39 results
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2. Preface: Listen to the voices of local beech forests: An ecological and evolutionary conception of beech under phylogenetic and environmental constraints.
- Author
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Kitamura, Keiko, Hara, Masatoshi, and Tamaki, Ichiro
- Subjects
TEMPERATE forests ,LISTENING - Abstract
Beech has long been the subject of ecological research in many fields. Recent studies using new methods are now being conducted. This special feature focuses on local beech forests and offers a collection of articles to readers of Ecological Research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Exploring subjective experiences of international social workers in Asia: Content analysis of Japanese field reports.
- Author
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Higashida, Masateru
- Subjects
FOREIGN workers ,SOCIAL workers ,CONTENT analysis ,JAPANESE people ,SOCIAL services ,RELIGIOUS differences - Abstract
The aim of this study is to explore the subjective and practical experiences of international social workers, focusing on the content, outcomes, impact, and related factors of their activities in Asia. Individual reports of social workers dispatched from Japan to 11 Asian countries during the period of 2003–2018 were collected (n = 59). A mixed quantitative and qualitative content analysis was used to examine their experiences and perceptions in the field. Parts of their reports were categorized mainly into the relationship between requested activities and perceived needs, the type of social work activities conducted, experiences of success and failure in activities, and perceived outcomes and impact of the activities. The quantitative analysis showed that approximately 48.9% of the social workers described positive outcomes of their activities and 43.9% described positive impacts of their activities on the placement or communities. The qualitative analysis revealed that they experienced a variety of difficulties, together with sociocultural and religious differences. Many of their experiences of success or failure appeared to be associated with their interactions with local stakeholders. The findings suggest the importance of the reflective and contextualized practice of international developmental social workers with local stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The Pitfall Facing the Cool Japan Project: The Transnational Development of the Anime Industry under the Condition of Post-Fordism.
- Author
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MŌRI, YOSHITAKA
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL division of labor ,POPULAR culture ,ANIME films ,TRANSNATIONALISM - Abstract
This paper examines the way in which the anime industry has developed since the mid-1960s, by looking at transnational production systems and the international division of labor. First, it tries to demonstrate that anime, though seen both as a cultural product originating from Japan and as an export within the recent Cool Japan project promoted by the Japanese government, has, from the beginning of its history, been a very hybridized product due to the transnational production system, in particular among Japan, Korea and China. Second, the paper also shows how this transnational production system has led to the lasting poor labor conditions suffered by Japanese animators, one of the prototypes for freeters in the 1990s. Third, by examining the anime promotion policy led by the Chinese government, I would like to discuss the possible future of anime production systems in the age of digital production in Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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5. The development of marriage and family therapy in East Asia (China, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong): past, present and future.
- Author
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Tseng, Chi‐Fang, Wittenborn, Andrea K., Blow, Adrian J., Chao, Wentao, and Liu, Ting
- Subjects
CULTURE ,COUPLES therapy ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,MARRIAGE & family therapy - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Family Therapy is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
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6. PATTERNS OF CONTROL WITHIN JAPANESE MANUFACTURING PLANTS IN CHINA: DOUBTS ABOUT JAPANIZATION IN ASIA.
- Author
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TAYLOR, BILL
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL management ,PERSONNEL management ,JAPANESE investments ,MANAGEMENT science ,EXPERIENCE ,INVESTMENT analysis ,EXECUTIVES ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises - Abstract
There remains a paucity of research on Japanese investment in Asia, especially on Japanese management practices in China. The paper draws predominantly on interviews with Chinese managers in 31 Japanese wholly owned and joint-venture manufacturing plants. In order to account for any differences in the perception of operations between Japanese and Chinese managers, interviews were conducted with Japanese managers in three case-study plants. The purpose was to examine the structure and pattern of managerial control in different locations and industries, and with different patterns of share ownership, size and age of investments. The paper argues that the patterns of control in Japanese manufacturing investment in China are not unique, and as a consequence call into question much of the current conventional wisdom concerning the internationalization of Japanese management practices. Instead of Japanese seeking to maintain strong control over overseas plants and attain high degrees of 'Japanization' (a term used to indicate the dynamics of the transfer process), a complex and varied array of patterns of control are identified. On the one hand, production appears highly Japanized, but personnel management is not. On the other hand, Japanese multinationals make investment decisions that necessitate ceding a high degree of control to local managers. Moreover, it is shown that such 'localization' of control is willingly ceded, if not actively sought, by Japanese multinationals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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7. The East Asian Economic Crisis: A Japanese Perspective.
- Author
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Ueda, Kazuo
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FINANCIAL crises ,FOREIGN exchange rates ,BUSINESS cycles ,BANKING industry & economics ,JAPANESE yen ,VALUATION ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper argues that, apart from exchange-rate aspects, the East Asian economic crisis has looked very similar to a domestic banking crisis arising from boom and bust cycles in bank lending and capital investment. One of the key determinants of the boom-bust cycle in East Asia was the sharp appreciation of the yen against the dollar between the mid-1980s and the mid-1990s, and its subsequent depreciation. Real investment and speculative financial capital within and into East Asia responded too much to the yen movements. The paper also discusses factors behind large medium-term movements in the yen-dollar rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Intra-industry Trade, Reconsidered: The Role of Technology Transfer and Foreign Direct Investment.
