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Benson Lee directs this drama starring Josh Holloway and Chris
Brown in which a down on his luck basketball coach attempts to
rally a team of breakdancers to win a major competition. Though
America initially set up the 'Battle of the Year' competition,
where the best b-boying (or breakdancing) performers from a number
of countries square off, a team from the US hasn't taken the trophy
home for 15 years. This greatly concerns L.A. rap mogul Dante (Laz
Alonso) who attempts to convince his friend Blake (Holloway), a top
basketball coach who has fallen on hard times, to take charge of
this year's team. Though Blake is initially sceptical, he quickly
realises that his ability to build team spirit may be the missing
ingredient. Can his team, which includes Rooster (Brown), prevail
in this year's competition?
The authors bring their wit and monstrous imaginations to play
across the entire history of sport, with chapters ranging from the
Greek athletic ideal and its perversions to the Nazi Olympics of
1936 and the use of drugs, alcohol and visionary states of being.
Contents: Martin, Caramazza, Neuropsychological and Neuroimaging Perspectives on Conceptual Knowledge: An Introduction. Capitani, Laiacona, Mahon, Caramazza, What are the Facts of Semantic Category-specific Deficits? A Critical Review of the Clinical Evidence. Humphreys, Riddoch, A Case Series Analysis of 'Category-specific' Deficits of Living Things: The HIT Account. Lambon Ralph, Patterson, Garrard, Hodges, Semantic Dementia with Category Specificity: A Comparative Case Series Study. Borgo, Shallice, Category-specificity and Feature Knowledge: Evidence from New Sensory-quality Categories. Crutch, Warrington, The Selective Impairment of Fruit and Vegetable Knowledge: A Multiple Processing Channels Account of Fine-grain Category Specificity. Samson, Pillon, A Case of Impaired Knowledge for Fruit and Vegetables. Farah, Rabinowitz, Genetic and Environmental Influences on the Organisation of Semantic Memory in the Brain: Is "Living Things" an Innate Category? Tranel, Kemmerer, Adolphs, Damasio, Damasio, Neural Correlates of Conceptual Knowledge for Actions. Mahon, Caramazza, Constraining Questions about the Organisation and Representation of Conceptual Knowledge. Kyle, Simmons, Barsalou, The Similarity-in-topography Principle: Reconciling Theories of Conceptual Deficits. Dehaene, Piazza, Pinel, Cohen, Three Parietal Circuits for Number Processing. Gauthier, James, Curby, Tarr, The Influence of Conceptual Knowledge on Visual Discrimination. Kan, Barsalou, Solomon, Minor, Thompson-Schill, Role of Mental Imagery in a Property Verification Task: fMRI Evidence for Perceptual Representations of Conceptual Knowledge. Tyler, Bright, Tavares, Pilgrim, Fletcher, Greer, Moss, Do Semantic Categories Activate Distinct Cortical Regions? Evidence for a Distributed Neural Semantic System. Price, Noppeney, Phillips, Devlin. How Is the Fusiform Gyrus Related to Category-specificity? Martin, Weisberg, Neural Foundations for Understanding Social and Mechanical Concepts.
Do you feel stressed? Does your anxiety get in the way of life? Are
you ready for change? It's time to say 'f*ck stress' and transform
yourself from a worrier to a warrior! This no-nonsense guide will
help you explore what is actually causing you stress and
reprogramme your brain to cope positively and rationally with what
life throws at you. Packed with easy-to-follow advice, useful tips
and empowering statements, this essential stress-busting toolkit
will help you master your own thoughts and confidently give stress
the middle finger.
Category-specific knowledge disorders are among the most intriguing
and perplexing syndromes in cognitive neuropsychology. The past
decade has witnessed increased interest in these disorders, due
largely to a heightened appreciation of the profound implications
that an understanding of concept representation has for such
diverse topics as object recognition, the organisation of the
lexicon, and storage of long-term memories. Until recently,
information about the representation of concepts was limited to
findings from patients with brain injury and disease. This state of
affairs has now changed with the advent and wide-spread
availability of functional imaging for studying cognition in the
normal human brain. The purpose of this special issue is to provide
a forum for new findings and critical, theoretical analyses of
existing data from patient and functional brain imaging studies.
The contributions, all from major investigators in the field, range
from studies of specific object categories such as animals, tools,
fruit and vegetables, and faces, to the more general domains of
number processing, social interaction, and mechanical knowledge. A
unifying theme of these papers is the extent to which the findings
can be best understood within the context of models that posit an
innate, domain-specific organisation, those that appeal to an
organisation by sensory- and motor-based features and properties,
and those that propose an undifferentiated, distributed neural
organisation.
From Battle of Britain fighter station to commercial airport, this
is the inspiring story of Biggin Hill. Â Biggin Hill,
world-famous as a Battle of Britain fighter station, has had many
lives. First used as an airfield in 1917, Biggin Hill saw brutal
action in both World Wars, never losing a day’s operations
despite devastating enemy attacks. Since 1959 two dynamic figures
have kept this historic airfield open against the odds: fighter ace
Jock Maitland, creator of the renowned Biggin Hill International
Air Fair, and army pilot Andrew Walters, who has turned it into
London’s No 1 business airport, with a thriving aviation
community that includes air charter companies, engineering firms,
flying schools, storage and restoration, and major Formula 1 and
Bombardier operations. Meanwhile a new Museum and St George’s
Memorial Chapel keep memories of its days as a Royal Force Station
alive. Â The first full history of this great airfield, Nine
Lives looks behind the scenes of a busy modern airport, digs deep
into its dramatic past, and tells an inspiring tale of enterprise,
innovation, teamwork and determination.
