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2. Abstracts of Papers Presented at the 2023 Annual Meeting.
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INFANTICIDE , *SLAVE trade , *ECONOMIC history , *CITY dwellers , *POOR people , *CAPITALISM , *ECONOMIC models - Abstract
This document contains abstracts of papers presented at an academic conference. The papers cover a wide range of topics related to economics, history, and social development. Each paper presents empirical evidence and analysis to shed light on specific phenomena or historical events. The research is conducted using different methodologies and data sources, providing valuable insights into these complex subjects. The summaries provide a brief overview of each paper's main findings and contribute to the understanding of various social and economic phenomena. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
3. A longitudinal analysis of highly cited papers in four CALL journals.
- Author
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Choubsaz, Yazdan, Jalilifar, Alireza, and Boulton, Alex
- Subjects
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COMPUTER assisted language instruction , *LANGUAGE & languages , *DATA analysis , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
This study traces the evolution of computer-assisted language learning (CALL) by investigating published research articles (RAs) in four major CALL journals: ReCALL, Computer Assisted Language Learning, Language Learning & Technology, and CALICO Journal. All 2,397 RAs published over four decades (1983-2019) were included in the pool of data, and the Google Scholar citation metric was adopted to assess the impact of the papers. By selecting the top 15% of widely cited papers from each individual year, we minimized the time bias between years, enabling a balanced narration of the history of CALL through a representative dataset of 426 high-impact RAs. To identify the evolution of research trends, the contexts, methodologies, theoretical underpinnings and research foci of all 426 RAs were investigated using NVivo 12 and AntConc. The analysis of the data yielded encouraging results such as the upward trend in the number of publications and the international reach of CALL in the last two decades, the physical or virtual presence of language learners with diverse language profiles, and the growing tendency to triangulate methodology for increased complexity. However, long-standing issues such as the heavy reliance on traditional research contexts, poor reporting practices of basic demographic information, the large number of atheoretical papers and the concentration on a limited number of research foci continue to pose challenges in CALL research. Based on the findings, the paper suggests solutions for the controversies and addresses key issues for future research in CALL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. NPS volume 52 issue 3 Cover and Front matter.
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NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Manichaeism and early Christianity. Selected papers from the 2019 Pretoria congress and consultation.
- Author
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Lieu, Samuel N. C.
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PRIMITIVE & early church, ca. 30-600 , *CONVERSION (Religion) ,BYZANTINE Empire - Abstract
However, it must be pointed out that because Manichaeism is a "source-rich" area of research and as such qualifies for international research funding, scholars active in Manichaean research, including the present reviewer, have pushed for Manichaean Studies to become a discipline in its own right independent of patristic studies. A major question for Manichaean scholars is how much access Mani had to Greek Christian writings or Syriac Christian writings of Greek origin. Given the importance of Manichaeism to the intellectual evolution of Augustine, the continuing interest of patristic scholars in Manichaeism is unabated. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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6. NPS volume 52 issue 3 Cover and Back matter.
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Snow spikes (penitentes) in the dry Andes, but not on Europa: a defense of Lliboutry's classic paper.
- Author
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Warren, Stephen G.
- Subjects
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EUROPA (Satellite) , *REMOTE-sensing images , *ALBEDO - Abstract
Tall, spiky snow structures (penitentes) occur high in subtropical mountains, in the form of blades oriented east-west and tilted toward the noontime sun. By trapping sunlight, they cause a reduction of albedo by ~0.3 relative to flat snow. The formation of penitentes, explained by Lliboutry in 1954, requires weather conditions allowing the troughs to deepen rapidly by melting while the peaks remain dry and cold by sublimation, losing little mass, because of the 8.5-fold difference in latent heats. Lliboutry's explanation has been misrepresented in some recent publications. A concern has been raised that in the low latitudes of Jupiter's moon Europa, the ice surface may have developed penitentes, which would pose a hazard to a lander. They would require a different mechanism of formation, because Europa is too cold for melting to occur. If penitentes are present on Europa, they cannot be resolved by the coarse-resolution satellite images available now, but the high albedo of Europa (~0.7 at visible wavelengths) argues against the existence of such extreme roughness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Discussion of the paper by Galuskin and Galuskina (2003), "Evidence of the anthropogenic origin of the 'Carmel sapphire' with enigmatic super-reduced minerals".
- Author
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Griffin, William L., Toledo, Vered, and O'Reilly, Suzanne Y.
- Subjects
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MINERALS , *SAPPHIRES , *SCIENTIFIC method , *GARNET - Abstract
• Cathodoluminescence imagery and Ti-zoning of corundum crystals ("Carmel Sapphire") record growth from a silicate melt in an evolving open system at very low oxygen fugacity (Oliveira et al., [19]). These spectacular structures are only one form of TiN in the Carmel sapphire; it also occurs in large inclusions coexisting with Fe-Ti silicides and TiB SB 2 sb , and as regular crystals that appear to have crystallised directly from Fe-Ti silicide melts (Griffin I et al. i , [10], [11], [12]). We thank the Galuskins for their detailed study of the explosion breccias and the nitrides included in corundum aggregates from Mt Carmel; space considerations have limited our previous publication of such detailed data on this interesting aspect of these important samples. We suggest that the report of böhmite /bauxite represents analyses of spots consisting of amorphous carbon plus micro-inclusions of corundum; this would be consistent with the apparently higher C content of the EDS spectrum. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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9. Abstracts of Papers Presented at the 2022 Annual Meeting.
