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With two new chapters, improved artwork, and significant updates
made throughout to increase readability, the fourth edition of
Audiology: Science to Practice continues to be the most
comprehensive textbook for audiology and hearing science courses,
as well as for health care professionals wanting a better
understanding of hearing science and audiology practices. It is
written in a style that makes new or difficult concepts relatively
easy to understand, while still providing more coverage of hearing
and vestibular science and clinical audiology than other
introductory texts. Topics include information about the profession
of audiology, acoustics, anatomy and physiology of the auditory and
vestibular systems, preparing for the patient, otoscopy, pure-tone
audiometry and speech measures, audiogram interpretations, masking,
tympanometry, acoustic reflexes, wideband acoustic immittance,
otoacoustic emissions, auditory brainstem responses, hearing
screening, hearing aids, assistive listening aides, cochlear and
other implantable devices, vestibular evaluation, descriptions of
auditory and vestibular disorders, and aural rehabilitation. There
is also a chapter on the roles of speech-language pathologists
related to understanding and caring for persons with hearing and
balance concerns. Where relevant, the material includes
evidence-based practice. New to the Fourth Edition Two new
chapters: Role of the Speech-Language Pathologist and Other
Treatments and (Re)habilitation of Hearing and Balance Disorders
Many new beautifully drawn two-color anatomy and physiology
illustrations Black and white figures have been color-enhanced
Several chapters were reorganized and updated to include vestibular
anatomy, physiology, and vestibular disorders within the relevant
auditory chapters A separate chapter on vestibular evaluation and
bedside screening Many chapters expanded to provide information on
environmental factors that affect the transmission of sound,
signal-to-noise ratio, preparation for testing, cerumen management,
assistive listening technology systems (HATS), and status of
over-the-counter hearing aids Updated references and standards
throughout Key Features Many illustrations than other texts to help
clarify and expand on key concepts Chapters begin with a list of
learning objectives and end with key references Punctuated with
historical and informational side boxes An easy-to-read writing
style to help students understand scientific concepts Key terms
highlighted throughout with a comprehensive end-of-book glossary A
PluralPlus companion website with PowerPoint lecture slides and an
image bank for instructors, James Jerger's chapter on the History
of Audiology, and more The authors have also created a companion
study aid for students, Audiology Workbook, Fourth Edition.
Audiology Workbook, Fourth Edition is a companion study aid to the
textbook, Audiology: Science to Practice, Fourth Edition. It can
also serve as an appropriate supplement to other introductory
audiology textbooks or class lectures. The Audiology Workbook
focuses on exercises and questions in hearing and vestibular
science and audiology clinical principles and procedures that are
beneficial for students in an undergraduate communication science
and disorders program and those in a graduate-level AuD program. It
is also a great study resource for the Audiology Praxis Exam. The
fourth edition is composed of an abundance of questions and
activities designed to reinforce students' knowledge of concepts
and procedures that are, traditionally, difficult to master. There
are questions and activities on 1) properties of sound, such as
drawing waveforms; calculating frequencies/periods, amplitudes, and
phases, 2) auditory and vestibular anatomy and physiology of the
auditory and vestibular systems, including diagrams to label, 3)
procedures for obtaining pure-tone thresholds and
interpreting/describing audiograms 4) masking for pure-tone and
speech tests, 5) performing and interpreting speech test,
tympanograms, wideband acoustic immittance, acoustic reflexes, 6)
understanding and interpreting evoked physiologic responses,
including OAEs, ABRs, ECochG, ENOG, VEMP, 7) clinical case studies
for common hearing and balance disorders, 8) treatment, including
hearing aids, implantable devices, cerumen management, tinnitus,
and aural rehabilitation. The exercises are comprehensive and
designed so they may be solved with relatively short answers and
useful for group discussion. The popular exercises from previous
editions have been retained, updated, and expanded, including those
on audiogram interpretation, masking, immittance, and case studies.
