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1

Artworks: Definition, meaning, value. University Park, Pa: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996.

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Jocano, F. Landa. Filipino value system: A cultural definition. Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines: Punlad Research House, 1997.

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3

Franke, O. Lehn. Definition of boundary and initial conditions in the analysis of saturated ground-water flow systems: An introduction. Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1987.

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Franke, O. Lehn. Definition of boundary and initial conditions in the analysis of saturated ground-water flow systems: An introduction. [Reston, Va.?]: Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1987.

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Puustinen, Pekka. Towards a consumer-centric definition of value in the non-institutional investment context: Conceptualization and measuremement of perceived investment value. Tampere: Tampere University Press, 2012.

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6

Jüttner-Nauroth, Beate. Definition, Verständnis und Relevanz des fair value von Aktienoptionsrechten in der internationalen Rechnungslegung: Eine theoretische und empirische Analyse. Frankfurt am Main: P. Lang, 2002.

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7

Human values: Definitions and interpretations. Kolkata: Bharatiya Vidya Mandir, 2013.

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8

Drăgan, Irinel. Some recursive definitions of the Shapley value and other linear values of cooperative TU games. Arlington, Tex: University of Texas at Arlington, Dept. of Mathematics, 1997.

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9

Hemingway, Christine A. An exploratory analysis of corporate social responsibility: Definitions, motives and values. Kingston upon Hull: University of Hull, Business School, 2002.

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10

Heidegger, Martin. Towards the definition of philosophy: With a transcript of the lecture course "On the nature of the university and academic study". New Brunswick, NJ: Athlone Press, 2000.

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11

Palau, Luis. High definition life: Trading life's good for God's best. Grand Rapids, Mich: Revell, 2005.

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12

Heidegger, Martin. Towards the definition of philosophy: With a transcript of the lecture-course 'On the nature of the university and academic study' (Freiburg Lecture-Courses 1919). London: Continuum, 2008.

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13

Rizzardi, Raffaele. Novità fiscali 1985: Definitivo, legge Visentini, nuove tabelle aliquote IVA, con il testo commentato di 28 provvedimenti e la segnalazione di altri 75. 2nd ed. Milano: Pirola, 1985.

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14

Zweig, Jason, and Graham Benjamin. The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition). New York: Collins Business Essentials, 2006.

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15

Stecker, Robert. Artworks: Definition Meaning Value. Pennsylvania State University Press, 1997.

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16

Artworks: Definition, Meaning, Value. Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996.

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17

Edwards, Steven D. Disability: Definition, Value And Identity. Not Avail, 2005.

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18

Wacks, Raymond. 2. An enduring value. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780198725947.003.0002.

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The notion of ‘privacy’ in its broadest, and least lucid, sense is founded upon a conception of the individual and his or her relationship with society. Individuals need privacy for psychological, emotional, and social purposes. Autonomy, creativity—and even sanity—depend on a degree of private space. Society has an interest in facilitating these goals. Privacy, moreover, enhances democratic ideals by ensuring the privacy of political choice. The pursuit of a satisfactory definition of privacy has borne little fruit, largely because the premises upon which the proposed definitions are based are materially different. The concept, particularly in the US, continues to provide a forum for contesting, inter alia, the rights of women (especially in respect of abortion), the use of contraceptives, the freedom of homosexuals and lesbians. This chapter endeavours both to set privacy in its wider social context and to clarify the issues.
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19

Thygesen, Kristian, Joseph S. Alpert, Allan S. Jaffe, and Harvey D. White. The universal definition of myocardial infarction. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199687039.003.0041.

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Myocardial infarction is defined pathologically as myocyte necrosis due to prolonged ischaemia. These conditions are met when there is a detection of a rise and/or fall of cardiac biomarkers, preferably troponins, with at least one value above the 99th percentile of the upper reference limit, together with evidence of myocardial ischaemia, as recognized by at least one of the following: symptoms of ischaemia, electrocardiographic changes of new ischaemia, the development of pathological Q waves, imaging evidence of a new loss of viable myocardium or new regional wall motion abnormality, or the identification of an intracoronary thrombus by angiography or autopsy.
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20

March, James G. Decision Processes and Value Endogeneity. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198825067.003.0004.

