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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    Tuscaloosa, Ala. [u.a.] :Univ. of Alabama Press,
    UID:
    almafu_BV019370668
    Format: X, 192 S.
    ISBN: 0-8173-1376-1 , 978-0-8173-5435-0 , 0-8173-5435-2
    Content: "In 1992, Art Spiegelman's two-volume illustrated novel Maus: A Survivor's Tale was awarded a special-category Pulitzer Prize. In it, Spiegelman tells the gripping story of his father's experiences in the Holocaust. The book portrays the trials Spiegelman's father endured as a Jewish refugee in the ghettos and concentration camps of Poland during World War II, his difficulties assimilating to American life following his immigration to New York, and the author's own troubled sense of self as he grapples with his father's history." "Ten scholars explore many aspects of the pivotal work, including Spiegelman's use of animal characters, the influence of other "comix" artists, the role of the mother and its relation to gender issues, the use of repeating images such as smoke and blood, Maus's place among Holocaust testimonials, its appropriation of cinematic technique, its use of language and styles of dialect, and the implications of the work's critical and commercial success."--BOOK JACKET.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. [175]-181) and index. - Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke
    Language: English
    Subjects: American Studies , General works
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: 1948- Maus Spiegelman, Art ; Judenvernichtung ; Biografie ; Biografie ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    UID:
    almahu_9948026717002882
    Format: 1 online resource (370 pages) : , illustrations (some color), photographs, tables
    ISBN: 0-12-803632-X , 0-12-803604-4
    Uniform Title: Sjögren's syndrome (Gerli)
    Content: Sjogren's Syndrome: Novel Insights in Pathogenic, Clinical and Therapeutic Aspects provides the reader with an overview of current knowledge about Sjogren's Syndrome. The book summarizes the huge amount of literature concerning related advances in genetic background, pathogenesis, clinical picture, and therapeutic approaches. It integrates basic immunology concepts, clinical aspects, and pharmacological issues. Scientific progress has allowed us to unmask novel pathogenic mechanisms, to perform genome wide studies, and to identify clinical and serological features associated with different disease subsets and, eventually, different disease prognoses. In addition, the increasing knowledge about SS pathogenesis provides the rationale to employ targeted therapies in SS as has already occurred in rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus.
    Note: Front Cover -- Sjögren's Syndrome -- Sjögren's Syndrome: Novel Insights in Pathogenic, Clinical and Therapeutic Aspects -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- Preface -- 1 - Introduction: History of Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 1.1 The History of Sjögren's Syndrome Before Henrik Sjögren -- 1.2 The History of Sjögren's Syndrome: Henrik Sjögren -- 1.3 The History of Sjögren's Syndrome: The Concept of Sjögren's Syndrome as an Autoimmune Disease -- 1.4 The History of Sjögren's Syndrome: Subsequent Milestones -- REFERENCES -- 2 - Clinical Features -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. THE MANY FACETS OF THE DISEASE -- 3. GLANDULAR MANIFESTATIONS -- 4. SYSTEMIC INVOLVEMENT -- 5. NONSPECIFIC MANIFESTATIONS -- 6. PERIEPITHELIAL MANIFESTATIONS -- 6.1 Lung -- 6.2 Kidney -- 6.3 Gastrointestinal Tract -- 6.4 Muscle -- 6.5 Nervous System -- 7. IMMUNE COMPLEX-MEDIATED MANIFESTATIONS -- 7.1 Nervous System -- 7.2 Cutaneous Vasculitis -- 7.3 Lung -- 7.4 Kidney -- 8. CARDIOVASCULAR MANIFESTATIONS -- 9. CONCLUSIONS -- REFERENCES -- 3 - Management of Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. MANAGEMENT OF GLANDULAR COMPLICATIONS -- 2.1 Dry Mouth and Salivary Gland Component -- 2.2 Dry Eyes -- 2.3 Other Glandular Manifestations -- 3. MANAGEMENT OF SYSTEMIC COMPLICATIONS -- 3.1 Nonspecific Manifestations -- 3.1.1 Fatigue -- 3.1.2 Arthralgias/Arthritis -- 3.1.3 Raynaud Phenomenon -- 3.2 Periepithelial Disease -- 3.2.1 Renal Involvement -- 3.2.2 Liver Involvement -- 3.2.3 Lung Involvement -- 4. IMMUNE COMPLEX-MEDIATED DISEASE -- REFERENCES -- 4 - Classification Criteria for Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. GENERAL CONCEPTS ON CLASSIFICATION CRITERIA -- 2. THE HISTORICAL SETS OF CLASSIFICATION CRITERIA PROPOSED BEFORE THE 1990S -- 3. FROM THE PRELIMINARY EUROPEAN CRITERIA TO THE AMERICAN-EUROPEAN CONSENSUS GROUP CRITERIA. , 4. THE NEW PRELIMINARY ACR CLASSIFICATION CRITERIA FOR SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 5. COMPARISON OF THE NEW ACR CRITERIA WITH THE AECG CLASSIFICATION CRITERIA -- 6. THE ACR-EULAR INITIATIVE -- REFERENCES -- 5 - Imaging Procedures Useful for the Diagnosis of Sjögren's Syndrome: Abnormalities of the Major Salivary Glands -- 1. SIALOGRAPHY -- 1.1 Procedure -- 1.2 Validity for Sjögren's Syndrome -- 2. SIALOSCINTIGRAPHY -- 2.1 Procedure -- 2.2 Validity for Sjögren's Syndrome -- 3. ULTRASONOGRAPHY -- 3.1 Procedure -- 3.2 Validity for Sjögren's Syndrome -- 4. MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING -- 4.1 Procedure -- 4.2 Validity for Sjögren's Syndrome -- 5. ELASTOMETRY -- 5.1 Procedure -- 5.2 Validity for Sjögren's Syndrome -- 6. FDG PET/CT IMAGING -- 6.1 Procedure -- 6.2 Validity for SS -- 7. CONCLUSION -- REFERENCES -- 6 - Sjögren's Syndrome-Associated Lymphoma -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. EPIDEMIOLOGY AND HISTOLOGICAL SUBTYPES OF LYMPHOMA IN SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 3. PREDICTORS OF LYMPHOMA IN SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 4. LYMPHOMAGENESIS IN PRIMARY SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 4.1 The Classification of Sjögren's Syndrome-Related Lymphoproliferation -- 4.2 Genetic Alterations in Sjögren's Syndrome-Related Lymphoma -- 4.3 The Role of Infectious Triggers in Sjögren's Syndrome-Related Lymphoproliferation -- 4.4 Rheumatoid Factor Specificity of Sjögren's Syndrome-Related Lymphomas -- 4.5 Why Cryoglobulinemia Develops: Information From HCV-Related Cryoglobulinemia -- 4.6 Cryoglobulinemic Vasculitis in Sjögren's Syndrome: The Clinical Picture -- 4.7 Cryoglobulinemia Is More Related to MALT Lymphoproliferation in Sjögren's Syndrome -- 4.8 B-Cell Clonality in MALT Lymphoproliferation of Sjögren's Syndrome -- 4.9 Ectopic Germinal Center-Like Structures and Chemokines in Sjögren's Syndrome Salivary Glands -- 4.10 Molecular and Cellular Network in Salivary Glands With Lymphoproliferation. , 5. BIOPSY AND IMAGING FOR AN IMPROVED EVALUATION OF LYMPHOPROLIFERATION IN SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 6. TREATMENT -- REFERENCES -- 7 - Spontaneous and Inducible Animal Models of Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. SPONTANEOUS MODELS -- 1.1 NOD Mice -- 1.1.1 NOD Strain Origins and Characteristics -- 1.1.2 NOD Genetics -- 1.1.3 Lessons From Gene Knockout in NOD Mice: The Role of Cytokines in NOD Mouse Sialadenitis -- 1.1.4 Histological and Functional Characteristics of the Immune Cell Infiltrates in NOD Salivary Glands: Formation of Ectopic Ge... -- 1.1.5 Autoreactive B-Cell Activation and Autoantibody Production in NOD Mice -- 1.1.6 Aberrant Apoptosis in NOD Salivary Glands -- 1.2 Other Spontaneous Models of SS: NZB and NZB/NZW F1, NFS/sld, IQI/Jic and MRL/+ and MRL/lpr Mice -- 2. INDUCIBLE MODELS OF SS-LIKE SIALADENITIS AND AUTOIMMUNITY -- 2.1 Immunization Methods to Induce Sialadenitis -- 2.2 Virus-Induced Experimental Sialadenitis -- 2.2.1 Murine Cytomegalovirus -- 2.2.2 Adenovirus-Induced Sialadenitis -- REFERENCES -- 8 - Genetics, Genomics, Gene Expression Profiling, and Epigenetics in Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND -- 2. EPIDEMIOLOGY, PREVALENCE, AND CLASSIFICATION CRITERIA -- 3. IMMUNOPATHOLOGY OF SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 4. "TRADITIONAL" GENETICS: HUMAN LEUKOCYTE ANTIGENS -- 5. CANDIDATE GENE ANALYSIS -- 6. GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION STUDIES -- 7. EPIGENETICS -- 7.1 Gene Methylation and Other Processes -- 7.2 Micro-RNAs -- 8. FUNCTIONAL GENOMICS -- 8.1 Gene Expression Profiling: Interferon Signature -- 8.2 Genomics and Transcriptomics -- 8.3 Microbiome Analysis -- 8.4 Proteomics -- 8.5 Metabolomics -- 9. CONCLUSIONS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- 9 - Autoantigens and Autoantibodies in the Pathogenesis of Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. PATHOGENESIS AND AUTOANTIGENS -- 2.1 Ro/SSA and La/SSB -- 2.2 Calreticulin. , 2.3 Muscarinic 3 Receptors -- 2.4 Carbonic Anhydrase II -- 2.5 α-Fodrin -- 2.6 Tear Lipocalin -- 3. AUTOANTIBODIES: THEIR ROLE IN THE PATHOGENESIS AND DIAGNOSIS -- 3.1 Antinuclear Antibodies and Anti-Ro/SSA and Anti-La/SSB -- 3.2 Rheumatoid Factor, Anticyclic Citrullinated Peptide Antibodies -- 3.3 Antibodies Against U1 Ribonucleoprotein -- 3.4 Anticentromere Antibodies -- 3.5 Antimitochondrial Antibodies -- 3.6 Anti-Smooth Muscle Antibodies -- 3.7 Antibodies Against Muscarinic Receptors Type 3 -- 3.8 Autoantibodies Targeting Carbonic Anhydrase II -- 3.9 Antibodies Against α-Fodrin -- 4. NOVEL PROPOSED AUTOANTIGENS AND AUTOANTIBODIES -- 5. CONCLUSIONS -- REFERENCES -- 10 - Sjögren's Syndrome and Environmental Factors -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME AND INFECTIONS -- 3. SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME AND VACCINES -- 4. SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME AND SILICONE -- 5. SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME AND ASIA SYNDROME -- 6. SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME, HORMONAL FACTORS, AND VITAMIN D -- 7. SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME, STRESS, AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION -- 8. CONCLUSIONS -- REFERENCES -- 11 - Histology of Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. SALIVARY GLAND ANATOMY -- 3. HISTOLOGY OF NORMAL SALIVARY GLANDS -- 4. SALIVARY GLAND BIOPSY -- 5. HISTOLOGICAL FINDINGS IN SALIVARY GLANDS FROM SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME PATIENTS -- 6. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS -- 7. GERMINAL CENTERS AS PREDICTORS OF LYMPHOMA DEVELOPMENT -- 8. LYMPHOMA HISTOPATHOLOGY -- 9. THE VALUE OF HISTOPATHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT DURING CLINICAL TRIALS -- 10. CONCLUSIONS -- REFERENCES -- 12 - Glandular Epithelium: Innocent Bystander or Leading Actor? -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. DYSFUNCTION OF GLANDULAR EPITHELIA IN SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME: "INNOCENT BYSTANDERS"? -- 2.1 Altered Epithelial Secretory Function in Sjögren's Syndrome -- 2.2 Apoptotic Cell Death of Epithelial Cells in Sjögren's Syndrome. , 3. THE CLINICAL EXPRESSION OF "AUTOIMMUNE EPITHELIITIS" -- 4. EPITHELIUM AS THE LEADING ACTOR OF AUTOIMMUNE RESPONSES -- 4.1 Epithelial Cells Are Suitably Equipped to Mediate the Development and Perpetuation of SS Autoimmune Responses -- 4.2 Epithelial Cells Are Able to Mediate the Activation and Differentiation of Immune Cells -- 4.3 Epithelial Cells of Sjögren's Syndrome Patients Are Intrinsically Activated -- 5. SUMMARY -- ABBREVIATIONS -- REFERENCES -- 13 - T Cells in the Pathogenesis of Sjögren's Syndrome: More Than Just Th1 and Th2 -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. REGULATORY T CELLS IN SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 3. IL-17-PRODUCING T CELLS IN SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 4. FOLLICULAR T HELPER CELLS IN SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 5. T HELPER 22 AND T HELPER 9 CELLS -- 6. CONCLUDING REMARKS -- REFERENCES -- 14 - B Lymphocytes in Primary Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. B-CELL HYPERACTIVITY IS A HALLMARK OF PRIMARY SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 2. B-CELL CLASSIFICATION ACCORDING TO THEIR ONTOGENIC STATE -- 3. B LYMPHOCYTES IN SALIVARY GLANDS -- 4. B LYMPHOCYTES IN PERIPHERAL BLOOD -- 5. INTRINSIC B-CELL DEFECTS -- 6. AUTOREACTIVITY-DRIVEN B LYMPHOCYTE PROLIFERATION -- 7. B-CELL-DERIVED CYTOKINES -- 8. INTERCONNECTIONS BETWEEN B- AND T-CELL CYTOKINE NETWORKS -- 9. EPIGENETIC DYSREGULATIONS IN SALIVARY GLANDS IS ASCRIBED TO B CELLS -- 10. CONCLUSION -- REFERENCES -- 15 - Cytokines, Chemokines, and the Innate Immune System in Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. INTRODUCTION -- 2. CYTOKINES OF THE INNATE IMMUNE SYSTEM IN PRIMARY SJÖGREN'S SYNDROME -- 2.1 Type I Interferon -- 2.2 Tumor Necrosis Factor -- 2.3 B-Cell Activating Factor -- 2.4 Interleukin-6 -- 2.5 Interleukin-1 -- 3. CONCLUSION -- REFERENCES -- 16 - Autoantibodies and Autoantigens in Sjögren's Syndrome -- 1. BACKGROUND OF AUTOANTIBODIES SSA/B -- 2. METHODS OF DETECTION OF ANTINUCLEAR ANTIBODIES AND RO/SSA AND LA/SSB. , 3. DETECTION OF SPECIFIC ANTIBODIES TO RO/SSA AND LA/SSB.
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_9949254429102882
    Format: 1 online resource (562 pages)
    Edition: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 0-12-816012-8
    Content: Ensuring Global Food Safety: Exploring Global Harmonization, Second Edition, examines the policies and practices of food law which remain top contributors to food waste. This fully revised and updated edition offers a rational and multifaceted approach to the science-based issue of "what is safe for consumption?" and how creating a globally acceptable framework of microbiological, toxicological and nutritional standards can contribute to the alleviation of hunger and food insecurity in the world. Currently, many laws and regulations are so stringent that healthy food is destroyed based on scientifically incorrect information upon which laws and regulations are based. This book illuminates these issues, offering guidelines for moving toward a scientifically sound approach to food safety regulation that can also improve food security without putting consumers at risk.
    Note: Front Cover -- Ensuring Global Food Safety -- Ensuring Global Food Safety -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of contributors -- 1 - Introduction: Ensuring global food safety: A public health priority and a global responsibility -- References -- 2 - Safety and security: the costs and benefits of traceability and transparency in the food chain -- 2.1 The burden of foodborne outbreaks -- 2.1.1 Each year 48 million people get sick from foodborne illnesses, 128,000 are hospitalized, and 3000 die (Centers for Disease ... -- 2.1.2 About 23% of U.S. food recalls cost the food industry over 30 million and 14% cost organizations over 50 mi ... -- 2.1.3 Reducing foodborne illnesses by just 1% would prevent nearly 500,000 Americans from getting sick each year -- 2.2 The food supply chain: increasing risk -- 2.3 Working toward traceability and transparency -- 2.4 The costs associated to a lack of traceability -- 2.4.1 Issues with labeling and brand claims -- 2.4.2 Restrictions to market access -- 2.5 Benefits beyond food safety -- 2.5.1 Enhanced credibility -- 2.5.2 Transparent marketing -- 2.5.3 Increased reliability for consumers -- 2.6 More operational efficiency -- References -- 3 - Food regulation around the world -- 3.1 - Introduction -- 3.1.1 Purpose of this chapter -- 3.1.2 Food law -- 3.1.3 Framework of analysis -- Further reading -- 3.2 - International food law -- 3.2.1 Codex Alimentarius -- 3.2.2 Procedural manual -- 3.2.3 Standards -- 3.2.4 Codes -- 3.2.5 Legal force -- 3.2.6 WTO/SPS -- 3.2.7 Conclusion -- References -- Further reading -- 3.3 - United States of America -- 3.3.1 Introduction -- 3.3.1.1 What is food law? -- 