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Embryogenesis
Charles E. Boklage (2012). Human Embryogenesis, Embryogenesis, Dr. Ken-Ichi Sato (Ed.), InTech, DOI: 10.5772/36871. Available from: https://www-intechopen-com.libezp.lib.lsu.edu/books/embryogenesis/human-embryogenesis

Article

this is termed the neural crest or ganglion ridge, and from it the spinal and cranial nerve ganglia and the ganglia of the sympathetic nervous system are developed.

Essay

Following fusion of the asymmetric half-structures, the resulting midline structures are remodeled with and by mesenchyme cells descended from neural crest cells.

Jr., Richard W. Cheney. "Animal Embryology." Salem Press Encyclopedia of Science, 2013. EBSCOhost, libezp.lib.lsu.edu/login?url= https://search-ebscohost-com.libezp.lib.lsu.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=ers&AN=88833198&site=eds-live&scope=site&profile=eds-main.

Article

After the 7th cleavage has produced 128 cells, the embryo is called a blastula. The blastula is usually a spherical layer of cells (the blastoderm) surrounding a fluid-filled or yolk-filled cavity

Essay

Following fertilization, a period known as cleavage begins. During this time, cells divide rapidly with little or no growth between cell divisions. Cells become smaller and more numerous. At the end of cleavage, a structure called the blastula is formed.

Normalization Process Model
The Normalization process model is a sociological theory developed by Carl R May that explains technologies in health care. The model provides framework for process evaluation using three components, actors, objects, and contexts, that are compared across four constructs, Interactional workability, relational integration, skill-set workability, and contextual integration. This model help build the Nomalization Process Theory.