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Biological Science: Exploring the Science of Life, Biomedical
Edition responds to the key needs of lecturers and their students
by placing a clear central narrative, carefully-structured active
learning, and confidence with quantitative concepts and scientific
enquiry central to its approach. With coverage tailored to the
needs of biomedical, medical, and neuroscience students, and with
an approach that fully supports flexible, self-paced learning, it
will set you on a path towards a deeper understanding of the key
concepts in biology, and a greater appreciation of biology as a
dynamic experimental science. Written by a team of dedicated and
passionate academics, and shaped by feedback from over 55
institutions, its straightforward narrative, reinforced by key
concept overview videos for every chapter, communicate key ideas
clearly: the right information is provided at the right time, and
at the right depth. Its pause and think features, self-check
quizzes, and graded end of chapter questions, augmented by
flashcards of key terms, directly support active learning. The
combination of narrative text and learning features promote a rich,
active learning experience: read, watch, and do. Its combination of
Quantitative Toolkits, Scientific Process panels, and the Life and
its Exploration chapters provide more insight and support than any
other general biology text; they prepare students to engage with
this quantitative and experimental discipline with confidence, and
set them on a path for success throughout their future studies.
Digital formats and resources Biological Science: Exploring the
Science of Life, Biomedial Edition is available for students and
institutions to purchase in a variety of formats. The enhanced
e-book is enriched with features that offer extra learning support:
www.oxfordtextbooks.co.uk/ebooks - Key concepts videos support
students from the start of every chapter and as they make their way
through every Module. - Self-check questions at the end of each
chapter section give students quick and formative feedback,
building their confidence and comprehension as they study and
revise. - Quantitative skills video screencasts help students to
master the foundational skills required by this discipline. -
Interactive figures give students the control they need to step
through, and gain mastery over, key concepts. - Per-chapter
flashcard glossaries help students to recall the key terms and
concepts on which further study can be built.
The ability to produce valid research has never been more crucial
to the academic community than it is today, but how do you go about
getting the funding for such projects? How do you identify which
funding organisations are likely to be sympathetic to your needs,
and convince them that they will benefit from funding you? Abby Day
Peters guides you step by step through the process of focusing your
research and identifying your funding partner to provide the very
best chance of success. But, perhaps more importantly, she also
goes on to explain how to build and maintain a relationship with
the partner, thereby assisting future research. In addition, the
book gives advice on writing and successful publication following
completion of the research project. The text is extremely lively
and enjoyable to read, with many valuable insights from both sides
of the funding process, and features real-life case studies and
interviews throughout.
This book offers a comprehensive overview of electronic dance music
(EDM) and club culture. To do so, it interlinks a broad range of
disciplines, revealing their (at times vastly) differing
standpoints on the same subject. Scholars from such diverse fields
as cultural studies, economics, linguistics, media studies,
musicology, philosophy, and sociology share their perspectives. In
addition, the book features articles by practitioners who have been
active on the EDM scene for many years and discuss issues like
gender and diversity problems in general, and the effects of
gentrification on club culture in Berlin. Although the book's main
focus is on Berlin, one of the key centers of EDM and club culture,
its findings can also be applied to other hotspots. Though
primarily intended for researchers and students, the book will
benefit all readers interested in obtaining an interdisciplinary
overview of research on electronic dance music.
Hormones play an integral part in the balance and workings of the
body. While many people are broadly aware of their existence, there
are many misconceptions and few are aware of the nature and
importance of the endocrine system. In this Very Short
Introduction, Martin Luck explains what hormones are, what they do,
where they come from, and how they work. He explains how the
endocrine system operates, highlighting the importance of hormones
in the regulation of water and salt in the body, how they affect
reproduction and our appetites, and how they help us adjust to
different environments, such as travel across time zones. In this
fresh and modern treatment, Luck also touches on the ethical and
moral issues surrounding research methods, testing on animals, and
hormone misuse. ABOUT THE SERIES: The Very Short Introductions
series from Oxford University Press contains hundreds of titles in
almost every subject area. These pocket-sized books are the perfect
way to get ahead in a new subject quickly. Our expert authors
combine facts, analysis, perspective, new ideas, and enthusiasm to
make interesting and challenging topics highly readable.
