918 resultados para Leaders in animal behavior : the second generation
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Published also as thesis (PH. D.) Columbia University, 1918.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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This thesis examines the role of Scots language verse translation in the second-generation or post-war Scottish Renaissance. The translation of European poetry into Scots was of central importance to the first-generation Scottish Renaissance of the nineteen twenties and thirties. As Margery Palmer McCulloch has shown, the wider cultural climate of Anglo-American modernism was key to MacDiarmid’s conception of the interwar Scottish Renaissance. What was the effect on second-generation poet-translators as the modernist moment passed? Are the many translations undertaken by the younger poets who emerged in the course of the nineteen forties and fifties a faithful reflection of this cultural inheritance? To what extent are they indicative of a new set of priorities and international influences? The five principal translators discussed in this thesis are Douglas Young (1913-1973), Sydney Goodsir Smith (1915-1975), Robert Garioch (1909-1981), Tom Scott (1918-1995) and William J. Tait (1918-1992). Each is the subject of a chapter, in many cases providing the first or most extensive treatment of particular translations. While the pioneering work of John Corbett, Bill Findlay and J. Derrick McClure, among other scholars, has drawn attention to the long history of literary translation into Scots, this thesis is the first extended critical work to take the verse translations of the post-MacDiarmid makars as its subject. The nature and extent of MacDiarmid’s influence is considered throughout, as are the wider discourses around language and translation in twentieth-century Scottish poetry. Critical engagement with a number of key insights from theoretical translation studies helps to situate these writers’ work in its global context. This thesis also explores the ways in which the specific context of Scots translation allows scholars to complicate or expand upon theories of translation developed in other cultural situations (notably Lawrence Venuti’s writing on domestication and foreignisation). The five writers upon whom this thesis concentrates were all highly individual, occasionally idiosyncratic personalities. Young’s polyglot ingenuity finds a foil in Garioch’s sharp, humane wit. Goodsir Smith’s romantic ironising meets its match in Scott’s radical certainty of cause. Tait’s use of the Shetlandic tongue sets him apart. Nonetheless, despite the great variety of style, form and tone shown by each of these translators, this thesis demonstrates that there are meaningful links to be made between them and that they form a unified, coherent group in the wider landscape of twentieth-century Scottish poetry. On the linguistic level, each engaged to some extent in the composition of a ‘synthetic’ or ‘plastic’ language deriving partly from literary sources, partly from the spoken language around them. On a more fundamental level, each was committed to enriching this language through translation, within which a number of key areas of interest emerge. One of the most important of these key areas is Gaelic – especially the poetry of Sorley MacLean, which Young, Garioch and Goodsir Smith all translated into Scots. This is to some extent an act of solidarity on the part of these Scots poets, acknowledging a shared history of marginalisation as well as expressing shared hopes for the future. The same is true of Goodsir Smith’s translations from a number of Eastern European poets (and Edwin Morgan’s own versions, slightly later in the century). The translation of verse drama by poets is another key theme sustained throughout the thesis, with Garioch and Young attempting to fill what they perceived as a gap in the Scots tradition through translation from other languages (another aspect of these writers’ legacy continued by Morgan). Beyond this, all of the writers discussed in this thesis translated extensively from European poetries from Ancient Greece to twentieth-century France. Their reasons for doing so were various, but a certain cosmopolitan idealism figures highly among them. So too does a desire to see Scotland interact with other European nations, thus escaping the potentially narrowing influence of post-war British culture. This thesis addresses the legacy of these writers’ translations, which, it argues, continue to exercise a perceptible influence on the course of poetry in Scotland. This work constitutes a significant contribution to a much-needed wider critical re-assessment of this pivotal period in modern Scottish writing, offering a fresh perspective on the formal and linguistic merits of these poets’ verse translations. Drawing upon frequently obscure book, pamphlet and periodical sources, as well as unpublished manuscripts in the National Library of Scotland and the Shetland Archives, this thesis breaks new ground in its investigation of the role of Scots verse translation in the second-generation Scottish Renaissance.
