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This book expands on the subject matter of 'Computational
Electromagnetics and Model-Based Inversion: A Modern Paradigm for
Eddy-Current Nondestructive Evaluation.' It includes (a)
voxel-based inversion methods, which are generalizations of
model-based algorithms; (b) a complete electromagnetic model of
advanced composites (and other novel exotic materials), stressing
the highly anisotropic nature of these materials, as well as giving
a number of applications to nondestructive evaluation; and (c) an
up-to-date discussion of stochastic integral equations and
propagation-of-uncertainty models in nondestructive evaluation. As
such, the book combines research started twenty-five years ago in
advanced composites and voxel-based algorithms, but published in
scattered journal articles, as well as recent research in
stochastic integral equations. All of these areas are of
considerable interest to the aerospace, nuclear power, civil
infrastructure, materials characterization and biomedical
industries. The book covers the topic of computational
electromagnetics in eddy-current nondestructive evaluation (NDE) by
emphasizing three distinct topics: (a) fundamental mathematical
principles of volume-integral equations as a subset of
computational electromagnetics, (b) mathematical algorithms applied
to signal-processing and inverse scattering problems, and (c)
applications of these two topics to problems in which real and
model data are used. It is therefore more than an academic exercise
and is valuable to users of eddy-current NDE technology in
industries as varied as nuclear power, aerospace, materials
characterization and biomedical imaging.
This book investigates male writers' use of female voices and
female writers' use of male voices in literature and theatre from
the 1850s to the present, examining where, how and why such
gendered crossings occur and what connections may be found between
these crossings and specific psychological, social, historical and
political contexts.
This edited collection presents a compilation of personal essays on
the role of public higher education in the lives of fourteen social
scientists who are graduates of the Graduate Center, the doctoral
granting institution at the City University of New York, the
nation's largest public urban university.
In the world of terrorism, knowledge is a critical asset. Recent
studies have revealed that, among international terrorists, there
is a global sharing of ideas, tactics, strategies, and lessons
learned. Teaching Terror examines this sharing of information in
the terrorist world, shaping our understanding of, and response to,
the global threat of terrorism. Chapters cover various aspects of
individual and organizational learning, some using a general level
of analysis and others presenting case studies of individual
terrorist groups. These groups teach each other through a variety
of means, including training camps and the Internet. Terrorist
networks are also learning organizations, drawing on situational
awareness, adapting their behavior, and, to give one example,
improving not just their use of improvised explosive devices, but
also rendering technology such as unmanned aerial vehicles and
satellite phones ineffective. This book provides a wealth of
insights on the transfer of knowledge in the world of terrorism,
and offers policy implications for counterterrorism professionals,
scholars, and policymakers.
Opening up contemporary debates about emotion in social and
historical contexts, Women and Ireland as Beckett's Lost Others
investigates the relationship between emotion, memory, exile and
language. Using a psychoanalytic framework, this monograph traces
discourses of mourning (Klein), melancholia (Freud) and abjection
(Kristeva) in Beckett's prose and drama, and demonstrates how
Ireland and women are often Beckett's objects of loss. This study
primarily focuses on Beckett's exploitation of ambivalent yet
conscious use of psychoanalytic concepts in his works on an
aesthetic level. It also addresses the impact of one of the key
events in Beckett's life, his self-imposed exile, on his poetics of
grieving. By exploring Beckett's ambiguous representations of his
homeland - Ireland - and women in general and the mother in
particular throughout his oeuvre, this study unveils his uneasy
relationship with them - an anxious part of his identity.