Now that you are approaching the final stages of your degree, have
you ever wondered how you're going to cope with writing your
dissertation? Apart from the practicalities of suddenly having to
think and work in a completely different, and more in-depth, way
trom before, how are you going to fit it in with the rest of your
work and also have a social life? Your Student Research Project
will show you how. This book gives you practical advice on how to
cope with your project and make a success of your studies. It: c is
written in clear, accessible language c provides a clear outline of
practical guidance on how to run your project, from thinking about
what topic to cover to the most effective way of presenting it c
explains how to work with your supervisor and the other important
people around you c shows you how to squeeze the maximum value from
the effort you put in c enables you to recognize how you have
changed in the process and c encourages you to exploit the skills
and experiences you have gained in the world beyond your degree. It
takes a different approach from other books on research methods
because it considers the project as only one part of your
existence. It concentrates on advice, ideas and examples while
still giving thought to how you will manage your work within a
crowded and exciting life. Above all, Your Student Research Project
helps you to keep track of where you are heading and to make the
right preparations for the future.
Biological Science: Exploring the Science of Life responds to the
key needs of lecturers and their students by placing a clear
central narrative, carefully-structured active learning, and
confidence with quantitative concepts and scientific enquiry
central to its approach. Written by a team of dedicated and
passionate academics, and shaped by feedback from over 55
institutions, its straightforward narrative, reinforced by key
concept overview videos for every chapter, communicate key ideas
clearly: the right information is provided at the right time, and
at the right depth. Its pause and think features, self-check
quizzes, and graded end of chapter questions, augmented by
flashcards of key terms, directly support active learning. The
combination of narrative text and learning features promote a rich,
active learning experience: read, watch, and do. Its combination of
Quantitative Toolkits, Scientific Process panels, and the Life and
its Exploration chapters provide more insight and support than any
other general biology text; they prepare students to engage with
this quantitative and experimental discipline with confidence, and
set them on a path for success throughout their future studies.
With coverage that spans the full scale of biological science -
from molecule to ecosystem - and with an approach that fully
supports flexible, self-paced learning, Biological Science:
Exploring the Science of Life will set you on a path towards a
deeper understanding of the key concepts in biology, and a greater
appreciation of biology as a dynamic experimental science. Digital
formats and resources Biological Science: Exploring the Science of
Life is available for students and institutions to purchase in a
variety of formats. The enhanced ebook is enriched with features
that offer extra learning support: www.oxfordtextbooks.co.uk/ebooks
- Key concepts videos support students from the start of every
chapter and as they make their way through every Module. -
Self-check questions at the end of each chapter section give
students quick and formative feedback, building their confidence
and comprehension as they study and revise. - Quantitative skills
video screencasts help students to master the foundational skills
required by this discipline. - Interactive figures give students
the control they need to step through, and gain mastery over, key
concepts. - Per-chapter flashcard glossaries help students to
recall the key terms and concepts on which further study can be
built.
This book offers a comprehensive overview of electronic dance music
(EDM) and club culture. To do so, it interlinks a broad range of
disciplines, revealing their (at times vastly) differing
standpoints on the same subject. Scholars from such diverse fields
as cultural studies, economics, linguistics, media studies,
musicology, philosophy, and sociology share their perspectives. In
addition, the book features articles by practitioners who have been
active on the EDM scene for many years and discuss issues like
gender and diversity problems in general, and the effects of
gentrification on club culture in Berlin. Although the book's main
focus is on Berlin, one of the key centers of EDM and club culture,
its findings can also be applied to other hotspots. Though
primarily intended for researchers and students, the book will
benefit all readers interested in obtaining an interdisciplinary
overview of research on electronic dance music.
Dieser Band thematisiert nach der Verleihung des Titels "UNESCO
City of Music" an Hannover und Mannheim das Thema "Musik und
Stadte" mit Beitragen zu konkreten Musikstrategien von Stadten wie
Berlin, London oder Stockholm, internationalen Vergleichen der
Musikfoerderung sowie Stadten als narratives Element in der Musik.
