Results for 'Deborah Gray White'

988 found
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  1.  79
    [Book review] ar'n't ia woman?, Female slaves in the plantation south. [REVIEW]Deborah Gray White - 1989 - Feminist Studies 15:573-590.
  2.  9
    Multimodal brain features at 3 years of age and their relationship with pre-reading measures 1 year later.Kathryn Y. Manning, Jess E. Reynolds, Xiangyu Long, Alberto Llera, Deborah Dewey & Catherine Lebel - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    Pre-reading language skills develop rapidly in early childhood and are related to brain structure and functional architecture in young children prior to formal education. However, the early neurobiological development that supports these skills is not well understood. Here we acquired anatomical, diffusion tensor imaging and resting state functional MRI from 35 children at 3.5 years of age. Children were assessed for pre-reading abilities using the NEPSY-II subtests 1 year later. We applied a data-driven linked independent component analysis to explore the (...)
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  3.  20
    From Place to Space: A Heideggerian Analysis.Elizabeth Smythe, Deborah Spence & Jonathon Gray - 2018 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 18 (2):191-201.
    In this paper, we pay attention to the impact on staff of what was a new place, Ko Awatea, within a large New Zealand hospital. The place became a space from within which a particular mood arose. This paper seeks to capture that mood and its impact. Using a Heideggerian hermeneutic approach, the study reported on drew on data from interviews with 20 staff. Philosophical notions about the nature and mood of place/space are explored. As staff claimed this space, the (...)
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  4.  11
    Educating From the Heart: Theoretical and Practical Approaches to Transforming Education.Sara Caldwell, Auriel Gray, Tobin Hart, Deb Higgins, Paul D. Houston, Joyce Kemp, Rachael Kessler, Madelyn Nash, Peter Perkins, Anthony R. Quintiliani, Donald Tinney, Deborah Thomsen-Taylor, Jessica Toulis, Ann Trousdale & Laura Weaver (eds.) - 2011 - R&L Education.
    This book offers both theoretical overviews and practical approaches for educators, academics, education students and parents who are interested in transforming schools. It encourages reinvigorating approaches to learning and teaching that can easily be integrated into both public and private K-12 school classrooms, with many ideas also applicable to higher education. It supports an educational system based on the beliefs that heart and spirit are intertwined with mind and intellect, and that inner peace, wisdom, compassion, and conscience can be developed (...)
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  5.  11
    Worm Work: Recasting Romanticism - by Janelle A. Schwarz.Deborah Elise White - 2014 - Centaurus 56 (2):131-133.
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  6.  18
    Beat the clock! Wait times and the production of 'quality' in emergency departments.Karen A. Melon, Deborah White & Janet Rankin - 2013 - Nursing Philosophy 14 (3):223-237.
    Emergency care in large urban hospitals across the country is in the midst of major redesign intended to deliver quality care through improved access, decreased wait times, and maximum efficiency. The central argument in this paper is that the conceptualization of quality including the documentary facts and figures produced to substantiate quality emergency care is socially organized within a powerful ruling discourse that inserts the interests of politics and economics into nurses' work. The Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale figures prominently (...)
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  7.  14
    Heavy objects and small children: Developmental data extend the passive frame theory.Cheshire Hardcastle, Eliah White, Heidi Kloos & Valerie Gray Hardcastle - 2016 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39.
    Passive frame theory is compatible with modern complexity theory and the idea that conflict drives the emergence of a novel structural organization. After describing new developmental data, we suggest that this conflict needs to be expanded to include not only conflict between action options, but also between action and perception.
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  8.  25
    Universal Funder Responsibilities That Advance Social Value.Barbara E. Bierer, David H. Strauss, Sarah A. White & Deborah A. Zarin - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics 18 (11):30-32.
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  9. A further investigation of childhood experience of family change and ever marriage: race and sex differences.J. H. Li, J. OToole, R. E. Wright, R. H. Gray, L. Rosenberg, E. Johannisson, I. Brosens, F. Cornillie, M. Elder & J. White - 1991 - Journal of Biosocial Science 23 (3):255-62.
