Academic literature on the topic 'Falcon College'

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Journal articles on the topic "Falcon College"

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King, Carolyn. "Monuments to Edward Wilson in Cheltenham." Polar Record 46, no. 2 (February 4, 2010): 184–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247409990544.

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Edward Adrian Wilson was born in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England on 23 July 1872. He attended Cheltenham College and then proceeded to Cambridge where he read natural sciences and to St George's Hospital, London where he trained in medicine. His name is best known because of his participation in Robert Falcon Scott's Antarctic expeditions of. 1901–1904 and 1910–1913. He reached the South Pole with Scott on 17 January 1912 and died with him on the return journey on or after 29 March 1912.
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Chehabeddine, Said, Muhammad Hassan Jamil, Wanjoo Park, Dianne L. Sefo, Peter M. Loomer, and Mohamad Eid. "Bi-manual Haptic-based Periodontal Simulation with Finger Support and Vibrotactile Feedback." ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications 17, no. 1 (April 16, 2021): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3421765.

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The rise of virtual reality and haptic technologies has created exciting new applications in medical training and education. In a dental simulation, haptic technology can create the illusion of substances (teeth, gingiva, bone, etc.) by providing interaction forces within a simulated virtual world of the mouth. In this article, a haptic periodontal training simulation system, named Haptodont, is developed and evaluated for simulating periodontal probing. Thirty-two faculty members from New York University College of Dentistry were recruited and divided into three groups to evaluate three fundamental functionalities: Group 1 evaluated bi-manual 3 Degrees of Freedome (DoF) haptic interaction, Group 2 evaluated bi-manual 3 DoF haptic interaction with a finger support mechanism, and Group 3 evaluated bi-manual 3 DoF haptic interaction with finger support mechanism and vibrotactile feedback. The probe and mirror interactions were simulated with the Geomagic Touch haptic device whereas the finger support was implemented using the Novint Falcon device. The three groups conducted two probing tasks: healthy gingiva scenario with no pockets (2- to 3-mm depth) and periodontitis scenario with deep pockets (4- to 8-mm depth). Results demonstrated that experts performed comparably to clinical settings in terms of probing depth error (within 0.3 to 0.6 mm) and probing forces (less than 0.5 N). Furthermore, the finger support mechanism significantly improved the probing accuracy for periodontitis condition in the lingual region. The argument that probing the lingual region is more difficult than the buccal region is supported by quantitative evidence (significantly higher probing depth error and probing force). Further research is planned to improve the usability of the finger support, integrate the Haptodont system into the pre-clinical curriculum, and evaluate the Haptodont system with dental students as a learning tool.
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Cox, John L. "College comments on the Fallon Inquiry." Psychiatric Bulletin 24, no. 5 (May 2000): 197. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.24.5.197-c.

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Cohn, Lawrence D., and Nancy E. Adler. "Female and Male Perceptions of Ideal Body Shapes: Distorted Views Among Caucasian College Students." Psychology of Women Quarterly 16, no. 1 (March 1992): 69–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1471-6402.1992.tb00240.x.

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Recent studies have demonstrated that women overestimate male preferences for thin female figures. This study examined whether women also overestimate the desirability of thin figures among female peers. Using body silhouettes employed by Fallon and Rozin (1985), 87 college women and 118 college men indicated the size of their own body figure, their ideal figure, the figure most attractive to other-sex peers, and the figure most attractive to same-sex peers. As predicted, the female silhouette that women selected as most attractive to same-sex peers was significantly thinner than the silhouette that women actually selected as most desirable. College men also misjudged the body preference of same-sex peers, exaggerating the extent to which other men perceived large physiques as ideal and desirable.
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Roemer, J., and S. R. Simon. "Neutrophil migration through in vitro interstitial matrix." Proceedings, annual meeting, Electron Microscopy Society of America 50, no. 1 (August 1992): 894–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0424820100124872.

