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1

1957-, Liebowitz Jay, and De Salvo Daniel A, eds. Structuring expert systems: Domain, design, and development. Englewood Cliffs, N.J: Yourdon Press, 1989.

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2

Sklar, Mitchell Jay. MU: A domain-independent case-based expert system. [New Haven: s.n.], 1988.

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3

Nunes, José H. T. ESP: a domain-independent expert system framework using PSN. Toronto: University of Toronto, Dept. of Computer Science, 1985.

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4

Nasir, M. L. Combining domain expert knowledge with neural networks for predicting corporate bankruptcies. Leicester: De Montfort University, 2000.

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5

Montazeri, M. A. Retrieval strategies for a case-based reasoning expert system in the legal domain. Manchester: UMIST, 1996.

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6

Gardin, Jean Claude. Artificial intelligence and expert systems: Case studies in the knowledge domain of archaeology. Chichester [England]: E. Horwood, 1988.

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7

Visser, Pepijn R. S. Knowledge specification for multiple legal tasks: A case studyof the interaction problem in the legal domain. The Hague: Kluwer, 1995.

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8

Visser, Pepijn R. S. Knowledge specification for multiple legal tasks: A case study of the interaction problem in the legal domain. Leiden: Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden, 1995.

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9

Rourke, Arianne, and Vaughan Rees. Moving from novice to expert on the road to expertise: Developing expertise in the visual domain. Champaign, Illinois: Common Ground Publishing, LLC., 2015.

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10

Lee, Wai Shing. Combining the technologies of expert system and conventional data processing system into the domain of internal control within a banking environment. [s.l: The Author], 1991.

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11

Strous, Leon. Internet of Things. Information Processing in an Increasingly Connected World: First IFIP International Cross-Domain Conference, IFIPIoT 2018, Held at the 24th IFIP World Computer Congress, WCC 2018, Poznan, Poland, September 18-19, 2018, Revised Selected Papers. Cham: Springer Nature, 2019.

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12

Peterson, M. Knowledge engineering: System design in diffuse domains. Lund: Studentlitteratur, 1990.

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13

Nesi, Paolo, Kia Ng, and Jaime Delgado, eds. Axmedis 2005. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6453-146-5.

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The AXMEDIS conference aims to promote discussions and interactions among researchers, practitioners, developers and users of tools, technology transfer experts, and project managers, to bring together a variety of participants. The conference focuses on the challenges in the cross-media domain (which include production, protection, management, representation, formats, aggregation, workflow, distribution, business and transaction models), and the integration of content management systems and distribution chains, with particular emphasis on cost reduction and effective solutions for complex cross-domain problems.
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14

Ng, Kia, Atta Badii, and Pierfrancesco Bellini, eds. Axmedis 2006. Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Automated Production of Cross Media Content for Multi-channel Distribution. Volume for Workshops, Tutorials, Applications and Industrial (Leeds, UK, 13-15 December 2006). Florence: Firenze University Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/88-8453-525-5.

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The AxMEDIS 2006 International Conference seeks to promote discussion and exchange of ideas amongst researchers, practitioners, developers and users of tools, technology transfer experts, and project managers. This conference series brings together a variety of participants from the academic, business and industrial worlds, to address the emergent research and technological issues as well as the engineering and commercial challenges of large-scale collaborative production and distribution of media as experienced by the associated industrial sectors in the emergent media markets. The conference focuses on the outstanding problems to be resolved in the new age of media computing including cross-domain production, protection, representation, formatting, aggregation, workflow, distribution and business and transaction models i.e. all lifecycle aspects of the new media value chain management. Additionally it explores the integration of new forms of content, content management systems and distribution chains, with particular emphasis on cost structures re-engineering to support the reduction of costs and the integration of innovative solutions to facilitate complex creative collaboration in cross-domain media production with benefit realisation to all stakeholders through optimised rights-protective multichannel distribution.
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15

Ellemers, Naomi, ed. World of Difference. Translated by Gioia Marini. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462984028.

