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Choosing a Career in Nutrition

Introduces various careers in the field of nutrition, including dietitians, and doctors.

Introduces various careers in the field of nutrition, including dietitians, and doctors.

Harold D. Lasswell: An Annotated Bibliography

By Harold D. Lasswell, Nathan Leites, and Associates (Raymond Fadner, Joseph
M. Goldsen, Alan Grey, Irving L. Janis, Abraham Kaplan, David Kaplan,
Alexander Mintz, I. de Sola Pool, and Sergius Yakobson). Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, ...

Bayesian Networks and Influence Diagrams: A Guide to Construction and Analysis

Bayesian Networks and Influence Diagrams: A Guide to Construction and Analysis, Second Edition, provides a comprehensive guide for practitioners who wish to understand, construct, and analyze intelligent systems for decision support based on probabilistic networks. This new edition contains six new sections, in addition to fully-updated examples, tables, figures, and a revised appendix. Intended primarily for practitioners, this book does not require sophisticated mathematical skills or deep understanding of the underlying theory and methods nor does it discuss alternative technologies for reasoning under uncertainty. The theory and methods presented are illustrated through more than 140 examples, and exercises are included for the reader to check his or her level of understanding. The techniques and methods presented for knowledge elicitation, model construction and verification, modeling techniques and tricks, learning models from data, and analyses of models have all been developed and refined on the basis of numerous courses that the authors have held for practitioners worldwide.

(2000) have developed an approach to elicitation of model structure, which is
based on describing the semantics and syntax of five commonly occurring
substructures (called idioms), representing different modes of uncertain
reasoning.

Policy Perspectives on Educational Testing

America faces a crisis in education and its accompanying effects on the nation's economic and social life. Educators and policy makers need to document the extent of this crisis, to gauge its potential impact, and to develop educational strategies that would boost achievement; this has turned the spotlight on educational assessment - the procedures, practices, and tools that educators use to measure the progress of students, both as individuals and groups. This book deals with a range of issues within the field of educational assessment, with an emphasis on those issues that have sparked the public policy debate in recent years. Much of this volume concerns itself with the impact of testing on various subgroups of the population - blacks, Hispanics, young children, and children considered to be of `below average' ability. Taken together, the contributions to this volume represent a broad range of views on differential test performance. (This book is part of the subseries of books based on the Ford Foundation's National Commission on Testing and Public Policy. Previous titles in this program include Gifford & Wing/Test in Defense, Gifford & O'Connor/Changing Assessments, Gifford/Test Policy and the Politics of Opportunity Allocation, and Gifford/Test Policy and Test Performance.)

... than forHispanic students. Thismay bedue,at leastin part, toanincreasing
proportion ofrecent immigrants among the Hispanic population and an attendant
increasein theproportion of Hispanic students for whom English is a second
language ...

Extending the Boundaries of Research on Second Language Learning and Teaching

The book contains a selection of papers reflecting cutting-edge developments in the field of learning and teaching second and foreign languages. The contributions are devoted to such issues as classroom-oriented research, sociocultural aspects of language acquisition, individual differences in language learning, teacher development, new strands in second language acquisition research as well as methodological considerations. Because of its scope, the diversity of topics covered and the adoption of various theoretical perspectives, the volume is of interest not only to theorists and researchers but also to methodologists and practitioners, and can be used in courses for graduate students.

Research on learning and teaching second and foreign languages represents an
very rapidly developing and vibrant field, which is evidenced by the multitude of
conferences, journals, edited collections and monographs dealing with various ...

Second Language Teaching

A View from the Right Side of the Brain

This volume offers a practical introduction to the use of neuroscience to teach second languages. It provides information on the relation between how the brain learns and how this can be used to construct classroom activities, evaluates methods, syllabi, approaches, etc. from the perspective of brain functioning. It illustrates how teaching can unfold with actual examples in several languages.

Epistemic Modality, Language, and Conceptualization: A Cognitive-Pragmatic
Perspective. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Nuyts, J. and Pederson, E. (1997) (
eds.). Language and Conceptualization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
.

Linguistic Theory in Second Language Acquisition

Suzanne Flynn and Wayne O'Neil Massachusetts Institute of Technology I. INTRODUCTION The theory of Universal Grammar (UG) as explicated e. g. in Chomsky, 1986, has led to explosive developments in the study of natural language as well as to significant advances in the study of first language (L I) acquisition. Most recently. the theory of UG has led to important theore tical and empirical advances in the field of adult second language (L2) acquisition as well. The principle impetus for this development can be traced to the work in linguistics which shifted the study "from behavior or the products of behavior to states of the mind/brain that enter into behavior" (Chomksy. 1986:3). Grammars within this framework are conceived of as theoretical accounts of "the state of the mind/brain of the person who knows a particular language" (Chomsky. 1986:3). Research within fields of language acquisition seeks to isolate and specify the properties of the underlying competence necessary for language learning. Full development of a theory of UG demands study and understanding of the nature of both the formal properties of language and of the language acquisition process itself. However. while there is a tradition of debate and dialogue established between theoretical linguistics and Ll acquisition research. relatively few connections have been made between linguistic theory and L2 acquisition research.

Flynn, Mazurkewich, and White all suggest that the principles involved in first
language acquisition are indeed at work in second language learning. Clahsen,
on the other hand, argues that adults learners resort to other learning strategies
in ...

Molecular Neurobiology

De Camilli P. Harris S. M., Huttner W. B., and Greengard P. (1983b) Synapsin I (
Protein I), a nerve terminal-specific phosphoprotein: II. Its specific association
with synaptic vesicles demonstrated by immunocytochemistry in agarose-
embedded ...

The Mammalian Carotid Body

According to Valentin (1833) and Luschka (1862), the first description of the structure now known as the carotid body must be ascribed to a Swiss physiolo gist - Albrecht von Haller - who, in 1762, called it the ganglion exiguum. This claim, however, may be erroneous, for Tauber (1743) described a struc ture at the bifurcation on the common carotid artery and called it the ganglion minutum. Andersch (1797) reprinted the text of a study made by his father between 1751 and 1755. The original printing of this work had apparently been sold as waste paper! Andersch called the organ the ganglion intercaroticum on account of its location. He also specifically stated that the sympathetic chain, the glossopharyngeal and the vagus nerves sent branches into the organ. For a while the carotid body remained forgotten, to be rediscovered in 1833 by Mayer of Bonn who again remarked upon the branches of the sympathetic, glossopharyngeal and vagus nerves as sources of a nerve plexus which innervated the ganglion intercaroticurtl. . Valentin (1833) clearly regarded the structure as part of the sympathetic nervous system, although he too recognised that the vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves contributed conspicuously to its innervation. Thus it is evident that the anatomists of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries regarded the structure in the carotid bifurcation as one of the many ganglia which are interspersed in the course of the sympathetic nervous system.

Croom Helm, London, pp 277282 Heath D, Smith P, Harris P, WinsonM (1973)
The atherosclerotic human carotid sinus.J Path 110:4958 Hellstrom S (1975a)
Morphometric studies of densecored vesicles in type I cells of rat carotid body.