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We are developing an in vitro interstitial extracellular matrix (ECM) system for study of inflammatory cell migration. Falcon brand Cyclopore membrane inserts of various pore sizes are used as a support substrate for production of ECM by R22 rat aortic smooth muscle cells. Under specific culture conditions these cells produce a highly insoluble matrix consisting of typical interstitial ECM components, i.e.: types I and III collagen, elastin, proteoglycans and fibronectin.
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Wiebe, Don. "Religion in Context: Recent Studies in Lonergan T. P. Fallon and P. B. Riley, editors Lanham, MD: University Press of America/College Theology Society, 1988. 216 p." Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 19, no. 3 (September 1990): 383. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000842989001900330.

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Briddell, Robert, Frank Litkenhaus, Gail Foertsch, Angela Fuhrmann, Karen Foster, Kate Falcon Girard, Bruce Fiscus, et al. "Recovery of Viable MSCs Isolated From Fresh Umbilical Cord Tissue, Measured After Cryopreservation, Is on Average 8-Fold Higher when Compared to Recovery of Viable MSCs Isolated From Previously Cryopreserved Umbilical Cord Tissue." Blood 118, no. 21 (November 18, 2011): 4398. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v118.21.4398.4398.

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Abstract Abstract 4398 Background. The human umbilical cord (hUC) is comprised of a gelatinous connective tissue that contains mesenchymal-like stem cells (TC-MSCs), proteoglycans and collagen. Isolation and cryopreservation of TC-MSCs for potential therapeutic use is an active area of research in the stem cell banking industry. We have compared two methods of cryopreservation to determine the optimal method for storing TC-MSCs: (1) cryopreservation of isolated TC-MSCs from fresh hUC tissue; and, (2) cryopreservation of intact hUC tissue followed by TC-MSC isolation. Methods. hUCs were aseptically obtained, and parallel hUC segments from the same hUC were processed by one of the two methods. Method 1: TC-MSCs were isolated from partially dissected fresh hUC segments by overnight collagenese digestion (2.5mg/mL-g), filtration and centrifugation. Isolated TC-MSCs from this process were cryopreserved in a cryopreservation solution (11% DMSO, 1% Dextran40, 4% HSA in 0.9% NaCl), frozen and stored at −80°C for < 30 days. Cells were rapidly thawed at 37°C, washed and resuspended in D-PBS for flow cytometric analysis. Method 2: hUC tissue was cryopreserved in the cryopreservation solution as in Method 1, frozen and stored at −80°C for < 30 days. Frozen hUC tissue was rapidly thawed at 37°C and processed as described above to isolate the TC-MSCs. TC-MSCs recovered from each procedure were enumerated and phenotyped by flow cytometry. Results. The recovery of viable CD45−/CD90+ TC-MSCs (after thawing) from fresh hUC tissue (Method 1), on average resulted in 5.04×105 cells/gram of tissue (n=15), whereas the yield of CD45−/CD90+ TC-MSCs from cryopreserved/thawed hUC tissue (Method 2) resulted in 8.20×104 cells/gram of tissue (n=15). Cell viabilities from both processes were comparable. Conclusions. Significantly higher (p<0.001) viable cell recoveries (8.4-fold average, 6.8-fold median, range 2.1–18.1) were obtained when TC-MSCs were harvested prior to cryopreservation. Disclosures: Briddell: PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Litkenhaus:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Foertsch:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Fuhrmann:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Foster:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Falcon Girard:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Fiscus:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Boehm:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Brown:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Pettit:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Rigas Bridges:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Nichols:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment. Fodor:PerkinElmer Inc.: Consultancy. Kraus:PerkinElmer Inc.: Employment.
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Kauffman, George B., and Anastacia Melendy. "Practical Chemistry for Schools & Colleges. Two CD-ROM set, 2000. �59.50 plus shipping. Order from: Viewtech Educational Media, 7?8 Falcons Gate, Northavon Business Centre, Dean Road, Yate, Bristol, BS37 5NH, England; telephone: 011-44-1454-858055; FAX: 011-44-1454-858056; e-mail: info@viewtech.co.uk; Web site: http://www.viewtech.co.uk." Chemical Educator 7, no. 3 (June 2002): 189–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00897020573a.