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COLLEGE curriculum , *BUSINESS enterprises , *HISTORY of economics , *RACE relations , *BUSINESSPEOPLE , *CULTURAL pluralism , *EDUCATIONAL mobility , *INTERGENERATIONAL mobility - Abstract
Isabella Ou, I University of Minnesota i , and Evan Roberts, I University of Minnesota i Origins of a Violent Land: The Role of Migration There is substantial variation in violent crime rates across the US - can cultural differences explain this? Explaining Gender Differences in the Selection and Sorting of Migrants: Evidence from Canada-... This paper uses newly digitized border crossing records from 1906 to 1954 and US census data to study the selection and sorting of migrants from Canada to the United States. David Escamilla-Guerrero, I University of St. Andrews i , Miko Lepistö, I University of Helsinki i , and Chris Minns, I London School of Economics i Return Innovation: Evidence from the English Migration to the United States, 1850-1940 What drives the direction of innovation? Andrea Bernini, I University of Oxford i , Giovanni Facchini, I University of Nottingham i , Marco Tabellini, I Harvard Business School i , and Cecilia Testa, I University of Nottingham i The Power of Narratives: Anti-Black Attitudes and Violence in the US South Systematic discrimination and violence against minorities are enduring phenomena. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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10. A position paper on researching braille in the cognitive sciences: decentering the sighted norm.
- Author
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Englebretson, Robert, Holbrook, M. Cay, and Fischer-Baum, Simon
- Subjects
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BLINDNESS , *LITERACY , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *LEARNING strategies , *BRAILLE , *COGNITIVE testing , *WRITTEN communication , *SCIENCE , *READING - Abstract
This article positions braille as a writing system worthy of study in its own right and on its own terms. We begin with a discussion of the role of braille in the lives of those who read and write it and a call for more attention to braille in the reading sciences. We then give an overview of the history and development of braille, focusing on its formal characteristics as a writing system, in order to acquaint sighted print readers with the basics of braille and to spark further interest among reading researchers. We then explore how print-centric assumptions and sight-centric motivations have potentially negative consequences, not only for braille users but also for the types of questions researchers think to pursue. We conclude with recommendations for conducting responsible and informed research about braille. We affirm that blindness is most equitably understood as but one of the many diverse ways humans experience the world. Researching braille literacy from an equity and diversity perspective provides positive, fruitful insights into perception and cognition, contributes to the typologically oriented work on the world's writing systems, and contributes to equity by centering the perspectives and literacy of the people who read and write braille. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Resolving problems in symbol identification in compilation of electronic navigational charts utilising paper charts.
- Author
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Fernando, P.B.A., Lewis, S.N., Perera, A.N.D., and Gunathilaka, M.D.E.K.
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WEB-based user interfaces , *MARITIME safety , *SIGNS & symbols , *DATABASES - Abstract
Electronic navigational charts (ENCs) can be compiled using existing paper charts to improve their coverage of the world's oceans. However, in the process of assigning symbols on ENCs, in some cases the software uses the same symbol for different paper chart symbols. This could ultimately compromise maritime safety. Addressing this issue, this paper describes a methodology for developing a new tool that complements the efficient production of ENCs using paper charts. First, the ENC product was produced utilising CARIS S-57 Composer. After considering the difficulties in assigning symbols through the compilation process, a new web application named SYMO EXPERT was introduced. It was developed using Firebase Realtime Database and React app. A questionnaire was prepared to collect data about the time factor and accuracy of using SYMO EXPERT. Results showed that it supports the users in selecting relevant symbols efficiently with an accuracy of up to 98%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. Comparative study of the pencil-and-paper and digital formats of the Spanish DARS scale.
- Author
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Arrua-Duarte, Elsa, Migoya-Borja, Marta, Barahona, Igor, Quilty, Lena C., Rizvi, Sakina J., Kennedy, Sidney H., Baca-García, Enrique, and Barrigon, Maria L.
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STANDARD deviations , *INTRACLASS correlation , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *ANHEDONIA , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
The Dimensional Anhedonia Rating Scale (DARS) is a novel questionnaire to assess anhedonia of recent validation. In this work, we aim to study the equivalence between the traditional paper-and-pencil and the digital format of DARS. Sixty-nine patients filled the DARS in a paper-based and digital versions. We assessed differences between formats (Wilcoxon test), validity of the scales [Kappa and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs)], and reliability (Cronbach's alpha and Guttman's coefficient). We calculated the comparative fit index and the root mean squared error (RMSE) associated with the proposed one-factor structure. Total scores were higher for paper-based format. Significant differences between both formats were found for three items. The weighted Kappa coefficient was approximately 0.40 for most of the items. Internal consistency was greater than 0.94, and the ICC for the digital version was 0.95 and 0.94 for the paper-and-pencil version (F = 16.7, p < 0.001). Comparative Adjustment Index was 0.97 for the digital DARS and 0.97 for the paper-and-pencil DARS, and RMSE was 0.11 for the digital DARS and 0.10 for the paper-and-pencil DARS. We concluded that the digital DARS is consistent in many respects with the paper-and-pencil questionnaire, but equivalence with this format cannot be assumed without caution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Comparison of Computerised and Pencil-and-Paper Neuropsychological Assessments in Older Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Australians.
- Author
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Page, Zara A., Croot, Karen, Sachdev, Perminder S., Crawford, John D., Lam, Ben C.P., Brodaty, Henry, Miller Amberber, Amanda, Numbers, Katya, and Kochan, Nicole A.
