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| | INDULGENCE, EXCESS, AND RESTRAINT: PERSPECTIVES ON CONSUMMATORY BEHAVIOR IN EVERYDAY LIFE |
 | | The well-known Coolidge effect, for instance, testifies to the ability of a novel sexual stimulus to elicit sexual activity in apparently sated animals (Bermant and Davidson, 1974). |
 | | It appears that the effects of drinking on the liver, brain, and heart are essentially cumulative, and vary as a function of total consumption, whether that consumption is achieved by chronic mild drinking (not excessive by the previous standards) or by more infrequent, "excessive" bouts of drinking (Lelbach, 1974). |
 | | Effects on the lower boundary of regulation, for instance, might involve a lowering of the boundary of regulation for one substance as a consequence of the ingestion of another. |
| www.drugtext.org /library/articles/indulg.htm (6086 words) |
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