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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.
Modelling: The Oculomotor Systems, Volume 269 in the Progress in
Brain Research serial highlights new advances in the field with
this new volume presenting interesting chapters on topics including
The function and phylogeny of eye movements, The behavior of
motoneurons, Statics of plant mechanics, Dynamics of plant
mechanics, The functional operation of the vestibulo-ocular reflex,
Basic framework of the vestibulo-ocular reflex, Oculomotor signals,
Signal processing in the vestibulo-ocular reflex, Plasticity and
repair of the vestibulo-ocular reflex, The behavior of the
optokinetic system, Models of the optokinetic system,
Neurophysiology of the optokinetic system, and much more.
This volume provides a comprehensive look into the innovative
methods used to explore the visual system. From the way the brain
processes vision, an imperative part of the human experience, to
the role eye movement plays in a range of questions concerning
visual perception, memory, attention, free will, and even
topological diagnoses, this in-depth handbook gives neurologists,
ophthalmologists, and neuro-ophthalmologists an invaluable tool to
help them better understand the visual system.
Disorders of the retinal and cerebral cortex, and those that
affect control of eye and lid movements are thoroughly discussed,
along with groundbreaking visual rehabilitative methods, and
chapters on individual parts of the visual system. Practitioners
will find a useful resource that lays out fundamental concepts,
while seamlessly summarizing clinical and laboratory methods for
neuro-ophthalmological evaluation.
The material is perfect for early-stage physicians or long
practicing specialists who wish to learn the latest developments in
the field.
* A comprehensive resource that explores the innovative methods
used to understand the visual system
* An in-depth study of how the brain processes vision, and the role
certain functions such as eye movement play in visual diagnosis and
memory
* Clinical and laboratory methods of evaluation that are perfect
for physicians and specialists in any stage of practice
Mathematical Modelling in Motor Neuroscience: State of the Art and
Translation to the Clinic. Ocular Motor Plant and Gaze
Stabilization Mechanisms, Volume 248, the latest release in the
Progress in Brain Research series, highlights new advances in the
field, with this new volume presenting interesting chapters on a
variety of topics, including Mathematical modeling in clinical and
basic motor neuroscience, The math of medicine - the computational
lessons learned from the human disease, Mathematical models - an
extension of the clinician's mind, From differential equation to
linear control systems: the study of the VOR, Closed lop and
nonlinear systems, State-space equations and learning, Integrators
and optimal control, and much more.
Mathematical Modelling in Motor Neuroscience: State of the Art and
Translation to the Clinic, Gaze Orienting Mechanisms and Disease,
Volume 249, the latest release in the Progress in Brain Research
series, highlights new advances in the field, with this new volume
presenting interesting chapters on a variety of topics, including
Sequential Bayesian updating, Maps and Sensorimotor Transformations
for Eye-Head Gaze Shifts: Role of the Midbrain Superior Colliculus,
Modeling Gaze Position-Dependent Opsoclonus, Eye Position-Dependent
Opsoclonus in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury, Saccades in Parkinson's
disease -- hypometric, slow, and maladaptive, Brainstem Neural
Circuits for Fixation and Generation of Saccadic Eye Movements, and
much more.
First published in 1971. The purpose of this study is to examine
the relationship which exists between the education services and
the leisure time of the people they attempt to serve. The author
explores education and provision for leisure and the problems of
schools, youth services and adult education in relation to this.
The case study of the leisure lives of young adults in a small
industrial village provides some illustration of the difficulties
of providing for leisure in non-urban areas. This title will be of
great interest to policy-makers and to students of Sociology and
Leisure Studies.
First published in 1971. The purpose of this study is to examine
the relationship which exists between the education services and
the leisure time of the people they attempt to serve. The author
explores education and provision for leisure and the problems of
schools, youth services and adult education in relation to this.
The case study of the leisure lives of young adults in a small
industrial village provides some illustration of the difficulties
of providing for leisure in non-urban areas. This title will be of
great interest to policy-makers and to students of Sociology and
Leisure Studies.
