Results 201 to 210 of about 688,422 (267)
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Archives of Neurology, 1964
Introduction Visual stimuli of various types have long been known to precipitate epileptic attacks. The best known of these stimuli are those consisting of a flickering light, such as the potter's wheel,1the rotating blades of a helicopter,2or the shafts of light which strike a driver along a tree-lined road.3Less frequent as precipitants are the ...
M H, CHARLTON, P F, HOEFER
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Introduction Visual stimuli of various types have long been known to precipitate epileptic attacks. The best known of these stimuli are those consisting of a flickering light, such as the potter's wheel,1the rotating blades of a helicopter,2or the shafts of light which strike a driver along a tree-lined road.3Less frequent as precipitants are the ...
M H, CHARLTON, P F, HOEFER
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Evidence from a sample of countries show that people roughly spend as much time watching television as earning their living. Moreover, television viewing and work hours are positively correlated across countries. A simple model based on complementarities in the organization of free time is developed that explains such a pattern as resulting from ...
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The Revolution Will be Televised
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery, 2008Ours is a golden age of surgical innovation. Advances in minimally invasive and computer-assisted (robotic) techniques are introduced at an ever-accelerating pace. Biomedical applications of emerging technologies such as novel energy sources, new biomaterials, nanoscale engineering and visualization will continue the revolution in surgical care for ...
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Journal of Audiovisual Media in Medicine, 1997
1997 is the 50th anniversary of the first use of television for medical teaching and the 40th anniversary in Britain of an experimental 2-hour demonstration of pre-clinical teaching by colour television, of the use of large screen television for medical conferences, and of the presentation on national television of programmes aimed at modifying the ...
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1997 is the 50th anniversary of the first use of television for medical teaching and the 40th anniversary in Britain of an experimental 2-hour demonstration of pre-clinical teaching by colour television, of the use of large screen television for medical conferences, and of the presentation on national television of programmes aimed at modifying the ...
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2017
AbstractMediatization of contemporary art on television potentially faces a paradox of balancing elitist and egalitarian stances: an elite subject matter is broadcast for consumption by a mass audience. This chapter aims to demonstrate how this tension has been addressed in the PBS TV art documentary program, Art in the Twenty-first Century.
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AbstractMediatization of contemporary art on television potentially faces a paradox of balancing elitist and egalitarian stances: an elite subject matter is broadcast for consumption by a mass audience. This chapter aims to demonstrate how this tension has been addressed in the PBS TV art documentary program, Art in the Twenty-first Century.
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Nursing Management, 2010
We at the BBC are researching a television documentary series and would like to speak to nurses about how they manage their finances.
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We at the BBC are researching a television documentary series and would like to speak to nurses about how they manage their finances.
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“Television Resurrections”: Television and Memory
Cinema Journal, 2008The Clarendon Press, 2000). For an innovatory attempt to write British commercial television into this history, see Rob Turnock, Television and Consumer Culture: Britain and the Transformation of Modernity (London: I. B. Tauris, 2007). 23. Dick Hebdige gives one of the classic accounts of the British romance with U.S.
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