32 results
Search Results
2. Community psychoanalysis and the generative landscape of our times.
- Author
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Chow, Lani, Gaspar, Sandra, Kassoff, Betsy, Leavitt, Julie, and Peltz, Rachael
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNITIES , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *MENTAL health , *CONSORTIA , *PRODUCTIVE life span - Abstract
In this paper five members of the "Community Psychoanalytic Track and Consortium" (CPT&C) in San Francisco, California, each holding different positionalities and functioning in different roles, come together in dialog with the shared aim to bring themselves and their readers inside the CPT&C. This writing project recapitulates principles of the CPT&C's vision itself: to form polyvocal groups with the shared task of supporting each other in our various roles, and members of community mental health organizations in their work and lives. From that effort new forms of psychoanalytic learning and work are generated; in this instance the process translates into a new writing form. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Spatial‐temporal response capability probabilistic evaluation method of electric vehicle aggregator based on trip characteristics modelling.
- Author
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Xu, Xiangchu, Mi, Zengqiang, Yu, Shiyuan, Zhan, Zewei, and Ji, Ling
- Subjects
- *
EVALUATION methodology , *MONTE Carlo method , *TRANSFER matrix , *BIDDING strategies , *LOAD management (Electric power) , *ELECTRIC vehicles - Abstract
Accurately evaluating the response capability of electric vehicles (EVs) is very important for an EV aggregator (EVA) to formulate reasonable bidding strategies in ancillary service markets. Most of the methods proposed in the existing literature only evaluate EVs' temporal response capability while ignoring their spatial distribution. In addition, the evaluation results provided by the existing methods are typically deterministic, which fails to characterize the uncertainty of EV trip. The above two issues pose high risk of economic loss for the EVA. To this end, a probabilistic evaluation method of spatial‐temporal response capability for EVA is proposed in this paper. The gravity model is adopted to calculate a spatial transfer probability matrix describing EV owners' trip characteristics between different areas at each time in a region which is divided into several different areas according to the evaluation requirements. Then, the trip chains of EVs are modelled based on the spatial transfer probability matrix, and the states of charge (SOCs) of EVs are tracked in the process. The spatial‐temporal response capability of EVA is evaluated based on charging–discharging states and states of charge of EVs, and the probabilistic evaluation results of response capability are obtained by multiple Monte Carlo simulations. The effectiveness of the proposed method is verified on a real dataset from San Francisco, CA, USA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Abstracts of papers presented at the 34th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Dermatopathology.
- Subjects
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DERMATOLOGY , *ANNUAL meetings , *MELANOMA , *SQUAMOUS cell carcinoma - Abstract
This article presents abstracts of research papers presented at the thirty-fourth Annual Meeting of the American Society of Dermatopathology in San Francisco, California. Some of the topics discussed in these research papers are de-differentiated metastatic melanoma masquerading as a high grade pos, folliculocystic eccrine hamartoma, histologic features of lichen sclerosus in a surgical scar, necrobiotic xanthogranuloma, mixed merkel cell and squamous cell carcinoma of the skin and melanoma in situ and tumor vascularity.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Abstracts of Papers That Will Be Presented at the Twenty-Eighth Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research.
- Subjects
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ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. , *PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *ANNUAL meetings - Abstract
Presents abstracts of papers that would be presented at the Twenty-Eighth Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological research in San Francisco, California in October 1988.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Abstracts of papers presented at the 30th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Dermatopathology.
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *DERMATOLOGY , *PATHOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents various abstracts of papers presented at the 30th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Dermatopathology, during December 2-4, 1992, held at Grand Hyaff, in San Francisco, California, U.S.A. Some of the abstracts are, "Dermatofibrosarcoma Protuberans Strongly Express CD34," by D.A. Altman B.J. Nickoloff and D.P. Fivenson, "Plexiform and other Unusual Variants of Palisaded Encapsulated Neuroma," by Z.B. Argenyi, P.H. Cooper and D. Santa Cruz, "The Significance of Clinically Observed, Black Dots, Within Melanocyctic Nevi," by J. Bolognia and P.E. Shapiro, and others.
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Abstracts of papers presented at the 27th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Dermatopathology.
