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Placebo and effect
Placebo effect may refer to:
simple: Placebo effect ( disambiguation )
Another possible resolution of the ethical dilemma might come from the " honest placebo " effect found in a 2010 study carried out by researchers in the Program in Placebo Studies at the Harvard Medical School, where patients with irritable bowel syndrome experienced a significant beneficial effect even though they were told the pills they were taking were placebos, as compared to a control group who received no pills.
Later, researchers became interested in understanding the placebo effect, rather than just controlling for its effects, and in 2011, a Program in Placebo Studies was established at the Harvard Medical School.
* Placebo effect
Placebo effect -
* Placebo effect
* Placebo effect
* Placebo effect ( disambiguation )
* Placebo effect
* Placebo effect
* Placebo effect
* Reactivity ( Placebo, Novelty, and Hawthorne Effects ): If cause-effect relationships are found they might not be generalizable to other settings or situations if the effects found only occurred as an effect of studying the situation.

Placebo and any
The first was in late October, when he performed on the Serge Gainsbourg tribute show that was recorded and posted on the Internet ; this was the only video of any Placebo member since Projekt Revolution ended in 2007.
There have been several published scientific studies that dispute the efficacy, beyond the Placebo Effect, of holistic medicine in treating any known disease.

Placebo and treatment
* Placebo, a treatment without intrinsic therapeutic value, but administered as if it were a therapy, either in medical treatment or in clinical trials

Placebo and even
Placebo effects after verbal suggestion for mild pain can be robust and still exist after being repeated ten times even if they have no actual pharmacological pain killing action.

Placebo and inert
* Placeboan inert medicine or preparation which works because the patient thinks it will

Placebo and one
He generally assumes one of three avatars: the sweet and innocent child ( as in the children's books ), the poignantly lovelorn and ineffectual being ( as, notably, in the Jerry Cornelius novels of Michael Moorcock ), or the somewhat sinister and depraved outsider ( as in David Bowie's various experiments, or Rachel Caine's vampire novels, or the S & M lyrics of the English rock group Placebo ).
In early 1996, Placebo opened several concerts for David Bowie in Italy, France, and Switzerland as part of his Outside Tour after he had only heard one of their demos.
Januarie's brothers are named Placebo and Justinus: the former a sycophant, whose name in Latin means ' I will please ', and the latter a fairer man (' the just one ') with no individual motive.
Januarie decides that he wants to marry, predominately for the purpose of lawful recreational sex and to produce an heir, and he consults his two brothers, Placebo ( meaning-' I shall please '), who while encouraging him offers no personal opinion, and Justinus ( meaning-' the just one '), who opposes marriage from his own experience.
" Untitled " ( Placebo ) ( 1991 ), in one installation, consisted of a six-by-twelve-foot carpet of shiny silver wrapped candies.
Brian Molko and Stefan Olsdal of Placebo were inspired to buy Fender Bass VIs with Molko commenting, " Playing the Fender VI is like playing two instruments in one, it can be treated as a guitar and as a bass.
Thus, one Thomas Windsor ( who died in 1479 ) orders that " on my moneth's minde there be a hundred children within the age of sixteen years, to say for my soul ," and candles were to be burned before the rood ( cross ) in the parish church and twenty priests were to be paid by his executors to sing Placebo, Dirige, and other songs.

Placebo and because
The name " Placebo ", Olsdal remarked in an MTV interview, was chosen because of its Latin origins ; " placebo " literally translates from Latin as " I will please ".
The band were forced to change their name because it was previously registered by Steve Hewitt ( formerly of Placebo ) on his vanity record label.
# the image on the cover is significant because it was made by a notable artist, Placebo.
# the image on the cover is significant because it was made by a notable artist, Placebo.
# the image on the cover is significant because it was made by a notable artist, Placebo.
# the image on the cover is significant because it was made by a notable artist, Placebo.

Placebo and will
Placebo confirmed in late May that they expect to release some tracks by the end of 2012, and that they have been assisted by Adam Noble ( Red Hot Chili Peppers, dEUS ) on a new album which will be released by the Northern Hemisphere summer in 2013.

