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Mining Biomedical Text, Images and Visual Features for Information
Retrieval provides the reader with a broad coverage of the
concepts, themes, and instrumentalities of the important and
evolving area of biomedical text, images, and visual features
towards information retrieval. It aims to encourage an even wider
adoption of IR methods for assisting in problem-solving and to
stimulate research that may lead to additional innovations in this
area of research.The book discusses topics such as internet of
things for health informatics; data privacy; smart healthcare;
medical image processing; 3D medical images; evolutionary
computing; deep learning; medical ontology; linguistic indexing;
lexical analysis; and domain specific semantic categories in
biomedical applications.It is a valuable resource for researchers
and graduate students who are interested to learn more about data
mining techniques to improve their research work.
Activated Carbon Fiber and Textiles provides systematic coverage of
the fundamentals, properties, and current and emerging applications
of carbon fiber textiles in a single volume, providing industry
professionals and academics working in the field with a broader
understanding of these materials. Part I discusses carbon fiber
principles and production, including precursors and pyrolysis,
carbon fiber spinning, and carbonization and activation. Part II
provides more detailed analysis of the key properties of carbon
fiber textiles, including their thermal, acoustic, electrical,
adsorption, and mechanical behaviors. The final section covers
applications of carbon fiber such as filtration, energy protection,
and energy and gas storage.
User Centered Design for Medical Visualization features a
comprehensive review of leading advances in medical visualization
and human-computer interaction. This book investigates the human
roles during a visualization process, specifically motivation-based
design, user-based design, and perception-and-cognitive-based
design. An essential resource for researchers, scholars, healthcare
practitioners, and medical technology specialists, ""User Centered
Design for Medical Visualization"" provides real-world examples and
insight into the analytical and architectural aspects of user
centered design.
Hypermedia systems may be one of the most significant contributions
to the Internet in recent years. This powerful new technology has
revolutionized the delivery of e-content through the internet.
However, as the needs of users have changed, the hypermedia systems
themselves have also changed. In just the past few years, adaptive
and adaptable hypermedia systems have emerged. These systems can
custom tailor information to individual end-users. The introduction
of these systems yields countless benefits for both users and
businesses. Adaptable and Adaptive Hypermedia Systems examines both
types of new hypermedia systems; discussing the benefits, impacts
and implications of both. This book covers the most current issues
in the field, while providing insight into analytical and
architectural aspects of the topic. Additionally, applications are
provided in real-world settings to allow for a better and more
thorough understanding of hypermedia systems.
Editors hope that Regenerative Biology of the Spine and Spinal Cord
appeals to the nostalgic sentiments of investigators and
intellectuals in that it can be held in hand and provide a broad
survey of leading edge science. At the same time its chapters can
be digitally acquired for those established in the field to refine
particular knowledge interests or gaps. Most importantly, we ask
the reader, whomever that may be, to peruse without prejudice as
countless more chapters will have been written before total spinal
regeneration is achieved.
A thoroughly revised and updated fourth edition of a text that has
become an international standard for curriculum development in
health professional education. Intended for faculty and other
content experts who have an interest or responsibility as educators
in their discipline, Curriculum Development for Medical Education
has extended its vision to better serve a diverse professional and
international audience. Building on the time-honored, practical,
and user-friendly approach of the six-step model of curriculum
development, this edition is richly detailed, with numerous
examples of innovations that challenge traditional teaching models.
In addition, the fourth edition presents * updates in our
understanding of how humans learn; * a new chapter on curricula
that address community needs and health equity; and * an increased
emphasis throughout on health systems science, population health,
equity, educational technology in health professions education, and
interprofessional education. This new edition remains a
cutting-edge tool and practical guidebook for faculty members and
administrators responsible for the educational experiences of
health professional students, residents, fellows, and
practitioners. It includes chapters on each of the steps of
curriculum development, with updated examples and questions to
guide the application of the timeless principles. Subsequent
chapters cover curriculum maintenance and enhancement,
dissemination, and curriculum development for larger programs.