- Author
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Okubo, Toshihiro
- Subjects
INTRA-industry trade ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,LICENSE agreements ,TECHNOLOGY transfer ,GROSS domestic product - Abstract
This paper investigates novel determinants of intra-industry trade (IIT) of late 1990s Japanese trade. Our empirical analysis shows that IIT is increased not only by the similarity of GDP and factor endowment but also by technology transfer via Japanese FDI. In particular, the current high proportion of Japanese IIT with Asian countries can be explained by technology transfer (licensing between headquarters and overseas affiliates) via FDI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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9. The Impact of Japanese Economic Cooperation on Asian Economic Development.
- Author
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Kawasaki, Kenichi
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,CAPITAL ,LOANS ,MARKETS ,IMPORTS ,ECONOMIC conditions in Asia - Abstract
The main objective of this paper is to overview the developments of Japan's ODA and assess, in a quantitative manner, their economic impacts on Asian countries. The benefits of two alternative measures—one from capital formation by Japan's ODA loans and the other from import liberalization in the Japanese market—are compared. Those economy-wide impacts of aid and trade on six Asian countries—China, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam—are estimated by a CGE model of global trade, incorporating a certain mechanism of dynamic capital formation. Japan's ODA loans are effective for economic growth in the countries. Real GDP gains range from 0.1 to 1.6% annually. Trade liberalization is efficient to improve economic welfare. Utility gains range from 0.2 to 1.9%, which exceed those on account of Japan's ODA. Variations in those economic impacts are much more significantly observed when examined by sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Improvements in the Land and Crop Modeling Over Flooded Rice Fields by Incorporating the Shallow Paddy Water.
- Author
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Xu, Xiaoyu, Maruyama, Atsushi, and Kusaka, Hiroyuki
- Subjects
WATER depth ,CROP improvement ,PADDY fields ,ENERGY budget (Geophysics) ,LAND-atmosphere interactions ,ATMOSPHERIC sciences - Abstract
Flooded rice paddies are important for modifying land surface energy and water budgets, especially in Asian countries. This study incorporated shallow paddy water into the Noah with Multi‐Parameterization (Noah‐MP) model to enhance its performance in capturing the distinct features of small Bowen ratios over flooded rice fields. The paddy surface water was parameterized as one integrated layer along with the top soil layer, and meteorological measurements from two crop sites in Japan, that is, SAITO (early rice) and SAGA (late rice), were employed for model evaluation at the field scale. The simulation results show that the model performance was significantly improved by combining the incorporation of paddy water and the calibration of rice crop parameters, particularly at SAGA. Compared with the reference run using the original version of Noah‐MP for SAGA, the underestimation in latent heat and the overestimation in sensible heat during daytime were decreased by ∼74 W m−2 (∼67%) and ∼92 W m−2 (∼55%), respectively. Approximately 60%–70% of this improvement was contributed by using calibrated rice crop parameters, while the rest of 30%–40% was from further incorporating paddy water. The decreased ground surface resistance owing to the presence of paddy water was crucial for capturing the features of small Bowen ratios. The observed water depth might help mitigate the underestimation of latent heat nonlinearly. This work may benefit the study of land‐atmosphere interactions and local and regional weather and climate in Asia with the widely used coupled Weather Research and Forecasting/Noah‐MP model. Plain Language Summary: As a staple food for approximately half the global population, rice is typically grown in flooded paddy fields, the distinct feature of which is a small ratio of sensible heat to latent heat. The presence of paddy water significantly modifies land surface energy and water budgets; however, such a shallow water layer in paddy fields has not been considered in many land surface models such as Noah‐MP. Noah‐MP is a well‐known land surface scheme coupled into the Weather Research and Forecasting model with the largest number of users in the atmospheric science field. To improve the model performance over flooded rice fields, this study incorporated paddy surface water into Noah‐MP and investigated the roles of some key parameters such as ground surface resistance and water depth. The model evaluation shows that the combination of using calibrated crop parameters for rice and correctly implementing the paddy water module helped mitigate the overestimation in sensible heat and the underestimation in latent heat. This work will be beneficial for the study of land‐atmosphere interactions and local and regional weather and climate, especially in Asia. Key Points: The shallow paddy water was incorporated into Noah‐MP to capture the distinct features of small Bowen ratios over flooded rice fieldsIn addition to calibrated crop parameters, decreased ground surface resistance owing to paddy water is essential for improving the modelEmploying a realistic paddy water depth helps mitigate the underestimation of latent heat, and this influence is possibly nonlinear [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. THE TRADE POLICY AGENDA.
- Author
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Robins, Fred
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL policy ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,INTERNATIONAL competition ,EXPORTS ,GLOBALIZATION ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to explore the manner in which Australian policy in matters of international trade is set. The author finds a number of puzzling features. First is the lack of detailed scrutiny given to the policy mechanisms employed by the countries of North-East Asia which have recently been so outstandingly successful in furthering their international trade and economic interests. There can be no valid reason for failing to give close attention to the means whereby others have succeeded. Second is the apparent separation in Australia, unlike Japan, between international trade policy and other, broader economic objectives such as the identification and support of new high value industries with global export potential. If we lack national objectives of this latter kind it is legitimate to ask whether this lack is for the best. Third is the extent to which policy appears to assume, without more ado, that through the liberation of market forces we shall largely resolve our international competitive and trade problems. This is a truly heroic assumption which should be clearly recognised for what it is. Fourth and perhaps most puzzling of all is the extraordinarily low level of community debate, even of interest group debate, over precisely where our 1990s international trade and economic development interests lie. If the current GATT round should largely fail, which is quite likely, clear thinking about where our best interests lie will suddenly become urgent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
- Full Text
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12. "Double Door" Opening of the Japan Sea Inferred by Pn Attenuation Tomography.
