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Smart textiles are materials and structures that sense and react to
environmental conditions or stimuli, and their integration into
protective clothing has led to the development of products with
greatly enhanced protective capabilities in hazardous situations.
Smart textiles for protection provides a comprehensive analysis of
smart materials used in producing protective textiles, and explores
a wide range of end-use protective applications.
Part one reviews smart materials and technologies. Beginning with
an overview of smart textiles for protection, this section goes on
to discuss types of materials, surface treatments and the use of
nanofibres and smart barrier membranes. The application of sensors,
actuators and computer systems in smart protective textiles is
explored, followed by a review of biomimetic approaches to design.
Part two investigates specific applications of smart textiles for
protection. Smart technology for personal protective equipment and
clothing, smart protective textiles for older people and smart
high-performance textiles for protection in construction and
geotechnical applications are all discussed in depth, as is the use
of smart textiles in the protection of armoured vehicles and in
protective clothing for fire fighters and first responders. The
final chapter describes recent advances in chemical and biological
protective clothing.
With its distinguished editor and international team of expert
contributors, Smart textiles for protection is an essential guide
for all those involved in the design, development and application
of protective smart textiles.
Provides a comprehensive analysis of smart materials used in
producing protective textiles, and explores a wide range of end-use
protective applicationsDiscusses types of materials, surface
treatments and the use of nanofibres and smart barrier membranes as
well as the application of sensors, actuators and computer systems
in smart protective textilesInvestigates specific applications of
smart textiles for protection, including smart high-performance
textiles for protection in construction and geotechnical
applications
Covering the entire spectrum of this fast-changing field,
Diagnostic Imaging: Head and Neck, fourth edition, is an invaluable
resource for neuroradiologists, general radiologists, and
trainees-anyone who requires an easily accessible, highly visual
reference on today's head and neck imaging. Dr. Philip R. Chapman
and his team of highly regarded experts provide up-to-date
information on recent advances in disease identification, imaging
techniques, and tumor staging to help you make informed decisions
at the point of care. The text is lavishly illustrated, delineated,
and referenced, making it a useful learning tool as well as a handy
reference for daily practice. Serves as a one-stop resource for key
concepts and information on head and neck imaging, including a
wealth of new material and content updates throughout Features more
than 2,800 illustrations including radiologic images, full-color
illustrations, clinical and gross pathology photographs, and
histology photographs, as well as an additional 2,200 digital
images online Features numerous new chapters and updates from cover
to cover including changes to staging of HPV-related/p16(+)
oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma; new metastatic disease
imaging recommendations, protocols, and treatments; and the latest
knowledge on the genetics of various congenital conditions and
syndromes Reflects new Lugano and WHO classifications for staging
lymphomas; updates in the AJCC Cancer Staging Manual, 8th Edition;
and updates from the 2018 ISSVA Classification regarding avoidance
of outdated and inappropriate terminology and nomenclature that can
lead to misdiagnosis or inappropriate treatments Uses bulleted,
succinct text and highly templated chapters for quick comprehension
of essential information at the point of care Enhanced eBook
version included with purchase, which allows you to access all of
the text, figures, and references from the book on a variety of
devices
The purpose of the preface is to explain the book's objectives and
how to use it; give warnings, disclaimers, and the like.* The main
objective of Protein and Peptide Analysis by Mass Spec trometry is
quite straightforward-to present authoritative, up-to-date, and
practical accounts of the use of mass spectrometry in the analysis
of pep tides and proteins. How to use it? Every reader will have
their own particular interests and will surely be drawn toward the
chapters that cover these interests. Within the remaining chapters,
however, techniques are described with analytical possibilities
that such a reader can then only guess at. So, read the book fully.
Again, as is customary in the Methods in Molecular Biology series,
the chapter format (Introduction, Materials, Methods, and Notes)
allows the authors to introduce the techniques, to explain their
relevance and applicability, and, above all, to provide
detail-detail that represents each author's accumulated experience
and enables the reader to use and benefit from these methods. So,
read the book fully, and read it diligently. Warnings and
disclaimers: Mass spectrometry today offers the pro tein chemist
ready access to a wealth of information that is otherwise avail
able only with great difficulty, or perhaps not at all. With this
goal in sight, any warnings and disclaimers will almost surely be
ignored. So, a warning anyway; the use of mass spectrometry might
be habit forming."
Scientific developments have increasingly been transforming our
understanding of the place of human beings in nature. The study of
humanity, carried out in a variety of disciplines from anthropology
and paleontology to genetics and neurosciences, is shedding new
light on the origins and biological bases of human nature and
culture. The findings of these relatively new hyphenated sciences
have profound implications for the interpretation of human behavior
within spiritual life no less than the material culture. This fine
compendium serves as a splendid introduction to sociobiology.