3.3.1.2 The history of U.S. food law -- 3.3.1.3 The evolution of food law through scandal and tragedy -- 3.3.2 The food regulatory system -- 3.3.2.1 Food and Drug Administration. , 3.3.2.2 U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service -- 3.3.2.3 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention -- 3.3.2.4 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency -- 3.3.2.5 Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau -- 3.3.2.6 U.S. Customs and Border Protection -- 3.3.2.7 Federal Trade Commission -- 3.3.2.8 Other federal agencies -- 3.3.2.9 State and local governments -- 3.3.3 Major federal laws -- 3.3.3.1 Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act -- 3.3.3.2 Federal Meat Inspection Act -- 3.3.3.3 Poultry Products Inspection Act -- 3.3.3.4 Egg Products Inspection Act -- 3.3.3.5 The regulations -- 3.3.4 Principles and concepts -- 3.3.4.1 Codex Alimentarius -- 3.3.4.2 Standards -- 3.3.4.3 Authorization requirements -- 3.3.4.4 Food from genetically engineered organisms -- 3.3.4.5 Process requirements -- 3.3.4.6 Risk analysis -- 3.3.4.7 Powers of enforcement -- 3.3.5 Labeling -- 3.3.5.1 The affirmative requirements -- 3.3.5.2 Labeling of ingredients and food additives -- 3.3.5.3 ``Major'' allergen labeling -- 3.3.5.4 Nutrition facts labeling -- 3.3.5.5 Nutrient level claims -- 3.3.5.6 Health claims -- 3.3.5.6.1 NLEA or significant scientific agreement claims -- 3.3.5.6.2 FDAMA or authoritative statement claims -- 3.3.5.6.3 Qualified health claim -- 3.3.5.6.4 Medicinal claims -- 3.3.6 Conclusion -- 3.3.6.1 Sources for more information -- References -- Further reading -- 3.4 - Canada -- 3.4.1 Introduction -- 3.4.1.1 Sources of legislation for food -- 3.4.1.2 Game changing event(s) -- 3.4.1.3 Addressees of food law and the role of risk analysis -- 3.4.1.4 Role of the Codex Alimentarius -- 3.4.2 Institutional -- 3.4.2.1 Authorities in food law -- 3.4.2.2 Is an FDA or EFSA model applied? -- 3.4.2.3 Powers of enforcement -- 3.4.3 Principles and concepts -- 3.4.3.1 Food law principles -- 3.4.3.2 Important concepts -- 3.4.4 Authorization requirements. , 3.4.4.1 Food additives -- 3.4.4.2 Food irradiation -- 3.4.4.3 Novel foods/genetically modified foods -- 3.4.5 Food safety limits -- 3.4.5.1 Residues limits of veterinary drugs -- 3.4.5.2 Chemical contaminants and/or microorganisms limits -- 3.4.5.3 Pesticide residue limits -- 3.4.6 Process requirements -- 3.4.6.1 Business hygiene processes -- 3.4.6.2 HACCP requirements -- 3.4.6.3 Traceability requirements -- 3.4.6.4 Recall obligations -- 3.4.7 Labeling -- 3.4.7.1 Introduction -- 3.4.7.2 Definition -- 3.4.7.3 Mandatory labeling requirements -- 3.4.7.4 Prohibited elements -- 3.4.7.5 Labeling of food additives -- 3.4.7.6 Allergen labeling -- 3.4.7.7 Nutrition labeling -- 3.4.7.8 Nutrition content claims, health claims, and medicinal claims -- 3.4.8 Human right to food -- References -- Further reading -- 3.5 - The road to harmonization in Latin America -- 3.5.1 Introduction -- 3.5.2 Steps toward harmonization -- 3.5.3 The challenges of regional food regulation -- 3.5.4 Regional intentions for improvement: the Pan American Commission of Food Safety (COPAIA 7) -- 3.5.5 General regulatory structure -- 3.5.6 Trade agreements -- 3.5.6.1 Pacific Alliance -- 3.5.6.2 NAFTA/USMCA -- 3.5.6.3 Andean Community -- 3.5.6.4 CARICOM -- 3.5.6.5 Central American Customs Union (UniOn Aduanera Centroamericana) -- 3.5.6.6 MERCOSUR -- 3.5.7 Conclusions -- References -- Further reading -- 3.6 - European Union -- 3.6.1 Introduction -- 3.6.2 Institutional -- 3.6.3 Enforcement and incident management -- 3.6.4 Principles and concepts -- 3.6.5 Standards -- 3.6.6 Authorization requirements -- 3.6.7 Food safety limits -- 3.6.8 Process requirements -- 3.6.9 Labeling -- 3.6.10 Human right to food/food security -- References -- Further reading -- 3.7 - Turkey -- 3.7.1 Introduction -- 3.7.1.1 Historical evolution of food law in Turkey -- 3.7.1.2 Fundamental legislation. , 3.7.1.3 Risk analysis -- 3.7.1.4 Codex Alimentarius and Turkish food law -- 3.7.2 Fundamental institutional framework -- 3.7.2.1 Major authorities -- 3.7.2.2 Enforcement powers -- 3.7.3 Standards -- 3.7.4 Authorization requirements -- 3.7.4.1 Food subject to authorization -- 3.7.4.2 Procedural aspects -- 3.7.5 Food safety limits -- 3.7.5.1 Residue limits -- 3.7.5.2 Contaminant limits -- 3.7.5.3 Determination of limits -- 3.7.6 Process requirements -- 3.7.6.1 The hygienic regulation of business processes -- 3.7.6.2 Traceability requirements -- 3.7.7 Labeling -- 3.7.7.1 Mandatory particulars -- 3.7.7.2 Labeling of food additives -- 3.7.7.3 Allergen labeling -- 3.7.7.4 Nutrition labeling -- 3.7.7.5 Nutrition and health claims -- 3.7.7.6 Medicinal claims -- 3.7.7.7 Modalities of information -- 3.7.8 Conclusion -- References -- 3.8 - The Russian Federation -- 3.8.1 Russian food law -- 3.8.2 Institutions -- 3.8.3 Technical regulation -- 3.8.4 General food safety -- 3.8.5 Authorization -- 3.8.5.1 General -- 3.8.5.2 Specialized food products -- 3.8.5.3 Novel foods -- 3.8.6 Process requirements -- 3.8.7 Labeling -- 3.8.7.1 Mandatory particulars -- 3.8.7.2 Allergens -- 3.8.7.3 Claims -- 3.8.8 Developments -- Further reading -- 3.9 - Azerbaijan -- 3.9.1 Introduction -- 3.9.2 Most important sources of legislation for food -- 3.9.3 Developments -- 3.9.4 Role of risk analysis -- 3.9.5 The addressees of food law -- 3.9.6 Codex Alimentarius -- 3.9.7 Institutional -- 3.9.8 Principles and concepts -- 3.9.9 Standards -- 3.9.10 Authorization requirements -- 3.9.11 Food safety limits -- 3.9.12 Process requirements -- 3.9.13 Labeling -- References -- Further reading -- 3.10 - Australia and New Zealand -- 3.10.1 Introduction -- 3.10.1.1 Food law in Australia and New Zealand -- 3.10.1.2 Sources of food legislation. , 3.10.1.3 Game-changing events in Australian and New Zealand food law -- 3.10.1.4 The role of risk analysis -- 3.10.1.5 The addressees of food law -- 3.10.1.6 Role of the Codex Alimentarius -- 3.10.2 Institutional framework -- 3.10.2.1 Food law regulatory bodies -- 3.10.2.1.1 Australia -- 3.10.2.1.2 New Zealand -- 3.10.2.2 The regulatory divide between food and medicine -- 3.10.2.3 Enforcement powers -- 3.10.3 Principles and concepts -- 3.10.3.1 Principles underpinning food law -- 3.10.3.2 Important concepts in food law -- 3.10.3.3 Definition of food -- 3.10.4 Standards -- 3.10.4.1 What is the role of standards? -- 3.10.5 Authorization requirements -- 3.10.5.1 Types of food subject to authorization -- 3.10.5.2 Authorization procedure -- 3.10.5.3 The role of Codex Alimentarius in food additive authorization -- 3.10.6 Food safety limits -- 3.10.6.1 Agricultural and veterinary chemical limits -- 3.10.6.2 Chemical contaminant and toxicity limits -- 3.10.6.3 How limits are set -- 3.10.6.4 How do these limits relate to the Codex Alimentarius? -- 3.10.7 Process requirements -- 3.10.7.1 Business processes to ensure quality and hygiene -- 3.10.7.2 Traceability requirements -- 3.10.7.3 Recall obligations -- 3.10.8 Labeling -- 3.10.8.1 Mandatory labeling particulars -- 3.10.8.2 Food additive labeling -- 3.10.8.3 Allergen labeling -- 3.10.8.4 Nutrition information labeling -- 3.10.8.5 Nutrition content claims and health claims -- 3.10.8.6 Therapeutic and medical claims -- 3.10.8.7 How do the labeling requirements apply outside of the label? -- 3.10.9 Human right to food/food security -- 3.10.9.1 Is food recognized as a human right? -- 3.10.9.2 Is right to food related to food law? -- 3.11 - People's Republic of China -- 3.11.1 Concepts, principles, and background -- 3.11.2 Food safety legislative framework -- 3.11.3 Food safety regulatory system. , 3.11.4 Conclusion.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-12-816011-X
    Language: English
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Waltham, MA :Elsevier,
    UID:
    almahu_9948025381802882
    Format: 1 online resource (494 p.)
    Edition: First edition.