Comprehensive answers are also included for each chapter. New to
the Fourth Edition Expanded exercises on the scientific foundations
from the previous edition as well as new questions added on
wavelength, resonance, decibels, signal-to-noise ratio, complex
vibrations, stages of transduction through the auditory system, and
psychoacoustics. Many new and figures of auditory and vestibular
anatomy. New exercises related to clinical topics, including
preparation for patient testing, case history, wideband acoustic
immittance and evoked physiologic responses. New chapter with
exercises on hearing aids, assistive listening technologies, and
implantable devices. Each chapter now ends with a set of
multiple-choice questions. Additional multiple-choice questions are
available on the companion website.
Interest in the coronaviruses has never been greater. Their
economic impact is considerable as they infect humans, livestock,
poultry and companion animals. Murine hepatitis virus (MHV)
infection of the mouse and rat central nervous systems are the
subject of intense study; these investigations are providing
insights into the potential role of viruses in human neurological
diseases and, more generally, into mechanisms causing neurological
damage. The single-stranded, positive-sense RNA genomes of two
species of these enveloped viruses (IBV and MHV) have been cloned
completely and one of them (lBV) sequenced in its entirety,
revealing a genome size of some 27000 nucleotides. This has made
possible more incisive investigations into the nature of those
polypeptides, encoded by more than half of the genome, which are
likely to contribute, in the main, to RNA polymerase/replicase
activity. Intriguingly, ribosomal frameshifting is exhibited within
the mRNA coding for these polypeptides. The cloning/sequencing
phase of coronavirology for which the 1980's will be partly
remembered, has provided a sound framework for furthex: studies of
the virus structural proteins and also some provocative insights
relevant to these studies. The large spike glycoprotein(s),
responsible for membrane fusion and bearing important antigenic
sites, varies amazingly in length and composition both within as
well as between coronavirus species. Receptors on host cells have
been identified. The integral membrane glycoprotein (M) has been
shown to use internal hydrophobic sequences to direct translocation
within membranes.
Winston Churchill famously claimed that the submarine war in the
Atlantic was the only campaign of the Second World War that really
frightened him. If the lifeline to north America had been cut,
Britain would never have survived; there could have been no
build-up of US and Commonwealth forces, no D-Day landings, and no
victory in western Europe. Furthermore, the battle raged from the
first day of the war until the final German surrender, making it
the longest and arguably hardest-fought campaign of the whole war.
The ships, technology and tactics employed by the Allies form the
subject of this book. Beginning with the lessons apparently learned
from the First World War, the author outlines inter-war
developments in technology and training, and describes the later
preparations for the second global conflict. When the war came the
balance of advantage was to see-saw between U-boats and escorts,
with new weapons and sensors introduced at a raid rate. For the
defending navies, the prime requirement was numbers, and the most
pressing problem was to improve capability without sacrificing
simplicity and speed of construction. The author analyses the
resulting designs of sloops, frigates, corvettes and destroyer
escorts and attempts to determine their relative effectiveness.
While the basic characteristics of these ships are well known, this
was the first book to look at their cost-effectiveness in terms of
anti-submarine warfare. Based on a lifetime's experience of
designing warships, the author's fascinating insights, presented in
this new softcover edition, will be of interest to enthusiasts and
valuable to naval historians alike.
Social Blueprints is a concise introduction to sociological thought
that is a refreshing alternative to the approaches of traditional
textbooks and other brief introductions to the field. David K.
Brown introduces students to concepts and theories that form the
foundation of sociological reasoning. In a highly engaging style,
he uses personal experiences, salient cultural examples, and
pressing social issues to ground these ideas in the everyday
experiences of students.
In five cogent chapters, Brown explores how core sociological
ideas such as culture, social structure, identities, power, and
globalization can better inform our understanding of the social
world. He uses contemporary, historical, and global examples drawn
from realms such as music, professional sports, fashion, film,
government, warfare, protests, corporations, workplaces, education,
crime, poverty, architecture, and tourism to lend immediate
relevance to sociological endeavor. Acutely focused and written
with a clear, critical point of view, Social Blueprints is ideal
for use in introductory and other sociology courses as either a
primary or supplemental text.
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