Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun psychology subjective experience of exertion or effort involved in performing an activity

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun the quality of requiring deliberate effort

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Obama seems to have an instinct for a fundamental rule of political theater: the inverse relationship between the effortfulness of stagecraft and the perception of substantive policy.

    Archive 2009-01-01 Matthew Guerrieri 2009

  • Obama seems to have an instinct for a fundamental rule of political theater: the inverse relationship between the effortfulness of stagecraft and the perception of substantive policy.

    Synchronicity Matthew Guerrieri 2009

  • Overall, these data suggest that the perceived effortfulness of visually presented actions affects the autonomic response by increasing the heart and respiratory rates as a function of the perceived muscular effort.

    PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles 2009

  • To catch this emergence of tension, try to start paying attention to your breathing several times trying to tune in to this transition from effortlessness to effortfulness.

    The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com 2009

  • What I mean by this is the effortfulness that stems from supervision, the sudden burden of responsibility that the mind feels as it tunes in to the workings of its own body.

    The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com 2009

  • In order to locate the possible neural source of the motor content and effortfulness effect for implied motion perception, two separate swLORETA source reconstructions were performed on the difference waves obtained by subtracting the ERPs to static from those elicited by dynamic pictures in two adjacent time windows, 380-430 and 430-480 ms.

    PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles 2009

  • Now, by effortfulness I do not mean "labored breath" or any "shortness of breath."

    The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com 2009

  • [14] has shown an interesting correlation between greater effortfulness of observed actions (which included weight-lifting, running, walking at increasing weight or speed) and increased respiration rate.

    PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles 2009

  • [14] - [16], [19], suggesting an interesting correlation in perfectly still observers between greater effortfulness of observed actions and increased respiration and heart rates.

    PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles 2009

  • [14] has shown an interesting correlation between greater effortfulness of observed actions (which included weight-lifting, running, walking at increasing weight or speed) and increased respiration rate.

    PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles Alice Mado Proverbio et al. 2009

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