A vital part of any southern football fan’s personal library, SEC
Football's Greatest Games is both engaging and comprehensive; a
collection that contextualizes readers’ favorite games while
introducing them to important moments they never knew existed.
Broken down into “The Games That Changed the Southâ€; “The
Iron Bowlâ€; “Hail Mary and Other Prayersâ€; “The
Classicsâ€; “Atlanta, Here We Comeâ€; and “Championship
Moments†. . . this book covers a century-plus of Southern
football through games covered with depth, outstanding photography,
and fascinating sidebars. Every entry takes the reader through
history with the matchups that healed a South stripped of its
pride, made coaches like Bear Bryant and Nick Saban regional
heroes, forced the sport to change, created superstars, crowned
champions, and revolutionized football.
An airline is supposed to make the experience of booking a flight
easy, trouble free, and reliable. But when scheduling software
breaks down and flights get canceled, customers will walk, and
heads will roll. That's what Leigh Freemark faces the day she and
her team launch a software upgrade that fails spectacularly and
hits the media immediately. As Senior Director of Quality
Assurance, her job is to make sure that code is market ready. And
she's the one who must face the music when it doesn't. Tasked by
senior management to find and fix the source of the failure, Leigh
discovers just how essential it has become to radically improve the
process of software development by introducing a concept called
continuous testing. She must quickly learn what it means, how it
works, and how to build it into her company's legacy system. But
she soon discovers that managing change is much more difficult than
it first appears. The airline business is changing fast, yet old
traditions and loyalties still dominate. As she fights to convince
her team to change or perish, she discovers that obstructions and
opportunities come in surprising forms. *** In The Kitty Hawk
Venture, the authors deliver a sound lesson in the importance of
continuous testing while taking the reader inside the world of
commercial aviation. Each chapter delivers distinct and vital
learning opportunities wrapped inside a fast-moving narrative
complete with interesting characters, intriguing situations, and
even some humor. The book concludes with a "Flight Plan for
Continuous Testing" that stands on its own as a valuable resource
guide for digital leaders in their continuous testing journey. The
story is immediately relatable to anyone who has worked in software
development or for the companies that rely on it. Who This Book Is
For C-level executives, VPs of apps and quality, VPs of DevOps,
architecture and strategy managers, and SMB and enterprise
professionals
A British cultural studies course for young adults with an
interactive focus. The Audio CD provides students with a
fascinating insight into what it is like to live in Britain today,
using recordings of young people from various parts of the country
talking about their lives.
"There is an odd, subversive book called The Decadent Gardener by
Medlar Lucan and Durian Gray. The introduction describes the
decadent gardening ethos thus: 'In the garden, the decadent seeks
to create a moment of beauty, which should be allowed to fall into
decay and ruin.'Gardening, Lucan and Gray believe, is 'little more
than systematic violence in pursuit of beauty', and the gardener is
first and foremost a sadist. These two, the Kropotkin and De Sade
of horticulture, understand that'nowhere are sex and death more
intimately bound together than in the garden.' For them the garden
is a place of 'agony, self-doubt and betrayal.' They remind us
that, if we are to believe the Bible - not that they would be
inclined to - the first murder was carried out by a gardener.And
the first garden was a place where sin beckoned wherever you
turned.The book abounds with piercing, pricking truths.The flower,
they remind us, for example, is nothing but a sexual organ.The
Decadent Garden consists of the plans for a series of thematic
gardens that Lucan and Gray had conceived for a wealthy patroness.
Each garden would symbolise an aspect of nature as they saw it. The
Cruel Garden would consist largely of impenetrable thickets of
thorns.The Fatal Garden would contain only representatives of the
vegetable world's many poisonous denizens: among them, black
bryony, dropwort and, of course, deadly nightshade.In the Narcotic
Garden, by the side of the opium poppy and cannabis sativa, would
grow more obscure mind-altering plants such as mandrake, henbane
and thornapple. The Priapic Garden would be populated by those
species whose flowers and foliage assumed the most suggestive
phallic and vulvic shapes.Their Torture Garden carried the
libertine ideas of Lucan and Gray furthest and is perhaps best left
to the reader's imagination.Because Lucan and Gray barely realised
their designs(they were too decadent to bother), their gardens
flourish mainly in the mind."
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Belvun (Paperback)
Alex Martin
bundle available
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R587
Discovery Miles 5 870
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Resonance (Paperback)
S Alex Martin
bundle available
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R621
Discovery Miles 6 210
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Every journey is an adventure. Especially one into the unknown. The
Twisted Vine is set in rural France and is a deeply romantic but
suspenseful tale. Roxanne Rudge escapes her cheating boyfriend by
going grape-picking in France. She feels vulnerable and alone in
such a big country where she can't speak the language and is
befriended by Armand le Clair, a handsome Frenchman. Armand is not
all he seems, however, and she discovers a darker side to him
before uncovering his dreadful secret. She is aided and abetted by
three new friends she has made; charming posh Peter, a gifted
linguist, the beautiful and vivacious Italian, Yvane, and clever
Henry of the deep brown eyes with the voice to match. Together they
unravel a mystery centred around a beautiful chateau and play a
part in its future. Join Roxanne on her journey of self discovery,
love and tragedy in rural France. Taste the wine, feel the sun,
drive through the Provencal mountains with her, as her courage and
resourcefulness are tested to the limit.
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