Academic literature on the topic 'Physical dominance'

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Journal articles on the topic "Physical dominance"

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Toscano, Hugo, Thomas W. Schubert, Ron Dotsch, Virginia Falvello, and Alexander Todorov. "Physical Strength as a Cue to Dominance." Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 42, no. 12 (October 7, 2016): 1603–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0146167216666266.

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We investigate both similarities and differences between dominance and strength judgments using a data-driven approach. First, we created statistical face shape models of judgments of both dominance and physical strength. The resulting faces representing dominance and strength were highly similar, and participants were at chance in discriminating faces generated by the two models. Second, although the models are highly correlated, it is possible to create a model that captures their differences. This model generates faces that vary from dominant-yet-physically weak to nondominant-yet-physically strong. Participants were able to identify the difference in strength between the physically strong-yet-nondominant faces and the physically weak-yet-dominant faces. However, this was not the case for identifying dominance. These results suggest that representations of social dominance and physical strength are highly similar, and that strength is used as a cue for dominance more than dominance is used as a cue for strength.
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Tremblay, Richard E., Benoist Schaal, Bernard Boulerice, Louise Arseneault, Robert G. Soussignan, Daniel Paquette, and Denis Laurent. "Testosterone, Physical Aggression, Dominance, and Physical Development in Early Adolescence." International Journal of Behavioral Development 22, no. 4 (December 1998): 753–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/016502598384153.

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The associations among testosterone, physical development, social dominance, and antisocial behaviour during early adolescence were assessed in a sample of boys followed from 6 to 13 years. Saliva testosterone level was positively correlated with height, and uncorrelated with measures of fatness, including the body mass index. Physical aggression and social dominance were not significantly correlated. Regression analyses revealed that testosterone level and body mass additively predicted social dominance, whereas only body mass predicted physical aggression. Thus, early adolescents with high levels of testosterone were more likely to be socially dominant, especially if they had a large body mass. Those who had a large body mass were more likely to be physically aggressive, independently of their testosterone level. The observed pattern of correlations between testosterone, body mass, dominance, and physical aggression offers an interesting example of the complex hormone-physique-behaviour relations at puberty. They support the hypothesis that testosterone level and social dominance are related, and that the association between testosterone level and physical aggression is probably observed in contexts where physical aggression leads to social dominance.
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Kordsmeyer, Tobias L., Daniel Freund, Mark van Vugt, and Lars Penke. "Honest Signals of Status: Facial and Bodily Dominance Are Related to Success in Physical but Not Nonphysical Competition." Evolutionary Psychology 17, no. 3 (July 2019): 147470491986316. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1474704919863164.

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Recent studies suggest that both facial and bodily dominance promote high status positions and predict status-seeking behaviors such as aggression and social dominance. An evolutionarily relevant context in which associations between these dominance signals and status outcomes may be prevalent are face-to-face status contests. The present study examined whether facial and bodily dominance predicted success in dyadic competitions (one physical discipline, arm wrestling, and three nonphysical disciplines) in men ( N = 125) in a controlled laboratory setting. Men’s bodies and faces were independently rated for physical dominance, and associations of these ratings with contest outcomes as well as mediating and moderating variables (such as physical strength, body height, trait dominance, baseline and reactive testosterone) were examined. Both facial and bodily dominance positively predicted success in the physical discipline, mediated by physical strength, but not in the three nonphysical disciplines. Our findings demonstrate that facial and bodily physical dominance may be honest signals for men’s formidability and hence status potential, at least in a physically competitive context.
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Steel, Beth, P. Chelladurai, and Barbara A. Brown. "Gender Differences in Managerial Aspirations and Potential among Physical Education and Non-Physical Education Students." Journal of Sport Psychology 9, no. 2 (March 1987): 118–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/jsp.9.2.118.

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Gender differences in managerial aspirations and managerial potential have been advanced as possible explanations for the structuring of organizations along gender lines, with women concentrated in lower level jobs and under-represented in managerial positions. These hypothesized gender differences were examined in a sample of male and female physical education and non-physical education students. Analysis of variance results showed that the effects of gender, faculty, or their interaction on managerial aspirations were not significant. The main effects of aspiration level, faculty, and gender on the set of managerial potential variables were significant. Aspirants scored higher than nonaspirants on self-assurance, decisiveness, and need for dominance. Non-physical education students scored higher on need for dominance than did physical education students. Males were higher in need for autonomy and need for dominance, while females were higher in decisiveness.
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Toscano, Hugo, Thomas W. Schubert, and Aaron N. Sell. "Judgments of Dominance from the Face Track Physical Strength." Evolutionary Psychology 12, no. 1 (January 2014): 147470491401200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/147470491401200101.

