scholarly journals Manage your Practice Successfully!!

2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Neelam Pande
Keyword(s):  

Practice means doing something regularly in order to be able to do it better, generally the work done by doctors. Management is the way something is handled, careful treatment, supervising skills, or those in charge of a business or group.

Author(s):  
Burdon Sanderson ◽  
F. Gotch

During the month of September, 1888, we availed ourselves of the facilities afforded by the Laboratory for the purpose of continuing the investigations began by us the year before, of the function of the electrical organ of the skate. In the record of the work done by us in 1887 at St. Andrews, published in the Journal of Physiology, vol. ix, p. 137, we indicated several new lines of investigation which we hoped to pursue if the opportunity offered. Two of these indications we have now been able to fulfil satisfactorily, namely, those relating to the electromotive force of the shock, and to the way in which the function of the electric organ is controlled and influenced by the central nervous system. In the first of these inquiries, we used apparatus which was brought from the Oxford Physiological Laboratory, and temporarily fitted up in the room at Plymouth, which is set apart for physiological researches, and which we found well adapted for this purpose. For the second, a large number of experiments and consequently a considerable number of fish were requisite. Forty skates of various species (Raia Batis, R. clavata, R. microcellata, and R. maculata) were supplied to us and used in our researches, of which the result will shortly be ready for publication.We desire to express in the strongest terms our appreciation of the advantages afforded by the Laboratory for physiological researches. We would also record our personal obligation to the Director for his uniform courtesy and untiring zeal in obtaining for us, in spite of considerable difficulties, the material required for our work.


Author(s):  
Karen Neander

In the second chapter, the author describes some research by cognitive scientists, who posit nonconceptual representations to explain certain perceptual capacities (and incapacities). This research and the way in which it is reported illustrate the type of theoretical work done by an error-permitting notion of nonconceptual representation, alongside a malfunction-permitting notion of function. One set of studies (led by McCloskey) that is described in some detail focuses on an unusual deficit in locating visual targets (in a young woman, AH), which were intended to contribute to understanding normal human vision. The author makes clear why the contents ascribed to the underlying representational states, where the errors first occur, are referential-intentional contents, not merely (natural-factive) informational contents, and why their ascriptions count as intensional, according to standard criteria. Toward the end of the chapter, the author reminds readers of a familiar conundrum: if a representation’s having content is not causally potent in a psychological process, why is it (still) a central tenet of mainstream cognitive science that such a process should be understood as representational?


1978 ◽  
Vol 192 (1) ◽  
pp. 189-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Halling

The paper covers work done at Salford University and identifies those aspects of tribology which are important to both the design of metal working machines and to the tool/workpiece interaction. After identifying the important tribological problem areas some examples of possible methods of solution are indicated using the work at Salford University for typical examples. Inevitably the paper identifies many questions to which there are currently very limited answers and thereby indicates the areas for further research. It should however be stressed that the author does not claim to have produced a comprehensive review on tribology in manufacturing engineering. Rather the style of the paper is to question the way forward and in some cases even to propose answers.


2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 33-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martie Van Deventer ◽  
Heila Pienaar

This paper explores our own journey to get to grips with research data management (RDM). It also mentions the overlap between our own ‘journeys’ and that of the country. We share the lessons that we learnt along the way – the most important lesson being that you can learn many wonderful and valuable RDM lessons from the international trend setters, but in the end you need to get your hands dirty and get the work done yourself. You must, within the set parameters, implement the RDM practice that is both appropriate and acceptable for and to your own set of researchers – who may be conducting research in a context that may be very dissimilar to that of international peers.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 646-646
Author(s):  
Jerold F. Lucey

I have always been impressed by the work done in phototherapy by Brazilians. In our 1968 article1 we actually referred to 9 of the 10 Brazilian authors mentioned by Dr. Senna. Now that there is so much concern and controversy in this country on the use of phototherapy it would be great if once again Brazil led the way by publishing some follow-up studies of infants treated by phototherapy over a decade ago. These studies would be very useful, and I'm sure avidly read by North Americans now that we have "seen the light."


1927 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 311-316
Author(s):  
S. M. Eiber

To review the work done, to summarize it, to find achievements and mistakes in it, then to outline a further plan closely connected with modern bio-technical and chemical methods, - this is the way through which the inquiring thought of every surgeon should pass. During the last 4 years (1923-1926) 4,563 patients admitted to my Surgical Department, 694 (15.2%) of them with hernias.


Author(s):  
Kirstie Blair

The first chapter provides an introduction to, and overview of, ‘occasional’ verse and performed verse, and considers the functions of newspaper poetry columns. Its broad remit underpins the detailed studies in the later chapters, and sets up the arguments about the work done by Scottish working-class poetry that re-occur in these. It contains an opening section discussing why working-class poetry came to seem so prevalent in Scotland, and how it became considered vital to Scottish cultural identity. This is followed by subsections on the role of occasional verse in commemorating and celebrating particular events or social occasions, the rise of newspaper poetry columns, and the way in which these columns fostered poetic communities.


2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-83
Author(s):  
Martin Ejsing Christensen ◽  
Thomas Bohl

Abstract This paper examines the way in which Ordinary Language Philosophy came to exert an important influence on the work done at Aarhus University’s department of philosophy in the latter half of the 20th century. The first section depicts the rise of Ordinary Language Philosophy as an international movement centered around Oxford in the wake of World War ii. The second section goes on to describe how it was brought to Aarhus by Professor Justus Hartnack, who had been deeply influenced by the movement during stays abroad in the UK and the US. The following three sections move on to describe some of the important ways in which Ordinary Language Philosophy has influenced the work of three of Hartnack’s most prominent students (Hans Fink, Uffe Juul Jensen and Jørgen Husted), who have influenced the life of the department in crucial ways from the 1970s until recently. Finally, the paper ends by briefly assessing the legacy and contemporary influence of Ordinary Language Philosophy in Aarhus.


1902 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 366-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. S. Buckman

In the Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, May, 1902, vol. lviii, p. 207, Mr. A. Strahan has a paper on the “Origin of the River-System of South Wales, and its Connection with that of the Severn and Thames.” It is with the part of the paper expressed in the latter portion of the title that I am more particularly concerned; for in that connection Mr. Strahan remarks in a footnote (p. 219), “The theories put forward by Mr. S. S. Buckman in Proc. Cotteswold Nat. Field Club, vol. xiii (1900), p. 175, following the lead of Professor W. M. Davis, appear to me to transgress the limits of legitimate speculation.” It seems rather curious that in a paper like this there is no further reference to the work done by Professor Davis, no attempt to consider his views, only a dismissal of them, implied in the rejection of the views which I have advanced in accordance with his teaching, which views, by the way, I gave in more detail in Natural Science, April, 1899, vol. xiv.


Author(s):  
Douglas MacLeod

Contemporary design practice is both borrowing from and contributing to other disciplines. This paper will examine two significant trends – design-based research and evidence-based design – that will have an impact on current and future design practices. Design-based research is currently popular in the field of education and borrows from the way architects and engineers work to develop their ideas in real-world contexts and as such it provides a new perspective into design engineering itself. Evidence-based design borrows from work done in evidence-based medicine to carefully observe and analyze the way people use the products of design. Taken together these two trends provide a new approach to design and a better means of connecting with collaborators, consumers and users.


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