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A descriptive study was developed in order to assess air contamination caused by fungi and particles in seven poultry units. Twenty seven air samples of 25 litters were collected through impaction method. Air sampling and particle concentration measurement were performed in the pavilions’ interior and also outside premises, since this was the place regarded as reference. Simultaneously, temperature and relative humidity were also registered. Regarding fungal load in the air from the seven poultry farms, the highest value obtained was 24040 CFU/m3 and the lowest was 320 CFU/m3. Twenty eight species/genera of fungi were identified, being Scopulariopsis brevicaulis (39.0%) the most commonly isolated species and Rhizopus sp. (30.0%) the most commonly isolated genus. From the Aspergillus genus, Aspergillus flavus (74.5%) was the most frequently detected species. There was a significant correlation (r=0.487; p=0.014) between temperature and the level of fungal contamination (CFU/m3). Considering contamination caused by particles, in this study, particles with larger dimensions (PM5.0 and PM10) have higher concentrations. There was also a significant correlation between relative humidity and concentration of smaller particles namely, PM0.5 (r=0.438; p=0.025) and PM1.0 (r=0.537; p=0.005). Characterizing typical exposure levels to these contaminants in this specific occupational setting is required to allow a more detailed risk assessment analysis and to set exposure limits to protect workers’ health.
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A pesar de que en los últimos años los estudios sobre historia y sociología de la Salud y la Enfermedad han experimentado un salto cualitativo, se ha soslayado sistemáticamente el análisis del paludismo y los complejos entramados de poder que subyacen a su presencia en los Departamentos del Noroeste y -en menor medida- en los del Oeste de la provincia de Córdoba. Nos referimos específicamente a la presencia de la endemia en los departamentos de Cruz del Eje, San Javier, San Alberto, Minas y Pocho. Con el propósito de redimensionar un comportamiento endemoepidémico que en esas localidades de Córdoba se remontó -según exploraciones provisionales- a mediados del siglo XIX, se construyen problemáticas que cobran sentido al ingresar en el terreno de los proyectos político-estatales nacionales, provinciales y de las mismas localidades afectadas, y, en lo que refiere a la articulación de las respuestas sanitarias frente a una enfermedad de profundas connotaciones ligadas al desarrollo socioeconómico y político de las regiones en estudio. En ese sentido en una primera instancia se articulará un análisis demográfico de la presencia y distribucion de la enfermedad a partir del trabajo con datos de corte estadistíco, elaborando mapas, cuadros y gráficos de morbimortalidad. Convergentemente se realizará un análisis hermenéutico de fuentes históricas del período en estudio. A grandes rasgos se considera que en relación al impacto del paludismo en bastas zonas del interior de la provincia de Córdoba y en cuanto a la acción sanitaria de los aparatos de poder estatal, desde mediados del siglo XIX, hasta la importante reducción de casos nuevos de paludismo a mediados del XX, pueden determinarse dos etapas sucesivas: Una primera se podría datar desde mediados del siglo XIX hasta mediados de la década de 1930, en la que actúa un Estado Nacional liberal que se desentendía de los problemas sanitarios de la regiones dejando esa función en manos de las provincias afectadas. Un segundo momento, aunque delimitado provisionalmente entre mediados de la década del 30' y mediados de la década del 50', se halla complejizado en su definición al combinarse en él procesos políticos particulares de la esfera nacional y de la provincial. Por un lado, en el plano nacional se ha observado desde la historiografía del período que, a partir de la década del 40' comienza a manifestarse una acción estatal nacional progresivamente centralizada y dispuesta a combatir la enfermedad con instituciones que podían llegar a todos los sectores sociales y a todas las regiones geográficas, aunque en menor medida a las zonas extra-pampeanas.Paralelamente, al considerar esos años en la esfera provincial se debe analizar el impacto de las formulaciones e intervenciones del radicalismo sabattinista como matriz política contraria al gobierno conservador nacional y promotor de un nuevo modelo de Estado en el que ocuparían un lugar privilegiado las políticas orientadas a la "cuestión social" y a la Salud en particular. Por otro lado, cobra significación una cuestión poco reconocida en los estudios en materia de politica sanitaria: los planes del peronismo combinaron una política centralizada en materia de dirección con una descentralización en el área de la ejecución.Finalmente dentro de este complejo marco político sanitario, se debe atender a lo largo de las dos etapas delimitadas, al universo de las iniciativas articuladas desde las autoridades de las localidades afectadas por el paludismo, así como, a las iniciativas civiles ya sea de vecinos, Sociedades de Beneficencia y asociadas a la Iglesia Católica.De acuerdo a la perspectiva asumida se propone recuperar una significativa problemática de marginalidad socioeconómica de las regiones, procurando reconstruir el impacto sociodemográfico del paludismo en el Noroeste y Oeste de la provincia de Córdoba ingresando al analisis histórico de las construcciones del poder público y privado en ese contexto local.
