Results 361 to 370 of about 223,364 (391)
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THE ONTOGENY OF CEREBRAL DOMINANCE

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1975
It has long been known that in most people the language function depends on the activity of the left cerebral hemisphere. It is clear that language develops from a base state of no language. But does language lateralization analogously develop from a base state of no lateralization? It has been generally assumed that this is so.
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D. ontogeny of ritualization: Ontogeny of ritualization in man [PDF]

open access: possiblePhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences, 1966
In this zoological setting, I may consider it a sign of hospitality that the ontogeny of ritualization in man is to be discussed before that in animals. This permits me to give full consideration to man’s complexity, and to dispense with the attempt to derive the human kind of ritualization from what has come to be ...
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Ontogeny of Hematopoiesis

Blood, 2013
Abstract The current challenge in hematopoietic transplantation and regeneration therapies is acquiring and/or producing a reliable and plentiful source of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Given that HSCs from bone marrow, peripheral, or umbilical cord blood undergo only limited/no expansion ex vivo, there is a high interest in ...
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Macrophages at CNS interfaces: ontogeny and function in health and disease

Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2019
Katrin Kierdorf   +3 more
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Ontogeny

2019
Ashikh Seethy   +2 more
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Ontogeny of Phagocytes

1989
Phagocytic cells represent the effector arm of the host defence system and include both polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) as well as cells of the monocyte-macrophage series. PMNs and peripheral blood monocytes circulate, whereas tissue macrophages reside in organs of the reticuloendothelial system (e.g. liver, spleen and bone marrow).
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Ontogeny of memory.

Psychological Review, 1972
Byron A. Campbell, Norman E. Spear
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