首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
文章检索
  按 检索   检索词:      
出版年份:   被引次数:   他引次数: 提示:输入*表示无穷大
  收费全文   4159篇
  免费   156篇
  国内免费   38篇
耳鼻咽喉   89篇
儿科学   64篇
妇产科学   51篇
基础医学   507篇
口腔科学   72篇
临床医学   290篇
内科学   1434篇
皮肤病学   31篇
神经病学   310篇
特种医学   79篇
外科学   667篇
综合类   9篇
预防医学   109篇
眼科学   60篇
药学   276篇
中国医学   4篇
肿瘤学   301篇
  2023年   31篇
  2022年   64篇
  2021年   137篇
  2020年   79篇
  2019年   98篇
  2018年   126篇
  2017年   83篇
  2016年   94篇
  2015年   90篇
  2014年   134篇
  2013年   156篇
  2012年   294篇
  2011年   269篇
  2010年   170篇
  2009年   169篇
  2008年   250篇
  2007年   278篇
  2006年   274篇
  2005年   282篇
  2004年   249篇
  2003年   236篇
  2002年   204篇
  2001年   32篇
  2000年   36篇
  1999年   34篇
  1998年   37篇
  1997年   22篇
  1996年   28篇
  1995年   14篇
  1994年   26篇
  1993年   16篇
  1992年   29篇
  1991年   13篇
  1990年   14篇
  1989年   15篇
  1988年   19篇
  1987年   11篇
  1986年   20篇
  1985年   20篇
  1984年   18篇
  1983年   22篇
  1982年   13篇
  1981年   12篇
  1979年   15篇
  1978年   14篇
  1977年   16篇
  1976年   11篇
  1975年   10篇
  1974年   13篇
  1973年   10篇
排序方式: 共有4353条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
51.
A century-long debate on bodily states and emotions persists. While the involvement of bodily activity in emotion physiology is widely recognized, the specificity and causal role of such activity related to brain dynamics has not yet been demonstrated. We hypothesize that the peripheral neural control on cardiovascular activity prompts and sustains brain dynamics during an emotional experience, so these afferent inputs are processed by the brain by triggering a concurrent efferent information transfer to the body. To this end, we investigated the functional brain–heart interplay under emotion elicitation in publicly available data from 62 healthy subjects using a computational model based on synthetic data generation of electroencephalography and electrocardiography signals. Our findings show that sympathovagal activity plays a leading and causal role in initiating the emotional response, in which ascending modulations from vagal activity precede neural dynamics and correlate to the reported level of arousal. The subsequent dynamic interplay observed between the central and autonomic nervous systems sustains the processing of emotional arousal. These findings should be particularly revealing for the psychophysiology and neuroscience of emotions.

