965 resultados para Isodirectionality Principle
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Résumé: L'article porte sur la conception du « dialogue » de Mikhaïl Bakhtine dans laquelle s'articulent deux groupes d'idées : 1) la notion de « dialogue » en tant que forme de l'interaction verbale interindividuelle (l'échange des répliques) et 2) la notion de « dialogisme » comme principe qui prévoit un rapport particulier entre le « Moi » (le « Je ») et l'« Autrui ». Son but consiste à 1) analyser ces notions au sens de Bakhtine, en s'appuyant sur le texte russe des Problèmes de l'oeuvre de Dostoïevski (1929) ; et à 2) montrer leurs sources sociologiques (principalement russes). Il y est également question de la notion de « polyphonie » introduite par Bakhtine pour caractériser la particularité de la construction des romans de Dostoïevski et d'une facette des réflexions bakhtiniennes sur le rôle de la « polyphonie » chez Dostoïevski, contenues dans le texte russe de 1929, abandonnées dans la version de 1963 et, de ce fait, méconnues des chercheurs francophones n'ayant accès qu'à la traduction des Problèmes de la poétique de Dostoïevski (1963). This paper examines the conception of "dialogue" elaborated by Mikhaïl Bakhtin in which are articulated two groups of ideas : 1) the notion of "dialogue" as a form of verbal interindividual interaction (an exchange of speech) and 2) the notion of "dialogism" as a principle which implies a relation between the "Me" (the "I") and the "Other". Its aim is 1) to analyse these notions in the sens of Bakhtin, on the base of russian text of Problems of Dostoyevsky's Art (1929) and 2) to show their sociological (mainly russian) origins. The paper also deals with the notion of "polyphony" introduced by Bakhtin to characterize the particularity of Dostoyevsky's method of constructing novels and with one facet of bakhtinian reflections (expounded in the text of 1929, omitted in the version of 1963, thereby unknown by francophone researchers who have access only to the translation of Problems of Dostoyevsky's Poetics (1963)) on the role of "polyphony" in Dostoyevsky's works.
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Background Area-based measures of socioeconomic position (SEP) suitable for epidemiological research are lacking in Switzerland. The authors developed the Swiss neighbourhood index of SEP (Swiss-SEP). Methods Neighbourhoods of 50 households with overlapping boundaries were defined using Census 2000 and road network data. Median rent per square metre, proportion households headed by a person with primary education or less, proportion headed by a person in manual or unskilled occupation and the mean number of persons per room were analysed in principle component analysis. The authors compared the index with independent income data and examined associations with mortality from 2001 to 2008. Results 1.27 million overlapping neighbourhoods were defined. Education, occupation and housing variables had loadings of 0.578, 0.570 and 0.362, respectively, and median rent had a loading of −0.459. Mean yearly equivalised income of households increased from SFr42 000 to SFr72 000 between deciles of neighbourhoods with lowest and highest SEP. Comparing deciles of neighbourhoods with lowest to highest SEP, the age- and sex-adjusted HR was 1.38 (95% CI 1.36 to 1.41) for all-cause mortality, 1.83 (95% CI 1.71 to 1.95) for lung cancer, 1.48 (95% CI 1.44 to 1.51) for cardiovascular diseases, 2.42 (95% CI 1.94 to 3.01) for traffic accidents, 0.93 (95% CI 0.85 to 1.02) for breast cancer and 0.86 (95% CI 0.78 to 0.95) for suicide. Conclusions Developed using a novel approach to define neighbourhoods, the Swiss-SEP index was strongly associated with household income and some causes of death. It will be useful for clinical- and population-based studies, where individual-level socioeconomic data are often missing, and to investigate the effects on health of the socioeconomic characteristics of a place.
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The molecular mechanisms that control how progenitors generate distinct subtypes of neurons, and how undifferentiated neurons acquire their specific identity during corticogenesis, are increasingly understood. However, whether postmitotic neurons can change their identity at late stages of differentiation remains unknown. To study this question, we developed an electrochemical in vivo gene delivery method to rapidly manipulate gene expression specifically in postmitotic neurons. Using this approach, we found that the molecular identity, morphology, physiology and functional input-output connectivity of layer 4 mouse spiny neurons could be specifically reprogrammed during the first postnatal week by ectopic expression of the layer 5B output neuron-specific transcription factor Fezf2. These findings reveal a high degree of plasticity in the identity of postmitotic neocortical neurons and provide a proof of principle for postnatal re-engineering of specific neural microcircuits in vivo.
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Silver Lake is located in an 18,053-acre watershed. The watershed is intensively farmed with almost all of the wetlands being previously drained or degraded over the last 50 years. Silver Lake is listed on the State of Iowa’s impaired water bodies list due to sediment and high nutrient level. Silver Lake is also known be in the bottom 25 percentile of Iowa’s lakes due Secchi disk readings and Chlorophyll a level. Farming in the watershed is the principle concern and cause for many of the problems occurring in Silver Lake currently with 78% of the watershed being intensively farmed. There are two major drainage ditches that have been used to drain the major wetlands and sloughs that, at one time, filtered the water and slowed it down before it reached Silver Lake. With these two major drainage ditches, water is able to reach the lake much faster and unfiltered than it once did historically. The loss of 255 restorable wetland basins to row crop production has caused serious problems in Silver Lake. These wetland basins once slowed and filtered water as it moved through the watershed. With their loss over the last 50 years that traditional drainage no longer occurs. We propose to create a Wetland Reserve Program incentive project to make WRP a more attractive option to landowners within the watershed. The incentive will be based on the amount of sediment delivery reduction to the lake, therefore paying a greater payment for a greater benefit to the lake. The expected result of this project is the restoration of over 250 acres of wetland basins with an associated 650 acres of upland buffers. The benefit for these wetlands and buffers would be reduced sediment, reduced nutrients, and slowed waters to the lake.
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We study the gravitational dual of a high-energy collision in a confining gauge theory. We consider a linearized approach in which two point particles traveling in an AdS-soliton background suddenly collide to form an object at rest (presumably a black hole for large enough center-of-mass energies). The resulting radiation exhibits the features expected in a theory with a mass gap: late-time power law tails of the form t −3/2, the failure of Huygens" principle and distortion of the wave pattern as it propagates. The energy spectrum is exponentially suppressed for frequencies smaller than the gauge theory mass gap. Consequently, we observe no memory effect in the gravitational waveforms. At larger frequencies the spectrum has an upward-stairway structure, which corresponds to the excitation of the tower of massive states in the confining gauge theory. We discuss the importance of phenomenological cutoffs to regularize the divergent spectrum, and the aspects of the full non-linear collision that are expected to be captured by our approach.