4 resultados para Linguistic Variation and Change
em Bucknell University Digital Commons - Pensilvania - USA
Resumo:
With a virus such as Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) that has infected millions of people worldwide, and with many unaware that they are infected, it becomes vital to understand how the virus works and how it functions at the molecular level. Because there currently is no vaccine and no way to eradicate the virus from an infected person, any information about how the virus interacts with its host greatly increases the chances of understanding how HIV works and brings scientists one step closer to being able to combat such a destructive virus. Thousands of HIV viruses have been sequenced and are available in many online databases for public use. Attributes that are linked to each sequence include the viral load within the host and how sick the patient is currently. Being able to predict the stage of infection for someone is a valuable resource, as it could potentially aid in treatment options and proper medication use. Our approach of analyzing region-specific amino acid composition for select genes has been able to predict patient disease state up to an accuracy of 85.4%. Moreover, we output a set of classification rules based on the sequence that may prove useful for diagnosing the expected clinical outcome of the infected patient.
Resumo:
The Druze community in Israel is a distinct religious community currently undergoing important ethnolinguistic shifts. The government's implementation of an official policy has led to the deconstruction and reshaping of the Druze political and national identity to one that differs substantially from that of the Palestinian minority in Israel. In this study, I argue that the visibility, vitality and appreciation of Hebrew in the Druze linguistic landscape are indicative of new ethnolinguistic boundaries of the Druze identity in Israel. The fact that the Druze in Israel are dispersed throughout the Galilee and Mount Carmel area and experience varying levels of language contact as well as divergent economic relations with their Palestinian–Israeli and Jewish–Israeli neighbors suggests that one cannot expect uniformity in the Druze linguistic markets or the processes of social, cultural and linguistic identification. This study will show that Hebrew has become a dominant component of the linguistic repertoire and social identity of the Druze in the Mount Carmel area since it has become the first choice of communication as the linguistic landscape indicates.
Resumo:
The central thesis of this article is that a single life event has the capacity to affect and change not one but several lives. This thesis is related to theory on attachment, roles, and convoys. The concept of life-event webs is introduced to capture the complex relations between individuals within networks such as families. Research challenges presented by the life-event web perspective include defining networks, assessing the impact of events on each member, and treating the web, not the individual, as the unit of analysis. The web perspective implies that intervention programs should be focused not on the individual but on the web.