The information is taken from both the manga and the anime series. For a more elaborate summary of the customizations of each car, see Initial D Car Modifications and Character Relations.
The FF-X7 Core Fighter is a Fighter from the sci-fi anime Mobile Suit Gundam. The FF-X7 Core Fighter was an integral part of the Federation's V Project. It could fold up from plane mode into a roughly rectangular block, in which mode it formed an interchangeable cockpit block for the RX-78 Gundam, RX-77 Guncannon and RX-75 Guntank. Developed by the Hervic Company, who was also the developer of the FF-6 TIN Cod and FF-S3 Saberfish fighters, the Core Fighter's primary purpose was to protect the data from the learning computer system of the Gundam, serving as an escape vehicle in the advent of the mobile suit being disabled or destroyed. The Core Fighter was armed to protect its data and pilot, with four 25mm machine guns mounted in the nose, and two small missile launchers mounted on the fuselage. The Core Fighter concept was used in many later suits and was used as late as UC 0153 in the LM312V04 Victory Gundam.
ko:코어 파이터 it:FF-X7 Core Fighter ja:コア・ファイター
vMeme is a typographic construction created for the 1996 book, Spiral Dynamics: Mastering Values, Leadership, and Change. It collapses a v for 'value system' and meme in an effort to represent an "idea attractor" rather than an information packet. The word meme was coined by Richard Dawkins in 1976 for idea chunks which are similar to genes — they replicate, spread, and compete for dominance in human consciousness. They are attracted, ignored, or repelled by minds at different levels of psychological existence based on their fit, and how they are received. Memes are like contents; vMemes are like containers.
In Spiral Dynamics, the distinction between memes (idea packages which behave like mind viruses) and Gravesian levels of psychological existence designated as vMemes is clear. The memetics aspect was included because it was a new field and the "levels of existence" theory appeared to offer a framework it lacked, just as memetics helped explain some of the apparent variability within Gravesian levels. Subsequently, some readers conflated memes with vMemes and incorrectly used the term "meme" for both concepts.
Psychiatrists |
Speciality |
|---|---|
Alfred Adler |
Individual psychology |
Franco Basaglia |
Antipsychiatry |
Jack Barchas |
Biological basis of schizophrenia |
Aaron Beck |
Cognitive therapy |
Eugene Bleuler |
Diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia |
John Bowlby |
Attachment behaviour |
Ian Brockington |
Nosological pioneer |
John Cade |
Lithium therapy |
Ugo Cerletti |
Electroconvulsive therapy |
Edmund Chiu |
Huntington's chorea |
Tim Crow |
Biological basis of schizophrenia |
Pierre Deniker |
Chlorpromazine |
Leon Eisenberg |
Psychiatric anthropology |
Milton Erickson |
Hypnosis |
Jean Etienne Esquirol |
Descriptive psychopathology, postnatal depression |
Frantz Fanon |
Effects of discrimination |
Daniel X Freedman |
Biological psychiatry |
Christopher Paul Lindsay Freeman |
Electroconvulsive therapy |
Sigmund Freud |
Psychoanalysis |
William Glasser |
Reality therapy, Choice theory |
Max Hamilton |
Depression and anxiety scales |
Karen Horney |
Womb envy |
Ashoka Jahnavi-Prasad |
Sodium valproate |
Pierre Janet |
Dissociation |
Karl Jaspers |
Phenomenology |
Eve Johnstone |
Brain changes in schizophrenia |
Maxwell Jones |
Therapeautic community |
Carl Gustav Jung |
Analytical psychology |
Seymour Kety |
Psychiatric genetics |
Eric R. Kandel |
Molecular basis for memory |
Antoni Kępiński |
Axiological psychiatry |
Otto Kernberg |
Psychoanalysis |
Arthur Kleinman |
Psychiatric anthropologist |
Emil Kraepelin |
Psychiatric methodology |
Richard von Krafft-Ebbing |
Sexuality |
Norman Krietman |
Psychiatric epidemiology |
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross |
Stages of Grief |
R. D. Laing |
Antipsychiatry |
Karl Leonhard |
Classification of Psychosis,cycloid psychosis |
Sir Aubrey Lewis |
Nosology |
Alwyn Lishman |
Neuropsychiatry |
Manuel Isaias Lopez |
Bioethics |
Peter McGuffin |
Psychiatric genetics |
Adolf Meyer |
Psychobiology |
Robert Michels |
Psychoanalysis |
Egas Moniz |
Psychosurgery |
Robin Murray |
Schizophrenia |
John Nemiah |
Psychotherapy |
Ian Oswald |
Sleep research |
Eugene Paykel |
Social psychiatry |
Eric Pfeiffer |
Gerentology, Alzheimer's disease |
Philippe Pinel |
Psychiatric treatment |
W. H. R. Rivers |
Psychiatric anthropologist |
Martin Roth |
Psychogeriatrics |
Michael Rutter |
Child psychiatry |
William Sargant |
Mind control |
Kurt Schneider |
Diagnostic criteria |
Mogens Schou |
Lithium therapy |
Peter Sifneos |
Psychotherapy |
Elliott Slater |
Psychiatric epidemiology |
Robert Spitzer |
Diagnostic criteria |
Solomon H.Snyder |
Neurotransmitters |
Harry Stack Sullivan |
Interpersonal psychiatry |
Thomas Szasz |
Antipsychiatry |
Eng Seong Tan |
Cross-cultural psychiatry |
Fuller Torrey |
Treatment of schizophrenia |
Ming Tsuang |
Psychiatric genetics |
Ladislas von Meduna |
Pharmacoconvulsions |
Julius Wagner-Jauregg |
Treatment of GPI |
Paul Watzlawick |
Communication theory of mental health |
Simon Wessely |
Epidemiology, general hospital and combat psychiatry |
Sula Wolff |
Stress in children |
Irvin Yalom |
Group psychotherapy |
Other researchers |
Speciality |
|---|---|
Michel Foucault |
Philosopher |
Anna Freud |
Child analysis |
Irving Goffman |
Social psychology |
Kay Redfield Jamison |
Bipolar affective disorder |
Ivan Pavlov |
Behavioral psychology |
Jean Piaget |
Cognitive development |
Carl Rogers |
Person-centred psychotherapy |
Joseph Wolpe |
Behavior therapy |
de:Psychiater nl:Psychiater