  10.  17
    Neonates as intrinsically worthy recipients of pain management in neonatal intensive care.Emre Ilhan, Verity Pacey, Laura Brown, Kaye Spence, Kelly Gray, Jennifer E. Rowland, Karolyn White & Julia M. Hush - 2020 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 24 (1):65-72.
    One barrier to optimal pain management in the neonatal intensive care unit is how the healthcare community perceives, and therefore manages, neonatal pain. In this paper, we emphasise that healthcare professionals not only have a professional obligation to care for neonates in the NICU, but that these patients are intrinsically worthy of care. We discuss the conditions that make neonates worthy recipients of pain management by highlighting how neonates are vulnerable to pain and harm, and completely dependent on others for (...)
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  11.  10
    When mothers matter: The effects of social class and family arrangements on african american and white women's perceived relations with their mothers.Deborah K. Thorne & Amy S. Wharton - 1997 - Gender and Society 11 (5):656-681.
    Previous studies suggest that social class, class background, and social mobility have important consequences for family life. Exploring hypotheses derived from these studies, as well as the literature on intergenerational relations, the authors focus on one key aspect of family relations: adult daughters' ties to their mothers. Analyzing data from the National Survey of Families and Households, the authors explore how employed women's relations with their mothers are shaped by race, social class memberships and backgrounds, and family arrangements. Their results (...)
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  12.  10
    Lewis White Beck 1913-1997.Deborah K. W. Modrak - 1998 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 71 (5):135 - 136.
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  13.  10
    Female Faith and the Politics of the Personal: Five Mission Encounters in Twentieth-Century South Africa.Deborah Gaitskell - 2000 - Feminist Review 65 (1):68-91.
    This article explores female religious interaction in racially divided ‘colonial’ South Africa through the lives of five unmarried Anglican women missionaries who worked in and around Johannesburg between 1907 and 1960. It particularly analyses the quality of their personal relationships with African women converts, colleagues and students. Deaconess Julia Gilpin, in the imperial, anglicizing post-Boer War years, encouraged devout, respectable wifehood on the mine compounds, contributing to the corporate solidarity of praying mothers as a deeply entrenched feature of most black (...)
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  14.  12
    The White Calf Kicks by Deborah Slicer. [REVIEW]Deborah Bogen - 2004 - Janus Head 7 (1):222-225.
  15.  10
    Protect the Sick: Health Insurance Reform in One Easy Lesson.Deborah Stone - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (4):652-659.
    In most other nations, insurance for medical care is called sickness insurance, and it covers sick people. In the United States, we have “health insurance,” and its major carriers — commercial insurers, large employers, and increasingly government programs — strive to avoid sick people and cover only the healthy. This perverse logic at the heart of the American health insurance system is the key to reform debates.Focusing on sick people versus healthy people might seem a strange way to view the (...)
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  16.  8
    Five Poems.Deborah Warren - 2019 - Arion 27 (1):43-48.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content: Five Poems DEBORAH WARREN Bugonia hic vero subitum dictu mirabile monstrum aspiciunt, liquefacta boum per viscera toto stridere apes utero et ruptis effervere costis. —Vergil, Georgics IV The covert’s dark, but Aristaeus sees —beyond it, in the oleandered meadow, walking to her wedding with her maids— Eurydice, as sweet as early windfall apples to the gods of the bitter dead. She runs, from shifting shade to sun (...)
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  17.  80
    Don’t be Ignorant.Deborah K. Heikes - 2018 - Southwest Philosophy Review 34 (1):49-57.
    “Ignorance” is receiving an increased amount of philosophical attention. The study of it even has its own name, “agnotology.” Some ignorance remains simply a case of not having enough information, but increasingly philosophers are recognizing a whole other type of ignorance, one that is socially constructed and often actively promoted. In the first section of this paper I examine perhaps the best known type of socially constructed ignorance, “white ignorance.” White ignorance reflects a lack of genuine understanding of (...)
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  18.  8
    Epistemic Responsibility for Undesirable Beliefs.Deborah K. Heikes - 2023 - Springer Nature Switzerland.
