Search

Results: 512
Tabernacle, Temple or Something in Between? Architectural Representation in Codex Amiatinus, fols IIv–IIIr
C O'Brien
May 11, 2017
Folios IIv –IIIr of the Codex Amiatinus present one of the most fascinating architectural diagrams of the early Middle Ages—not least because there has been a large degree of debate over quite what the Amiatinus image depicts...
Published by:
Clinical imaging in dementia with Lewy bodies.
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is a common neurodegenerative dementia in older people; however, the clinical features, particularly cognitive fluctuations and rapid eye movement sleep disorder, are often hard to elicit, leading...
Published by:
Phylogenetic Analysis Shows That Neolithic Slate Plaques From the Southwestern Iberian Peninsula are not Genealogical Recording Systems
Prehistoric material culture proposed to be symbolic in nature has been the object of considerable archaeological work from diverse theoretical perspectives, yet rarely are methodological tools used to test the interpretations....
Chronometers and Units in Early Archaeology and Paleontology
Early in the nineteenth century, geologist Charles Lyell reasoned that successively older faunas would contain progressively more extinct species and younger faunas relatively more extant species. The present, with one-hundred...
Genes, Culture, and Agriculture
Theory and empirical data from a variety of disciplines strongly imply that recent human history involves extensive gene-culture coevolution, much of it as a direct result of human agricultural practices. Here we draw on...
Ursinus College Bulletin, Fall 1991
President's memo Letters Summer receptions assist admissions effort Renovating Wismer from the ground up UC by the Sea IV Ursinus Day Academic Convocation Retirement 101 New administrative staff Book grant for Myrin...
Published by: Ursinus College
Chronometers and Units in Early Archaeology and Paleontology
Early in the nineteenth century, geologist Charles Lyell reasoned that successively older faunas would contain progressively more extinct species and younger faunas relatively more extant species. The present, with one-hundred...
Cultural Evolutionary Tipping Points in the Storage and Transmission of Information
Human culture has evolved through a series of major tipping points in information storage and communication. The first was the appearance of language, which enabled communication between brains and allowed humans to specialize...
Tipping Points Among Social Learners
There is a long and rich tradition in the social sciences of using models of collective behavior in animals as jumping-off points for the study of human behavior, including collective human behavior. Here, we come at the problem...
A Continuous-Flow Model for in vitro Cultivation of Mixed Microbial Populations Associated With Cystic Fibrosis Airway Infections.
The airways of people with cystic fibrosis (CF) provide a nutrient-rich environment which favours colonisation by a variety of bacteria and fungi. Although the dominant pathogen associated with CF airway infections is...
Published by:
Social recovery and the move beyond deficit models of depression
S P Fullagar, Wendy O'Brien
Sep 01, 2014
In Australia, like other advanced liberal democracies, the adoption of a recovery orientation was hailed as a major leap forward in mental health policy and service provision. We argue that this shift in thinking about the...
Published by:

|<

<

1

2

3

4

5

>

>|