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Public debates tend to see social inequality as resulting from individual decisions people make, for instance with respect to their education or lifestyle. Solutions are often sought in supporting individuals to make better choices. This neglects the importance of social groups and communities in determining individual outcomes. A moral perspective on social inequality questions the fairness of insisting on individual responsibilities, when members of some groups systematically receive fewer opportunities than others. The essays in this book have been prepared by experts from different disciplines, ranging from philosophy to engineering, and from economics to epidemiology. On the basis of recent scientific insights, World of Difference examines how group memberships impact on individual outcomes in four key domains: health, education and work, migration, and the environment. This offers a new moral perspective on social inequality, which policy makers tend to neglect.
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16

Nunes, José H. T. ESP: a domain-independent expert system framework using PSN. 1985.

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17

Liebowitz, Jay. Structuring Expert Systems: Domain, Design, and Development (Yourdon Press Computing Series). Yourdon, 1989.

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18

Liebowitz, Jay. Structuring Expert Systems: Domain, Design, and Development (Yourdon Press Computing Series). Yourdon, 1989.

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19

Gardin, Jean-Claude. Gardin: Artificial Intelligence & Expert Systems- Case Studies in the Know Domain of Arch. Ellis Horwood, 1988.

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20

Rees, Vaughan. Moving from Novice to Expert on the Road to Expertise: Developing Expertise in the Visual Domain. Edited by Arianne Rourke. Common Ground Research Networks, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.18848/978-1-61229-804-7/cgp.

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21

Gardin, J. C. Artificial Intelligence and Expert Systems: Case Studies in the Knowledge Domain of Archaeology (Ellis Series in Artificial Intelligence Foundations). Ellis Horwood Ltd, 1989.

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22

Lackey, Jennifer. Experts and Peer Disagreement. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198798705.003.0012.

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It is often argued that widespread disagreement among epistemic peers in a domain threatens expertise in that domain. This chapter sketches two different conceptions of expertise: the expert-as-authority and the expert-as-advisor models. While it is standard for philosophers to understand expertise as authoritative, such an approach renders the problem posed by widespread peer disagreement intractable. This chapter argues, however, that there are independent reasons to reject both this model of expertise and the central argument offered on its behalf. The chapter then develops an alternative approach—one that understands expertise in terms of advice—that not only avoids the problems afflicting the expert-as-authority model, but also has the resources for a much more satisfying response to the problem of widespread peer disagreement.
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23

Streiner, David L., Geoffrey R. Norman, and John Cairney. Devising the items. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199685219.003.0003.

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This chapter discusses various sources for the items that make up a scale (e.g. existing item banks, patient interviews, research, clinical judgement, expert opinion, and theory). It then covers ways of ensuring content validity of the resulting items. This involves assessing whether all domains are covered, and each item maps onto one and only one domain. The chapter covers both subjective and objective ways of doing this. It reviews the arguments for and against disease-specific scales as opposed to generic ones. Finally, it discusses the issues that arise when a scale is translated from one language to another.
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24

Wiil, Uffe Kock, and S. Margret Anouncia. Knowledge Computing and its Applications : Knowledge Computing in Specific Domains: Volume II. Springer, 2018.

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25

Cauli, Alberto. Domains and instruments. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198737582.003.0023.

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In order to define and validate standardized outcome measurement tools both for therapeutic trials and for real life clinics, the need to precisely identify the relevant domains of psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis has led to the ‘rassemblement’ of experts and patients in the Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis (GRAPPA). The output of intensive work, performed according to the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology (OMERACT) scientific method, has been the definition of the key domains and instruments relevant in PsA evaluation. This chapter summarizes the present approach in PsA assessment, focusing on the ‘pathophysiological manifestations’, as well as current ideas regarding future revisions. Patient-related outcome measures and composite scores will be detailed in other chapters.
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26

Handzo, George, and Christina Puchalski. The role of the chaplain in palliative care. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199656097.003.0045.