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Humans use reasons to shape and justify choices. In the process, trade-offs seem essential and often inevitable. But trade-offs involve comparisons, which are problematic both across values and especially over time. Reducing disparate values to a common metric (especially if that metric is money) is often problematic and unsatisfactory. Critically, it is not that values just shape choices, but that choices themselves shape values. This endogeneity of values makes an unconditional normative endorsement of modern decision-theoretic rationality unwise. This is a hard problem and there is no escaping the definition of good values, that is, those that make humans better. This removes the wall between economics and philosophy. If we are to adopt and enact this perspective, then greater discourse and debate on what matters and not just what counts will be useful and even indispensable.
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21

Broyde, Michael J. Religious Arbitration as a Secular Value. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190640286.003.0011.

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This chapter states the case in favor of religious arbitration. The most important argument is that recognizing religious arbitration is a religious freedom imperative. Perhaps just as important, religious arbitration often resolves disputes better than does secular adjudication. Equally important, religious arbitration is necessary for resolving religious problems such as the agunah problem and very importantly, secular recognition of religious arbitration helps moderate and integrate religions generally. Related to that, secular recognition of religious arbitration promotes value sharing that enriches public policy and discourse. Precisely The chapter concludes by noting that precisely because as a society we can no longer agree on a single definition for what were once commonly held legal sacraments, religious arbitration is a fundamental tool to allowing many different and competing parts of society to flourish.
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22

Tucci, Christopher L., Allan Afuah, and Gianluigi Viscusi, eds. Creating and Capturing Value through Crowdsourcing. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198816225.001.0001.

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Examples of the value that can be created and captured through crowdsourcing go back to at least 1714, when the UK used crowdsourcing to solve the Longitude Problem, obtaining a solution that would enable the UK to become the dominant maritime force of its time. Today, Wikipedia uses crowds to provide entries for the world’s largest and free encyclopedia. Partly fueled by the value that can be created and captured through crowdsourcing, interest in researching the phenomenon has been remarkable. For example, the Best Paper Awards in 2012 for a record-setting three journals—the Academy of Management Review, Journal of Product Innovation Management, and Academy of Management Perspectives—were about crowdsourcing. In spite of the interest in crowdsourcing—or perhaps because of it—research on the phenomenon has been conducted in different research silos within the fields of management (from strategy to finance to operations to information systems), biology, communications, computer science, economics, political science, among others. In these silos, crowdsourcing takes names such as broadcast search, innovation tournaments, crowdfunding, community innovation, distributed innovation, collective intelligence, open source, crowdpower, and even open innovation. The book aims to assemble papers from as many of these silos as possible since the ultimate potential of crowdsourcing research is likely to be attained only by bridging them. The papers provide a systematic overview of the research on crowdsourcing from different fields based on a more encompassing definition of the concept, its difference for innovation, and its value for both the private and public sectors.
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23

Definition, Verstandnis Und Relevanz Des Fair Value Von Aktienoptionsrechten in Der Internationalen Rechnungslegung: Eine Theoretische Und Empirische Analyse ... Zum Rechnungs-, Finanz- Und Revisionswesen). Peter Lang Pub Inc, 2002.

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24

Anderberg, Thomas. Suicide: Definitions, Causes, and Values. Studentlitteratur, 1990.

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25

Steinhardt, Gabriel. Market-Value Pricing: Definitions, Concepts, and Processes for Market-Value Centric Pricing. Springer, 2019.

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26

Briggs, Andrew, Hans Halvorson, and Andrew Steane. Religion, history, and philosophy. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198808282.003.0003.

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The chapter provides a survey of the distinction between religious and philosophical reflection, and commentary on ways that have been tried in the past of relating them to each other and to science. The word ‘religion’ itself requires definition; if different people adopt different definitions then they may, on this basis, find themselves engaged in unproductive disputes. Philosophy also can sometimes misconceive what theological discourse is. This is illustrated through reactions to Thomas Aquinas. The attempt to separate science and religion as a separation between facts and meaning, process and value (‘NOMA’), is considered. The attempt has some positive features, but ultimately fails. Deism is discussed as an historical experiment which also failed.
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27

Thorne, Sara, and Paul Clift, eds. Ebstein anomaly. Oxford University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199228188.003.0011.

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Definition 86Incidence 86Associations 86Natural history 86Presenting features in the adult 86Physical signs 88Failure of delamination of the TV leaflets causes apical displacement of the value away from the atrioventricular ring. This leads to: • Atrialization of the proximal part of the RV → enlarged RA....
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28

Film Preservation: Competing Definitions of Value, Use, and Practice. Society of Amer Archivists, 2007.

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29

Alexandrova, Anna. A Philosophy for the Science of Well-Being. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199300518.001.0001.