- Subjects
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MEETINGS , *DERMATOLOGY , *PATHOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of papers presented at the 27th Annual Meeting of American Society of Dermatopathology, held in San Francisco, California. The meeting was held from November 29 to December 1, 1989. Some abstracts which were presented at the meeting are "Angiomatoid Fibrous Histiocytoma," by R. Cerio, D. McGibbon and E. Wilson Jones, "Pemphigus Vulgaris Affecting A Pilar Cyst," by W.R. Coleman and R.P. Kaplan and "The Cutaneous Signs of Lymphomatoid Granulomatosis," by K.G. Carison and L.E. Gibson.
- Published
- 1989
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8. A personal commentary on J.W. Perry, M.D., and introduction to 'Reconstitutive process in the psychopathology of the Self'.
- Author
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Kirsch, Jean
- Subjects
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JUNGIAN psychology , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *SELF , *PRODUCTIVE life span , *WEIRS - Abstract
John Weir Perry's influence on the understanding of the psychotic process through his research in San Francisco between 1950 and 1981 was groundbreaking, because it both verified and expanded upon C.G. Jung's research at the Burghölzli Hospital in Switzerland in the early 1900's. The author explores both the brilliance of Perry's contribution as a psychiatrist and Jungian analyst and also shows the flawed human, who, with his rare sensitivity to the psychotic process, devoted his life work to the schizophrenic population and their often ill-fated search for meaning. She tells how his creative engagement with the analytic processes of Self discovery eventually led to analytic boundary violations, which ultimately resulted in his indefinite suspension from membership in his local Jungian community. Further, this paper describes her reflections on the innovative work that influenced both the treatment of this population, as well as educating candidates in analytical training to be receptive to and cognizant of psychotic affects and imagery. The archetypal field of the psychotic process, its influence on the development of analytical psychology relative to the psychotic process, and one man's impact on the analytic community are considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Bears in space: Geographies of a global community of big and hairy gay/bi/queer men.
- Author
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McGlynn, Nick
- Subjects
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SEXUAL minority men , *WORKING class , *GEOGRAPHY , *FAT , *LGBTQ+ youth - Abstract
Bears are a large global community of big and hairy gay, bisexual and queer (GBQ) men. Little sustained empirical scholarship has investigated Bears' lives and communities, and none from within geography. Three geographic lenses are used to demonstrate the significance of a geographic approach to Bears. First, rural and urban imaginaries are entwined with Bear masculinities and ideals of 'real men'. However a geographically specific North American working class rural imaginary is particularly important. Second, the global trajectory of Bear begins in 1980s San Francisco and has since spread worldwide. The idea that Bear is fundamentally an American phenomenon is challenged by evidence of global variation in Bear identities, communities, and spaces. Third, the material and aesthetic production of Bear spaces relates to Bear masculinities and bodies, particularly fat bodies. Regarding more ephemeral Bear events, the 'Bearing' of space (including queer space) may provide a means of understanding these. The paper argues first that geography is crucial for understanding Bears and second that geographers of masculinities, sexualities, and fatness/bodies could productively engage with Bear identities, communities, and spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Frische Meeresbrise – Atemübungen für eine außergewöhnliche Fassade in San Francisco.
- Author
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Nuiding, Xaver, Lorenz, Thomas, Herreiner, Philipp, and Engelmann, Michael
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CORPORATE headquarters , *ENGINEERING design , *FACADES , *ARCHITECTS , *SYSTEM integration - Abstract
Breathing lessons – development of a custom motorized façade For a Confidential Tech Client's new corporate headquarters in San Francisco's Mission Bay district, SHoP Architects designed a semi‐conditioned atrium space inside the external glazed envelope known as "the commons". To ventilate this space, the facade specialist Josef Gartner developed a glazing system featuring motorized bi‐fold units. These operable window units, 3.0 m wide by 4.4 m tall, are computer‐controlled in conjunction with operable skylights to maintain comfortable temperatures in the atrium and significantly reduce the need for mechanical ventilation. This paper describes the engineering and design development of this dynamic facade. A number of kinematic options were studied, resulting in the final configuration whereby window operation is guided in the visible upper and lower rails. In the upper rails, the self‐weight is resolved via newly developed double vertical hybrid rollers. The necessary lateral stability is provided by scissor arms mounted on both sides at the top and bottom, which prevent the window from moving sideways on one side over the entire opening stroke. All components, especially the chain drives and a synchronized linear locking drive, are integrated and concealed in the central mullion. A complete opening takes approx. 155 s. Safety strips integrated circumferentially in the frame protect the device, while closing, from objects that are accidentally left in the window rebate and will switch off the device automatically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Mechanical and durability properties of self‐compacting mortars containing binary and ternary mixes of fly ash and silica fume.