Placebo and work
Worrell ’ s synthesizer work is prominent on the majority of Parliament ’ s most popular ( and most sampled ) songs throughout the 1970s, most notably ” Mothership Connection ( Star Child )” and “ Give Up the Funk ( Tear the Roof Off the Sucker )” from Mothership Connection, " Flash Light from Funkentelechy Vs. the Placebo Syndrome and " Aqua Boogie " from Motor Booty Affair.
Placebo analgesia is more likely to work the more severe the pain.
Since the cessation of activity of My Bloody Valentine, Shields has found steady work remixing and producing for artists including Joy Zipper, Placebo and Yo La Tengo.
In 2006, Tomer published The Placebo Man ( Alternative Comics ), which compiles much of his work from Bipolar.

effect and tendency
The Poynting-Robertson effect causes the semi-major axis of orbits to diminish more rapidly than the semi-minor axis, with a consequent tendency toward circular orbits as the particles move toward the sun.
This whole tendency had an unfortunate effect on Chinese thinking.
The ELIZA effect, in computer science, is the tendency to unconsciously assume computer behaviors are analogous to human behaviors.
In a limited sense, the Coandă effect refers to the tendency of a fluid jet to stay attached to an adjacent surface that curves away from the flow, and the resultant entrainment of ambient air into the flow.
More broadly, some consider the effect to include the tendency of any fluid boundary layer to adhere to a curved surface, not just the boundary layer accompanying a fluid jet.
The second-system effect refers to the tendency of small, elegant, and successful systems to have elephantine, feature-laden monstrosities as their successors.
In upholding his conviction, the Court reasoned that although he had not spoken any words that posed a " clear and present danger ," taken in context, the speech had a " natural tendency and a probable effect to obstruct the recruiting services "
In social psychology, the fundamental attribution error ( also known as correspondence bias or attribution effect ) describes the tendency to over-value dispositional or personality-based explanations for the observed behaviors of others while under-valuing situational explanations for those behaviors.
The discovery of this tendency is attributed to Maurice Duverger, a French sociologist who observed the effect and recorded it in several papers published in the 1950s and 1960s.
The mirror effect results in a tendency for charged particles to bounce back from the high field region.
In multimode fibre, mandrel wrapping is used to eliminate the effect of " transient loss ", the tendency of high order modes to experience higher loss than lower order modes.
* Skin effect, the tendency of an alternating electric current to distribute itself within a conductor so that the current density near the surface of the conductor is greater than that at its core.
" Eugene P. Odum, professor of zoology, 1971: ' The tendency for increased variety and diversity at community junctions is known as the edge effect ....
Due to what social psychologists call the vividness effect, a tendency to notice only certain distinctive characteristics, the majority population tends to draw conclusions like gays flaunt their sexuality.
In comparison, the tendency of antimony to be oxidized more easily partially offsets the effect of its 4d < sup > 10 </ sup > shell.
Because large plasma proteins cannot easily cross through the capillary walls, their effect on the osmotic pressure of the capillary interiors will, to some extent, balance out the tendency for fluid to leak out of the capillaries.
The car retained a vacuum-powered wiper with its tendency to slow down or stop above about 40 mph ( 64 km / h ), the point at which the suction effect from the induction manifold disappeared ; however, the Anglia's wipers were supported by a vacuum reservoir, which partially addressed the propensity to stop entirely when the car was accelerated.
In the modern scientific literature, these terms are rarely used, with a tendency to use just the " Zeeman effect ".
The term is derived from the halo effect, the tendency for a favorable trait to influence the perception of subsequent traits in a sequence of interpretations ; it appears to have been used as early as 1938.
The Coandă effect is the tendency of a fluid jet to be attracted to a nearby surface.
Some of his later works do revert to this custom, as suggested by the tendency for distant figures to be painted as blobs of colour-an effect produced by using a camera obscura, which blurs farther-away objects.
In social psychology, the fundamental attribution error ( also known as correspondence bias or attribution effect ) describes the tendency to over-value dispositional or personality-based explanations for the observed behaviors of others while under-valuing situational explanations for those behaviors.
The mere-exposure effect originally referred to the tendency of a person to positively favor those who they have been physically exposed to most often.
The most common types of error are leniency errors, central tendency errors, and errors resulting from the halo effect.

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