- Author
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Yang, Geng, Zhao, Lian‐Feng, Xie, Xiao‐Bi, He, Xi, Lü, Yan, and Yao, Zhen‐Xing
- Subjects
OCEANIC crust ,TOMOGRAPHY ,BACK-arc basins ,LITHOSPHERE ,ISLAND arcs - Abstract
The extension of back‐arc basins and formation of marginal seas following the subduction of oceanic lithosphere are usually attributed to the rollback of subducting slabs and distorted mantle convection. However, for the Japan Sea, the largest marginal sea in the northwestern Pacific, its opening is unlikely only resulted from the subduction of the Pacific plate because of the coeval Philippine plate subduction and the arcuate arc volcanic zone. Therefore, the present‐day thermal structure in the uppermost mantle, which can be directly constrained by strong Pn‐wave attenuation, plays a vital role in understanding the Japan Sea opening. Here, we observe two belts of strong Pn attenuation beneath the Japan Sea; their strikes are generally consistent with local Pn anisotropy and the retreat directions of the Pacific and Philippine trenches. Hence, there seem to be two divergent mantle flows in the uppermost mantle, pushing a "double door" for the Japan Sea opening. Plain Language Summary: The western Pacific is one of the most active regions of global tectonics. For the Japan Sea, the largest marginal sea in the northwest Pacific, its formation mechanism is still controversial. The Japan Sea may have experienced a complex evolution process driven by the superposition of multiple mechanisms, and finally produced a diamond‐shaped ocean. The present thermal structure in the uppermost mantle, which can be directly constrained by strong Pn‐wave attenuation, plays a vital role in understanding the Japan Sea opening. In this study, we construct a high‐resolution broadband Pn attenuation model for the uppermost mantle beneath the Japan Sea. Two strong Pn attenuation belts are observed in this region, with their strikes generally consistent with the local Pn velocity anisotropy and the opening directions of the Japan Sea. Therefore, two divergent mantle flows likely exist in the uppermost mantle, pushing the opening of the Japan Sea like a "double door." These mantle flows could be part of mantle convection in a big mantle wedge, where ascending hot materials from the deep mantle not only feed volcanoes in northeastern Asia but also thicken the back‐arc oceanic crust. Key Points: A high‐resolution broadband Pn attenuation model is obtained beneath the Japan SeaHot mantle materials ascend to feed the volcanoes in NE Asia, intruding into and thickening the oceanic crust in the Japan SeaDivergent mantle flows likely push the fan‐shaped rotational opening of the Japan Sea [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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13. An integrated youth mental health service in a densely populated metropolitan area in Japan: Clinical case management bridges the gap between mental health and illness services.
- Author
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Uchino, Takashi, Kotsuji, Yumi, Kitano, Tomoji, Shiozawa, Takuma, Iida, Satomi, Aoki, Akiko, Iwai, Momoko, Shirahata, Masanori, Seki, Akihiko, Mizuno, Masafumi, Tanaka, Kuniaki, and Nemoto, Takahiro
- Subjects
MENTAL health services ,METROPOLITAN areas ,YOUNG adults ,HEALTH facilities ,YOUTH health ,SOCIAL support ,COMMUNITY mental health services - Abstract
Aims: A global movement, including in Asia, is seeking to establish integrated youth mental health services that provide early intervention in the continuum from mental health to mental illness. Clinical case management (CCM), in which a case manager becomes not only a coordinator of services but also a provider of psychosocial support, can establish a 'one‐stop network' that supports youth in densely populated areas with various social resources. In 2019, we opened a community‐based centre called 'SODA' in front of a metropolitan railway station, which was designed to be highly accessible, stigma‐free and youth‐friendly to provide CCM. We aimed to clarify its services and effectiveness of CCM. Methods: Data from 105 youths were investigated in a case‐controlled study, dividing them into two groups: those who had received CCM for 6 months, and those whose needs were met in fewer sessions. Results: Twenty‐one subjects who received CCM for 6 months had difficulties in more domains than the others. The mean of the total service minutes for the subjects who received CCM for 6 months was 491.3 min: psychological support (accounted for 24.8% of the time), support for community living (31.2%), work support (13.8%), family support (10.5%) and support for cooperation with other organizations (19.8%). Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) score improved significantly, from 46.6 at baseline to 59.3 at 6 months. Conclusion: Even in metropolitan areas with numerous medical facilities, young people can face high barriers to access. CCM can be effective as an early intervention for subjects developing mental illness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Message from the Editor-in-Chief.
- Author
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Okai, Takashi
- Subjects
SCHOLARLY periodicals ,OBSTETRICS ,GYNECOLOGY ,PERIODICAL editors ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. - Abstract
The article comments on developments in the periodical "Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research." The author was honored to be appointed as editor in chief of the periodical succeeding professor Yuji Murata. The periodical is the official periodical of the Asia and Oceania Federation of Obstetrics and Gynecology and the Japan Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology. All members of the Editorial Board are committed to work hard to produce a distinctively Asian and world-class scholarly magazine.
- Published
- 2006
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15. Preface.
- Author
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Yamauchi, Toshio, Tan, Chong Tin, and Yagi, Kazuichi
- Subjects
EPILEPSY ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,BRAIN diseases ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
The article presents information on the 4th Asian Oceania Epilepsy Organization (AOEO). AOEO was founded at the 25th Annual Congress of the Japan Epilepsy Society (JES) with Dr.M. Seino as the President. The 4th AOEC was held in collaboration with the 36th Annual Congress of the JES from September 11 to 14, 2002 in Karuizawa, Japan. It was an important milestone in the history of development of epileptology and epilepsy care in Asia in terms of the richness of its scientific program and the large number of participants. The scientific program consisted of one special lecture, four symposia, two workshops, eight didactic lectures, the ILAE/IBE/WHO Global Campaign Meeting and 332 free papers.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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16. Long-term Forecast of the Demographic Transition in Japan and Asia.
