Results 221 to 230 of about 1,339,857 (267)
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Natural History and the Nature of History
Monthly Review, 2005Over 500 million years ago, Pikaia, a two-inch-long worm-like creature, swam in the Cambrian seas. It was not particularly common, nor in anyway would it have appeared remarkable to a hypothetical naturalist surveying the fauna of the time. Pikaia is the first known chordate, the phylum to which Homo sapiens and all other vertebrates belong.
Richard York, Brett Clark
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The psychology of natural history
Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 2022Natural history observations are an integral part of ecology and evolution. However, they can be underappreciated because they operate independent of the scientific method. Here, we illustrate that the science of natural history has its own methodology based on a well-known psychological paradigm that describes how the human mind learns.
K.C. Burns, Jason Low
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2016
International literature has always shown more interest in the surgical treatment of the rotator cuff tear rather than in the medical or physiotherapy ones. However, the orthopedic surgeon should be able to propose, among the various treatment options, also the conservative treatment, as many tears can become asymptomatic over time.
Passaretti D., Candela V., Gumina S.
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International literature has always shown more interest in the surgical treatment of the rotator cuff tear rather than in the medical or physiotherapy ones. However, the orthopedic surgeon should be able to propose, among the various treatment options, also the conservative treatment, as many tears can become asymptomatic over time.
Passaretti D., Candela V., Gumina S.
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Current Gastroenterology Reports, 2013
Significant strides have been made in the last few years in advancing our knowledge of the natural history of cirrhosis. These include (1) a better understanding of prognosis in compensated and decompensated cirrhosis, (2) improved estimates of the natural course of variceal bleeding in patients receiving standard of care therapy, (3) recognition of ...
Sumeet K, Asrani, Patrick S, Kamath
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Significant strides have been made in the last few years in advancing our knowledge of the natural history of cirrhosis. These include (1) a better understanding of prognosis in compensated and decompensated cirrhosis, (2) improved estimates of the natural course of variceal bleeding in patients receiving standard of care therapy, (3) recognition of ...
Sumeet K, Asrani, Patrick S, Kamath
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Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1998
Our understanding of the natural history of asthma is improving through the establishment of a more precise definition of asthma linked with information from large-scale longitudinal studies. Risk factors for the development of childhood asthma including sex, atopic status, genetic and familial factors, respiratory infections, and outdoor and indoor ...
R A, Barbee, S, Murphy
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Our understanding of the natural history of asthma is improving through the establishment of a more precise definition of asthma linked with information from large-scale longitudinal studies. Risk factors for the development of childhood asthma including sex, atopic status, genetic and familial factors, respiratory infections, and outdoor and indoor ...
R A, Barbee, S, Murphy
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A Natural History of "Agonist"
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 2002This paper constructs a brief history of the biochemical term agonist by exploring the multiple meanings of the root ag n in ancient Greek literature and describing how agonist first appeared in the scientific literature of the 20th century in the context of neurophysiologists' debates about the existence and properties of cellular receptors.
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1994
Charles Darwin has been moldering in his grave now for a full century. But it is not death with which we associate his name; it is life, in all its abundance and variety. In particular, the argument he made for the natural origin of life, including humans, has been one of the most influential ideas in the world over that century’s span. It was accepted
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Charles Darwin has been moldering in his grave now for a full century. But it is not death with which we associate his name; it is life, in all its abundance and variety. In particular, the argument he made for the natural origin of life, including humans, has been one of the most influential ideas in the world over that century’s span. It was accepted
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Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 2006
Asthma begins most often in infants as wheezing with respiratory infections. If these episodes are mild and infrequent, asthma does not usually persist into the school years. However, if they are more frequent and severe, the asthma is likely to persist.
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Asthma begins most often in infants as wheezing with respiratory infections. If these episodes are mild and infrequent, asthma does not usually persist into the school years. However, if they are more frequent and severe, the asthma is likely to persist.
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