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Cerebral preconditioning is a phenomenon wherein a mild insult or
stress induces cellular and tissue adaptation or tolerance to a
later, severe injury, therefore reflecting the efficacy of
endogenous mechanisms of cerebrovascular protection. Initially
identified for rapid cardiac protection, preconditioning has
expanded to all aspects of CNS protection from ischemia, trauma and
potentially neurodegeneration. Many different stimuli or stressors
have been identified as preconditioning agents, suggesting a
downstream convergence of mechanisms and underscoring the potential
for translational application of preconditioning in the clinic.
Moreover, the fundamental mechanisms responsible for
preconditioning-induced tolerance will help in the design novel
pharmacological approaches for neuroprotection. While stroke and
many other brain injuries are not predictable, in some populations
(e.g., metabolic syndrome, patients undergoing carotid
endarterectomy, aneurysm clipping, or with recent TIAs) the risk
for stroke is identifiable and significant, and preconditioning may
represent a useful strategy for neuroprotection. For unpredictable
injuries, post-conditioning the brain - or inducing endogenous
protective mechanisms after the initial injury - can also abrogate
the extent of injury. Finally, remote pre- and post-conditioning
methods have been developed in animals, and are now being tested in
clinical trials, wherein a brief, noninjurious stress to a
noncerebral tissue (i.e., skeletal muscle) can provide protection
to the CNS and thereby allows clinicians the opportunity to
circumvent concerns regarding the direct preconditioning of
neurological tissues.
This book will be useful to anyone who wants to understand the use
of quantum theory for the description of physical processes. It is
a graduate level text, ideal for independent study, and includes
numerous figures, exercises, bibliographical references, and even
some computer programs. The first chapters introduce formal tools:
the mathematics are precise, but not excessively abstract. The
physical interpretation too is rigorous. It makes no use of the
uncertainty principle of other ill-defined notions. The central
part of the book is devoted to Bell's theorem and to the
Kochen-Specker theorem. It is here that quantum phenomena depart
most radically from classical physics. There has recently been
considerable progress on these issues, and the latest developments
have been included. The final chapters discuss further topics of
current research: spacetime symmetries, quantum thermodynamics and
information theory, semiclassical methods, irreversibility, quantum
chaos, and especially the measuring process. In particular, it is
shown how modern techniques allow the extraction of more
information from a physical system than traditional measurement
methods. For physicists, mathematicians and philosophers of science
with an interest in the applications and foundations of quantum
theory. The volume is suitable as a supplementary graduate
textbook.
This book asks why crime and violence persist in Latin America at
extreme levels and why the states have not been able to more
effectively solve this problem that dominates the lives of many
millions of Latin Americans. Informed by diverse disciplinary
backgrounds, the book brings together a team of regional experts to
discuss research-based explanations on some of Latin America's most
pressing criminal and violent issues distressing the rule of law.
First, it examines old and new forms of observing crime upon
perpetrators and victimized communities. Second, it explores the
geographies of urban and rural violence and the entangled politics
following organized criminality. Third, it questions how the
transfer of policy knowledge and expertise reshapes local security
governance, and, more importantly, critically examines the problems
in implementing foreign models and paradigms in the Latin American
context. Finally, it exposes the everchanging scenario of
policy-making and prosecuting crime and homicide. Crime, Violence,
and Justice in Latin America provides new themes and novel trends
on what crime and violence mean in the eyes of observers,
perpetrators, policymakers, governmental officials, and victims. It
is an important acquisition for policy makers and academics alike.
This book provides a general overview of several concepts of
synchronization and brings together related approaches to secure
communication in chaotic systems. This is achieved using a
combination of analytic, algebraic, geometrical and asymptotical
methods to tackle the dynamical feedback stabilization problem. In
particular, differential-geometric and algebraic differential
concepts reveal important structural properties of chaotic systems
and serve as guide for the construction of design procedures for a
wide variety of chaotic systems. The basic differential algebraic
and geometric concepts are presented in the first few chapters in a
novel way as design tools, together with selected experimental
studies demonstrating their importance. The subsequent chapters
treat recent applications. Written for graduate students in applied
physical sciences, systems engineers, and applied mathematicians
interested in synchronization of chaotic systems and in secure
communications, this self-contained text requires only basic
knowledge of integer ordinary and fractional ordinary differential
equations. Design applications are illustrated with the help of
several physical models of practical interest.