- Author
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KOMINE, Takao and KABE, Shigesaburo
- Subjects
DEMOGRAPHIC transition ,AGE-structured populations ,LABOR supply ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The demographic structure of Asia is expected to change rapidly from around 2020 up to around 2050. Following Japan, which is already at an advanced stage of aging and birthrate decline, China, South Korea, Thailand, and Singapore will also witness a further decline in their birthrates and an aging of their populations. Next in line will be the remaining countries of the Association of South-East Asian Nations as well as India. Such changes, accompanied by a decline in the labor force, will not only adversely affect economic growth, but also have a major impact on voting structures, savings rates, and social security systems. Moreover, the process of demographic aging in Asia will be faster than in Japan, and its extent will be substantial, both of which exacerbates the negative effects. On positive side, these trends will give rise to the emergence of new markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. First Concurrent Observations of NO2 and CO2 From Power Plant Plumes by Airborne Remote Sensing.
- Author
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Fujinawa, Tamaki, Kuze, Akihiko, Suto, Hiroshi, Shiomi, Kei, Kanaya, Yugo, Kawashima, Takahiro, Kataoka, Fumie, Mori, Shigetaka, Eskes, Henk, and Tanimoto, Hiroshi
- Subjects
COAL-fired power plants ,REMOTE sensing ,POWER plants ,AIRBORNE-based remote sensing ,EMISSION inventories ,CARBON dioxide ,FOSSIL fuels - Abstract
Combined NO2 and CO2 observations have the potential to constrain the identification of the locations and strength of urban CO2 emissions, in particular, point sources such as power plants. We report the first results of airborne spectroscopic NO2 and CO2 observations over an urban area in Japan in February 2018. Inversed emission rates of two stacks of the coal‐fired power plant for CO2 showed relatively good agreement with those estimated by a bottom‐up inventory—the Regional Emission inventory in ASia (REAS) v3.1—within −7% to 40% because the plume shapes were well identified due to constraint by NO2 measurements. The estimated NOx emission rates showed discrepancies more than 80% with those estimated by the REAS v3.1, mainly due to the uncertainties in activity data and emission factors, or in the greatly varying NO/NO2 ratios in fresh plumes, which warrant further investigations when estimating NOx emissions from satellite NO2 observations on km‐scales. Plain Language Summary: Burning of fossil fuels at high temperatures constitutes a major anthropogenic source of nitrogen oxides (NOx) and carbon dioxide (CO2). While CO2 stays in the atmosphere for hundreds of years, thereby being a well‐mixed gas, NO2 has a much shorter lifetime of only a few hours. This substantial difference in lifetime between NO2 and CO2 means that concurrent NO2 and CO2 observations obtained by the same platform can be used to identify the locations and strength of CO2 emissions from point sources such as power plants. In February 2018, for the first time, we obtained concurrent airborne spectroscopic NO2 and CO2 observations over an urban area, to demonstrate the traceability of NO2 to CO2. The plumes of co‐emitted NO2 and CO2 were derived from measured spectra. The plumes of NO2 and CO2 co‐emitted from the stacks of power plants were well identified owing to constraint by NO2. Uncertainties of inversed emission rates were statistically derived. For CO2, the results were within 40% in agreement with a bottom‐up emission inventory known as REAS v3.1. For NOx, however, a disagreement of 80% was identified, likely due to the uncertainties of the inventory data or in the NOx partitioning in fresh plumes. Key Points: Concurrent observations of NO2 and CO2 in fresh plumes from a large single point source using airborne spectrometers were reportedColumnar enhancements of NO2 and CO2 due to power plant emissions were up to 3.8 × 1016 molec.cm−2 and 75 ppm, respectivelyPlume shapes of CO2 emitted from power plants were well identified and constrained by NO2 plume shapes [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Quantitative effects of cultural practices on growth and yield of forage rice having short panicles.
- Author
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Tanno, Kazuyuki
- Subjects
FORAGE ,RICE ,HYPOKALEMIA ,NITROGEN fertilizers ,SOIL testing ,FORAGE plants ,POTASSIUM fertilizers - Abstract
Cultivation of forage rice for whole‐crop silage has been increasing in Japan and will be important in Asia. In this study, effects of cultural practices on growth and yield of a forage rice cultivar "Tsukisuzuka" having short panicle 1 allele were analysed quantitatively using linear mixed model. The contribution of basal dressing to dry yield per 1 g/m2 nitrogen fertilizer was larger than that of topdressing. In addition, topdressing 30 and 20 days before heading was considered to have the disadvantage of increasing risk of lodging and panicle weight respectively. Effects of weather elements on growth of forage rice were also speculated. In tested fields, high solar radiation at seedling and tillering stage was considered important for the high yield. As the number of continuous cropping cycles increased, growth of forage rice got worse. And application of compost improved growth of forage rice. Elemental analysis of soil and plants revealed that this continuous cropping obstacle was likely to attributed to deficiency of potassium. In addition, potassium deficiency increased panicle weight of a forage rice cultivar having short panicle 1 allele. Therefore, control of potassium nutrition will be useful for both sustaining productivity (sufficient application of potassium) and seed production (restriction of potassium). These findings will be useful for improvement of cultivation method of forage rice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. School health promotion in South‐East Asia by Japan and partners.
