129 resultados para 791 Public performances (incl. film)
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Resumo:
Introduction Music performance anxiety (MPA, often referred to as "stage fright") is one of the leading severe medical problems among musicians. For about 15-25% of musicians MPA is a serious problem. Particularly high levels of MPA are observed among music students. Musical performance can induce negative emotions, including anxiety, which in some individuals can approach extreme levels of terror and take the form of panic attack, impair the quality of the performance, lead to avoidance of performance situations, and consequently have debilitating effects on the career. Coping efforts used by musicians in their attempts to manage MPA, such as sedatives, alcohol, and β-blockers can have deleterious health side-effects. Music ranks high in the cultural and economic life of Switzerland. In ten university music schools, students from all around the world are educated to become professional musicians. Despite the importance of musical education in Switzerland, data concerning the phenomenon of MPA are largely lacking. Goal and Methods The main goal of this research was to survey the occurrence, experience, and management of MPA among full-time music students in French Swiss conservatories. A questionnaire was developed based on the literature and interviews with music students and teachers and distributed to all the students of the conservatories of Fribourg, Geneva, Lausanne, and Neuchâtel in the spring 2007. 194 students (61% women) returned the questionnaire. Results The size of the problem: MPA is a major problem for 1/3 of the students (ranks 3 and 4). The consequences of MPA: 22% and 35% of the students think that they have failed exams and auditions, respectively, because of MPA. Further, 25% of the students have already avoided performing and 11% have interrupted public performances because of MPA. Coping with MPA: 90% of the students have never used alcohol prior to performing, whereas 97% and 81%, respectively, have never used recreation drugs and medication. The majority of students use relaxation exercises, respiratory exercises, and meditation techniques to prepare themselves. About ¾ of the students think that the use of alcohol and recreational drugs to manage MPA is never justified. 53% of the students think that the use of medication is justified on some occasions. Need for information and support: 66% of the students would like to receive more support and help to cope with music performance situations. This support should mainly come from their teachers and specialists. 53% of the students know nothing or little about possible means for the management of MPA. About 50% consider themselves not at all or little informed about the possible risks associated with the consumption of alcohol, recreational drugs, and medication for the management of performance situations. 89% would like to know more about MPA and 94% think that this topic should be discussed much more in their musical education at the conservatory. Conclusions The results of this survey indicate that MPA is a major problem for 1/3 of the students with serious consequences on their career. There is a huge need for more information and support on how to manage the stress due to performance situations. The use of alcohol, recreational drugs, and medication is modest but the students are poorly informed about possible side-effects of these coping strategies. It seems clear that more should be done in the French Swiss conservatories about music performance anxiety to inform, educate, and prepare the students for their future professional career.
Resumo:
Les auditeurs exercent une activité tournée dans une large mesure vers l'intérêt public. Il paraît donc important que la qualité des services qu'ils fournissent soit aussi élevée que possible. La question se pose dès lors de savoir s'il est possible, notamment au moment de leur engagement, de prévoir les performances individuelles futures des auditeurs.
Resumo:
Les auditeurs exercent une activité tournée dans une large mesure vers l'intérêt public. Il paraît donc important que la qualité des services qu'ils fournissent soit aussi élevée que possible. La question se pose dès lors de savoir s'il est possible, notamment au moment de leur engagement, de prévoir les performances individuelles futures des auditeurs.
Resumo:
The Fortress (La Forteresse) is a 2008 documentary film by Fernand Melgar that reports the Swiss asylum reality from a distant but committed point of view. The documentary describes the life of asylum seekers awaiting in a federal centre the decision to grant them-or not-refugee status. It subtly raises the issue of the role that "textual realities", grasped from the spectator's point of view, play in the production of public discourses. Most of all, it subtly poses the question of the (Swiss) spectator as an actor of the asylum policy, in the context of a semi-direct democracy. After evoking the notion of sensible experience for linking spectatorship to politics, we look at how the documentary invites its model spectator to accept the film's moral premises. Furthermore, focusing on the Swiss public sphere, we deliver an account of the reception by empirical spectators, notably by a group of leftist activists that tend to subvert Melgar's intentions. This two-fold analysis leads us to exhibit that, in a context of discursive struggles, The Fortress generates an original space of deliberation and experience, which appeals to the public to exercise their political agency on asylum policy without being constricted by an antagonist framework.
