256 resultater (0,34289 sekunder)

Mærke

Butik

Pris (EUR)

Nulstil filter

Produkter
Fra
Butikker

How to Age-Proof Your Dog - Elizabeth U. Murphy - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Complete Guide to Bird Dog Training - John Falk - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Genetic Prospects - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Testing Too Much? - Philip A. Streifer - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Testing Too Much? - Philip A. Streifer - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Usability Testing - Rebecca Blakiston - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Dog Body, Dog Mind - Michael Fox - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Agility Training for You and Your Dog - Diane Goodspeed - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

101 Dog Training Tips - Kirsten Mortensen - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Whole Dog Journal Handbook of Dog and Puppy Care and Training - Nancy Kerns - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

The Dressmaker's Mirror - Susan Weiss Liebman - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

The Dressmaker's Mirror - Susan Weiss Liebman - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

My niece was 36, newly married, and “on top of the world,” when she collapsed and died. Her autopsy report caused us to panic—there was something in our blood that could trigger sudden death. As a mother, I prayed for the curse to spare my children. As a geneticist, I plotted to find the killer. Without planning to do so, I became a medical detective. The book tells of the sorrows a mutation caused my family for generations, revealing a history of resilience and hope. As the stories unfold, I weave in discussions about genetic testing, screening, and gene therapy. The aim is to raise awareness of the crucial role of genetic testing in safeguarding personal health and patient care. I believe I became a geneticist at a time when few women pursued this path because I was destined to help understand the family illness and advocate for genetic testing. Experts agree on the value of genetic testing when there is a family history of disease, or if the patient has an illness frequently caused by a mutation. Knowing the disease mutation lets other family members find out if they have it too and need preventive care. The book explains that doctors can order tests with genetic counseling at relatively low cost and how this will help them prescribe preventive actions, make earlier diagnoses, and get better outcomes. The book’s genetic discussions also delve into the implications of broad-based genetic screening without a family history. Policymakers are currently considering the benefits and drawbacks of this approach and I present both sides of this debate. While working on this book I uncovered a family secret hidden for over one hundred years. Family lore had it that a heavy dressmaker’s mirror fell on and killed my uncle when he was four. But the death certificate told a different story. The true cause of my uncle’s death was heart failure. My grandparents fabricated the dressmaker’s mirror accident to protect their surviving children’s marriage prospects. Long before the discovery of DNA, my grandparents intuited and feared James Watson’s message, "We used to think that our fate was in our stars, but now we know that, in large measure, our fate is in our genes .” The book suggests genetic testing and associated medical intervention can yet change our fates.

DKK 269.00
1

Understanding Personality through Projective Testing - Steven B. Tuber - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Understanding Personality through Projective Testing - Steven B. Tuber - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

The past forty years have revealed a myriad of theoretical advances to Freud’s original conceptions of the personality. It has also witnessed the continued use of projective methods as a vital means of understanding the what and the how of mental health and psychopathology. Understanding Personality Through Projective Testing provides the reader with a comprehensive framework for linking these revitalized key domains of personality functioning to the quality of responses to projective testing in both children and adults. Six core aspects of personality: two facets of object relations (moving towards and away from self and others); the quality of defense mechanisms; the nature of affect maturity; the integrity of autonomous ego functioning and the capacity for playfulness are defined, articulated, and linked to one another in a reciprocal manner. Four commonly used projective testing methods: the Rorschach Inkblot Method (RIM); the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT), the Sentence Completion Test (SCT), and the Animal Preference Test (APT) are then described in detail. Each of these projective methods is in turn presented as dynamically-based tools to indicate the relative performance of the patient across the six core personality domains. Clinical case examples provide both the beginning and more seasoned clinician with a comprehensive psychodynamic paradigm with which to view each of the testing methods, as well as enhanced methods with which to use each of the tests more subtly and hence with greater clinical acumen. A comprehensive battery of projective testing is then assessed through the protocol of a single adult patient, allowing the reader to integrate the value of each of the individual projective methods into a comprehensive assessment of the whole person. Readers will find the book a vital complement to both standard reference works on projective methods as well as books that describe personality along developmental and psychodynamic lines.

DKK 432.00
1

A History of U.S. Nuclear Testing and Its Influence on Nuclear Thought, 1945–1963 - Joseph M. Siracusa - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

The New Genetic Medicine - James J. Walter - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Dog Walks Man - John Zeaman - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Dog Walks Man - John Zeaman - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

A humorous, thoughtful, absorbing narrative aboutthe metaphysical joys of a simple daily task Imagine if Annie Dillard had taken a dog along with her to Tinker Creek. Now imagine Tinker Creek was a New Jersey suburb, and you have an idea of the surprises that await in John Zeaman’s book. Humorous, thought-provoking, and playful, Dog Walks Man might also be called Zen and the Art of Dog Walking. Zeaman takes us on a journey from a ''round-the-block fraternity of “dog-walking dupes”—suburban fathers who indulged their children’s wish for a dog—to a strange and forbidden wonderland at the edge of town: the New Jersey Meadowlands. Along the way he rediscovers childhood’s forgotten “fringe places,” investigates the mysteries of the natural world, and experiences moments of inexplicable joy. Each chapter of Dog Walks Man is a bite-size meditation on the wisdom derived from dogs and dog walking. Woven into the narrative are musings on such familiar dog-walking issues as the war of nerves that precedes each walk (or “w-a-l-k” if your dog is in earshot), the problem of dog-walking monotony, and why dog walkers are always the ones to discover dead bodies. This is also the story of Pete, the prescient standard poodle who begins as the “family glue” and evolves into Zeaman’s partner on a journey through an abandoned landscape as alive as any jungle. Above all, Dog Walks Man is about a search for wholeness in an increasingly artificial world. It is about discovering what Thoreau meant when he wrote, in his seminal essay “Walking,” “Life consists with wildness.” Because the truth is, something as simple as walking the dog can open up unexpected worlds. An excerpt In the beginning, I walked around the block. Or a couple of blocks. It didn’t seem to matter. That it didn’t matter was in itself novel. It had been a long time since I had gone out without any particular destination or direction, without knowing whether I was going to turn left or turn right at the end of the front walk. . . . The simple aimlessness of it made me feel like a kid again. . . .Pete, with his boundless enthusiasm for the outside world, was like the reincarnation of that juvenile self. We’d hit the sidewalk and, like two kids with nothing special to do, spend a half-hour meandering about. We were suburban vagabonds. In the mornings, with the whole world rushing to get somewhere, there was something almost subversive about roaming around with a companion who had no responsibilities.We walked the irregular streets of our hilly town. We each had our compulsions. I revived the childhood aversion to stepping on cracks. Pete made sure that every tree was marked with his scent. . . .At night, Pete and I would escape the sometimes-suffocating sweetness of family life—the pajamas and stories, the smell of toothpaste and sheets, the damp goodnight kisses and prolonged hugs. We’d slip out into the silky night like a pair of teenage boys with high hopes for a Saturday night. We’d walk beneath the streetlights from one pool of light to the next. The people in the houses would drift past the windows like aquarium fish. Pete, with his black coat, was practically invisible in the dark stretches and I would let him off the leash.

DKK 167.00
1

Sea Dog - Astrid Sheckels - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

The Greatest Dog Stories Ever Told - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Testing the Limits - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

The Fastest Hound Dog in the State of Maine - John Gould - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Mark Twain for Dog Lovers - - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Rough-Shooting Dog - Charles Fergus - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk

Best Dog Hikes Northern California - Linda Mullally - Bog - Rowman & Littlefield - Plusbog.dk