866 resultados para Theories of Unemployment
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We present an analysis of previously published measurements of the London penetration depth of layered organic superconductors. The predictions of the BCS theory of superconductivity are shown to disagree with the measured zero temperature, in plane, London penetration depth by up to two orders of magnitude. We find that fluctuations in the phase of the superconducting order parameter do not determine the superconducting critical temperature as the critical temperature predicted for a Kosterlitz–Thouless transition is more than an order of magnitude greater than is found experimentally for some materials. This places constraints on theories of superconductivity in these materials.
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Fifth-grade children were given a series of word reading tasks. First, two sets of 16 disyllabic words with medial VCV spellings, and with a long initial vowel were selected, varying in frequency but with similar word-initial segments. Nonwords were derived from these sets of words by exchanging initial onsets. Children read these nonwords in a first testing session. In a second test session, children were given the Woodcock Word Identification Test and the set of analogue words from which the nonwords were derived. Initial analyses examined only nonwords derived from words that were correctly read. Both sets of nonwords were more likely to be read with a long initial vowel than a short initial vowel, although this tendency was stronger in nonwords derived from high frequency words. Furthennore, Word Identification ability showed a strong relationship with the preference for long initial vowels in this type of disyllabic nonword, both for nonwords derived from known analogues and for nonwords derived from words that children could not read correctly. This preference was also correlated with the preference for context-sensitive grapheme-phoneme correspondences in the reading of ambiguous monosyllabic nonwords.These results have strong implications for current theories of word reading.
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Prospective memory (ProM) is the memory for future actions. It requires retrieving content of anaction in response to an ambiguous cue. Currently, it is unclear if ProM is a distinct form of memory, or merely a variant of retrospective memory (RetM). While content retrieval in ProM appears analogous to conventional RetM, less is known about the process of cue detection. Using a modified version of the standard ProM paradigm, three experiments manipulated stimulus characteristics known to influence RetM, in order to examine their effects on ProM performance. Experiment 1 (N — 80) demonstrated that low frequency stimuli elicited significantly higher hit rates and lower false alarm rates than high frequency stimuli, comparable to the mirror effect in RetM. Experiment 2 (N = 80) replicated these results, and showed that repetition of distracters during the test phase significantly increased false alarm rates to second and subsequent presentations of low frequency distracters. Building on these results. Experiment 3 (AT = 40) showed that when the study list was strengthened, the repeated presentation of targets and distracters did not significantly affect response rates. These experiments demonstrate more overlap between ProM and RetM than has previously been acknowledged. The implications for theories of ProM are considered.
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This article examines book illustrations through the prism of Translation Studies. It mainly suggests that the pictures in illustrated books are (intersemiotic) translations of the text and that, as such, they can be analyzed making use of the same tools applied to verbal interlingual translation. The first section deals with the theoretical bases upon which illustrations can be regarded as translations, concentrating on theories of re-creation, as illustration is viewed essentially as the re-creation of the text in visual form. One of the claims in this section is that, because illustration is carried out in very similar ways as interlingual translation itself, the term ""intersemiotic"" relates more to the (obvious) difference of medium. For this reason the word is most often referred to in parentheses. The second section discusses three particular ways through which illustrations can translate the text, namely, by reproducing the textual elements literally in the picture, by emphasizing a specific narrative element, and by adapting the pictures to a certain ideology or artistic trend. The example illustrations are extracted from different. kinds of publication and media, ranging from Virgil`s Aeneid, Lewis Carroll`s Alice in Wonderland and Mark Twain`s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn to an online comic version of Shakespeare`s Hamlet.
Resumo:
Speech disorder in monolingual Cantonese- or English-speaking children has been well described in the literature. There appear to be no reports, however, that describe speech-disordered children who have been exposed to both languages. Here we report on the error patterns of two preschool speech-disordered children who were learning two languages. Both children's first language was Cantonese, but they were also exposed to English through the media and child care. Their disorders were of unknown aetiology. The following questions were asked of the data: (a) Do bilingual children, suspected of having speech problems, make errors in Cantonese and English that reflect delay or disorder when compared with normative data on monolingual speech development in each language? (b) How does the children's speech differ from other bilingual children from the same language learning background? (c) Are the children's speech difficulties apparent in both languages? (d) Is the pattern of errors the same in both languages or do language-specific processes operate? The results bear on theories of acquisition, disorder and bilingualism; they also have clinical implications for speech-language pathologists whose caseloads include bilingual preschool children.