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Al-Darmaki, Saeed, Gioia Falcone, Colin Hale, and Geoffrey Hewitt. "Experimental Investigation and Modeling of the Effects of Rising Gas Bubbles in a Closed Pipe." SPE Journal 13, no. 03 (September 1, 2008): 354–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/103129-pa.

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Summary Transient multiphase flow in the wellbore causes problems in well-test interpretation when the well is shut in at surface and the pressure is measured downhole. Pressure-buildup data recorded during a test can be dominated by transient wellbore effects (i.e., phase change, flow reversal, and re-entry of the denser phase into the producing zone), making it difficult to distinguish between true reservoir features and transient wellbore artifacts (Gringarten et al. 2000). This paper is a follow-up to paper SPE 96587 (Ali et al. 2005), which presented experimental results of phase redistribution effects on pressure-buildup data. Though the results of the experiments were revealing, they are complex because they reflect the real well situation. To obtain results in which the phase redistribution in the well is studied independently of the interaction with the reservoir, a further set of experiments was carried out. In these experiments, the tube (simulating the well) was isolated at both the top and the bottom at the same time. The pressure distribution was measured during the transient following shut-in and for the steady-state final condition, in which there was a liquid-filled zone at the bottom of the test section and a gas-filled zone at the top. A substantial number of tests were conducted in the bubbly-flow region and could therefore be analyzed by a simple 1D model for bubbly flow. The results of the comparison between the model and the experimental data are presented in this paper. Introduction In the first study (Ali et al. 2005), experiments were carried out to investigate the effects of wellbore phase redistribution (WPR) and phase re-injection on pressure-buildup data. Single-phase- and two-phase-flow tests were conducted with air and water in the long-tube system (LOTUS) at Imperial College. The LOTUS test layout, as described in paper SPE 96587 (Alii et al. 2005), was designed to simulate a reservoir connected, by a resistance, to the base of a flowing well. The "reservoir" was recreated by a pressurized vessel, while the "well" was simulated by a 10.8-m -long, 32-mm-internal-diameter vertical pipe (i.e., the main LOTUS test section). The well was flowed at controlled rates to mimic those encountered in gas/condensate reservoirs. After steady-state conditions had been attained, the well was shut in at the top of the rig (i.e., at the surface) and the associated transient phenomena were monitored through distributed measurements of pressure, temperature, liquid holdup, and wall shear stress. Pressure-buildup data were interpreted with established well-test-analysis techniques. These initial experiments provided a qualitative and quantitative understanding of the effects of gas rates, liquid rates, and rising gas bubbles on WPR and phase re-injection. Gas flow rate was found to have a higher effect than water flow rate on WPR. This was most probably because of annular flow being the predominant flow regime for the experiments. Phase re-injection was simulated successfully. The lower the reservoir pressure, the higher the liquid re-injection, an analog to low-permeability reservoirs. For a closed system, WPR took place. Rising gas caused an increase in bottomhole pressure. The focus of the second study, presented here, was to investigate WPR independently of the interactions with the reservoir. The LOTUS tube was isolated at both the top and the bottom at the same time. The test section was again the LOTUS 10.8-m-long, 32-mm-internal-diameter vertical tube. A two-phase flow was set up with known air- and water-flow rates. The pressure distribution and void fraction were measured for the steady-state flow, and the flow subsequently was shut down by closing valves at the top and bottom of the test section simultaneously. Although the experiments covered a wide range of conditions, a substantial number of tests were conducted in the bubbly-flow regime. A simple, 1D model for bubbly flow was developed and implemented for comparison with the experimental data. Earlier efforts toward understanding the physics of gas-bubble migration in wells were carried out by Hasan and Kabir (1994; 1993) and Xiao et al. (1996). Aremu (2005) provided an overview of bubbly-flow models applied to the problem of gas kicks while drilling. A detailed review of previously published work on research into transient wellbore phenomena is presented by Falcone (2006). In recent years, much work has been carried out on the phenomena occurring in bubbly flows with a wide range of local measurements, and increasingly, many use computational methods to represent the detailed motions and interfacial deformations of the bubbles.
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Aldrovani, Marcela, Amanda Garcia Pereira, Ana Luísa Santos Nielsen Tinasi, Vinícius José da Silva Cardoso Brito, Ana Claudia Santos Raposo, Cristiane dos Santos Honsho, and Arianne Pontes Oriá. "Birefringence Analyses Reveal Differences in Supramolecular Characteristics of Corneal Stromal Collagen Fibrils Between Falconiformes and Strigiformes." Integrative and Comparative Biology, July 27, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/icb/icab171.