- Author
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Benli, Ahmet
- Subjects
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SELF-consolidating concrete , *FLY ash , *SILICA fume , *FLEXURAL strength testing , *FLEXURAL strength , *MORTAR - Abstract
In this paper, the results of experimental work on the strength and durability performances of self‐compacting mortars (SCMs) manufactured from silica fume (SF) and fly ash (FA) were presented. The cement was partially replaced with 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25% of FA and 5, 10, and 15% of SF as binary mixes. Also, ternary mixtures were prepared by the incorporation of FA and SF at different replacement dosages by weight. In total, 14 different combinations of mixes were studied at the ages of 7, 28, and 180 days. Prismatic samples of size 40 × 40 × 160 mm3 were produced and exposed to water curing to observe mechanical behavior of SCMs. The mechanical properties of SCMs were examined by the tests of compressive strength and flexural strength. Sorptivity, porosity, water absorption, and density were also measured. To evaluate fresh properties of SCMs, mini slump flow diameter and mini V‐funnel flow time tests were conducted. The results of the study reveal that increase in the dosage of FA increases SCMs flow but also reduce segregation resistance. The enhancement in flexural strength is the best in the binary mixes of SF10 and in binary mixes of FA. Ten percent replacement of FA shows the best flexural strength performance with a value of 10.21 MPa at the age of 180 days. Compressive and flexural strengths of mortars containing SF and FA reached up to about 86.14 and 10.50 MPa, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Effect of MgO calcination temperature on the reaction products and kinetics of MgO–SiO2–H2O system.
- Author
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Li, Zhaoheng, Xu, Yudong, Zhang, Tongsheng, Hu, Jie, Wei, Jiangxiong, and Yu, Qijun
- Subjects
- *
CHEMICAL kinetics , *MAGNESIUM silicates , *SILICA fume , *CONSTRUCTION materials , *TEMPERATURE , *HIGH temperatures , *GRAIN size - Abstract
MgO‐based binders have been widely studied for decades. Recently, the MgO–SiO2–H2O system was developed as a novel construction material, however, its reaction mechanism remains unclear. This paper investigated the reaction products and kinetics of MgO/silica fume (SF) pastes with MgO calcinated at different temperatures. The results indicate that MgO presented larger grain size after calcination at higher temperature. Mg(OH)2 and magnesium silicate hydrate (M–S–H) gel were formed when using MgO calcined at 850, 950, and 1050°C. However, only M–S–H gel was formed when using MgO calcined at 1450°C. The reaction kinetics of MgO could be described using α = 1 − e−k*t. The reaction rate of MgO increased with decreasing calcination temperature, increasing SF dosage, and the addition of sodium hexametaphosphate. Only M–S–H gel was formed when the reaction rate of MgO was below the demarcation line (about 0.250 × 10−6 s−1), and the corresponding demarcation area was around 14 days. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Race and the Making of Southeast San Francisco: Towards a Theory of Race-Class.
- Author
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Brahinsky, Rachel
- Subjects
- *
RACE , *URBAN renewal , *SOCIAL classes , *WORKING class , *NEIGHBORHOOD planning , *SOCIAL constructionism ,SAN Francisco (Calif.) politics & government - Abstract
San Francisco is engaged in a redevelopment project that could bring millions in investment and community benefits to a starved neighborhood-and yet the project is embedded in an urban development process that is displacing residents. In trying to unsettle these contradictions, this paper achieves two aims. First, I unearth a little known history of redevelopment activism that frames debate around the current project. Second, I use this history to argue for a reframing of the language of race. To wit: although the social construction of race and racism is well established, race is still deeply understood in everyday life as natural. This paper offers a theoretical fusing of race and class, 'race-class', to help us think race through a vital constructionist lens. Race-class makes present the economic dynamics of racial formation, and foregrounds that race is a core process of urban political economy. Race-class works both 'top-down' and 'ground-up.' While it is a vehicle for capital's exploitation of people and place, race-class also emerges as a mode of power for racialized working-class residents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Race, Waste, and Space: Brownfield Redevelopment and Environmental Justice at the Hunters Point Shipyard.
