Google Share on Facebook labile Also found in:Dictionary,Thesaurus,Medical,Wikipedia. Related to labile:labile diabetes [′lā‚bīl] (psychology) Unstable in mood. (science and technology) Also known as metastable. Readily changed, as by heat, oxidation, or other processes. ...
1. Labile refers to something that is unstable, subject to change, or easily decomposed. The opposite of labile is stable or stiff, which means something that is steady and unchanging.2. The term "labile" is often used in the context of psychology to describe emotions that are ...
The Psychology of Learning and Motivation, Vol. 32 (pp. 22 1-246). San Diego: Academic Press.Mellers, B. A., Weber, E. U., Ordonez, L. D., & Cooke, A. D. (1995). Utility invariance despite labile preferences. In J. R. Busemeyer, R. Hastie, D. L. Medin (Eds.) Decision...
Psychology and Health, 17, 387–404). To date, however, few studies have sought to examine the psychological processes that underpin this relationship. The purpose of the present investigation was to determine the degree to which self-oriented and socially prescribed perfectionism were associated ...
andThomasElbertSDOSBiological PsychologyRau, H., Furedy, J. J., & Elbert, T. (1996). PRES- and orthostatic-induced heart-rate changes as marker of labile hypertension: Magnitude and reliability measures. Biological Psychology, 42 , 105–115....
Psychology Public Health Social Sciences Statistics Our Content Journals Books Book Series Protocols Reference Works Other Sites Springer.com SpringerProtocols SpringerMaterials Help & Contacts Contact Us Impressum Legal © Springer International Publishing AG, Part of Springer Science+Busin...
THE STABLE AND LABILE PERSONALITY TYPES OF LURIA IN CLINICALLY NORMAL INDIVIDUALSFirst page of articledoi:10.1111/j.2044-8295.1948.tb00203.xRONALD C. ALBINOJohn Wiley & Sons, LtdBritish Journal of Psychology. General Section
Conditioning (PsychologyMemoryModels, NeurologicalConsolidation' has been used to describe distinct but related processes. In considering the implications of our recent findings on the lability of reactivated fear memories, we view consolidation and reconsolidation in terms of molecular events taking place ...
Conditioning (PsychologyMemoryModels, Neurological'Consolidation' has been used to describe distinct but related processes. In considering the implications of our recent findings on the lability of reactivated fear memories, we view consolidation and reconsolidation in terms of molecular events taking place...
JUDGEMENT(PSYCHOLOGYMEASUREMENTPROBLEM SOLVINGVALUEDecision making requires two sequential actions: assessing what one wants and then figuring how best to obtain that goal. Typically it is assumed that people know what they want and that, with a little care, those values can be elicited. Furthermore...