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We are delighted to present the “Horizons in Systems Neuroscience” article collection. This collection showcases high-impact, authoritative, and reader-friendly review articles covering the most topical research at the forefront of systems neuroscience. All contributing authors were individually nominated by the Chief Editors of the Journal in recognition of their prominence and influence in their respective fields. The cutting-edge work presented in this article collection highlights the diversity of research performed across the entire breadth of the systems neuroscience field and reflects on the latest advances in the theory, experiment, and methodology with applications to compelling problems in academic and translational research.
This book aims to provide a deeper understanding of Third Mobile Window Syndrome and its various forms beyond just Superior Canal Dehiscence. It will illuminate the various presentations of Third Mobile Window Syndrome, provide the means for diagnosis, and elucidate treatments. The disorder Superior Semicircular Canal Dehiscence Syndrome was discovered in 1995 by Dr Lloyd Minor at The John Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. Though he published his findings in 1998, there remains no book wholly devoted to the topic. For this reason, many neurotologists and otorhinolaryngologists still misunderstand this condition and its presentation. Structured in six parts, the first part w...
Chiefly a record of some of the descendants of Michael Hartman Dillow. Michael was born ca. 1755 in Pennsylvania. He married Anna Margareth Holshouser ca. 1774 probably in North Carolina. He died ca. 1805 in Salisbury, North Carolina. They were the parents of seven known children.
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Chiefly a record of some of the descendants of Michael Hartman Dillow. Michael was born ca. 1755 in Pennsylvania. He married Anna Margareth Holshouser ca. 1774 probably in North Carolina. He died ca. 1805 in Salisbury, North Carolina. They were the parents of seven known children.
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