Individuals including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, gender non-conforming people, and other populations whose sexual orientation or GENDER IDENTITY and reproductive development is considered outside cultural, societal, or physiological norms
Dissidents. : The ideology of tyranny : Bataille, Foucault, and the postmodern corruption of political dissent / Guido Giacomo Preparata
2007
1
Dissidents -- Chine -- Sources. : Wild lily, prairie fire : China's road to democracy, Yan'an to Tian'anmen, 1942-1989 / edited by Gregor Benton and Alan Hunter
Individuals including lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, gender non-conforming people, and other populations whose sexual orientation or GENDER IDENTITY and reproductive development is considered outside cultural, societal, or physiological norms
Dissociation (Psychology) -- Case studies. : DSM 5 Military Case Scenarios Series Index. Trauma- and Stressor-Related Disorders. Episode 37, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder with Derealization A-1 / [produced by] SymptomMedia
Dissociation -- Tables. : Dissociation constants of organic bases in aqueous solution / International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Analytical Chemistry Division, Commission on Electroanalytical Chemistry. Supplement / D.D. Perrin
1972
1
dissociational. : Therapeutic trances : the cooperation principle in Ericksonian hypnotherapy / Stephen Gilligan
Pathologic partial or complete loss of the ability to recall past experiences (AMNESIA, RETROGRADE) or to form new memories (AMNESIA, ANTEROGRADE). This condition may be of organic or psychologic origin. Organic forms of amnesia are usually associated with dysfunction of the DIENCEPHALON or HIPPOCAMPUS. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp426-7)
Pathologic partial or complete loss of the ability to recall past experiences (AMNESIA, RETROGRADE) or to form new memories (AMNESIA, ANTEROGRADE). This condition may be of organic or psychologic origin. Organic forms of amnesia are usually associated with dysfunction of the DIENCEPHALON or HIPPOCAMPUS. (From Adams et al., Principles of Neurology, 6th ed, pp426-7)