Sociobiology, now frequently being referred to by many as
evolutionary psychology and evolutionary anthropology, first
offered a radically selfish and individualist account of human
nature. However, later researchers have moved away from such
reductionisms, and into a sense of the common good that
characterizes many species, and human brings as well. The emergence
of discourses on the role of religion in understanding behavior in
terms of moral considerations that permit people to live in
community contexts has generated a lively examination within the
new social sciences on the source of instinct, impulse,
intelligence and interest. This compendium is clearly etched in a
new and generous vision of human behavior that is at the same time
rooted in the best of the current social sciences. "The Origins and
Nature of" Sociality comes out of a symposium sponsored by the
Program for Dialogue on Science, Ethics, and Religion of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science, and co-chaired
by the editors. The contributors focus on the current status of
research on sociality and the evolution of cooperative and
altruistic behavior in nonhuman and human primates. They examine
questions related to the evolution, cultural viability, and
hormonal underpinnings of human sociality in specific detail, and
describe patterns of sociality among nonhuman primates that many
shed light on human social behavior. "Robert W. Sussman" is
professor of anthropology, at Washington University in St. Louis.
His work has appeared, among other places, in "The American Journal
of Physical Anthropology, Folia Primatology," and Zygon. "Audrey R.
Chapman" serves as director of the Science and Human Rights program
of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, in
Washington D.C.
This volume brings together experts in the fields of information
ethics and health care to explore the impactions of these
challenges as they impact what kind of care will be available, who
will receive health care, and how the care is monitored. This
fascinating study grew out of a project sponsored by the American
Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).
Written by a respected authority on human rights and public health,
this book delivers an in-depth review of the challenges of
neoliberal models and policies for realizing the right to health.
The author expertly explores the integration of social determinants
into the right to health along with the methodologies and findings
of social medicine and epidemiology. The author goes on to
challenge the way that health care is currently provided and makes
the case that achieving universal health coverage will require
fundamental health systems reforms.
The purpose of the preface is to explain the book's objectives and
how to use it; give warnings, disclaimers, and the like.* The main
objective of Protein and Peptide Analysis by Mass Spec trometry is
quite straightforward-to present authoritative, up-to-date, and
practical accounts of the use of mass spectrometry in the analysis
of pep tides and proteins. How to use it? Every reader will have
their own particular interests and will surely be drawn toward the
chapters that cover these interests. Within the remaining chapters,
however, techniques are described with analytical possibilities
that such a reader can then only guess at. So, read the book fully.
Again, as is customary in the Methods in Molecular Biology series,
the chapter format (Introduction, Materials, Methods, and Notes)
allows the authors to introduce the techniques, to explain their
relevance and applicability, and, above all, to provide
detail-detail that represents each author's accumulated experience
and enables the reader to use and benefit from these methods. So,
read the book fully, and read it diligently. Warnings and
disclaimers: Mass spectrometry today offers the pro tein chemist
ready access to a wealth of information that is otherwise avail
able only with great difficulty, or perhaps not at all. With this
goal in sight, any warnings and disclaimers will almost surely be
ignored. So, a warning anyway; the use of mass spectrometry might
be habit forming.
As nations throughout the world emerge from periods of human rights
abuses, systematic oppression, and collective violence, truth
commissions have become indispensable to political transition. Such
commissions are established as temporary bodies to investigate
human rights violations and patterns of violence that occurred over
a specified period of time. Their goal is to document conflict-to
recover the truth-as a first step toward healing. Of the truth
commissions to date, the South African Truth and Reconciliation
Commission (TRC) has most effectively captured public attention
throughout the world and provided the model for succeeding bodies.
Although other truth commissions had preceded its establishment,
the TRC had a far more expansive mandate: to go beyond
truth-finding to promote national unity and reconciliation, to
facilitate the granting of amnesty to those who made full factual
disclosure, to restore the human and civil dignity of victims by
providing them an opportunity to tell their own stories, and to
make recommendations to the president on measures to prevent future
human rights violations. Truth and Reconciliation in South Africa
provides a comprehensive evaluation of the TRC process and its
impact on South African society. Based on a six-year study, the
volume draws on an analysis of the victim hearings, amnesty
hearings, institutional hearings, public opinion survey data, and
extensive interviews with a range of TRC staff, people who worked
with the commission, and members of different communities affected
by the TRC. Truth and Reconciliation in South Africa raises
fundamental questions about the TRC, indeed about all truth
commissions, their abilities to realize the mandates assigned to
them, and particularly to achieve the difficult balance between
truth-finding and reconciliation.
Arguing that health care should be a human right rather than a
commodity, the distinguished contributors to this volume call for a
new social covenant establishing a right to a standard of health
care consistent with society's level of resources. By linking
rights with limits, they offer a framework for seeking national
consensus on a cost-conscious standard of universal medical care.