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NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *NATIVE language , *AUSTRALIANS , *OLDER people , *COGNITIVE ability , *COGNITION disorders - Abstract
Objectives: Computerised neuropsychological assessments (CNAs) are proposed as an alternative method of assessing cognition to traditional pencil-and-paper assessment (PnPA), which are considered the "gold standard" for diagnosing dementia. However, limited research has been conducted with culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) individuals. This study investigated the suitability of PnPAs and CNAs for measuring cognitive performance in a heterogenous sample of older, Australian CALD English-speakers compared to a native English-speaking background (ESB) sample. Methods: Participants were 1037 community-dwelling individuals aged 70–90 years without a dementia diagnosis from the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study (873 ESB, 164 CALD). Differences in the level and pattern of cognitive performance in the CALD group were compared to the ESB group on a newly developed CNA and a comprehensive PnPA in English, controlling for covariates. Multiple hierarchical regression was used to identify the extent to which linguistic and acculturation variables explained performance variance. Results: CALD participants' performance was consistently poorer than ESB participants on both PnPA and CNA, and more so on PnPA than CNA, controlling for socio-demographic and health factors. Linguistic and acculturation variables together explained approximately 20% and 25% of CALD performance on PnPA and CNA respectively, above demographics and self-reported computer use. Conclusions: Performances of CALD and ESB groups differed more on PnPAs than CNAs, but caution is needed in concluding that CNAs are more culturally-appropriate for assessing cognitive decline in older CALD individuals. Our findings extend current literature by confirming the influence of linguistic and acculturation variables on cognitive assessment outcomes for older CALD Australians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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14. A Paper Puritan of Puritans: The Liberator 's Protestant Spirit the Antebellum Public Sphere.
- Author
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GRADERT, KENYON
- Subjects
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PUBLIC sphere , *PURITANS , *PROTESTANTS , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *IMAGINATION , *PRINT culture - Abstract
This essay argues that the anti-slavery periodical The Liberator cast itself as heir to a revolutionary tradition of Puritan print to sanction its critiques of the American church and state. This reimagination of Puritanism spoke to readers by tapping into desires for spiritual revival within a secularizing public sphere and a print culture shifting from Protestant scarcity to Victorian abundance. By tracking how The Liberator both utilized these new print technologies and imagined their reclamation of Puritanism, this essay ultimately reveals a more ambiguous negotiation between the sacred and the secular in the emergent public sphere than is often supposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Recent Books on the History of Money.
- Author
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Adjepong-Boateng, Kofi
- Subjects
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NATIONAL currencies , *PAPER money , *HISTORY of the book , *CAPITAL market , *CENTRAL banking industry , *SLAVE trade - Abstract
The literature on monetary history has tended to present as 'revolutionary' the switch from barter and slave money to the introduction of paper money in regions like West Africa, while describing monetary reform processes in Britain, North America, and other Western capital markets as 'evolutionary'. In part, the resulting tension comes from believing that colonial currency systems were imposed by the colonial states, while those that emerged elsewhere did so as a result of private transactions involving individual market participants. When read concurrently, four books published recently advance our understanding of the differences between theories that explain the emergence of money as a result of private transactions and those which describe the importance of state involvement in introducing and maintaining currency systems. These works highlight how closely similar the emergence of a modern currency system was in Britain, the United States, and several parts of Africa. By 'modern', I am referring here to currency systems that ultimately led to single national currencies which eventually came to be managed by central banks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. NPS volume 52 issue 2 Cover and Front matter.
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NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Investigating differences between traditional (paper bag) ordering and online ordering from primary school canteens: a cross-sectional study comparing menu, usage and lunch order characteristics.
- Author
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Leonard, Alecia, Delaney, Tessa, Seward, Kirsty, Zoetemeyer, Rachel, Lamont, Hannah, Sutherland, Rachel, Reilly, Kathryn, Lecathelinais, Christophe, and Wyse, Rebecca
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PAPER bags , *PRIMARY schools , *SCHOOL children , *CROSS-sectional method , *LUNCHEONS , *PACKAGED foods , *RESEARCH , *FERRANS & Powers Quality of Life Index , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SCHOOLS , *FOOD service - Abstract
Objective: To assess differences between traditional paper bag ordering and online ordering from primary school canteens in terms of menu, usage and lunch order characteristics.Design: A cross-sectional study.Setting: New South Wales (NSW) primary schools that offered both paper bag and online canteen ordering.Participants: Students (aged 5-12 years) with a lunch order on the day of the observation.Results: Across the six school canteens, 59-90 % of all available items were listed on both the online and paper menus, with no significant differences in the nutritional quality ('Everyday'/'Occasional') or nutritional content (kJ/saturated fat/sugar/sodium) of menu items. In total, 387 student lunch orders were placed, containing 776 menu items. Most orders (68 %) were placed online. There were no significant differences between order modality in the quantity of items ordered or the cost of orders, or the nutritional quality of orders based on the classification system of the NSW Healthy School Canteen Strategy ('Everyday'/'Occasional'). However, nutritional analysis revealed that paper bag orders contained 222 fewer kJ than online orders (P = 0·001), 0·65 g less saturated fat (P = 0·04) and 4·7 g less sugar (P < 0·001).Conclusions: Online canteens are commonly used to order canteen lunches for primary school children. This is the first study to investigate differences between traditional paper bag ordering and online ordering in this setting. Given the rapid increase in the use of online ordering systems in schools and other food settings and their potential to deliver public health nutrition interventions, additional research is warranted to further investigate differences in ordering modalities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