“What Is an Emotion?” by William James (1), published more than a century ago, started the scientific debate on the nature of emotions. However, a shared and definitive theory of emotions is not in place yet, and the very definition of emotions and their nature is still a matter of debate. While more “classical” theories point to emotions as “the functional states of the brain that provide causal explanations of certain complex behaviors—like evading a predator or attacking prey” (2), other theories suggest how they are constructions of the world, not reactions to it (3). Namely, emotions are internal states constructed on the basis of previous experiences as predictive schemes to react to external stimuli.The role of bodily activity in emotions is often questioned. Despite the vast literature showing bodily correlates with emotions, a long-lasting debate about the relationship between bodily states and emotions persists (4). For instance, a feeling is defined as the subjective metarepresentation and labeling of physiological changes (such as an increase in heart rate, the increase of blood pressure, or changes in peristalsis) (5) that are strictly related to the body state on the one hand and to emotions on the other. To this extent, emotions are complex psychological phenomena in which feelings are interpreted and labeled. In a particular psychopathological condition known as alexithymia, individuals experience difficulties in experiencing and understanding emotions to various degrees (6). Indeed, some of these patients can perceive the physical changes connected to a feeling but are unable to label it as emotion, so that emotional experience is described only as its physical counterpart [e.g., described an experience as “I have my heart beating too fast” instead of “I’m fearful” (7)]. From a biological point of view the way in which physical changes become feelings and emotions is based on the interplay between the central and the autonomic nervous systems.The central nervous system (CNS) communicates with the autonomic nervous system (ANS) through interoceptive neural circuits that contribute to physiological functions beyond homeostatic control, from the emotional experience and the genesis of feelings (8) to decision making (9, 10). The debate about the role of the ANS in emotions can be condensed into two views: specificity or causation (4). The specificity view is related to the James–Lange theory, which states that bodily responses precede emotions’ central processing, meaning that bodily states would be a response to the environment, followed by an interpretation carried out by the CNS that would result in the feeling felt. However, causation theories represent an updated view of the James–Lange theory, suggesting that peripheral changes influence the conscious emotional experience; from a biological point of view this may reflect the fact that autonomic nervous signals from the body do influence perceptual activity in the brain (11, 12). In this regard, subjective perception may be influenced or shaped by ascending communication from visceral inputs to the brain (1315).Functional models of CNS and ANS interplay have described bidirectional dynamics in emotions (1618). In particular, the functional brain–heart interplay (BHI) involves brain structures that comprise the central autonomic network (CAN), which has been described as being in charge of autonomic control (19, 20). Moreover, the default mode network (DMN) has been found to be involved in autonomic control (21) and tasks of self-related cognition and interoception (22, 23), suggesting that the DMN participates in both ascending and descending communications with the heart. Finally, the constructed emotion theory suggests how DMN together with other intrinsic networks is crucial in the genesis of emotion and emotional experience (3).Psychophysiological studies have uncovered several correlates of different autonomic signals in the brain during emotional experiences (2427). To understand these correlations and the functional interactions between the heart and brain, various signal processing methods have been proposed to investigate functional BHI through noninvasive recordings (28). The study of emotions using these methods comprises the analysis of heartbeat-evoked potentials (29), nonlinear couplings (30), and information transfer modeling (31). However, the causative role of bodily inputs remains unknown (4) and, more specifically, the temporal and causal links between cortical and peripheral neural dynamics in both ascending and descending directions, i.e., from the brain to the body and from the body to the brain, are still to be clarified.In this study, we take a step forward in answering these scientific questions and investigate whether peripheral neural dynamics play a causal role in the genesis of emotions. We applied a mathematical model of functional BHI based on synthetic data generation (SDG) (32), estimating the directionality of the functional interplay using simultaneous electroencephalography (EEG) and electrocardiography (ECG) recordings gathered from healthy subjects undergoing emotion elicitations with video clips, the publicly available DEAP and MAHNOB datasets (33, 34). ECG series were analyzed to derive heart-rate variability (HRV) series, which result from the concurrent activity of the sympathetic and parasympathetic (vagal) branches of the ANS acting to regulate the heartbeat. We hypothesize that, from a neurobiological point of view, feelings and subsequent emotional experiences arise from the mutual interplay between brain and body, particularly in which the CNS integrates the afferent ANS information outflow, namely from-heart-to-brain interplay, which actually triggers a cascade of cortical neural activations that, in turn, modulate directed neural control onto the heart, namely from brain-to-heart interplay.  相似文献   
52.
53.
54.
55.
We studied X-chromosome inactivation patterns in blood cells from normal females in three age groups: neonates (umbilical cord blood), 25–32 years old (young women group) and >75 years old (elderly women). Using PCR, the differential allele methylation status was evaluated on active and inactive X chromosomes at the human androgen receptor (HUMARA) and phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) loci. A cleavage ratio (CR)  3.0 was adopted as a cut-off to discriminate between balanced and unbalanced X-chromosome inactivation. In adult women this analysis was also performed on hair bulbs. The frequency of skewed X-inactivation in polymorphonuclear (PMN) cells increased with age: CR  3.0 was found in 3/36 cord blood samples, 5/30 young women and 14/31 elderly women. Mathematical analysis of patterns found in neonates indicated that X-chromosome inactivation probably occurs when the total number of haemopoietic stem cell precursors is 14–16. The inactivation patterns found in T lymphocytes were significantly related to those observed in PMNs in both young ( P  < 0.001) and elderly women ( P  < 0.01). However, the use of T lymphocytes as a control tissue for distinguishing between skewed inactivation and clonal proliferation proved to be reliable in young females, but not in elderly women, where overestimation of the frequency of clonal myelopoiesis may appear.  相似文献   
56.
57.
OBJECTIVES: We tested the hypothesis that defective interactions between adhesion junctions and the cytoskeleton caused by the plakoglobin mutation in Naxos disease lead to remodeling of gap junctions and altered expression of the major gap junction protein, connexin43. BACKGROUND: Naxos disease, a recessive form of arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy, is associated with a high incidence of arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. Naxos disease is caused by a mutation in plakoglobin, a protein that links cell-cell adhesion molecules to the cytoskeleton. METHODS: Myocardial expression of connexin43 and other intercellular junction proteins was characterized in 4 patients with Naxos disease. Immunohistochemistry was performed in all 4 patients, and immunoblotting and electron microscopy were performed in 1 patient who died in childhood before overt arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy had developed. RESULTS: Connexin43 expression at intercellular junctions was reduced significantly in both right and left ventricles in all patients with Naxos disease. Electron microscopy revealed smaller and fewer gap junctions interconnecting ventricular myocytes. Mutant plakoglobin was expressed but failed to localize normally at intercellular junctions. Localization of N-cadherin, alpha- and beta-catenins, plakophilin-2, desmoplakin-1, and desmocollin-2 at intercalated disks appeared normal. CONCLUSIONS: Remodeling of gap junctions occurs early in Naxos disease, presumably because of abnormal linkage between mechanical junctions and the cytoskeleton. Gap junction remodeling may produce a coupling defect which, combined with the subsequent development of pathologic changes in myocardium, could contribute to a highly arrhythmogenic substrate and enhance the risk of sudden death in Naxos disease.  相似文献   
58.

