--subdivision Mental health under names of individual persons and under classes of persons and ethnic groups, e.g. Women--Mental health; African Americans--Mental health
Mental Processes -- radiation effects : Photobiomodulation in the Brain : Low-Level Laser (Light) Therapy in Neurology and Neuroscience / edited by Michael R. Hamblin and Ying-Ying Huang
The act or fact of grasping the meaning, nature, or importance of; understanding. (American Heritage Dictionary, 4th ed) Includes understanding by a patient or research subject of information disclosed orally or in writing
Mental representation -- Data processing. : Exemplar-based knowledge acquisition : a unified approach to concept representation, classification, and learning / Ray Bareiss
Mental representation in children -- Case studies : Young children learning through schemas : deepening the dialogue about learning in the home and in the nursery / [edited by] Katey Mairs and the Pen Green Team ; Edited by Cath Arnold
Mental Research Institute. / http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n50079903 : Propagations : thirty years of influence from the Mental Research Institute / John H. Weakland, Wendel A. Ray, editors ; contributors Prabha Appasamy [and twenty five others]
2013
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Mental Research Institute -- Influence : Propagations : thirty years of influence from the Mental Research Institute / John H. Weakland, Wendel A. Ray, editors ; contributors Prabha Appasamy [and twenty five others]
Subnormal intellectual functioning which originates during the developmental period. This has multiple potential etiologies, including genetic defects and perinatal insults. Intelligence quotient (IQ) scores are commonly used to determine whether an individual has an intellectual disability. IQ scores between 70 and 79 are in the borderline range. Scores below 67 are in the disabled range. (from Joynt, Clinical Neurology, 1992, Ch55, p28)
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Mental retardation, Psychosocial : Mental retardation : the developmental-difference controversy / edited by Edward Zigler, David Balla
Mental Retardation, X-Linked, Associated With Fragile Site Fraxe -- See Fragile X Syndrome
A condition characterized genotypically by mutation of the distal end of the long arm of the X chromosome (at gene loci FRAXA or FRAXE) and phenotypically by cognitive impairment, hyperactivity, SEIZURES, language delay, and enlargement of the ears, head, and testes. INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY occurs in nearly all males and roughly 50% of females with the full mutation of FRAXA. (From Menkes, Textbook of Child Neurology, 5th ed, p226)
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Mental Retardation, X-Linked, Associated With Marxq28 -- See Fragile X Syndrome
A condition characterized genotypically by mutation of the distal end of the long arm of the X chromosome (at gene loci FRAXA or FRAXE) and phenotypically by cognitive impairment, hyperactivity, SEIZURES, language delay, and enlargement of the ears, head, and testes. INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY occurs in nearly all males and roughly 50% of females with the full mutation of FRAXA. (From Menkes, Textbook of Child Neurology, 5th ed, p226)
Subnormal intellectual functioning which originates during the developmental period. This has multiple potential etiologies, including genetic defects and perinatal insults. Intelligence quotient (IQ) scores are commonly used to determine whether an individual has an intellectual disability. IQ scores between 70 and 79 are in the borderline range. Scores below 67 are in the disabled range. (from Joynt, Clinical Neurology, 1992, Ch55, p28)