5 resultados para Elders, Daniel
em Consorci de Serveis Universitaris de Catalunya (CSUC), Spain
Resumo:
En noviembre de 2006, Nicaragua se unió a los países latinoamericanos que han apostado por que la izquierda vuelva a gobernar el país. En el presente trabajo sus autoras realizan una reflexión sobre el devenir postrevolucionario en Nicaragua en relación con una de sus figuras claves, Daniel Ortega. Una aproximación personal a uno de los líderes históricos del sandinismo contextualizada con el papel desempeñado por Ortega en la política moderna nicaragüense, considerando que los liderazgos personales están primando en la política nacional frente a las necesidades reales de una sociedad que está atravesando una grave crisis interna.
Resumo:
Pyrenae acoge la reseña de una obra divulgativa, que debe ser valorada dentro de ese género. No obstante, su lectura también será útil para cualquier profesional que quiera abrir una cata en el estado de la arqueología peninsular de finales de la primera década del siglo XXI, puesto que la firma un doctor en la materia y no un divulgador procedente de otro campo. El arqueólogo enamorado va precedido de un prólogo escrito con amor por Carmen Rigalt, periodista y madre del autor. Bajo el subtítulo Historia oculta de la arqueología española: de los hallazgos fortuitos a los falsificadores de tesoros, se plantea un proyecto elogiable, que aspira a ofrecer un panorama completo del pasado hispánico, desde la más remota prehistoria a los visigodos, haciendo cuadrar, de forma bastante equilibrada, la amplia geografía peninsular en 14 capítulos y una introducción.
Resumo:
Behavioral consequences of a brain insult represent an interaction between the injury and the capacity of the rest of the brain to adapt to it. We provide experimental support for the notion that genetic factors play a critical role in such adaptation. We induced a controlled brain disruption using repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and show that APOE status determines its impact on distributed brain networks as assessed by functional MRI (fMRI).Twenty non-demented elders exhibiting mild memory dysfunction underwent two fMRI studies during face-name encoding tasks (before and after rTMS). Baseline task performance was associated with activation of a network of brain regions in prefrontal, parietal, medial temporal and visual associative areas. APOE ε4 bearers exhibited this pattern in two separate independent components, whereas ε4-non carriers presented a single partially overlapping network. Following rTMS all subjects showed slight ameliorations in memory performance, regardless of APOE status. However, after rTMS APOE ε4-carriers showed significant changes in brain network activation, expressing strikingly similar spatial configuration as the one observed in the non-carrier group prior to stimulation. Similarly, activity in areas of the default-mode network (DMN) was found in a single component among the ε4-non bearers, whereas among carriers it appeared disaggregated in three distinct spatiotemporal components that changed to an integrated single component after rTMS. Our findings demonstrate that genetic background play a fundamental role in the brain responses to focal insults, conditioning expression of distinct brain networks to sustain similar cognitive performance.
Resumo:
Past research in using ICTs (Information and Communication Technologies) in interpersonal communication showed that age plays an important role. There is a general assumption that the elderly are left behind regarding the adoption and the use of ICTs. Furthermore, elders tend to use ICTs mainly for instrumental purposes and the use is rather non-sophisticated. When elders are using ICTs to maintain their social network, similar patterns could be found: They start using internet, or intensify its use, when their children move abroad while they might decrease using the tool if the motivation ends. In this research we explore elders' incentives to go online and use internet services to communicate; the type of agencies they use to communicate with children and grandchildren abroad; and the situations that make them stop using the ICTs or even reject internet mediated communications. We base our discussion on the empirical evidence the two authors gathered in different cities and countries: Barcelona, Romania, Toronto, Los Angeles, Montevideo and Lima, through semi-structured interviews and observation, with people aged 60 years old and over. The results show that the ability for using ICT tools in an autonomous way is a better explanation than age. In this, we distinguish between assisted users and autonomous users. We found that oldest seniors and those seniors who are less socially active are more likely to be assisted users than those who are socially or professionally active. For them communication with their children and grandchildren abroad follows no agency or it is mediated by significant others from their local social network, who are able to use ICTs and select specific information to share, in the second step, with the elder. For some younger participants the use of ICTs is rather situational and imposed by their children or grandchildren, who installed the tool in the first place and assisted them in using it. Finally, other elders describe a proficient and independent use of ICTs so they use the devices and services the way they want to.We discuss the implications of the patterns in using ICTs, for elders' social life and their relationships with children and grandchildren. First, we emphasis the fact that those elders rejecting the ICTs or being unskilled in using them to communicate might be left out from their family circle, particularly when children are abroad -they would experience more isolation. Second, we underline the fact that when children and grandchildren are the ones that control the ICTs used by their parents and grandparents, they are controlling also the information flow and this will redefine the power relations between elders and their younger relatives.