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The afferent nerves of the cornea and conjunctiva, efferent nerves of the lacrimal gland, and the lacrimal gland are a functional unit that works cooperatively to produce the aqueous component of tears. A decrease in the lacrimal gland secretory function can lead to dry eye disease. Because aging is a risk factor for dry eye disease, study of the changes in the function of the lacrimal gland functional unit with age is important for developing treatments to prevent dry eye disease. No one mechanism is known to induce the changes that occur with aging, although multiple different mechanisms have been associated with aging. These fall into two theoretical categories: programmed theories of aging (immunological, genetic, apoptotic, and neuroendocrine) and error theories of aging (protein alteration, somatic mutation, etc). Lacrimal glands undergo structural and functional alteration with increasing age. In mouse models of aging, it has been shown that neural stimulation of protein secretion is an early target of aging, accompanied by an increase in mast cells and lipofuscin accumulation. Hyperglycemia and increased lymphocytic infiltration can contribute to this loss of function at older ages. These findings suggest that an increase in oxidative stress may play a role in the loss of lacrimal gland function with age. For the afferent and efferent neural components of the lacrimal gland functional unit, immune or inflammatory mediated decrease in nerve function could contribute to loss of lacrimal gland secretion with age. More research in this area is critically needed.
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In this article, we propose a mathematical model that describes the competition between two plant virus strains (MAV and PAV) for both the host plant (oat) and their aphid vectors. We found that although PAV is transmitted by two aphids and MAV by only one, this fact, by itself, does not explain the complete replacement of MAV by PAV in New York State during the period from 1961 through 1976; an interpretation that is in agreement with the theories of A. G. Power. Also, although MAV wins the competition within aphids, we assumed that, in 1961, PAV mutated into a new variant such that this new variant was able to overcome MAV within the plants during a latent period. As shown below, this is sufficient to explain the swap of strains; that is, the dominant MAV was replaced by PAV, also in agreement with Power`s expectations.
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In the light of Gary Becker's economic theory of the family, considers how economic cost and benefit factors can influence the size of families that parents decide to have. Some support for the importance of such factors is found from results of structured interviews with wives in Kondh-dominated villages in western Orissa. These results are at variance with the hypothesis of Malthus about population growth. Factors that may alter the optimal family size as development proceeds are discussed. It is found in our sampling that, on the whole, there is a preference for daughters rather than sons although this is not as strong in the Kondh-dominated villages as in poor villages in the Santal tribal belt of West Bengal. While in the Kondh-dominated villages some discrimination in access to education in favour of boys compared to girls is present, little such or no such discrimination occurs in relation to access to food and medical attention. In the villages surveyed in the West Bengal Santal tribal belt, discrimination in favour of boys is more pronounced than in the Kondh-dominated area in Orissa. While economic considerations help to explain gender discrimination between boys and girls, we find that social and cultural factors also play a major role. Parents in a similar economic situation seem to display substantially different patterns of gender discrimination between children depending on their social and cultural content. It seems that the extent to which economic theories of the family explain family preferences and behaviour depend significantly on the social and cultural context in which they are to be applied.
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Shows how economic theories based on parental self-interest may explain parental discrimination against daughters relative to sons. However, such theories often need to be adjusted (or even discarded) to allow for altruism of parents towards their children, and to take account of cultural influences on parental desires to have children of particular gender, and care equally for their children of different gender. The latter point is illustrated by a study of two different communities. In one situated in the Santal tribal belt I West Bengal, discrimination against daughters is found to be marked and accords (given the structure of society) with predictions of economic theories based on the pursuit of parental self-interest. By contrast, it is found that although the Knondh-dominated community in Orissa experiences similar economic conditions and social structures to the West Bengal communities, parental discrimination against daughters is almost absent. The differences seem to arise from a difference between the cultural values shared by the Kondhs in Orissa and those shared by the West Bengal community consisting of Santals and Bengali Hindus. This suggests that the applicability of economic theories of the family depends significantly on the social contexts in which they are to be applied. In this respect, both social structures and cultural values are important.
