Personal Archives
Mostrando 13-20 de 20 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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13. CPDOC's experience: personal archives and oral history in Brazilian contemporary history
Publicado em: 2001
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14. REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON PERSONAL ARCHIVES
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15. The Oral History Program: I. Personal views of health sciences librarianship and the Medical Library Association.
The Medical Library Association Oral History Program uses accepted oral history techniques to collect and preserve interviews with members. The original taped interviews and transcripts are kept in the Medical Library Association archives and made available for research purposes; edited copies of the interviews are distributed through the National Network of
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16. The Oral History Program: II. Personal views of health sciences librarianship and the Medical Library Association.
The Medical Library Association Oral History Program uses accepted oral history techniques to collect and preserve interviews with members. The original taped interviews and transcripts are kept in the Medical Library Association archives and made available for research purposes; edited copies of the interviews are distributed through the National Network of
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17. The Oral History Program: III. Personal views of health sciences librarianship and the Medical Library Association.
The Medical Library Association Oral History Program uses accepted oral history techniques to collect and preserve interviews with members. The original taped interviews and transcripts are kept in the Medical Library Association archives and made available for research purposes; edited copies of the interviews are distributed through the National Network of
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18. Appraisal of the papers of biomedical scientists and physicians for a medical archives.
Numerous medical libraries house archival collections. This article discusses criteria for selecting personal papers of biomedical scientists and physicians for a medical archives and defines key terms, such as appraisal, manuscripts, papers, records, and series. Appraisal focuses on both collection and series levels. Collection-level criteria include the si
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19. The Halifax disaster (1917): eye injuries and their care
Explosions, man‐made and accidental, continue to require improved emergency medical responses. In the 1917 Halifax Explosion, an inordinate number of penetrating eye injuries occurred. A review of their treatment provides insight into a traumatic event with unique ophthalmological importance. Archived personal and government documents relating to the Halif
BMJ Group.
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20. Generation, description and storage of dendritic morphology data.
It is generally assumed that the variability of neuronal morphology has an important effect on both the connectivity and the activity of the nervous system, but this effect has not been thoroughly investigated. Neuroanatomical archives represent a crucial tool to explore structure-function relationships in the brain. We are developing computational tools to