7 resultados para Involved actors
em RUN (Repositório da Universidade Nova de Lisboa) - FCT (Faculdade de Cienecias e Technologia), Universidade Nova de Lisboa (UNL), Portugal
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Dissertation presented to obtain the Ph.D degree in Molecular Biology
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The particular characteristics and affordances of technologies play a significant role in human experience by defining the realm of possibilities available to individuals and societies. Some technological configurations, such as the Internet, facilitate peer-to-peer communication and participatory behaviors. Others, like television broadcasting, tend to encourage centralization of creative processes and unidirectional communication. In other instances still, the affordances of technologies can be further constrained by social practices. That is the case, for example, of radio which, although technically allowing peer-to-peer communication, has effectively been converted into a broadcast medium through the legislation of the airwaves. How technologies acquire particular properties, meanings and uses, and who is involved in those decisions are the broader questions explored here. Although a long line of thought maintains that technologies evolve according to the logic of scientific rationality, recent studies demonstrated that technologies are, in fact, primarily shaped by social forces in specific historical contexts. In this view, adopted here, there is no one best way to design a technological artifact or system; the selection between alternative designs—which determine the affordances of each technology—is made by social actors according to their particular values, assumptions and goals. Thus, the arrangement of technical elements in any technological artifact is configured to conform to the views and interests of those involved in its development. Understanding how technologies assume particular shapes, who is involved in these decisions and how, in turn, they propitiate particular behaviors and modes of organization but not others, requires understanding the contexts in which they are developed. It is argued here that, throughout the last century, two distinct approaches to the development and dissemination of technologies have coexisted. In each of these models, based on fundamentally different ethoi, technologies are developed through different processes and by different participants—and therefore tend to assume different shapes and offer different possibilities. In the first of these approaches, the dominant model in Western societies, technologies are typically developed by firms, manufactured in large factories, and subsequently disseminated to the rest of the population for consumption. In this centralized model, the role of users is limited to selecting from the alternatives presented by professional producers. Thus, according to this approach, the technologies that are now so deeply woven into human experience, are primarily shaped by a relatively small number of producers. In recent years, however, a group of three interconnected interest groups—the makers, hackerspaces, and open source hardware communities—have increasingly challenged this dominant model by enacting an alternative approach in which technologies are both individually transformed and collectively shaped. Through a in-depth analysis of these phenomena, their practices and ethos, it is argued here that the distributed approach practiced by these communities offers a practical path towards a democratization of the technosphere by: 1) demystifying technologies, 2) providing the public with the tools and knowledge necessary to understand and shape technologies, and 3) encouraging citizen participation in the development of technologies.
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RESUMO - Confrontados por uma procura mais ativa e exigente e pressionados por uma maior restrição orçamental, os prestadores de saúde têm vindo a reconhecer o Marketing de Fidelização como uma solução sustentável para o seu sucesso financeiro. Assim, a autora explora como se desenvolve a cocriação de valor do consumidor no setor de saúde, nomeadamente, as interações, os atores e as atividades envolvidas na gestão e tratamento da doença. O projeto de investigação foca-se particularmente na cocriação de valor entre o médico regular e o paciente. Foi realizada uma pesquisa exploratória de natureza qualitativa. Os dados recolhidos na APDP, a uma amostra de 16 pacientes diabéticos através da técnica de entrevistas aprofundadas, revelaram que os estilos práticos de criação de valor do consumidor (CVCPS) desenvolvido por McColl-Kennedy et al. (2012) adequam-se às características desta doença. Os resultados do estudo sustentam que os pacientes com estilos práticos de cocriação de valor do consumidor “Parceria” e “Gestor de equipa” tendem a estar associados a um nível de fidelização elevado, pelo que se sugere que estes estilos sejam encorajados pelos prestadores. Em contraste, o Estilo de cocriação “Colaboração Passiva” está potencialmente associado a níveis de fidelização reduzidos, o que também sugere que a participação do paciente no seu relacionamento com o médico possa ser um fator potenciador da sua fidelização. O presente projeto de Investigação pretende ser um contributo teórico para investigação futura na área da cocriação e fidelização, com uma aplicação empírica que contribui para uma maior extensividade dos benefícios da cocriação de valor do consumidor para a Gestão em Saúde.