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Abstract This study aimed to assess the birefringent properties of corneal stromal collagen fibrils in birds of the orders Falconiformes (diurnal) and Strigiformes (predominantly nocturnal) to compare their supramolecular organizations. In total, 22 corneas of Falconiformes (Caracara plancus, n = 8; Rupornis magnirostris, n = 10; and Falco sparverius, n = 4) and 28 of Strigiformes (Tyto furcata, n = 16; Pseudoscops clamator, n = 6; and Athene cunicularia, n = 6) were processed histotechnically into 8-μm thick sections. Corneal optical retardation (OR) values related to the form and intrinsic fractions of the total birefringence of collagen fibrils were measured using a polarized light microscope equipped with phase compensators. In addition, the coherence coefficients that inform the local orientation of the fibrils were calculated through video image analysis. All assessments were conducted both in the anterior and posterior stroma of the cornea. Differences were significant when P &lt; 0.05. The results showed supraorganizational differences between fibrils in the anterior stroma of Falconiformes and Strigiformes. The OR values were greater (P &lt; 0.0001) for Falconiformes, indicating that the corneas of these birds contain more collagen fibrils or more aggregated collagen fibrils. In contrast, the coherence coefficients were higher (P = 0.016) for Strigiformes, indicating that the corneal collagen fibers in these birds are highly aligned and have few undulations. A multivariate data matrix constructed for Euclidean distance calculations showed that the dissimilarity between Falconiformes and Strigiformes corneas, in terms of the supraorganization of stromal collagen fibrils, was 4.56%. In conclusion, it is possible that the supraorganizational differences reported in this study may be sources of variation in the visual quality of Falconiformes and Strigiformes. This study provides the necessary evidence to encourage further research associating corneal optical performance to supramolecular characteristics of corneal stromal collagen.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Falcon College"

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Farah, Maria Cecilia Knoll. "Disfunção ventricular no pós-operatório da intervenção cirúrgica para correção dos defeitos congênitos da Tetralogia de Fallot: estudo de correção clínica e anatomopatológica." Universidade de São Paulo, 2008. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/5/5131/tde-05082008-143708/.

