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Operations and Supply Chain Management, 17e covers the latest and
most important issues facing operations and supply chain management
(OSCM) managers while providing basic tools and techniques to
promote a competitive advantage and career-readiness. It covers
relevant, current OSCM issues with a focus on the global economy,
analytic content that ties decisions to relevant data, and
solutions to operations and supply chain-related problems. Hot
topics in business today that relate to OSCM are mitigating the
risk of disruptions while reducing the cost of supply chain
processes, integration and collaboration with customers and
suppliers, sustainability and minimizing the long-term cost of
products and processes. These topics are studied in the book to
clarify the "big picture" of what these topics are and why they are
important to business today. The seventeenth edition supplies many
examples of leading-edge companies and practices to make the book
an interesting and relevant read.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
The Sixth Edition of Operations and Supply Chain Management: The
Core focuses on the important core concepts in the dynamic field of
operations. Just as lava flows from the core of the earth,
operations and supply chain management is the core of business.
Material must flow through supply chain processes to create cash
output and input. This new edition has an increased focus on supply
chain analytics involving the analysis of data to better solve
business problems. Jacobs The Core 6e focuses on the core concepts
and tools needed to ensure business processes run smoothly and is
designed to be lean and focused on the material sufficient for a
12-15 week course in Operations Management. It includes new
exercises in Analytics , Supply Chain Improvement Models, new
carbon footprint exercises, forecasting analytics and Inventory
management exercises. New vignettes like in Ch. 2 featuring a
special purpose acquisition (SPAC) of a large indoor farm, and
Operations Management insights from the COVID-19 pandemic
throughout provide valuable, engaging and relevant content for
students learning Operations Management.
Not since the late 1970s has a single work presented the biology of
this heterogenous group of secondary alkaloids in such depth.
Alkaloids, a unique treatise featuring leaders in the field,
presents both the historical use of alkaloids and the latest
discoveries in the biochemistry of alkaloid production in plants
alkaloid ecology, including marine invertebrates, animal and plant
parasites, and alkaloids as antimicrobial and current medicinal use
. Highlights include chapters on the chemical ecology of alkaloids
in host-predator interactions, and on the compartmentation of
alkaloids synthesis, transport, and storage. Extensive
cross-referencing in tabular format makes this volume an excellent
reference.
Autotrophic and methylotrophic microorganisms are able to grow at
the expense of one-carbon compounds (e.g. carbon dioxide,
formaldehyde) as the principal carbon sources for the synthesis of
cell material, using light, inorganic compounds or one-carbon
compounds as energy sources. The study of the special adaptations
required in aerobic and anaerobic microorganisms to sustain an
autotrophic or methylotrophic mode of life is a fascinating field
of research for scientists from various disciplines. Current
research efforts not only focus on fundamental aspects, i.e.
metabolic pathways and their regulation, ecology, energy conversion
and genetics, but also the possible application of these organisms,
in waste water treatment, degradation of xenobiotics, single-cell
protein production, as biocatalysts for the production of fine
chemicals, draws strong attention. The aim of this series is to
provide annual reviews on the biochemistry, physiology, ecology,
genetics, and application of microbial autotrophs and
methylotrophs. The scope of the series includes all aspects of the
biology of these microbes, and will deal with phototrophic and
chemolithotrophic prokaryotic autotrophs, carboxydobacteria,
acetogenic-, methanogenic- and methylotrophic bacteria, as well as
methylotrophic eukaryotes. The exciting advances made in recent
years in the study of these organisms is reflected in the chapters
of this first volume which have been written by experts in the
field. We would like to express our sincere thanks to all the
contributors for their stimulating and comprehensive chapters.
First published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Working capacity is the physiological key to understanding man's
ability, in technically less advanced communities, to exploit his
environment, and hence to understanding his role in the ecological
balance. In this volume the present state of knowledge of working
capacity in tropical populations is reviewed in a series of
illustrative papers. Topics cover the measurement of working
capacity in populations: the functional consequences of
malnutrition; growth, size and muscular efficiency; ethnic
differences in working capacity; energy; expenditure and endemic
disease; and energy flow in tropical ecosystems. These papers and
their ensuing discussions lead to a series of recommendations on
studies to be incorporated in the Decade of the Tropics research
programme of the International Union of Biological Sciences.
Assessing Expressive Learning is the only book in the art education
field to date to propose and support a research-supported
teacher-directed authentic assessment model for evaluating K-12
studio art, and to offer practical information on how to implement
the model. This practical text for developing visual arts
assessment for grades 1-12 is based on and supported by the results
of a year-long research effort primarily sponsored by the National
Endowment for the Arts, involving 70 art teachers and 1,500
students in 12 school districts in Florida, Indiana, and Illinois.