The authors identify the policy implications of recognizing and
implementing such a right and develop specific criteria to measure
the success of health care reform from a human rights
perspective.
"Health Care Reform" also offers specific and timely criticism
of managed competition and its offspring, the Clinton plan for
health care reform. Because health care reform will inevitably be
an ongoing process of assessment and revision -- especially since
managed competition has not been implemented elsewhere -- this book
will last beyond the moment by providing vital standards to guide
the future evolution of the health care system.
Effective fruit production requires general knowledge of fruit
husbandry such as nutrition, propagation, pruning and training,
effects of climate and crop protection as well as specific
cultivation techniques for each fruit. Fully revised and expanded
to include organic fruit production, this new edition provides a
thorough introduction to the cultivation of fruit found throughout
the temperate and subtropical regions of the world.
Written by a respected authority on human rights and public health,
this book delivers an in-depth review of the challenges of
neoliberal models and policies for realizing the right to health.
The author expertly explores the integration of social determinants
into the right to health along with the methodologies and findings
of social medicine and epidemiology. The author goes on to
challenge the way that health care is currently provided and makes
the case that achieving universal health coverage will require
fundamental health systems reforms.
The Laguna Madre is the only hypersaline coastal lagoon on the
North American continent and only one of five worldwide. The lagoon
is renowned for its vast seagrass meadows, huge wintering redhead
population, and bountiful fishing grounds. In 2000, the Nature
Conservancy, whose mission is the conservation of biodiversity
through protection of habitat, recognized the need to amass all
known information about the Laguna Madre and implement a
science-based conservation agenda. From those efforts came the
first edition of this book. Now completely revised and updated,
this second edition of The Laguna Madre of Texas and
Tamaulipas is the culmination of two decades of additional
research and continued conservation efforts in the
region. Nearly 100 years of literature on the Laguna Madre
and surrounding environments has been synthesized here. With 150
figures and illustrations, the book takes a broad and comprehensive
look at both the Texan and Tamaulipan Laguna Madre. The value of
this book for scientists, conservationists, resource managers, and
policy makers involved in the future of the Texas and Mexico coasts
is clear. Coastal residents, birders, anglers, and nature lovers
who want to learn about and take care of the Laguna Madre will find
this to be an indispensable guide.
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Mute Dog (Paperback)
Chloe M Chapman, Madison R Chapman; Illustrated by Paul Nash
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R383
Discovery Miles 3 830
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A non-fiction account of personal travels, growth and experiences
through vacationing.
Behind a thatched hut, a birthing woman bleeds to death only
minutes from "life-saving" maternity care. Chapman begins with the
deceptively simple question, "Why don't women in Mozambique use
existing prenatal and maternity services?" then widens her analysis
to include a whole universe of cultural, political, and economic
forces. Fusing cultural anthropology with political economy,
Chapman vividly demonstrates how neoliberalism and the increasing
importance of the market have led to changing sexual and
reproductive strategies for women.
Pregnant herself during her research, Chapman interviewed 83 women
during pregnancy and postpartum. She discovered that the social
relations surrounding traditional Shona practices, Christian faith
healing, and Western biomedical treatments are as important to
women's choices as the efficacy of the therapies.
Behind a thatched hut, a birthing woman bleeds to death only
minutes from "life-saving" maternity care. Chapman begins with the
deceptively simple question, "Why don't women in Mozambique use
existing prenatal and maternity services?" then widens her analysis
to include a whole universe of cultural, political, and economic
forces. Fusing cultural anthropology with political economy,
Chapman vividly demonstrates how neoliberalism and the increasing
importance of the market have led to changing sexual and
reproductive strategies for women.
Pregnant herself during her research, Chapman interviewed 83 women
during pregnancy and postpartum. She discovered that the social
relations surrounding traditional Shona practices, Christian faith
healing, and Western biomedical treatments are as important to
women's choices as the efficacy of the therapies.
The theme of this issue of "Vera Lex" is the relationship between
natural law theory and Asian philosophy and religion. (Legal
Reference/Law Profession)
With vast new scientific and technological powers, we face
unprecedented choices for which traditional ethics provide little
direct guidance. What role can the religious community play in
addressing the ethical and theological issues that even science now
acknowledges as urgent? Chapman's work forges a method for
integrating ethical reasoning with scientific data, focusing on
four issues -- cloning, genetic engineering, patenting of life, and
environmental alteration. For each, she reviews the work of
religious thinkers, assesses the roles of the religious community,
considers relevant confessional differences, determines how
traditional theological and ethical concepts can be clarified,
reformulated, and "operationalized" to meet the questions, and
finally she formulates helpful methodological options. She calls
for a scientifically informed religious ethics built dialogically
from concepts in both science and theology.
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