- Author
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Estrada, Crystal Amiel M., Gregorio, Ernesto R., Kanyasan, Kethsana, Hun, Jeudyla, Tomokawa, Sachi, Dumlao, Maria Corazon, and Kobayashi, Jun
- Subjects
DIET ,HEALTH promotion ,HELMINTHIASIS ,INTERNATIONAL agencies ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,SANITATION ,SCHOOL health services ,HUMAN services programs - Abstract
School health promotion in South‐East Asia has developed rapidly in recent years, and Japan has been one of the significant contributors to the reinforcement of school health promotion in the region. Starting from the Hashimoto Initiative on global parasite control, Japan advocated for international partnerships with several agencies for the development of school health programs in South‐East Asia. Through a strengthened collaboration with international organizations, countries such as the Lao PDR, Cambodia, the Philippines, and Thailand have created and implemented school health programs on nutrition, sanitation, and deworming, among others. In addition to school health program formulation and implementation, the expanded network in South‐East Asia led to more capable school health personnel, with many workers in the education and health sectors benefitting from the training programs jointly held by collaborating organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Message from the Immediate Past Editor-in-Chief: The role and place of Digestive Endoscopy.
- Author
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Yamakawa, Tatsuo
- Subjects
PERIODICALS ,ENDOSCOPY ,MEDICAL journalism ,MEDICAL societies - Abstract
The article reflects on the progress of the journal "Digestive Endoscopy," which is the official journal of Japan Gastroenterlogical Endoscopy Society and Asian Pacific Society for Digestive Endoscopy. The journal's first edition was released in 1989. Since then, it has become the medium in showing the high standard of gastrointestinal endoscopy in Asian-Pacific countries.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Bonding and bridging social capital and their associations with self‐evaluated community resilience: A comparative study of East Asia.
- Author
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Lee, Juheon
- Subjects
COMMUNITIES ,COMPARATIVE studies ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,NATURAL disasters ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience ,SELF-evaluation ,SOCIAL networks ,TRUST ,SOCIAL capital ,COMMUNITY support ,MEMBERSHIP - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to test key social capital indicators in a disaster context by considering the bonding and bridging types of social capital. Using the East Asian Social Survey, this study chooses three behavioural/cognitive elements of social capital—social trust, voluntary association membership, and personal networks—and divides them into bonding and bridging social capital, in‐group and out‐group trust, homogeneous and heterogeneous membership, and strong and weak ties to test their effects on self‐evaluated community resilience to natural hazards. The results showed that social trust and personal networks had strong positive effects, but the effect of voluntary association membership was positive in societies with high rates of membership (Japan and South Korea) and negative in a society with a low rate of membership (Taiwan). Furthermore, while bonding social capital generally showed a stronger effect than bridging social capital in East Asia, a society with more frequent and intense disasters (Japan) showed a strong effect of heterogenous membership on self‐evaluated community resilience. This study connects two aspects of social capital studies—the elements and the types of social capital—and the findings imply that the relationship between social capital and community resilience may have some mediator variables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Socially responsible investment returns and news: Evidence from Asia.
- Author
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Yen, Meng‐Feng, Shiu, Yung‐Ming, and Wang, Chi‐Feng
- Subjects
ETHICAL investments ,SOCIAL responsibility of business ,RATE of return ,STOCK exchanges ,EMERGING markets - Abstract
We set out in this study to examine (a) whether "socially responsible investment" (SRI) portfolios can outperform less‐SRI portfolios in the emerging Asian stock markets and (b) whether investors within these emerging markets achieve awareness of SRI through publicly available news. On the basis of 2009–2013 data, we find that SRI portfolios tend to perform better in Japan. However, firms in the emerging Asian markets do not earn rewards for superior corporate social responsibility (CSR) practices. We also find that investors in the emerging Asian markets are indeed aware of SRI through public CSR news releases; in particular, investors in these markets reward high environmental‐, social‐, and governance‐rated firms for their good CSR practices advertised through such news releases, relative to those with no news releases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Host range and molecular analysis of Beet leaf yellowing virus, Beet western yellows virus‐JP and Brassica yellows virus in Japan.
- Author
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Yoshida, N. and Tamada, T.
- Subjects
BEETS ,PHYTOPLASMAS ,BARLEY yellow dwarf viruses ,FOLIAR diagnosis ,GREEN peach aphid ,BRASSICA - Abstract
Beet western yellows virus (BWYV; genus Polerovirus, family Luteoviridae) is one of the most important viruses causing yellowing disease of many field and vegetable crops. This study isolated different poleroviruses from sugar beet, spinach, radish and brassica in Japan, and identified them as BWYV‐JP, Beet leaf yellowing virus (BLYV), Brassica yellows virus (BrYV) and BrYV‐R (radish strain) based on host range and molecular analysis. Among over 100 plant species from 19 families inoculated with the vector Myzus persicae, about half of the species in 13 families were infected with some of these viruses. BLYV shared a similar host range to Beet mild yellowing virus (BMYV). These had a much more limited host range than BWYV‐JP, which resembled BWYV‐USA. The host range of BrYV was similar to that of Turnip yellows virus (TuYV). Phylogenetic analyses at the 5′ portion (replication‐related gene) of the genome showed that BLYV, BMYV, BWYV (‐JP and ‐USA) and Cucurbit aphid‐borne yellows virus (CABYV) formed one large group, whereas BrYV and TuYV were grouped together. BLYV and BWYV were most closely related to each other, and were more closely related to CABYV than to BMYV. However, at the 3′ end (coat protein gene), BLYV and BWYV‐JP formed a distinct group, separated from the BrYV group, which in turn was more closely related to BWYV‐USA, BMYV, TuYV and Beet chlorosis virus, a group originating from outside Asia. Thus, this study presents host range differences and phylogeographical relationships of BWYV‐like poleroviruses that are distributed worldwide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. East Asian Monsoon History and Paleoceanography of the Japan Sea Over the Last 460,000 Years.