    This book considers whether we can be epistemically responsible for undesirable beliefs, such as racist and sexist ones. The problem with holding people responsible for their undesirable beliefs is: first, what constitutes an “undesirable belief” will differ among various epistemic communities; second, it is not clear what responsibility we have for beliefs simpliciter; and third, inherent in discussions of socially constructed ignorance (like white ignorance) is the idea that society is structured in such a way that white people (...)
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  19.  7
    Rationality, representation, and race.Deborah K. Heikes - 2016 - [New York]: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Heikes challenges Enlightenment rationality's tendency to be an achievement concept which excludes non-whites and non-males. She examines post-Cartesian criticisms of modernism, and pre-modern efforts to address the functional diversity of human cognition, arguing that such approaches offer a rationality that is diverse and morally substantive.
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  20.  20
    Purity matters more than harm in moral judgments of suicide: Response to Gray.Joshua Rottman, Deborah Kelemen & Liane Young - 2014 - Cognition 133 (1):332-334.
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  21.  22
    The eyes are the window to the uncanny valley: Mind perception, autism and missing souls.Chelsea Schein & Kurt Gray - 2015 - Interaction Studies 16 (2):173-179.
    Horror movies have discovered an easy recipe for making people creepy: alter their eyes. Instead of normal eyes, zombies’ eyes are vacantly white, vampires’ eyes glow with the color of blood, and those possessed by demons are cavernously black. In the Academy Award winning Pan’s Labyrinth, director Guillermo del Toro created the creepiest of all creatures by entirely removing its eyes from its face, placing them instead in the palms of its hands. The unease induced by altering eyes may (...)
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  22.  46
    The eyes are the window to the uncanny valley: Mind perception, autism and missing souls.Chelsea Schein & Kurt Gray - 2015 - Interaction Studiesinteraction Studies Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systems 16 (2):173-179.
    Horror movies have discovered an easy recipe for making people creepy: alter their eyes. Instead of normal eyes, zombies’ eyes are vacantly white, vampires’ eyes glow with the color of blood, and those possessed by demons are cavernously black. In the Academy Award winning Pan’s Labyrinth, director Guillermo del Toro created the creepiest of all creatures by entirely removing its eyes from its face, placing them instead in the palms of its hands. The unease induced by altering eyes may (...)
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  23.  14
    The eyes are the window to the uncanny valley.Chelsea Schein & Kurt Gray - 2015 - Interaction Studies. Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies / Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies 16 (2):173-179.
    Horror movies have discovered an easy recipe for making people creepy: alter their eyes. Instead of normal eyes, zombies’ eyes are vacantly white, vampires’ eyes glow with the color of blood, and those possessed by demons are cavernously black. In the Academy Award winning Pan’s Labyrinth, director Guillermo del Toro created the creepiest of all creatures by entirely removing its eyes from its face, placing them instead in the palms of its hands. The unease induced by altering eyes may (...)
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  24.  7
    Thomas E. A. Dale, Pygmalion’s Power: Romanesque Sculpture, the Senses, and Religious Experience. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2019. Pp. xii, 276; 21 color plates and many black-and-white figures. $99.95. ISBN: 978-0-2710-8345-2. [REVIEW]Deborah Kahn - 2021 - Speculum 96 (1):199-201.
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  25.  6
    The Senior Black Correspondent.Jason Holt & John Scott Gray - 2013 - In The Ultimate Daily Show and Philosophy. Oxford: Wiley. pp. 155–166.
    Jon Stewart often delivers the satire himself, but nearly every episode also features at least one of The Daily Show's numerous correspondents. This chapter focuses on Larry Wilmore, who as Senior Black Correspondent is able to discuss issues of race in ways that a white correspondent probably could not. For example, Wilmore has discussed how the election of Barack Obama could be perceived by the African‐American community in the United States, proposing that peer pressure creates a monolithic voting block (...)