- Author
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Dillon, Lindsey
- Subjects
- *
BROWNFIELDS , *WASTE management , *URBAN renewal , *RACE , *ENVIRONMENTAL justice , *SHIPYARDS - Abstract
This paper advances the concept of 'waste formations' as a way of thinking together processes of race, space, and waste in brownfield redevelopment projects. Defined as formerly industrial and contaminated properties, in the 1990s brownfields emerged as the grounds for new forms of urbanization and an emerging environmental remediation industry. Through their redevelopment, the twentieth century's urban wastelands-environmentally degraded, economically divested, and often racially marked-have become sites of investment, resignification, and value formation. The concept of waste formations provides a critical framework on the ways these socio-ecological transformations rework twentieth century urban inequalities-in particular, the articulation of waste and toxic waste-and the ways they produce new geographies of environmental injustice through the displacement of toxic waste to newly waste-able spaces. This paper develops an analytic of waste formations and applies it to the process of brownfield redevelopment at the Hunters Point Shipyard in southeast San Francisco. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The Spaces of Parking: Mapping the Politics of Mobility in San Francisco.
- Author
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Henderson, Jason
- Subjects
- *
NEOLIBERALISM , *INTERNAL migration , *PUBLIC spaces , *DEBATE , *PRICING , *IDEOLOGY , *GEOPOLITICS - Abstract
Recently a “mobility turn” has entered critical geographic discourse. This mobility turn recognizes that mobility is at once physical movement and contains social meanings that are manifested in a politics of mobility. In this paper I contribute to this emerging line of inquiry by exploring how the politics of mobility is manifested in localized urban processes. Mobility, as with the broader localized urban process, is political and ideological, and this is particularly true with contemporary debates about automobiles and parking in cities. I explore parking as an example of the broader contestation of urban space, using a case study of San Francisco, California. There are three broad factions in San Francisco's parking debates—progressives that advocate for less parking, neoliberals that advocate that market-based pricing determine the amount of parking, and neoconservatives that advocate for more parking. Throughout the paper, I provide thoughts on the relationship between parking, space, ideology, and the broader urban process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Legislative Research Reports.
- Author
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Ahuja, Sunil
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL science research , *LEGISLATIVE bodies , *ANNUAL meetings - Abstract
This article discusses, in brief, about some of the papers presented at the 2001 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, held in San Francisco, California. All these papers have a common theme to bring legislative affairs into the limelight. The paper "A Tools of the Trade' Look at the Comparing Congress with State Legislatures" offers a primer on comparing and contrasting U.S. Congress with the American state legislatures. The paper "Senate Apprenticeship in Historical Perspective" addresses the conventional wisdom among U.S. senators.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Post-Industrial 'Shop Floor': Emerging Forms of Gentrification in San Francisco's Innovation Economy.
- Author
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Stehlin, John
- Subjects
- *
GENTRIFICATION , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *PUBLIC spaces , *EMPLOYMENT , *URBAN planning - Abstract
The San Francisco Bay Area in California is undergoing a technology-driven wave of growth arguably more thoroughgoing than the first 'dot-com' bubble, fueling hypertrophic gentrification and tales of a deeply class-divided, 'Blade Runner kind of society'. While Silicon Valley is still the industry's employment center, San Francisco is seeing faster tech firm growth, and is transforming its downtown to become more 'livable' and promoting public space as key to innovation. In this context, this paper offers a reading of urban public space not just as a consumption amenity but also as the 'shop floor' of a labor process that goes beyond the walls of the firm to mobilize the social itself in the production of privately appropriated value. With innovation now the watchword of gentrification, the stakes of this shift oscillate between the total commodification of urban vitality and the recognition of the social process of value production itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Comiendo Bien: The Production of Latinidad through the Performance of Healthy Eating among Latino Immigrant Families in San Francisco.
- Author
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Martínez, Airín D.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *IMMIGRANT families , *HISPANIC Americans , *HEALTH behavior - Abstract
Utilizing a bricolage of interactionist cultural studies, ethnic foodways, and situational analysis this paper examines how Latino immigrants, representing six countries and multiple preimmigration class positions, come to perform Latinidad through the lay health practice of comiendo bien (eating well). Comiendo bien was examined through participant observation of 15 families living in San Francisco and 27 key informant interviews. Comiendo bien is a performance that exists through the convergence of multiple identity positions. Latina/o immigrants not only enact the Latinidad in the United States through artistic expression or political strategizing, but also by sharing an idealized practice of healthy eating. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. “Compassionate” Strategies of Managing Homelessness: Post-Revanchist Geographies in San Francisco.