This volume will define the direction of eddy-current technology in
nondestructive evaluation (NDE) in the twenty-first century. It
describes the natural marriage of the computer to eddy-current NDE,
and its publication was encouraged by favorable responses from
workers in the nuclear-power and aerospace industries. It will be
used by advanced students and practitioners in the fields of
computational electromagnetics, electromagnetic inverse-scattering
theory, nondestructive evaluation, materials evaluation and
biomedical imaging, among others, and will be based on our
experience in applying the subject of computational
electromagnetics to these areas, as manifested by our recent
research and publications. Finally, it will be a reference to
future monographs on advanced NDE that are being contemplated by
our colleagues and others. Its importance lies in the fact that it
will be the first book to show that advanced computational methods
can be used to solve practical, but difficult, problems in
eddy-current NDE. In fact, in many cases these methods are the only
things available for solving the problems. The book will cover the
topic of computational electromagnetics in eddy-current
nondestructive evaluation (NDE) by emphasizing three distinct
topics: (a) fundamental mathematical principles of volume-integral
equations as a subset of computational electromagnetics, (b)
mathematical algorithms applied to signal-processing and inverse
scattering problems, and (c) applications of these two topics to
problems in which real and model data are used. This will make the
book more than an academic exercise; we expect it to be valuable to
users of eddy-current NDE technology in industries as varied as
nuclear power, aerospace, materials characterization and biomedical
imaging. We know of no other book on the market that covers this
material in the manner in which we will present it, nor are there
any books, to our knowledge, that apply this material to actual
test situations that are of importance to the industries cited. It
will be the first book to actually define the modern technology of
eddy-current NDE, by showing how mathematics and the computer will
solve problems more effectively than current analog practice.
Two international policy analysts scrutinize the increasingly
important operative and support roles women play in various
terrorist organizations around the world. Women as Terrorists:
Mothers, Recruiters, and Martyrs is the first post-September 11
book to examine women's multifarious roles in terrorist
organizations of all stripes around the world. It covers political,
religious, ethno-separatist, and Maoist groups in countries as
diverse as Iraq, Palestine, Chechnya, Sri Lanka, Colombia, South
Africa, the Philippines, and Northern Ireland. Modeling terrorist
organizations as purposive organizations that depend for support,
recruitment, and rationale on a culturally defined community of
sympathizers, the authors explore why women become involved in
terrorist groups, how terrorist leaders turn the societal
attributes of women to advantage in designing terrorist campaigns,
and how women fight for the right to assume strategic and combat
roles in terrorist groups. The authors conclude with a review and
projection of the rapidly evolving trends in the use of women in
terrorist organizations, paying particular attention to al-Qaeda
and its affiliated groups and considering the implications of their
findings for counterterrorist strategies.
In the world of terrorism, knowledge is a critical asset. Recent
studies have revealed that, among international terrorists, there
is a global sharing of ideas, tactics, strategies, and lessons
learned. Teaching Terror examines this sharing of information in
the terrorist world, shaping our understanding of, and response to,
the global threat of terrorism. Chapters cover various aspects of
individual and organizational learning, some using a general level
of analysis and others presenting case studies of individual
terrorist groups. These groups teach each other through a variety
of means, including training camps and the Internet. Terrorist
networks are also learning organizations, drawing on situational
awareness, adapting their behavior, and, to give one example,
improving not just their use of improvised explosive devices, but
also rendering technology such as unmanned aerial vehicles and
satellite phones ineffective. This book provides a wealth of
insights on the transfer of knowledge in the world of terrorism,
and offers policy implications for counterterrorism professionals,
scholars, and policymakers.
First published in 1996. With so much information available today
in the area of child abuse, figuring out where to begin quickly
becomes overwhelming. But the Spectrum of Child Abuse stands out
from current literature in its comprehensiveness and balance. Dr.
Oates presents a detailed, thoroughly referenced overview of the
entire field- rather than focusing exclusively on one particular
professional viewpoint or facet of the problem. The chapters
encompass physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse and
neglect. For each of these areas, the text offers a clear
historical perspective in addition to pertinent data on incidence
and epidemiology, contributing factors, assessment, treatment and
prevention. Moreover, a wealth of case studies underscores the
important and meaning of various intervention strategies.
Now is a critical time in pediatric informatics. As information
technologies-electronic health records (EHRs), personal health
records (PHRs), computerized physician order entry (CPOE)-and
standards (HL7) are developed to improve the quality of health
care, it is imperative for policy makers and pediatricians to be
aware of their impact on pediatric care and child health. Informed
child advocates must be at the planning table as national and
regional health information networks are developed to insure the
unique health care needs of children are being met.
Pediatric Informatics: Computer Applications in Child Health is
a current digest of the important trends in pediatric informatics,
written by leading experts in the field. This book explores how the
management of biomedical data, information, and knowledge can
optimize and advance child health. The contributors investigate the
specific importance of pediatric informatics is derived from the
biological, psychological, social and cultural needs that the
distinguish children from other populations. These distinctions
create complexities in the management of pediatric data and
information that make children a vulnerable population and require
the development of a new body of knowledge in pediatric
informatics.
