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The riveting true story of John and Aileen Crowley's race to
find a cure for Pompe disease that inspired the movie Extraordinary
Measures
With three beautiful children, a new house, and financial
security, John and Aileen Crowley were on top of the world--until
their two youngest children, fifteen-month-old Megan and
five-month-old Patrick, were diagnosed with Pompe disease and given
only months to live. Refusing to accept a death sentence, John quit
his financial consultant job and invested his life savings in a
biotechnology start-up to research the disease and find a cure.
Battling scientific setbacks, conflict of interest accusations, and
business troubles, John and Aileen would be tested to their limits
as they valiantly fought, and succeeded, in finding revolutionary
new treatment for the disease--offering hope to Megan, Patrick, and
the many children and families affected by Pompe disease around the
world.
The inspiration for the captivating film Extraordinary Measures,
starring Brendan Fraser and Harrison Ford, The Cure is a remarkable
true story of cutting-edge science, business acumen and daring, and
one family's indomitable spirit.
In this engaging and easy text, the authors explore the
foundational works of Hinduism. Spanning philosophy, mythology,
poetry and music, this book is sure to educate, as well as
entertain.
By applying data analytics techniques and machine learning
algorithms to predict disease, medical practitioners can more
accurately diagnose and treat patients. However, researchers face
problems in identifying suitable algorithms for pre-processing,
transformations, and the integration of clinical data in a single
module, as well as seeking different ways to build and evaluate
models. The Handbook of Research on Disease Prediction Through Data
Analytics and Machine Learning is a pivotal reference source that
explores the application of algorithms to making disease
predictions through the identification of symptoms and information
retrieval from images such as MRIs, ECGs, EEGs, etc. Highlighting a
wide range of topics including clinical decision support systems,
biomedical image analysis, and prediction models, this book is
ideally designed for clinicians, physicians, programmers, computer
engineers, IT specialists, data analysts, hospital administrators,
researchers, academicians, and graduate and post-graduate students.
This lovely version of Srimad Bhagavatam is the labour of love of a
grandmother for her grandaughters who live overseas, helping them
develop a strong appreciation for the wonders of one of the most
fundamental works of the ancients of India.
"A Daughter's Desire, A Mother's Worst Nightmare" tells the true
story of one woman's quest as she struggles to preserve her
arranged marriage by continuing in her abusive relationship. The
names have been changed to protect the privacy of the people
involved in the story. Shivani Ragunandan, a twenty-two-year-old
college graduate, found herself betrothed into marriage by her
family. Although it was not what she truly wanted, she went ahead
with the wedding-only to find herself in a very unhappy marriage.
Her husband was emotionally and physically abusive, cheating on her
whenever the opportunity presented itself. Abiding by the rules of
an arranged marriage in her Indo-Guyanese tradition, she was not
allowed to file a divorce. She tried continuously to preserve her
marriage to her twenty-seven-year-old husband. Although Shivani
knew deep inside that this was not what she wanted, she feared her
innocence, dignity, and reputation would be tarnished forever if
she left her husband. Bound by cultural ties, she had no one to
turn to but the celestial deities and her mother for guidance,
faith, and strength.
Many new social and economic organizations are emerging in
different parts of Asia Pacific which have skillfully adapted
western capitalism to suit their own specific requirements. They
have also put to effective use their own social and cultural values
to get the best economic results. Japan used its heritage of
associated living to overcome adversarial labour and management
relations; Singapore made use of Confucial emphasis on social
discipline and respect for merit to build a meritocratic society;
Indonesia used its genius for eclecticism to build its own brand of
social pragmatism, and then used it for economic growth; Thailand
used the concept of merit in Theravada Buddhism to accelerate
economic growth; and Malaysia used its own growing pragmatism to
balance conflicting ethnic demands. The book examines the variety
of address their respective core development issues and
simultaneously register an explosive economic growth.
