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basic rest–activity cycle n. Quick reference
A Dictionary of Psychology (4 ed.)
... rest–activity cycle n. A biological rhythm of waxing and waning alertness with a period of approximately 90 minutes in humans. During sleep it controls the cycles of REM and slow-wave sleep . Also called the rest–activity cycle . BRAC ...

basic rest-activity cycle

46 The History of the Book in Latin America (including Incas, Aztecs, and the Caribbean) Reference library
The Oxford Companion to the Book
...ended up affecting the book industry or the business of bookselling: for example, a protectionist national policy toward papermaking in Mexico resulted in higher production costs for books. In addition, the fall in oil prices, precipitating a financial crisis that led to cycles of hyperinflation, devaluation, and economic recession in most of the region during the 1980s actually reduced the population’s income, increased book production costs, and led to declining book sales. From 1984 to 1990 , for example, Argentina produced 18 per cent fewer...

biological rhythm

chronobiology

infradian rhythm

chronobiology n. Quick reference
A Dictionary of Psychology (4 ed.)
... n. The branch of biology concerned with biological rhythms . See biological clock , biological rhythm . See also alpha wave , basic rest–activity cycle , beta wave , circadian rhythm , circannual rhythm , delta wave , gamma wave , infradian rhythm , menstrual cycle , sensorimotor rhythm , sleep–wake cycle , suprachiasmatic nucleus , telomere , theta wave , ultradian rhythm , Zeitgeber . [From Greek chronos time + English biology...

biological rhythm n. Quick reference
A Dictionary of Psychology (4 ed.)
...rhythm n. Any periodic, more-or-less regular fluctuation or cycle in a biological system or process that is not wholly under the control of environmental cues but is controlled centrally by a biological clock . It may be an ultradian rhythm such as a circannual rhythm or a menstrual cycle ; a circadian rhythm such as the sleep–wake cycle ; or an infradian rhythm such as an alpha wave , basic rest–activity cycle , beta wave , delta wave , gamma wave , sensorimotor rhythm , or theta wave . See also chronobiology , pacemaker...

infradian rhythm n. Quick reference
A Dictionary of Psychology (4 ed.)
...rhythm n . Any biological rhythm with a period of less than a day. See alpha wave , basic rest–activity cycle , beta wave , delta wave , gamma wave , sensorimotor rhythm , theta wave . See also biological clock , chronobiology , Zeitgeber . Compare circadian rhythm , circannual rhythm , ultradian rhythm . [From Latin infra under + dies a...

sleep n. Quick reference
A Dictionary of Psychology (4 ed.)
...III, and IV NREM sleep respectively. See also basal forebrain , basic rest–activity cycle , circadian rhythm , delta sleep-inducing peptide , delta wave , dream ( 1 ) , dyssomnias , hypnagogic image , hypnopompic image , K complex , locus coeruleus , magnocellular nucleus , melatonin , nucleus gigantocellularis , paradoxical sleep , parasomnias , PGO spike , pineal gland , polysomnography , pseudoinsomnia , REM atonia , REM rebound , sleep spindle , sleep–wake cycle , sleepwalking , slow-wave sleep , subcoerulear nucleus...

Nutrient and Biogeochemical Cycling Reference library
Deane WANG
Berkshire Encyclopedia of Sustainability
...of management emphasized the need for research into the basic ecosystem dynamics of a whole suite of elements, including both nutrients and environmental contaminants. This new approach to understanding ecosystems has been subsequently applied to understanding acid rain, nitrogen saturation (over-fertilization), mercury pollution, and the biggest hurdle of the twenty-first century, global climate change. Sustainability: Nutrient and Biogeochemical Cycling As suggested above, nutrient cycling criteria may provide some of the most rigorous and...

Mbuti Dance Reference library
The International Encyclopedia of Dance
...as in the reproductive cycle, which is echoed in dance movements. As if to regenerate the cycle interrupted by the death, the molimo dance emphasizes the separate but equally necessary roles of male and female in creating life. The men build a sacred fire as they dance and then, with a movement imitating the act of copulation, fan it into a blaze. The women slowly and deliberately dance through the fire, scattering the burning logs, which the men once again build into a blaze. At any moment, the women can stop the activity of the men— “killing the hunt...

mélodie Reference library
Leslie Orrey and Roger Nichols
The Oxford Companion to Music
...to Gounod's basic model. Fauré's early songs remain close to the romance , but in such a mélodie as Automne ( 1878 ) the regular rhythms are already threatening rather than consoling. His 17 settings of Paul Verlaine , made between 1887 and 1894 , wonderfully mirror the poet's elegant, melancholy languor and, in the cycle La Bonne Chanson ( 1892–4 ), his ability to break out into joy. Such later cycles as La Chanson d'Ève ( 1906–10 ) and Le Jardin clos ( 1914 ) show Fauré's harmony at its most elusive, but in two final cycles, Mirages (...

