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Primer on the Autonomic Nervous System, Fourth Edition provides a
concise and accessible overview of autonomic neuroscience for
students, scientists, and clinicians. The book's 142 chapters draw
on the expertise of more than 215 basic scientists and clinicians
who discuss key information on how the autonomic nervous system
controls the body, particularly in response to stress. This new
edition also focuses on the translational crossover between basic
and clinical research. In addition to comprehensively covering all
aspects of autonomic physiology and pathology, topics such as
psychopharmacology decoding and modulating nerve function are also
explored.
The Critical Heritage series gathers together a large body of
critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume
presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling
students and researchers to read for themselves, for example,
comments on early performances of Shakespeare's plays, or reactions
to the first publication of Jane Austen's novels. The selected
sources range from important essays in the history of criticism to
journalism and contemporary opinion, and documentary material such
as letters and diaries. Significant pieces of criticism from later
periods are also included, in order to demonstrate the fluctuations
in an author's reputation. Each volume contains an introduction to
the writer's published works, a selected bibliography, and an index
of works, authors and subjects. The Critical Heritage series is
available as a set of 67 volumes, as mini-sets selected by period
(in slipcase boxes) or as individual volumes.
The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical
sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents
contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling the student or
researcher to read the material themselves.
Contents: Introduction. Note on the text. Lyrics: She walks in Beauty, The Destruction of Sennacherib, Sonnet on Chillon, Prometheus, Epistle to Augusta, Darkness, Verses sent in a letter from Venice to Thomas Moore, So We'll Go No More A-Roving, Stanzas, On This Day I Complete My Thirty-Sixth Year, Childe Harold's Pilgrimage - Canto 3, Beppo, Mazeppa, Don Juan - Cantos 1-2, The Vision of Judgment. Prose: Speeches: 1) Framework Bill 2) Roman Catholic Emancipation, Alpine Journal 1816, Byron's Views on Don Juan, and on Poets. Critical Commentary. Notes. Bibliography.
Donald Low's collection contains Byron's most subversive, spirited
and playful poetry as well as his outspoken prose. With helpful and
informative annotation and a full bibliography this is an essential
study aid for students.
Student-led peer review can be a powerful learning experience for
both giver and receiver, developing evaluative judgment, critical
thinking, and collaborative skills that are highly transferable
across disciplines and professions. Its success depends on
purposeful planning and scaffolding to promote student ownership of
the process. With intentional and consistent implementation, peer
review can engage students in course content and promote deep
learning, while also increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of
faculty assessment. Based on the authors' extensive experience and
research, this book provides a practical introduction to the key
principles, steps, and strategies to implement student peer review
- sometimes referred to as "peer critique" or "workshopping." It
addresses common challenges that faculty and students encounter.
The authors offer an easy-to-follow and rigorously tested
three-part protocol to use before, during, and after a peer review
session, and advice on adapting each step to individual courses.
The process is applicable across all disciplines, content types,
and modalities, face-to-face and online, synchronous and
asynchronous. Instructors can guide students in peer review in one
course, across two or more courses that are team-taught, or across
programs or curriculums. When instructors, students, and university
stakeholders create a culture of peer review, it enhances learning
benefits for students and allows faculty to share pedagogical
resources. This book is intended as a practical guide for
instructors to use in their classrooms but can equally be used in
the context of faculty learning communities, departmental
workshops, or in a faculty development context to promote
consistent and wide usage on campus. Student peer review is a
high-impact pedagogy that's easily implemented, inculcates lifelong
learning skills in students, and relieves the assessment burden on
faculty as students collaborate to improve their own work and
develop into self-regulated learners.
Student-led peer review can be a powerful learning experience for
both giver and receiver, developing evaluative judgment, critical
thinking, and collaborative skills that are highly transferable
across disciplines and professions. Its success depends on
purposeful planning and scaffolding to promote student ownership of
the process. With intentional and consistent implementation, peer
review can engage students in course content and promote deep
learning, while also increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of
faculty assessment. Based on the authors' extensive experience and
research, this book provides a practical introduction to the key
principles, steps, and strategies to implement student peer review
- sometimes referred to as "peer critique" or "workshopping." It
addresses common challenges that faculty and students encounter.
