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Tonight, Friday, October 18th, at 6 pm on The Brian Crombie Hour the second guest I interview is Neil McMillan. Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/r1r8T7227oI. ALL my podcasts and videocasts can be accessed any time on my web site www.briancrombie.com which holds repository of all my shows. Neil McMillan talks about accelerated payments for companies selling internationally. Accelerated Payments specializes in receivables finance – this is a process whereby a company can sell its invoices for cash. This means they don't have to wait 30/60/90 days to get paid and they can then deploy that cash into accelerating their business. Accelerated Payments Is a fintech player with business conducted on their fintech platform. The Brian Crombie Hour airs 6:00 pm nightly. Please subscribe to my YouTube channel: https://bit.ly/2Oioec8. Stream, listen, like, watch and share. Thank You!
What is the impact of central insulin on muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and vascular conductance in the absence of peripheral insulin delivery? Listen as Associate Editor Dr. Jason Carter (Baylor University) interviews authors Neil McMillan and Dr. Jackie Limberg (both at University of Missouri), along with expert Dr. Manda Keller-Ross (University of Minnesota), about the new Short Report by McMillan et al. To gain a better understanding of the central sympathoexcitatory effects of insulin in humans, the authors recruited two groups of young, healthy individuals. One group served as a time control and the other group received intranasal insulin administration. McMillan et al. measured MSNA from the fibular nerve, combined with continuous monitoring of blood pressure and leg blood flow, before and after insulin administration. Limberg, McMillan and co-authors found that only the individuals who received insulin exhibited an increase in efferent sympathetic nervous system activity, which was coupled with peripheral vasoconstriction and increases in arterial blood pressure. How does this research influence our mechanistic understanding of the sympathetic and hemodynamic response to insulin? Listen now to find out. Neil J. McMillan, Dain W. Jacob, Brian Shariffi, Jennifer L. Harper, Glen E. Foster, Camila Manrique-Acevedo, Jaume Padilla, and Jacqueline K. Limberg Effect of acute intranasal insulin administration on muscle sympathetic nerve activity in healthy young adults Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, published July 3, 2024. DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00253.2024
Host Jim Burneka speaks with Neil McMillan from Ottawa Firefighters Local 162 and Nantucket (MA) Fire Department Deputy Chief Sean Mitchell. They discuss the recently released Public Comments for NFPA 1971 TIA 1594. Read the comments here. (PDF)
Dan Johnson, Clinical Director at Kibble interviews Neil McMillan, an Executive Director at Kibble on the topic of moral distress in residential child care. The conversation defines the concept, provides examples of it, and suggestions for how to support workers who experience moral distress. More broadly it explores the impact of the system on the practice of residential child care. Transcript of episode. Music Credit: Make your dream a reality by Scott Holmes.
In episode 21, Leo chats with Neil McMillan. Neil is an experienced teacher, teacher-trainer, writer, and translator. He holds a Diploma in TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) as well as a Ph.D in literature from the University of Glasgow, and has over 15 years’ classroom experience working with adults, teenagers, and children from all over the world. Neil is also the president of the Cooperative de Serveis Linguistics de Barcelona, a forward-thinking language cooperative based in Barcelona, Spain, and is an active advocate of Task-based Language Teaching. In this episode, Neil talks about: the gap between standardized tests and necessary performative tasks, especially in the case of immigration; what SLB is, how it works, and how teachers elsewhere can form a cooperative; if ELT is a genuine career given the lack of regulation in the industry; TBLT myths, SLB's TBLT course, and how teachers can implement tasks from coursebooks; EAP contexts and how understanding a professor's expectations is integral before creating language curriculum. Contact Neil or SLB: Twitter: @neil_mcm; @SLBCoop Website: Cooperative de Serveis Linguistics de Barcelona Follow "The SLB Podcast" in any podcast app, or stream on their website. Read Neil's blog "Animalising ELT" This episode was created with support from our listeners. If you enjoy our work, consider contributing to our tip jar on Patreon. As always, thank you for listening. Your support has been overwhelming and we couldn't do what we do without you. We hope this podcast serves as an effective CPD tool for you. If you like the show, consider subscribing on Spotify, iTunes, or Google Podcasts, and sharing it with a friend. If you have a comment or question about today's show, we'd love to hear from you: info@learnyourenglish.com For more info on what we do at LYE, check out: Our Website Our Online Store Our catalog of online courses on Thinkific Join our Mailing List And don't forget to follow us online: Instagram: @learnyourenglish/@teachertalkingtimepodcast Twitter: @LYEnetwork/@TTTthepodcast Facebook: Learn Your English Network Or shoot us an email: info@learnyourenglish.com