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Farah MCK. Disfunção ventricular no pós-operatório da intervenção cirúrgica para correção dos defeitos congênitos da Tetralogia de Fallot. Estudo de correlação clínica e anatomopatológica [tese]. São Paulo: Faculdade de Medicina, Universidade de São Paulo; 2008. 136p. O estudo investigou de modo prospectivo o remodelamento ventricular histopatológico em crianças submetidas à correção cirúrgica de Tetralogia de Fallot (TF) com o objetivo de detectar possíveis fatores associados aos indicadores ecocardiográficos de disfunção ventricular sistólica e diastólica no período pós-operatório. Pacientes e métodos: foram incluídos 23 pacientes consecutivos portadores de TF (14 masculinos), com idade entre 12 e 186 meses (média=39,6 meses, mediana = 23 meses). A análise do Doppler Tecidual (índice de aceleração isovolumétrica - AVI, velocidade miocárdica sistólica - S\', velocidade miocárdica diastólica precoce - E\') foi realizada em três momentos: antes da cirurgia, nos primeiros três dias de PO e entre 30 a 90 dias após a cirurgia. Durante a cirurgia, além das bandas musculares infundibulares, foram obtidas biópsias subendocárdicas na via de entrada do VD e do VE. Foram avaliados quanto ao grau de hipertrofia miocárdica, colágeno intersticial (picorsirius) e capilaridade (imunohistoquímica-fator VIII). Níveis séricos de troponina T foram mensurados antes e após a cirurgia. Eletrocardiogramas realizados antes e após a cirurgia, características clínicas e uso prévio de propranolol foram avaliados. Este estudo foi aprovado pela comissão de ética da CPPESQUSP. Resultados: Os cardiomiócitos do VD mostraram acentuada hipertrofia. O colágeno intersticial esteve aumentado em ambos os ventrículos. A área ocupada por capilares não diferiu entre as diversas regiões estudadas. Houve diminuição significativa do AVI do VD no terceiro ecocardiograma (p=0,006) o que se correlacionou de modo negativo e significativo com o diâmetro dos cardiomiócitos da via de entrada do VD (r=-0,59; p=0,006). As velocidades de E\' do VD, diminuíram significativamente nos dois períodos pós-operatórios (p<0,001) e tiveram correlação negativa significativa com a porcentagem de colágeno intersticial (r= -0,525; p=0,004). Os níveis séricos de Troponina T aumentaram significativamente em todos os pacientes no período pós-operatório- 27,7 ±18,6 ng/ml e 15,9+11,3 ng/ml respectivamente no segundo e terceiro PO e se correlacionaram de modo positivo e significativo com o tempo de circulação extra corpórea e com o tempo de anoxia (p=0,019 e 0,018, respectivamente) e maior tempo de uso de droga vasoativa no pós-operatório (r=0,552, p=0,006). A duração do QRS aumentou significativamente no PO. Os pacientes que apresentaram aumento do QRS maior que 40ms, também apresentaram maior porcentagem de colágeno intersticial na via de entrada do VD. Conclusão: o remodelamento miocárdico presente no período pré-operatório, a julgar pela avaliação histopatológica morfométrica da hipertrofia celular e colágeno intersticial, influenciou respectivamente a função sistólica e diastólica do ventrículo direito no período pós-operatório da correção cirurgia da Tetralogia de Fallot.
It was investigate prospectively the histopathological myocardial remodeling in children submitted to surgical repair of Fallot\'s tetralogy, in order to detect possible factors associated to postoperative (PO) echocardiographic findings of systolic or diastolic ventricular dysfunction. Patients and Methods: 23 consecutive Fallot patients (14 males), aged 12 to 186 months (mean=39.6, median=23 months) were enrolled in the study. Tissue Doppler echocardiographic analysis (isovolumic acceleration-IVA, systolic myocardial velocity-S\' and early diastolic myocardial velocity-E\') was performed in three moments for both ventricles: before surgery, within the first three postoperative days and later, between the 30th and 90th PO days. During surgery, besides the anomalous infundibular bands resected, subendocardial biopsy samples from the right ventricular (RV) inflow tract and of the left ventricle (LV), through the ventricular septal defect, were obtained for histopathological morphometric evaluation: degree of cell hypertrophy, interstitial collagen (Sirius-red) and capillarity (immunohistochemistry against Factor-VIII). Troponin-T levels were measured before and after surgery. The electrocardiogram performed before and after surgery, some clinical features and previous use propranolol were considered. This study was approved by the Ethical Committee of our Institution. Results: the right ventricular cardyomyocytes showed a significant hypertrophy. The interstitial collagen was increase in both right and left ventricle. The capillary area fraction did not differ among the biopsy samples analyzed. IVA of the RV decreased significantly at the third echocardiographic evaluation (p=0.006) and correlated negatively with the diameter of the RV cardyomyocytes (r= -0.59; p=0.006). E\' measured at the RV decreased significantly in both PO periods (p<0.001) and showed a significant negative correlation with the percentage of interstitial myocardial collagen (r=-0.525; p=0,044). Troponin-T levels increased postoperatively in all patients (27.7 ±18,6ng/ml and 15.9+11.3ng/ml - second and third PO days) and correlated positively with the cardiopulmonary bypass and cross clamping times (p=0.019 and 0.018 respectively). The QRS interval increased significantly in the PO period. The patients in whom the PO electrocardiogram showed an increase of the QRS greater than 40ms, showed a greater interstitial collagen area fraction in the right ventricle inflow tract. Conclusions: Myocardial remodeling present preoperatively, as judged by the morphometric histopathological evaluation of cell hypertrophy and interstitial collagen, influenced respectively the medium term PO systolic and diastolic right ventricular function of repaired Fallot patients.
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Růžička, Jiří. "Polyfunkční koncový dům v Karlových Varech." Master's thesis, Vysoké učení technické v Brně. Fakulta stavební, 2017. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-265694.

