736 resultados para Approaches to learning
Resumo:
Paper presented as part of the National Center for Radiological Health's Seminar Program on Mar. 8, 1968, in Rockville, Md.
Resumo:
Includes index.
Resumo:
"ILENR/RE-94/08."
Resumo:
"June 1994."
Resumo:
"March 1984"--Cover.
Resumo:
On cover: A special report on New York, Pennsylvania [and] Maryland.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
S/N 052-070-054735
Resumo:
The Greeks -- The Bible -- St. Augustine -- Bodin -- Vico -- Herder -- Hegel.
Resumo:
At head of title: International Biological Program, United States National Committee, Aerobiology Program.
Resumo:
In Australia, oral cancer accounts for approximately 2-3 per cent of all cancers, and approximately 1 per cent of deaths from cancer. The incidence of intra-oral cancer is gradually increasing. It is now well established that early detection of potentially malignant disease can improve the clinical outcome for patients, and as such it is the responsibility of dentists to identify such lesions early. To facilitate early detection of suspicious oral lesions several clinical methods of detection can be used. In addition to conventional visual screening of oral tissues with the naked eye under projected incandescent or halogen illumination, there are many clinical diagnostic aids that can be undertaken to help detect oral cancer. In this article we explore clinically available modalities that may be used by the general dental practitioner, and highlight their inherent strengths and weaknesses.
Resumo:
In the present paper, risk-management problems where farmers manage risk both through production decisions and through the use of market-based and informal risk-management mechanisms are considered. It is shown that many of these problems share a common structure, and that a unified and informative treatment of a broad spectrum of risk-management tools is possible within a cost-minimisation framework, under minimal conditions on their objective functions. Fundamental results are derived that apply regardless of the producer's preference towards risks, using only the no-arbitrage condition that agricultural producers never forego any opportunity to lower costs without lowering returns.