- Author
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Gallagher, Stephen J., Sagawa, Takuya, Henderson, Andrew C. G., Saavedra‐Pellitero, Mariem, De Vleeschouwer, David, Black, Heather, Itaki, Takuya, Toucanne, Sam, Bassetti, Maria‐Angela, Clemens, Steve, Anderson, William, Alvarez‐Zarikian, Carlos, and Tada, Ryuji
- Subjects
ASIAN history ,TSUSHIMA Current ,JAPANESE history ,TERRITORIAL waters ,ICE sheets ,INTERGLACIALS ,PALEOCEANOGRAPHY ,MONSOONS - Abstract
The Japan Sea is directly influenced by the Asian monsoon, a system that transports moisture and heat across southeast Asia during the boreal summer, and is a major driver of the Earth's ocean‐atmospheric circulation. Foraminiferal and facies analyses of a 460‐kyr record from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Expedition 346 Site U1427 in the Japan Sea reveal a record of nutrient flux and oxygenation that varied due to sea level and East Asian monsoon intensity. The East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) was most intense during marine isotope stage (MIS) 5e, MIS 7e, MIS 9e, and MIS 11c when the Tsushima Warm Current flowed into an unrestricted well‐mixed normal salinity Japan Sea, whereas East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM) conditions dominated MIS 2, MIS 4, MIS 6, and MIS 8 when sea level minima restricted the Japan Sea resulting in low‐salinity and oxygen conditions in the absence of Tsushima flow. Reduced oxygen stratified, low‐salinity, and higher productivity oceanic conditions characterize Terminations TV, TIII, TII, and TI when East China Sea coastal waters breached the Tsushima Strait. Chinese loess, cave, and Lake Biwa (Japan) and U1427 proxy records suggest EASM intensification during low to high insolation transitions, whereas the strongest EAWM prevailed during lowest insolation periods or high to low insolation transitions. Ice sheet/CO2 forcing leads to the strongest EAWM events in glacials and enhanced EASM in interglacials. Mismatches between proxy patterns suggest that latitudinal and land/sea thermal contrasts played a role in East Asian monsoon variability, suggesting that a complex interplay between ice sheet dynamics, insolation, and thermal gradients controls monsoonal intensity. Key Points: East Asian summer monsoon intensified in MIS 5, MIS 7, MIS 9, and MIS 11 when the Tsushima Current flowed into an unrestricted normal marine Japan SeaEast Asian winter monsoon dominated MIS 2, MIS 4, MIS 6, and MIS 8 when sea level lows restricted the Japan Sea causing low‐salinity and oxygen conditionsReduced oxygen stratified, low‐salinity, and higher productivity oceanic conditions characterize Terminations TV, TIII, TII, and TI [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Comment on 'Determinants of International Research Collaboration: Evidence from International Co-Inventions in Asia and Major OECD Countries'.
- Author
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Noland, Marcus
- Subjects
COMPUTER software development ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,IMMIGRATION law ,PATENTS - Abstract
The author comments on an article "Determinants of International Research Collaboration: Evidence from International Co-Inventions in Asia and Major OECD Countries'" by N. Tsukada and colleagues, which appeared in 2015 issue of the journal "Asian Economic Policy Review." Topics discussed include the role of cultural distance to shape innovative activity in Northeast Asia, impacts of software development on Japanese patenting behaviour and immigration laws Japan.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Divorce in Korea: Trends and Educational Differentials.
- Author
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Park, Hyunjoon and Raymo, James M.
- Subjects
DIVORCE statistics ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,COHORT analysis ,COMPARATIVE sociology ,MARITAL statistics ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,FINANCIAL crises ,RELATIONSHIP duration - Abstract
The authors extend comparative research on educational differences in divorce by analyzing data from Korea. A primary motivation was to assess whether the theoretically unexpected negative educational gradient in divorce in Japan is also observed in Korea. Using vital statistics records for marriages and divorces registered between 1991 and 2006, the authors calculated cumulative probabilities of divorce, by marriage cohort (N = 5,734,577) and educational attainment. The results indicated that the relationship between education and divorce was negative even in the earliest cohort and that this negative gradient has become more pronounced in more recent cohorts. Contrary to expectations, however, little evidence was found that the concentration of divorce at lower levels of education was exacerbated by the Asian economic crisis in the late 1990s. The authors discuss these findings in light of conventional emphases on the costs of divorce and highlight the importance of better understanding this distinctive east Asia pattern of divorce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Examining differences in competitive intelligence practice: China, Japan, and the West.
- Author
-
Fleisher, Craig S. and Wright, Sheila
- Subjects
BUSINESS intelligence ,INTERNATIONAL business enterprises ,DECISION making ,COMPETITIVE advantage in business - Abstract
This article identifies the state of competitive intelligence (CI) in Asia--specifically, two of its most prominent economic powers, China and Japan. Comparisons with Western, mainly U.S. practice, are made, particularly where data and management research from those countries supports this approach. In terms of current practice, CI in Japan is more developed than in China, although China continues to devote increasing attention and resources to the area. Decision makers in multinational companies, competing in China or Japan, or with firms that originate there, should be aware of the competitive implications emanating from their utilization of CI. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The global and regional constitution of nations: the view from East Asia.
