00902nam--2200301---450-99000868700040332120080710133840.0000868700FED01000868700(Aleph)000868700FED0100086870020080710d1913----km-y0itaa50------baitaITy-------001yyScritti herbartianiN. Fornellicon note ed appendice del dott. Mariano MarescaRoma; Napoli; MilanoDante Alighieri1913347 p.20 cmBiblioteca pedagogica antica e moderna30Fornelli,Nicola<1843-1915>179833Maresca,Mariano<1884-1948>ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990008687000403321370.1 FOR 1s.i.FLFBCFLFBCScritti herbartiani717157UNINA01367nam 2200385Ia 450 99639626750331620221108074920.0(CKB)4330000000328798(EEBO)2240939261(OCoLC)12443061(EXLCZ)99433000000032879819850830d1694 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|The great advertisement, that a religious life is the best way to present happiness[electronic resource] in two sermons preach'd at White-hall, the 1st on Sunday, April the 15th, the 2d on Sunday, Apr. 22, 1694 /by E. Young ..London Printed by Tho. Warren for Walter Kettilby ...169462, [1] p"Published by Her Majesties special command"Errata: p. 33.Advertisements: p. [1] at end.Reproduction of original in Huntington Library.eebo-0113ContentmentSermonsSermons, EnglishContentmentSermons, English.Young Edward1641 or 2-1705.1001856EAAEAAm/cWaOLNBOOK996396267503316The great advertisement, that a religious life is the best way to present happiness2311733UNISA00824nam a2200253 i 450099100289872970753620020509104738.0940207s1989 it ||| | ita b11077773-39ule_instPARLA171147ExLDip.to FilosofiaitaDreier, Wilhelm261050Etica sociale /Wilhelm DreierBrescia :Editrice Queriniana,1989205 p. ;21 cm.GDT ;192Etica socialeSozialethik.b1107777323-02-1728-06-02991002898729707536LE005 MF 52 A 4441le005ex c.b.-E0.00-l- 00000.i1120762028-06-02Etica sociale811373UNISALENTOle00501-01-94ma -itait 0105776nam 22006735 450 991040967520332120250609110555.03-030-35746-510.1007/978-3-030-35746-7(CKB)4100000011208615(MiAaPQ)EBC6167093(DE-He213)978-3-030-35746-7(PPN)243761562(MiAaPQ)EBC6166878(EXLCZ)99410000001120861520200406d2020 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierCyber Defence in the Age of AI, Smart Societies and Augmented Humanity /edited by Hamid Jahankhani, Stefan Kendzierskyj, Nishan Chelvachandran, Jaime Ibarra1st ed. 2020.Cham :Springer International Publishing :Imprint: Springer,2020.1 online resource (viii, 450 pages) illustrationsAdvanced Sciences and Technologies for Security Applications,2363-94663-030-35745-7 Includes bibliographical references.Foreword -- Part 1: Cyber Defence & Critical National Infrastructure (CNI) -- Critical National Infrastructure, C4ISR and Cyber Weapons in the Digital Age -- The Malicious Use of AI-based Deepfake technology as the New Threat to Psychological Security and Political Stability -- Considerations for the Governance of AI and Government Legislative Frameworks -- Part 2: Augmented Humanity & Digital Society -- Augmented humanity: Data, Privacy and Security -- Consumer Awareness on Security and Privacy Threat of Medical Devices -- Biohacking Capabilities & Threat/ Attack Vectors -- Digital Twins for Precision Healthcare -- 5G Cybersecurity Vulnerabilities with IoT and Smart Societies -- Part 3: Technology of Cyber Attacks -- Blockchain, TTP Attacks and Harmonious Relationship with AI -- Protecting Privacy and Security Using Tor and Blockchain and De-anonymization Risks -- Experimental Analyses in Search of Effective Mitigation for Login Cross-Site Request Forgery -- Attack Vectors and Advanced Persistent Threats -- Artificial Intelligence in Protecting Smart Building’s Cloud Service Infrastructure from Cyberattacks -- Part 4: Smart Societies and Data Exploitation -- Smart Distributed Ledger Technologies in Industry 4.0: Challenges and Opportunities in Supply Chain Management -- Combating Domestic Abuse inflicted in smart societies -- Deep Convolutional Neural Networks for Forensic Age Estimation: a Review -- Secure Implementation of E-governance: a Case Study about Estonia -- Insider Threat.This publication highlights the fast-moving technological advancement and infiltration of Artificial Intelligence into society. Concepts of evolution of society through interconnectivity are explored, together with how the fusion of human and technological interaction leading to Augmented Humanity is fast becoming more than just an endemic phase, but a cultural phase shift to digital societies. It aims to balance both the positive progressive outlooks such developments bring with potential issues that may stem from innovation of this kind, such as the invasive procedures of bio hacking or ethical connotations concerning the usage of digital twins. This publication will also give the reader a good level of understanding on fundamental cyber defence principles, interactions with Critical National Infrastructure (CNI) and the Command, Control, Communications and Intelligence (C3I) decision-making framework. A detailed view of the cyber-attack landscape will be garnered; touching on the tactics, techniques and procedures used, red and blue teaming initiatives, cyber resilience and the protection of larger scale