalon Owens, a PhD candidate in biology at Tufts and a co-author of the study, in a news release.
Though he wasn't the first to fill dance tracks with breaths and sighs, and to seemingly attune abstract melodies to human biorhythms, in his music, there was always the all-too-rare sense that there was a man behind the machines.
"It looks like natural light, to fit human biorhythms," Chung Lee said in an interview ahead of the launch of the new LEDs in Frankfurt, adding that some sales would be substitutes for existing LEDs but the technology should also create new demand.
Much is made of how cruel golf can be on days when one's biorhythms, swing or both are off, as was the case Thursday with the 21999 champion, Rory McIlroy, who made bogeys on five of his first six holes in his round of 71.
However, unlike biorhythms which are claimed to have precise and unaltering periods, circadian rhythms are found by observing the cycle itself and the periods are found to vary in length based on biological and environmental factors. Assuming such factors were relevant to biorhythms would result in chaotic cycle combinations that remove any "predictive" features.
Biorhythms and Human Reproduction. New York, John Wiley and Sons, 1974, pp 219-238.Zeleznik, A., Fairchild Benyo, D. Control of follicular development, corpus luteum function and the recognition of pregnancy in higher primates. In Knobil E (ed).
It is also the least visited national park in Slovakia, so the human impact on the environment is minimal. In terms of light pollution, Poloniny National Park is the darkest area in Slovakia. Natural night darkness and night biorhythms of all living organisms are disturbed the least there.
In the 1970s, he propagated the existence of global biorhythms in the fossil record and in 1977 the concept of cycles of low and high leves of biodiversity in the marine fauna over 32 million years. In 1982 he spoke in favour of the Earth's climate alternating between ice ages and warm periods due to the (Icehouse-Greenhouse concept).
James hypothesized that if biorhythms were rooted in science, then each proposed biorhythm cycle would contribute to task performance. Further, he predicted that each type of biorhythm cycle (i.e., intellectual, physical, and emotional) would be most influential on tasks associated with the corresponding cycle type. For example, he postulated that intellectual biorhythm cycles would be most influential on academic testing performance.
Wilhelm Fliess (; 24 October 1858 - 13 October 1928) was a German otolaryngologist who practised in Berlin. He developed a highly eccentric theory of human biorhythms and a possible nasogenital connection that have not been accepted by modern scientists. He is today best remembered for his close personal friendship, sexual relationship, and theoretical collaboration with Sigmund Freud, a controversial chapter in the history of psychoanalysis.
This game is drastically different from the Japanese version of Bases Loaded II: The Second Season. While the controls are nearly identical to Bases Loaded II, the camera angles are different for fielding. Graphics also look more realistic and more advanced due to the enhanced engine used to make this game. There are three statistics for the biorhythms: P-Physical, S-Sensitivity, and I-Intellectual.
Studies on extant vertebrates indicate that the vascularized zones form during moderate to rapid skeletogenesis, and that abrupt metabolic disruptions of bone formation can trigger growth line deposition. Both types of growth lines may be deposited in synchrony with endogenous biorhythms. For example, captive crocodilians exposed to constant temperature, diet, and photoperiod, still exhibit the periodic and cyclical skeletal growth banding of their wild counterparts.Castanet et al. (1993).
He was well-recognised as a horticultural scholar and researcher. His interest was mainly indigenous South African flora and he was generally regarded as an expert on ericas and South African orchids, particularly the genus Disa. He had a vast knowledge of the natural habitat and spent many hours in the veld. His studies and research on the biorhythms of the disa orchid species allowed the successful cultivation of these beautiful orchids in nurseries.
Günter Tembrock (7 June 1918 - 26 January 2011) was an East German zoologist who pioneered the field of bioacoustics and biorhythms. He studied vocal communication in red foxes and birds. He was also a science popularizer and presented a television series. Born in Berlin, he studied biology at the Humboldt University (then Friedrich-Wilhelm University) in 1937 and completed his doctoral work in 1941 on the biology of the carabid beetle Carabus ullrichi.
Mensa members are provided membership strictly because of their high-IQ scores. The survey results showed that 44% of the members believed in astrology, 51% believed in biorhythms, and 56% believed in the existence of extraterrestrial visitors. Stanovich argued that these beliefs have no valid evidence and thus might have been an example of dysrationalia. Sternberg countered that "No one has yet conclusively proven any of these beliefs to be false", so endorsement of the beliefs should not be considered evidence of dysrationalia.
