|
|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
This book provides a practical, comprehensive and up-to-date
overview of the use of spatial statistics in epidemiology - the
study of the incidence and distribution of diseases. Used
appropriately, spatial analytical methods in conjunction with GIS
and remotely sensed data can provide significant insights into the
biological patterns and processes that underlie disease
transmission. In turn, these can be used to understand and predict
disease prevalence. This user-friendly text brings together the
specialised and widely-dispersed literature on spatial analysis to
make these methodological tools accessible to epidemiologists for
the first time.
With its focus is on application rather than theory, Spatial
Analysis in Epidemiology includes a wide range of examples taken
from both medical (human) and veterinary (animal) disciplines, and
describes both infectious diseases and non-infectious conditions.
Furthermore, it provides worked examples of methodologies using a
single data set from the same disease example throughout, and is
structured to follow the logical sequence of description of spatial
data, visualisation, exploration, modelling and decision support.
This accessible text is aimed at graduate students and researchers
dealing with spatial data in the fields of epidemiology (both
medical and veterinary), ecology, zoology and parasitology,
environmental science, geography and statistics.
This study guide is a good start as you embark on a journey of
discovery and education about what it is you should know as a
Christian believer. Use this guide for personal growth or as part
of a classroom or a Sunday School setting with your local church.
In any way you begin your quest to know more and understand more of
the Bible, who God is, what it is every Christian should know and
believe, just start.
This book provides a practical, comprehensive and up-to-date
overview of the use of spatial statistics in epidemiology - the
study of the incidence and distribution of diseases. Used
appropriately, spatial analytical methods in conjunction with GIS
and remotely sensed data can provide significant insights into the
biological patterns and processes that underlie disease
transmission. In turn, these can be used to understand and predict
disease prevalence. This user-friendly text brings together the
specialised and widely-dispersed literature on spatial analysis to
make these methodological tools accessible to epidemiologists for
the first time.
With its focus is on application rather than theory, Spatial
Analysis in Epidemiology includes a wide range of examples taken
from both medical (human) and veterinary (animal) disciplines, and
describes both infectious diseases and non-infectious conditions.
Furthermore, it provides worked examples of methodologies using a
single data set from the same disease example throughout, and is
structured to follow the logical sequence of description of spatial
data, visualisation, exploration, modelling and decision support.
This accessible text is aimed at graduate students and researchers
dealing with spatial data in the fields of epidemiology (both
medical and veterinary), ecology, zoology and parasitology,
environmental science, geography and statistics
"This book will be extremely useful for gardeners, nurserymen,
extension agents, students, and others interested in woody
landscape plants of the Deep South. . . . The text contains much
information based on first-hand observations of the authors in a
personal style that is most attractive. The Table of Horticultural
Characteristics and Landscape Planning Aids is a welcome
addition."--Dr. Frederick G. Meyer, National Arboretum, Washington,
D.C.
"Woody Ornamentals" will take its place alongside the spade and
trowel as an indispensable gardening tool for plant lovers in the
Deep South. No other book offers such complete information about
trees, shrubs, woody vines, and ground covers for USDA Zone 8, an
area beginning at the Texas-Mexico border and cutting a wide swath
across the Deep South.
When David Rogers retired after a life's work in botany and
returned to his native Deep South, he discovered that many new
cultivated plants and rare species from all over the world had been
introduced into the gardens and landscapes. This comprehensive work
also identifies the native flora that contribute handsome, hardy
plants to residential landscaping, the many subtropical trees and
shrubs that do not grow in more northerly gardens, and the
fruit-bearing trees such as mandarin orange, sand pear, and new
varieties of apple.
The plants are listed alphabetically in the book by their generic
name. General information about the plants--their appearance,
growth and habit, with details about geographic origin,
environmental requirements, and special features--appears in
easy-to-read prose. For those who designate plants by their common
name, an index to the common names references the generic name, and
an additional index references the family, genus, and species.
Photographs of unusual species and 174 beautiful, detailed line
drawings supplement the text. Extensive tables of horticultural
characteristics and landscape planning aids provide an overview of
each species in the categories of large, medium, and small trees,
shrubs, woody vines, and woody ground covers.
|
You may like...
Impossible
Sarah Lotz
Paperback
R365
Discovery Miles 3 650
Icebreaker
Hannah Grace
Paperback
R279
R222
Discovery Miles 2 220
|