    ISBN: 0-12-396471-7 , 0-12-394847-9
    Series Statement: Hazards and disasters series
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Front Cover; Biological and Environmental Hazards, Risks, and Disasters; Copyright; Dedication; Title and Description of the Cover Image; ALGAL BLOOM IN LAKE ERIE, USA; Contents; Contributors; Editorial Foreword; GENERAL HAZARDS, RISKS, AND DISASTERS; BIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF HAZARDS, RISKS, AND DISASTERS; REFERENCES; Acknowledgments; List of Reviewers; 1 - Introduction to Biological and Environmental Hazards, Risks, and Disasters; REFERENCES; 2 - Algal Blooms; 2.1 INTRODUCTION; 2.2 HISTORIC EXAMPLES OF HAB INCIDENTS; 2.3 HAB INCIDENTS IN RECENT DECADES; 2.4 ECONOMIC IMPACTS OF HABS , 2.5 HOW DO BLOOMS FORM?2.6 VULNERABILITY; 2.7 MITIGATION; 2.8 PREPAREDNESS; 2.9 RESPONSE; 2.10 (4F) RECOVERY; REFERENCES; 3 - Large-Scale Grasshopper Infestations on North American Rangeland and Crops; 3.1 INTRODUCTION; 3.2 TAXONOMY; 3.3 BASIC BIOLOGY; 3.4 ECOLOGY; 3.5 GRASSHOPPER-OUTBREAK DAMAGE; 3.6 LONG-TERM DAMAGE; 3.7 PAST GRASSHOPPER-OUTBREAK MANAGEMENT; 3.8 EARLY PESTICIDE CONTROL EFFORTS; 3.9 RECENT OUTBREAKS; REFERENCES; 4 - Locusts: An Introduction; REFERENCES; 4.1 - The Australian Plague Locust-Risk and Response; 4.1.1 INTRODUCTION; 4.1.2 ECOLOGY OF THE AUSTRALIAN PLAGUE LOCUST , 4.1.3 POPULATION OUTBREAKS4.1.4 HISTORY OF LOCUST OUTBREAKS AND CONTROL IN AUSTRALIA; 4.1.5 ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL IMPACTS; 4.1.6 THE AUSTRALIAN PLAGUE LOCUST COMMISSION AND CURRENT APPROACHES TO LOCUST MANAGEMENT IN AUSTRALIA; 4.1.7 THE RISKS AND HAZARDS OF LOCUST CONTROL IN AUSTRALIA; 4.1.7.1 Failure to Control; 4.1.7.2 Unnecessary Intervention; 4.1.7.3 Off-target Risks and Hazards; 4.1.7.4 Injury; 4.1.8 FUTURE CONSIDERATIONS; 4.1.9 CONCLUSIONS; REFERENCES; 4.2 - Desert Locust; 4.2.1 MONITORING AND FORECASTING; 4.2.2 TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES; 4.2.3 EARLY WARNING; 4.2.4 CHALLENGES , 4.2.5 CONCLUSIONREFERENCES; 4.3 - Other Locusts; REFERENCES; 5 - Decline of Bees and Other Pollinators; 5.1 INTRODUCTION; 5.2 LAND-USE CHANGES; 5.3 WEATHER; 5.4 PEST AND DISEASES; 5.5 CLIMATE CHANGE; 5.6 PESTICIDES; 5.7 OTHER CAUSES; 5.8 WHAT CAN BE DONE?; REFERENCES; 6 - Bark Beetle-Induced Forest Mortality in the North American Rocky Mountains; 6.1 INTRODUCTION; 6.1.1 The Nature and Extent of Mortality by Insects and Disease; 6.2 EFFECTS OF BARK BEETLE IMPACTS; 6.2.1 Nitrogen; 6.2.2 Carbon; 6.2.3 Water; 6.2.4 Vegetation Response; 6.2.5 Economic Costs and Losses; 6.3 SUMMARY; REFERENCES , 7 - Novel Approaches for Reversible Field Releases of Candidate Weed Biological Control Agents: Putting the Genie B ...7.1 INTRODUCTION; 7.2 BRAZILIAN PEPPERTREE CASE STUDY; 7.2.1 Biological Approach; 7.2.2 Autocidal Approach; 7.2.2.1 Radiation Induced; 7.2.2.2 Transgenic; 7.3 CONCLUSION; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; 8 - Animal Hazards-Their Nature and Distribution; 8.1 INTRODUCTION; 8.2 ANIMAL ATTACKS; 8.3 ANIMAL ACCIDENTS; 8.4 DISEASES CONTRACTED FROM ANIMALS; 8.4.1 Contracted from Animal Bites and Stings; 8.4.2 Contracted from Consumption of Infected Animal Products , 8.4.3 Contracted from the Handling of Animals or Animal Products , English
    Language: English
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  • 5
    UID:
    almahu_9947362714502882
    Format: XXXVIII, 640 p. 209 illus., 8 illus. in color. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9783319043791
    Series Statement: Springer Proceedings in Complexity,
    Content: Recent developments in air pollution modelling are explored as a series of contributions from researchers at the forefront of their field. This newest contribution on air pollution modelling and its application is focused on local, urban, regional and intercontinental modelling; data assimilation and air quality forecasting; model assessment and evaluation; aerosol transformation. Additionally, this work also examines the relationship between air quality and human health and the effects of climate change on air quality. The work derives from  a series of papers presented at the 33rd International Technical Meeting on Air Pollution Modelling and its Application held in Miami, USA, August 27 - 31, 2013.  The book is intended as reference material for students and professors interested in air pollution modelling at the graduate level as well as researchers and professionals involved in developing and utilizing air pollution models.
    Note: Part I Air quality and human health -- Use of air quality modeling results in health effects research -- 2 Air quality effects on human health -- 3 Development of model-based air pollution exposure metrics for use in epidemiologic studies -- 4 Improved spatiotemporal air pollutant mixture characterization for health studies -- 5 Advances in linked air quality, farm management and biogeochemistry models to address bidirectional ammonia flux in CMAQ -- 6 A temporal NOx emissions trading system: case study of US power plants -- 7 Source attribution of attainment and exposure-based ozone metrics in North America -- 8 CASTNET methodology for modeling dry and total deposition -- 9 ACCEPTED: an Assessment of Changing Conditions, Environmental Policies, Time-activities, Exposure and Disease -- Part II Climate change and air quality -- 10 Studying aerosol-cloud-climate interactions over East Asia using WRF/Chem -- 11 Investigation of trends in aerosol direct radiative effects over North America using a coupled meteorology-chemistry model -- 12 Future year air quality change due to growth in aircraft emissions and changes in climate -- Part III Aerosols in the atmosphere -- 13 The use of a Non Negative Matrix Factorization method combined to PM2.5 chemical data for a source apportionment study in different environments -- 14 On the interplay between upper and ground levels dynamics and chemistry in determining the surface aerosol budget -- 15 Modeling of aerosol indirect effects with WRF/Chem over Europe -- 16 The influence of cloud chemical processes on the formation of secondary particulate matter -- 17 An improved volatility basis set for modeling organic aerosol in both CAMx and CMAQ -- 18 Issues related to on/offline meteorological and atmospheric chemistry model coupling -- 19 Increases in wintertime oxidation capacity counteract the success of emission reduction measures in Europe with respect to secondary inorganic aerosols -- 20 Investigating the contribution of biogenic emissions to the formation of secondary pollutants in Portugal -- 21 Modelling aerosol-cloud-meteorology interaction: a case study with a fully coupled air quality model (GEM-MACH) -- 22 Evaluation of cloud chemistry mechanism towards laboratory experiments -- 23 Effects of surf zone sea-spray particles on aerosol concentration in coastal area -- 24 Novel pathways to form secondary organic aerosols: glyoxal SOA in WRF/Chem -- 25 Modeling seasonal changes in organic aerosol composition at the puy de Dôme (France) -- 26 Using WRF-CMAQ air quality modelling system to estimate BaP concentrations over Zaragoza (Spain) -- 27 The POAEMM project: prediction of spatial and temporal variation of marine aerosols in coastal area -- 28 An integrated Weather and Sea State Forecasting system for the Arabian Peninsula (WASSF) -- 29 Modelling past and future changes in secondary inorganic aerosol concentrations in the UK -- Part IV Regional and intercontinental modeling -- 30 Modelling the impact of energy transitions on air quality and source receptor relations -- 31 Impact of mercury chemistry on regional concentration and deposition patterns -- 32 A multiscale modeling study to assess impacts of full-flight aircraft emissions on upper troposphere and surface air quality -- 33 Relevance of photolysis frequencies calculation aspects to the ozone concentration simulation -- 34 Air pollution in China in January 2013 -- 35 Impact on Ontario’s air quality due to changes in North American emission from 2005 to 2020 -- 36 Modelling the concentration and deposition of heavy metals in the UK -- 37 A process analysis of the impact of air-quality/weather feedbacks using GEM-MACH -- 38 Analog-based postprocessing methods for air quality forecasting -- 39 Comparing different modeling approaches in obtaining regional scale concentration maps -- 40 Impact of RACM2, halogen chemistry and updated ozone deposition velocity on hemispheric ozone predictions -- 41 A global wildfire emission and atmospheric composition: refinement of the Integrated System For Wild-Land Fires IS4FIRES -- 42 The regional LOTOS-EUROS model on tour -- 43 The incorporation of the US national emission inventory into version 2 of the Hemispheric Transport of Air Pollutants inventory -- 44 Impact of vertical and horizontal resolutions on chemistry transport modeling -- 45 A model study on the effects of emission reductions on European air quality between 1990 and 2020 -- 46 Analysis and modelling of ambient air toxics pollutants in Canada with Environment Canada AURAMS model -- 47 Investigating the coherence between a global and a limited area model for dust particle production and distribution in N. Africa -- 48 Effects of future ship emissions in the North Sea on air quality -- 49 Temporally and spatially resolved air pollution in Georgia using fused ambient monitor data and chemical transport model results -- 50 Maritime sector emissions contribution to the particulate matter pollution in a Mediterranean city-port: A modeling approach -- 51 Application and evaluation of the high-resolution regional scale FRAME model for calculation of ammonia and ammonium air concentrations for Poland for the years 2002-2008 -- 52 Regional transports of atmospheric NOx and HNO3 over Cape Town -- 53 The impact of transboundary transport of air pollutants on air quality in the United Kingdom and Poland -- Part V Local and urban scale modeling -- 54 A 40-year history of a simple urban dispersion model and its evaluation -- 55 Assessment of the effect of multiscale interactions on the atmospheric flow and the dispersion of air pollution in the city of Paris -- 56 PAHs modelling over urban area of Rome: integration of models results with experimental data -- 57 Modelling the effects of urban morphology, traffic and pedestrian dynamics on students’ exposure to air pollution -- 58 LES of advective and turbulent passive scalar fluxes in a street intersection -- 59 Two-phase accidental dense gas releases simulations with the Lagrangian particle model Microspray -- 60 Modeling of the Urban Heat Island and its effect on air quality using WRF/WRF-Chem – Assessment of mitigation strategies for a central European city -- 61 Assessment of three dynamical urban climate downscaling methods -- 62 Validating the RIO-IFDM street canyon coupling over Antwerp, Belgium -- 63 The influence of the changing NOx-split for compliance to the European limit values in urban areas -- 64 Evaluation of air pollution models for their use in emergency response tools in built environments: the ‘Michelstadt’ case study in COST ES1006 ACTION -- 65 Development of a numerical prediction model system for the assessment of the air quality in Budapest -- 66 Analysis of the differences between pollution levels into a new and an old district of a big city using dispersion simulations at microscale -- 67 Water Tank Simulation of a dense fluid release -- 68 The porosity concept applied to urban canopy improves the results of Gaussian dispersion modelling of traffic-dominated emissions -- 69 An evaluation of the box model estimating carbon monoxide concentration in the city of Caracas, Venezuela -- 70 Implications of vegetation on pollutant dispersion in an idealized urban neighborhood -- Part VI Model assessment and verification -- 71 Dynamic evaluation of the CMAQv5.0 modeling system:  Assessing the model’s ability to simulate ozone changes due to NOx emission reductions -- 72 Evaluation of a chemical data assimilation system -- 73 Resolving and quantifying ozone contributions from boundary conditions within regional models -- 74 E pluribus unum: KZ filters and Ensemble Air Quality modeling -- 75 Air quality model evaluation using Gaussian process modelling and empirical orthogonal function decomposition -- 76 AQMEII Phase 2: Overview and WRF-CMAQ Application over North America -- 77 Modelling UK Air Quality for AQMEII2 with the Online Forecast Model AQUM -- 78 Model inter-comparison study between NMMB/B
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783319043784
    Language: English
    Keywords: Konferenzschrift
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [Amsterdam] :Elsevier B.V., ; Began with Volume 1 (2021).