Appendixes present examples of full curricula designed using the
six-step approach, which is widely recognized as the current
standard for publication and dissemination of new curricula and
provides a basis for meaningful educational interventions,
scholarship, and career advancement for the health professional
educator. The book also provides curricular, faculty development,
and funding resources. Contributors: Chadia N. Abras, Belinda Y.
Chen, Heidi L. Gullett, Mark T. Hughes, David E. Kern, Brenessa M.
Lindeman, Pamela A. Lipsett, Mary L. O'Connor Leppert, Amit K.
Pahwa, Deanna Saylor, Mamta K. Singh, Sean A. Tackett, Patricia A.
Thomas
Many agricultural crops worldwide, especially in semi-arid
climates, suffer from iron deficiencies. Among plants sensitive to
iron deficiency are apples, avocado, bananas, barley, beans,
citrus, cotton, grapes, peanuts, pecans, potatoes, sorghum,
soybeans, and numerous ornamental plants. Deficiencies are usually
recognized by chlorotic, in new leaves and are typically found
among sensitive crops grown in calcareous or yellowed, interveinal
areas soils which cover over 30% of the earth's land surface. Iron
deficiency may lead, in extreme cases, to complete crop failure. In
intensive agriculture on calcareous soils, iron often becomes a
major limiting nutrient for optimal crop production, thus,
correction of iron deficiency is required. Various chemicals and
practices are available. They are, however, costly and do not
always result in a complete remedy of the deficiency. Crucial
questions relative to the cost-benefit equation such as the
recovery rate of plants and the long-term fertilizing effect have
not yet been resolved. The complexity of iron nutrition problems
requires an understanding of the chemistry of iron oxides in soils,
of the chemistry of both natural and synthetic chelates, of
rhizosphere microbiology and biochemistry, and of the physiological
involvement of the plant in iron uptake and transport.
In the current English-language publication market, this book is
one of the earliest academic monographs to comparatively
investigate different feminist scholars and academic feminism
across the Taiwan Strait. It problematizes recent scholarly
understanding of feminist complexity in various Chinese-speaking
areas. This book addresses sociocultural backgrounds of how
Mainland Chinese, Taiwanese, and Hong Kong feminist scholars
strategize their transfers, localization, and acculturation of
Western feminist literary theories. It emphasizes how Chinese
literary theorists filter, gate-keep, select, import latest Western
feminist theories, and then match them with local socio-cultural
trends by exerting comparative researchers' cross-cultural and
cross-lingual academic power in order to tackle Mainland China's,
Taiwan's, and Hong Kong's own gender problems.
Biopolymers represent a carbon emission solution: they are green
and eco-friendly with a variety of uses in biomedical engineering,
the automotive industry, the packaging and paper industries, and
for the development of new building materials. This book describes
the various raw materials of biopolymers and their chemical and
physical properties, the polymerization process, and the chemical
structure and properties of biopolymers. Furthermore, this book
identifies the drawbacks of biopolymers and how to overcome them
through modification methods to enhance the compatibility,
flexibility, physicochemical properties, thermal stability, impact
response, and rigidity.
This book represents the latest research on urban forestry in a
Malaysian context. It demonstrates that urban forestry is concerned
not only with environmental enhancement, but also other aspects,
such as recreation, health and well-being, and government policies.
This edited collection provides a comprehensive overview of urban
forestry studies from various researchers in Malaysia, and includes
rich historical perspectives of urban forestry in the country. It
also tackles related issues in policy. The greening of urban
Malaysia in the 1970s focused primarily on beautification and was
primarily the province of horticulturists, landscapers, nursery
workers, town planners, and architects, with negligible inputs from
foresters, particularly urban foresters. Perhaps for that reason,
the term "landscaping" has been used more widely than "urban
forestry" by government and private institutions, politicians,
stakeholders, academicians, and the public. Nevertheless, the
authors show that the concept of urban forestry is not new for
developing countries such as Malaysia, where urbanization is
increasing at a rapid rate. The book unpacks this demographic shift
from a predominantly rural to a principally urban society. As the
only unified body of work on urban forestry and arboricultural
studies in Malaysia, this volume presents an important
interdisciplinary reference for students, researchers, and scholars
in physical geography, forestry and urban forestry, arboriculture
and landscape architecture, both in Malaysia, and in other
developing urbanizing countries, particularly in Southeast Asia. It
is also an important resource for those working in environmental
policy and practice, excavating the vital connection between the
environment and well-being.