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Spirituality has been shown to be a key factor in how people understand illness and how they cope with suffering. It is especially important for people who have serious or chronic illness. Standards for palliative care include spiritual care as a required domain of palliative care. Models and recommendations have been developed to facilitate interprofessional spiritual care where all members of the team attend to the spiritual issues of patients with the professional chaplain being the expert in spiritual care in a generalist specialist model of care. Palliative care teams should have a professional chaplain with training in palliative care assigned. This chaplain functions as the spiritual care lead and the spiritual care specialist on the team.
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27

Case-based maintenance of case-based reasoning systems in classification domains: Methods, implementation, and evaluation. Aachen: Shaker Verlag, 2005.

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28

Mieg, Harald A. Social Psychology of Expertise: Case Studies in Research, Professional Domains, and Expert Roles. Taylor & Francis Group, 2001.

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29

Mieg, Harald A. Social Psychology of Expertise: Case Studies in Research, Professional Domains, and Expert Roles. Taylor & Francis Group, 2001.

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30

Mieg, Harald A. Social Psychology of Expertise: Case Studies in Research, Professional Domains, and Expert Roles. Taylor & Francis Group, 2001.

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31

Mieg, Harald A. Social Psychology of Expertise: Case Studies in Research, Professional Domains, and Expert Roles. Taylor & Francis Group, 2001.

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32

Mieg, Harald A. Social Psychology of Expertise: Case Studies in Research, Professional Domains, and Expert Roles. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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33

Mieg, Harald A. Social Psychology of Expertise: Case Studies in Research, Professional Domains, and Expert Roles. Taylor & Francis Group, 2001.

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34

Mieg, Harald A. Social Psychology of Expertise: Case Studies in Research, Professional Domains, and Expert Roles. Taylor & Francis Group, 2001.

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35

Mieg, Harald A. Social Psychology of Expertise: Case Studies in Research, Professional Domains, and Expert Roles. Taylor & Francis Group, 2001.

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36

Ferlie, Ewan, Sue Dopson, Chris Bennett, Michael D. Fischer, Jean Ledger, and Gerry McGivern. Concluding discussion. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198777212.003.0011.

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The concluding chapter further develops the overall themes explored throughout the book. We critique the evidence-based management movement empirically by suggesting its absence in a sector which should have been fertile territory for it (given the strong evidence-based medicine inheritance). We highlight instead the importance of the macro context of public services reforming (with political and ideological components) in shaping which preferred management knowledges become influential in local health care organizations. We also complement this macro-level perspective with an awareness of the role of micro-level knowledge leadership. We then bring in some academic literature on business schools (‘the Business School Business’) and consider how business schools might properly operate in this domain given their importance as management knowledge producers. Finally, we reflect on the implications of what might have changed since we completed our research, including the populist rise of an anti-expert backlash.
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37

The social psychology of expertise: Case studies in research, professional domains, and expert roles. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2001.

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38

The perceived nature and function of planning by domain-related experts: Academic, business, lay, and teacher. Ottawa: National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997.

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39

Verma, Vidhu. Secularism in India. Edited by Phil Zuckerman and John R. Shook. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199988457.013.14.

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This chapter examines the historical emergence of secularism through movements, debates, and legal formulations to explain specific features that the concept has acquired in the context of India. The first part examines the tensions between the theoretical narratives of Indian constitutionalism and the practices of politics that led to the acceptance of certain essential conditions of secularism. The approach towards secularism found in writings of Nehru, Gandhi and Ambedkar are then discussed. The third part focuses on the ill-defined meaning of secularism that does not accurately reflect the conceptual shifts made by the modern legal system. The final section critically examines the claim that secularism is a state-led exercise in certain domains. An overview of the legal literature shows that secularism is also the domain of experts, bureaucrats, and professionals. The history of court decisions about what constitutes a religious practice that is protected by law reveals considerable variation and arbitrariness..
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40

Forest, James J. F. Influence Warfare. Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400670046.