This edited book addresses the issues of gun trafficking and gun
violence across different regions of the world, including the
Americas, Africa, Asia, Europe and Oceania. It seeks to identify
global key trends on gun trafficking and related violence and
discuss different enforcement measures. Each chapter is written by
teams of distinguished academics and/or experienced practitioners
to include practitioner insights and policy proposals on issues
related to gun violence and gun trafficking. Chapters offer an
overview of violence and recent gun control debates in the regions,
enumerate challenges, provide lessons learnt, and recommend policy
solutions. An overview of the global small arms trade is provided
at the beginning alongside a comparative analysis of common
challenges and significant differences across the regions. This
book speaks to those in Criminology, International Relations,
Public Policy, International Security, Public health and Law, and
to civil society organizations, think tanks, research centers,
policy analysts and policy makers involved in gun control debates.
This anthology addresses the role of postsecondary institutional
structures and policy in shaping the tenure-track process for
Chicana and Latina faculty in higher education. Each chapter offers
first-person narratives of survival in the academy employing
critical theoretical contributions and qualitative empirical
research. Major topics included are the importance of early
socialization, intergenerational mentorship, culturally relevant
faculty programming, and institutional challenges and support
structures. The aim of this volume is to highlight practical and
policy implications and interventions for scholars, academics, and
institutions to facilitate tenure and promotion for women faculty
of color.
Defining organs at risk is a crucial task for radiation oncologists
when aiming to optimize the benefit of radiation therapy, with
delivery of the maximum dose to the tumor volume while sparing
healthy tissues. This book will prove an invaluable guide to the
delineation of organs at risk of toxicity in patients undergoing
radiotherapy. The first and second sections address the anatomy of
organs at risk, discuss the pathophysiology of radiation-induced
damage, and present dose constraints and methods for target volume
delineation. The third section is devoted to the radiological
anatomy of organs at risk as seen on typical radiotherapy planning
CT scans, with a view to assisting the radiation oncologist to
recognize and delineate these organs for each anatomical region -
head and neck, mediastinum, abdomen, and pelvis. The book is
intended both for young radiation oncologists still in training and
for their senior colleagues wishing to reduce intra-institutional
variations in practice and thereby to standardize the definition of
clinical target volumes.
There is a great deal more to Cubas place on the global stage than
its contentious relationship with the United States. Taking a
refreshing look at Cuban international relations, contributors to
this volume from both inside and outside the island explore the
myriad ways in which it has not only maintained but often increased
its reach and influence. In Latin America, Europe, Africa, and
Asia, Cuba has assumed a geopolitical role of unlikely prominence.
Even in the face of the ongoing U. S. embargo, Cubans have seen
improvement in the quality of their lives. Shedding new light on
Cuban diplomacy with communist China as well as with Western
governments such as Great Britain and Canada, these essays reveal
how the promotion of increased economic and political cooperation
between Cuba and Venezuela served as a catalyst for the Petrocaribe
group. Links established with countries in the Caribbean and
Central America have increased tourism, medical diplomacy, and food
sovereignty across the region. Cuban transnationalism has also
succeeded in creating people-to-people contacts involving those who
have remained on the island and members of the Cuban diaspora.
While the specifics of Cubas international relations are likely to
change as new leaders take over, the role of Cubans working to
assert their sovereignty has undoubtedly, as this volume
demonstrates, impacted every corner of the globe. Cubas domestic
and political successes may even serve as models for other
developing countries.
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Formal Techniques for Distributed Objects, Components, and Systems - 39th IFIP WG 6.1 International Conference, FORTE 2019, Held as Part of the 14th International Federated Conference on Distributed Computing Techniques, DisCoTec 2019, Kongens Lyngby, Denmark, June 17-21, 2019, Proceedings (Paperback, 1st ed. 2019)
Jorge A. Perez, Nobuko Yoshida
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R1,753
Discovery Miles 17 530
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This book constitutes the proceedings of the 39th IFIP WG 6.1
International Conference on Formal Techniques for Distributed
Objects, Components, and Systems, FORTE 2019, held in Copenhagen,
Denmark, in June 2019, as part of the 14th International Federated
Conference on Distributed Computing Techniques, DisCoTec 2019. The
15 full and 3 short papers presented were carefully reviewed and
selected from 42 submissions. The conference is dedicated to
fundamental research on theory, models, tools, and applications for
distributed systems.
