Hoodia
What is Hoodia ?
The heralded south African cactus featured on "60 Minutes", "The Today Show", and in Oprah's "O Magazine" is probably the new miracle supplement for safe, effective weight loss for everyone wanting to lose weight.Hoodia gordonii (Hoodia) is an all-natural appetite suppressant known for having no side effects or conflicts that are associated with other weight-loss products.
How Hoodia Works.
It essentially suppresses the appetite by tricking the brain into thinking that you're full when you're not: Scientists explain that the active ingredient in Hoodia works within the hypothalamus, the satiety center of the brain, by releasing a chemical compound similar to glucose, only much stronger. The hypothalamus receives this signal as an indication that enough food has been consumed and therefore suppresses the appetite.
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500mg
| Quantity | Price | Price per pill | Returning customer price | Bonus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 60 | $ 50.00 | $ 0.83 | $ 45.00 | ---- | Add to cart |
| 120 | $ 81.00 | $ 0.68 | $ 72.00 | ---- | Add to cart |
Drug Medical Information
AGE AND BEHAVIOR: PROCESSING SENSE INFORMATION STUDIES
Most studies of perceptual aftereffects and other illusions, but not all, show that aged adults tend not to be susceptible to them. Moreover, when they are established, they are often reported less sustained in later life than in young adulthood. Such reports argue against stimulus persistence theory for, if in the old nervous system traces persist longer than in young nervous systems, aftereffects and illusions should be sustained longer. However, the reports may be misleading. The literature shows that when figural and spiral aftereffects are developed after long and thorough periods of stimulus viewing, and tests of aftereffects are carried out for long periods afterward, they might be seen lasting longer in the old than in the young. One reason it may be more difficult to establish an aftereffect in the old than in the young may be that it takes more physical energy of the external event to make an impact on them. Once the energy of stimulation is increased, the old often perform as well as the young. If two modalities are stimulated simultaneously, the elderly may perform even better. A study on color afterimages was different in that it was not especially difficult to initiate the images among the elderly. The afterimages lasted longer among the elderly than the young, confirming stimulus persistence theory.
Quite another type of stimulus processing involves spatial integration. Old subjects were seen to have difficulty with spatially integrating dissociated stimulus parts and finding them in complex backgrounds. They also seemed to have difficulty in modifying percepts once established. Stimulus persistence theory was applied here too, but only with great stress on the theory.
Thus stimulus persistence theory has been useful in explaining much of the data of perception studies. The theory has been used to organize data already reported in the literature and has been put to a test by studies carried out for just that purpose. While the stimulus persistence notion seems useful, it is well to keep in mind that this is not the only theory that is considered effective. There are other theories, and one in particular which is extraordinarily good takes the form of "oxygen want." Many similarities were noted between aging and oxygen deprivation, particularly in regard to sensory and perceptual performances.
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