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单词 sensation
释义

sensation


sen·sa·tion

S0265600 (sĕn-sā′shən)n.1. a. A perception associated with stimulation of a sense organ or with a specific body condition: the sensation of heat; a visual sensation.b. The faculty to feel or perceive; physical sensibility: The patient has very little sensation left in the right leg.c. An indefinite generalized body feeling: a sensation of lightness.2. A state of heightened interest or emotion: "The anticipation produced in me a sensation somewhat between bliss and fear" (James Weldon Johnson).3. a. A state of intense public interest and excitement: "The purser made a sensation as sailors like to do, by predicting a storm" (Evelyn Waugh).b. A cause of such interest and excitement: The band's new singer is a sensation.
[French, from Old French, from Medieval Latin sēnsātiō, sēnsātiōn-, from Late Latin sēnsātus, gifted with sense; see sensate.]

sensation

(sɛnˈseɪʃən) n1. (Physiology) the power of perceiving through the senses2. (Physiology) a physical condition or experience resulting from the stimulation of one of the sense organs: a sensation of warmth. 3. a general feeling or awareness: a sensation of fear. 4. a state of widespread public excitement: his announcement caused a sensation. 5. anything that causes such a state: your speech was a sensation. [C17: from Medieval Latin sensātiō, from Late Latin sensātus sensate] senˈsationless adj

sen•sa•tion

(sɛnˈseɪ ʃən)

n. 1. perception or awareness of stimuli through the senses. 2. a mental condition or physical feeling resulting from stimulation of a sense organ or from internal bodily change, as cold or pain. 3. the faculty of perception of stimuli. 4. a general feeling not directly attributable to any given stimulus, as discomfort, anxiety, or doubt. 5. widespread excitement or interest: The divorce caused a sensation. 6. a cause of such feeling or interest. [1605–15; < Late Latin sēnsātiō understanding, idea = Latin sēns(us) sense + -ātiō -ation]
Thesaurus
Noun1.sensation - an unelaborated elementary awareness of stimulation; "a sensation of touch"aesthesis, esthesis, sense datum, sense experience, sense impressionperception - the process of perceivinglimen, threshold - the smallest detectable sensationmasking - the blocking of one sensation resulting from the presence of another sensation; "he studied auditory masking by pure tones"visual sensation, vision - the perceptual experience of seeing; "the runners emerged from the trees into his clear vision"; "he had a visual sensation of intense light"odour, olfactory perception, olfactory sensation, smell, odor - the sensation that results when olfactory receptors in the nose are stimulated by particular chemicals in gaseous form; "she loved the smell of roses"gustatory perception, gustatory sensation, taste, taste perception, taste sensation - the sensation that results when taste buds in the tongue and throat convey information about the chemical composition of a soluble stimulus; "the candy left him with a bad taste"; "the melon had a delicious taste"auditory sensation, sound - the subjective sensation of hearing something; "he strained to hear the faint sounds"synaesthesia, synesthesia - a sensation that normally occurs in one sense modality occurs when another modality is stimulated
2.sensation - someone who is dazzlingly skilled in any fieldsensation - someone who is dazzlingly skilled in any fieldadept, hotshot, maven, mavin, superstar, virtuoso, whiz, whizz, wiz, wizard, star, ace, genius, championexpert - a person with special knowledge or ability who performs skillfullytrack star - a star runner
3.sensation - a general feeling of excitement and heightened interest; "anticipation produced in me a sensation somewhere between hope and fear"stir - emotional agitation and excitement
4.sensation - a state of widespread public excitement and interest; "the news caused a sensation"excitation, fervour, inflammation, excitement, fervor - the state of being emotionally aroused and worked up; "his face was flushed with excitement and his hands trembled"; "he tried to calm those who were in a state of extreme inflammation"
5.sensation - the faculty through which the external world is apprehended; "in the dark he had to depend on touch and on his senses of smell and hearing"sensory faculty, sentiency, sentience, sensefaculty, mental faculty, module - one of the inherent cognitive or perceptual powers of the mindsense modality, sensory system, modality - a particular sensesensitivity, sensitiveness, sensibility - (physiology) responsiveness to external stimuli; the faculty of sensation; "sensitivity to pain"