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Well-being, happiness, and quality of life are now established objects of social and medical research. Does this science produce knowledge that is properly about well-being? What sort of well-being? The definition and measurement of these objects rest on assumptions that are partly normative, partly empirical, and partly pragmatic, producing a great diversity of definitions depending on the project and the discipline. This book, written from the perspective of philosophy of science, formulates principles for the responsible production and interpretation of this diverse knowledge. Traditionally, a philosopher’s goal has been a single concept of well-being and a single theory about what it consists in. But for science this goal is both unlikely and unnecessary. Instead the promise and authority of the science depends on it focusing on the well-being of specific kinds of people in specific contexts. Sceptical arguments notwithstanding, this contextual well-being can be measured in a valid and credible way—but only if scientists broaden their methods to make room for normative considerations and address publicly and inclusively the value-based conflicts that inevitably arise when a measure of well-being is adopted. The science of well-being can be normative, empirical, and objective all at once, provided that we line up values to science and science to values.
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30

Value Creation: The Definitive Guide for Business Leaders. SAGE Publications India Pvt, Ltd., 2016.

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31

Lim, Stanley. Value investing in Asia: The definitive guide to investing in Asia. 2018.

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32

Hrushovski, Ehud, and François Loeser. Introduction. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691161686.003.0001.

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This book deals with non-archimedean tame topology and stably dominated types. It considers o-minimality as an analogy and reduces questions over valued fields to the o-minimal setting. A fundamental tool, imported from stability theory, is the notion of a definable type, which plays a number of roles, starting from the definition of a point of the fundamental spaces. One of the roles of definable types is to be a substitute for the classical notion of a sequence, especially in situations where one is willing to refine to a subsequence. To each algebraic variety V over a valued field K, the book associates in a canonical way a projective limit unit vector V of spaces, which is the stable completion of V. In case the value group is ℝ, the results presented in this book relate to similar tameness theorems for Berkovich spaces.
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33

Goff, Philip. What Is Physicalism? Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190677015.003.0002.

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This chapter defines physicalism, the view that the first half of the book argues against. All are agreed that physicalism is the view that fundamental reality is entirely physical. But this definition requires clarification in two respects: (A) what is it for something to be physical, and (B) what is it for something to be fundamental? The chapter’s answer to (A) is that physical facts concern entities at low levels of complexity and do not involve mentality or value-laden causation. The answer to (B) is defended in terms of a specific form of the grounding relation—constitutive grounding—which is, by definition, such that the grounded facts are nothing over and above their grounds.
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34

Ewan, McKendrick. Ch.6 Performance, s.2: Hardship, Art.6.2.2. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198702627.003.0125.

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This commentary analyses Article 6.2.2 of the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts (PICC) concerning the definition of hardship. The definition of hardship can be broken down into two elements. The first consists of the opening lines of Art 6.2.2, in particular the phrase ‘fundamentally alters the equilibrium of the contract’. The second consists of the four matters referred to in Art 6.2.2(a)–(d). According to Art 6.2.2, there is hardship where the occurrence of events fundamentally alters the equilibrium of the contract either because the cost of a party's performance has increased or because the value of the performance a party receives has diminished. Art 6.2.2(d) deals with the assumption of risk.
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35

Veith, Frank J., Benjamin W. Starnes, and Manish Mehta. Ruptured Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm: The Definitive Manual. Springer, 2018.

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36

Veith, Frank J., Benjamin W. Starnes, and Manish Mehta. Ruptured Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm: The Definitive Manual. Springer, 2017.

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37

Archard, David. Family and Family Law. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198786429.003.0003.

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Much contemporary writing on ‘family’ and ’family law’ cites extensive changes to the family as evidence that the very concept of the ‘family’ is redundant, or that the family has disappeared. Conceptual questions (What counts as a family?) should be distinguished from normative ones (Is the family a good thing? Are some families better than others?). The use of the term ‘the family’ can be normatively innocent such that there are different family forms none of which should be privileged. Having distinguished ‘the family’ as an extra-legal concept and as a legal construct, I defend a functional definition of the family. This value-free definition can serve as the basis of evaluative judgments about the family. There are good reasons why law might recognize the family, consistent with law also recognizing non-familial personal relations. Nevertheless we need not accord familial status to such relations, or abandon the term ‘family’.
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38

Sierra, Maria Teresa Mata. El I.V.A. comunitario: Configuracion del sistema definitivo (Coleccion Derecho financiero y tributario). Editorial Lex Nova, 1995.

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39

Cheong, Mun Hong, and Peir Shenq (Stanley) Lim. Value Investing in Asia: The Definitive Guide to Investing in Asia. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2017.

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40

Corbett, Greville G., and Sebastian Fedden. New approaches to the typology of gender. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198795438.003.0002.