Based on a proven six-step model and including examples and
questions to guide application of those timeless principles,
Curriculum Development for Medical Education is a practical
guidebook for all faculty members and administrators responsible
for the educational experiences of medical students, residents,
fellows, and clinical practitioners. Incorporating revisions driven
by calls for reform and innovations in medical education that
challenge established teaching models, the third edition includes
an awareness of new accreditation standards and regulatory
guidelines. The authors have expanded their discussion of survey
methodology for needs assessment and stress the importance of
writing competency-based goals and objectives that incorporate
milestones, entrustable professional activities, and observable
practice activities. With updated examples focusing on
interprofessional education, collaborative practice, and
educational technology, they describe educational strategies that
incorporate the new science of learning. A completely new chapter
presents the unique challenges of curriculum development for large,
long, and integrated curricula.
In this volume various integral equations for multiple crack
problems in plane elasticity are investigated. Formulation of the
problems is based on relevant elementary solutions in which the
complex variable function method is used. The multiple crack
problem is considered as a superposition of many single crack
problems while many more complicated cases, including bonded
dissimilar materials and multiple thermally insulated crack
problems, are considered. Miscellaneous problems, including the
multiple rigid line problem and the multiple circular hole problem
are studied. Solutions for three-dimensional multiple crack
problems are also investigated by using the Fredholm integral
equation, the hypersingular integral equation and the variational
principle. Many programs for multiple crack problems using FORTRAN
are featured. A CD-ROM containing solutions is also included.
Like a data-guzzling turbo engine, advanced data mining has been
powering post-genome biological studies for two decades. Reflecting
this growth, Biological Data Mining presents comprehensive data
mining concepts, theories, and applications in current biological
and medical research. Each chapter is written by a distinguished
team of interdisciplinary data mining researchers who cover
state-of-the-art biological topics. The first section of the book
discusses challenges and opportunities in analyzing and mining
biological sequences and structures to gain insight into molecular
functions. The second section addresses emerging computational
challenges in interpreting high-throughput Omics data. The book
then describes the relationships between data mining and related
areas of computing, including knowledge representation, information
retrieval, and data integration for structured and unstructured
biological data. The last part explores emerging data mining
opportunities for biomedical applications. This volume examines the
concepts, problems, progress, and trends in developing and applying
new data mining techniques to the rapidly growing field of genome
biology. By studying the concepts and case studies presented,
readers will gain significant insight and develop practical
solutions for similar biological data mining projects in the
future.
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Crip Genealogies (Hardcover)
Mel Y. Chen, Alison Kafer, Eunjung Kim, Julie Avril Minich; Foreword by TherĂ Alyce Pickens
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R2,542
R2,369
Discovery Miles 23 690
Save R173 (7%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The contributors to Crip Genealogies reorient the field of
disability studies by centering the work of transnational feminism,
queer of color critique, and trans scholarship and activism. They
challenge the white, Western, and Northern rights-based genealogy
of disability studies, showing how a single coherent narrative of
the field is a mode of exclusion that relies on logics of whiteness
and imperialism. The contributors examine how disability justice
activists work in concert with other social justice projects,
explore crip environments, create alternate disciplinary
genealogies, and reject notions of the model minority. Throughout,
they demonstrate how the mandate for a single genealogy of the
discipline whitewashes disability and continues forms of violence.
By cripping disability studies, the contributors allow for
divergent histories, the coexistence of anti-ableist and antiracist
theorizing, and a radically just and capacious understanding of
disability. Contributors. Suzanne Bost, Mel Y.
