Long-term transfer of learning from books and video during toddlerhood. (41/105)

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Establishing books as conditioned reinforcers for preschool children as a function of an observational intervention. (42/105)

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Scurvy and cloudberries: a chapter in the history of nutritional sciences. (43/105)

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A randomized trial comparing yoga, stretching, and a self-care book for chronic low back pain. (44/105)

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Print exposure, reading habits, and reading achievement among deaf and hearing college students. (45/105)

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Using baby books to change new mothers' attitudes about corporal punishment. (46/105)

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Aretaeus of Cappadocia and the first description of diabetes. (47/105)

The name Aretaeus of Cappadocia has been linked with diabetes more than that of any other physician of antiquity, his texts forming a sophisticated synthesis of the previous knowledge on this disease copiously supplemented by his own observations. Gifted with a unique faculty for observing pathologic phenomena, he was able to elaborate upon earlier texts enriching them with his own original findings and numerous thoughtful reflections. Among the many diseases he dealt with, Aretaeus has bequeathed to us an outstandingly vivid and accurate description of diabetes.  (+info)

Children's sensitivity to the knowledge expressed in pedagogical and nonpedagogical contexts. (48/105)

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