Defining organs at risk is a crucial task for radiation oncologists
when aiming to optimize the benefit of radiation therapy, with
delivery of the maximum dose to the tumor volume while sparing
healthy tissues. This book will prove an invaluable guide to the
delineation of organs at risk of toxicity in patients undergoing
radiotherapy. The first and second sections address the anatomy of
organs at risk, discuss the pathophysiology of radiation-induced
damage, and present dose constraints and methods for target volume
delineation. The third section is devoted to the radiological
anatomy of organs at risk as seen on typical radiotherapy planning
CT scans, with a view to assisting the radiation oncologist to
recognize and delineate these organs for each anatomical region –
head and neck, mediastinum, abdomen, and pelvis. The book is
intended both for young radiation oncologists still in training and
for their senior colleagues wishing to reduce intra-institutional
variations in practice and thereby to standardize the definition of
clinical target volumes. ​
This book, first published in 1987, looks at the processes and
spread of social innovation: the mechanisms of this innovation are
rooted in the conflict that minorities are capable of creating in
others and introducing into the social system. These innovations
give rise to rejection, discrimination and denial of the minority
group. However, minority ideas take root and gradually new norms
replace the old ones. Despite the denial, therefore, the marginal
standpoint of minority groups can have an impact on the belief
systems and behaviour patterns of other individuals. This book
proposes a psychosociological explanation of these individual and
collective phenomena by articulating the underlying identification
games and cognitive activities. It throws fresh light not only on
minority influence, but also on major themes of social psychology,
especially theories of intergroup conflict, persuasion and attitude
change. Based upon a series of experiments which have been
developed and refined for the 1991 English edition, this is a
rigourous and valuable contribution to the study of minority
influence on social processes.
Organisms are constantly being bombarded by stimuli in their envi
ronment (and also by internal stimuli), and a common way of
responding is by movement. This is an aspect of irritability, or
excitability, or behaviour. Response to stimuli by movement is
found in all organisms: it represents one of the universalities of
biology. Yet at the molecular level it is one of the least
understood of biological phenomena. Micro-organisms are no
exception. If motile, they respond to stimuli by active movement
(taxis); if sessile, they respond by growth movements (tropisms).
Responses by movement are known among micro-organisms to such
stimuli as chemicals, electric current, gravity, light,
temperature, touch, and vibrations. The behaviour of
micro-organisms is an exciting subject, first of all for its own
sake, but in addition because it may reveal facts and concepts that
are applicable to understanding behaviour in more complicated
organisms (even us) and because it may, help to understand the
movement of cells and tissues during differentiation and
development of higher plants and animals.
Cartagena of Indias, Columbia, September 13-19, 1998
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Differential Geometrical Methods in Mathematical Physics - Proceedings of the Conference Held at Aix-en-Provence, September 3-7, 1979 and Salamanca, September 10-14, 1979 (English, French, Paperback, 1980 ed.)
P.L. Garcia, A. Perez-Rendon, Jean-Marie Souriau
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R1,556
Discovery Miles 15 560
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
This anthology addresses the role of postsecondary institutional
structures and policy in shaping the tenure-track process for
Chicana and Latina faculty in higher education. Each chapter offers
first-person narratives of survival in the academy employing
critical theoretical contributions and qualitative empirical
research. Major topics included are the importance of early
socialization, intergenerational mentorship, culturally relevant
faculty programming, and institutional challenges and support
structures. The aim of this volume is to highlight practical and
policy implications and interventions for scholars, academics, and
institutions to facilitate tenure and promotion for women faculty
of color.
This edited book addresses the issues of gun trafficking and gun
violence across different regions of the world, including the
Americas, Africa, Asia, Europe and Oceania. It seeks to identify
global key trends on gun trafficking and related violence and
discuss different enforcement measures. Each chapter is written by
teams of distinguished academics and/or experienced practitioners
to include practitioner insights and policy proposals on issues
related to gun violence and gun trafficking. Chapters offer an
overview of violence and recent gun control debates in the regions,
enumerate challenges, provide lessons learnt, and recommend policy
solutions. An overview of the global small arms trade is provided
at the beginning alongside a comparative analysis of common
challenges and significant differences across the regions. This
book speaks to those in Criminology, International Relations,
Public Policy, International Security, Public health and Law, and
to civil society organizations, think tanks, research centers,
policy analysts and policy makers involved in gun control debates.
