Results 221 to 230 of about 462,658 (268)
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The Yearbook of English Studies, 2014
Like the Protestant Schism (or Reformation, depending upon which side you were on) around one hundred years earlier, the cataclysmic events of the English Civil War (1642–51) and the resulting Interregnum (1649–60) did not create an entirely unbridgeable rupture in the nation’s history, its collective consciousness, or even individuals’ personal ...
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Like the Protestant Schism (or Reformation, depending upon which side you were on) around one hundred years earlier, the cataclysmic events of the English Civil War (1642–51) and the resulting Interregnum (1649–60) did not create an entirely unbridgeable rupture in the nation’s history, its collective consciousness, or even individuals’ personal ...
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Vision Research, 1994
In images of real visual scenes, contours are often fragmented by occlusion, shadows and low reflectance contrast. In order to infer shape from contour, the human visual system must selectively integrate fragments projecting from a common object while keeping fragments from different objects separate.
J, Elder, S, Zucker
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In images of real visual scenes, contours are often fragmented by occlusion, shadows and low reflectance contrast. In order to infer shape from contour, the human visual system must selectively integrate fragments projecting from a common object while keeping fragments from different objects separate.
J, Elder, S, Zucker
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Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery, 1976
A retrospective review of no patients who had their colostomies closed during the period from 1963 to 1973 has been undertaken. Their average age was 64 years. Diverticular disease and colorectal cancer had been the most frequent indications for the colostomy. Wound infection occurred in 36‐4% and facal fistula in 7m3%.
J E, Barnett +2 more
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A retrospective review of no patients who had their colostomies closed during the period from 1963 to 1973 has been undertaken. Their average age was 64 years. Diverticular disease and colorectal cancer had been the most frequent indications for the colostomy. Wound infection occurred in 36‐4% and facal fistula in 7m3%.
J E, Barnett +2 more
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Family Process, 2012
Therapies for grief and loss have traditionally focused on the work of grieving. The goal was to reach an endpoint, now popularly called closure. There are, however, many people who, through no fault of their own, find a loss so unclear that there can be no end to grief.
Pauline, Boss, Donna, Carnes
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Therapies for grief and loss have traditionally focused on the work of grieving. The goal was to reach an endpoint, now popularly called closure. There are, however, many people who, through no fault of their own, find a loss so unclear that there can be no end to grief.
Pauline, Boss, Donna, Carnes
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Closure, Properties and Closure Properties of Multirelations
2015Multirelations have been used for modelling games, protocols and computations. They have also been used for modelling contact, closure and topology. We bring together these two lines of research using relation algebras and more general algebras. In particular, we look at various properties of multirelations that have been used in the two lines of ...
Rudolf Berghammer, Walter Guttmann
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Gestalt Concept of Closure: A Construct without Closure
Perceptual and Motor Skills, 2002This comment reviews the original Gestalt literature which introduced the concept of ‘closure’. It is argued that the meaning of ‘closure’ was confounded in the source literature and, thus, the term connotes more than it denotes. Research based on different measures of this ambiguous construct inevitably may not always converge.
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Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 2007
There are many techniques available for the closure of traumatic wounds in emergency departments. Each method has its own unique benefits and limitations that must be considered in each case individually. The best technique provides durability, simplicity, excellent cosmetic outcome, and overall patient satisfaction.
Jeremy D, Lloyd +2 more
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There are many techniques available for the closure of traumatic wounds in emergency departments. Each method has its own unique benefits and limitations that must be considered in each case individually. The best technique provides durability, simplicity, excellent cosmetic outcome, and overall patient satisfaction.
Jeremy D, Lloyd +2 more
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Médecine et Santé Tropicales, 2013
mst.2013.0197 Auteur(s) : Jean-Marc Debonne Medecin general des armees © Christian Chambon La redaction publie l’ordre du jour no 28-13, discours prononce a Marseille le 14 juin 2013 par le medecin general des armees Jean-Marc Debonne, directeur central du Service de sante des armees francaises a l’occasion de la fermeture de l’ex-Institut de medecine ...
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mst.2013.0197 Auteur(s) : Jean-Marc Debonne Medecin general des armees © Christian Chambon La redaction publie l’ordre du jour no 28-13, discours prononce a Marseille le 14 juin 2013 par le medecin general des armees Jean-Marc Debonne, directeur central du Service de sante des armees francaises a l’occasion de la fermeture de l’ex-Institut de medecine ...
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Tropical Doctor, 2000
There have been considerable developments in abdominal closure over the past 30 years or so, and (happily for some of the poorer countries of the world) they have not largely involved undue expense. Indeed many of the developments are compatible with considerable cost-saving.
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There have been considerable developments in abdominal closure over the past 30 years or so, and (happily for some of the poorer countries of the world) they have not largely involved undue expense. Indeed many of the developments are compatible with considerable cost-saving.
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Proceedings of the 1988 ACM conference on LISP and functional programming, 1988
In this paper we describe syntactic closures. Syntactic closures address the scoping problems that arise when writing macros. We discuss some issues raised by introducing syntactic closures into the macro expansion interface, and we compare syntactic closures with other approaches. Included is a complete implementation.
Alan Bawden, Jonathan Rees
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In this paper we describe syntactic closures. Syntactic closures address the scoping problems that arise when writing macros. We discuss some issues raised by introducing syntactic closures into the macro expansion interface, and we compare syntactic closures with other approaches. Included is a complete implementation.
Alan Bawden, Jonathan Rees
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