    UID:
    almahu_9948637570702882
    Format: 1 online resource
    Note: Refereed/Peer-reviewed , Canine and feline vector-borne diseases of zoonotic concern in Southeast Asia -- Helminth lipidomics: Technical aspects and future prospects -- Perspectives on intestinal tapeworm infections: An evaluation of direct and indirect life-cycles with a special emphasis on species of Hymenolepis -- Leishmania infection in cats and feline leishmaniosis: An updated review with a proposal of a diagnosis algorithm and prevention guidelines -- Current debates and advances in tick microbiome research -- Comparative studies on faecal egg counting techniques used for the detection of gastrointestinal parasites of equines: A systematic review -- Systematic review of the entomological impact of insecticide-treated nets evaluated using experimental hut trials in Africa -- Ecological and evolutionary perspectives on tick-borne pathogen co-infections -- Protecting dogs and cats against the Australian paralysis tick, Ixodes holocyclus (Acari: Ixodidae): A review of the Australian acaricide registration process -- The controversies surrounding Giardia intestinalis assemblages A and B -- Variability in human attractiveness to mosquitoes -- Cystic echinococcosis in humans and animals in Egypt: An epidemiological overview -- Seroprevalence of Neospora caninum in dogs from greater Sydney, Australia unchanged from 1997 to 2019 and worldwide review of adult-onset of canine neosporosis -- Whole-genome reference of Dirofilaria immitis from Australia to determine single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with macrocyclic lactone resistance in the USA -- Not gone but forgotten: Tritrichomonas foetus in extensively-managed bulls from Australia's Northern Territory -- Recent trends in the use of social media in parasitology and the application of alternative metrics -- Modeling the association between Aedes aegypti ovitrap egg counts, multi-scale remotely sensed environmental data and arboviral cases at Puntarenas, Costa Rica (2017-2018) -- Bulinus truncatus transcriptome - a resource to enable molecular studies of snail and schistosome biology -- Mitochondrial genome of Bulinus truncatus (Gastropoda: Lymnaeoidea): Implications for snail systematics and schistosome epidemiology -- Molecular characterization of novel Ehrlichia genotypes in Ixodes auritulus from Uruguay -- Four polyopisthocotyleans (Platyhelminthes: Monogenea) from carangid fishes in the Mediterranean, off the Algerian coasts -- Genetic diversity and shedding profiles for Cryptosporidium parvum in adult cattle and their calves -- What the fox? Cryptic Eucoleus [Capillaria] sp. in the respiratory tract of a cat from Australia -- Comparison of quantitative polymerase chain reaction, Kato-Katz and circulating cathodic antigen rapid test for the diagnosis of Schistosoma mansoni infection: A cross-sectional study in Kirinyaga County, Kenya -- Field evaluation of Veeralin, an alpha-cypermethrin + PBO long-lasting insecticidal net, against natural populations of Anopheles funestus in experimental huts in Muheza, Tanzania -- In vitro anti-Trypanosoma cruzi activity enhancement of curcumin by its monoketone tetramethoxy analog diveratralacetone -- Complexity of malaria transmission dynamics in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest -- Using cerebrospinal fluid to confirm Angiostrongylus cantonensis as the cause of canine neuroangiostrongyliasis in Australia where A. cantonensis and Angiostrongylus mackerrasae co-exist -- Molecular screening for tick-borne bacteria and hematozoa in Ixodes cf. boliviensis and Ixodes tapirus (Ixodida: Ixodidae) from western highlands of Panama -- Illuminating the bacterial microbiome of Australian ticks with 16S and Rickettsia-specific next-generation sequencing -- Biolarviciding for malaria vector control: Acceptance and associated factors in southern Tanzania -- Unexpected failure of Ixodes scapularis nymphs to transmit a North American Borrelia bissettiae strain -- Promastigotes of Leishmania donovani exhibited sensitivity towards the high altitudinal plant Cicer microphyllum -- Towards understanding transfluthrin efficacy in a pyrethroid-resistant strain of the malaria vector Anopheles funestus with special reference to cytochrome P450-mediated detoxification -- Insecticide-impregnated netting: A surface treatment for killing Lutzomyia longipalpis (Diptera: Psychodidae), the vector of Leishmania infantum -- Cat fleas (Ctenocephalides felis clade 'Sydney') are dominant fleas on dogs and cats in New South Wales, Australia: Presence of flea-borne Rickettsia felis, Bartonella spp. but absence of Coxiella burnetii DNA -- Babesia gibsoni emerging with high prevalence and co-infections in "fighting dogs" in Hungary -- Morphological and molecular characterization of a new species of Isospora Schneider, 1881 (Apicomplexa: Eimeriidae) from the western wattlebird Anthochaera lunulata Gould in Western Australia -- Unravelling the diversity of the Crassiphialinae (Digenea: Diplostomidae) with molecular phylogeny and descriptions of five new species -- Haemoprotozoan surveillance in peri-urban native and introduced wildlife from Australia -- VectorMap-GR: A local scale operational management tool for entomological monitoring, to support vector control activities in Greece and the Mediterranean Basin -- Neospora caninum and Toxoplasma gondii as causes of reproductive losses in commercial sheep flocks from Argentina -- Molecular detection of Borrelia burgdorferi (sensu lato) and Rickettsia spp. in hard ticks distributed in Tokachi District, eastern Hokkaido, Japan -- Considerations for anthelmintic resistance emergence in hookworm at a single locus -- Wild deer in the United Kingdom are a potential reservoir for the livestock parasite Babesia divergens -- First description of sarcoptic mange in an Iberian hare (Lepus granatensis) -- Evaluation of buffered Trypanosoma evansi antigen and rapid serum agglutination test (BA/Te) for the detection of anti-T. evansi antibodies in horses in Brazil -- Cryptosporidium of birds in pet markets in Wuhan city, Hubei, China -- Global analysis of cytochrome c oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) gene variation in Dibothriocephalus nihonkaiensis (Cestoda: Diphyllobothriidae) -- Insecticidal efficacy of afoxolaner against Stomoxys calcitrans (Diptera: Muscidae) in dogs -- The detection of Schistosoma bovis in livestock on Pemba Island, Zanzibar: A preliminary study -- Sarcoptic mange in the wild boar, Sus scrofa, in Sweden -- Dengue outbreaks in Bangladesh: Historic epidemic patterns suggest earlier mosquito control intervention in the transmission season could reduce the monthly growth factor and extent of epidemics -- Predicting eastern equine encephalitis spread in North America: An ecological study -- Vapor phase repellency and insecticidal activity of pyridinyl amides against anopheline mosquitoes -- Editorial: First anniversary of Current Research in Parasitology &Vector-BorneDiseases.
    Additional Edition: ISSN 2667-114X
    Language: English
    Keywords: Periodical. ; Periodicals. ; Periodical. ; Periodicals.
