neutroceptor

English

Etymology

neutro- + receptor

Noun

neutroceptor (plural neutroceptors)

  1. A sensory receptor that is stimulated by both pleasant and unpleasant stimuli.
    • 1929, The Australasian Journal of Psychology and Philosophy, page 310:
      He divides receptors into three classes— "nociceptors", such as the nerve-endings for pain and hunger, "beneceptors", such as the nerve-endings stimulated when sugar melts on the tongue, and "neutroceptors", such as the nerve-endings in the eye and ear, called " neutroceptors " because they receive more or less indiscriminately both pleasant and unpleasant messages.
    • 1973, Behaviorism, page 42:
      The “beneceptors,” “nociceptors,” and “neutroceptors” generally signalled stimuli that were, respectively, beneficial, harmful, or neutral as regards the organism or its species.

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