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Inhibition - 8 dictionary results

in⋅hi⋅bi⋅tion

[in-i-bish-uhn, in-hi-]
–noun
1. the act of inhibiting.
2. the state of being inhibited.
3. something that inhibits; constraint.
4. Psychology.
a. the blocking or holding back of one psychological process by another.
b. inappropriate conscious or unconscious restraint or suppression of behavior, as sexual behavior, often due to guilt or fear produced by past punishment, or sometimes considered a dispositional trait.
5. Physiology.
a. a restraining, arresting, or checking of the action of an organ or cell.
b. the reduction of a reflex or other activity as the result of an antagonistic stimulation.
c. a state created at synapses making them less excitable by other sources of stimulation.
6. Chemistry. a stoppage or decrease in the rate of action of a chemical reaction.
7. English Ecclesiastical Law. an order, esp. from a bishop, suspending a priest or an incumbent from the performance of duties.

Origin:
1350–1400; ME inhibicio(u)n < L inhibitiōn- (s. of inhibitiō). See inhibit, -ion
in·hi·bi·tion   (ĭn'hə-bĭsh'ən, ĭn'ə-)   
n.  
  1. The act of inhibiting or the state of being inhibited.
  2. Something that restrains, blocks, or suppresses.
  3. Psychology Conscious or unconscious restraint of a behavioral process, a desire, or an impulse.
    1. Chemistry The condition in which or the process by which a reaction is inhibited.
    2. Biology The condition in which or the process by which an enzyme, for example, is inhibited.

Inhibition

In`hi*bi"tion\, n. [L. inhibitio: cf. F. inhibition.]

1. The act of inhibiting, or the state of being inhibited; restraint; prohibition; embargo.

2. (Physiol.) A stopping or checking of an already present action; a restraining of the function of an organ, or an agent, as a digestive fluid or ferment, etc.; as, the inhibition of the respiratory center by the pneumogastric nerve; the inhibition of reflexes, etc.

3. (Law) A writ from a higher court forbidding an inferior judge from further proceedings in a cause before; esp., a writ issuing from a higher ecclesiastical court to an inferior one, on appeal. --Cowell.

inhibition

A personal hindrance to activity or expression. For example, fear of contracting cancer might serve as an inhibition against smoking.


inhibition 
c.1375, from O.Fr. inibicion, from L. inhibitionem (nom. inhibitio) "a restraining," from stem of inhibere "hold in, restrain, hinder," from in- "in, on" + habere "to hold" (see habit). Psychological sense of "involuntary check on an expression of an impulse" is from 1876.

Main Entry: in·hi·bi·tion
Pronunciation: "in-(h)&-'bish-&n
Function: noun
: the act or an instance of inhibiting or the state ofbeing inhibited: as a (1) : a stopping or checking of a bodily action : a restraining of the function of an organ or an agent (as a digestive fluid or enzyme)<inhibition of the heartbeat by stimulation of the vagus nerve> <inhibition of plantar reflexes> (2) : interference with or retardation or prevention of a process oractivity <inhibition of bacterial growth> b (1) : a desirable restraint or check upon the free or spontaneous instincts or impulses of an individual guided or directed bythe social and cultural forces of the environment inhibition —C. W. Russell> (2) : a neurotic restraint upon a normal or beneficialimpulse or activity caused by psychological inner conflicts or by sociocultural forces of the environment inhibitions such asinability to think, to concentrate —Muriel Ivimey> <inhibitions, phobias, compulsions, and other neurotic patterns —Psychological Abstracts>

inhibition in·hi·bi·tion (ĭn'hə-bĭsh'ən, ĭn'ə-)
n.

  1. The act of inhibiting or the state of being inhibited.
  2. Something that restrains, blocks, or suppresses.
  3. The conscious or unconscious restraint of a behavioral process, a desire, or an impulse.
  4. Any of a variety of processes that are associated with the gradual attenuation, masking, and extinction of a previously conditioned response.
  5. The condition in which or the process by which a reaction is inhibited.
  6. The condition in which or the process by which an enzyme is inhibited.

inhibition   (ĭn'hə-bĭsh'ən)  Pronunciation Key 
The blocking or limiting of the activity of an organ, tissue, or cell of the body, caused by the action of a nerve or neuron or by the release of a substance such as a hormone or neurotransmitter. Compare excitation.
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