In 21st-century America, one of the goals of the education is to
successfully prepare students for their meaningful, sustained, and
robust participation in a democratic society. In the context of
K-12 science education, this means educating students so that they
develop into future adult citizen capable of considering and
deciding on conflicting issues and policies influenced by science,
technology, and sustainability issues. The challenge for science
education is thus to find successful ways to integrate content,
pedagogy, and citizenship education. It is important to examine
curricular approaches in science classrooms since most of the
science education a student receives take place in the context of a
formal school science curriculum. Most curricular materials in
science education allow students to engage in what is commonly
referred to as an inform, verify, practice (IVF) format. Using this
format, students gain access to information either through a
lecture or a text, attempt to verify the presented information
through lab activities, and may practice the mastered information
with questions and/or problems. These curricular approaches do not
explicitly integrate citizenship education to facilitate students'
understandings of issues and policies shaped by science,
technology, and sustainability issues. In order to bridge this gap,
curricula guided by sociocultural perspectives may be a possible
answer. Existing literature integrating sociocultural perspectives
in the school science curriculum include context-based science,
connected science, contextualized science, and/or socioscientific
issues (SSI). These curricular approaches are being examined to
document their effectiveness by linking social dilemmas with
conceptual or technological links to science. This study integrates
science education reform documents, blends sociocultural
theoretical frameworks, and draws upon empirical data to contribute
to the use of sociocultural theory in science education in an urban
middle school setting. Current findings indicate that urban
children are not experiencing much success when it comes to school
science. Traditional paradigms for science education research focus
on the learning of science using IVF format with little regard for
the sociocultural context. In this book, the author posits that the
exploration of urban students' engagement with school science using
sociocultural perspectives may uncover factors that influence
students learning and success in the science classrooms. The author
further proposes that using curricula framed around sociocultural
perspectives may develop students' understandings about the role
science and technology plays in their lives, as well as well as in
the larger society, thus making science more accessible and
relevant for these children in urban settings. There has been no
study to date that examines the impact of curricular approaches
guided by a sociocultural framework (contextualized curriculum in
this study) on the comprehension level and attitudes of students.
The study fills that gap and holds implications for the inclusion
of alternative curricular framework in urban middle school science
classrooms. The author has used a mixed-methods study and draws
upon both quantitative and qualitative data sources. The study
design allows the reader to appreciate the perspectives of
participating students and teachers on the use of contextualized
curricular framework versus curricular framework guided by IVF
practices in urban middle school science classrooms. This is an
important book for collections in education, particularly science
and K-12.
This book explores the universal and highly topical issues of
ageing and retirement. It places a particular focus on the
macroeconomic aspects of the ageing and retirement of college and
university teachers, through a case study of teachers and
professors in France and India. While the ageing of the population
and the financing of the pension system are notoriously pressing
issues in Western nations such as France, it has previously not
been acknowledged that these issues are also critical to the
development trajectory of emerging countries such as India. The
book also highlights the importance of pensions for welfare,
well-being and stability in all categories of workers, including
workers in the informal sector and private companies devoid of
pension schemes, where jobs are largely irregular and temporary in
nature. It will be of great interest to researchers in the fields
of comparative education, sociology and economics.
This book explores the significant role education plays in the
promotion of human development and gender equality in India,
situating this progression in relation to developed nations, the
other BRIC countries and the ongoing attainment of the Millennium
Development Goals.
This book provides an empirically formulated foundation for
conflict-sensitive conservation, a field in which the existing
literature relies primarily on anecdotal evidence. Seeking to
better understand the impact of conflict on the implementation and
outcomes of environmental projects, the Global Environment Facility
(GEF) Independent Evaluation Office and the Environmental Law
Institute undertook an evaluation of GEF support to fragile and
conflict-affected contexts. Following a qualitative and
quantitative analysis of documents from more than 4000 projects,
the research team discovered a statistically significant negative
correlation between a country’s Fragile States Index score and
the implementation quality of environmental projects in that
country. In this book, the evaluation and research team explain
these groundbreaking findings in detail, highlighting seven key
case studies: Afghanistan, Albertine Rift, Balkans, Cambodia,
Colombia, Lebanon and Mali. Drawing upon additional research and
interviews with GEF project implementation staff, the volume
illustrates the pathways through which conflict and fragility
frequently impact environmental projects. It also examines how
practitioners and sponsoring institutions can plan and implement
their projects to avoid or mitigate these issues and find
opportunities to promote peacebuilding through their environmental
interventions. Examining data from 164 countries and territories,
this innovative book will be of great interest to students and
scholars of environmental management, conservation, international
development and the fast-growing field of environmental
peacebuilding. It will also be a great resource for practitioners
working in these important fields.
With an annual growth rate of over 35%, wind is the fastest growing
energy source in the world today. As a result of intensive research
and developmental efforts, the technology of generating energy from
wind has significantly changed during the past five years. The book
brings together all the latest aspects of wind energy conversion
technology - right from the wind resource analysis to grid
integration of the wind generated electricity. The chapters are
contributed by academic and industrial experts having vast
experience in these areas. Each chapter begins with an introduction
explaining the current status of the technology and proceeds
further to the advanced lever to cater for the needs of readers
from different subject backgrounds. Extensive
bibliography/references appended to each chapter give further
guidance to the interested readers.