Chen, Sony Coråùez Bolton, Natalia Duong, Lezlie
Frye, Magda GarcĂa, Alison Kafer, Eunjung Kim, Yoo-suk Kim,
KateĹina KolĂĄĹovĂĄ, James Kyung-Jin Lee, Stacey Park Milbern,
Julie Avril Minich, Tari Young-Jung Na, TherĂ A. Pickens, Leah
Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, Jasbir K. Puar, Sami Schalk, Faith
NjahĂŽra WangarĂŽ
Editors hope that Regenerative Biology of the Spine and Spinal Cord
appeals to the nostalgic sentiments of investigators and
intellectuals in that it can be held in hand and provide a broad
survey of leading edge science. At the same time its chapters can
be digitally acquired for those established in the field to refine
particular knowledge interests or gaps. Most importantly, we ask
the reader, whomever that may be, to peruse without prejudice as
countless more chapters will have been written before total spinal
regeneration is achieved.
Biopolymers represent a carbon emission solution: they are green
and eco-friendly with a variety of uses in biomedical engineering,
the automotive industry, the packaging and paper industries, and
for the development of new building materials. This book describes
the various raw materials of biopolymers and their chemical and
physical properties, the polymerization process, and the chemical
structure and properties of biopolymers. Furthermore, this book
identifies the drawbacks of biopolymers and how to overcome them
through modification methods to enhance the compatibility,
flexibility, physicochemical properties, thermal stability, impact
response, and rigidity.
Many agricultural crops worldwide, especially in semi-arid
climates, suffer from iron deficiencies. Among plants sensitive to
iron deficiency are apples, avocado, bananas, barley, beans,
citrus, cotton, grapes, peanuts, pecans, potatoes, sorghum,
soybeans, and numerous ornamental plants. Deficiencies are usually
recognized by chlorotic, in new leaves and are typically found
among sensitive crops grown in calcareous or yellowed, interveinal
areas soils which cover over 30% of the earth's land surface. Iron
deficiency may lead, in extreme cases, to complete crop failure. In
intensive agriculture on calcareous soils, iron often becomes a
major limiting nutrient for optimal crop production, thus,
correction of iron deficiency is required. Various chemicals and
practices are available. They are, however, costly and do not
always result in a complete remedy of the deficiency. Crucial
questions relative to the cost-benefit equation such as the
recovery rate of plants and the long-term fertilizing effect have
not yet been resolved. The complexity of iron nutrition problems
requires an understanding of the chemistry of iron oxides in soils,
of the chemistry of both natural and synthetic chelates, of
rhizosphere microbiology and biochemistry, and of the physiological
involvement of the plant in iron uptake and transport.
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Modern Agriculture and the Environment - Proceedings of an International Conference, held in Rehovot, Israel, 2-6 October 1994, under the auspices of the Faculty of Agriculture, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1997)
David Rosen, E. Tel-Or, Y. Hadar, Y. Chen
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R1,661
Discovery Miles 16 610
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume comprises the proceedings of the First International
Rehovot Conference on Modem Agriculture and the Environment, held
at the Rehovot Campus of the Faculty of Agriculture, the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, Israel, 2-6 October 1994. The conference,
first in a series intended to be convened in Rehovot at 4-5 year
intervals to address various aspects of the interaction of
agriculture and the environment, was initiated, organised and
carried out under the auspices of the Faculty of Agriculture, the
leading academic institution in agricultural and environmental
studies in Israel. It featured four keynote addresses, 39 invited
lectures, 40 submitted papers, and 62 posters. Of these, 51
articles, written by 122 contributing authors from 14 countries,
were selected by the editors to be presented in this book. All
through the twentieth century, and especially ever since the advent
of the Green Revolution, modem agriCUlture has been striving to
feed and clothe the ever increasing multitudes of the human species
through improved technology, relying heavily on tremendous inputs
of fertilisers, pesticides, and various other agrochemicals.
Undoubtedly, this has been a great blessing to mankind, and
enormous strides have indeed been made in the never-ending struggle
against starvation, but these have been achieved at a very steep
price of increased environmental deterioration. In fact, modem
agriculture has become one of the major factors contributing to the
degradation of the world's fragile biosphere.