sensation

noun1. feeling, sense, impression, perception, awareness, consciousness A sensation of burning or tingling may be felt in the hands.2. excitement, surprise, thrill, stir, scandal, furore, agitation, commotion she caused a sensation at the Montreal Olympics3. hit, success, wow (slang, chiefly U.S.), crowd puller (informal) the film that turned her into an overnight sensation

sensation

noun1. The capacity for or an act of responding to a stimulus:feeling, sense, sensibility, sensitiveness, sensitivity, sentiment.2. A condition of intense public interest or excitement:brouhaha, stir, uproar.Informal: to-do.Slang: hoo-hah.3. One that evokes great surprise and admiration:astonishment, marvel, miracle, phenomenon, prodigy, stunner, wonder, wonderment.Idioms: one for the books, the eighth wonder of the world.
Translations
引起轰动的事件、人物感觉知觉

sensation

(senˈseiʃən) noun1. the ability to feel through the sense of touch. Cold can cause a loss of sensation in the fingers and toes. 觸覺 知觉2. a feeling. a sensation of faintness. 感覺 感觉3. a general feeling, or a cause, of excitement or horror. The murder caused a sensation; His arrest was the sensation of the week. 引起轟動的原因 引起轰动的事件、人物senˈsational adjective1. causing great excitement or horror. a sensational piece of news. 轟動的,駭人的 轰动的,骇人的 2. very good. The film was sensational. 很棒的 好的,惊人的 3. intended to create feelings of excitement, horror etc. That magazine is too sensational for me. 聳人聽聞的 耸人听闻的senˈsationally adverb 轟動地 轰动地

sensation


sensation

1. the power of perceiving through the senses 2. a physical condition or experience resulting from the stimulation of one of the sense organs

Sensation

A term commonly used to refer to the subjective experience resulting from stimulation of a sense organ, for instance, a sensation of warm, sour, or green. As a general scientific category, the study of sensation is the study of the operation of the senses. Sense receptors are the means by which information presented as one form of energy, for example, light, is converted to information in the form used by the nervous system, that is, impulses traveling along nerve fibers. See Sense organ

Each sense has mechanisms and characteristics peculiar to itself, but all display the phenomena of absolute threshold, differential threshold, and adaptation. Not until sufficient stimulation impinges on a receptor can the presence of a stimulus be detected. The quantity of stimulation required is known as the absolute threshold. Not until a sufficient change occurs in some aspect of a stimulus can the change be detected. The magnitude of the change required is called the differential threshold. Under steady stimulation there is a decrease in sensitivity of the corresponding sense, as indicated by a shift in the absolute threshold and in the magnitude of sensation. After the stimulation ceases, sensitivity increases. An obvious example of visual adaptation occurs when one goes from bright to dim surroundings or vice versa.

With fairly good accuracy humans can localize visual objects, sounds, and cutaneous contacts and can discriminate the spatial orientation of the body and its members. With rather poor accuracy humans can localize many of the stimuli originating within the body.

With the exception of hearing, in which sense localization depends on differences in the acoustic stimuli reaching the two ears, there appears to be a common principle involved in giving spatially separated receptors their different local signs. Stimulation at different points on the receptive surface results in peaks of electrical activity at different loci in the brain. In no sense is there anything like a private wire from each sensory cell to a corresponding point in the brain. In fact, there are so many opportunities for a signal to go astray on its way from the receptor to the brain that it is surprising that spatial discrimination is as good as it is. Nevertheless, there is clear evidence that, by a combination of anatomical and functional arrangements, spatial differences at the receptor level are translated into topologically similar spatial differences in brain activity. See Hearing (human)

The nerve fibers between receptor and brain do not serve merely as transmitters of sensory information. Their interconnections enable them to influence one another's sensitivity and to perform logical operations like those carried out inside computers. As a result the information arriving in the sensory areas of the brain is not merely a more or less faithful replica of that presented to the receptors but in addition has had certain aspects of the information selected for special signaling. See Chemical senses, Somesthesis, Taste, Vision

Sensation

 

the reflection of the properties of things in the objective world, resulting when things act upon the sense organs and arouse the nerve centers of the cerebral cortex. Sensation is the starting point of cognition and an inseparable part of it. Pointing to the reflection of quality as the chief element in sensation, V. I. Lenin wrote that “the very first and most familiar to us is sensation, and in it there is inevitably also quality” (Poln. sobr. soch, 5th ed., vol. 29, p. 301). There are many kinds of sensations, including tactile, visual, aural, vibrational, and olfactory; there are also sensations of the muscles and joints as well as sensations of temperature, taste, pain, equilibrium, and acceleration. The special feature of each sensation is called its modality. Sensations of different modalities are not comparable with one another.