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The project solves a multifunctional Duma building in a vacant lot, contemplated the construction site is located in Carlsbad, in the street Vyhlíce. This is a protected site spa. Part of the project's layout and structural design of the house. It is a six-storey house with an attic and a basement floor. It is designed as a free-standing in the gap as the final house. The layout is divided into two complete units with their own input. There are spaces for business and residential units for permanent housing. Part of the living area are also room house equipment. Inputs to both parts are wheelchair accessible. The house is not wheelchair The house is designed as a brick building of brick masonry Porotherm the module dimensions of 250 (125) mm with reinforced concrete ceilings. Roofed by a hipped roof. The house is located on a private plot of 519 m2 built-up area of 221 m2. The land is gently sloping. The main orientation of the building to the cardinal's east and west. The south wall is adjacent to the neighboring house.
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Books on the topic "Falcon College"

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David, Grant. An oasis of excellence: Falcon college, 1954-2014. Esigodini, Zimbabwe: Falcon College, 2014.

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John, Cheever. Falconer. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1986.

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John, Cheever. Falconer. New York: Vintage Books, 1991.

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Morson, Ian. A psalm for Falconer. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1997.

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Morson, Ian. Falconer and the great beast. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1999.

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Falconer and the great beast. London: Vista, 1999.

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Greenlee, James Grant Christopher. Sir Robert Falconer: A biography. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1988.

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Morson, Ian. Falconer's judgement. London: Gollancz, 1995.

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Morson, Ian. Falconer's crusade. New York: St. Martin's Paperbacks, 1996.

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Morson, Ian. Falconer's judgement. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1996.

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Book chapters on the topic "Falcon College"

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Scharffetter-Kochanek, Karin, and Evgenia Makrantonaki. "Acquired Disorders of Collagen and Elastin." In Braun-Falco´s Dermatology, 1–17. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-58713-3_52-1.

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Brinckmann, Jürgen. "Hereditary Disorders of Collagen and Elastic Fibers." In Braun-Falco´s Dermatology, 1–16. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-58713-3_51-1.

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Brinckmann, JÜrgen. "Hereditary Disorders of Collagen and Elastin." In Braun-Falco’s Dermatology, 677–86. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-29316-3_48.

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Scharffetter-Kochanek, Karin. "Acquired Disorders of Elastin and Collagen." In Braun-Falco’s Dermatology, 687–700. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-29316-3_49.

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"Forward Falcons." In College Fight Songs, 65. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203047774-4.

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Hunter, Margaret A., and Harriette Thurber Rasmussen. "Interactive Learning Environments." In Handbook of Research on Student-Centered Strategies in Online Adult Learning Environments, 365–84. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-5085-3.ch017.

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The promise of technology to meet student learning demands, increase employer demand for digital fluency, and provide faculty with a platform for student-centered teaching has fallen short. Colleges must examine new ways to train faculty to use technology in tandem with pedagogy. This chapter illustrates a three-tiered model to close this gap in digital fluency among college faculty, in order to enable a more engaging and student-centered experience for faculty-learners and the students they teach. The three-tiered model, adapted from a blended learning pilot, incorporates critical constructs in technological pedagogical content knowledge integration, the technology acceptance model, and phased faculty development, while offering user-friendly access to digital tools which are appropriate for each tier of the model.
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Solomon, Robert C. "Doctors Police Your Own Expert Witness Testimony." In Legal and Ethical Issues in Emergency Medicine, 181–88. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190066420.003.0025.