In March, 1983 a workshop on Pollutants in Porous Media was hosted
by the Institute of Soils and Water of the Agricultural Research
Organi zation in Bet Dagan, Israel. At this workshop, the
unsaturated zone be tween the soil surface and groundwater was the
focal point of discus sions for scientists from various disciplines
such as soil chemists, physicists, biologists and environmental
engineers. Since then, the prob lem of soil and water pollution has
only worsened as more and more cases of pollution caused by human
activities including agriculture and industry have been revealed. A
great deal of work has been carried out by environmental scientists
since 1983 in elucidating the behavior of the many classes of
pollutants and the complex physical, chemical, and bio logical
transformations which they undergo as they move through the soil to
the vadose zone and, in many cases, the groundwater. In light of
this, it was felt that another meeting of specialists from the many
disciplines which deal with this subject was necessary and so a
Second International Workshop on the Behavior of Pollutants in
Porous Media, sponsored by IUPAC (the International Union of Pure
and Applied Chemistry) and IAHS (the International Association of
Hydrological Sciences), was organized and held in the Institute of
Soils and Water of the Agricultural Research Organization in Bet
Dagan, Israel during 1987. June, The present volume is a selection
of the talks presented at this second workshop and deals only with
toxic organic chemicals in porous media."
The use of organic residues as a means of maintaining and
increasing soil fertility is of long-standing. This tradition has
been somewhat neglected since the introduc tion of mineral
fertilizers at low cost. More and more farmers and scientists are
now showing renewed interest in the proper and effective use of
org~tnic residues, composts and other recycled organic additives.
The role and function of organic amendments in modern agricultural
systems have become topics of major interest in the scientific and
agricultural communities. Research work on residue disposal has
provided new concepts on the interaction between organic components
and soils as well as new handling technologies (e. g. pelletizing
of organic residues). The trend to conserve energy has led
scientists to study the minimal tillage system, to find ways of
replacing conventional inorganic fertilizers with natural organic
prod ucts or microbial preparations, and to develop new composting
methods. The drive to achieve higher yields in commercial
greenhouse farming has led to a search for optimum substrates as
growth media and for improved management techniques. This has led
to the introduction of organic substitutes for peat, nota bly those
originating from agricultural wastes. Another important aspect is
the current interest in organic farming, where use of synthetic
chemicals is avoided or prohibited. An increasing percentage of the
population in highly developed countries is willing to pay premium
prices for food produced on soils where inorganic fertilizers and
other agricultural chemicals have not been used.
In the current English-language publication market, this book is
one of the earliest academic monographs to comparatively
investigate different feminist scholars and academic feminism
across the Taiwan Strait. It problematizes recent scholarly
understanding of feminist complexity in various Chinese-speaking
areas. This book addresses sociocultural backgrounds of how
Mainland Chinese, Taiwanese, and Hong Kong feminist scholars
strategize their transfers, localization, and acculturation of
Western feminist literary theories. It emphasizes how Chinese
literary theorists filter, gate-keep, select, import latest Western
feminist theories, and then match them with local socio-cultural
trends by exerting comparative researchers' cross-cultural and
cross-lingual academic power in order to tackle Mainland China's,
Taiwan's, and Hong Kong's own gender problems.
Jandial's 100 Case Reviews in Neurosurgery is the only reference
offering a comprehensive approach to effective preparation for oral
examinations, MOC, or grand rounds. Ideal for residents and
graduates alike, it covers 100 of the most commonly encountered
neurosurgical cases and presents them in a layout mirroring that of
the oral exams. This singular resource eliminates the need to
consult several texts, providing readers with all of the complete,
concise knowledge needed to go in with confidence. Expert Consult
eBook version included with purchase. This enhanced eBook
experience allows you to search all of the text, figures, images,
and references from the book on a variety of devices. Covers 100 of
the most commonly encountered neurosurgical cases on oral exams.
Highly templated format mirrors that of the oral exams and ensures
quick and easy navigation. Over 500 illustrations ensure an
enhanced visual understanding. Provides a chapter on endovascular
neurosurgery, a topic newly included on oral exams. Features robust
sections and art on the challenging areas of peripheral nerve
surgery and vascular surgery. Includes common questions on
complication management. Appendices with key neurosurgery tables
and figures (e.g. positioning, spinal fracture grading, and
neuropathology) facilitate quick review. Information is backed by
evidence when available.
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