18. The evolution of the medical record from paper to digital: an ENT perspective.
- Author
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Murphy, C and Keogh, I J
- Subjects
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AUDITING , *HEALTH information systems , *DIGITAL health , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *PATIENTS , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *PUBLIC hospitals , *ELECTRONIC health records , *DATA analysis software , *MEDICAL informatics - Abstract
Objectives: A national electronic health record is being procured for Health Service Executive hospitals in Ireland. A number of hospitals have implemented an electronic document management system. This study aimed to investigate the efficiency and safety of the electronic document management system in our centre. Methods: A retrospective audit was performed of patients operated on at Galway University Hospital. The availability and location of patients' admission data on the electronic document management system were recorded. These data were analysed using Microsoft Excel software, version 16.45. Results: The records of 100 patients were analysed. The main findings were: 5 per cent of operation notes were missing, 80 per cent were in the incorrect section, while 15 per cent were in the correct 'procedure' section on the electronic document management system. Conclusion: This study shows there is potential for error with 'paper-light' solutions, whereby delayed scanning, misfiling of scanned records and missing records may lead to significant delays in treatment and potential patient safety issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Snow spikes (penitentes) in the dry Andes, but not on Europa: a defense of Lliboutry's classic paper.
- Author
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Warren, Stephen G.
- Subjects
- *
EUROPA (Satellite) , *REMOTE-sensing images , *ALBEDO - Abstract
Tall, spiky snow structures (penitentes) occur high in subtropical mountains, in the form of blades oriented east-west and tilted toward the noontime sun. By trapping sunlight, they cause a reduction of albedo by ~0.3 relative to flat snow. The formation of penitentes, explained by Lliboutry in 1954, requires weather conditions allowing the troughs to deepen rapidly by melting while the peaks remain dry and cold by sublimation, losing little mass, because of the 8.5-fold difference in latent heats. Lliboutry's explanation has been misrepresented in some recent publications. A concern has been raised that in the low latitudes of Jupiter's moon Europa, the ice surface may have developed penitentes, which would pose a hazard to a lander. They would require a different mechanism of formation, because Europa is too cold for melting to occur. If penitentes are present on Europa, they cannot be resolved by the coarse-resolution satellite images available now, but the high albedo of Europa (~0.7 at visible wavelengths) argues against the existence of such extreme roughness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Globe on Paper: Writing Histories of the World in Renaissance Europe and the Americas.
- Author
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Basista, Jakub
- Subjects
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RENAISSANCE , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2024
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21. The health of detainees and the role of primary care: Position paper of the European Forum for Primary Care.
- Author
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Groenewegen, Peter, Dirkzwager, Anja, van Dam, Anke, Massalimova, Dina, Sirdifield, Coral, and Smith, Lauren
- Subjects
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HEALTH services accessibility , *PRISONERS , *PRIMARY health care , *CONTINUUM of care , *POLICY sciences , *MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
This position paper aims to increase awareness among primary care practitioners and policymakers about the specific and complex health needs of people who experience incarceration. We focus on the importance of primary care and of continuity of care between prison and community. We highlight what is known from the literature on the health of people who experience incarceration, on the organisation of prison health care, and on the role of primary care both during and after detention. We present three case descriptions of detainees' encounters with the organisation of prison health care in three European countries. Finally, we describe the position that the European Forum for Primary Care takes. Prisoners and ex-prisoners have a worse physical and mental health compared with a cross-section of the population. However, access to good quality treatment and care is often worse than in the outside situation. In particular, well-organised primary care in the prison context could benefit prisoners and, indirectly, society at large. Moreover, continuity of care between the community and the prison situation needs improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. NPS volume 50 issue 6 Cover and Front matter.
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NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY - Abstract
The article presents the cover as well as the list of editorial board members and the table of contents for the issue.
- Published
- 2022
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23. Conversations with friends: 'friends of the Court' interventions of the state parties to the European Convention on Human Rights.
- Author
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Dzehtsiarou, Kanstantsin
- Subjects
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HUMAN rights , *PAPER analysis , *SELF-interest , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *FEDERAL government ,EUROPEAN Convention on Human Rights - Abstract
The European Convention on Human Rights allows its Contracting Parties to submit third-party interventions. This paper analyses the reasons for engagement of the states with the European Court of Human Rights beyond what they are strictly expected to do: respond in contentious cases and execute judgments. It is argued here that the states mainly engage with the Court for the purposes of self-interest. This paper fills the gap in the literature by substantiating this claim using empirical methods of content analysis of the case law and research interviews with the governmental representatives. Finally, this paper looks at the impact of third-party interventions on the Court's reasoning and concludes that the Court is aware of the aims of the national governments and bears those aims in mind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Spatial neglect in the digital age: Influence of presentation format on patients' test behavior.
- Author
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Rosenzopf, Hannah, Sperber, Christoph, Wortha, Franz, Wiesen, Daniel, Muth, Annika, Klein, Elise, Möller, Korbinian, and Karnath, Hans-Otto
- Subjects
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UNILATERAL neglect , *DIGITAL technology , *ELECTRONIC paper , *STROKE patients , *SEARCHING behavior - Abstract
Objective: Computerized neglect tests could significantly deepen our disorder-specific knowledge by effortlessly providing additional behavioral markers that are hardly or not extractable from existing paper-and-pencil versions. This study investigated how testing format (paper versus digital), and screen size (small, medium, large) affect the Center of cancelation (CoC) in right-hemispheric stroke patients in the Letters and the Bells cancelation task. Our second objective was to determine whether a machine learning approach could reliably classify patients with and without neglect based on their search speed, search distance, and search strategy. Method: We compared the CoC measure of right hemisphere stroke patients with neglect in two cancelation tasks across different formats and display sizes. In addition, we evaluated whether three additional parameters of search behavior that became available through digitization are neglect-specific behavioral markers. Results: Patients' CoC was not affected by test format or screen size. Additional search parameters demonstrated lower search speed, increased search distance, and a more strategic search for neglect patients than for control patients without neglect. Conclusion: The CoC seems robust to both test digitization and display size adaptations. Machine learning classification based on the additional variables derived from computerized tests succeeded in distinguishing stroke patients with spatial neglect from those without. The investigated additional variables have the potential to aid in neglect diagnosis, in particular when the CoC cannot be validly assessed (e.g., when the test is not performed to completion). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Colonial American Paper Money and the Quantity Theory of Money: An Extension.
