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Showing 1 - 11 of 11 matches in All Departments
The Environmental Protection Agency is a young and dynamic federal agency facing the challenges of modern environmental protection. The political controversies and social impacts of the agency are immense, involving courts, legislatures, and elected officials, and the effects of its actions are far reaching, affecting every single person in the United States. After a brief history of the agency, chapters describe its organization, programs, controversies, key events, notable people, and impact on society. Topics covered include the Exxon Valdez oil spill, Three Mile Island, and The Clean Air Act, as well as biographies on administrators Carol Browner, William Ruckelhaus, and Anne M. Gorsuch.
The Cognitive Psychology of Planning assesses recent advances in the scientific study of the cognitive processes involved in formulating, evaluating and selecting a sequence of thoughts and actions to achieve a goal. Approaches discussed range from those which look at planning in terms of problem-solving behaviour to those which look at how we control thoughts and actions within the frameworks of attention, working memory or executive function. Topics covered include: simple to complex tasks, well- and ill-defined problems and the effects of age and focal brain damage on planning. This survey of recent work in the cognitive psychology and cognitive neuropsychology of planning will be an invaluable resource for anyone studying or researching in the fields of thinking and reasoning, memory and attention.
Alzheimer's disease can be thought of as a multi-faceted
neuropsychological disorder, with diverse impairments in cognitive
abilities, such as attention, memory, language and executive
functioning. Over the last decade cognitive neuropsychology has
provided a far richer understanding of these impairments, and this
book describes these advances, placing them in their clinical
context. The first section deals with background theoretical and
clinical issues, such as the extent to which Alzheimer's disease
can be considered as a single entity or whether it is more fruitful
to explore the neuropsychology of individual patients. It considers
the diagnostic aspects of Alzheimer's disease, the natural history
of the disease, how it progresses over time and the characteristics
of the prodromal phase. A second section, the core of the book,
covers major cognitive functions and delineates how impairments can
be differentiated from each other. A third portion integrates what
is known about cognitive decline with the underlying
neurobiological basis, including pathological structural brain
abnormality and neuropharmacological changes. A final section
explores the clinical implications of the research with an overview
of the neuropsychological assessment of this disease, cognitive
approaches to management, and neurobiological treatment.
A girl flees the demons that her mother made. A man knows when the world will die. A famous hat that brings evil to life. An eyeball in the hand is worth two in the head. A hotel that loves a man. A mayor who is worse than anything undead. Torn from the subconscious of Robin Morris, fourteen tales of fear and weirdness lie in wait, ready to slither their way into your mind. Bonus story in this print edition.
Something follows the Conover family as they drive from L.A. to Chicago. Nine year old Michael sees a face form in the window of the family car. Fourteen year old Alison sees two creepy children at a motel. A car stays behind them on the road, never passing or falling behind. Wherever the Conovers go, wherever they look, they see a large woman and her children. Patiently, relentlessly, the woman gets closer. She is superhumanly strong. She can enter and leave a locked room at will. Confused and scared, the Conovers can't understand what is happening. Everywhere they turn they see death coming for them. Mama teaches her children, like a lioness teaches her cubs to hunt. The Conovers realize that they are the prey.
The Cognitive Psychology of Planning assesses recent advances in the scientific study of the cognitive processes involved in formulating, evaluating and selecting a sequence of thoughts and actions to achieve a goal. Approaches discussed range from those which look at planning in terms of problem-solving behaviour to those which look at how we control thoughts and actions within the frameworks of attention, working memory or executive function. Topics covered include: simple to complex tasks, well- and ill-defined problems and the effects of age and focal brain damage on planning. This survey of recent work in the cognitive psychology and cognitive neuropsychology of planning will be an invaluable resource for anyone studying or researching in the fields of thinking and reasoning, memory and attention.
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