The monarchs of seventeenth-century Europe put a surprisingly high
priority on the abolition of dueling, seeing its eradication as an
important step from barbarism toward a rational state monopoly on
justice. But it was one thing to ban dueling and another to stop
it. Duelists continued to kill each other with swords or pistols in
significant numbers deep into the nineteenth century. In 1883
Maupassant called dueling "the last of our unreasonable customs."
As a dramatic and forbidden ritual from another age, the duel
retained a powerful hold on the public mind and, in particular, the
literary imagination. Many of the greatest names in Western
literature wrote about or even fought in duels, among them
Corneille, Moliere, Richardson, Rousseau, Pushkin, Dickens, Hugo,
Dumas, Twain, Conrad, Chekhov, and Mann. As John Leigh explains,
the duel was a gift as a plot device. But writers also sought to
discover in duels something more fundamental about human conflict
and how we face our fears of humiliation, pain, and death. The duel
was, for some, a social cause, a scourge to be mocked or lamented;
yet even its critics could be seduced by its risk and glamour. Some
conservatives defended dueling by arguing that the man of noble
bearing who cared less about living than living with honor was
everything that the contemporary bourgeois was not. The literary
history of the duel, as Touche makes clear, illuminates the
tensions that attended the birth of the modern world.
This volume of Progress in Brain Research is based on the
proceedings of a conference, "Using Eye Movements as an
Experimental Probe of Brain Function," held at the Charing Cross
Hospital Campus of Imperial College London, UK on 5th -6th
December, 2007 to honor Professor Jean Buttner-Ennever. With 87
contributions from international experts - both basic scientists
and clinicians - the volume provides many examples of how eye
movements can be used to address a broad range of research
questions. Section 1 focuses on extraocular muscle, highlighting
new concepts of proprioceptive control that involve even the
cerebral cortex. Section 2 comprises structural, physiological,
pharmacological, and computational aspects of brainstem mechanisms,
and illustrates implications for disorders as diverse as
opsoclonus, and congenital scoliosis with gaze palsy. Section 3
addresses how the cerebellum transforms neural signals into motor
commands, and how disease of such mechanisms may lead to ataxia and
disorders such as oculopalatal tremor. Section 4 deals with
sensory-motor processing of visual, vestibular, somatosensory, and
auditory inputs, such as are required for navigation, and gait.
Section 5 illustrates how eye movements, used in conjunction with
single-unit electrophysiology, functional imaging, transcranial
magnetic stimulation, and lesion studies have illuminated cognitive
processes, including memory, prediction, and even free will.
Section 6 includes 18 papers dealing with disorders ranging from
congenital to acquired forms of nystagmus, genetic and degenerative
neurological disorders, and treatments for nystagmus and motion
sickness.
* Clinicians will find important new information onthe substrate
for spinocerebellar ataxia, lat-onset Tay-Sachs disease, Huntington
disease, and pulvinar lesions
* Several series of papers address similar issues, providing a
coherent discussion of such topics as proprioception, short and
longer-term memory, and hereditary cerebellar ataxias
* Some articles concerning anatomic tracers, functional imaging,
and computational neuroscience are illustrated in color
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The Figaro Plays (Paperback)
Beaumarchais; Translated by John Wells; Edited by John Leigh
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R392
Discovery Miles 3 920
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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[Beaumarchais'] fame rests on Le Barbier de Seville (1775) and Le
Mariage de Figaro (1784), the only French plays which his
stage-struck century bequeathed to the international repertoire.
But his achievement has been adulterated, for 'Beaumarchais' has
long been the brand name of a product variously reprocessed by
Mozart, Rossini, and the score or so librettists and musicians who
have perpetuated his plots, his characters, and his name. The most
intriguing question of all has centered on his role as catalyst of
the Revolution. Was his impertinent barber the Sweeney Todd of the
Ancien Regime, the true begetter of the guillotine? . . .