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This thesis focuses on the representation of Popular Music in museums by mapping, analyzing, and characterizing its practices in Portugal at the beginning of the 21st century. Now that museums' ability to shape public discourse is acknowledged, the examination of popular music's discourses in museums is of the utmost importance for Ethnomusicology and Popular Music Studies as well as for Museum Studies. The concept of 'heritage' is at the heart of this processes. The study was designed with the aim of moving the exhibiting of popular music in museums forward through a qualitative inquiry of case studies. Data collection involved surveying pop-rock music exhibitions as a qualitative sampling of popular music exhibitions in Portugal from 2007 to 2013. Two of these exhibitions were selected as case studies: No Tempo do Gira-Discos: Um Percurso pela Produção Fonográfica Portuguesa at the Museu da Música in Lisbon in 2007 (also Faculdade de Letras, 2009), and A Magia do Vinil, a Música que Mudou a Sociedade at the Oficina da Cultura in Almada in 2008 (and several other venues, from 2009 to 2013). Two specific domains were observed: popular music exhibitions as instances of museum practice and museum professionals. The first domain encompasses analyzing the types of objects selected for exhibition; the interactive museum practices fostered by the exhibitions; the concepts and narratives used to address popular music discursively, as well as the interpretative practices they allow. The second domain, focuses museum professionals and curators of popular music exhibitions as members of a group, namely their goals, motivations and perspectives. The theoretical frameworks adopted were drawn from the fields of ethnomusicology, popular music studies, and museum studies. The written materials of the exhibitions were subjected of methods of discourse analysis methods. Semi-structured interviews with curators and museum professional were also conducted and analysed. From the museum studies perspective, the study research suggests that the practice adopted by popular music museums largely matches that of conventional museums. From the ethnomusicological and popular music studies stand point, the two case studies reveal two distinct conceptual worlds: the first exhibition, curated by an academic and an independent researcher, points to a mental configuration where popular music is explained through a framework of genres supported by different musical practices. Moreover, it is industry actors such as decision makers and gatekeepers that govern popular music, which implies that the visitors' romantic conception of the musician is to some extent dismantled; the second exhibition, curated by a record collector and specialist, is based on a more conventional process of the everyday historical speech that encodes a mismatch between “good” and “bad music”. Data generated by a survey shows that only one curator, in fact that of my first case study, has an academic background. The backgrounds of all the others are in some way similar to the curator of the second case study. Therefore, I conclude that the second case study best conveys the current practice of exhibiting Popular Music in Portugal.
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RESUMO - O presente trabalho pretende centrar-se no estudo da Segurança do Doente e das boas práticas de Consentimento Esclarecido na realização de exames de Tomografia Computorizada. Nos dias de hoje, a assinatura do documento de Consentimento Esclarecido tem-se mostrado um ato banal, sem a merecida atenção que entidades de saúde, Médicos e Técnicos de Radiologia lhe deviam conceder, uma vez que os Eventos Adversos, aquando da realização de uma TC com Meio de Contraste, poderão ser vários e complicados; por outro lado, o doente muitas vezes não está preparado nem devidamente informado sobre os seus efeitos e as medidas necessárias que deverão ser acionadas para os combater. A necessidade da veiculação de uma informação capaz, de uma elucidação total para o doente pôr em prática a sua autonomia, fruto da consciência que tem dos factos, revela-se fundamental, mas para que tal aconteça é urgente ultrapassar obstáculos respeitantes às práticas profissionais de entidades de saúde, Médicos e Técnicos de Radiologia, assim como aspetos sociais, linguísticos, idade, vulnerabilidade individual, entre outros. Neste contexto, a apresentação de boas práticas de Consentimento Esclarecido revela-se de extrema importância para o desenvolvimento desta dissertação. Para consubstanciar as ideias a desenvolver, para além da pesquisa bibliográfica, revelou-se importante a recolha de dados através de uma entrevista e de um inquérito a elementos que participam neste processo, nomeadamente, doentes, Médicos e Técnicos de Radiologia e, posteriormente, uma análise dos conteúdos dos resultados obtidos e a sua integração nos princípios teóricos do estudo.
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Nowadays, safety and security regarding the tourism and events industries are a fundamental subject to society. Portugal’s tourism has significantly increased its number of visitors, whether due to the increasing number of cruisers docking in Lisbon, or due to visitors arriving by air, travelling the country from North to South and staying in the most varied accommodation units. Issues like human security and internal security of the different countries, even the security in the world, as development factors of a modern society, are discussed on a daily basis. On the contrary, few deal with tourism and major events security as being part of internal security, as well as the existing barriers tourism encounters to integrate the system for fighting terrorism. Although two distinct activities, they are complementary and may influence the country’s economy, provided that they can offer certainty to all actors involved. It is this substance that organised crime groups look for when planning terror acts. Therefore, as tourism can offer deception and shelter opportunities and events the theatre of a possible attack, those events assemble all the necessary conditions for an attack to achieve its goals.
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Courtship is a behavior that allows the display of fitness of one sex to the other and gates possible subsequent mating. This behavior is crucial for reproduction and has strong innate components in all animals. Courtship in Drosophila melanogaster consists of a series of highly stereotyped actions that the male performs towards the female. He sings with vibrations of the wings, touches and licks her abdomen, while she evaluates the information presented to her.(...)