systems. The integration of AI, smart societies, the human-centric approach and Augmented Humanity is discernible in the exponential growth, collection and use of [big] data; concepts woven throughout the diversity of topics covered in this publication; which also discusses the privacy and transparency of data ownership, and the potential dangers of exploitation through social media. As humans are become ever more interconnected, with the prolificacy of smart wearable devices and wearable body area networks, the availability of and abundance of user data and metadata derived from individuals has grown exponentially. The notion of data ownership, privacy and situational awareness are now at the forefront in this new age.Advanced Sciences and Technologies for Security Applications,2363-9466Artificial intelligenceBig dataData protection—Law and legislationSecurity systemsArtificial IntelligenceBig DataPrivacySecurity Science and TechnologyArtificial intelligence.Big data.Data protection—Law and legislation.Security systems.Artificial Intelligence.Big Data.Privacy.Security Science and Technology.005.8Jahankhani Hamidedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtKendzierskyj Stefanedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtChelvachandran Nishanedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtIbarra Jaimeedthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/edtMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910409675203321Cyber Defence in the Age of AI, Smart Societies and Augmented Humanity2004358UNINA05304nam 2201225z- 450 991055735050332120220111(CKB)5400000000042385(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/76915(oapen)doab76915(EXLCZ)99540000000004238520202201d2021 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierTraining, Education and Research in COVID-19 Times: Innovative Methodological Approaches, Best Practices, and Case StudiesBasel, SwitzerlandMDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute20211 online resource (278 p.)3-0365-2101-1 3-0365-2102-X The global COVID-19 pandemic has posed a major challenge in all aspects of life, including how graduate training of healthcare practitioners is conducted. In Saudi Arabia, there were over 14,000 graduate health professional trainees in different stages of their training in various specialties distributed in many healthcare facilities across the country. The vast geographical distribution and diversity of health specialties training programs and activities have remarkably magnified the challenge posed by the pandemic. However, recently, the SCFHS implemented a health training governance reform that granted more autonomy to accredited training facilities in supervising training activities according to preset policies. This autonomy was crucial for mitigating various risks imposed by the pandemic, especially during the extended periods of strict lockdown. The ultimate mandate is a knowledge management primer. We need to once again focus on the basics of human creativity and knowledge creation: Create the content/knowledge; Utilize knowledge; Document knowledge; Communicate knowledge; Enable an integrated training, education, and research ecosystem; Utilize the integrated platform. Our volume is a contribution to the scientific debate for the added value of COVID-19 to our training, education, and research capabilities. We continue this debate with a new Special Issue in the Sustainability journal. We look forward to your contributions to this discussion.Training, Education and Research in COVID-19 TimesTechnology: general issuesbicsscaccreditationambidexterityARCS modelAustriabest practicesChinese universitiescontinued usage intentioncourse performanceCOVID-19digital educationdynamic capabilityeducation for sustainable developmenteducational processeducational spaceseLearningemployee psychophysiological profileenvironmental engineerexpectation-confirmation modelflipped classroomframeworkgamificationgovernancehealth governancehealthcarehigher educationhybrid learninginternational cooperationIS success modeljob satisfactionmanagement changemedical education assurancemedical trainingmixed methodsMOOCMOOCsn/aonline coursesonline educationorganizational speedpandemicpopulation health researchpost-digitalpreventive behaviorsprofessional-defining qualitiespsychophysiological standardpsychophysiological statuspublic health researchqualityR&D organizationremote teachingresearch methodsresidents trainingsatisfactionSaudi Commission for Health Specialtiessmart healthcarespecialist professiogramstudent attitudestudent behaviorstudent performancesubjective normssustainable educationsustainable healthteaching methodtertiary educationthe COVID-19 pandemicthe satisfaction of studentstheory of planned behaviortrainingyoung adultsTechnology: general issuesLytras Miltiadisedt1149833Housawi AbdulrahmanedtAlsaywid BasimedtLytras MiltiadisothHousawi AbdulrahmanothAlsaywid BasimothBOOK9910557350503321Training, Education and Research in COVID-19 Times: Innovative Methodological Approaches, Best Practices, and Case Studies3037447UNINA