- Author
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Murphy, Stacey
- Subjects
- *
HOMELESS shelters , *HOMELESSNESS , *PUBLIC housing , *SOCIAL problems , *POVERTY , *INVESTORS , *NEOLIBERALISM - Abstract
After almost 30 years of Federal retraction from anti-poverty initiatives, many American cities have been left with the dual burden of intensified poverty and far fewer resources to combat the problem. At the same time, such devolution has afforded cities the authority to forge poverty policy at the local level, such that the familiar neoliberal imperatives of state retraction and the mobilization of territory for capitalist expansion are frequently tempered by more progressive political imperatives at the local scale. What has thus emerged is a deeply ambivalent policy landscape, of which “kinder and gentler” poverty management strategies are a central feature. Using the example of a recent homeless program in San Francisco, “Care Not Cash”, this paper argues that such poverty management strategies, while less punitive than their revanchist predecessors, nonetheless introduce a new set of exclusions to the service delivery system, many of which are obscured by the language of compassion. In order to illustrate those new exclusions, I describe the city's homeless geographies—the public spaces, shelters, service sites, and housing models—that have been produced and reconfigured according to a logic of managing homelessness through the provision of care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. ACCP Annual Meeting.
- Subjects
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ANNUAL meetings , *PHARMACOLOGY , *PHARMACEUTICAL industry , *SURGICAL stents - Abstract
Presents a list of research papers that will be presented during the annual meeting of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy from October 23-26, 2005 in San Francisco, California. "Adverse Drug Reactions in Medicare Patients: Clinical and Economic Outcomes of Pharmacist Provided ADR Management Programs"; "Case Series: Bosentan and Warfarin Interaction"; "Effects of Clopidogrel Versus Cilostazol in Coronary Artery Stenting."
- Published
- 2005
21. Earthquake Drills and Simulations in Community-based Training and Preparedness Programmes.
- Author
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Simpson, David M.
- Subjects
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EMERGENCY management , *EARTHQUAKES - Abstract
The San Francisco, California, bay area is subject to continuous seismic risk. One particular response has been the development of community-based training programmes designed to teach residents basic emergency response skills. Citizens are taught emergency medical techniques, search and rescue, fire suppression and other fundamental response skills. Current estimates in the Bay Area place the number of programmes at more than 100. Many programmes now include an annual community drill to reinforce the training and to evaluate the programme. The study described here is based on an evaluation of an effort initiated by BayNET (Bay Area Neighborhood Emergency Training), a voluntary association of communities with community-based disaster preparedness programmes. In April 1996, BayNET asked all of its members to hold a community earthquake drill. After the drill, a mail survey was conducted of all programme managers. The survey examined the structure and administration of the programmes, training efforts and other related components. This paper describes the typology of drill formats that communities used, the role of the simulation in the city's preparedness efforts, the qualitative costs and benefits, as well as an assessment of the drill based on survey respondents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Earthquake Culture and Corporate Action.
- Author
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Mileti, Dennis S., Cress, Daniel M., and Darlington, Joanne Derouen
- Subjects
- *
CORPORATE culture , *EARTHQUAKES , *VALUES (Ethics) , *DISASTERS - Abstract
In this paper we examine the effects of different components of corporate culture on two different categories of action in both routine and jolted environments. Data were collected on a heterogeneous sample of 54 corporations in the San Francisco Bay Area. We examined how the values, knowledge, and practices dimensions of corporate culture influenced actions to prepare for responding to future earthquake disasters and actions to mitigate or reduce future physical and associated earthquake losses. The findings show that corporate earthquake culture is a multidimensional concept, that varied elements of culture function to impact corporate action differently is distinct organizational environments, and that culture's impact on organizational action is contingent on the type of action being considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Alcohol Consumption and Casualties: a comparison of two emergency room populations.
- Author
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Stephens Cherpitel, Cheryl J.
- Subjects
- *
HOSPITAL emergency services , *ALCOHOL drinking - Abstract
This paper compares alcohol consumption and casualties in probability samples of two diverse emergency room populations: San Francisco General Hospital (SFGH) (n = 2516) and four hospitals representative of a nearby California county (n = 3609). Both studies used similar methods and data collection instruments. Patients were breathalysed and interviewed regarding self-reported alcohol consumption 6 hours prior to the injury or illness event, usual drinking patterns and alcohol-related problems. Injuries were found to be positively associated with breathalyser readings, self-reported consumption prior to the event and more frequent heavy drinking in both samples. In the county sample injuries were also positively associated with more frequent drunkenness, symptoms of alcohol dependence and loss of control and prior alcohol-related accidents. The SFGH sample had higher rates than the county sample on all alcohol variables and both samples reported higher rates of alcohol-related problems than that found in U.S. general population surveys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. 2006 NCME Annual Meeting Highlights.
