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Students preparing for careers in various medical professions will
value this highly detailed and profusely illustrated reference
guide. Fourteen chapters show, label, and define all human body
regions and parts and describe physiological processes. The chapter
titles are--
* Body Overview * Cells and Tissues * The Skeletal System * The
Muscular System * The Nervous System * Special Sense Organs * The
Lymphatic System * The Circulatory System * The Respiratory System
* The Digestive System * The Urinary System * The Endocrine System
* The Reproductive System
The book's fifteenth and final chapter provides students with a
workbook that presents labeled line illustrations of the human
body's muscle and skeletal systems. Students are encouraged to
color in individual muscles and bones as an effective aid to
memorizing the names and locations of each part. An attractive and
instructive supplementary feature is a separate section of eight
full-color acetate overlay sheets that dramatically illustrate body
systems. More than 500 color illustrations.
MRI/DTI Atlas of the Human Brainstem in Transverse and Sagittal
Planes presents a detailed view of the human brainstem in DTI/MRI.
It is the first ever MRI or histological atlas to present detailed
diagrams of sagittal views of the brainstem. Presenting data of
unprecedented quality, images are juxtaposed with detailed diagrams
in the transverse and sagittal planes. The atlas features a 50
micron resolution for the GRE and 200 microns for the FAC and DWI,
8000 times higher than that seen in a clinical MRI and 1000 times
higher than that seen in a clinical DTI scan, all based on one
brain. This atlas is important for neuroscientists, neurosurgeons,
pathologists, anatomists, neurophysiologists, radiologists,
radiotherapists (e.g., for cyberknife guidance), and graduate
students in neuroscience.
Australian marsupials represent a parallel adaptive radiation to
that seen among placental mammals. This great natural experiment
has produced a striking array of mammals with structural and
behavioural features echoing those seen among primates, rodents,
carnivores, edentates and ungulates elsewhere in the world. Many of
these adaptations involve profound evolutionary changes in the
nervous system, and occurred in isolation from those unfolding
among placental mammals. Ashwell provides the first comprehensive
review of the scientific literature on the structure and function
of the nervous system of Australian marsupials. The book also
includes the first comprehensive delineated atlases of brain
structure in a representative diprotodont marsupial (the tammar
wallaby) and a representative polyprotodont marsupial (the
stripe-faced dunnart). For those interested in brain development,
the book also provides the first comprehensive delineated atlas of
brain development in a diprotodont marsupial (the tammar wallaby)
during the critical first 4 weeks of pouch life.
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Paperback
(2)
R391
R362
Discovery Miles 3 620
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