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  • 7
    UID:
    almahu_9949301296502882
    Format: 1 online resource (1965 pages)
    ISBN: 9789811513466
    Note: Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- List of Videos -- Chapter Contributors and Video Contributors -- Contributors -- Video Contributors -- About the Editors -- Part I: Introduction -- 1: Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in India: How Did We Get Here and Where Are We Going? -- 1.1 History of Our Missions and Our Challenges -- 1.2 Expertise, Familiarity, and Competence -- 1.3 Predicting the Future -- References -- Part II: Preoperative Assessment and Patient Preparation/Optimization -- 2: Preoperative Evaluation and Investigations for Maxillofacial Surgery -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Preoperative Evaluation -- 2.3 Laboratory Investigations -- 2.4 Preanesthetic Evaluation -- 2.5 Aspects of Evaluation Unique to Anesthesia -- 2.6 Assessment of the Pediatric Patient -- 2.7 Assessment of the Elderly Patient -- 2.8 Specialist Consultation and Work-up -- 2.9 The Process of Risk Assessment -- 2.10 Risk Reduction Strategies -- 2.10.1 Premedication [4] -- 2.10.2 Fasting Guidelines -- 2.10.3 Perioperative Beta-Blocker Therapy -- 2.10.4 PONV Prophylaxis [47] -- 2.10.5 Plan for Postoperative Analgesia [51] -- 2.11 Preoperative Decision Making and Obtaining Informed Consent: The Team Concept [53] -- 2.12 Conclusion -- References -- 3: Management of Medical Comorbidities in Maxillofacial Surgery -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Changing Demographics in India -- 3.3 Lifestyle Changes in India -- 3.4 The Changing Face of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery -- 3.4.1 Medical History and India -- 3.5 Cardiovascular System -- 3.5.1 Hypertension -- 3.5.1.1 Minor Oral Surgery -- 3.5.1.2 Major Maxillofacial Surgery -- 3.5.1.3 Vasoconstrictors and Hypertension -- 3.5.2 Ischemic Heart Disease (IHD) -- 3.5.2.1 Minor Oral Surgery -- 3.5.2.2 Major Surgery -- 3.5.3 Postintervention Cardiac Patients. , 3.5.3.1 Percutaneous Coronary Angioplasty (PTCA) and Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) and Valve Replacement Procedures -- 3.5.4 Conventional Antiplatelets, Anticoagulants, and Novel Oral Anticoagulants (NOAC) -- 3.5.4.1 Minor Dentoalveolar Surgery: Antiplatelets -- 3.5.4.2 Maxillofacial Surgery -- 3.5.4.3 Bridging with Heparin -- 3.5.4.4 Anticoagulants and Oral/Maxillofacial Surgery -- 3.5.4.5 Minor Oral Surgery -- 3.5.4.6 Major Maxillofacial Surgery -- 3.5.5 Infective Endocarditis Prophylaxis -- 3.5.6 Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators (ICD) -- 3.5.6.1 Implications -- 3.6 Impact of Central Nervous System Disorders in Maxillofacial Surgery -- 3.6.1 Epilepsy -- 3.6.1.1 Basic considerations -- 3.6.1.2 Outpatient maxillofacial considerations -- 3.6.1.3 Major Surgical Considerations -- 3.6.1.4 Precautions, complications, & -- management -- 3.6.1.5 Management of an acute episode on the dental chair -- 3.6.2 Stroke -- 3.6.2.1 Basic Considerations -- 3.6.2.2 Maxillofacial considerations -- 3.6.2.3 Precautions -- 3.7 Impact of Psychiatric Disorders in Maxillofacial Surgery -- 3.7.1 Maxillofacial Considerations -- 3.8 Dental and Maxillofacial Implications in Liver Disease -- 3.8.1 Introduction -- 3.8.1.1 The Function of the Liver [36] -- 3.8.2 Classification of Liver Dysfunctions [35] -- 3.8.2.1 Viral Hepatitis -- 3.8.2.2 Autoimmune Hepatitis -- 3.8.2.3 Fulminant Hepatitis -- 3.8.2.4 Cirrhosis -- 3.8.2.5 Hepatocellular Carcinoma -- 3.8.2.6 Alcoholic Liver Disease -- 3.8.3 Oral Manifestations of Liver Disease -- 3.8.4 Implications of Liver Disease -- 3.8.4.1 Liver Disease and Maxillofacial Surgery -- 3.9 Maxillofacial Implications in GI Disorders -- 3.9.1 Perioperative Maxillofacial Implications -- 3.9.1.1 GERD -- 3.9.1.2 Peptic Ulcers -- 3.9.1.3 Ulcerative Colitis -- 3.10 Pregnancy -- 3.10.1 Physiologic Changes. , 3.10.2 Treatment Protocol -- 3.10.2.1 Minor Surgery -- 3.10.2.2 Dental Radiology -- 3.10.2.3 Major Surgery -- 3.10.3 Drug Usage in Pregnancy -- 3.11 Endocrine Disorders -- 3.11.1 Diabetes -- 3.11.1.1 Management of Patients Undergoing Procedures -- 3.11.1.2 Preoperative Glycemic Control in patients on Oral Hypoglycemic Agents -- 3.11.1.2.1 Minor surgery -- 3.11.1.2.2 Major surgery -- 3.11.1.3 Preoperative Glycemic Control in Type 2 Diabetics on Insulin -- 3.11.1.4 Preoperative Glycemic Control in Type 1 Diabetics on Insulin -- 3.11.1.4.1 Minor surgery: -- 3.11.1.4.2 Major surgery: -- 3.11.1.4.3 Intraoperative glycemic control: -- 3.11.1.4.4 Postoperative glycemic control: -- 3.11.2 Hypo/Hyperthyroidism -- 3.11.2.1 Hypothyroidism -- 3.11.2.1.1 Physiologic Challenges -- 3.11.2.1.2 Management -- 3.11.2.2 Hyperthyroidism -- 3.11.3 Adrenal Gland Disorders -- 3.11.3.1 Primary Adrenocortical Hypofunction -- 3.11.3.2 Secondary Adrenocortical Insufficiency -- 3.11.4 Renal Disorders -- 3.11.4.1 Acute Renal Failure (ARF) -- 3.11.4.2 Chronic Renal Failure (CRF) -- 3.12 Patients with Non-head and Neck Malignancies -- 3.12.1 Introduction -- 3.12.2 Treatment Protocol -- 3.12.2.1 Chemotherapy -- 3.12.2.2 Radiotherapy -- 3.12.3 Prevention and Treatment of Osteonecrosis After Chemotherapy and Radiation -- References -- 4: Medical Emergencies in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgical Practice -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Acute Asthmatic Attack -- 4.2.1 Life-Threatening Acute Asthma -- 4.3 Acute Adrenal Insufficiency/Adrenal Crisis/Steroid Crisis/Addisonian Crisis -- 4.4 Airway Obstruction -- 4.5 Anaphylaxis -- 4.6 Chest Pain -- 4.6.1 Angina -- 4.6.2 Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack) -- 4.7 Cardiac Arrest -- 4.8 Hypoglycemia -- 4.9 Grand Mal Seizures -- 4.10 Syncope -- 4.11 Other Causes of Loss of Consciousness -- 4.12 Conclusion -- References. , Part III: Anesthesia for Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery -- 5: Local Anesthesia in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.1.1 Historical Background -- 5.1.2 Definition -- 5.1.3 Ideal Characteristic of Local Anesthesia -- 5.2 Classification (Tables 5.1 and 5.2) -- 5.3 Local Anesthetic Agents -- 5.3.1 Lidocaine (Lignocaine) -- 5.3.2 Bupivacaine -- 5.3.3 Articaine -- 5.4 Vasoconstrictors -- 5.4.1 Dilution of Vasoconstrictor -- 5.5 Causes of Failure of LA -- 5.6 LA Toxicity and Antidote for Toxicity -- 5.6.1 Reversal of Cardiomyotoxicity -- 5.7 Reversal of Soft-Tissue Anesthesia -- 5.8 Plain Local Anesthetic (Without Epinephrine) -- 5.9 Topical Local Anesthetic Agent -- 5.10 Surface Anesthesia -- 5.11 Methods of Local Anesthetic Administration -- 5.11.1 Percentage of Blood Vessel Penetration During IANB -- 5.11.2 Controversy in the Use of Bilateral IANB and Lingual Nerve Block [17] -- 5.12 Techniques -- 5.12.1 Inferior Alveolar Nerve Block (Also Known as Mandibular Nerve Block) [Along with Lingual & -- Long Buccal Nerve Blocks] -- 5.12.2 Technique -- 5.12.3 Areas Anesthetized by This Block -- 5.12.4 Signs and Symptoms of Anesthesia -- 5.12.5 Complications (Table 5.6) -- 5.12.5.1 Failure to Obtain Anesthesia -- 5.12.5.2 Hematoma Formation -- 5.12.5.3 Transient Facial Nerve Palsy -- 5.12.5.4 Trismus -- 5.12.5.5 Accidental Breakage of the Needle -- 5.13 Vazirani-Akinosi (VA) Versus Inferior Alveolar Nerve Block -- 5.13.1 Indications for VA [24] -- 5.13.2 Akinosi-Vazirani Technique (Closed-Mouth Technique) -- 5.13.3 Technique -- 5.14 Mental/Incisive Nerve Block -- 5.14.1 Technique -- 5.14.2 Areas Anesthetized -- 5.14.3 Signs and Symptoms -- 5.15 Nerve Blocks in the Maxilla -- 5.15.1 Posterior Superior Alveolar Nerve Block Technique -- 5.15.1.1 Areas Anesthetized -- 5.15.1.2 Signs and Symptoms. , 5.15.2 Infraorbital Nerve Block [Also Anterior and Middle Superior Nerve Blocks] -- 5.15.2.1 Technique -- 5.15.2.2 Areas Anesthetized -- 5.15.2.3 Signs and Symptoms of Anesthesia -- 5.15.3 Palatal Anesthesia -- 5.15.3.1 Greater Palatine Nerve Block -- 5.15.3.2 Nasopalatine Nerve Block -- 5.16 Regional Blocks in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery -- 5.16.1 Maxillary Nerve Block -- 5.16.2 Mandibular Nerve Block -- 5.16.3 Greater Auricular Nerve Block -- 5.16.4 Glossopharyngeal Nerve Block -- 5.16.5 Sphenopalatine Ganglion Block -- 5.17 Recent Advances in Local Anesthesia -- 5.17.1 Vibrotactile Devices -- 5.17.1.1 Vibraject [38] -- 5.17.1.2 Dental Vibe [39] -- 5.17.1.3 Accupal -- 5.17.2 C-CLAD (Computer-Controlled Local Anesthetic Delivery) -- 5.17.3 Compu-Flo -- 5.17.4 STA-single tooth anesthesia -- 5.17.5 Jet Injection -- 5.17.6 MED-JET H III -- 5.17.7 Safety Dental Syringes [43] -- 5.17.8 Devices for Intraosseous Anesthesia [44] -- 5.18 Conclusion -- References -- 6: Office-Based Anesthesia in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery-The American Model and Training -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Brief History of Anesthesia in OMS -- 6.3 The Anesthesia Team -- 6.4 AAOMS Office Anesthesia Guidelines -- 6.5 Office Requirements -- 6.6 Record Keeping -- 6.7 Office Anesthesia Evaluation Program and Parameters of Care -- 6.8 AAOMS National Simulation Program -- 6.9 Dental Anesthesia Assistant National Certification Examination (DAANCE) -- 6.10 Anesthesia Training during OMS Residency -- 6.11 Preanesthetic Evaluation of the Patient -- 6.12 Monitoring -- 6.12.1 Methods for Monitoring Ventilation -- 6.13 Airway Armamentarium -- 6.14 Oxygen and Supplemental Gas Delivery System -- 6.15 Suction Equipment -- 6.16 Recovery Room -- 6.17 Techniques in Anesthesia -- 6.17.1 Enteral Anesthesia. , 6.17.2 Parenteral Anesthesia: Intravenous Anesthesia and Inhalational Anesthesia.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Bonanthaya, Krishnamurthy Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery for the Clinician Singapore : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,c2021 ISBN 9789811513459
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books. ; Electronic books.
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  • 8
    UID:
    almahu_9947363282702882
    Format: XIX, 409 p. , online resource.