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This article aims to explain how newspapers commented on the movie Good Night, and Good Luck before its release. The media coverage anticipated George Clooney's film as a partisan attack launched against George W. Bush's policy since 9/11. Clooney advocates another reading: the historic confrontation between journalist Edward Murrow and Senator Joseph McCarty permits to reflect on the crucial role that the media play for democracy. Such reflection tries to prevent the dividing of the public sphere into antagonistic camps opposing "friends" to "foes," a division that undermines the possibility of a true pluralism. Our socio-semiotic analysis will focus on the critical work accomplished by the media, and on the way that work determines the collective meaning of a cultural object. Simultaneously, we will discuss the necessary conditions for pluralism in a public sphere.
Resumo:
Introduction 1.1 Le sujet cérébral, rencontre entre le biologique et le social L'objectif de ce travail est d'éclairer une des voies par lesquelles le phénomène anthropologique de l'individualité prend corps au sein de l'environnement contemporain. L'individualisme est compris comme les divers processus par lesquels la détermination du sujet tend à s'autonomiser des appartenances préconstituées. Il est la forme sociologique qui gouverne la façon contemporaine de faire société depuis l'avènement de la «modernité ». Le choix de l'angle de la cérébralité pour aborder la question de recherche repose sur le postulat qu'une des particularités culturelles de la figure du sujet individuel contemporain est la tendance à attribuer aux mécanismes cérébraux le rôle déterminant dans la constitution de la subjectivité du sujet. Dès lors, si aujourd'hui, penser le cerveau c'est penser l'humain, il s'agit d'un phénomène anthropologique qui demande à être explicité. Il m'appartient de démontrer que le champ des neurosciences se profile comme révélateur privilégié pour observer comment penser l'individualité concorde avec l'établissement de vérités relatives au cérébral' . Faire l'anthropologie du proche et de l'actuel a ses intérêts mais comporte aussi des risques. La perte de ce qui faisait le moteur de la recherche anthropologique -l'altérité donnée des sujets de son observation - a été compensée par l'émergence de nouveaux objets de travail et par des reconfigurations des rapports que l'anthropologue entretient avec son terrain. Le renouvellement du cadre de réflexion opéré par l'anthropologie au cours du siècle écoulé suit les transformations des pratiques sociales, culturelles et économiques qui s'opèrent au niveau mondial. L'échelle désormais planétaire de la circulation des acteurs sociaux et des objets de savoir a forcé la discipline à revoir la grille de lecture qui a longtemps opposé sociétés traditionnelles à sociétés modernes. La prise de conscience de la caducité du grand partage a engagé les anthropologues à s'intéresser à des phénomènes en rapport avec des problèmes rencontrés au sein de leur propre collectif et, dans le même mouvement, les a amenée à repenser les articulations entre le global et le local, le particulier et l'universel. Le bouleversement heuristique généré par ce repositionnement n'est toutefois pas exempt de nouvelles difficultés pour la recherche ethnographique. En se posant le défi d'étudier des traits culturels propres à sa société d'appartenance, l'anthropologie s'ouvre à des terrains enquête sur la façon dont, dans le monde occidental, le constat toujours plus pesant de la discordance entre les phénomènes de vieillissement cognitif et l'allongement de l'espérance de vie est traité. Dans une démarche ethnographique, il s'agit de voir quelles sont les logiques d'action et les pratiques sociales développées en réponse à ces inadéquations. La thématique impose une navigation entre des domaines théoriques spécialisés et des champs d'activités possédant chacun leurs cadres de référence. Une telle entreprise suppose une multiplication des systèmes de référence devant être pris en compte. Toutes les disciplines approchées au cours de ce travail abondent en métaphores utiles à la mise en ordre de leur pensée et à la description de leurs objets de travail. Toutefois, faire résonner entre elles les différentes «cultures épistémiques » (Knorr-Cetina, 1999) pour mieux faire apparaître la trame sociale qui constitue leur arrière-fond équivaut souvent à forcer le trait. Le sens des mots varie selon leurs champs d'application et l'exercice de la mise en résonance peut s'avérer périlleux. Je me suis efforcée tout au long de ces pages de préciser de quel point de vue les énoncés considérés sont formulés. L'analyse anthropologique étant guidée par la recherche des points de liaison entre les différents registres, la démarche est forcément limitée dans le niveau d'approfondissement auquel elle peut tendre. Elle risque de décevoir les lecteurs experts dans les domaines soumis à la grille de lecture de cette discipline, non familiers avec les concepts anthropologiques. Il est probable qu'un certain flou subsiste dans la façon dont ces énoncés sont décris par rapport au traitement dont ils sont l'objet dans leurs disciplines respectives. Si on perd de vue la préoccupation centrale de l'anthropologie, consistant à éclairer le système de valeurs commun sous-tendant les pratiques sociales observées, la lecture d'un tel travail risque effectivement de rater son but. En revanche, en acceptant d'emblée de se prêter à un décentrement par rapport à son modèle disciplinaire, le lecteur doit pouvoir appréhender des aspects intéressant ses propres pratiques. S'intéresser à ce qui relie les savoirs et les pratiques au sein d'un monde commun, voilà un programme heuristique qui va à l'encontre de la logique de spécialisation.