Festivals and Festival Cycles Reference library
The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures
...more complex; it was dialectical, and its symbolism was exuberant. Besides the solar reference, the structure of the festival calendar derived from seasonal and agricultural cycles. The division of the year into the dry season ( tonalco ) and the rainy season ( xopan ) was fundamental. Ceremonies dedicated to the deities of rain, maize, and the earth provided the basic calendrical cycle. Mesoamerica is situated within the tropical latitudes, where the sun passes the zenith twice a year, on its apparent journey toward the Tropic of Cancer (23°27′N), and on its...

Endurance Reference library
Lisa TOSCANO
Berkshire Encyclopedia of World Sport (3 ed.)
...of the heart and lungs to take in and transport adequate amounts of oxygen to working muscles increases when one engages in activities such as running, walking or hiking, swimming, cycling, cross-country skiing, dancing, and endurance games and activities that are performed over long periods of time at a certain heart rate. Two Marine officer candidates take their turn at the endurance run during physical training at the Basic School for Marine officers at the Marine Corps Development and Education Command, June 1980 . National Archives. The key to...

Ritualizing and Anthropology Reference library
The Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature
... identified two principal types of rituals, both tied to natural cycles: rites of passage and rites of intensification . Rites of passage involve transformations in the life cycle of an individual. They typically occur around times of personal transition, such as birth, puberty, marriage and death. Initiation rites for shamans, healers, priests and priestesses are also considered rites of passage. In some religions, rites of passage involve the temporary isolation of initiates from the rest of society. Among the Plains Indians in North America, for example,...

Exercise and Health Reference library
Becky CLARK
Berkshire Encyclopedia of World Sport (3 ed.)
...problems. Recommended Levels and Types of Exercise Physical activity and exercise do not need to be strenuous. WHO recommends thirty minutes of physical activity/exercise at a moderate intensity daily. Physical activity and exercise are measured by frequency, intensity (mild, moderate, strenuous), and duration (time/length). They can be aerobic and/or anaerobic in nature. This also includes weight-bearing exercises (e.g., free weights, machine weights, body weight). Endurance activities (e.g., cycling, walking, running, swimming) increase heart rate and...

Leisure Reference library
Garry CHICK
Berkshire Encyclopedia of World History (2 ed.)
...diaries kept by research respondents. Leisure as Activity The most common leisure activity for humans, both past and present, is undoubtedly resting or sleeping. The anthropologist Lauriston Sharp indicated that the Yir Yiront, an Australian Aboriginal tribe, devoted the majority of their leisure to rest: Any leisure time the Yir Yiront might gain by using steel axes or other western tools was invested, not in “improving the conditions of life,” and certainly not in developing aesthetic activities, but in sleep, an art that they had thoroughly...

Economy, American, since World War II Reference library
Grahame Thompson
The Oxford Companion to Comparative Politics
... is given some analytical purchase by being organized —in the first instance at least—around the cyclical nature of economic activity. Capitalist economies—of which the US is exemplary—tend to move in cycles of what is popularly known as “boom and bust.” In a more academic parlance this is termed the “business cycle,” and it has tended to take a six to ten-year period to move through the stages of first an expansion of economic activity, followed by contraction. Because the US economy has been of such importance to the health of the international economy (or...

Economy, American, since World War II Reference library
Grahame Thompson
The Oxford Companion to American Politics
...given some analytical purchase by being organized—in the first instance at least—around the cyclical nature of economic activity. Capitalist economies—of which the United States is exemplary—tend to move in cycles of what is popularly known as “boom and bust.” In a more academic parlance this is termed the “business cycle,” and it has tended to take a six to ten year period to move through the stages of first an expansion of economic activity, followed by contraction. Because the US economy has been of such importance to the health of the international economy...