The authors offer an easy-to-follow and rigorously tested
three-part protocol to use before, during, and after a peer review
session, and advice on adapting each step to individual courses.
The process is applicable across all disciplines, content types,
and modalities, face-to-face and online, synchronous and
asynchronous. Instructors can guide students in peer review in one
course, across two or more courses that are team-taught, or across
programs or curriculums. When instructors, students, and university
stakeholders create a culture of peer review, it enhances learning
benefits for students and allows faculty to share pedagogical
resources. This book is intended as a practical guide for
instructors to use in their classrooms but can equally be used in
the context of faculty learning communities, departmental
workshops, or in a faculty development context to promote
consistent and wide usage on campus. Student peer review is a
high-impact pedagogy that's easily implemented, inculcates lifelong
learning skills in students, and relieves the assessment burden on
faculty as students collaborate to improve their own work and
develop into self-regulated learners.
Toward the end of the nineteenth century, as young women began
entering college in greater numbers than ever before, physicians
and social critics charged that campus life posed grave hazards to
the female constitution and women's reproductive health. "A girl
could study and learn," Dr. Edward Clarke warned in his widely read
1873 book Sex in Education, "but she could not do all this and
retain uninjured health, and a future secure from neuralgia,
uterine disease, hysteria, and other derangements of the nervous
system." For half a century, ideas such as Dr. Clarke's framed the
debate over a woman's place in higher education almost exclusively
in terms of her body and her health.
For historian Margaret A. Lowe, this obsession offers one of the
clearest expressions of the social and cultural meanings given to
the female body between 1875 and 1930. At the same time, the
"college girl" was a novelty that tested new ideas about feminine
beauty, sexuality, and athleticism. In Looking Good, Lowe examines
the ways in which college women at three quite different
institutions -- Cornell University, Smith College, and Spelman
College -- regarded their own bodies in this period. Contrasting
white and black students, single-sex and coeducational schools,
secular and religious environments, and Northern and Southern
attitudes, Lowe draws on student diaries, letters, and
publications; institutional records; and accounts in the popular
press to examine the process by which new, twentieth-century ideals
of the female body took hold in America.
This introduction to the New Testament orients readers to each
book's theology, key themes, and overall message from a Reformed,
covenantal, and redemptive-historical perspective-equipping readers
to study and teach the New Testament with clarity.
The Primer on the Autonomic Nervous System presents, in a readable
and accessible format, key information about how the autonomic
nervous system controls the body, particularly in response to
stress. It represents the largest collection of world-wide
autonomic nervous system authorities ever assembled in one book. It
is especially suitable for students, scientists and physicians
seeking key information about all aspects of autonomic physiology
and pathology in one convenient source. Providing up-to-date
knowledge about basic and clinical autonomic neuroscience in a
format designed to make learning easy and fun, this book is a
must-have for any neuroscientist s bookshelf
* Greatly amplified and updated from previous edition including the
latest developments in the field of autonomic cardiovascular
regulation and neuroscience
* Provides key information about all aspects of autonomic
physiology and pathology
* Discusses stress and how its effects on the body are
mediated
* Compiles contributions by over 140 experts on the autonomic
nervous system"
ABC of Transfer and Retrieval Medicine provides the key information
required to help health care professionals involved in the movement
of critically ill patients to do so safely, correctly and with
confidence. Beginning with the practical and clinical
considerations to be taken into account during patient transfer and
an overview of transfer equipment, it then addresses
pharmacological aspects of patient transfer, the roles and
responsibilities of the transfer team, and the requirements of
neonatal, paediatric and specialist transfers. Mapped against the
syllabus for the Diploma of Retrieval and Transfer Medicine (Royal
College of Surgeons of Edinburgh), it has been developed as a core
resource for the diploma whilst providing an invaluable resource
for any healthcare professional involved in the transfer of
critically ill patients including anaesthetists, intensivists,
nurses from ICU/ED and paramedics. It also includes frameworks for
radiology and arterial blood gas interpretation, guidance on
patient triage, transfer checklists and equipment checklists, and a
summary of the relevant national guidelines. From a
multidisciplinary international author team, this new addition to
the ABC series is a useful resource for all health care
professionals involved in the transfer of patients. It is relevant
to anaesthetists, intensivists, paramedics, critical care and
emergency department nursing staff who are required to take part in
intra and inter hospital transfers.
