Lecture - 2014 Course Introduction: Difference between revisions
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:'''Secondly''', some historic background to the subject and related current Australian trends. I do not expect you to remember specific historic dates or statistical data, this is provided as an introduction to the topic. | :'''Secondly''', some historic background to the subject and related current Australian trends. I do not expect you to remember specific historic dates or statistical data, this is provided as an introduction to the topic. | ||
[[Lecture - 2015 Course Introduction|current 2015 Course Introduction]] | |||
I like my lectures to be interactive, so ask me questions and I will also be asking you questions! | I like my lectures to be interactive, so ask me questions and I will also be asking you questions! | ||
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# Brief understanding of Australian data. | # Brief understanding of Australian data. | ||
# Broad overview of human development. | # Broad overview of human development. | ||
[[File:ECHO360_icon.gif|right|link=https://lectures.unsw.edu.au/ess/portal/section/691ba9a0-7c35-4ad2-8fd0-846db7771557]] | |||
[[Lecture_-_2014_Course_Introduction|Lecture 1]] - [https://lectures.unsw.edu.au/ess/echo/presentation/e7ad0e2e-7a04-4719-ae59-c8523afd76d9 Rich Media Playback] | [https://lectures.unsw.edu.au/ess/echo/presentation/e7ad0e2e-7a04-4719-ae59-c8523afd76d9/media.m4v Vodcast Playback] | [https://lectures.unsw.edu.au/ess/echo/presentation/e7ad0e2e-7a04-4719-ae59-c8523afd76d9/media.mp3 Podcast Playback] | |||
{{Human development movie 1}} | {{Human development movie 1}} | ||
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[[File:BrauneB1.jpg|400px|alt=The Position of the Uterus and Fetus at Term (1872)]] | [[File:BrauneB1.jpg|400px|alt=The Position of the Uterus and Fetus at Term (1872)]] | ||
Braune - The Position of the Uterus and Fetus at Term (1872) | [[Embryology_History_-_17th_and_18th_Century_Anatomies|17-18C]] Braune - The Position of the Uterus and Fetus at Term (1872) | ||
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Latest revision as of 12:35, 27 July 2015
Course Introduction
Course coordinator |
This first lecture will be a general introduction to the course and the subject of Embryology.
I like my lectures to be interactive, so ask me questions and I will also be asking you questions! |
Lecture Objectives
<html5media height="384" width="352">File:Human development 001.mp4</html5media> |
Lecture 1 - Rich Media Playback | Vodcast Playback | Podcast Playback
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ANAT2341 Course Outline
I will spend the first half going through the current course design, online support and assessment criteria. This is an opportunity to ask the coordinator questions about the course.
Course Links: Homepage | Overview | Timetable | Moodle | Lecture 1 PDF
Lecture Archive: 2013 | 2012 | 2011
Email me for any additional information or to make an appointment.
Textbooks
- Either of the textbooks listed below are recommended for this course and page references to both are given in each lecture.
- Both textbooks available at campus bookshop and online to UNSW students.
- There are additional embryology textbooks that can also be used, consult course organizer.
The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology (10th edn) |
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UNSW Students have online access to the current 10th edn. through the UNSW Library subscription (with student Zpass log-in).
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History
History - Embryologists | Embryology History | Human Embryo Collections
17-18C Braune - The Position of the Uterus and Fetus at Term (1872)
Human Embryo Collections | ||
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Wilhelm His (1831-1904) His's Normentafel (Normal Table) |
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Franz Keibel (1861 - 1929) Franz Keibel and Curt Elze (1908) Normal Plates of the Development of the Human Embryo |
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Franklin Mall (1862-1917) |
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Begun by Dr. Hideo Nishimura (1912–1995)
Developed by Kohei Shiota and currently curated by Shigehito Yamada. |
Animal Models | |
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mouse
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Fly Development - The fruitfly (drosophila) was and is the traditional geneticist's tool. It has been transformed to an magnificent embryologist's tool, with developmental mechanisms being uncovered in this system combined with homolgy gene searches in other species. The fly genome was one of the first to be been completely sequenced. In early development nurse cells sacrifice their cytoplasmic contents to allow egg growth and early pattern formation is through the localization of maternal messenger RNAs (mRNAs). | |
Worm Development - Early embryological studies of the worm Caenorhabditis elegans (C.Elegans, so called because of its "elegant" curving movement) characterized the fate of each and every cell in the worm through all stages of development. This worm has recently had its entire genome sequenced. | |
Zebrafish Development - Zebrafish are seen as the latest and greatest "model' for embryological development studies. They can be easily genetically altered and develop as practically "see through" embryos, all internal development can be clearly observed from the outside in the living embryo. |
In Vitro Fertilization (1978) | Stem Cells (1981) | Molecular Development |
Australian Data
1 August 2014 at 03:53:30 PM (Canberra time), the resident population of Australia is projected to be: 23,550,233.
Australian Statistics | |
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Australia’s mothers and babies (2011) | Assisted reproductive technology in Australia and New Zealand (2010) |
Average maternal age in 2011 was 30.0 years, the same as 2009 but still more than the earlier years (2000, 29.0 years; 2002, 29.4 years). | Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) was used by 3.8% (2009, 3.6%) of women who gave birth. |
Victoria - 10 most reported birth anomalies | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Based upon statistics from the Victorian Perinatal Data Collection Unit in Victoria between 2003-2004. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Human Development
- 2014 Course: Week 2 Lecture 1 Lecture 2 Lab 1 | Week 3 Lecture 3 Lecture 4 Lab 2 | Week 4 Lecture 5 Lecture 6 Lab 3 | Week 5 Lecture 7 Lecture 8 Lab 4 | Week 6 Lecture 9 Lecture 10 Lab 5 | Week 7 Lecture 11 Lecture 12 Lab 6 | Week 8 Lecture 13 Lecture 14 Lab 7 | Week 9 Lecture 15 Lecture 16 Lab 8 | Week 10 Lecture 17 Lecture 18 Lab 9 | Week 11 Lecture 19 Lecture 20 Lab 10 | Week 12 Lecture 21 Lecture 22 Lab 11 | Week 13 Lecture 23 Lecture 24 Lab 12
Student Projects - Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 3 | Group 4 | Group 5 | Group 6 | Group 7 | Group 8 | Moodle
Glossary Links
- Glossary: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | Numbers | Symbols | Term Link
Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, June 17) Embryology Lecture - 2014 Course Introduction. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Lecture_-_2014_Course_Introduction
- © Dr Mark Hill 2024, UNSW Embryology ISBN: 978 0 7334 2609 4 - UNSW CRICOS Provider Code No. 00098G