- Author
-
DUARA, PRASENJIT
- Subjects
GLOBALIZATION ,NATIONALISM ,REGIONALISM - Abstract
While the origins of nationalism are sought in global historical trends, few analysts have shown how nations themselves are constituted and re-shaped by circulating global power, ideas and models. The view from East Asia shows that these circulations are mediated by regional developments and interactions which bind these nations together in rivalry and interdependence. The histories of China, Japan and Korea have been closely tied together since the end of the nineteenth century and, with a gap of about thirty years during the Cold War, have intensified once again. The global and regional constitution of nations produces a dialectic between its global form and aspirations and misrecognition of this constitution arising from the self-perception of nationalism as historically immanent. This tension between the global constitution and national misrecognition contributes to the tenacity of nationalism. It also allows us to get a better grasp of the relationship between historical change and structure in nationalism and the relationship between state and popular nationalisms in the countries of the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. International Capital Mobility in the Short Run and the Long Run: A Daily Data Study for Japan, Singapore and Taiwan.
- Author
-
Han-Min Hsing
- Subjects
CAPITAL ,FINANCIAL crises ,FINANCIAL markets - Abstract
Using daily data from between 1993 and 2003, covered interest differential and cointegration tests are applied to examine short-run and long-run international capital mobility for Japan, Singapore and Taiwan, and, for comparison purposes, the UK. Despite the high short-run mobility in Japan (Singapore and Taiwan), being slightly (significantly) lower than in the UK, perfect long-run mobility exists in all three Asian economies, especially when the Asian currency crisis is excluded. Different short-run and long-run mobility implies the existence of a response lag in the financial market. As expected, although the impulse response reaches the significant long-run equilibrium level shortly after the shock in the UK, lagged responses appear in the three Asian economies, particularly in Singapore and Taiwan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. CSR Asia news review: February–April 2006.
- Author
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Hills, Jonathan
- Subjects
SOCIAL responsibility of business ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,SEX discrimination in employment ,EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,SEX discrimination ,ANTI-discrimination laws ,AIR pollution - Abstract
The article presents news briefs related to corporate social responsibility and environmental management in Asia for the period February to April 2006. The Japanese government has approved a bill to revise the antidiscrimination law guaranteeing equal employment opportunities. A survey reveals that majority of female workers in Korea think that sexual discrimination is prevalent both in the job search and in the workplace. Half of the visitors to Hong Kong, China had complained of the worsening air pollution in the city, according to a survey conducted by Friends of the Earth.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Exchange rate co-ordination for surmounting the East Asian currency crises.
- Author
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McKinnon, Ronald I.
- Subjects
FINANCIAL crises ,FOREIGN exchange rates ,MONETARY policy ,DEVALUATION of currency - Abstract
Emphasizes the significance of exchange rate coordination among Asian countries to deal with currency crises. Implications of misregulated banks for currency management; Way to solve the deflationary problems in Japan; Relevance of the financial condition in China to other Asian countries; Role of the U.S. in restoring exchange rate stability in Asia.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Editorial.
- Author
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Taylor, Eric
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *CHILDREN , *POPULATION , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *SURVEYS , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents introduction to various articles published in this issue of the Journal. The wide range of cultures, from which papers appear in this issue of the Journal, underlines the need to understand what is universal about the presentation of children's disorders and what is specific to the population from which they come. Hiroshi Morita, Motoji Suzuki, Shousuke Suzuki and Shigehiko Kamoshita have applied a two-stage methodology of rating scales and clinical interviews to the prevalence of problems in Japan. S.J. Newth and J. Corbett describe a survey of Asian children in an English city and suggest that the under-representation of Asian children in English clinics stems from attitudes towards disorder and referral.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Making Sense of the Asian Success Story: An Integrative Framework.
- Author
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Chow-Hou Wee and Tan, Gilbert
- Subjects
ECONOMIC conditions in Asia, 1945- ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,ECONOMIC conditions in Japan, 1989- ,TAIWANESE economy, 1975- ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
The article focuses on Asian countries that have experienced economic growth over the past 50 years including Hong Kong, China; Japan; Singapore; South Korea and Taiwan. With the exception of Hong Kong, the economic success of the Asian countries has been attributed to the interventionist framework. Export-orientation is one strategy that is most associated with the success of the five Asian countries. The export-oriented strategy helped the five Asian countries in many ways. The ensuring growth of employment enabled the country to save and accumulate capital for reinvestment. The export-oriented strategy also positively affects the competitive advantages of the country. There are other non-economic factors, such as culture, the need to survive, strong government, historical factors and even luck, that could have helped in the development process of these countries. Policy-makers must know how to use the total-systems approach to solving economic problems. In other words, policy-makers must know how to analyse their economies as complex systems.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Japan, Asia, Religion.
- Author
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Bellah, Robert N.
- Subjects
RELIGION & culture ,RELIGION & sociology ,SOCIAL science research ,SOCIOLOGICAL research ,ETHNOPSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The article describes research of article's author concerning religion and sociology. The author has been concerned with the problem of the place of religion in human culture, personality and society; religion as a transformative or retarding factor in modernization, especially in the several culture areas of Asia; and finally the transformation of religion and worldview in modern Japan at both the sophisticated and popular level. The problem is that religion is the most coherent, organized and systematic aspect of the non-rational. It does not follow the ground rules of pragmatic common sense or science. Whatever students may have read in graduate school most sociologists do not believe in the reality, importance or value of anything, which falls outside the areas of common sense and science. Or if they do it is partitioned off in a part of their lives, which has nothing to do with their work as sociologists. Sociologist made the intellectually impeccable distinction between the frame of reference of the actor and that of the scientist. A scientist ought to be able to deal with the world of the religious actor whatever be may think of the reality, importance or value of that actor's point of view.