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The Ministry of Education in Singapore has embarked on the ambitious project of introducing IT in schools. The IT Masterplan, budgeted at a cost of $2 billion, aims to wire up all schools by the year 2002. While the well-funded IT Masterplan is seeing the project in its final phase of implementation, this paper argues for a "critical cyber pedagogy" along with the acquisition of the functional and operational skills of technology. Drawing on theories of critical multiliteracies (Burbules & Callister, 2000; Luke, 2000b; New London Group, 1996), this paper explores and suggests how an instructional design of two classroom activities can be utilized as new forms of cyber and technoliteracies. Through the critical evaluation of websites and hypertext construction, students will be equipped with a new literacy that extends reading and writing by incorporating new blended forms of hybrid textualities. This technology-assisted pedagogy can achieve the desired outcome of self-directed learning, teamwork, critical thinking and problem solving strategies necessary for a knowledge-based society.
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This paper reviews current research and contemporary theories of subcortical participation in the motor control of speech production and language processing. As a necessary precursor to the discussion of the functional roles of the basal ganglia and thalamus, the neuroanatomy of the basal ganglial-thalamocortical circuitry is described. Contemporary models of hypokinetic and hyperkinetic movement disorders based on recent neuroanatomical descriptions of the multi-segmented circuits that characterise basal ganglion anatomy are described. Reported effects of surgically induced lesions in the globus pallidus and thalamus on speech production are reviewed. In addition, contemporary models proposed to explain the possible contribution of various subcortical structures to language processing are described and discussed in the context of evidence gained from observation of the effects of circumscribed surgically induced lesions in the basal ganglia and thalamus on language function. The potential of studies based on examination of the speech/language outcomes of patients undergoing pallidotomy and thalamotomy to further inform the debate relating to the role of subcortical structures in speech motor control and language processing is highlighted. Copyright (C) 2001 S. Karger AG, Basel.
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Based on discussions with Asian-Australian young women at a mixed-sex, Australia State high school, this article argues that the pro-school conformity of Asian-Australian young women sets them in a problematic and precarious relationship to the material and symbolic and processes of racialisation. The first part of the article identifies the limitations of research into the pro-school/anti-school orientations of minority students, arguing that most accounts are based on theories of culture, acculturation, class and gender, and class and race that neglect an analysis of race and sex. I then argue that practices of racialisation and sexualisation actually sustain pro-school culture and Asian female group associations. While these formations are effective in securing Asian female educational success, they are also problematic because they limit the educational possibilities and employment opportunities of Asian young women in Australia.
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Neste trabalho é apresentado um possível fundamento empírico para as teorias dos turbilhões que figuram em praticamente todas as teorias cosmogônicas dos pré-socráticos e mesmo presentes nas teorias de pensadores modernos como René Descartes e C. Huyghens.