The purpose of the study was to demonstrate that creative artwork
by K-12 students can be empirically assessed using quantitative
measures that are consistent with the philosophical assumptions of
authentic learning and with the means and ends of art, and that
these measures can reliably assess student art growth. A further
goal was to provide a rationale for the assessment of student art
as an essential part of the K-12 instructional program and to
encourage art teachers to take responsibility for and assume a
leadership role in the assessment of art learning in the school and
the school district. Assessing Expressive Learning: *reports on
current assessment methods but also stresses a time-tested
portfolio assessment process that can be used or adapted for use in
any K-12 art classroom; *includes the assessment instruments used
in the study and several case studies of art teachers using
electronic portfolios of student work, a bibliography of major art
assessment efforts, and a critical review of current methods; *is
designed to be teacher- and system-friendly, unlike many other art
assessment publications that provide only a review of information
on assessment; and *both documents an experiment where artistic
values and aesthetic issues were considered paramount in the
education of K-12 students in the visual arts, and also serves as a
guide for the conduct of similar experiments by art teachers in the
nation's schools--the research methodology and results are reported
in an appendix in a format that will enable educational researchers
to duplicate the study. This volume is ideal as a text for
upper-division undergraduate and graduate classes in visual arts
education assessment, and highly relevant for college art education
professors, researchers, and school district personnel involved in
the education and supervision of art teachers, and researchers
interested in performance measurement.
Originally published in 1985, this title was a retrospective
appreciation of the late Richard L. Solomon. His pre- and
postdoctoral students from past years presented the 22 papers which
are published in this volume. The book reflects the breadth of
Solomon's impact through his teaching and research. The first part
contains a chapter that provides a bit of history in a
retrospective appreciation of the several foci of Solomon's
research career. This chapter sets the stage for those that follow
and reduces their diversity by providing a degree of historical
understanding. The second part on the role of properties of fear
contains chapters that address various issues associated with the
role of conditioned fear. The third part contains papers that
address cognitive, information-processing issues in the context of
Pavlovian conditioning of appetitive and aversive events, reasoning
and timing. The fourth part continues the exploration of the
phenomenon of learned helplessness first discovered in Solomon's
laboratory. The fifth part addresses various issues associated with
the Solomon and Corbit opponent-process theory of motivation and
affect. The final part, on applications to human and cultural
issues, contains chapters on such diverse subjects as
cross-cultural analyses of aggressive behavior in children, the
analysis of resistance to change in industrial organizations, the
concept of liberty in formulating research issues in developmental
psychology, and the status of free will in modern American
psychology.
First published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Assessing Expressive Learning is the only book in the art education
field to date to propose and support a research-supported
teacher-directed authentic assessment model for evaluating K-12
studio art, and to offer practical information on how to implement
the model. This practical text for developing visual arts
assessment for grades 1-12 is based on and supported by the results
of a year-long research effort primarily sponsored by the National
Endowment for the Arts, involving 70 art teachers and 1,500
students in 12 school districts in Florida, Indiana, and Illinois.
The purpose of the study was to demonstrate that creative artwork
by K-12 students can be empirically assessed using quantitative
measures that are consistent with the philosophical assumptions of
authentic learning and with the means and ends of art, and that
these measures can reliably assess student art growth. A further
goal was to provide a rationale for the assessment of student art
as an essential part of the K-12 instructional program and to
encourage art teachers to take responsibility for and assume a
leadership role in the assessment of art learning in the school and
the school district. Assessing Expressive Learning: *reports on
current assessment methods but also stresses a time-tested
portfolio assessment process that can be used or adapted for use in
any K-12 art classroom; *includes the assessment instruments used
in the study and several case studies of art teachers using
electronic portfolios of student work, a bibliography of major art
assessment efforts, and a critical review of current methods; *is
designed to be teacher- and system-friendly, unlike many other art
assessment publications that provide only a review of information
on assessment; and *both documents an experiment where artistic
values and aesthetic issues were considered paramount in the
education of K-12 students in the visual arts, and also serves as a
guide for the conduct of similar experiments by art teachers in the
nation's schools--the research methodology and results are reported
in an appendix in a format that will enable educational researchers
to duplicate the study. This volume is ideal as a text for
upper-division undergraduate and graduate classes in visual arts
education assessment, and highly relevant for college art education
professors, researchers, and school district personnel involved in
the education and supervision of art teachers, and researchers
interested in performance measurement.