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A phylogenetic study of Chinese Polygonatum (Polygonateae, Asparagaceae).
- Author
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Zhao, Li‐Hua, Zhou, Song‐Dong, and He, Xing‐Jin
- Subjects
ASPARAGACEAE ,CHINA studies ,TAXONOMY ,KNOWLEDGE gap theory ,RIBOSOMAL DNA - Abstract
Polygonatum Mill., which consists of more than 60 species are mainly distributed in eastern Asia, especially China and Japan, has received considerable attention from plant taxonomists. Nevertheless, there are still gaps in our knowledge of this genus, especially concerning those species that are endemic to China and which have often not been included in previous studies. Here, we re‐evaluate the taxonomy of 28 Chinese Polygonatum species with emphasis on molecular evidence. Phylogenetic analyses were carried out on sequence data from four plastid DNA regions: atpB‐rbcL, matK, rbcL and rps16, using maximum parsimony and Bayesian approaches. Analyses of the combined datasets of the four regions revealed that: 1) Chinese Polygonatum are monophyletic at the current level of sampling; 2) three major lineages in Polygonatum are well supported and largely correlated with cytological and morphological characters; 3) our results, along with the results of previous works support that P. simizui is a synonym of P. odoratum, and 4) Polygonatum cirrhifoliodes is shown to be distinct from P. cirrhifolium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Xenotransplantation in Asia.
- Author
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Girani, Lea, Xie, Xiaofang, Lei, Tiantian, Wei, Liang, Wang, Yi, and Deng, Shaoping
- Subjects
XENOGRAFTS ,TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,ORGAN donation - Abstract
The organ shortage crisis affects most of the world today. In Asia, rates of deceased organ donation are extremely low due to sociocultural factors. In this context, implementing new organ donation policies is not enough; xenotransplantation remains the most promising way to solve the organ crisis. Most of the early research on xenotransplantation was conducted in the US and Europe. Today, however, Asia has caught up on its Western counterparts partly due to the increasing demand for organ transplants. Given the growing influence of countries such as China, South Korea, and Japan in xenotransplantation, this article provides the reader with an essential global understanding of the scientific and ethical issues currently at stake. Furthermore, it sheds light on the beliefs and values that shape the response of the Asian public to both organ donation and xenotransplantation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Japan: HIV/AIDS Epidemic Galloping Ahead.
- Subjects
AIDS ,EPIDEMICS ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
To date, over 17 million people, are infected with HIV/AIDS from 14 million in 1993. And the scenario is expected to worsen, particularly in Asia where the epidemic is growing at an alarming rate. For example, estimated infections in Thailand have risen ten fold since early 1990. In India, they have tripled since 1992. "Fear, indifference and denial are the main enemies to prevention," said WHO Director-General Hiroshima Nakajima at the opening of the 10th International Conference on AIDS which gathered over 11,000 people from 128 countries in Yokohama, Japan.
- Published
- 1994
38. New year's greetings.
- Author
-
Homma, Yukio
- Subjects
EDITORIALS ,UROLOGY ,PUBLIC health ,PUBLIC welfare ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
The author reflects on the Japanese Urological Association (JUA), which will be reformed as a corporate body in 2013. The author states that the association aims to contribute to urological science, welfare, and health of the general population. The author also mentions the "International Journal of Urology (IJU)," which is the official journal of the Urological Association of Asia (UAA) and the JUA.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Deciduous dental morphology of the prehistoric Jomon people of Japan: comparison of nonmetric characters.
- Author
-
Kitagawa Y, Manabe Y, Oyamada J, and Rokutanda A
- Subjects
- Africa, Southern ethnology, Asia ethnology, Australia ethnology, Cuspid anatomy & histology, Dental Occlusion, History, Ancient, Humans, Incisor anatomy & histology, Japan, Molar anatomy & histology, North America ethnology, Tooth Root anatomy & histology, Ethnicity, Paleodontology, Tooth, Deciduous anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Morphological variations of the deciduous dentition are as useful as those of the permanent dentition for determining the biological affinities of human populations. This paper provides material on morphological variations of deciduous teeth of the prehistoric Japanese population from the Late and the Latest Jomon Period (ca. 2000-ca. 300 B.C.). The expression of nonmetric traits of the deciduous teeth in the Jomon sample shows a closer affinity with modern Japanese and Native American samples than with American White, Asiatic Indian, and African samples. However, the frequency of shoveling in deciduous upper incisors in the Jomon sample is lower than those in modern Japanese and Native American samples. The Jomon sample also expresses a much higher frequency of cusp 6 in deciduous lower second molars than seen in modern Japanese, Ainu, and Native American samples. The frequency in the Jomon sample is equal to that in the Australian Aboriginal sample, which shows cusp 6 most frequently among the samples compared. A somewhat low incidence of incisor shoveling in the Jomon sample was also reported in the permanent dentition (Turner [1976] Science 193:911-913, [1979] Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 51:619-635, [1987] Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 73:305-321, [1990] Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 82:295-317; T. Hanihara [1992] Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 88:163-182, 88:183-196). However, the frequency of cusp 6 in the Jomon sample shows no significant difference from those of Northeast Asian or Native American samples in the permanent dentition (Turner [1987] Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 73:305-321; T. Hanihara [1992] Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 88:163-182, 88:183-196). Evidently, some nonmetric traits express an inter-group difference only in the deciduous dentition.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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