Osteitis or Skull Osteomyelitis
... century researchers observed that the condition also affected the frontal, sphenoid, ethmoid and maxillae by way of the paranasal sinuses. Previous researchers have reported cases in which skull-base osteomyelitis typically emerged from paranasal infections, instead of ear infections (Blyth, 2010; ...
... century researchers observed that the condition also affected the frontal, sphenoid, ethmoid and maxillae by way of the paranasal sinuses. Previous researchers have reported cases in which skull-base osteomyelitis typically emerged from paranasal infections, instead of ear infections (Blyth, 2010; ...
Unique features of the human brainstem and cerebellum
... and Baker, 2006a). We referred to this region as the “calretinin (CR) area.” We subsequently found a CR area in the MVe of other species, including squirrel and macaque monkeys, chimpanzees, and humans (Baizer and Baker, 2006a; Baizer and Broussard, 2010; Baizer et al., 2013a). Figure 2 illustrates ...
... and Baker, 2006a). We referred to this region as the “calretinin (CR) area.” We subsequently found a CR area in the MVe of other species, including squirrel and macaque monkeys, chimpanzees, and humans (Baizer and Baker, 2006a; Baizer and Broussard, 2010; Baizer et al., 2013a). Figure 2 illustrates ...
Structural Abnormalities of the Central Auditory Pathway in Infants
... 16.0 software package, and a covariate-adjusted multivariate analysis of variance (MANCOVA) approach was applied. For measurements of both body height and head circumference, age (in months) was used as the covariant. For brain size and brain stem measurements, head circumference was selected as the ...
... 16.0 software package, and a covariate-adjusted multivariate analysis of variance (MANCOVA) approach was applied. For measurements of both body height and head circumference, age (in months) was used as the covariant. For brain size and brain stem measurements, head circumference was selected as the ...
pdf - Northern Illinois University
... anthropology: physical or biological anthropology, archaeology, linguistic anthropology, and cultural anthropology. Human diversity across time and space is explored critically within each subfield area and through examples from applied anthropology projects in the world. Grades are based on the tot ...
... anthropology: physical or biological anthropology, archaeology, linguistic anthropology, and cultural anthropology. Human diversity across time and space is explored critically within each subfield area and through examples from applied anthropology projects in the world. Grades are based on the tot ...
Introduction
... Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (1872), he found Reynolds’ observations of the human figure worth reviewing and mentions him, perhaps because this book was designed to appeal to artists as well as scientists.11 Darwin’s own most developed aesthetic program was in the area of sexual sel ...
... Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (1872), he found Reynolds’ observations of the human figure worth reviewing and mentions him, perhaps because this book was designed to appeal to artists as well as scientists.11 Darwin’s own most developed aesthetic program was in the area of sexual sel ...
File
... there’s bone to bone contact in the areas of movement, there will be high friction, so the area between them was covered to decrease the friction *spinous process : very sharp, like the needle *Trochanter : large projection, there are 2 trochanters located in the beginning of the largest bone (femur ...
... there’s bone to bone contact in the areas of movement, there will be high friction, so the area between them was covered to decrease the friction *spinous process : very sharp, like the needle *Trochanter : large projection, there are 2 trochanters located in the beginning of the largest bone (femur ...
ANTHROPOlOgy - UTP Publishing
... surrounded. It uses a question-based approach to introduce important anthropological concepts, embedding those concepts in contemporary global issues that will interest students. The third edition of this popular text includes two new chapters: one on globalization and transnational mobility, and on ...
... surrounded. It uses a question-based approach to introduce important anthropological concepts, embedding those concepts in contemporary global issues that will interest students. The third edition of this popular text includes two new chapters: one on globalization and transnational mobility, and on ...
D.3.4-3.10 Human Evolution PowerPoint
... Southern or Eastern Africa – Homo Erectus – Eastern Africa & Asia – Homo neanderthalensis found in Western Asia & Europe – Homo sapiens many parts of the World. Mader: Biology 8th Ed. ...
... Southern or Eastern Africa – Homo Erectus – Eastern Africa & Asia – Homo neanderthalensis found in Western Asia & Europe – Homo sapiens many parts of the World. Mader: Biology 8th Ed. ...
Visual areas and spatial summation in human visual cortex
... (Wandell, 1999). The data in this figure represent the average of five separate scans. To emphasize the dorsal activation, the overlay is shown only for measurements that are located near the transverse occipital sulcus (TOS) and correlated with the stimulus at a level of at least 0.35. The eccentri ...