Originally published in 1985, this title was a retrospective
appreciation of the late Richard L. Solomon. His pre- and
postdoctoral students from past years presented the 22 papers which
are published in this volume. The book reflects the breadth of
Solomon's impact through his teaching and research. The first part
contains a chapter that provides a bit of history in a
retrospective appreciation of the several foci of Solomon's
research career. This chapter sets the stage for those that follow
and reduces their diversity by providing a degree of historical
understanding. The second part on the role of properties of fear
contains chapters that address various issues associated with the
role of conditioned fear. The third part contains papers that
address cognitive, information-processing issues in the context of
Pavlovian conditioning of appetitive and aversive events, reasoning
and timing. The fourth part continues the exploration of the
phenomenon of learned helplessness first discovered in Solomon's
laboratory. The fifth part addresses various issues associated with
the Solomon and Corbit opponent-process theory of motivation and
affect. The final part, on applications to human and cultural
issues, contains chapters on such diverse subjects as
cross-cultural analyses of aggressive behavior in children, the
analysis of resistance to change in industrial organizations, the
concept of liberty in formulating research issues in developmental
psychology, and the status of free will in modern American
psychology.
Manufacturing Planning & Control for Supply Chain Management,
6e by Jacobs, Berry, and Whybark (formerly Vollmann, Berry,
Whybark, Jacobs) is a comprehensive reference covering both basic
and advanced concepts and applications for students and practicing
professionals. The text provides an understanding of supply chain
planning and control techniques with topics including purchasing,
manufacturing, warehouse, and logistics systems. Manufacturing
Planning & Control for Supply Chain Management, 6e continues to
be organized in a flexible format, with the basic coverage in
chapters 1-8 followed by the last four chapters that focus on the
integration of manufacturing with the supply chain. Each chapter
provides a managerial issues overview, a detailed technical
presentation related to the topic, company examples, and concluding
principles. This book is the essential desk reference for Supply
Chain Planning and Control techniques.
Lhwyd, the illegitimate son of a father ruined by the Civil War,
had to make his own way in the world. A competent botanist before
going up to Oxford as a student, he spent much time there at the
Botanical Garden before being appointed to the newly established
Ashmolean Museum, where he became its second Keeper. This biography
traces the development of his research interests from botany to
palaeontology - and then to antiquarian studies, which led to him
studying the Celtic languages as a source of linguistic evidence in
historical studies. Thus he became the founder of Celtic Studies.
Lhwyd's diverse research interests were underpinned by an
evidence-led methodology - the collection (by personal observation
where possible) of material, which would then be classified as a
preliminary to drawing conclusions - and, as such, his is a
valuable contribution to the history of science.
This special symposium volume of the SSHB explores the biological
effects of human isolation and migration, and how the situations to
which they give rise help to elucidate a variety of biological
problems, ranging from evolutionary change to disease etiology. The
majority of the case studies presented here are by Asian
investigators, and provide a uniquely accessible source of
information. Besides documenting the results, the book illustrates
the different methods employed in such studies. It will be
invaluable to those contemplating similar investigations elsewhere,
and will be of interest to researchers in a range of disciplines
including epidemiology, clinical medicine, demography,
anthropology, genetics and evolutionary biology.
For more than two millennia, African blacksmiths have transformed
one of Earth’s most basic natural resources into objects of
life-changing utility, empowerment, prestige, spiritual potency,
and astonishing artistry—shaping African cultures in the most
fundamental ways. Striking Iron combines interdisciplinary
scholarship with vivid illustrations to offer the most
comprehensive treatment to date of the blacksmith’s art in
sub-Saharan Africa. Interspersed throughout are photographs of more
than 250 diverse works from over 100 ethnic groups—including
tools, blades, currencies, wood sculptures studded with iron,
musical instruments, and accoutrements—with field photographs
documenting blacksmiths at work and objects in use. Seventeen
contributors write from the disciplinary perspectives of art
history, art, anthropology, archaeology, history, and astronomy,
examining how the blacksmiths’ virtuosity can harness powers of
the natural and spiritual worlds, effect change and ensure
protection, assist with life’s challenges and transitions, and
enhance the efficacies of sacred acts. Exhibition dates: Musée du
Quai Branly-Jacques Chirac, Paris, November 19, 2019, to March 29,
2020
Working capacity is the physiological key to understanding man's
ability, in technically less advanced communities, to exploit his
environment, and hence to understanding his role in the ecological
balance. In this volume the knowledge of working capacity in
tropical populations is reviewed in a series of illustrative
papers. Topics cover the measurement of working capacity in
populations: the functional consequences of malnutrition; growth,
size and muscular efficiency; ethnic differences in working
capacity; energy; expenditure and endemic disease; and energy flow
in tropical ecosystems. These papers and their ensuing discussions
lead to a series of recommendations on studies to be incorporated
in the Decade of the Tropics research programme of the
International Union of Biological Sciences.
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