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  26.  25
    Cartulaire de l'Abbaye Saint-Sauveur de Redon, 2. Rennes: Association des Amis des Archives Historiques du Diocèse de Rennes, Dol et Saint-Malo, 2004. Pp. 128; black-and-white and color figures and tables. [REVIEW]Deborah Nelson-Campbell - 2006 - Speculum 81 (3):821-823.
  27.  6
    A Review of “What If All the Kids Are White?: Anti-bias Multicultural Education With Young Children and Families ”. [REVIEW]R. Deborah Davis - 2008 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 44 (3):294-300.
  28.  47
    The Piety of Thinking: Essays by Martin Heidegger (review).J. Glenn Gray - 1980 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 18 (2):242-244.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:242 HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY asks questions like these: What is there in favor of calling green a primary color, and not a blend of blue and yellow? (1, 6) or, Why can something be transparent green but not transparent white? (1, 19). The effect of such questions is to force us to realize that our concept of color is more complex than we might have realized, or would (...)
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  29.  4
    Killing the Black Body.Kishonna L. Gray - 2023 - Filozofski Vestnik 44 (2):181-98.
    The purpose of this essay is to explore the patterns of antiblackness within contemporary gaming. Video games are sites of necropolitical logics that use Black death to propel narratives. But even more concerning, is that these games might make sense of larger desires of white colonial supremacy, attempting to remove and destroy its troubled racialized past. Ethnographic observations also engage gaming as a carceral logic that seeks to surveil, police, and criminal Blackness. Under these conditions, it is imperative to (...)
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  30.  5
    Phenomenology of Black Spirit.Biko Mandela Gray - 2022 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Edited by Ryan J. Johnson.
    Ryan Johnson and Biko Mandela Gray study the relationship between Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit and Black Thought from Frederick Douglass to Angela Davis. This staging of an elongated dialectical parallelism between Hegel's classic text and major 19th-20th-century Black thinkers explodes the western canon of philosophy. Johnson and Mandela Gray show that Hegel's abstract dialectic is transformed and critiqued when put into conversation with the lived dialectics of Black Thought: from Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs through to Malcolm X (...)
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  31.  18
    Decolonialism’s Reframing of French Existentialism in Fanon’s The Drowning Eye.Carol J. Gray - 2021 - CLR James Journal 27 (1-2):213-234.
    Frantz Fanon’s posthumously published one act play, The Drowning Eye (2018, 81–112), reframes French existentialism in a postcolonial context by examining both the absurd and racial identity. Divided into three parts, this article first discusses the many parallels between The Drowning Eye and Jean-Paul Sartre’s No Exit (1989), both one act plays set in one room with the entire action of the play consisting of a dialogue among three individuals in a love triangle. The second part explores the role of (...)
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  32.  15
    Decolonialism’s Reframing of French Existentialism in Fanon’s The Drowning Eye.Carol J. Gray - 2021 - CLR James Journal 27 (1-2):213-234.
    Frantz Fanon’s posthumously published one act play, The Drowning Eye (2018, 81–112), reframes French existentialism in a postcolonial context by examining both the absurd and racial identity. Divided into three parts, this article first discusses the many parallels between The Drowning Eye and Jean-Paul Sartre’s No Exit (1989), both one act plays set in one room with the entire action of the play consisting of a dialogue among three individuals in a love triangle. The second part explores the role of (...)
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  33.  9
    Stellar Spectral Classification.Richard O. Gray & Christopher J. Corbally - 2009 - Princeton University Press.
    Written by leading experts in the field, Stellar Spectral Classification is the only book to comprehensively discuss both the foundations and most up-to-date techniques of MK and other spectral classification systems. Definitive and encyclopedic, the book introduces the astrophysics of spectroscopy, reviews the entire field of stellar astronomy, and shows how the well-tested methods of spectral classification are a powerful discovery tool for graduate students and researchers working in astronomy and astrophysics. The book begins with a historical survey, followed by (...)
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  34.  17
    Mind – your head!R. P. Ingvaldsen & H. T. A. Whiting - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (4):685-686.