Beaumarchais' plays have often seemed to need the same kind of
shoring up as his reputation, as though they couldn't stand on
their own without a scaffolding of good tunes. Yet, as John Wells'
lively and splendidly speakable translations of the Barber , the
Marriage , and A Mother's Guilt demonstrate, they need assistance
from no one. [Beaumarchais] thought of the three plays as a
trilogy. Taken together, they reflect, as John Leigh's commentaries
make clear, the Ancien Regime's unstoppable slide into revolution.
--David Coward in The London Review of Books
In his Philosophical Letters, Voltaire provides a pungent and often
satirical assessment of the religion, politics, science, and arts
of the England he observed during his nearly three-year exile. In
addition to the Letters, this edition provides a translation of
Voltaire's Proposal for a Letter about the English, a general
Introduction, chronology, notes, and bibliography.
John Leigh Smeathman Hatton (1865-1933) was a British mathematician
and educator. He worked for 40 years at a pioneering educational
project in East London that began as the People's Palace and
eventually became Queen Mary College in the University of London.
Hatton served as its Principal from 1908 to 1933. This book,
published in 1920, explores the relationship between imaginary and
real non-Euclidean geometry through graphical representations of
imaginaries under a variety of conventions. This relationship is of
importance as points with complex determining elements are present
in both imaginary and real geometry. Hatton uses concepts including
the use of co-ordinate methods to develop and illustrate this
relationship, and concentrates on the idea that the only
differences between real and imaginary points exist solely in
relation to other points. This clearly written volume exemplifies
the type of non-Euclidean geometry research current at the time of
publication.
This volume brings together work from leading researchers in the
fields of developmental disorders of binocular vision, strabismus,
and both infantile and acquired forms of nystagmus. It contains
four sections. The first section, Basic Concepts of Stable Vision
and Gaze, deals with psychophysical aspects of infantile forms of
nystagmus and the relative contributions of extraocular
proprioception and efference (corollary discharge). It also
contains an accessible review of current notions of spatial and
temporal visual functions and spatial constancy in infantile
nystagmus syndrome and latent nystagmus. The second section, New
Models and Techniques for Studying Gaze Stability, reviews animal
and development models for strabismus, amblyopia, and nystagmus. It
also contains novel optical methods for managing the visual
consequences of nystagmus and a study of the potential ill effects
of video displays on children's response to near viewing. The third
section, New Therapies for Congenital Nystagmus, presents basic
genetic studies and clinical trials of drug and surgical treatment
of those patients with infantile forms of nystagmus. The final
section, General Aspects of Normal and Abnormal Gaze Control, pulls
together a range of contributions dealing with normal gaze control,
infantile nystagmus, and acquired disorders of eye movements,
including new treatment measures. This book will be a valuable
resource for all scientists and practitioners interested in
developmental disorders of vision.
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The Figaro Plays (Hardcover)
Beaumarchais; Translated by John Wells; Edited by John Leigh
|
R1,140
R1,049
Discovery Miles 10 490
Save R91 (8%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
[Beaumarchais'] fame rests on Le Barbier de Seville (1775) and Le
Mariage de Figaro (1784), the only French plays which his
stage-struck century bequeathed to the international repertoire.
But his achievement has been adulterated, for 'Beaumarchais' has
long been the brand name of a product variously reprocessed by
Mozart, Rossini, and the score or so librettists and musicians who
have perpetuated his plots, his characters, and his name. The most
intriguing question of all has centered on his role as catalyst of
the Revolution. Was his impertinent barber the Sweeney Todd of the
Ancien Regime, the true begetter of the guillotine? . . .
Beaumarchais' plays have often seemed to need the same kind of
shoring up as his reputation, as though they couldn't stand on
their own without a scaffolding of good tunes. Yet, as John Wells'
lively and splendidly speakable translations of the Barber , the
Marriage , and A Mother's Guilt demonstrate, they need assistance
from no one. [Beaumarchais] thought of the three plays as a
trilogy. Taken together, they reflect, as John Leigh's commentaries
make clear, the Ancien Regime's unstoppable slide into revolution.
--David Coward in The London Review of Books
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
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