homeostasis

Psychology

(noun)

The ability of a system or living organism to adjust its internal environment to maintain a stable equilibrium, such as the ability of warm-blooded animals to maintain a constant temperature.

Related Terms

  • drive
  • catecholamine
  • emotion
  • temperament
  • arousal
  • hypothalamus
  • cerebral cortex
  • amygdala
  • hippocampus
  • neuron

(noun)

Equilibrium of the body, in which biological conditions (such as body temperature) are maintained at optimal levels.

Related Terms

  • drive
  • catecholamine
  • emotion
  • temperament
  • arousal
  • hypothalamus
  • cerebral cortex
  • amygdala
  • hippocampus
  • neuron

(noun)

The ability of a system or living organism to adjust its internal environment to maintain a state of dynamic constancy, such as the ability of warm-blooded animals to maintain a stable temperature. 

Related Terms

  • drive
  • catecholamine
  • emotion
  • temperament
  • arousal
  • hypothalamus
  • cerebral cortex
  • amygdala
  • hippocampus
  • neuron
Physiology

(noun)

The ability of a system or living organism to adjust its internal environment to maintain a stable equilibrium, such as the ability of warm-blooded animals to maintain a constant internal temperature despite changes in outdoor temperature.

Related Terms

  • blood sugar regulation
  • Living Systems
  • physiology
  • endocrine system
  • endocrine
  • negative feedback
  • euvolemia
  • diabetes
  • sodium
  • hormone
  • vasoconstriction
  • arrector pili
  • positive feedback
  • Evaporation
  • glomerulus
  • electrolyte

(noun)

The ability of a system or living organism to adjust its internal environment to maintain a stable equilibrium, such as the ability of warm-blooded animals to maintain a constant body temperature.

Related Terms

  • blood sugar regulation
  • Living Systems
  • physiology
  • endocrine system
  • endocrine
  • negative feedback
  • euvolemia
  • diabetes
  • sodium
  • hormone
  • vasoconstriction
  • arrector pili
  • positive feedback
  • Evaporation
  • glomerulus
  • electrolyte
Biology

(noun)

the ability of a system or living organism to adjust its internal environment to maintain a stable equilibrium

Related Terms

  • Organism
  • cell,
  • homeostas
  • multicellular
  • Single-celled organism
  • organism
  • cell
  • phototaxis
  • gene
  • effector
  • hydraulic
  • regulation
  • stimuli
  • chemotaxis
  • coagulation

Examples of homeostasis in the following topics:

  • Bone and Calcium Homeostasis

    • Calcium metabolism or calcium homeostasis is the mechanism by which the body maintains adequate calcium levels.
    • Calcium metabolism or calcium homeostasis is the mechanism by which the body maintains adequate calcium levels.
  • Homeostatic Process

    • The varied processes by which the body regulates its internal environment are collectively referred to as homeostasis.
    • Homeostasis, in a general sense, refers to stability, balance, or equilibrium.
    • This ongoing process continually works to restore and maintain homeostasis.
    • The ultimate goal of homeostasis is the maintenance of equilibrium around the set point.
    • An example of how homeostasis is achieved by controlling blood sugar levels after a meal.
  • Disease as Homeostatic Imbalance

    • While disease is often a result of infection or injury, most diseases involve the disruption of normal homeostasis.
    • This lack of homeostasis increases the risk for illness and is responsible for the physical changes associated with aging.
    • In these cases, medical intervention is necessary to restore homeostasis and prevent permanent organ damage.
    • Negative feedback between insulin and glucagon levels controls blood sugar homeostasis.
    • Homeostasis may become imbalanced if the pancreas is overly stressed, making it unable to balance glucose metabolism.
  • Control of Homeostasis

    • Homeostasis is maintained by negative feedback loops within the organism.
    • Homeostasis is controlled by the nervous and endocrine systems in mammals.
    • Negative feedback loops are the predominant mechanism used in homeostasis.
    • Homeostasis is performed so the body can maintain its internal set point.
    • Discuss the ways in which the body maintains homeostasis and provide examples of each mechanism
  • Homeostatic Control

    • Homeostasis is maintained by the body's responses to adverse stimuli, ensuring maintenance of an optimal physiological environment.
    • Homeostasis regulates an organism's internal environment and maintains a stable, constant condition of properties like temperature and pH.
    • Homeostasis can be influenced by either internal or external conditions and is maintained by many different mechanisms.
    • The integrating center or control center receives information from the sensors and initiates the response to maintain homeostasis.
    • Positive feedback is a mechanism in which an output is enhanced in order to maintain homeostasis.
  • Interactions of Hormones at Target Cells

    • Maintaining homeostasis often requires conditions to be limited to a narrow range.
    • When conditions exceed the upper limit of homeostasis, a specific action—usually the production of a hormone—is triggered.
    • If conditions exceed the lower limits of homeostasis, a different action, usually the production of a second hormone, is triggered.
    • The two glands most responsible for homeostasis are the thyroid and the parathyroid.
    • Glucagon is a pancreatic peptide hormone that, as a counter-regulatory hormone for insulin, stimulates glucose release by the liver and maintains glucose homeostasis.
  • Overview of the Pituitary Gland

    • The pituitary gland is connected to the hypothalamus and secretes nine hormones that regulate body homeostasis.
    • The pituitary gland secretes hormones that regulate homeostasis.
  • Drive-Reduction Theory of Motivation

    • According to drive-reduction theory, humans are motivated to satisfy physiological needs in order to maintain homeostasis.
    • An early theory of motivation proposed that the maintenance of homeostasis is particularly important in directing behavior.
    • Homeostasis is the tendency to maintain a balance, or optimal level, within a biological system.
    • The purpose of biological drives is to correct disturbances of homeostasis.
    • According to this theory, deviations from homeostasis create physiological needs.
  • Properties of Life

    • Key characteristics or functions of living beings are order, stimuli, reproduction, growth/development, regulation, homeostasis, and energy.
    • All living organisms share several key characteristics or functions: order, sensitivity or response to the environment, reproduction, growth and development, regulation, homeostasis, and energy processing.
    • Organisms are able to maintain internal conditions within a narrow range almost constantly, despite environmental changes, through homeostasis (literally, "steady state")—the ability of an organism to maintain constant internal conditions.
    • Adaptations help organisms survive in their ecological niches, and adaptive traits may be structural, behavioral, or physiological; as such, adaptations frequently involve other properties of organisms such as homeostasis, reproduction, and growth and development.
  • Overview of the Urinary System

    • The urinary system maintains blood homeostasis by filtering out excess fluid and other substances from the bloodstream and secreting waste.
    • Regulation of acid-base homeostasis and blood pH, a function shared with the respiratory system.
    • The primary function of the kidneys is to maintain a stable internal environment (homeostasis) for optimal cell and tissue metabolism.
    • Many hormones involved in homeostasis will alter the permeability of these tubules to change the amount of water that is retained by the body.
    • Besides ADH secretion, the renin-angiotensin feedback system is critically important to maintain blood volume and blood pressure homeostasis.
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