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In the framework of health services research sponsored by the Swiss National Science Foundation, a research was undertaken of the activity of the large majority of the public health nurses working in the Swiss cantons of Vaud and Fribourg (total population 700,000). During one week, 130 nurses gathered, with a specially devised instrument, data on 4165 patient visits. Studying the duration of the contacts, one has distinguished contact duration per se (DC), duration of the travel time preceding the contact (DD), and total duration in relation with the contact (DTC-addition of the first two). It was noted that the three durations increased significantly with patient age (as regard travel time, this is explained by the higher proportion of home visits in higher age groups, as compared with visits at a health center). Examined according to location of the visit, contact duration per se (without travel) is higher for visits at home and in nursing homes than for those taking place at a health center. Looked at in respect to the care given (technical care, or basic nursing care, or both simultaneously), our data show that the provision of basic nursing care (alone or with technical care) doubles contact duration (from 20 to 42-45'). The analyses according to patient age shows that, at an advanced age (beyond 80 years particularly), there is an important increase of the visits where both types of care are given. However, contact duration per se shows a significant raise with age only for the group "technical care only"; it can be demonstrated that this is due to the fact that older patients require more complex technical acts (e.g., bladder care, as compared with simpler acts such as injection). A model of the relationships between patient age and contact duration is proposed: it is because of the increase in the proportions of home visits, of visits including basic nursing care, and of more complex technical acts that older persons require more of the working time of public health nurses.
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A number of studies show that New Public Management reforms have altered the current identity benchmarks of public officials, particularly by hybridizing values or management practices. However, existing studies have largely glossed over the sense of belonging of officials when their organization straddles the concerns of public service and private enterprise, so that the boundary between public and private sector is blurred. The purpose of this article is precisely to explore this sense of belonging in the context of organizational hybridization. It does so by drawing on the results of research conducted among the employees of a public unemployment insurance fund in Switzerland. On the one hand, the analysis shows how much their markers of belonging are hybrid, multiple and constructed in negative terms (with regard to the State), while indicating that the working practices of the employees point to an identity that is nevertheless closely bound with the public sector. On the other hand, the analysis shows that the organization plays strategically with its State status, by exploiting either its private or public identity in line with the needs related to its external image. The article concludes with a discussion of the results highlighting the strategic functionality of the hybrid identity of the actors.
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OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this article is to present the specific public health indicators recently developed by EUROCAT that aim to summarize important aspects of the public health impact of congenital anomalies in a few quantitative measures. METHODS: The six indicators are: (1) congenital anomaly perinatal mortality, (2) congenital anomaly prenatal diagnosis prevalence, (3) congenital anomaly termination of pregnancy, (4) Down syndrome livebirth prevalence, (5) congenital anomaly pediatric surgery, and (6) neural tube defects (NTD) total prevalence. Data presented for this report pertained to all cases (livebirths, fetal deaths, or stillbirths after 20 weeks of gestation and terminations of pregnancy for fetal anomaly [TOPFA]) of congenital anomaly from 27 full member registries of EUROCAT that could provide data for at least 3 years during the period 2004 to 2008. Prevalence of anomalies, prenatal diagnosis, TOPFA, pediatric surgery, and perinatal mortality were calculated per 1000 births. RESULTS: The overall perinatal mortality was approximately 1.0 per 1000 births for EUROCAT registries with almost half due to fetal and the other half due to first week deaths. There were wide variations in perinatal mortality across the registries with the highest rates observed in Dublin and Malta, registries in countries where TOPFA are illegal, and in Ukraine. The overall perinatal mortality across EUROCAT registries slightly decreased between 2004 and 2008 due to a decrease in first week deaths. The prevalence of TOPFA was fairly stable at about 4 per 1000 births. There were variations in livebirth prevalence of cases typically requiring surgery across the registries; however, for most registries this prevalence was between 3 and 5 per 1000 births. Prevalence of NTD decreased by about 10% from 1.05 in 2004 to 0.94 per 1000 in 2008. CONCLUSION: It is hoped that by publishing the data on EUROCAT indicators, the public health importance of congenital anomalies can be clearly summarized to policy makers, the need for accurate data from registries emphasized, the need for primary prevention and treatment services highlighted, and the impact of current services measured.