Results 201 to 210 of about 4,720 (260)

Ancestral trajectory of infant gut microbiome assembly in non-industrialised populations

open access: yes
Rozday T   +27 more
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On the industrialisation of biology

AI & SOCIETY, 2009
The times required to develop new drugs is growing continuously and most drugs fail in the development process because we lack the detailed knowledge of biology and physiology needed to understand the result of a proposed treatment. The problem is one of complexity—we do not know the full complexity of living organisms, neither does traditional biology
openaire   +1 more source

Does de‐industrialisation beget industrialisation which begets re‐industrialisation?

The Journal of Development Studies, 1985
The Military Origins of Industrialisation and International Trade Rivalry. By Gautam Sen. London: Frances Pinter, 1984. Pp.204. £16. ISBN 0 86187 357 2. The De‐industrialisation of America: Plant Closings, Community Abandonment, and the Dismantling of Basic Industry. By Barry Bluestone and Bennett Harrison. New York: Basic Books, 1982. Pp.x + 323.
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The industrialisation of cellular screening

Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery, 2008
Cell-based assays have become the method of choice for compound screening in drug discovery. Such assays are used in high-throughput screening to identify molecules for lead optimisation and to support subsequent chemistry programmes in developing clinical candidates.In this article we describe the technologies and working practices that have been ...
Stephen, Rees, Alan, Wise
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Software Industrialisation – How to Industrialise Knowledge Work?

2017
Industrial production has been paramount for survival on competitive markets. But what does this mean for software development? Will occidental programmers be supplanted by computers churning out software? Or by hordes of low paid programmers in India as clothing manufacturers have been by sewers in Bangladesh?
Josef Adersberger, Johannes Siedersleben
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Industrialisation and de-industrialisation: England divides [PDF]

open access: possible, 2011
National averages conceal powerful interactions underlying English economic development in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The simplest operational divisions are north, south and London. Initially industry and business culture predominated in the south but this culture was seduced by the gentry lifestyle and entrepreneurship redirected ...
openaire  

Industrialisation as a ‘Phenomenon’

1978
It has been argued that one of the major contributions of the discipline of sociology to the student of business studies is its ability to make the student aware that certain concrete problems within the context of business organisations are only understandable in the context of the participants and their images of the social world. Additionally it has
David Brown, Michael J. Harrison
openaire   +1 more source

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