... (Wandell, 1999). The data in this figure represent the average of five separate scans. To emphasize the dorsal activation, the overlay is shown only for measurements that are located near the transverse occipital sulcus (TOS) and correlated with the stimulus at a level of at least 0.35. The eccentri ...
Proposal for 2 MRI scanner in the NHSCT
... A single Siemens Harmony MRI scanner supports the full MRI service for all of the NHSCT/Board patient population. The existing MRI scanner, based in Antrim Hospital, was installed in 2004, and is central to the delivery of a wide range of clinical specialities. The increasing demand for MRI scans is ...
... A single Siemens Harmony MRI scanner supports the full MRI service for all of the NHSCT/Board patient population. The existing MRI scanner, based in Antrim Hospital, was installed in 2004, and is central to the delivery of a wide range of clinical specialities. The increasing demand for MRI scans is ...
Feeling and Facial Efference: Implications of the Vascular Theory of
... that would guide future research, however, can be made now. A testable hypothesis that follows from VTEE is that facial efferents can produce changes in brain blood temperature, which in turn have significant hedonic consequences (Stellar, 1982). Hedonic consequences are obtained for a variety of re ...
... that would guide future research, however, can be made now. A testable hypothesis that follows from VTEE is that facial efferents can produce changes in brain blood temperature, which in turn have significant hedonic consequences (Stellar, 1982). Hedonic consequences are obtained for a variety of re ...
Advocacy in Anthropology: Active engagement or passive
... (1992:17-18). She replied: “my work is different now. I cannot be an anthropologist and a companheira at the same time.” But this argument was rejected by the women who insisted that “the next time I came back it would be on their terms, that is as a companheira, ‘accompanying’ them as I had before ...
... (1992:17-18). She replied: “my work is different now. I cannot be an anthropologist and a companheira at the same time.” But this argument was rejected by the women who insisted that “the next time I came back it would be on their terms, that is as a companheira, ‘accompanying’ them as I had before ...
6.Lecture-664 - iLab! - University of Southern California
... the vision problem in its general form is an unsolved problem in engineering. There exists gesture recognition systems for humancomputer interaction and sign language interpretation Our vision system must at least recognize 1) The Hand and its Configuration 2) Object features We attempt in (1) ...
... the vision problem in its general form is an unsolved problem in engineering. There exists gesture recognition systems for humancomputer interaction and sign language interpretation Our vision system must at least recognize 1) The Hand and its Configuration 2) Object features We attempt in (1) ...
facial nerve
... brainstem at the pontomedullary and travels with facial nerve until it travels in the auditory canal to reach the cochlea spiral-shaped cavity of the inner ear and the main organ of hearing) and vestibular organs (utricle, saccule, and the three semicircular ducts of the membranous labyrinth of the ...
... brainstem at the pontomedullary and travels with facial nerve until it travels in the auditory canal to reach the cochlea spiral-shaped cavity of the inner ear and the main organ of hearing) and vestibular organs (utricle, saccule, and the three semicircular ducts of the membranous labyrinth of the ...
Slide - University of Minnesota Duluth
... Westerners, it may be easier to pose research problems emphasizing decision-making individuals . . . ...
... Westerners, it may be easier to pose research problems emphasizing decision-making individuals . . . ...
JACP-D-15-00072R1_accepted_version_postprint
... or psychopathic traits to variance in grey matter indices across the CP sample. The pattern of findings has been somewhat mixed. For example, in a very large (N=191) sample of incarcerated male adolescents (Ermer, Cope, Nyalakanti, Calhoun, & Kiehl, 2013) found negative associations between GM volum ...
... or psychopathic traits to variance in grey matter indices across the CP sample. The pattern of findings has been somewhat mixed. For example, in a very large (N=191) sample of incarcerated male adolescents (Ermer, Cope, Nyalakanti, Calhoun, & Kiehl, 2013) found negative associations between GM volum ...
zygomatic fractures - Erlanger Health System
... midface consists of alternating thick and thin sections of bone that are capable of resisting significant force. This structurally strong bone provides protection for the globes and brain, projection of the midface, and support for occlusion. Reestablishing continuity of these buttresses is the foun ...
... midface consists of alternating thick and thin sections of bone that are capable of resisting significant force. This structurally strong bone provides protection for the globes and brain, projection of the midface, and support for occlusion. Reestablishing continuity of these buttresses is the foun ...