Clinical case studies have long been recognized as a useful adjunct
to problem-based learning and continuing professional development.
They emphasize the need for clinical reasoning, integrative
thinking, problem-solving, communication, teamwork and
self-directed learning - all desirable generic skills for health
care professionals. This book is based on the unique autonomic
program at the Mayo Clinic, comprising an autonomic laboratory that
studies over 4000 patients annually. The authors teach using actual
patient material and laboratory recordings to clarify complex
autonomic syndromes. Important and common disorders like neurogenic
orthostatic hypotension and distal small fiber neuropathy are
described in some detail. There are also fascinating uncommon
autonomic syndromes described succinctly and clearly. Emphasis is
given to clarifying what is real and highlighting those changes
that mimic autonomic dysfunction. Providing a broad breadth of
coverage with many clinical examples, the book will be of interest
to residents and non-specialist practitioners in neurology and
cardiology.
The OECD Convention on Bribery established an international
standard for compliance with anti-corruption rules, and has
subsequently been adopted by the thirty-four OECD members and six
non-member countries. As a result of the Convention and national
implementation laws, companies and managers now risk tough
sanctions if they are caught bribing foreign officials. The UK
Bribery Act 2010 is only one example of this development. The
second edition of this, the only commentary on the Convention,
provides law practitioners, company lawyers and academic
researchers with comprehensive guidance on the OECD standards. It
includes case examples as well as the FCPA Resource Guide 2012 and
the 2009 OECD Recommendation for Further Combating Bribery of
Foreign Public Officials with Annexes I and II.
The OECD Convention is the first major international treaty
specifically to address 'supply-side bribery' by sanctioning the
briber. The OECD Convention establishes an international standard
for compliance with anti-corruption rules by 36 countries,
including the 30 OECD members and six non-member countries, with
the leading OECD exporting countries receiving particular
attention. This book is an article-by-article commentary which
gives particular attention to the results of the OECD monitoring
process as applied to state implementation. Companies in particular
are at ever greater risk of legal and 'reputational' damage
resulting from failure to comply with the anti-corruption standards
set inter alia, by the OECD Convention. This book provides them
with comprehensive guidance on the OECD standards. The commentary
also constitutes a significant work of comparative criminal law. It
is written and edited by persons who include experts involved in
development of the Convention standards as well as academics and
legal practitioners.
This is an EXACT reproduction of a book published before 1923. This
IS NOT an OCR'd book with strange characters, introduced
typographical errors, and jumbled words. This book may have
occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor
pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original
artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe
this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections,
have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing
commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We
appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the
preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
The use of molecular markers has revolutionized ecological genetics
in the last 20 years. The fundamental problem facing new
researchers is which of the many markers should be used and how the
resulting data should then be analyzed. Until now, these guidelines
have been hidden away in specialist journals. "Ecological Genetics"
addresses this fundamental problem in clear, accessible language,
suitable for upper-level undergraduates through to research-level
professionals.
The major topics in "Ecological Genetics" are treated within
separate chapters, including:
genetic diversity of populations and species
gene flow
phylogeography, and
speciationWithin each chapter the potentially suitable molecular
markers are described and the resulting data from each type of
marker are discussed, including the underlying concepts of the
various modes of analysis. These are illustrated with examples from
both the plant and animal kingdoms.
Researchers embarking on molecular approaches to ecological
genetics (for instance, final-year undergraduates and new
postgraduates) will find the book essential, and more experienced
researchers will also find it of interest.
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