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Experienced emergency physicians with involvement in teaching and writing about clinical topics may be approached about a case of alleged medical negligence. The physician must decide whether to get involved as a potential expert witness, subjecting oneself to the requirement for diligent and thorough review of the case in all its particulars. If one agrees to do this, one must interact with attorneys, prepare opinions, and likely give testimony in deposition, and possibly at trial if the case is not settled. Accepting the responsibility for judging whether a colleague has fallen short of the standard of care, and harmed a patient through negligence, cannot be taken lightly. Guidelines for ethical conduct by an expert witness in a medical negligence tort have been developed and promulgated by the American College of Emergency Physicians and should guide physicians’ actions.
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Gulson, Kalervo N., and P. Taylor Webb. "Policy and biopolitics: the event of race-based statistics in Toronto." In Education Policy and Racial Biopolitics in Multicultural Cities. Policy Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447320074.003.0004.

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This chapter connects race-based violence, ideas of counting and race-based statistics, with ideas about racial biopolitics. The focus is on two events. The first is a 2008 a report into school safety, the Falconer Report, which urged for the use of ‘race-based statistics’ in the Toronto District School Board (TDSB), which reignited the overall move towards Black-focused schooling. We connect this report, and its plea to use race-based statistics in discipline related incidents in schooling, to racial profiling and policing in Toronto in the early 2000s. The chapter concludes with the TDSB decision in 2004-5, to collect race-based statistics, as a second policy event that preceded the Falconer Report.
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Grasso, Christopher. "Wanderer upon the Earth." In Teacher, Preacher, Soldier, Spy, 52–69. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197547328.003.0005.

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In the mid-1850s, Kelso was a successful schoolteacher and preacher, reading through a college curriculum in his off hours and, intellectually, pushing past the boundaries of Methodist orthodoxy. But his married life was miserable. His wife Adelia was so depressed he feared for her sanity, and he discovered she had been aborting her pregnancies. By the time she confessed she didn’t love him and they agreed to divorce, he had fallen in love with one of his nineteen-year-old students. His marital troubles, however, scandalized his church and the congregation denounced him. Publicly renouncing Methodism, he became “a wifeless, homeless, churchless . . . and moneyless wanderer upon the earth.” Feeling reckless, he crossed thin ice on the Missouri River, fell through, and nearly drowned.
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10

Kelly, Laura. "The Medical School Marketplace, c.1850–1900." In Irish Medical Education and Student Culture, c.1850-1950. Liverpool University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781786940599.003.0002.

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The early nineteenth century has been frequently hailed as the ‘golden age of Irish medicine’ as result of the work of physicians Robert Graves and William Stokes, whose emphasis on bedside teaching earned fame for the Meath Hospital where they were based. However, by the 1850s and for much of the nineteenth century, Irish medical education had fallen into ill-repute. Irish schools were plagued by economic difficulties, poor conditions, sham certificate system, night lectures and grinding, all of these affected student experience in different ways. Furthermore, intense competition between medical schools meant that students wielded a great deal of power as consumers. Irish students had a remarkable amount of freedom with regard to their education and qualifications. As the medical profession became increasingly professionalised, student behaviour improved but disturbances and protests in relation to professional matters or standards of education replaced earlier rowdiness. The nineteenth century also witnessed complaints by medical students about the quality of the education they were receiving, resulting, for example, in a series of visitations to Queen’s College Cork and Queen’s College Galway. This chapter highlights these distinctive aspects of Irish medical education while illustrating the power of Irish students in the period as consumers.
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Conference papers on the topic "Falcon College"

1

Lim, ZN, BJW Chew, S. Yong, and AF Corno. "G414(P) Tetralogy of fallot with right aortic arch and retro-aortic innominate vein." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the RCPCH Conference and exhibition, 13–15 May 2019, ICC, Birmingham, Paediatrics: pathways to a brighter future. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2019-rcpch.399.

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2

Alomari, Y., R. Calthorpe, P. Foxon, S. Durairaj, and P. Thakker. "G390(P) A 3-year retrospective audit of tetralogy of fallot infants who experienced hypercyanotic ‘tet’ spells and parent awareness." In Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, Abstracts of the RCPCH Conference and exhibition, 13–15 May 2019, ICC, Birmingham, Paediatrics: pathways to a brighter future. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2019-rcpch.376.

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