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Nominal classification remains a fascinating topic. To make further progress in this area we need greater clarity of definition and analysis. We use canonical gender as an ideal against which we can measure the great variety of the actual gender systems we find in the languages of the world. Starting from previous work on canonical morphosyntactic features, particularly on how they intersect with canonical parts of speech, we establish the distinctiveness of gender, reflected in the Canonical Gender Principle: In a canonical gender system, each noun has a single gender value. We develop three criteria associated with this principle, which together ensure that canonically a noun has exactly one gender value. We give examples of non-canonicity for each criterion, and this establishes a substantial typological space, which accommodates the various non-canonical gender systems in the languages featured in this volume.
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41

Sahay, Sundeep, T. Sundararaman, and Jørn Braa. Complexity and Public Health Informatics in Low and Middle-Income Countries. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198758778.003.0007.

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This chapter enriches the Expanded PHI perspective through the lens of complexity. Current technical health systems and institutional developments, including the increasing inter-connections between them, and the uncertainities associated with both context and goals are enhancing complexity exponentially. Simple linear approaches to design and develop systems can no longer work, as they imply trying to bring order into processes which by definition defy them. Cloud computing and big data are offered as examples to depict this rising complexity, providing rich opportunities to materialize them. Many organizations are adopting outsourcing models as a means to manage this complexity. However, outsourcing comes in multiple hues and shades, from a simple use of third party hardware to the externalization of the whole value chain of activities, including the analysis and use of data. Public health informatics in LMICs, which are population-based and taking place in largely resource-constrained and unstructured settings, are by definition problematic to outsource and should be approached with caution. An incremental approach where a ‘cultivation strategy’ addresses uncertainities, and ‘attractors’ draw in user-participants are more likely to succeed.
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42

Maiter, Sarah. Child welfare in a multicultural context: Definitions, values and service issues. 2001.

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43

Stewart, Bennett. Best-Practice EVA: The Definitive Guide to Measuring and Maximizing Shareholder Value. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2013.

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44

Stewart, Bennett. Best-Practice EVA: The Definitive Guide to Measuring and Maximizing Shareholder Value. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2013.

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45

Stewart, Bennett. Best-Practice EVA: The Definitive Guide to Measuring and Maximizing Shareholder Value. Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, John, 2013.

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46

Stewart, Bennett. Best-Practice EVA: The Definitive Guide to Measuring and Maximizing Shareholder Value. Wiley, 2013.

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47

Bacon, Andrew. Vague Propositions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198712060.003.0011.

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If there are vague propositions, and the vague supervenes on the precise, then vague propositions cannot be represented by sets of metaphysically possible worlds. According to an alternative, broadly supervaluationist idea, propositions are sets of world-precisification pairs. To interpret this theory non-linguistically, precisifications are understood as assigning an extension to each vague property at each possible world. However, there are many other positions on propositional fineness of grain. The chapter investigates the general logic of propositional individuation. It gives an internal definition of the broadest notion of necessity, and shows that it is at least as broad as any combination of determinacy and necessity operators. It formulates a propositions-first account of vague propositions, in which propositions are taken as primitive and not constructed out of sets of things, and presents a theory of vague propositions in which they are individuated by their role in thought.
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48

Standing Committee on the Scientific Evaluation of Dietary Reference Intakes, Food and Nutrition Board, and Panel on the Definition of Dietary Fiber. Dietary Reference Intakes: Proposed Definition of Dietary Fiber. National Academies Press, 2001.

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49

Palau, Luis, and Steve Halliday. High Definition Life: Trading Lifes Good for Gods Best. Revell, 2005.

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50

Beninger, Richard J. Dopamine and inverse incentive learning. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198824091.003.0006.

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Dopamine and inverse incentive learning explains that dopamine determines an incentive–value continuum. Novel and intense stimuli innately produce rapid dopamine neurons activation followed by inhibition. The repeated presentation of novel stimuli leads to a loss of this effect. Aversive stimuli, biologically important by definition, often deactivate dopamine neurons and may produce inverse incentive learning, leading to conditioned inverse incentive stimuli with decreased ability to elicit approach and other responses. The offset of aversion may increase the firing of dopamine neurons producing incentive learning about safety-related stimuli. Habituation to stimuli enhances their ability to produce inverse incentive learning, suggesting that inverse incentive learning may occur during habituation. In the end, there may be no “neutral” stimuli, only stimuli that lie on a continuum of incentive value from strong conditioned incentive stimuli to strong conditioned inverse incentive stimuli with most of the things we encounter in day-to-day life falling in between.
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