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *AWARDS , *EDUCATION - Abstract
The article presents information related to the National Council on Measurement in Education annual meeting which was held in San Francisco, California in 2006. The meeting included sixty five paper sessions, two board sessions and a cocktail party and reception. Some of the photographs which highlights the awards which presented in the meeting is also presented.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Endnotes.
- Author
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Wiener, Jan
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOTHERAPY , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *REINCARNATION , *HUMAN abnormalities - Abstract
In this article, the author presents his views on several papers discussed in the JAP Conference which was held in San Francisco, California. He discusses the papers including "Psychotherapy in the aesthetic attitude" by John Beebe and "Staying alive through living art: birth and rebirth" by JoAnn Culbert-Koehn and a research on "Union and separation in the therapy of developmental disorders" by Toshio Kawai. He also shares how he prepared endnotes of the conference.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Diary.
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL conferences , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
A calendar of events related to various congresses and conventions is presented which include one titled "RSM Clinicopathology Papers Prize Meeting and Stater of the Art Lecture" by the Royal Society of Medicine on March 18, 2010 in London, England, one titled "25th Annual EAU Congress" on April 16-20, 2010 in Barcelona, Spain, and one titled "1st World Congress of Pediatric Urology" on May 28-30, 2010 in San Francisco, California.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Research in Medical Education (RIME) Conference Report.
- Author
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Karen V, Mann
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL research , *CONFERENCES & conventions ,STUDY & teaching of medicine - Abstract
Focuses on the 41st Annual Research in Medical Education RIME) Conference held in San Francisco, California from November 10-13, 2002. Agenda of the conference; Participants of the conference; Research papers presented during the conference.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Annual Meeting American Psychosomatic Society.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *ANNUAL meetings , *ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. , *PSYCHOSOMATIC medicine - Abstract
This article presents details of the annual meeting of the American Psychosomatic Society that is to be held at the Ramada Renaissance Hotel in San Francisco, California, from March 9-11, 1989. The deadline for submission or abstracts for paper and poster sessions is November 15, 1988.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Twenty-Eighth Annual Meeting Society for Psychophysiological Research.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *ANNUAL meetings , *LECTURERS - Abstract
This article reports on the Twenty-Eight Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research that will take place in San Francisco, California from October 19 to 23, 1988. Abstracts of papers that will be presented at the meeting, and the program of invited speakers, symposia, and social events are published in the July 1988 issue of journal Psychophysiology.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Twenty-Eighth Annual Meeting Society for Psychophysiological Research.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *MEETINGS , *SOCIETIES , *EXECUTIVES - Abstract
This article presents information on the Twenty-Eighth Annual Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research that will be held from October 19 through 23, 1988. It will be held at the Hyatt on Union Square in San Francisco, California. Information about membership in the Society for Psychophysiological Research and application forms may be obtained from either of the society's membership chairman, Alan W. Langer. Information regarding submission of papers may be obtained from the 1988 program chairman, Lois E. Putnam.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. SEVENTH ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC MEETING PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY SOCIETY (LONDON).
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *EDUCATION , *PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *SOCIETIES , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *HOTELS ,INSTITUTE of Psychiatry (London, England) - Abstract
The article presents information related to educational opportunities and meetings to be held in the year 1979. It announces that the seventh annual scientific meeting of Psychophysiology Society will be held at Institute of Psychiatry in London, England, from December 13-15, 1979. One can obtain more information regarding the submission of papers, abstracts and registration from the institute. The article also announces that a symposium on stress will be held at Sheraton-Palace Hotel in San Francisco, California from November 3-4, 1979.
- Published
- 1979
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Announcements.
- Subjects
- *
CONFERENCES & conventions , *DERMATOLOGY , *SKIN diseases , *SKIN inflammation , *MEDICINE - Abstract
The article presents information about several events related to dermatology scheduled to take place as of 1990-1991. The 8th Postgraduate Course in Medical Mycology is to be held at San Francisco as of October 12, 1990 to October 14, 1990. The American Contact Dermatitis Society will meet on Friday, November 30, 1990 in Atlanta, immediately preceding the American Academy of Dermatology. Individuals interested in presenting papers relevant to contact dermatitis and occupational dermatology are invited to participate. The 4th International Symposium of Atopic Dermatitis is to be held in Norway as of May 1991.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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