A bonus episode of EduBlether bringing you a recording of the SELMAS (@SELM4S) Forum event from 16th May. The title of the evening was Sunlight, Candour and Unashamed Conversations. We heard from Clare Lavelle, Managing Director of The Hive of Wellbeing(@Lavelle103), Nancy Clunie, A Glasgow based Primary Headteacher (@ClunieNancy) and Neil McMillan, Director at Kibble, a charity for at risk children and young people in Scotland (@KibbleCharity, @neilmcmillan99). Let us know what you think and continue the discussion @EduBlether on Twitter. www.edublether.wordpress.com
Welcome back to The TEFLology Podcast – a podcast all about teaching English as a foreign language, and related matters. In episode 87, Rob discusses the work and ideas of MICHAEL LEWIS, Matthew leads a conversation about the use of VISUAL AIDS, and Matt presents reflections on IATEFL from Sandy Millin, Yasmine Abdelhamid, and Neil McMillan. The book by Clark and Miller mentioned in Matt's section can be found here. Our book - Podcasting and Professional Development: A Guide for English Language Teachers can be bought here. For other great titles, visit The Round. Email - Ask us questions, give us feedback, tell us what you think of the show. YouTube - Stream all of our episodes. Facebook - Like and share our page with your colleagues or friends. Twitter - Follow us and retweet us. iTunes - Subscribe, rate, and review the podcast. Also available on Acast / Stitcher Radio / SoundCloud / TuneIn / iheart Radio and more!
Dr. David Brodbeck's Psychology Lectures from Algoma University
Neil McMillan is a postdoctoral researcher in the psychology department at the University of Alberta. Neil completed his undergraduate degree (a BSc(Hons)) in 2007 with Angelo Santi at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, ON and then moved on to graduate school at the University of Western Ontario. He completed his MSc and later his PhD (in 2013) under the supervision of Bill Roberts. We have something in common there as I did a postdoc with Bill Roberts back in the mid 90s. We talked about a few things in this episode, including my bizarre inability to remember Neil's name for like the past 3 years. Of course we talked science too. Neil is interested in spatial memory and so am I. That said, no matter what, timing keeps pulling him back in. He also is first author of a pretty cool review paper that you should check out. We talked about hierarchical representations and cue conflict experiments as well, which I am quite fond of.... His recent JEP paper with his two postdoc supervisors was another topic that we got in to, they have found an effect in reversal learning that you should read about. Finally, we also talked about the future of the discipline. Thanks again to Red Arms for the background closing music. Buy their music now.
Neil, telling us things at CO3Neil McMillan is a postdoctoral researcher in the psychology department at the University of Alberta. Neil completed his undergraduate degree (a BSc(Hons)) in 2007 with Angelo Santi at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, ON and then moved on to graduate school at the University of Western Ontario. He completed his MSc and later his PhD (in 2013) under the supervision of Bill Roberts. We have something in common there as I did a postdoc with Bill Roberts back in the mid 90s.We talked about a few things in this episode, including my bizarre inability to remember Neil's name for like the past 3 years. Of course we talked science too. Neil is interested in spatial memory and so am I. That said, no matter what, timing keeps pulling him back in. He also is first author of a pretty cool review paper that you should check out. We talked about hierarchical representations and cue conflict experiments as well, which I am quite fond of....His recent JEP paper with his two postdoc supervisors was another topic that we got in to, they have found an effect in reversal learning that you should read about.Finally, we also talked about the future of the discipline.Thanks again to Red Arms for the background closing music. Buy their music now. mp3 download
Date: 28 February 2010 (Evening)Title: Church PlantingPassage: Ephesians 3:10-11Preacher: Neil McMillan