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The objective was to evaluate the usefulness, accuracy, precision, and reproducibility of the second generation CMD for PC concrete under production conditions.
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This study considers the complex dynamics of work motivation. Forty-eight employees completed a work-motivation diary several times per day over a period of four weeks. The obtained time series were analysed using different methodologies derived from chaos theory (i.e. recurrence plots, Lyapunov exponents, correlation dimension and surrogate data). Results showed chaotic dynamics in 75% of cases. The findings confirm the universality of chaotic behavior within human behavior, challenge some of the underlying assumptions on which work motivation theories are based, and suggest that chaos theory may offer useful and relevant information on how this process is managed within organizations.
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This is the original Dingledine et al's Tor paper. Please consider it required reading.
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This is the original Dingledine et al's Tor paper. Please consider it required reading.
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Guía para la visita de las salas quince y diecisiete del Museo de Arte Moderno de Cataluña. Estas salas tratan contenidos sobre la segunda generación del Modernismo. Mediante un mapa, esta guía orienta al visitante por los distintos espacios de las salas.
Lost in flatlands: will the next generation of page layout programs give us back our sense of space?
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This paper reports on an unmodeled, all-sky search for gravitational waves from merging intermediate mass black hole binaries (IMBHB). The search was performed on data from the second joint science run of the LIGO and Virgo detectors (July 2009-October 2010) and was sensitive to IMBHBs with a range up to similar to 200 Mpc, averaged over the possible sky positions and inclinations of the binaries with respect to the line of sight. No significant candidate was found. Upper limits on the coalescence-rate density of nonspinning IMBHBs with total masses between 100 and 450 M-circle dot and mass ratios between 0.25 and 1 were placed by combining this analysis with an analogous search performed on data from the first LIGO-Virgo joint science run (November 2005-October 2007). The most stringent limit was set for systems consisting of two 88 M-circle dot black holes and is equal to 0.12 Mpc(-3) Myr(-1) at the 90% confidence level. This paper also presents the first estimate, for the case of an unmodeled analysis, of the impact on the search range of IMBHB spin configurations: the visible volume for IMBHBs with nonspinning components is roughly doubled for a population of IMBHBs with spins aligned with the binary's orbital angular momentum and uniformly distributed in the dimensionless spin parameter up to 0.8, whereas an analogous population with antialigned spins decreases the visible volume by similar to 20%.
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The first generation of the bioresorbable everolimus drug-eluting vascular scaffold showed signs of shrinkage at 6 months, which largely contributed to late luminal loss. Nevertheless, late luminal loss was less than that observed with bare metal stents. To maintain the mechanical integrity of the device up to 6 months, the scaffold design and manufacturing process of its polymer were modified.
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The aim of this study was to demonstrate that the prevention of early scaffold area shrinkage of the ABSORB BVS (Rev.1.1, Abbott Vascular, Santa Clara, California) was sustained and not simply delayed by a few months.