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transmission

n.

1. the act or process of causing something (e.g., a disease) to pass from one place or person to another. See also horizontal transmission.

2. in neuroscience, see neurotransmission.

3. the inheritance of traits through successive generations.

4. the handing down of customs and mores from generation to generation. See social transmission. See also cultural heritage. —transmissible adj. —transmit vb.

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Psychology term of the day

January 26th 2025

congenital oculomotor apraxia

congenital oculomotor apraxia

a condition, present at birth, in which a child is unable to fixate objects normally (see oculomotor apraxia). It is characterized by the absence of saccades and smooth-pursuit eye movements in the horizontal plane, but vertical eye movements are preserved: Children with this condition are often mistakenly thought to be blind. Between the ages of 4 and 6 months, they develop thrusting, horizontal head movements, sometimes blinking prominently or rubbing their eyelids when they attempt to change fixation. The cause of congenital oculomotor apraxia is unknown, but there is usually an improvement with age.