- Author
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Grubb, Farley
- Subjects
- *
PAPER money , *QUANTITY theory of money , *PUBLIC spending - Abstract
The quantity theory of money is applied to the paper money regimes of seven of the nine British North American colonies south of New England. Individual colonies, and regional groupings of contiguous colonies treated as one monetary unit, are tested. Little to no statistical relationship, and little to no magnitude of influence, between the quantities of paper money in circulation and prices are found. The quantity theory of money does not explain the value and performance of colonial paper monies well. This is a general and widespread result, and not a rare and isolated phenomenon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Please Like This Paper.
- Author
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McDonald, Lucy
- Subjects
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PHILOSOPHICAL analysis , *SOCIAL media , *SOCIAL capital - Abstract
In this paper I offer a philosophical analysis of the act of 'liking' a post on social media. First, I consider what it means to 'like' something. I argue that 'liking' is best understood as a phatic gesture; it signals uptake and anoints the poster's positive face. Next, I consider how best to theorise the power that comes with amassing many 'likes'. I suggest that 'like' tallies alongside posts institute and record a form of digital social capital. Finally, I consider whether 'likes' have ultimately improved online discourse. I argue that while the 'liking' function itself is relatively innocuous, public 'like' tallies introduce a corrosive motivation to online communication. By making the prospect of increased social capital perpetually salient to us, they encourage us to prioritise high levels of engagement over meaningful engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. 'Best paper' prize winners for 2023 and in the current issue: entry to UK ENT specialist training.
- Author
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Fisher, Edward W and Fishman, Jonathan
- Subjects
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PUBLISHING , *AWARDS , *SERIAL publications , *OTOLARYNGOLOGY , *MEDICAL specialties & specialists , *AUTHORSHIP - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the editor discusses various articles on topics including ENT specialist training in the United Kingdom, providing valuable insights for aspiring ENT surgeons regarding portfolio building, competitiveness of the process, and strategies for success.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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28. NPS volume 52 issue 2 Cover and Back matter.
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NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Imperial Currencies after the Fall of Empires: The Conversion of the German Paper Mark and the Austro-Hungarian Crown at the End of the First World War.
- Author
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Rigó, Máté
- Subjects
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HARD currencies , *IMPERIALISM , *INTERNATIONAL organization , *PAPER money , *ETHNIC discrimination , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
Following the 1918 collapse of the two major empires that ruled central Europe, Austria-Hungary and Germany, successor states inherited billions of increasingly depreciating paper monies. The conversion of imperial currencies posed enormous difficulties for successor states and exposed the limits of an emerging international order that rendered the pan-European predicament of defunct imperial currencies the problem of individual states. This article compares the first, and one of the last, conversions of imperial currencies, taking monetary transitions in Alsace-Lorraine (1918) and Transylvania (1920) as case studies. Although historians usually treat western and east-central European history separately, the conversion of imperial currencies produced similar outcomes in both the former Alsace-Lorraine and Transylvania. Differences emerge where one would not expect them: the phasing out of the paper mark was coupled with systematic ethnic discrimination against Germans in Alsace and Lorraine, while in Transylvania, some ethnic minorities even managed to benefit from the process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Australia—Anti-Dumping Measures on A4 Copy Paper.
- Author
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Zhou, Weihuan and Peng, Delei
- Subjects
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LEGAL judgments , *DUMPING (International trade) - Abstract
The World Trade Organization (WTO) Panel Report in Australia – Anti-Dumping Measures on A4 Copy Paper (Australia – A4 Copy Paper) marks a significant development of the multilateral rules on anti-dumping. Under certain circumstances, WTO agreements permit members to impose anti-dumping measures to counteract the injurious effect of dumping on domestic industries, typically through import duties. The Report is the first to examine in detail when an anti-dumping authority may determine that a "particular market situation" exists in the country of exportation under Article 2.2 of the WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement, potentially justifying the imposition of elevated remedial duties. The Report also develops the jurisprudence on how such remedies may be calculated, expounding the use of benchmark costs for the calculation of a constructed normal value (CNV) under Article 2.2.1.1. These doctrinal questions are central to the longstanding debate over how far the Anti-Dumping Agreement allows anti-dumping measures against state intervention and market distortions. On both fronts, the Australia – A4 Copy Paper panel created flexibilities for WTO members to respond to government-induced distortions. In doing so, the Report deviates considerably from the course set by the Appellate Body in the landmark EU – Biodiesel decision, which seemed to confine anti-dumping measures to responding to private action. At the same time, the panel left open several important issues relating to the adoption of CNVs and the use of benchmarks for their calculation, leaving wide latitude for investigating authorities to inflate dumping margins in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. NPS volume 49 issue 4 Cover and Back matter.
- Subjects
- *
MEMBERSHIP in associations, institutions, etc. , *PHOTOGRAPHY competitions - Abstract
The article presents several announcements, as of July 2021, including the Association for the Study of Nationalities' call for its members to renew membership for 2022, the deadline for the 4th "Nationalities Papers" photo contest and how to subscribe to the periodical "Nationalities Papers."