In the course of evolution, sensation arises on the basis of irritability associated with the development of a nervous system. However, specific sense organs have been developed only for a few types of energy. Many other properties of the objective world, such as form, size, and distance of objects from one another and from the observer, are sensed only when various sense organs interact.

A leading role in man’s sensory knowledge of reality is played by visual sensations, which are closely linked to tactile sensations. “Touch and sight supplement each other to such an extent that from the appearance of an object we can often enough predict its tactile properties” (F. Engels, in K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch., 2nd ed., vol. 20, p. 548). Tactile sensations include dermotactile sensations, sensations of the muscles and joints, and those of temperature and pain. Dermotactile sensations reflect touch, pressure, and the surface qualities of an object, such as smoothness, roughness, size, hardness, elasticity, and impermeability.

Vibrational sensations reflect periodic changes of pressure linked to mechanical oscillations of moving bodies in the environment; these sensations are especially keen in the blind. Hearing represents a complex of heterogeneous sensations, including pitch, volume, and timbre. The development of human hearing is most closely linked with the development of auditory language as the most important means of communication and with the development of music. The chemoreceptors of smell and taste are also important to sensation.

A characteristic of sensation is the localization of the object of sensation. In sensing color, for example, a person attributes it to a specific surface of an illuminated body occupying a specific place in space; sensing a sound, a person localizes the source of this sound.

In contrast to the sensations of animals, human sensations are mediated by man’s object-oriented practical activity and the whole process of the sociohistorical development of culture. In the words of Marx, “the human eye enjoys things in a way differently from the crude, nonhuman eye; the human ear differently from the crude, nonhuman ear, etc.” (K. Marx and F. Engels, Iz rannikh proizvedenii, 1956, p. 592). In principle, human sensations are of an intelligent and conscious nature, although unconscious sensations also exist.

The variety of sensations reflects the qualitative variety of the world. Lenin’s theory of reflection regards sensation as a copy or photograph of reality, a subjective image of the properties of the objective world. His theory stands in contrast to the views of the adherents of physiological idealism, who assert that sensations are only conventional signs or hieroglyphs for the properties of objects. It is also opposed to the mechanistic distinction between primary and secondary qualities, which leads to agnosticism, subjective idealism, and the view that things are complexes of sensations. In criticizing the adherents of Machism, Lenin emphasized that sensations give us more or less faithful images of the objective properties of things, although different sensations possess various degrees of adequacy in reproducing these properties.

A source of man’s knowledge about the surrounding world, sensation is an element in the integral process of human cognition, a process that also includes perceptions, images, and concepts.

REFERENCES

Lenin, V. I. “Materializm i empiriokrititsizm.” Poln. sobr. soch, 5th ed., vol. 18.
Mach, E. Analiz oshchushchenii i otnoshenie fizicheskogo k psikhicheskomu, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1908. (Translated from German.)
Anan’ev, B. G. Teoriia oshchushchenii. Leningrad, 1961.
Boring, E. G. Sensation and Perception in the History of Experimental Psychology. New York-London [1942].
Piéron, H. La Sensation. Paris, 1953.

A. G. SPIRKIN

sensation

[sen′sā·shən] (physiology) The subjective experience that results from the stimulation of a sense organ.

sensation


sensation

 [sen-sa´shun] an impression produced by impulses conveyed by an afferent nerve to the sensorium.girdle sensation zonesthesia.gnostic s's sensations perceived by the more recently developed senses, such as those of light touch and the epicritic sensibility to muscle, joint, and tendon vibrations.primary sensation that resulting immediately and directly from application of a stimulus.referred sensation (reflex sensation) one felt elsewhere than at the site of application of a stimulus.subjective sensation one originating with the organism and not occurring in response to an external stimulus.

