207 resultados para Hasse, Faustina Bordoni.


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Mode of access: Internet.

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For solo voices (SSAA), chorus (SATB), orchestra and organ; Latin and German words.

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Includes bibliographical references.

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"Literatur": p. 205-206.

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Top Row: Emma Abramson, Emilee Amo, Philip Arnold, Janet Biezlein, Anna Brede, Lindsey Brighton, Bethany Brown, Connie Brown-Olds, Charlene Bugais, Jammy Coates, Heather Coopex, Angie Costtakes, Jeffin Dejanovich, Jessica Farhat, Renee Filo, Kelly Fons, Katie Francis, Courtney Franklin, Rebecca Fransted

Row 2: Janelle Gailliard, Ericka Gess, Rebecca Goldstein, Candace Graham, Monique Grinnell, Jacob Grossman

Row 3: Joann Haderer, Diane Hamilton, Janet Hasse, Lisa Hoag, Nicole Hoeft, Emily Keeton

Row 4: Annette Keevex, Karen Kevelighan, Kelli Kincaid, Jennifer Kittell, Alison Knapp, Kelly Kulczyk

Row 5: Meejin Kwon, Megan Layher, Autumn Ledtke, Lora Lemaire-Valdez, Jessica Lewis, Diana Loud

Row 6: Melissa Maci, Andrea Magnus, Bre'Anne Mallon, Ada Sue Hinshaw, Patricia Coleman-Burns, Carol Loveland-Cherry, Judith Lynch-Sauer, Judy Wismont, Carrie Marshall, Neika Martin, Sarah Martin

Row 7: Lindsay Mason, Maryanne Matkovich, Alison McCann, Lina srgedas, Paula Graff, Rachel Mundinger, Christopher Ramos, Lauren Bealafeld, Gennifer Gasek, Angie Henderson, Sarah Ansett, Marisa Lirot, Caitlin McClellan, Diane Mille, Theresa Molyneux

Row 8: Isabel Moreno, Kristy Morrison, Phyllis Mulchay, Joielinn Nelson, Ann Newhof, Dawn O'Neil, Shontaya Overall, Theresa Overwater, Katherine Piper, Teresa Pizana, Erica Powers, Sarah Ricci, Leah Richardson, Anne Rucinski, Karon Sanderson, Rachel Sawman, Kathryn Sisterman, Sarah Smart, Curt Smith

Row 9: Elizabeth Stackable, Tracey Streiff, Angelica Susi, Tracy Swerrod, Leah Tatasciore, Julie Thomas, Rebecca Tidrick, Rebecca Vander Werff, Danielle Victor, Andrea Vincent, Katie Wagner, Essence Walker, Myre Ware, Jill Weirich, Kelly Wickham, Karen Wiklanski

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... El Discreto. Oráculo manual y arte de prudencia. El héroe / Baltasar Gracian.

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Thesis (doctoral)--Universitat Heidelberg.

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Patterns of cognitive change over micro-longitudinal timescales (i.e., ranging from hours to days) are associated with a wide range of age-related health and functional outcomes. However, practical issues with conducting high-frequency assessments make investigations of micro-longitudinal cognition costly and burdensome to run. One way of addressing this is to develop cognitive assessments that can be performed by older adults, in their own homes, without a researcher being present. Here, we address the question of whether reliable and valid cognitive data can be collected over micro-longitudinal timescales using unsupervised cognitive tests.In study 1, 48 older adults completed two touchscreen cognitive tests, on three occasions, in controlled conditions, alongside a battery of standard tests of cognitive functions. In study 2, 40 older adults completed the same two computerized tasks on multiple occasions, over three separate week-long periods, in their own homes, without a researcher present. Here, the tasks were incorporated into a wider touchscreen system (Novel Assessment of Nutrition and Ageing (NANA)) developed to assess multiple domains of health and behavior. Standard tests of cognitive function were also administered prior to participants using the NANA system.Performance on the two “NANA” cognitive tasks showed convergent validity with, and similar levels of reliability to, the standard cognitive battery in both studies. Completion and accuracy rates were also very high. These results show that reliable and valid cognitive data can be collected from older adults using unsupervised computerized tests, thus affording new opportunities for the investigation of cognitive function.

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BACKGROUND: More than 80 % of all terrestrial plant species establish an arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) symbiosis with Glomeromycota fungi. This plant-microbe interaction primarily improves phosphate uptake, but also supports nitrogen, mineral, and water aquisition. During the pre-contact stage, the AM symbiosis is controled by an exchange of diffusible factors from either partner. Amongst others, fungal signals were identified as a mix of sulfated and non-sulfated lipochitooligosaccharides (LCOs), being structurally related to rhizobial nodulation (Nod)-factor LCOs that in legumes induce the formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules. LCO signals are transduced via a common symbiotic signaling pathway (CSSP) that activates a group of GRAS transcription factors (TFs). Using complex gene expression fingerprints as molecular phenotypes, this study primarily intended to shed light on the importance of the GRAS TFs NSP1 and RAM1 for LCO-activated gene expression during pre-symbiotic signaling. RESULTS: We investigated the genome-wide transcriptional responses in 5 days old primary roots of the Medicago truncatula wild type and four symbiotic mutants to a 6 h challenge with LCO signals supplied at 10(-7/-8) M. We were able to show that during the pre-symbiotic stage, sulfated Myc-, non-sulfated Myc-, and Nod-LCO-activated gene expression almost exclusively depends on the LysM receptor kinase NFP and is largely controled by the CSSP, although responses independent of this pathway exist. Our results show that downstream of the CSSP, gene expression activation by Myc-LCOs supplied at 10(-7/-8) M strictly required both the GRAS transcription factors RAM1 and NSP1, whereas those genes either co- or specifically activated by Nod-LCOs displayed a preferential NSP1-dependency. RAM1, a central regulator of root colonization by AM fungi, controled genes activated by non-sulfated Myc-LCOs during the pre-symbiotic stage that are also up-regulated in areas with early physical contact, e.g. hyphopodia and infecting hyphae; linking responses to externally applied LCOs with early root colonization. CONCLUSIONS: Since both RAM1 and NSP1 were essential for the pre-symbiotic transcriptional reprogramming by Myc-LCOs, we propose that downstream of the CSSP, these GRAS transcription factors act synergistically in the transduction of those diffusible signals that pre-announce the presence of symbiotic fungi.

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As final markers of identity and memory, the tombs of Roman women carried ritual, ideological, and emotional significance. By surveying the funerary monuments of four distinct Roman women, it is possible to reconstruct, at least in part, the exhibited identities of Eumachia, Naevoleia Tyche, Faustina the Elder, Claudia, Amymone, and Postumia Matronilla. Drawing in the viewer to participate in the creation of identity through narrative and contextual relationships, each of the sepulchers solidifies the memories of the deceased women, thereby granting them an immortality of sorts. Engaging with issues of gender, status, the politics of self, propaganda, and regional variation, this paper seeks to explore the nuances of life, death, and identity in the Roman world, with an emphasis on understanding the monuments in their original contexts.

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International audience