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. NPS volume 50 issue 1 Cover and Front matter.
- Subjects
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NATIONALISM - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. NPS volume 50 issue 1 Cover and Back matter.
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Genomics Research of Lifetime Depression in the Netherlands: The BIObanks Netherlands Internet Collaboration (BIONIC) Project.
- Author
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Huider, Floris, Milaneschi, Yuri, Hottenga, Jouke-Jan, Bot, Mariska, Rietman, M. Liset, Kok, Almar A.L., Galesloot, Tessel E., 't Hart, Leen M., Rutters, Femke, Blom, Marieke T., Rhebergen, Didi, Visser, Marjolein, Brouwer, Ingeborg, Feskens, Edith, Hartman, Catharina A., Oldehinkel, Albertine J., de Geus, Eco J.C., Kiemeney, Lambertus A., Huisman, Martijn, and Picavet, H. Susan J.
- Subjects
- *
BIONICS , *SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms , *GENOMICS , *MENTAL depression , *BIOBANKS , *PSYCHIATRIC treatment - Abstract
In this cohort profile article we describe the lifetime major depressive disorder (MDD) database that has been established as part of the BIObanks Netherlands Internet Collaboration (BIONIC). Across the Netherlands we collected data on Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) lifetime MDD diagnosis in 132,850 Dutch individuals. Currently, N = 66,684 of these also have genomewide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data. We initiated this project because the complex genetic basis of MDD requires large population-wide studies with uniform in-depth phenotyping. For standardized phenotyping we developed the LIDAS (LIfetime Depression Assessment Survey), which then was used to measure MDD in 11 Dutch cohorts. Data from these cohorts were combined with diagnostic interview depression data from 5 clinical cohorts to create a dataset of N = 29,650 lifetime MDD cases (22%) meeting DSM-5 criteria and 94,300 screened controls. In addition, genomewide genotype data from the cohorts were assembled into a genomewide association study (GWAS) dataset of N = 66,684 Dutch individuals (25.3% cases). Phenotype data include DSM-5 -based MDD diagnoses, sociodemographic variables, information on lifestyle and BMI, characteristics of depressive symptoms and episodes, and psychiatric diagnosis and treatment history. We describe the establishment and harmonization of the BIONIC phenotype and GWAS datasets and provide an overview of the available information and sample characteristics. Our next step is the GWAS of lifetime MDD in the Netherlands, with future plans including fine-grained genetic analyses of depression characteristics, international collaborations and multi-omics studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) position on autonomous weapon systems: ICRC position and background paper.
- Subjects
- *
WEAPONS systems , *COMMITTEES - Abstract
This position paper is available in the six United Nations languages at: https://www.icrc.org/en/document/icrc-position-autonomous-weapon-systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A Paper Tiger No More? The Media Portrayal of the Notwithstanding Clause in Saskatchewan and Ontario.
- Author
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Nicolaides, Eleni and Snow, Dave
- Subjects
- *
MASS media , *CHARTERS , *DIPLOMATICS , *POLITICAL parties - Abstract
Since 2017, four provincial legislatures have introduced bills invoking the controversial notwithstanding clause. We present an original dataset of news articles from 10 different outlets that discussed the clause while these bills were being debated in Saskatchewan and Ontario. Empirically, although the clause is typically portrayed accurately, we find over one-fifth of articles about the clause did not indicate that it must be included in legislation. Normatively, the clause was twice as likely to be portrayed negatively as it was positively, and the type of portrayal was strongly associated with the ideological orientation of the news outlet. The rate of negative portrayals was similar across the two provinces, which suggests that attitudes toward the clause may endure beyond the policy issue itself or the level of media visibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Colonial New Jersey Paper Money, 1709–1775: Value Decomposition and Performance.
- Author
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Grubb, Farley
- Subjects
- *
PAPER money , *HISTORY ,COLONIAL New Jersey, ca. 1600-1775 - Abstract
I decompose the market value of Colonial New Jersey's paper money into its component parts, namely its real-asset present value and transaction premium. Its market value was predominately determined by its real-asset present value. I also find a small transaction premium that is positively associated with the quantity of paper money in circulation and with the land-bank method of paper money injection. This paper money was not a fiat currency. It traded below face value due to time-discounting not depreciation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Population Registration in Germany, 1842–1945: Information, Administrative Power, and State-Making in the Age of Paper.
- Author
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Frohman, Lawrence
- Subjects
- *
RECORDING & registration , *POPULATION , *MANAGEMENT of public records , *VITAL records (Births, deaths, etc.) , *PUBLIC administration ,GERMAN politics & government - Abstract
Population registration has figured only peripherally in histories of state formation in modern Europe. Although the registries never fully shed their original security function, the emergence of the interventionist state transformed the personal data or information collected by the registries into a central element of state administrative power. However, the ways in which this information could be used by both the civilian administration and the police to govern individuals and populations were limited by the use of paper as a means of data storage and transmission and by the information processing technologies available at the time. Rather than viewing the population registries and, later, the National Registry (Volkskartei) primarily as instruments of the Holocaust, this article embeds them in a longer, alternative history, which explores the relationship between population registration, information, information processing, and state formation between the mid-nineteenth and the mid-twentieth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The Queerness of Black Matriarchal Praxis.
