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Quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping is used to discover the
genetic and molecular architecture underlying complex quantitative
traits. It has important applications in agricultural,
evolutionary, and biomedical research. R/qtl is an extensible,
interactive environment for QTL mapping in experimental crosses. It
is implemented as a package for the widely used open source
statistical software R and contains a diverse array of QTL mapping
methods, diagnostic tools for ensuring high-quality data, and
facilities for the fit and exploration of multiple-QTL models,
including QTL x QTL and QTL x environment interactions. This book
is a comprehensive guide to the practice of QTL mapping and the use
of R/qtl, including study design, data import and simulation, data
diagnostics, interval mapping and generalizations, two-dimensional
genome scans, and the consideration of complex multiple-QTL models.
Two moderately challenging case studies illustrate QTL analysis in
its entirety.
The book alternates between QTL mapping theory and examples
illustrating the use of R/qtl. Novice readers will find detailed
explanations of the important statistical concepts and, through the
extensive software illustrations, will be able to apply these
concepts in their own research. Experienced readers will find
details on the underlying algorithms and the implementation of
extensions to R/qtl. There are 150 figures, including 90 in full
color.
Employing both large-scale surveys and in-depth interviews, the
authors document the mental health effects on workers caused by the
closure of four General Motor plants. They paint a portrait of how
the social context in which these workers lived played a critical
role in their experiences of unemployment or of keeping their jobs
when others around them lost theirs. More than simply a study of
unemployment and mental health, this book is also a story of coping
and resilience.
This volume is based on a conference held to examine what is known
about cognitive behaviors and brain structure and function in three
syndromes and to evaluate the usefulness of such models. The goal
of this endeavor is to add to the knowledge base of cognitive
neuroscience within a developmental framework. Most of what is
known about the neurological basis of cognitive function in humans
has been learned from studies of central nervous system trauma or
disease in adults. Certain neurodevelopmental disorders affect the
central nervous system in unique ways by producing specific as
opposed to generalized cognitive deficit. Studies of these
disorders using neurobiological and behavioral techniques can yield
new insights into the localization of cognitive function and the
developmental course of atypical cognitive profiles.
The focus of this book is a discussion of the multidisciplinary
research findings from studies of autism, and Williams and Turner
syndromes. The approaches, methods, techniques, and findings
reported are at the cutting edge of neuroscience research on
complex behavior patterns and their neural substrates. Each
disorder is accompanied by some degree of general cognitive
impairment or mental retardation. Of greater interest are the
atypical deficits in which a cognitive function is spared, such as
language in Williams syndrome, or is disproportionately depressed
as are spatial discrimination skills and visual-motor coordination
in Turner syndrome. Drastically reduced or seemingly absent
language capabilities and little interaction with other people
characterize the core autism syndrome. A comprehensive and critical
discussion of appropriate statistical techniques is made vivid by
examples given from studies of small groups or single subjects in
neurolinguistics and related fields.
The first volume begins with the early experiments into wireless
telegraphy by Ernest Rutherford and ends with the New Zealand
Broadcasting Service in the 1950s, just before the advent of
television. Topics dealt with are the development and geographical
spread of transmission and reception facilities, the political
debates about broadcasting and consequential institutional changes,
the interventionist role of the state in broadcasting, programming
style and content, and the social and cultural consequences of
broadcasting.
This book provides a comprehensive analysis of how EU state aid law
is shaping the future of EU investment policy in a global context.
It examines in detail how EU state aid policy and practice interact
with the EU investment regime on the internal market and affect the
external trade relations of the Member States and the EU alike. The
debate this book engages in concerns competence, i.e., which body
delineates the scope of state aid law and policy (now and in the
future) when and where it intersects and collides with another
distinct legal field: investment protection. Pursuing a doctrinal
approach to the topic in the light of EU law and international law,
the book analyses the interaction of the EU's trade, state aid and
investment policy. This is done by posing the following research
question: How is EU state aid law shaping the future of EU
investment policy in a global context? Further, the book puts
forward three corresponding arguments. First, this influence can be
seen in the EU's incorporation of clauses promoting fair
competition and state aid policy in international trade agreements.
Second, EU state aid law and policy contributed to recent internal
developments which led the Member States to terminate their
bilateral agreements with each other (intra-EU BITs) by the end of
2019. Third, the EU has been working to replace the BITs between
its Member States and third countries (extra-EU BITs) with its own
trade agreements, which are aligned with EU legislation. This
combined analysis of EU law and international law yields a number
of interesting conclusions. The book addresses a highly topical and
rapidly evolving area of EU law and international investment law.
It is also the first book to provide a comprehensive approach to
the interplay of state aid rules and EU investment policy
internally and externally, i.e., within the EU and on a global
scale. As such, it closes an important gap in the extant literature
on international and EU law.
This volume is based on a conference held to examine what is known
about cognitive behaviors and brain structure and function in three
syndromes and to evaluate the usefulness of such models. The goal
of this endeavor is to add to the knowledge base of cognitive
neuroscience within a developmental framework. Most of what is
known about the neurological basis of cognitive function in humans
has been learned from studies of central nervous system trauma or
disease in adults. Certain neurodevelopmental disorders affect the
central nervous system in unique ways by producing specific as
opposed to generalized cognitive deficit. Studies of these
disorders using neurobiological and behavioral techniques can yield
new insights into the localization of cognitive function and the
developmental course of atypical cognitive profiles. The focus of
this book is a discussion of the multidisciplinary research
findings from studies of autism, and Williams and Turner syndromes.
The approaches, methods, techniques, and findings reported are at
the cutting edge of neuroscience research on complex behavior
patterns and their neural substrates. Each disorder is accompanied
by some degree of general cognitive impairment or mental
retardation. Of greater interest are the atypical deficits in which
a cognitive function is spared, such as language in Williams
syndrome, or is disproportionately depressed as are spatial
discrimination skills and visual-motor coordination in Turner
syndrome. Drastically reduced or seemingly absent language
capabilities and little interaction with other people characterize
the core autism syndrome. A comprehensive and critical discussion
of appropriate statistical techniques is made vivid by examples
given from studies of small groups or single subjects in
neurolinguistics and related fields.
Richard “Rick” Blayne has a mission. One of the CIA’s top
expert on Cambodia, who escaped the country’s fall to the Khmer
Rouge and has monitored the ensuing genocide from Thailand ever
since, he has been sent to Paris to further the CIA’s plan to
infiltrate the Cambodian resistance to the Hanoi-controlled puppet
government in Phnom Penh. Arriving in the middle of a Parisian
summer, Rick feels out of place and uncertain if he can handle the
assignment. Vying factions seek to form a guerrilla force. As he
establishes contact with old Cambodian friends on both sides trying
to control the resistance, he is drawn into an operation to recruit
a Russian diplomat serving in Paris. With the help of a Thai
fashion designer serving as an access agent, Rick, under the
guidance of Sasha – a seasoned CIA Soviet “head hunter” and
deputy chief of Paris station – moves the operation forward at a
time of great upheaval and change for the Soviet Union.
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