This edited collection presents a compilation of personal essays on
the role of public higher education in the lives of fourteen social
scientists who are graduates of the Graduate Center, the doctoral
granting institution at the City University of New York, the
nation's largest public urban university.
Healthcare Information Management Systems, 4th edition, is a
comprehensive volume addressing the technical, organizational and
management issues confronted by healthcare professionals in the
selection, implementation and management of healthcare information
systems. With contributions from experts in the field, this book
focuses on topics such as strategic planning, turning a plan into
reality, implementation, patient-centered technologies, privacy,
the new culture of patient safety and the future of technologies in
progress. With the addition of many new chapters, the 4th Edition
is also richly peppered with case studies of implementation. The
case studies are evidence that information technology can be
implemented efficiently to yield results, yet they do not overlook
pitfalls, hurdles, and other challenges that are encountered.
Designed for use by physicians, nurses, nursing and medical
directors, department heads, CEOs, CFOs, CIOs, COOs, and healthcare
informaticians, the book aims to be a indispensible reference.
This volume will define the direction of eddy-current technology in
nondestructive evaluation (NDE) in the twenty-first century. It
describes the natural marriage of the computer to eddy-current NDE,
and its publication was encouraged by favorable responses from
workers in the nuclear-power and aerospace industries. It will be
used by advanced students and practitioners in the fields of
computational electromagnetics, electromagnetic inverse-scattering
theory, nondestructive evaluation, materials evaluation and
biomedical imaging, among others, and will be based on our
experience in applying the subject of computational
electromagnetics to these areas, as manifested by our recent
research and publications. Finally, it will be a reference to
future monographs on advanced NDE that are being contemplated by
our colleagues and others. Its importance lies in the fact that it
will be the first book to show that advanced computational methods
can be used to solve practical, but difficult, problems in
eddy-current NDE. In fact, in many cases these methods are the only
things available for solving the problems. The book will cover the
topic of computational electromagnetics in eddy-current
nondestructive evaluation (NDE) by emphasizing three distinct
topics: (a) fundamental mathematical principles of volume-integral
equations as a subset of computational electromagnetics, (b)
mathematical algorithms applied to signal-processing and inverse
scattering problems, and (c) applications of these two topics to
problems in which real and model data are used. This will make the
book more than an academic exercise; we expect it to be valuable to
users of eddy-current NDE technology in industries as varied as
nuclear power, aerospace, materials characterization and biomedical
imaging. We know of no other book on the market that covers this
material in the manner in which we will present it, nor are there
any books, to our knowledge, that apply this material to actual
test situations that are of importance to the industries cited. It
will be the first book to actually define the modern technology of
eddy-current NDE, by showing how mathematics and the computer will
solve problems more effectively than current analog practice.
Now is a critical time in pediatric informatics. As information
technologies-electronic health records (EHRs), personal health
records (PHRs), computerized physician order entry (CPOE)-and
standards (HL7) are developed to improve the quality of health
care, it is imperative for policy makers and pediatricians to be
aware of their impact on pediatric care and child health. Informed
child advocates must be at the planning table as national and
regional health information networks are developed to insure the
unique health care needs of children are being met. Pediatric
Informatics: Computer Applications in Child Health is a current
digest of the important trends in pediatric informatics, written by
leading experts in the field. This book explores how the management
of biomedical data, information, and knowledge can optimize and
advance child health. The contributors investigate the specific
importance of pediatric informatics is derived from the biological,
psychological, social and cultural needs that the distinguish
children from other populations. These distinctions create
complexities in the management of pediatric data and information
that make children a vulnerable population and require the
development of a new body of knowledge in pediatric informatics.
"A fresh lens for viewing Jacob Lawrence's art: through the
perspective of teens of color. . . . An invaluable resource
amplifying marginalized teen voices and conveying Lawrence's
relevance to their own lives." -Kirkus Reviews In the mid-1950s, as
Brown v. Board of Education felled the ideology of "separate but
equal," the great African-American artist Jacob Lawrence saw the
need for a version of American history that reckoned with its
complexities and contradictions yet was shared by all its citizens.
The result was his monumental work Struggle . . . from the History
of the American People. Lawrence, the best known black American
artist of the 20th century, developed the series of thirty panels,
each measuring 12 x 16 inches, over the course of two years.
