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Instuments in the Hand of God : Missionary Women in Malaya, 1815-45
Christine DORAN Ewha Womans University Press 2004 Asian Journal of Women's Studies(AJWS) Vol.10 No.1
Most previous research on female missionaries in the Asia-Pacific region has dealt with the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and/or has concentrated on American women. In contrast, this article explores the motives and experiences of British women who were actively involved in mission stations in the Straits Settlements in Malaya, working under the auspices of the London Missionary Society; and it examines the early period of missionary activity in the region, from 1815 to 1845. The paper focuses on a key, but previously neglected issue: the women's motives for becoming involved in missionary endeavor. These women created a notional space for themselves as mission workers, firstly by means of ideas about being useful instruments in God's work; and secondly by asserting a direct relationship with their God, unmediated by male missionaries or the officials of the missionary society. This conceptual strategy gave them scope for maneuver within gendered power structures and thus some degree of social and political leverage.
Christine A. Chen,Yoonhee Ahn,Scott Odell,Mel Mupparapu,David Mattew Graham 대한영상치의학회 2016 Imaging Science in Dentistry Vol.46 No.3
A static, unilateral, and focal bone depression located lingually within the ascending ramus, identical to the Stafne’s bone cavity of the angle of the mandible, is being reported. During development of the mandible, submandibular gland inclusion may lead to the formation of a lingual concavity, which could contain fatty tissue, blood vessels, or soft tissue. However, similar occurrences in the ascending ramus at the level of the parotid gland are extremely rare. A static, unilateral, and focal bone depression located lingually within the ascending ramus, identical to the Stafne’s bone cavity of the angle of the mandible, is being reported. During development of the mandible, submandibular gland inclusion may lead to the formation of a lingual concavity, which could contain fatty tissue, blood vessels, or soft tissue. However, similar occurrences in the ascending ramus at the level of the parotid gland are extremely rare. Similar cases were previously reported in dry, excavated mandibles, and 3 cases were reported in living patients. A 52-year-old African American male patient was seen for pain in the mandibular teeth. Panoramic radiography showed an unusual concavity within the left ascending ramus. Cone-beam computed tomography confirmed this incidental finding. The patient was cleared for the extraction of non-restorable teeth and scheduled for annual follow-up.
Le droit et les institutions de l’insanité d’esprit en France sous l’Ancien Régime
Christine Peny Ewha Institute for Biomedical Law & Ethics 2008 BIOMEDICAL LAW & ETHICS Vol.2 No.2
During the last two centuries of the Ancien Regime, medicine and the monarchistic state progressively increased their hold over the law and institutions dedicated to insane people. Whereas at the beginning of the XVII^(th) century, families and charity institutions were still the main supports of mad people, on the eve of Revolution, most mentally sick persons were locked up and taken care of on "public powers" initiative. Allied to the "medical power", the absolute monarchy developed a kind of social assistance specifically intended for insane people, while their legal status tended to be standardized. The principles and practices established by the "Esquirol law" of June 30th 1838 already existed at the end of the Ancien Regime.
WBC Analysis Through Image Processing
Christine D. Bandalan,Randy G. Alegre,Angelie C. Allego,Paolo Francisco E. Alonso,Daniel L. Balagosa,Rodrigo C. Talingting Jr 대한전자공학회 2010 ICEIC:International Conference on Electronics, Inf Vol.1 No.1
This study aims to develop a simple, cost effective and efficient neutrophil, lymphocyte and monocyte counter using image processing techniques. To achieve this, a microscope, with a CCD camera mounted on it, is interfaced with the system. The camera provides the live feed from the microscope which is the source of still images that are subjected to the software for assessment. OpenCV library is used in the image processing techniques. The process has two main modules ? cell detection and cell matching. In cell detection, the region of interest (ROI) is extracted and undergoes image matching by means of histogram method. Matching module is subdivided into three ? neutrophil matching, lymphocyte matching and monocyte matching. The result of the matching process is the classification of the detected cell which can be neutrophil, lymphocyte, monocyte or unclassified. Additionally, the total number of neutrophils, lymphocytes and monocytes including unclassified cells found per image and on all images are given.