Human Remains Human Remains The Pathologist Rigor Mortis
... Race is difficult to determine from most skeletal remains, especially since pure races are becoming uncommon. An experienced forensic anthropologist can generally place skulls into one of three groups: Caucasian—European, Middle Eastern, and Indian ...
... Race is difficult to determine from most skeletal remains, especially since pure races are becoming uncommon. An experienced forensic anthropologist can generally place skulls into one of three groups: Caucasian—European, Middle Eastern, and Indian ...
12 cranial nerves made easy
... can be purchased here https://www.scribd.com/doc/244032967/. I reduced the length of my other cranial. 12 cranial nerves 1. By: Dr. Pamela Josefina T. Fabie 2. Cranial Nerve I 3. Component: Sensory Function: Smell Origin. We know that there are 12 pairs of cranial nerves which originate from the bra ...
... can be purchased here https://www.scribd.com/doc/244032967/. I reduced the length of my other cranial. 12 cranial nerves 1. By: Dr. Pamela Josefina T. Fabie 2. Cranial Nerve I 3. Component: Sensory Function: Smell Origin. We know that there are 12 pairs of cranial nerves which originate from the bra ...
discintro
... despite the remarkable and undeniable expressive power and universality of natural language, human cognizers are capable of a lot more I/O than just email in and email out. But what is and isn’t a single autonomous system? Certainly a robot controlled remotely by a team of technicians would be neith ...
... despite the remarkable and undeniable expressive power and universality of natural language, human cognizers are capable of a lot more I/O than just email in and email out. But what is and isn’t a single autonomous system? Certainly a robot controlled remotely by a team of technicians would be neith ...
Distributed Cognition: Cognizing, Autonomy and the Turing Test
... despite the remarkable and undeniable expressive power and universality of natural language, human cognizers are capable of a lot more I/O than just email in and email out. But what is and isn’t a single autonomous system? Certainly a robot controlled remotely by a team of technicians would be neith ...
... despite the remarkable and undeniable expressive power and universality of natural language, human cognizers are capable of a lot more I/O than just email in and email out. But what is and isn’t a single autonomous system? Certainly a robot controlled remotely by a team of technicians would be neith ...
Document
... Afferents from cortical motor areas (cotico-bulbar Fs.) supply Ms. of upper face (frontalis & orbicularis oculi) are distributed bilaterally , but those supplying Ms. of lower face are crossed. So, Unilateral upper motor neurone lesion (UMNL) leads to lower facial Ms. paralysis of opposite side only ...
... Afferents from cortical motor areas (cotico-bulbar Fs.) supply Ms. of upper face (frontalis & orbicularis oculi) are distributed bilaterally , but those supplying Ms. of lower face are crossed. So, Unilateral upper motor neurone lesion (UMNL) leads to lower facial Ms. paralysis of opposite side only ...
Long-term use of psychedelic drugs is associated with differences in
... The two-back task involved presentation of a sequence of letters. Participants had to identify if the letter was presented two steps back and make a yes/no decision. The series used comprised 100 items, 30% of which were targets. In the WCST, a pack of 48 cards was presented sequentially on a comput ...
... The two-back task involved presentation of a sequence of letters. Participants had to identify if the letter was presented two steps back and make a yes/no decision. The series used comprised 100 items, 30% of which were targets. In the WCST, a pack of 48 cards was presented sequentially on a comput ...
Craniometry
Craniometry is measurement of the cranium (the main part of the skull), usually the human cranium. It is a subset of cephalometry, measurement of the head. It is distinct from phrenology, the pseudoscience that tried to link personality and character to head shape, and physiognomy, which tried the same for facial features. However, these fields have all claimed the ability to predict traits or intelligence.They were once intensively practised in anthropology, in particular in physical anthropology in the 19th and the first part of the 20th century. Theories attempting to scientifically justify the segregation of society based on race became popular at this time, one of their prominent figures being Georges Vacher de Lapouge (1854–1936), who divided humanity into various, hierarchized, different ""races"", spanning from the ""Aryan white race, dolichocephalic"" (from the Ancient Greek kephalê, head, and dolikhos, long and thin), to the ""brachycephalic"" (short and broad-headed) race. On the other hand, craniometry was also used as evidence against the existence of a ""Nordic race"" and also by Franz Boas who used the cephalic index to show the influence of environmental factors. Charles Darwin used craniometry and the study of skeletons to demonstrate his theory of evolution first expressed in On the Origin of Species (1859).More direct measurements involve examinations of brains from corpses, or more recently, imaging techniques such as MRI, which can be used on living persons. Such measurements are used in research on neuroscience and intelligence.