- Author
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Hice-Fromille, Theresa
- Subjects
- *
PAPER arts , *FUNDRAISING , *BLACK women - Abstract
I met Kyla at a small conference on a rainy weekend in February 2018. I wandered into the workshop shortly after it had started, and the room was filled with Black women designing vision boards. Kyla didn't stop what she was doing as she replied to the question the presenter posed to the room. Her hands continued moving, cutting glossy paper or pasting shiny gems onto her board: "When I tell people that my organization raises money to take girls abroad, so many of them say, 'Well why wouldn't you raise money for them to buy clothes or eat. They need food and education before they need to travel.' But I always say, 'But what about Black joy?'" [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The potential human cost of the use of weapons in outer space and the protection afforded by international humanitarian law: Position paper submitted by the International Committee of the Red Cross to the Secretary-General of the United Nations on the issues outlined in General Assembly Resolution 75/36, 8 April 2021
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HUMANITARIAN law , *OUTER space , *WEAPONS systems , *WEAPONS - Abstract
1. The use of weapons in outer space – be it through kinetic or non-kinetic means, using space- and/or ground-based weapon systems – could have significant impacts on civilians on earth. This is because technology enabled by space systems permeates most aspects of civilian life, making the potential consequences of attacks on space systems a matter of humanitarian concern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. From a Line on Paper to a Line in Physical Reality: Joint state-building at the Chinese-Vietnamese border, 1954–1957.
- Author
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YIN, QINGFEI
- Subjects
- *
NATION building , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *BORDERLANDS , *COMMUNISTS - Abstract
This article studies the collaboration between the Chinese and Vietnamese communists in the socialist transformation of their shared borderlands after the First Indochina War. It both complicates and clarifies the volatile bilateral relationship between the two emerging communist states as they solidified their power in the 1950s. Departing from traditional narratives of Sino-Vietnamese relations which focus on wars and conflicts, this article examines how the timely convergence of Cold War and state expansion transformed the Sino-Vietnamese borderlands from 1954 to 1957. Using both Chinese and Vietnamese archival sources, it contends that the Chinese and Vietnamese communists pursued two interrelated goals in carrying out the political projects at the territorial limits of their countries. First, they wanted to build an inward-looking economy and society at the respective borders by consolidating the national administration of territory. Second, they wanted to impose a contrived Cold War comradeship between the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV) in place of the organic interdependence of people within the borderlands that had existed in the area for centuries. The Sino-Vietnamese border, therefore, was the focus of joint state-building by the two communist governments, which made the cross-border movement of people and goods more visible, manipulable, and, more importantly, taxable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A Nation on Paper: Making a State in the Republic of Biafra.
- Author
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Daly, Samuel Fury Childs
- Subjects
- *
LAW , *NATIONAL character , *SOVEREIGNTY , *CITIZENSHIP , *POSTCOLONIALISM , *BUREAUCRACY ,NIGERIAN Civil War, 1967-1970 - Abstract
What role did law play in articulating sovereignty and citizenship in postcolonial Africa? Using legal records from the secessionist Republic of Biafra, this article analyzes the relationship between law and national identity in an extreme context—that of the Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970). Ideas about order, discipline, and legal process were at the heart of Biafra's sense of itself as a nation, and they served as the rhetorical justification for its secession from Nigeria. But they were not only rhetoric. In the turmoil of the ensuing civil war, Biafra's courts became the center of its national culture, and law became its most important administrative implement. In court, Biafrans argued over what behaviors were permissible in wartime, and judges used law to draw the boundaries of the new country's national identity. That law played this role in Biafra shows something broader about African politics: law, bureaucracy, and paperwork meant more to state-making than declensionist views of postcolonial Africa usually allow. Biafra failed as a political project, but it has important implications for the study of law in postcolonial Africa, and for the nation-state form in general. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Nutraceutical support in heart failure: a position paper of the International Lipid Expert Panel (ILEP).
- Author
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Cicero, Arrigo F. G., Colletti, Alessandro, von Haehling, Stephan, Vinereanu, Dragos, Bielecka-Dabrowa, Agata, Sahebkar, Amirhossein, Toth, Peter P., Reiner, Željko, Wong, Nathan D., Mikhailidis, Dimitri P., Ferri, Claudio, and Banach, Maciej
- Subjects
- *
CACAO , *CARNITINE , *DIET therapy , *DIETARY supplements , *FLAVONOIDS , *FOOD habits , *HAWTHORNS , *HEART failure , *INORGANIC compounds , *IRON , *MAGNESIUM , *MEDLINE , *MINERALS , *MONOSACCHARIDES , *NEUROPEPTIDES , *NITRATES , *OLIGOPEPTIDES , *ONLINE information services , *PHYSICIANS , *UBIQUINONES , *VITAMIN B1 , *VITAMIN C , *VITAMIN D , *VITAMIN E , *FUNCTIONAL foods , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *PHYTOCHEMICALS , *PROBIOTICS - Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is a complex clinical syndrome that represents a major cause of morbidity and mortality in Western countries. Several nutraceuticals have shown interesting clinical results in HF prevention as well as in the treatment of the early stages of the disease, alone or in combination with pharmacological therapy. The aim of the present expert opinion position paper is to summarise the available clinical evidence on the role of phytochemicals in HF prevention and/or treatment that might be considered in those patients not treated optimally as well as in those with low therapy adherence. The level of evidence and the strength of recommendation of particular HF treatment options were weighed up and graded according to predefined scales. A systematic search strategy was developed to identify trials in PubMed (January 1970 to June 2019). The terms 'nutraceuticals', 'dietary supplements', 'herbal drug' and 'heart failure' or 'left verntricular dysfunction' were used in the literature search. The experts discussed and agreed on the recommendation levels. Available clinical trials reported that the intake of some nutraceuticals (hawthorn, coenzyme Q10, l-carnitine, d-ribose, carnosine, vitamin D, probiotics, n-3 PUFA and beet nitrates) might be associated with improvements in self-perceived quality of life and/or functional parameters such as left ventricular ejection fraction, stroke volume and cardiac output in HF patients, with minimal or no side effects. Those benefits tended to be greater in earlier HF stages. Available clinical evidence supports the usefulness of supplementation with some nutraceuticals to improve HF management in addition to evidence-based pharmacological therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Rational Animal and Modern Science: The Research Context of the Papers.