Summary

Platelet count represents a useful tool in clinical practice to discriminate individuals at higher risk of bleeding. Less obvious is the role of platelet count variability within the normal range of distribution in shaping the individual's disease risk profile. Epidemiological studies have shown that platelet count in the adult general population is associated with a number of health outcomes related to hemostasis and thrombosis. However, recent studies are suggesting a possible role of this platelet index also as an independent risk factor. In this review of adult population studies, we will first focus on known genetic and non‐genetic determinants of platelet number variability. Next, we will evaluate platelet count as a marker and/or a predictor of disease risk and its interaction with other risk factors. We will then discuss the role of platelet count variability within the normal distribution range as a contribution to disease and mortality risk. The possibility of considering platelet count as a simple, inexpensive indicator of increased risk of disease and death in general populations could open new opportunities to investigate novel platelet pathophysiological roles as well as therapeutic opportunities. Future studies should also consider platelet count, not only platelet function, as a modulator of disease and mortality risk.
  相似文献   
59.

Objective

To investigate whether oldest-old age (≥85y) is an independent predictor of exclusion from stroke rehabilitation.

Design

Retrospective cohort study.

Setting

Stroke unit (SU) of a tertiary hospital.

Participants

Elderly patients (N=1055; aged 65–74y, n=230; aged 75–84y, n=432; aged ≥85y, n=393) who, between 2009 and 2012, were admitted to the SU with acute stroke and evaluated by a multiprofessional team for access to rehabilitation. The study excluded patients for whom rehabilitation was unnecessary or inappropriate.

Interventions

Not applicable.

Main Outcome Measures

Access to an early mobilization (EM) protocol during SU stay and subsequent access to postacute rehabilitation after SU discharge. Analyses were adjusted for prestroke and stroke-related characteristics.

Results

32.2% of patients were excluded from EM. Multivariable-adjusted odds ratios (ORs) of EM exclusion were 1.30 (95% confidence interval [CI], .76–2.21) for ages 75 to 84 years and 2.07 (95% CI, 1.19–3.59) for ages ≥85 years compared with ages 65 to 74 years. Of 656 patients admitted to EM and who, at SU discharge, had not yet fully recovered their prestroke functional status, 18.4% were excluded from postacute rehabilitation. For patients able to walk unassisted at SU discharge, the probability of exclusion did not change across age groups. For patients unable to walk unassisted at SU discharge, ORs of exclusion from postacute rehabilitation were 3.74 (95% CI, 1.26–11.13) for ages 75 to 84 years and 9.15 (95% CI, 3.05–27.46) for ages ≥85 years compared with ages 65 to 74 years.

Conclusions

Oldest-old age is an independent predictor of exclusion from stroke rehabilitation.  相似文献   
60.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号