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This important work, edited by an expert on terrorism, focuses on the 21st-century struggle for strategic influence and ways in which states can neutralize the role of new media in spreading terrorist propaganda. In an era where anyone can have access to the Internet or other media forms that make widespread communication easy, terrorists and insurgents can spread their messages with complete freedom, creating challenges for national security. Influence Warfare: How Terrorists and Governments Fight to Shape Perceptions in a War of Ideas focuses on the core of the ongoing struggle for strategic influence and, particularly, how states can counter the role media and the Internet play in radicalizing new agents of terrorism. As the book makes clear, governments need to find ways to effectively confront non-state adversaries at all levels of the information domain and create an understanding of strategic communications within a broad range of technologies. The essays from the international group of authors who contributed to this work offer a deeper understanding of the ongoing struggle. Influence Warfare also provides a set of case studies that illustrate how the means and methods of strategic influence can impact a nation's security.
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41

Springer, Paul J. Cyber Warfare. ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400636479.

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Providing an invaluable introductory resource for students studying cyber warfare, this book highlights the evolution of cyber conflict in modern times through dozens of key primary source documents related to its development and implementation. This meticulously curated primary source collection is designed to offer a broad examination of key documents related to cyber warfare, covering the subject from multiple perspectives. The earliest documents date from the late 20th century, when the concept and possibility of cyber attacks became a reality, while the most recent documents are from 2019. Each document is accompanied by an introduction and analysis written by an expert in the field that provides the necessary context for readers to learn about the complexities of cyber warfare. The title’s nearly 100 documents are drawn primarily but not exclusively from government sources and allow readers to understand how policy, strategy, doctrine, and tactics of cyber warfare are created and devised, particularly in the United States. Although the U.S. is the global leader in cyber capabilities and is largely driving the determination of norms within the cyber domain, the title additionally contains a small number of international documents. This invaluable work will serve as an excellent starting point for anyone seeking to understand the nature and character of international cyber warfare.
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42

Richardt, Susanne. Metaphor in Language for Special Purposes: The Function of Conceptual Metaphor in Written Expert Language and Expert-Lay Communication in the Domains of Economics, Medicine and Computing. Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, Peter, 2005.

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43

Metaphor in Languages for Special Purposes: The Function of Conceptual Metaphor in Written Expert Language and Expert-Lay Communication in the Domains of Economics, Medicine, and Computing. New York: Peter Lang, 2005.

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44

Ottati, Victor, and Chase Wilson. Open-Minded Cognition and Political Thought. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.143.

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Dogmatic or closed-minded cognition is directionally biased; a tendency to select, interpret, and elaborate upon information in a manner that reinforces the individual’s prior opinion or expectation. Open-minded cognition is directionally unbiased; a tendency to process information in a manner that is not biased in the direction of the individual’s prior opinion or expectation. It is marked by a tendency to consider a variety of intellectual perspectives, values, attitudes, opinions, or beliefs—even those that contradict the individual’s prior opinion. Open-Minded Cognition is assessed using measures that specifically focus on the degree to which individuals process information in a directionally biased manner. Open-Minded Cognition can function as an individual difference characteristic that predicts a variety of social attitudes and political opinions. These include attitudes toward marginalized social groups (e.g., racial and ethnic minorities), support for democratic values, political ideology, and partisan identification. Open-Minded Cognition also possesses a malleable component that varies across domains and specific situations. For example, Open-Minded Cognition is higher in the political domain than religious domain. In addition, Open-Minded Cognition is prevalent in situations where individuals encounter plausible arguments that are compatible with conventional values, but is less evident when individuals encounter arguments that are extremely implausible or that contradict conventional values. Within a situation, Open-Minded Cognition also varies across social roles involving expertise. Because political novices possess limited political knowledge, social norms dictate that they should listen and learn in an open-minded fashion. In contrast, because political experts possess extensive knowledge, social norms dictate that they are entitled to adopt a more dogmatic cognitive orientation when listening to a political communication.
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45

Lopes, Dominic McIver. Beings for Beauty. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198827214.003.0002.

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The main argument for the network theory of aesthetic value is that it better explains the facts about aesthetic activity than does its rival, aesthetic hedonism. Aesthetic activity is not limited to appreciation, and six case studies are presented of aesthetic agents whose expertise covers a range of aesthetic activities. From a survey of the case studies, we see that six facts need explaining. Aesthetic experts disperse into almost all demographic niches, they jointly inhabit the whole aesthetic universe, they specialize by aesthetic domain, they specialize by type of activity, they specialize by activity and domain interact, and their expertise is rooted in relatively stable psychological traits.
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46

Lopes, Dominic McIver. Six Degrees of Separation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198827214.003.0005.