In 2010, Professor Michael Quinn from the Royal Melbourne Hospital announced that trials would be conducted on women suffering from ovarian cancer. Dr Roxana S. Dronca et al. from the Mayo Clinic found that the immune cycle is also evident in fluctuations beyond C-reactive protein, as it can be seen in "infradian immune biorhythms of both immune cell subpopulations and cytokines." Speaking to the Daily Express newspaper in the UK, Quinn said However, in 2014, Dr Mutsa Madondo et al.
Peveto examined the proposed relationship between biorhythms and academic performance, specifically in terms of reading ability. Through examination of the data collected, Peveto concluded that there were no significant differences in the academic performance of the students, in regards to reading, during the high, low, or critical positions of neither the physical biorhythm cycle, the emotional biorhythm cycle, nor the intellectual biorhythm cycle. As a result, it was concluded that biorhythm cycles have no effect on the academic performance of students, when academic performance was measured using reading ability.
A study conducted in 1989 (reference 2) found that when given multiple photographs and paintings as potential decoration of the international space station. Test (crew) subjects all individually preferred those with naturalistic, irrespective themes, and a large depth of field. Other examples of human-centered design is using pastel paints on the International Space Station (ISS) to contrast and provide “up/down” cues in micro-g environments or the concept of dynamically and spatially adjusting lighting color and intensities to conform to daily and even seasonal biorhythms similar to earth to mitigate the societal separation effects experienced in space.
Judy Garland in 1954 Judy Garland has been the subject of many biographies. Since her death in 1969, she has been the subject of over two dozen books. The first of these was Brad Steiger's Judy Garland, published shortly after her death, which includes information on Garland's astrological chart, analysis of her handwriting, numerology and biorhythms. Most of the books are entirely about Garland, but some, including Patricia Fox-Sheinwold's Too Young to Die, Some Are Born Great by Adela Rogers St. Johns and Jane Ellen Wayne's The Golden Girls of MGM, merely feature a chapter about her.
Wilhelm Fliess "was able to impose his number patterns on virtually everything" and worked to convince others that cycles happen within men and women every 23 and 28 days. Mathematically, Fliess’s equation, n = 23x +28y is unconstrained as there are infinitely many solutions for x and y, meaning that Fliess and Freud (who adopted this idea in the early 1890s) could predict anything they wanted with the combination. The skeptical evaluations of the various biorhythm proposals led to a number of critiques lambasting the subject published in the 1970s and 1980s. Biorhythm advocates who objected to the takedowns claimed that because circadian rhythms had been empirically verified in many organisms' sleep cycles, biorhythms were just as plausible.
After the end of World War I, he settled again in Vienna, where he taught private pupils. He also helped Schoenberg run his Society for Private Musical Performances, which sought to create the ideal environment for the exploration and appreciation of unfamiliar new music by means of open rehearsals, repeat performances, and the exclusion of professional critics. Berg had a particular interest in the number 23, using it to structure several works. Various suggestions have been made as to the reason for this interest: that he took it from the biorhythms theory of Wilhelm Fliess, in which a 23-day cycle is considered significant, or because he first suffered an asthma attack on the 23rd of the month.
The lowest rate to which their gill > movement can be reduced and still maintain life is 43 "breaths" per minute. > If a clock ticks only 40 times per minute, the fish gill movement slows down > too much, and the fish strives convulsively to breathe faster but cannot. It > swims rapidly to escape the ticking noise, but if it cannot retreat to a > quiet area, it expires. Another writer has recalled an "infamous" French series of experiments with a "super-whistle" in the 1960s that demonstrated that very powerful low- frequency sounds (in the 5–8 Hz range) could interfere with the biorhythms of living creatures, to the extent of killing cattle, and warns that Alphabet's situation 9 ("harmonize the seven centres of the body") could prove similarly hazardous if done "scientifically … with physical vibrations coordinated to biological and brain rhythms" .
Lanz's publisher, Herbert Reichstein, made contact with the group in 1925 and formed it into an institute with himself as director. This association was named the Ariosophical Society in 1926, renamed the Neue Kalandsgesellschaft (from Kaland, Guido von List's term for a secret lodge or conventicle) in 1928, and renamed again as the Ariosophische Kulturzentrale in 1931, the year in which it opened an Ariosophical School at Pressbaum that offered courses and lectures in runic lore, biorhythms, yoga and Qabalah. The institute maintained a friendly collaboration with Lanz, its guiding intellect and inspiration, but also acknowledged an indebtedness to List, declaring itself as the successor to the Armanen priest-kings and their hierophantic tradition. Reichstein's circle therefore establishes the historical precedent for a broad conception that was followed by Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke in 1985 when he redefined Ariosophy as a general term to describe Aryan-centric occult theories and hermetic practices, including both Lanz's Ario-Christianity and the earlier Armanism of List, as well as later derivatives of either or both systems.

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