When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Professional development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_development

    Professional development, also known as professional education, is learning that leads to or emphasizes education in a specific professional career field or builds practical job applicable skills emphasizing praxis in addition to the transferable skills and theoretical academic knowledge found in traditional liberal arts and pure sciences education.

  3. Morphogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morphogenesis

    During embryonic development, cells are restricted to different layers due to differential affinities. One of the ways this can occur is when cells share the same cell-to-cell adhesion molecules. For instance, homotypic cell adhesion can maintain boundaries between groups of cells that have different adhesion molecules.

  4. Developmental systems theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Developmental_systems_theory

    Context Sensitivity and Contingency: Development depends on the current state of the organism. Extended Inheritance: An organism inherits resources from the environment in addition to genes. Development as a process of construction: The organism helps shape its own environment, such as the way a beaver builds a dam to raise the water level to ...

  5. Motor skill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motor_skill

    A motor skill is a function that involves specific movements of the body's muscles to perform a certain task. These tasks could include walking, running, or riding a bike. In order to perform this skill, the body's nervous system, muscles, and brain have to all work together.

  6. Biological process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biological_process

    Living things require energy to maintain internal organization (homeostasis) and to produce the other phenomena associated with life. Growth: maintenance of a higher rate of anabolism than catabolism. A growing organism increases in size in all of its parts, rather than simply accumulating matter.

  7. Large-group capacitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large-group_capacitation

    Jan Nederveen Pieterse [34] contrasts "capacitation" or human development, as proposed by alternative or autonomous (aka self-development) theorists – (such as e.g. Korten, 1990; Max-Neef, 1991; Rahman, 1993 and Carmen, 1996), – with "development-as -economic growth" theorists for whom, according to Pieterse, capital accumulation is the ...

  8. Pattern formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_formation

    In developmental biology, pattern formation refers to the generation of complex organizations of cell fates in space and time. The role of genes in pattern formation is an aspect of morphogenesis, the creation of diverse anatomies from similar genes, now being explored in the science of evolutionary developmental biology or evo-devo.

  9. Autopoiesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autopoiesis

    In their 1972 book Autopoiesis and Cognition, Chilean biologists Maturana and Varela described how they invented the word autopoiesis. [4]: 89 : 16 "It was in these circumstances ... in which he analyzed Don Quixote's dilemma of whether to follow the path of arms (praxis, action) or the path of letters (poiesis, creation, production), I understood for the first time the power of the word ...