placebo
placebo 英 [pləˈsi:bəʊ] 美 [pləˈsiboʊ]
n. 安慰剂;为死者所诵的晚祷词
名词复数:placebos
- A patient's symptoms sometimes disappear just because they believe that they are being treated. Even when doctors give them a biologically inactive drug, otherwise known as a placebo, the patients swear they are cured.
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- n. 安慰剂;为死者所诵的晚祷词
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1. Instead, we see the effects of treatment plus placebo effects that are shaped by the subjects’ expectations.
反而我们看到的是加上人们对治疗本身的期望之后即安慰剂效应的治疗的效果。
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2. Or it could be that the needles caused a “super placebo” effect, triggering a real reaction in the brain that changes the way the body perceives and responds to pain.
或者是因为针灸造成了一种“超级安慰剂”效应,并触发了大脑内的一个反应,这种反应能改变身体对疼痛信号的感知和回应。
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3. I went to the labs of the leading placebo researchers in Turin and subjected myself to some experimentation.
我去了在都灵一些安慰剂主要研究人员的实验室,并亲身经受了一些实验。
- placebo (n.) early 13c., name given to the rite of Vespers of the Office of the Dead, so called from the opening of the first antiphon, "I will please the Lord in the land of the living" (Psalms cxiv.9), from Latin placebo "I shall please," future indicative of placere "to please" (see please). Medical sense is first recorded 1785, "a medicine given more to please than to benefit the patient." Placebo effect attested from 1900.
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