Results 311 to 320 of about 2,258,380 (360)
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New Scientist, 2021
Once thought to be uniquely human, culture is showing up in all sorts of animals, finds Michael Le ...
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Once thought to be uniquely human, culture is showing up in all sorts of animals, finds Michael Le ...
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The burgeoning reach of animal culture
Science, 2021We are not alone Before the mid-20th century, it was generally assumed that culture, behavior learned from others, was specific to humans. However, starting with identification in a few species, evidence that animals can learn and transmit behaviors has accumulated at an ever-increasing pace.
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The animal cell culture collection
In Vitro, 1970The Animal Cell Culture Collection established by the Advisory Committee and cooperating laboratories at the American Type Culture Collection has been described. The description includes procedures and criteria for the acceptance and certification of cells, guidelines for future studies, and policies for the selection of cells.
J. E. Shannon+3 more
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Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 2019
In recent decades, a burgeoning literature has documented the cultural transmission of behavior through social learning in numerous vertebrate and invertebrate species. One meaning of “cultural evolution in animals” refers to these discoveries, and I present an overview of key findings.
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In recent decades, a burgeoning literature has documented the cultural transmission of behavior through social learning in numerous vertebrate and invertebrate species. One meaning of “cultural evolution in animals” refers to these discoveries, and I present an overview of key findings.
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Introduction: The End of the Animal – Literary and Cultural Animalities
2017The introduction to this volume calls for the end of “animal studies” broadly conceived as an umbrella term encompassing such diverse fields as animality studies, posthumanism, human-animal studies, critical animal studies, and species critique. While these fields attempt to move beyond the human in various ways, they often have rather different ends ...
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Physiology of cultured animal cells
Journal of Biotechnology, 1997The physiology of cultured animal cells, in particular hybridoma, myeloma and insect cells, with respect to growth and proliferation, amino acid metabolism, energy metabolism and cellular responses to environmental stress is discussed in this paper. The rate of proliferation of hybridoma cells in serum-containing media is limited by growth factors at a
Lars Öhman+3 more
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2013
Greek and Roman societies developed, in their separate ways and at different times, a very refined sense of their own identity and could articulate a clear sense of where the borders of their geographical and conceptual worlds were positioned (although in practice there was a large and diverse set of cultures and communities within these boundaries). A
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Greek and Roman societies developed, in their separate ways and at different times, a very refined sense of their own identity and could articulate a clear sense of where the borders of their geographical and conceptual worlds were positioned (although in practice there was a large and diverse set of cultures and communities within these boundaries). A
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2012
On the BBC Radio 4 programme A Point of View (first broadcast on Friday 8 July 2011) Alain de Botton claimed that ‘animals, as we know, don’t loom very large in culture’ (de Botton, 2011); he could not have been more wrong. If only, as a schoolchild, Alain had read Bryant’s (1979) newly published paper about the zoological connection he would not have ...
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On the BBC Radio 4 programme A Point of View (first broadcast on Friday 8 July 2011) Alain de Botton claimed that ‘animals, as we know, don’t loom very large in culture’ (de Botton, 2011); he could not have been more wrong. If only, as a schoolchild, Alain had read Bryant’s (1979) newly published paper about the zoological connection he would not have ...
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2015
Preface Chapter 1: Cell line development Hansjoerg Hauser Chapter 2: Transient recombinant protein expression in mammalian cells Volker Jager, Konrad Bussow, Thomas Schirrmann Chapter 3: Hybridoma technology for the in vitro production of therapeutic antibodies Susan McDonnell Chapter 4: Bioreactors for mammalian cells R.
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Preface Chapter 1: Cell line development Hansjoerg Hauser Chapter 2: Transient recombinant protein expression in mammalian cells Volker Jager, Konrad Bussow, Thomas Schirrmann Chapter 3: Hybridoma technology for the in vitro production of therapeutic antibodies Susan McDonnell Chapter 4: Bioreactors for mammalian cells R.
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Animal cells in culture are microorganisms
Cytotechnology, 1992Pick up any textbook with 'Microbiology' in the title and observe the scant to nonexistent treatment of animal cells in culture. Viruses do not suffer from such an exclusion. Chapters abound regaling the molecular niceties of the complex dances their components undergo while infecting bacteria or animal cells in culture.
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