    ISBN: 9783662095102
    Series Statement: The European Consortium for Mathematics in Industry, 5
    Content: This volume contains the proceedings of the twelfth conference of the Euro­ pean Consortium for Mathematics in Industry. ECMI was founded in 1986 in to foster research and education in Mathematics in Industry in Europe order and these biannual conferences are the show case for ECMI's research. It is a pleasure to see that six of the plenary speakers have submitted papers for this volume. Their contributions illustrate the breadth of applica­ tions and the variety of mathematical and computational techniques that are embraced by ECMI. ECMI is also committed to the education of students and it is encouraging that a number of the papers are given by students. The Wacker Prize, which is offered for a Masters Level thesis on an industrial problem, always attracts excellent entries and this year's winner, Nicole Marheineke, is no exception. This is the first time that an ECMI conference has been held in Eastern Europe and the ECMI Council is very grateful to Professor Andris Buikis and his colleagues in Latvia and Lithuania for the excellent job they have done. Thanks too go to the European Union which supported 30 delegates at this conference via TMR Contract No ERBFMRXCT 97-0117 'Differential Equations in Industry and Commerce'. The final meeting of this network was held during this conference which provided a platform for network members to describe their work to a wider audience.
    Note: Mathematical Modeling is a Source of Novel Mathematical Problems -- Parameter Identification in Industrial Problems via Iterative Regularization Methods -- Mathematics of Enhanced Oil Recovery -- Business Modelling. Languages and Tools -- Modelling Tumour Growth and Progression -- Interaction of Viscous Mean Flows and Surface Waves at Low Viscosity -- Modified FEM for Fibre-Fluid Interactions -- Numerical Investigation of the Geometrical Factor for Simulating the Drying of Wood -- Phase Plane Analysis of Web Drying -- Parameters Identification for Wood Drying -- Numerical Methods in the Simulation of Vehicle-Guideway Interaction -- Parameter Optimization in Mechanical Multibody Systems and Linearized Runge-Kutta Methods -- Using AD-generated Derivatives in Optimal Control of an Industrial Robot -- Applications to Traffic Breakdown on Highways -- Runge-Kutta-Nyström-Methods with Maximized Stability Domain for Stiff Mechanical Systems -- Free Boundary Problems Describing Two-Dimensional Pulse Recycling and Motion in Semiconductors -- Mobility for Silicon Semiconductor Derived from the Hydrodynamical Model Based on the Maximum Entropy Principle -- Random Domain-Relocation Times in Semiconductor Superlattices: A Stochastic Discrete Drift-Diffusion Approach -- A Priori Estimates for Multiphysics Models in Electric Circuit Design -- Preconditioned Splitting in Dynamic Iteration Schemes for Coupled DAE Systems in RC Network Design -- Augmented Lagrangian Algorithm for Optimizing Analog Circuit Design -- Simulating Multi-tone Free-running Oscillators with Optimal Sweep Following -- Jacobi-Davidson Methods and Preconditioning with Applications in Pole-zero Analysis -- Development and Comparison of Formulas for Scaling ANN Inputs and Outputs in RF-Modeling Applications -- Reduced Order Modelling — Methods and Constraints -- Ghost Field Gauging Used in Electrodynamic Simulation -- Option Pricing Using Stochastic Volatility Models -- Mathematical Model for Gravitational Cascade Separation of Pourable Materials at Identical Stages of a Classifier -- Parallel Iterative Solvers for Sparse Linear Systems in Circuit Simulation -- Conservative Averaging Method for Solutions of Inverse Problems for Heat Equation -- Creation of Temperature Field in a Finite Cylinder by Alternated Electromagnetic Force -- A Finite Element Method for Parabolic Equations -- Reduction of a Mathematical Model for Polymer Crystallization -- Asymptotic and Numerical Aspects of a Nonlinear Singular Integro-Differential Equation for Dryout in a LMFBR Boiler Tube -- Geostatistics: An Overview of Estimation and Simulation Methods for Oil Reservoirs and Basin Modelling -- Global Uncertainty and Sensitivity Analysis and Neighbourhoods -- A Mathematical Model for Tonometry -- Modelling Capillary Pressure in a Streamline Reservoir Simulator Using Operator Splitting -- Electromagnetic Simulations in the Electronics Industry -- Reduction of a Non—Linear Parabolic Initial—Boundary Value Problem to Cauchy Problem for a System of ODEs -- Recent Applications of Multipole Expansions in Computational Electromagnetics -- Examples of Asymptotical Analysis of Hyperbolic Equations -- Monte Carlo Valuation of American Options -- On the Frame — Invariant Description of the Phase Space of the Folgar—Tucker Equation -- Simulating Bass Loudspeakers Requires Nonlinear Acoustics — a Second Order Correction to the Helmholtz Equation -- A Mathematical Model for Hammocking of a Bandage on a Limb -- Probabilistic Analysis of DAX High Frequency Data -- Optimal and Robust Damping Control for Semi-Active Vehicle Suspension -- A Fast Finite Difference Method for Elliptic PDEs in Domains with Non-Grid Aligned Boundaries with Application to 3D Linear Elasticity -- Analysis of a Model for Twin-Wire Forming -- Coherent Dynamics of Excitable and Coupled ?-Cells -- A Mathematical Model of the Cardiovascular System -- Mathematical Modelling of the Drawing of Spun Capillary Tubes -- Mathematical Modelling of CO-oxidation on Modified Pt-Catalyst -- Mathematical Models for Impinging Jets -- Relations Between the Motion-Responses Caused by Fixed and Moving Loads Acting on Discretely Supported Strings and Beams.
    In: Springer eBooks
    Additional Edition: Printed edition: ISBN 9783642072628
    Language: English
    Keywords: Konferenzschrift
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 9
    UID:
    almahu_9949697967202882
    Format: 1 online resource (594 p.)
    ISBN: 1-281-03425-8 , 9786611034252 , 0-08-053435-X
    Series Statement: Studies in surface science and catalysis ; vol. 106
    Content: The symposium on Hydrotreatment and Hydrocracking of Oil Fractions aims to provide a global perspective and an inspection of the state-of-the-art of these processes. New American, European and Japanese environmental regulations call for advanced hydrotreatment processes for HDS and HDN for the removal of S- and Ni-components from oil fractions. These will alter the product slate of the oil refineries and the hydrocarbon composition of these products. Hydrocracking will play an important part in this shift. Adapting the operating conditions will not suffice to reach the desired product specif
    Note: Description based upon print version of record. , Cover; CONTENTS; Introduction; PART I: KEY NOTE LECTURES; Chapter 1. Processes and catalysts for hydrocracking of heavy oil and residues; Chapter 2. An improved process for the production of environmentally friendly diesel fuels; Chapter 3. Hydroprocessing to produce reformulated gasolines - the ISAL' process; Chapter 4. Molecules, catalysts and reactors in the hydro-processing of oil fractions; Chapter 5. Simultaneous HDN/HDS of model compounds over Ni-Mo sulfide catalysts , Chapter 6. Kinetics of the catalytic removal of the sulphur components from the light cycle oil of a catalytic cracking unitChapter 7. A review of catalytic hydrotreating processes for the upgrading of liquids produced by flash pyrolysis; Chapter 8. Dual-functional Ni-Mo sulfide catalysts on zeolite-alumina supports for hydrotreating and hydrocracking of heavy oils; PART II: ORAL COMMUNICATIONS; CATALYTIC ASPECTS; Chapter 9. Hydrodracking of C10 hydrocarbons over a sulfided NiMo/Y zeolite catalyst; Chapter 10. Novel hydrotreating catalysts based on synthetic clay minerals , Chapter 11. Influence of the location of the metal sulfide in NiMo/HY hydrocracking catalystsChapter 12. Acidity induced by H2S adsorption on unpromoted and promoted sulfided catalysts; Chapter 13. Organo metallic siloxanes as an active component of hydrotreatment catalysts; Chapter 14. Alumina supported HDS catalysts prepared by impregnation with new heteropoli-compounds; Chapter 15. Genesis, characterizations and HDS activity of Mo-P-alumina based hydrotreating catalysts prepared by a sol-gel method , Chapter 16. Effects of ethylenediamine on the preparation of HDS catalysts : comparison between Ni-Mo and Co-Mo based solidsChapter 17. Creation of acidic sites by hydrogen spillover in model hydrocracking systems; Chapter 18. Application of ASA supported noble metal catalysts in the deep hydrodesulphurisation of diesel fuel; Chapter 19. Reactor runaway in pyrolysis gasoline hydrogenation; Chapter 20. Surface property of alumina-supported Mo carbide and its activity for HDN; Chapter 21. The design of base metal catalysts for hydrotreating reactions , temperature programmed sulphidation of NiW/Al2O3 catalysts and their activity in the hydrodesulphurisation of thiophene and dibenzothiopheneTHEORY AND CATALYTIC DEACTIVATION; Chapter 22. Surface science models of CoMoS hydrodesulfurization catalysts; Chapter 23. Molecular mechanics modelling of the interactions between MoS2 layers and alumina or silica support; Chapter 24. In-situ FT-IR study of NO adsorbed on Co-Mo/Al2O3 sulfided at high pressure (〈 5.1 MPa); Chapter 25. Compound formation and hydrogen activity at sulfided catalysts : a combined surface science and quantum chemical approach , Chapter 26. Deactivation studies on NiO-MoO3/Al2O3 and CoO-MoO3/Al2O3 hydrodesulphurization catalysts , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-444-82556-8
    Language: English
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  • 10
    UID:
    almahu_9949641624202882
    Format: 1 online resource (783 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2024.
    ISBN: 3-031-49811-9
    Series Statement: Springer Series in Design and Innovation, 37
    Content: This open access book gathers the contributions from the Design! OPEN International Conference, held in Parma, Italy in May 2022. The conference explored the multidisciplinary aspects of design starting from its dimensions: objects (design as focused on the object, on its functional and symbolic dimension, and at the same time on the object as a tool for representing cultures), processes (the designer’s self-reflective moment which is focused on the analysis and on the definition of processes in various contexts, spanning innovation, social engagement, reflection on emergencies or forecasting), experiences (design as a theoretical and practical strategy aimed at facilitating experiential interactions among people, people and objects or environments), and narratives (making history, representing through different media, archiving, narrating, and exhibiting design). The contributions, which were selected by means of a rigorous international peer-review process, highlight numerous exciting ideas that will spur novel research directions and foster multidisciplinary collaboration among different specialists.
