exogenous

എൻസോഗമസ്സ്
definition
adjective
External or exogenous factors were a threat to the monetary stability achieved in 1999.
of, relating to, or developing from external factors.
example
It can be loosely defined as a hybrid of 'exogenous' and indigenous languages.
They are supposed to move like a pendulum: they may be dislocated by external forces, so-called 'exogenous' shocks, but they will seek to return to the equilibrium position.
Once again, it is endogenous, not 'exogenous' factors that make or break a relationship.
This theory stipulates that people are motivated by calculations of abstract utility in a cost-benefit framework, informed by 'exogenous' tastes and preferences.
Like addiction, pornography is an ostensibly participatory process which commensurates the organism to 'exogenous' - and arbitrary - stimuli.
Before 1815, depressions were caused primarily by 'exogenous' shocks, that is, by forces external to the economy such as wars, widespread crop failures, or other disasters.
Citizens found themselves squeezed to suffocation in one way or another between domestic repression and 'exogenous' vilification.
‘These could be treated as 'exogenous' but this might be misleading’.
Little is known about the relative importance of glycogen versus 'exogenous' glucose for contractility of cardiac tissue in trout.
This is an important claim because it challenges conventional wisdom that the oil shocks were driven by 'exogenous' political events in the Middle East.
Nesting female scoters rely on nutrient reserves stored before nesting for completion of incubation, but rely on 'exogenous' nutrients for egg formation.
However, the building of excess capacity is not inevitable and is not driven by 'exogenous' factors, such as external control of markets.
While external climatic factors are the cause of 'exogenous' diseases such as fevers, colds and flus, Ama is the root of more endogenous diseases such as arthritis, heart disease and cancer.
The only things that have changed since the start of the peace process have been, as it were, 'exogenous' variables.
As predicted, many get there because of so-called 'exogenous' shocks: a major media announcement, a celebrity endorsement, a dignitary's death.
Doctors generally avoid prescribing hormone replacement therapy to postmenopausal women with systemic lupus erythematosus because of a widespread belief that 'exogenous' oestrogens make the disease worse.
External or 'exogenous' factors were a threat to the monetary stability achieved in 1999.
All patients underwent toxicological analysis to exclude the presence of alcohol and other 'exogenous' agents.
Furthermore, laboratory studies of the uptake of 'exogenous' chromosomal DNA in bacteria have also demonstrated that recombination can mediate the process of adaptive evolution.
The latter may be formed endogenously from cellular precursors, but they may also originate from 'exogenous' sources such as diet, tobacco smoke or environmental pollution.
Rational choice theory views actors as rational insofar as they act instrumentally, are utility maximizers, possess stable and 'exogenous' preferences, and are self-interested.
In modern times, all significant bouts of inflation have been generated by a war or 'exogenous' oil price shocks, not by a peacetime economy that expanded beyond its sustainable limits.
He said that while there are a few indigenous reasons like genes, heredity etc for obesity, there are more 'exogenous' reasons for the problem.
The linkages perspective considers both the 'exogenous' pressures toward change and the internal dynamic of local cultures.
Two of the papers in this volume refocus syncretism away from issues of authenticity and inauthenticity to argue for an integration and synchronisation of indigenous and 'exogenous' elements.
What we don't find is any sense in which religion is an 'exogenous' variable, an autonomous force that floats above the social landscape and mysteriously bends the minds of men to its will.
A patient history should include attention to 'exogenous' agents that may cause or further aggravate symptoms.
On many issues, Latin Americans continue to be highly vulnerable to 'exogenous' events, trends and decisions.
Also, the country remains vulnerable to 'exogenous' shocks.
Other tastes, not necessarily 'exogenous' , often superceded the desire for financial gain.
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