- Author
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Conrad, Richard
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN evolution , *HUMAN beings , *ANIMAL psychology , *HYLOMORPHISM , *CONSCIOUSNESS - Abstract
The papers collected in this issue of New Blackfriars were delivered at Aquinas Seminar series in Oxford and represent research interests of the Aquinas Institute. This article contextualises them by giving an impression of areas of contemporary research to which they contribute or to which they point. These areas concern animal psychology, the human being as complex rational animal, body‐and‐soul, and human evolution. Some of the many possible issues are identified, so as to suggest that in all these areas the Aristotelian‐Thomistic tradition can enter into a real and fruitful conversation with modern discoveries in biology and psychology; it can take them on board and at the same time pose questions and offer perspectives that stand to be illuminating. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Categorical Denial: Evaluating Post-1492 Indigenous Erasure in the Paper Trail of American Archaeology.
- Author
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Panich, Lee M. and Schneider, Tsim D.
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL site location , *PREHISTORIC peoples , *LAND use , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL chronology , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL dating - Abstract
To understand the implications of archaeological site recording practices and associated inventories for studying Indigenous persistence after the arrival of Europeans, we examined the documentary record associated with nearly 900 archaeological sites in Marin County, California. Beginning with the first regional surveys conducted during the early 1900s and continuing into the present, the paper trail created by archaeologists reveals an enduring emphasis on precontact materials to the exclusion of more recent patterns of Indigenous occupation and land use. In assessing sites occupied by Indigenous people from the late sixteenth through the mid-twentieth centuries, we discuss how the use of multiple lines of evidence--including temporally diagnostic artifacts, chronometric dating techniques, and historical documentation--may help illuminate subtle but widespread patterns of Native presence that have been obscured by essentialist assumptions about Indigenous culture change. Our findings further reveal the shortcomings of traditional site recording systems, in which archaeologists typically categorize sites within the prehistoric-protohistoric-historic triad on the basis of commonsense decisions that conflate chronology with identity. Instead, we argue for recording practices that focus specifically on the calendric ages of occupation for any given site. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Why You'll Regret Not Reading This Paper.
- Author
-
Schroeder, Mark
- Abstract
In this paper, I explore the role for anticipated regret in major life decision-making, focusing on how it is employed by realistic decision-makers in a variety of realistic cases. I argue that the most obvious answers to how regret might matter in decision do not make these cases intelligible, but that we can make them intelligible through consideration of the significance of narrative in our own self-understanding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Paper Trails: Fang Yongbin and the Material Culture of Calligraphy.
- Author
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Kelly, Thomas and Ko, Dorothy
- Subjects
- *
CONCEPTUAL art , *SIXTEENTH century , *TRAILS , *SALES personnel , *CALLIGRAPHY , *BUSINESSMEN , *MATERIAL culture - Abstract
Fang Yongbin's (1542–1608) cache of paper-based ephemera—733 notes, invoices, and 190 name cards—now held in the Harvard-Yenching library, discloses the multidimensional expertise of the stationery dealer in late Ming China. This article explores how businessmen from Huizhou prefecture turned to the trade in writing materials to improvise with new forms of cultural entrepreneurship in the late sixteenth century. Introducing the diverse contents of the cache, I demonstrate how Fang's involvement in the sale of desktop tools drew from, and creatively combined literary endeavors, shop-keeping, and artisanal labor. Unsettling discrete conceptions of "scholar," "merchant," and "craftsman," Fang's career reveals how stationery dealers vied to usurp custodianship over the material culture of calligraphy. The Harvard-Yenching cache registers the increasingly powerful influence exerted over the business of culture by those skilled in the making and marketing of writing materials: largely forgotten salesmen whose services made the art of writing possible in the first place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. NPS volume 49 issue 4 Cover and Front matter.
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *ETHNICITY - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Paper Trade in Early Modern Europe: Practices, Materials, Networks.
- Author
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Button, Victoria
- Subjects
- *
PAPER industry , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Abstracts of Papers Presented at the 2021 Annual Meeting.
- Subjects
- *
SCIENTIFIC ability , *ECONOMIC history , *ECONOMIC indicators , *SOCIAL status , *RACE relations , *VOTER turnout , *INTERGENERATIONAL mobility , *HOME ownership - Abstract
Antonio Iodice, I University of Exeter and University of Genoa i SESSION 2: HISTORICAL LABOR MARKETS The Economics of Gender-Specific Minimum-Wage Legislation During the 1910s, twelve U.S. states passed and implemented the country's first minimum-wage laws. First, where rivers shift states form, and existing states expand their capacity. Lee J. Alston, I Indiana University i , Marie Duggan, I Keene State College i , and Julio Ramos, I Pennsylvania State University i SESSION 11: FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT Financing Industrialization in Russia and Germany A large literature debates what system best promotes the accumulation and allocation of capital, especially in late-industrializing countries, where capital market imperfections may be severe. In contrast, this paper leverages detailed firm-level data from late 19th-century Sweden showing that a sharp increase in industrial tariffs has a heterogeneous impact across firms: Initially low-productivity firms see an increase in productivity while initially high-productive firms experience a decline. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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