Results 261 to 270 of about 425,750 (308)
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Hastings Center Report, 2022
AbstractTiffany was seventeen when injury to her brain stem put her in the intensive care unit on life‐sustaining treatment and in a permanently locked‐in state—fully conscious but able to control no bodily movements other than her eye movements. As a clinical ethicist at the hospital, I was consulted by her neurologist, who had established a blink ...
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AbstractTiffany was seventeen when injury to her brain stem put her in the intensive care unit on life‐sustaining treatment and in a permanently locked‐in state—fully conscious but able to control no bodily movements other than her eye movements. As a clinical ethicist at the hospital, I was consulted by her neurologist, who had established a blink ...
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Cambridge quarterly of healthcare ethics : CQ : the international journal of healthcare ethics committees, 2017
Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) can enable communication for persons in severe paralysis including locked-in syndrome (LIS); that is, being unable to move or speak while aware. In cases of complete loss of muscle control, termed "complete locked-in syndrome," a BCI may be the only viable solution to restore communication.
JOHANSSON, VERONICA +2 more
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Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) can enable communication for persons in severe paralysis including locked-in syndrome (LIS); that is, being unable to move or speak while aware. In cases of complete loss of muscle control, termed "complete locked-in syndrome," a BCI may be the only viable solution to restore communication.
JOHANSSON, VERONICA +2 more
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Phi Delta Kappan, 2006
IN The Pursuit of Loneliness, sociologist Philip Slater accused Americans of operating too often on what he called "the toilet assumption." We assume that, once something is flushed down the toilet, it's gone--poof--and we don't have to worry about it anymore. We get miffed if the sewer backs up.
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IN The Pursuit of Loneliness, sociologist Philip Slater accused Americans of operating too often on what he called "the toilet assumption." We assume that, once something is flushed down the toilet, it's gone--poof--and we don't have to worry about it anymore. We get miffed if the sewer backs up.
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Lock Detection in Phase-Locked Loops
SIAM Journal on Applied Mathematics, 1992The phase quadrature lock detector is used extensively to detect phase lock in phase-locked loops (PLLs). However, this lock detector's relationship to PLL closed-loop dynamics has never been established. A new theory is presented, which accomplishes this for a specified class of PLLs.
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Women & Therapy, 2007
SUMMARY In one of the quietest but most significant social phenomena of our time, national statistics indicate that the number of incarcerated women has quadrupled over the last 20 years. The status of women of color in America, already precarious, is further eroded under this new world order, as 54% of the incarcerated female population is African ...
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SUMMARY In one of the quietest but most significant social phenomena of our time, national statistics indicate that the number of incarcerated women has quadrupled over the last 20 years. The status of women of color in America, already precarious, is further eroded under this new world order, as 54% of the incarcerated female population is African ...
openaire +1 more source