Neben Beitragen zu Titel und Thema des Jahrbuchs werden aktuelle
rechtliche, politische, wirtschaftliche sowie asthetische Aspekte
von Musikwirtschaft und Musikkultur behandelt.
Big Data ist nicht nur Sache von Versicherungen und
Internetunternehmen. Auch fur die global agierende Musikwirtschaft,
die in den letzten knapp 20 Jahren bereits zahlreiche
Transformationen uberstehen musste, werden Sammlung, Analyse und
Verwertung grosser Datenmengen zu einem immer zentraleren Thema.
Das aktuelle Jahrbuch der Gesellschaft fur Musikwirtschafts- und
Musikkulturforschung versammelt hierzu unterschiedliche Ansatze und
Perspektiven auf das Thema Big Data und Musik: Von den
Datafication-Algorithmen Spotifys uber die rechtlichen
Implikationen von Music Data Mining, die Blockchain oder der
Nutzung von Big Data im Artist & Repertoire Management werden
zentrale Anwendungsfelder von Musik und Big Data in den Blick
genommen.
Arthur Milnes Marshall was a 19th-century scientist who gave
lectures addressing the biological debates of his time. They
covered topics including evolution, embryology, development and
inheritance, with Charles Darwin's name and those of other
important biologists distributed liberally throughout. Marshall was
a zoologist, embryologist, anatomist and Darwin enthusiast, as well
as an accomplished mountaineer and sportsman. He was a humanist, an
admired academic teacher and brilliant public educator. The
lectures reveal his passion for communicating his subject, to his
students and to the working men and women of Manchester, and they
provide a remarkable snapshot of the state of biological science at
the close of the 19th century. His death in 1893 aged only 41, on a
climbing expedition in the Lake District, left a fascinating time
capsule in the form of lectures from a critical transitional period
in the history of biology. Evolution by natural selection was the
established doctrine but genes were undefined, with Mendel's work
yet to be recognised. Embryology was suggesting recapitulation but
ancestry, genetics and missing links awaited liberation from
theoreticians and the stones of palaeontology. Microscopy was
flourishing and cell science was finding its feet, but DNA and
molecular science were far in the future. Had Marshall lived and
worked into the 20th century, these lectures would undoubtedly have
been superseded and forgotten. Instead, they reveal biology's
transformation from a descriptive exercise to an experimental
science, its rejection of purpose and design in evolution, and the
shift of its axis from continental Europe to Britain and the United
States. Professor Martin Luck discovered these lectures (published
by CF Marshall in two volumes shortly after his brother's death)
languishing in a university corridor. His careful curation,
introductions to each lecture and copious annotations on the
organisms, theories and scientists discussed, illuminate their
significance as prequels to modern biology. Marshall's own story
brings the lectures and their social context into sharp relief.
Biology in Transition will interest anyone curious about the
history of science, especially biology, evolution, genetics and its
19th-century pioneers.
Die Musikwirtschaftsforschung versteht sich als Inter-Disziplin an
der Schnittstelle wirtschaftlicher, kunstlerischer, insbesondere
musikalischer, kultureller, sozialer, rechtlicher, technologischer
aber auch daruber hinausgehender Entwicklungen, die zur Entstehung,
Verbreitung und Rezeption des Kulturgutes Musik beitragen. Der
Sammelband beinhaltet Beitrage mit unterschiedlichen
fachdisziplinaren und methodischen Zugangen und ist Ergebnis eines
Workshops, der Anfang Juli 2016 am Institut fur Kulturmanagement
und Kulturwissenschaft (IKM) der Universitat fur Musik und
darstellende Kunst Wien stattgefunden hat.
Der Band versteht Strassen als Phanomene, Orte oder Dispositive:
Durch praxeologische, inter- und transdisziplinare Zugriffe finden
sich sowohl Themen wie die Strassenmusik, beruhmte Strassennamen
selbst, sowie Marketingmassnahmen, welche auf Strassen und urbanen
Platzen ihre Wirkung entfalten. Die Beispiele der Artikel reichen
dabei von Zentral- und Ost-Europa bis nach Asien und Nordamerika.
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