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Visando a proteção da propriedade industrial advinda de uma região demarcada, surgiu a Indicação Geográfica (IG). O registro da IG é conferido aos produtos ou serviços característicos de seu local de origem, apresentando qualidades únicas em função dos recursos naturais. Além disso, a IG é responsável por distinguir estes produtos em relação aos disponíveis no mercado. Neste contexto, entidades como Sebrae, MAPA e INPI, têm promovido ações estratégicas com o objetivo de apoiar a proteção do saber fazer e consequentemente, os produtos tradicionais das regiões. Tais entidades são responsáveis por promover a sustentabilidade do processo juntos aos produtores, assim como disseminar o selo para os consumidores. Assim, iniciativas como esta precisam ser apoiadas a fim de entregar resultados significativos para o desenvolvimento das regiões e seus respectivos produtos com o selo de IG. O Plano de Apoio à Gestão da Indicação Geográfica desenvolvido pelo Sebrae/ES tem três pilares: melhoria do processo de produção, promoção do produto e a sustentabilidade do processo. A presente pesquisa, baseando-se nas teorias sobre estratégia e implementação de estratégias, analisa os fatores intervenientes que contribuem para o sucesso da implementação do Plano de Apoio à Gestão da indicação geográfica das Panelas de Barro de Goiabeiras, bairro do município de Vitória, capital do Espírito Santo. A pesquisa é um estudo de caso de natureza qualitativa, exploratória e descritiva ex-post-facto. Os dados foram coletados nos documentos (plano de ação do Sebrae/ES, Livro dos Saberes e relatórios desenvolvidos por consultores especializados) e por meio de entrevistas com seis agentes de políticas públicas e cinco paneleiras, envolvidos na elaboração e implementação do plano de ação. Para a análise dos dados, adotou-se a metodologia de análise de conteúdo com index definido a posteriori. Do Plano de Apoio à Gestão da IG das Paneleiras de Goiabeiras, foram agrupadas três ações estratégicas buscando identificar em que medida os fatores intervenientes afetaram a implementação de cada ação estudada: Ação1: fortalecimento dos aspectos culturais do produto, Ação 2: fortalecimento dos aspectos sociais do produto e Ação 3: fortalecimento dos aspectos econômicos associados à diferenciação por IG. Os resultados mostraram que na Ação 1 o fator interveniente liderança superou as expectativas na implementação das estratégias. Já os aspectos políticos, o acompanhamento de resultados e a estrutura organizacional desenvolveram as ações conforme o planejado, enquanto os fatores intervenientes cultura e clareza nas estratégias apresentaram oportunidades de melhorias. Na Ação 2 somente os fatores intervenientes recursos, cultura e clareza nas estratégias apresentaram-se de acordo com o proposto, enquanto a liderança e a estrutura organizacional mostraram-se como pontos de oportunidades de melhoria. Por fim, na Ação 3 nenhum fator interveniente foi destaque como uma oportunidade de melhoria. A estrutura organizacional e os aspectos políticos apresentaram-se de acordo, enquanto os recursos e a liderança superaram as expectativas.
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Nesta dissertação discutimos os movimentos em torno da temática da apropriação evidenciando o deslocamento do objeto de uso comum para o campo da arte em três movimentos paradigmáticos: o Dadaísmo, o Surrealismo e o Novo Realismo, e seus desdobramentos na arte contemporânea no sentido de legado cultural. Permitimo-nos transitar pelas demais vertentes dos processos de apropriação na arte nova-iorquina e europeia seguindo as propostas da arte com objetos. Investigamos os processos envolvidos nas controvérsias do ready-made, executado por Marcel Duchamp desde 1913, para dar partida ao percurso histórico das manifestações onde ocorre o objet trouvé, a colagem e a assemblagem. Nosso objetivo é responder à pergunta com a qual o filósofo Arthur C. Danto inicia suas investigações filosóficas acerca das apropriações e condições que fazem de um objeto comum uma obra de arte. Para tanto buscamos as teorias de Abrahan Moles e Jean Baudrillard acerca do objeto industrializado e Roland Barthes com as questões metalingüísticas de sua função-signo. Para discutir tais relações da arte com os objetos, recorremos aos textos de Peter Bürger, André Breton, Pierre Restany, Gregory Battcock, Walter Benjamin, Hal Foster e outros. Destacamos alguns trabalhos artísticos, evidenciando o objeto caixa, tratado como um utilitário com forma e finalidade definidas, reafirmando-se como objeto de consumo, no discurso sobre a poética do espaço de Gaston Bachelard. A pesquisa propõe analisar as transformações radicais das estruturas conservadoras da arte e especular sobre o gesto de apropriação dos objetos, com algumas reflexões direcionadas sobre o objeto e a transgressividade da apropriação como experiência de tensão e poder.