18 resultados para 410104 Indigenous Performing Arts

em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland


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This chapter assesses the theories and related empirical evidence regarding the factors that explain cultural innovation by cultural organizations. It begins by defining key concepts, including what is meant by a cultural organization, cultural innovation, and the innovation referent. The chapter identifies two main disciplines that have been interested in cultural innovation or innovative programming by cultural organizations: sociology and economics. The focus, contributions, and overlap of these two disciplinary approaches to cultural innovation are discussed, and the chapter concludes by identifying some gaps and putting forward some suggestions for future research.

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La neige, dans ses dimensions optiques, chromatiques et plastiques, dans ses états instables et variables, constitue l'un des enjeux centraux de l'esthétique contemporaine,. Neige blanc papier fait l'historiographie des esthétiques de la neige, de la quête d'un art pur, affranchi de toute contrainte illustrative, littéraire, voire représentative, à la construction de formes expressives où se réinvente un langage-espace. Au coeur du volume, le calepin d'artiste réalisé par la plasticienne Catherine Bolle, Inhumaine neige lunel, concrétise à son tour l'imaginaire poétique de la neige dans la matérialité esthétique du livre.

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La circularité relationnelle du savoir-être : l'enseignement post-grade selon une perspective systémique / Marco Vannotti - La passion de transmettre : une lecture platonicienne en hommage à M. Vannotti / Michèle Gennart - «Apprendre à coopérer pour apprendre» : la construction des échanges coopératifs / Olivier Real del Sarte - Apprendre à traiter les enfants battus : la transformation de l'intervenant / Stefano Cirillo - Fin de thérapie / Ferenc Rakoczy - La transmission du savoir psychiatrique à la Policlinique Médicale Universitaire : les liaisons dangereuses / Christian Marin - Entre transmission et acquisition des savoirs : le poids de la parole / Brikela Sulstarova - La volonté de faire sens en médecine : clinique, intersubjectivité, et reconnaissance / Francesco Panese - Médecine et rationalité / Jean Starobinski

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PURPOSE: Aerodynamic drag plays an important role in performance for athletes practicing sports that involve high-velocity motions. In giant slalom, the skier is continuously changing his/her body posture, and this affects the energy dissipated in aerodynamic drag. It is therefore important to quantify this energy to understand the dynamic behavior of the skier. The aims of this study were to model the aerodynamic drag of alpine skiers in giant slalom simulated conditions and to apply these models in a field experiment to estimate energy dissipated through aerodynamic drag. METHODS: The aerodynamic characteristics of 15 recreational male and female skiers were measured in a wind tunnel while holding nine different skiing-specific postures. The drag and the frontal area were recorded simultaneously for each posture. Four generalized and two individualized models of the drag coefficient were built, using different sets of parameters. These models were subsequently applied in a field study designed to compare the aerodynamic energy losses between a dynamic and a compact skiing technique. RESULTS: The generalized models estimated aerodynamic drag with an accuracy of between 11.00% and 14.28%, and the individualized models estimated aerodynamic drag with an accuracy between 4.52% and 5.30%. The individualized model used for the field study showed that using a dynamic technique led to 10% more aerodynamic drag energy loss than using a compact technique. DISCUSSION: The individualized models were capable of discriminating different techniques performed by advanced skiers and seemed more accurate than the generalized models. The models presented here offer a simple yet accurate method to estimate the aerodynamic drag acting upon alpine skiers while rapidly moving through the range of positions typical to turning technique.