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EGO RESILIENCY

A personality with the ability to vary and adapt and express emotional impulses depending on social demands.

EGO-IDEAL

Psychoanalytical theory. The part of the egothat holds positive identifications with parental goals and values we admire and want to

EITHER-OR THINKING

Less common name for dichotomous thinking.

ELDERSPEAK

The adjustment to speech made by younger people when talking to older people based on an assumption that older people

ELECTROCORTICOGRAM (ECOG)

Recording the brain's elecrical activity by placing electrodes on the cerebral cortex.

ELECTROOLFACTOGRAM (EOG)

Recording of the response of olfactory nerve endings that can diagnose olfactory disorders.

ELEMENTARY EVENT

Probablity theory. The outcome of an experiment of chance.

ELOPEMENT

1. Sdecretly leaving home to marry. 2. A patient leaving a mental hospital without permission. 3. Slang term for an

EMBOLISM

An interruption of blood flow due to a blocked vessel by an embolus in the blood stream.

EMERGENTISM

The view that complex phenomena have mergent properties arising from interactions of more basic processes.

EMOTIONAL DEPENDENCE

Where you depend on another for support, comfort and nurture.

EMOTIONAL INSULATION

Defense mechanism. Where indifferent and detached responses are made in frustrating situations.

EMOTIVE

Related to arousing emotion.

EMPIRICALLY KEYED TEST

A test where the answers are coded in a way to maximise criterion validity, construct validity or both. See empirical

EMPTY-CHAIR TECHNIQUE

Gestalt therapy. Where the client conducts an emotional dialogue with an aspect of himself or a significant person in their

ENCEPHALOCELE

A congenital hernia of the brain that protudes through a cleft in the skull.

END PLATE

The specialised region of a muscle cell membrane facing the termus of a motor neuron.

ENDOGENOUS OSCILLATOR

A neural circuit generating regular and repeated sequences of neural activity. See circadian oscillator.

END-PLATE POTENTIAL (EPP)

The depolarisation induced at the end plate of a muscle cell when stimulated.

ENGRAM

The hypothetical trace of a memory stored in the brain. Also called mnemonic trace.