Lawrence created the panels as history you could hold in your hands
and intended to reproduce the images in a book that he never
realized. The paintings depict signal moments in the American
Revolution and the early decades of the American republic, and
feature the words and actions of founding fathers, enslaved people,
women, and Native Americans. In January 2020, the Peabody Essex
Museum in Salem, Massachusetts, is mounting the landmark
exhibition, Jacob Lawrence: The American Struggle. The show, which
unites the panels in one place for the first time in nearly half a
century, then travels to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New
York, the Birmingham Museum of Art in Alabama, the Seattle Art
Museum, and the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., on a
two-year national tour. In the spirit of Lawrence's project, this
collection includes brief interpretive texts written by teens in
response to the Struggle series. This illustrated book features a
chorus of thirty singular young adult voices expressing how
Lawrence and his Struggle series speaks to them on a personal,
emotional level. The young writers come from a broad variety of
races and ethnicities, nationalities, religions, genders,
sexualities, and abilities, and underrepresented voices. As Jacob
Lawrence mined American history to reflect upon events he saw
happening around him in segregation-era America, these young adults
use these panels to comment on their experiences in today's
America.
Suicide and martyrdom are closely intertwined with Korean social
and political processes. In this first book-length study of the
evolving ideals of honorable death and martyrdom from the Choson
Dynasty (1392-1910) to contemporary South Korea, interdisciplinary
essays explore the changing ways in which Korean historical agents
have considered what constitutes a sociopolitically meaningful
death and how the surviving community should remember such events.
Among the topics covered are the implications of women's chaste
suicides and men's righteous killings in the evolving
Confucian-influenced social order of the latter half of the Choson
Dynasty; changing nation-centered constructions of sacrifice and
martyrdom put forth by influential intellectual figures in
mid-twentieth-century South Korea, which were informed by the
politics of postcolonial transition and Cold War ideology; and the
decisive role of martyrdom in South Korea's interlinked democracy
and labor movements, including Chun Tae-il's self-immolation in
1970, the loss of hundreds of lives during the Kwangju Uprising of
1980, and the escalation of protest suicides in the 1980s and early
1990s.
With so much information available today in the area of child abuse, figuring out where to begin quickly becomes overwhelming. But The Spectrum of Child Abuse stands out from the current literature in its comprehensiveness and balance. Dr Oates presents a detailed, thoroughly referenced overview of the entire field, rather than focusing exclusively on one particular professional viewpoint or facet of the problem. The chapters encompass physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, and neglect. For each of these areas, the text offers a clear historical perspective in addition to pertinent data on incidence and epidemiology, contributing factors, assessment, treatment and prevention. Moreover, a wealth of case studies underscores the importance and meaning of various intervention strategies. Clearly, child abuse is an area that demands attention. We need to find ways to care for the children themselves, and we need to be able to identify the long-term consequences for both family and society if we are to intervene effectively. Even with progress to date, the work remaining to be done is formidable. With The Spectrum of Child Abuse, clinicians and caregivers at every level have an easily accessible, straightforward discussion that will serve as the foundation for a new generation of investigations.
Related link: Free Email Alerting
Suicide and martyrdom are closely intertwined with Korean social
and political processes. In this first book-length study of the
evolving ideals of honorable death and martyrdom from the Choson
Dynasty (1392-1910) to contemporary South Korea, interdisciplinary
essays explore the changing ways in which Korean historical agents
have considered what constitutes a sociopolitically meaningful
death and how the surviving community should remember such events.
Among the topics covered are the implications of women's chaste
suicides and men's righteous killings in the evolving
Confucian-influenced social order of the latter half of the Choson
Dynasty; changing nation-centered constructions of sacrifice and
martyrdom put forth by influential intellectual figures in
mid-twentieth-century South Korea, which were informed by the
politics of postcolonial transition and Cold War ideology; and the
decisive role of martyrdom in South Korea's interlinked democracy
and labor movements, including Chun Tae-il's self-immolation in
1970, the loss of hundreds of lives during the Kwangju Uprising of
1980, and the escalation of protest suicides in the 1980s and early
1990s.
-Richly illustrated; 109 illustrations, 57 in color -Cover a wide
range of diagnostic and theraputic techniques, i.e. MRI, PET,
surgical treatment, radiation therapy
This book investigates male writers' use of female voices and
female writers' use of male voices in literature and theatre from
the 1850s to the present, examining where, how and why such
gendered crossings occur and what connections may be found between
these crossings and specific psychological, social, historical and
political contexts.
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