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  • 1
    Keywords: Physiology. ; Science Study and teaching. ; Educational tests and measurements. ; Education Research. ; Physiology. ; Science Education. ; Assessment and Testing. ; Educational Research.
    Description / Table of Contents: Part 1: Introduction and Educational Context -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Intentional Innovation in Educational Technology and Media to Promote Students’ Holistic Development -- Chapter 2: Technology, Equity and Inclusion in the Virtual Education Space -- Chapter 3: Institutional Culture of Student Empowerment: Redefining the Roles of Students and Technology -- Chapter 4: From Psychology Laboratory to Student Development: Untangling Momentary Engagement from Longer-term Engagement in Bioscience Education -- Part 2: How Educational Technologies Shape the Classroom Experience -- Chapter 5: Perceptual Learning, Adaptive Learning, and Gamification: Educational Technologies for Pattern Recognition, Problem Solving and Knowledge Retention in Medical Learning -- Chapter 6: The Flipped Classroom: A Guide to Making Evidence-Based Decisions about Implementation -- Chapter 7: Supplementary Videos in the Biosciences: How Stakeholders Can Reinforce Complex Concepts for Self-Directed Learners -- Chapter 8: Aligning assessment goals with the current and future technologies needed to achieve them -- Chapter 9: The Use of Video, Audio and E-portfolios to Provide Feedback -- Chapter 10: Academic Cheating: How Can We Detect and Discourage It? -- Part 3: How Educational Technologies Transcend the Classroom -- Chapter 11: DEBATE PART 1: Attendance and Performance: a New Landscape in the Era of Online Teaching -- Chapter 12: DEBATE PART 2: Lecture Capture, Attendance and Exam Performance in the Biosciences: Exploring Rare Exceptions to the Link Between Attendance and Performance in the Era of Online Teaching -- Chapter 13: Online Science Education at Scale: Open and Distance Learning, MOOCS, and Other Learning Assets for Theory and Practice -- Chapter 14: Social Online Learning: Leveraging Social Media and Web-Based Co-Creation to Drive Learning -- Chapter 15: The Role of Educational Technology on Mitigating the Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Teaching and Learning -- Part 4: The Future and Research -- Chapter 16: The Unpredictable Future of High Fidelity Patient Simulation in Biomedical Science Education: the Price Must Be Right -- Chapter 17: The Future with Extended Reality, Three-dimensional and Advanced Imaging for Molecules, Microscopy and Anatomy -- Chapter 18: The Future of Biomedical and Life Sciences Education: Evidence-based Future Directions.
    Abstract: This contributed volume focuses on understanding the educational strengths and weaknesses of mediated content (including media as a learning supplement), in comparison to traditional face-to-face learning. Each chapter includes research on, and a broad-brush summary of, approaches to combining life sciences education with educational technologies. The chapters are organized into four main sections, each of which focuses on a key question regarding the consequences of incorporating media into education. In this regard, the authors highlight how educational technology is both a bridge and barrier to student access and inclusivity. Further, they address the ongoing discussion as to whether students need to be present for lectures, and on how having agency in their own learning can improve both retention and conceptual understanding. To link the content to current events, the authors also shed light on the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic is having on the continuity of educational programs and on the growing importance of educational technologies. Consequently, the book offers life science educators valuable guidance on the technologies already available, and an outlook on what is yet to come.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: XVI, 580 p. 77 illus., 61 illus. in color. , online resource.
    Edition: 1st ed. 2022.
    ISBN: 9783030956332
    Series Statement: Methods in Physiology,
    DDC: 571
    Language: English
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  • 2
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    Burleigh Dodds Science Publishing | Burleigh Dodds Science Publishing
    Publication Date: 2024-04-14
    Description: One of the most common methods to evaluate environmental footprints of farming systems is life cycle assessment (LCA). Although LCA itself is suitable for and adopted by a wide range of industries far beyond agriculture, what separates agriculture, and in particular pasture-based ruminant production systems, is the high degree of uncertainties associated with physical, chemical and biological processes that underpin production. Through a review of recent literature and a quantitative case study, this chapter explores how the practical trade-off between feasibility and scientific rigour should be addressed in the field of ruminant production systems. Finally, the chapter provides detailed guidance on where to look for further information in the field.
    Keywords: Life cycle assessment (LCA) ; Ruminant production systems ; Pasture-based agriculture ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TV Agriculture and farming::TVK Agronomy and crop production ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TV Agriculture and farming::TVF Sustainable agriculture ; thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TV Agriculture and farming::TVH Animal husbandry
    Language: English
    Format: image/jpeg
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2021-10-20
    Description: Transposable elements (TEs) are mobile genetic elements that make up a large fraction of mammalian genomes. While select TEs have been co-opted in host genomes to have function, the majority of these elements are epigenetically silenced by DNA methylation in somatic cells. However, some TEs in mice, including the Intracisternal A-particle (IAP) subfamily of retrotransposons, have been shown to display interindividual variation in DNA methylation. Recent work has revealed that IAP sequence differences and strain-specific KRAB zinc finger proteins (KZFPs) may influence the methylation state of these IAPs. However, the mechanisms underlying the establishment and maintenance of interindividual variability in DNA methylation still remain unclear. Here, we report that sequence content and genomic context influence the likelihood that IAPs become variably methylated. IAPs that differ from consensus IAP sequences have altered KZFP recruitment that can lead to decreased KAP1 recruitment when in proximity of constitutively expressed genes. These variably methylated loci have a high CpG density, similar to CpG islands, and can be bound by ZF-CxxC proteins, providing a potential mechanism to maintain this permissive chromatin environment and protect from DNA methylation. These observations indicate that variably methylated IAPs escape silencing through both attenuation of KZFP binding and recognition by ZF-CxxC proteins to maintain a hypomethylated state.
    Electronic ISSN: 2050-084X
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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