    Gray takes an information-processing paradigm as his departure point, invoking a comparator as part of the system. He concludes that consciousness is to be found “in” the comparator but is unable to point to how the comparison takes place. Thus, the comparator turns out not to be an entity arising out of brain research per se, but out of the logic of the paradigm. In this way, Gray both reinvents dualism and remains trapped in the language game of (...)
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  35.  26
    “Lethal” Fetal Anomalies and Elective Cesarean.Mejebi T. Mayor & Amina White - 2015 - Hastings Center Report 45 (6):13-14.
    Deborah is a thirty-three-year-old who presented to labor and delivery at thirty-seven weeks gestation with complaints of contractions. Upon arrival, she explained that her fetus, Nathan, had been diagnosed with a “lethal” condition by her primary obstetrician. At twenty-two weeks gestation, an amniocentesis confirmed trisomy 13, a chromosomal abnormality leading to miscarriage or stillbirth in nearly one-half of affected pregnancies. During the admission process, Deborah voices the worry that due to Nathan's brain and heart structure, vaginal delivery could (...)
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  36.  10
    Experiences of indigenous (Māori/Pasifika) early career academics.Georgina Tuari Stewart, Te Wai Barbarich-Unasa, Dion Enari, Cecelia Faumuina, Deborah Heke, Dion Henare, Taniela Lolohea, Megan Phillips, Hilda Port, Nimbus Staniland, Nooroa Tapuni, Rerekura Teaurere, Yvonne Ualesi, Leilani Walker, Nesta Devine & Jacoba Matapo - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    This article presents narratives from 13 Indigenous early career academics (ECAs) at one university in Auckland, New Zealand. These experiences are likely to represent those of Indigenous Māori and Pasifika ECAs nationally, given the small, centralised nature of the national academy of Aotearoa New Zealand. The narratives contain testimony, fictionalised vignettes of experience, and poetic expressions. Meeting the demands of an academic role in one’s first years of working at a university is a big deal for anyone; the extra pressures (...)
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  37.  45
    Adams, Colin, and Ray Laurence, eds. Travel and Geography in the Roman Empire. London: Routledge, 2001. x+ 202 pp. Numerous black-and-white figs. Cloth, $75. Alberti, Ioannes Baptista, ed. Thucydidis Historiae. Vol. 3: Libri VI–VIII. Scriptores Graeci et Latini Consilio Academiae Lynceorum Editi. Rome: Typis. [REVIEW]Alain Billault, Christine Mauduit, Deborah Boedeker, David Sider & G. R. Boys-Stones - 2002 - American Journal of Philology 123:145-147.
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  38.  9
    Integrity of the grey/white matter border is associated with cognitive performance in ageing: The PATH Through Life Project.Cherbuin Nicolas, Shaw Marnie, Salat David H., Sachdev Perminder & Anstey Kaarin - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  39. "On White Privilege and Anesthesia: Why Does Peggy McIntosh's Knapsack Feel Weightless," In Feminists Talk Whiteness, eds. Janet Gray and Leigh-Anne Francis.Alison Bailey (ed.) - forthcoming - London: Taylor and Francis.
    It is no accident that white privilege designed to be both be invisible and weightless to white people. Alison Bailey’s “On White Privilege and Anesthesia: Why Does Peggy McIntosh’s Knapsack Feel Weightless?” extends a weighty invitation white readers to complete the unpacking task McIntosh (1988) began when she compared white privilege to an “invisible and weightless knapsack.” McIntosh focuses primarily making white privilege visible to white people. Bailey’s project continues the conversation by extending (...)
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  40. Black, White and Gray: Quine on Convention.Yemima Ben-Menahem - 2005 - Synthese 146 (3):245-282.
    This paper examines Quine’s web of belief metaphor and its role in his various responses to conventionalism. Distinguishing between two versions of conventionalism, one based on the under-determination of theory, the other associated with a linguistic account of necessary truth, I show how Quine plays the two versions of conventionalism against each other. Some of Quine’s reservations about conventionalism are traced back to his 1934 lectures on Carnap. Although these lectures appear to endorse Carnap’s conventionalism, in exposing Carnap’s failure to (...)