This book is a primer on economics of competition law by a
Commissioner based on cases of the Competition Commission of India
(CCI). It presents economic theories in lucid ways while providing
an in depth economic analysis of the cases dealt by CCI and in the
process, it blends the diversity of responses by including the
orders upheld by majority and minority. In essence. It is a unique
work that addresses the gap between competition law and economics.
This book includes basics of impedance spectroscopy technology,
substrate compatibility issues, integration capabilities, and
several applications in detection of different analytes. It helps
explore the importance of this technique in biological detection,
related micro/nano-fabricated platforms and respective integration,
biological synthesis schemes to carry out the detection, associated
challenges, and related future directions. The various
qualitative/quantitative findings of several modules are summarized
in the form of the detailed descriptions, schematics, and tables.
Features: Serves as a single source for exploring underlying
fundamental principles and the various biological applications
through impedance spectroscopy. Includes chapters based on
non-biological applications of impedance spectroscopy and IoT
enabled impedance spectroscopy-based methods for detection.
Discusses derivations, substrates, applications, and several
integrations. Describes micro/nanofabrication of impedance-based
biological sensors. Reviews updated integrations like digital
manufacturing and IoT. This book is aimed at researchers and
graduate students in material science, impedance spectroscopy and
biosensing.
Real-world issues can be translated into the language and concepts
of mathematics with the use of mathematical models. This book
provides these real-world examples, explores research challenges in
numerical treatment, and demonstrates how to create new numerical
methods for resolving problems. Theories and practical applications
in the sciences and engineering are also discussed. Students of
engineering and applied mathematics, as well as researchers and
engineers who use computers to solve problems numerically or
oversee those who do, will find this book focusing on advance
numerical techniques to solve linear and nonlinear differential
equations useful. Models guided by differential equations with
intuitive solutions can be used throughout engineering and the
sciences. Almost any changing system may be described by a set of
differential equations. They may be found just about anywhere you
look in fields including physics, engineering, economics,
sociology, biology, business, healthcare, etc. The nature of these
equations has been investigated by several mathematicians over the
course of hundreds of years and, consequently, numerous effective
methods for solving them have been created. It is often impractical
to find a purely analytical solution to a system described by a
differential equation because either the system itself is too
complex or the system being described is too vast. Numerical
approaches and computer simulations are especially helpful in such
systems.
The book offers insight into the healthcare system by exploring
emerging technologies and AI-based applications and implementation
strategies. It includes current developments for future directions
as well as covering the concept of the healthcare system along with
its ecosystem. Data-Centric AI Solutions and Emerging Technologies
in the Healthcare Ecosystem focuses on the mechanisms of proposing
and incorporating solutions along with architectural concepts,
design principles, smart solutions, decision-making process, and
intelligent predictions. It offers state-of-the-art approaches for
overall innovations, developments, and implementation of the smart
healthcare ecosystem and highlights medical signal and image
processing algorithms, healthcare-based computer vision systems,
and discusses explainable AI (XAI) techniques for healthcare. This
book will be useful to researchers involved in AI, IoT, Data, and
emerging technologies in the medical industry. It is also suitable
as supporting material for undergraduate and graduate-level courses
in related engineering disciplines.
This book provides an empirically formulated foundation for
conflict-sensitive conservation, a field in which the existing
literature relies primarily on anecdotal evidence. Seeking to
better understand the impact of conflict on the implementation and
outcomes of environmental projects, the Global Environment Facility
(GEF) Independent Evaluation Office and the Environmental Law
Institute undertook an evaluation of GEF support to fragile and
conflict-affected contexts. Following a qualitative and
quantitative analysis of documents from more than 4000 projects,
the research team discovered a statistically significant negative
correlation between a country’s Fragile States Index score and
the implementation quality of environmental projects in that
country. In this book, the evaluation and research team explain
these groundbreaking findings in detail, highlighting seven key
case studies: Afghanistan, Albertine Rift, Balkans, Cambodia,
Colombia, Lebanon and Mali. Drawing upon additional research and
interviews with GEF project implementation staff, the volume
illustrates the pathways through which conflict and fragility
frequently impact environmental projects. It also examines how
practitioners and sponsoring institutions can plan and implement
their projects to avoid or mitigate these issues and find
opportunities to promote peacebuilding through their environmental
interventions. Examining data from 164 countries and territories,
this innovative book will be of great interest to students and
scholars of environmental management, conservation, international
development and the fast-growing field of environmental
peacebuilding. It will also be a great resource for practitioners
working in these important fields.
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