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The main argument for the network theory of aesthetic value is that it better explains six facts about aesthetic activity than does its rival, aesthetic hedonism. The chapter indicates why aesthetic hedonism does not predict how aesthetic experts disperse into almost all demographic niches, how they jointly inhabit the whole aesthetic universe, how they specialize by aesthetic domain, how they specialize by type of activity, how they specialize by activity and domain interact, or how their expertise comes to be relatively stable. In addition, the account of the normativity of aesthetic reasons has some revealing flaws. The account has trouble with the plasticity of pleasure, the bounded rationality of aesthetic agents, the importance of aesthetic personality, and the possibility of the alienation of aesthetic reasons from desires.
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47

Ghebrehewet, Sam, Alex G. Stewart, and Ian Rufus. What is health protection? Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198745471.003.0001.

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Health Protection is one of the core fields of public health work. It can be defined as: “The protection of individuals, groups and populations through expert advice and effective collaboration to prevent and mitigate the impact of infectious disease, environmental, chemical and radiological threats.” This chapter concisely sets out the breadth and nature of health protection practice across its three domains: communicable disease control, emergency preparedness, resilience and response (EPRR), and environmental public health. The development of these domains and the scope of health protection are illustrated by a brief history of its development in England. The role of a specialist health protection service is also described.
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48

Baker, Keith. Deliberate Practice and the Acquisition of Expertise. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199366149.003.0005.

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The American medical system has room for improvement in the area of quality. Many systems-level approaches have been tried, but most have not yielded significant improvements in healthcare quality. This chapter focuses on strategies that mediate individual-level expert performance in a variety of domains. A central strategy underlying expert performance is deliberate practice. Deliberate practice is supported by having a learning orientation and “grit,” which is defined as long-term perseverance and passion for a goal, even if the goal is arduous. A general approach to performance improvement for individuals is also discussed. A reinvestment model for performance improvement proposes that individuals invest their time, effort, and cognitive resources, such as working memory capacity, in the design and implementation of deliberate practice for performance improvement.
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49

Anderson, Ray C. Berkshire Encyclopedia of Sustainability. Berkshire Publishing Group, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acref/9780190622664.001.0001.

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887 entriesIn this seminal work, experts from around the world provide authoritative coverage of the growing body of knowledge about ways to restore the planet. Focused on solutions, this interdisciplinary publication draws from the natural, physical, and social sciences to bring readers an unprecedented array of 887 articles from over 900 contributors from 53 countries on environmental law and ethics, green business practices, regional sustainability issues, and resource and ecosystem management.There is no shortage of information about environmental problems and no dearth of people calling themselves experts on sustainability. In fact, there is all too much information, and strident voices with opposing claims and frightening predictions. This encyclopedia solves the problem of information overload with concise overviews from experts on an array of sustainability-related topics. The reader will find solid research data, thorough analyses, and jargon-free discussion, effectively transforming a fast-developing research domain.
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50

Lopes, Dominic McIver. Hundred Mile Aesthetics. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198827214.003.0008.

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The main argument for the network theory of aesthetic value is that it better explains the facts about aesthetic activity than aesthetic hedonism. According to the network theory, an aesthetic value figures in a fact that lends weight to the proposition that it would be an aesthetic achievement for an agent to act in the context of an aesthetic practice. Each aesthetic practice has its own aesthetic profile, in which determinate aesthetic values are distinctively realized, and each has core aesthetic norms centred on its distinctive aesthetic profile. An account is given of the valence of aesthetic values. The theory explains why aesthetic experts disperse into almost all demographic niches, why they jointly inhabit the whole aesthetic universe, why they specialize by aesthetic domain, why they specialize by type of activity, why they specialize by activity and domain interacts, and why their expertise is rooted in relatively stable psychological traits.
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