    Note: Intro -- Introduction -- Contents -- OBJECTS -- Beyond the Beauty-Utility Diatribe -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Sustainable Design Between Ethics and Aesthetics -- 3 Frugality as an Aesthetic Category for Ecodesign -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- "The Useful-Beautiful Couplet": On the Aesthetic Appraisal of Designed Objects -- References -- Imaginative Object and Mimetic Object -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Aesthetics of Toys -- 3 Mimesis, Imagination, Pleasure -- References -- OBJECTS. Objects Between Anthropology and Material Culture -- Seaweed Fabrics for Fashion Design. A Field Research Experience -- 1 Introduction -- 2 New Materialism Within the Water -- 3 A Workshop with Fashion Design Students -- 4 From Seaweed to Bodies -- 5 Conclusions -- References -- Material Objects as Dispositive of Memory -- 1 Research Methodology -- 2 Deductive Method: Designing Material Objects -- 2.1 Design Methodology -- 2.2 Design Tools -- 2.3 Design Outcome: Manufactured Artifacts -- 3 Abduction -- 3.1 Phenomenological Inquiry: Dubai World Expo as Object of Interest -- 3.2 Place-Making as Object of Memory -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Objects Between Material Culture and Visual Culture -- 1 Visual culture and objects -- 2 Empirical Attempts of Analysis: Kitchen Objects in the American Filmography of the Last Twenty years -- 3 Conclusion -- References -- Puppets' Tales. New Design Perspectives for a Multimedia Archive of a Humanity's Intangible Heritage -- 1 Puppets in the UNESCO's Intangible Heritages List -- 2 New Approaches for Preserving Puppets' Heritage -- 2.1 Puppets' Museums: An Overview -- 2.2 Puppets' Multimedia Archive -- 2.3 Docudramas on Puppets Traditions -- 3 A Didactic Experiment -- 3.1 Objectives -- 3.2 Context and Methodology -- 3.3 Final Outputs: Description and Analysis -- 4 Measuring Impacts: A Democratized Knowledge -- References. , Anonima Castelli. Objects, Design and Cultural Heritage -- 1 Design as a Cultural Heritage Asset -- 2 The Anonima Castelli Company -- 3 From the Archive to the Market: Current Production, Educational Experiences and the Research Project -- References -- OBJECTS. Political and Social Value of Objects -- Through the Mirror. Concept Maps to not Lose (One's Way Between) Objects -- 1 "Psychological Reaction" Objects -- 2 Functions and Meanings -- 2.1 Recognise and Discover Oneself -- 2.2 Double - Splitting -- 2.3 Door to Fantasy -- 2.4 Vanitas -- 2.5 Mirror and Soul -- 2.6 Mirror and Sexuality -- 3 Techniques -- 3.1 Double Mirror - Multiplication or "Mise en Abyme" -- 3.2 In photography and Cinema -- 3.3 Deforming Mirrors -- 3.4 "Functional" Mirrors -- 4 Conclusions -- References -- For F☆ck's Sake. The Political Narrative of Sex Toys in the Communication of MySecretCase -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Research Background -- 3 Methodology -- 4 Analysis -- 5 Discussion and Conclusions -- References -- Telephones in Italy, the Italtel Study-Case -- 1 Methodology and Sources -- 2 From Sit-Siemens to Italtel -- 3 The Eighties -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Design and Self-reproduction: A Theoretical-Political Perspective -- References -- OBJECTS. Philosophy and Representation -- Everyday Design: The Aesthetic Dimension of Alternative Use -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Functional Accounts of Design Aesthetic Appreciation -- 2.1 An Alternative Paradigm -- 2.2 The Role that the Notion of "Function" Plays within FADAA -- 2.3 From Acknowledged to Prescribed Function -- 3 Appreciating Everyday Design -- 3.1 Possible Objections -- 3.2 A New Framework for the Aesthetics of Design -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Digital Objects' Aesthetic Features. Virtuality and Fluid Materiality in the Aesthetic Education -- 1 Digital Objects and Virtual Bodies. , 1.1 A Wide Variety of Materiality -- 2 The Issue of Immateriality and New Forms of Aesthetic Education -- 2.1 From the "Systems Esthetic" to the Aesthetics of Communication -- 2.2 Material Engagement Theory and "Digital Materiality" -- 2.3 From Virtual to Physical Object: Towards New Forms of Aesthetic Education -- 2.4 Conclusions -- References -- The Value System of Objects Through the Interpretation of Photographic Language -- 1 Functional Values (But Not Only) -- 2 The Photographer's Creativity as Added Value -- 3 Narrative, Symbolic and Experiential-Relational Values -- 4 The Designer Photographer -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Objects, Things, Hyperobjects. A Philosophical Gaze on Contemporary Design -- 1 Transition 1: From Object to Thing -- 2 Transition 2 - From Thing to Organism -- 3 Transition 3 - From Organism to Hyperobject -- 4 Hyperobjects: A Philosophical-Based Design Research -- 5 Conclusions -- References -- OBJECTS. Symbolic Value and Use Value -- The Evolution of Yacht: From Status-Symbol to Values' Source -- 1 Research Context -- 1.1 Yacht Design Discipline -- 1.2 Raising Market Trends -- 2 Problem Framing -- 2.1 Status-Symbol Object Objects: The Yachts -- 2.2 Luxury and Sustainability: Conflict or Synergy? -- 2.3 Research Questions -- 3 Applied Methodology -- 4 Findings and Research Evidence: The Yachting Evolution -- 4.1 Formal Evolution -- 4.2 New Values for Sustainable Luxury in Yachting -- 5 Conclusion -- 6 Further Research -- References -- Liberating the Imprisoned Soul of Dorian Gray: Cultural Affordance as Design Tool to Rediscover Cultural Values -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The Picture of Dorian Gray as Reflection of Semantic Crisis -- 1.2 Problem Statement and its Interpretation -- 1.3 Research Hypothesis and Structure of the Paper -- 2 Review on Concepts and Their Intrinsic Problematic. , 2.1 A Review About Affordance Theory and Cultural Contribution to Such Concept -- 2.2 Universality or Context Oriented -- 3 Review on Examples from Egypt and Iran -- 3.1 Critical Design Approach in Egypt to Explore People's Awareness of Cultural Content -- 3.2 Example from Iran -- 4 References for Detecting Cultural Affordances: Reflective Translation -- 5 Design as a Manifestation and Further Considerations -- References -- The Extraordinary Everyday. The Post-Crafts in the Historical City -- 1 Where is the Craftsman? -- 2 Ordinary vs. Extraordinary -- 3 Anna Maria Fundarò: Design as Material Culture -- 4 New Craft in the Historic Centre -- 5 New Domestic and Autobiographical Dimensions: Projects -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- PROCESSES -- Archives and Processes -- 1 Processes and Archives -- 2 Through the 1970s -- 2.1 Bruno Munari. The Rule and Chance -- 2.2 Enzo Mari Design and Archive -- 2.3 Alessandro Mendini. The Vertigo of the List and the Theory of Fragment -- 3 Conclusions -- References -- 25 Ways to Hammer a Nail. "Postcrocian" Aesthetics and Everyday Life's Poetics in Enzo Mari -- 1 Beyond Croce. Towards a Revaluation of the Operating and Fruitive Processes -- 1.1 Design, Process, Form -- 1.2 Design and The Poetics Of Everyday Life -- References -- PROCESSES. Contemporary Strategies and Perspectives -- Design Through Body Memory for the Regeneration of Urban Areas -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Memory and Reinvention -- 3 Place and Memory: The Lazzaretto Nuovo in Venice -- 3.1 Research Objectives -- 3.2 Methodology -- 3.3 Results -- 4 Role of Design -- References -- Environmental Re-design of the Top San No Touch 2.0 Portable Toilet: The Contribution of the Bio-inspired Approach -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Research, Selection, Analysis of Case Study for Biomimetic Design Experimentation. , 3 Bio-inspired Product Re-design and Comparative Environmental Analysis -- 4 Conclusions -- References -- How to Use Strategic Design Process to Address Complex Challenges -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Theoretical Background -- 3 Research Methodology -- 4 Results -- 4.1 Mapping the Company and Assessing the Market -- 4.2 Analyzing the Most Important Stakeholders -- 4.3 Building Scenarios -- 4.4 Developing Both a New Services Set and a New Identity -- 5 Discussion -- References -- Design for Emergencies -- 1 Emergency and Its Dichotomy Within the Project Culture -- 2 Cycles and Waves: A Considered Overview on Strategies Applied by Design for Emergency -- 2.1 Strategies and Products in Response to Cyclical Emergencies -- 2.2 Strategies and Products in Response to Wave Emergencies -- 3 Conclusions -- References -- PROCESSES. Histories of Processes and Processes for History -- Exhibiting Design as a Process -- 1 Exhibiting Design as a Process -- 2 The Digital Models -- 3 Case Study 1: The Ettore Sottsass Archive -- 4 Case Study 2: The Typeline Project -- References -- Toward Paris! 45 Years of Domus for a Design à la Français -- References -- Archival Projects. Tools and Methods for Promoting the Corporate Culture Starting from Historical Brand -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The project -- 2.1 MaToSto.it - Marchi Torinesi nella Storia -- 2.2 The Developed and Adopted Methodology -- 2.3 Research and Quantitative Analysis -- 2.4 Qualitative Analysis -- 2.5 Exploratory Analysis and Definition of Project Outputs -- 3 Conclusions -- References -- Working in Regress and Beyond, with Rural Material Culture [1] -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Claudio Costa's Indagine su una cultura -- 1.2 Superstudio's Cultura Materiale Extraurbana -- 1.3 Mario Cresci's Misurazioni -- 2 To Conclude -- References -- PROCESSES. Design Methodological Processes. , Air as a Design Tool: Raw Material, Infra-material Space, and Transformative Matter.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 3-031-49810-0
    Language: English
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