Updated with details on the newest therapies and sporting a new
full-color design, this latest edition of Radiation Oncology:
Management Decisions continues to offer comprehensive guidance for
residents as well as radiation oncologists already in professional
practice. You'll discover the latest treatment plans for numerous
cancer sites and tumor types, including the mouth and sinus,
gastrointestinal areas, lungs, bones, and blood. Concise,
easy-to-read material you can use in a clinical setting immediately
with patients! Combines comprehensive overviews of basic concepts
with the latest radiologic treatment regimens for a wide variety of
tumor types and cancer sites. Now in full color! Bursting with
hundreds of illustrations, figures, and images to illuminate
visually important and state-of-the-art techniques. Heavily
bulleted content format and to-the-point writing style makes
content easy to digest and use with patients quickly. Chapters that
address tumor- or site-specific treatments cover screening,
assessment, staging, therapeutic developments, and other key
information. Features an up-to-date list of commonly prescribed
drugs-streamlined for easier reading-and coverage of the latest
pain management and palliative treatments. Enhance Your eBook
Reading Experience Read directly on your preferred device(s), such
as computer, tablet, or smartphone. Easily convert to audiobook,
powering your content with natural language text-to-speech.
This well-received book, now in its fifth edition, is unique in
providing a detailed examination of the technological basis of
radiation therapy. Another unique feature is that the chapters are
jointly written by North American and European authors. This
considerably broadens the book's contents and increases its
applicability in daily practice throughout the world. The book is
divided into two sections. The first section covers basic concepts
in treatment planning and explains the various approaches to
radiation therapy, such as intensity-modulated radiation therapy,
tomotherapy, stereotactic radiotherapy, and high and low dose rate
brachytherapy. The second discusses in depth the practical clinical
applications of the different radiation therapy techniques in a
wide range of cancer sites. All chapters have been written by
leaders in the field. This book will serve to instruct and acquaint
teachers, students, and practitioners with the basic technological
factors and approaches in radiation therapy.
Cerebral preconditioning is a phenomenon wherein a mild insult or
stress induces cellular and tissue adaptation or tolerance to a
later, severe injury, therefore reflecting the efficacy of
endogenous mechanisms of cerebrovascular protection. Initially
identified for rapid cardiac protection, preconditioning has
expanded to all aspects of CNS protection from ischemia, trauma and
potentially neurodegeneration. Many different stimuli or stressors
have been identified as preconditioning agents, suggesting a
downstream convergence of mechanisms and underscoring the potential
for translational application of preconditioning in the clinic.
Moreover, the fundamental mechanisms responsible for
preconditioning-induced tolerance will help in the design novel
pharmacological approaches for neuroprotection. While stroke and
many other brain injuries are not predictable, in some populations
(e.g., metabolic syndrome, patients undergoing carotid
endarterectomy, aneurysm clipping, or with recent TIAs) the risk
for stroke is identifiable and significant, and preconditioning may
represent a useful strategy for neuroprotection. For unpredictable
injuries, post-conditioning the brain - or inducing endogenous
protective mechanisms after the initial injury - can also abrogate
the extent of injury. Finally, remote pre- and post-conditioning
methods have been developed in animals, and are now being tested in
clinical trials, wherein a brief, noninjurious stress to a
noncerebral tissue (i.e., skeletal muscle) can provide protection
to the CNS and thereby allows clinicians the opportunity to
circumvent concerns regarding the direct preconditioning of
neurological tissues.
In this expansive and contemplative history of Cuba, Louis A. Perez
Jr. argues that the country's memory of the past served to
transform its unfinished nineteenth-century liberation project into
a twentieth-century revolutionary metaphysics. The ideal of
national sovereignty that was anticipated as the outcome of Spain's
defeat in 1898 was heavily compromised by the U.S. military
intervention that immediately followed. To many Cubans it seemed
almost as if the new nation had been overtaken by another country's
history. Memory of thwarted independence and aggrievement - of the
promise of sovereignty ever receding into the future - contributed
to the development in the early republic of a political culture
shaped by aspirations to fulfill the nineteenth-century promise of
liberation, and it was central to the claim of the revolution of
1959 as the triumph of history. In this capstone book, Perez
discerns in the Cuban past the promise that decisively shaped the
character of Cuban nationality.
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