sen·sa·tion

(sen-sā'shŭn), A feeling; the translation into consciousness of the effects of a stimulus exciting any of the organs of sense. [L. sensatio, perception, feeling, fr. sentio, to perceive, feel]

sensation

(sĕn-sā′shən)n.a. A perception associated with stimulation of a sense organ or with a specific body condition: the sensation of heat; a visual sensation.b. The faculty to feel or perceive; physical sensibility: The patient has very little sensation left in the right leg.c. An indefinite generalized body feeling: a sensation of lightness.

sensation

Homeopathy
A general term for the quality of a symptom; for example, a pain can be burning, throbbing, tearing and so on.
Mainstream medicine
The conscious recognition of a physical (audio, chemical, electrical, mechanical, visual) stimulation that excites a sense organ.
Psychology
The mental and emotional experience associated with a sound, light or other simple stimulus, and the initial information-processing steps by which sense organs and neural pathways receive stimulus information from the environment.

sensation

Mainstream medicine The conscious recognition of a physical–audio, chemical, electrical, mechanical, visual stimulation which excites a sense organ. See Epicritic sensation.

sen·sa·tion

(sen-sā'shŭn) A feeling; the translation into consciousness of the effects of a stimulus exciting any of the organs of sense. [L. sensatio, perception, feeling, fr. sentio, to perceive, feel]

sensation

The conscious experience produced by the stimulation of any sense organ such as the eye, ear, nose, tongue, skin, or any internal sensory receptor.

sensation 

The conscious response to the effect of a stimulus exciting any sense organ. See perception.

sen·sa·tion

(sen-sā'shŭn) A feeling; translation into consciousness of effects of a stimulus exciting any of the organs of sense. [L. sensatio, perception, feeling, fr. sentio, to perceive, feel]

Patient discussion about sensation

Q. What causes a warm sensation in your foot I have a warm sensation at sole of left foot lasting 5-10 second From time to time I get a warm sensation at the sole of my foot lasting about 5-10 seconds. Started about 2 months ago.A. Frankly? Although it's tempting to try to give you diagnosis here, these kinds of complaints are so varied and can point to so many different directions I would refrain from doing it. In my opinion you should see a doctor. It's impossible to give a diagnosis based on one line. Sorry...

More discussions about sensation

sensation


  • noun

Synonyms for sensation

noun feeling

Synonyms

  • feeling
  • sense
  • impression
  • perception
  • awareness
  • consciousness

noun excitement

Synonyms

  • excitement
  • surprise
  • thrill
  • stir
  • scandal
  • furore
  • agitation
  • commotion

noun hit

Synonyms

  • hit
  • success
  • wow
  • crowd puller

Synonyms for sensation

noun the capacity for or an act of responding to a stimulus

Synonyms

  • feeling
  • sense
  • sensibility
  • sensitiveness
  • sensitivity
  • sentiment

noun a condition of intense public interest or excitement

Synonyms

  • brouhaha
  • stir
  • uproar
  • to-do
  • hoo-hah

noun one that evokes great surprise and admiration

Synonyms

  • astonishment
  • marvel
  • miracle
  • phenomenon
  • prodigy
  • stunner
  • wonder
  • wonderment

Synonyms for sensation

noun an unelaborated elementary awareness of stimulation

Synonyms

  • aesthesis
  • esthesis
  • sense datum
  • sense experience
  • sense impression

Related Words

  • perception
  • limen
  • threshold
  • masking
  • visual sensation
  • vision
  • odour
  • olfactory perception
  • olfactory sensation
  • smell
  • odor
  • gustatory perception
  • gustatory sensation
  • taste
  • taste perception
  • taste sensation
  • auditory sensation
  • sound
  • synaesthesia
  • synesthesia

noun someone who is dazzlingly skilled in any field

Synonyms

  • adept
  • hotshot
  • maven
  • mavin
  • superstar
  • virtuoso
  • whiz
  • whizz
  • wiz
  • wizard
  • star
  • ace
  • genius
  • champion

Related Words

  • expert
  • track star

noun a general feeling of excitement and heightened interest

Related Words

  • stir

noun a state of widespread public excitement and interest

Related Words

  • excitation
  • fervour
  • inflammation
  • excitement
  • fervor

noun the faculty through which the external world is apprehended

Synonyms

  • sensory faculty
  • sentiency
  • sentience
  • sense

Related Words

  • faculty
  • mental faculty
  • module
  • sense modality
  • sensory system
  • modality
  • sensitivity
  • sensitiveness
  • sensibility
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