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  41.  48
    White, gray, and black domains of cultural adaptations to climato-economic conditions.Evert Van de Vliert - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (5):503 - 521.
    Forty-nine commentators have reviewed the theory that needs-based stresses and freedoms are shaped differently in threatening, comforting, and challenging climato-economic habitats. Their commentaries cover the white domain, where the theory does apply (e.g., happiness, collectivism, and democracy), the gray domain, where it may or may not apply (e.g., personality traits and creativity), and the black domain, where it does not apply (e.g., human intelligence and gendered culture). This response article provides clarifications, recommendations, and expectations.
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  42.  52
    Altered Gray Matter Volume and White Matter Integrity in College Students with Mobile Phone Dependence.Yongming Wang, Zhiling Zou, Hongwen Song, Xiaodan Xu, Huijun Wang, Federico D’Oleire Uquillas & Xiting Huang - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  43.  32
    White matter matters for grey(ing) areas: a functional and structural view of task switching dynamics in middle-to-old age.Baniqued Pauline, Low Kathy, Fletcher Mark, Schneider-Garces Nils, Tan Chin Hong, Zimmerman Benjamin, Gratton Gabriele & Fabiani Monica - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  44.  5
    Going Grey in Black and White: The Representation of Old Age in Netherlandisch Prints.Anouk Janssen - 2007 - In Jörg Vögele, Johannes Siegrist, Hans-Georg Pott, Andrea von Hülsen-Esch, Christoph auf der Horst, Henriette Herwig, Monika Gomille & Heiner Fangerau (eds.), Alterskulturen Und Potentiale des Alters. Akademie Verlag. pp. 59-80.
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  45.  30
    Black and white and shades of gray: A portrait of the ethical professor.Mary Birch, Deni Elliott & Mary A. Trankel - 1999 - Ethics and Behavior 9 (3):243 – 261.
  46.  4
    Deborah McGrady, The Writer’s Gift or the Patron’s Pleasure?: The Literary Economy in Late Medieval France. Toronto, Buffalo, London: University of Toronto Press, 2018. Pp. xii, 321; 16 black-and-white figures. $85. ISBN: 978-1-4875-0365-9. [REVIEW]Sarah Wilma Watson - 2021 - Speculum 96 (2):535-536.
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  47.  9
    Altered Functional Connectivity in White and Gray Matter in Patients With Multiple Sclerosis.Muwei Li, Qiongge Li, Zhipeng Yang, Bowen Xin, Zhigang Qi, Zheng Liu, Huiqing Dong, Kuncheng Li, Zhaohua Ding & Jie Lu - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
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  48. Influence of White and Gray Matter Connections on Endogenous Human Cortical Oscillations.Ammar H. Hawasli, DoHyun Kim, Noah M. Ledbetter, Sonika Dahiya, Dennis L. Barbour & Eric C. Leuthardt - 2016 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10.
  49. 1 H mr spectroscopy of gray and white matter in carbon monoxide poisoning.Else Daniel Kondziella, Klaus Hansen R. Danielsen, Erik Carsten Thomsen & Peter Arlien-Soeborg C. Jansen - 2009 - Journal of Neurology 256 (6).
    Carbon monoxide intoxication leads to acute and chronic neurological deficits, but little is known about the specific noxious mechanisms. 1 H magnetic resonance spectroscopy may allow insight into the pathophysiology of CO poisoning by monitoring neurochemical disturbances, yet only limited information is available to date on the use of this protocol in determining the neurological effects of CO poisoning. To further examine the short-term and long-term effects of CO on the central nervous system, we have studied seven patients with CO (...)
     
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  50.  13
    David Brakke, Deborah Deliyannis, and Edward Watts, eds., Shifting Cultural Frontiers in Late Antiquity. Farnham, Surrey, UK, and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2012. Pp. xii, 286; 26 black-and-white figures and 1 table. $119.95. ISBN: 978-1-4094-4149-6. [REVIEW]Benjamin Anderson - 2014 - Speculum 89 (4):1112-1114.
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