Biography conduction in research

          The analysis of the heat conduction of skin tissue is helpful for understanding of the bio-thermo-mechanical behavior of skin tissue.

          The heat transfer in biological tissue involves multiple phenomenological mechanisms including heat conduction in tissue, convection between blood and tissues..

          Biographical research

          Biographical research is a qualitative research approach aligned to the social interpretive paradigm of research.

          Biographical research is concerned with the reconstruction of life histories and the constitution of meaning based on biographical narratives and documents. The material for analysis consists of interview protocols (memorandums), video recordings, photographs, and a diversity of sources.

          In this article, we propose “ethnographic biography” as a research strategy designed to address the basic difficulty of qualitative studies.

        1. In this article, we propose “ethnographic biography” as a research strategy designed to address the basic difficulty of qualitative studies.
        2. This study was mainly a direct analysis of non-Fourier multilayer bio-heat conduction, and the inverse non-Fourier multilayer boundary remains largely unknown.
        3. The heat transfer in biological tissue involves multiple phenomenological mechanisms including heat conduction in tissue, convection between blood and tissues.
        4. This research focused on frequency-dependent reconfiguration based on a bio-inspired conduction mode, analyzing its considerable dynamic.
        5. Thermal conduction is the diffusion of thermal energy (heat) within one material or between materials in contact.
        6. These documents are evaluated and interpreted according to specific rules and criteria. The starting point for this approach is the understanding of an individual biography in terms of its social constitution. The biographical approach was influenced by the symbolic interactionism, the phenomenological sociology of knowledge (Alfred Schütz, Peter L.

          Berger, and Thomas Luckmann), and ethnomethodology (Harold Garfinkel). Therefore, biography is understood in terms of a social construct[1] and the reconstruction of biographies can give insight on social