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Han, Chengyang, Michal Kandrik, Amanda C. Hahn, Claire I. Fisher, David R. Feinberg, Iris J. Holzleitner, Lisa M. DeBruine, and Benedict C. Jones. "Interrelationships Among Men’s Threat Potential, Facial Dominance, and Vocal Dominance." Evolutionary Psychology 15, no. 1 (January 1, 2017): 147470491769733. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1474704917697332.

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The benefits of minimizing the costs of engaging in violent conflict are thought to have shaped adaptations for the rapid assessment of others’ capacity to inflict physical harm. Although studies have suggested that men’s faces and voices both contain information about their threat potential, one recent study suggested that men’s faces are a more valid cue of their threat potential than their voices are. Consequently, the current study investigated the interrelationships among a composite measure of men’s actual threat potential (derived from the measures of their upper-body strength, height, and weight) and composite measures of these men’s perceived facial and vocal threat potential (derived from dominance, strength, and weight ratings of their faces and voices, respectively). Although men’s perceived facial and vocal threat potential were positively correlated, men’s actual threat potential was related to their perceived facial, but not vocal, threat potential. These results present new evidence that men’s faces may be a more valid cue of these aspects of threat potential than their voices are.
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Hamby, Sherry L. "The Dominance Scale: Preliminary Psychometric Properties." Violence and Victims 11, no. 3 (January 1996): 199–212. http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/0886-6708.11.3.199.

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Dominance may be the most widely mentioned risk factor for physical assaults on an intimate partner, but empirical studies have found mixed results. A new measure, the Dominance Scale, operationalizes a reconceptualization that examines three different forms of dominance: Authority, Restrictiveness, and Disparagement. Preliminary psychometric characteristics demonstrated good distributions and internal consistency in a sample of 131 undergraduates. In a comparison of Dominance Scale scores with related constructs of interest, Authority was found to be most closely related to a measure of decision-making power and to social desirability. Of the three, Restrictiveness appears to be most closely associated with partner violence, including psychological aggression, physical assault, and injury. Differences among forms of dominance may partially explain the mixed results of past research. Further validation of the Dominance Scale is planned.
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Pun, Anthea, Susan A. J. Birch, and Andrew Scott Baron. "Infants use relative numerical group size to infer social dominance." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113, no. 9 (February 16, 2016): 2376–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1514879113.

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Detecting dominance relationships, within and across species, provides a clear fitness advantage because this ability helps individuals assess their potential risk of injury before engaging in a competition. Previous research has demonstrated that 10- to 13-mo-old infants can represent the dominance relationship between two agents in terms of their physical size (larger agent = more dominant), whereas younger infants fail to do so. It is unclear whether infants younger than 10 mo fail to represent dominance relationships in general, or whether they lack sensitivity to physical size as a cue to dominance. Two studies explored whether infants, like many species across the animal kingdom, use numerical group size to assess dominance relationships and whether this capacity emerges before their sensitivity to physical size. A third study ruled out an alternative explanation for our findings. Across these studies, we report that infants 6–12 mo of age use numerical group size to infer dominance relationships. Specifically, preverbal infants expect an agent from a numerically larger group to win in a right-of-way competition against an agent from a numerically smaller group. In addition, this is, to our knowledge, the first study to demonstrate that infants 6–9 mo of age are capable of understanding social dominance relations. These results demonstrate that infants’ understanding of social dominance relations may be based on evolutionarily relevant cues and reveal infants’ early sensitivity to an important adaptive function of social groups.
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Macdermid, Joy C., Lb Fehr, and Kc Lindsay. "The Effect of Physical Factors on Grip Strength and Dexterity." British Journal of Hand Therapy 7, no. 4 (December 2002): 112–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/175899830200700401.

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This study evaluated the relationship between physical factors (age, sex, hand size and dominance, height and weight) and both grip strength and dexterity. Ninety healthy subjects without current upper extremity pathology or injuries were recruited. Anthropometric measures of the hand were taken using the NK Micrometer, grip strength using the NK Digit-Grip, and dexterity (small, medium and large subsets) was tested using the NK Dexterity Board. Univariate correlations between grip strength and subject height, hand span, width and length were significant (r=0.38-0.82). Sex (p 0.001) and hand dominance (p 0.05) were also significant predictors of grip strength. Increased age resulted in increased time in all dexterity subtests (r=0.30-0.51). Multivariate stepwise regression revealed that sex explained the majority of variance in grip strength scores (r2=0.46-0.76), with additional contribution of age and height. Dexterity was less predictable, but most related to age (r2=0.13-0.26), with sex and dominance providing some additional information. While it is relatively easy to establish that a patient has an impaired grip, caution should be taken when ascribing that label to an individual patient's performance on a dexterity test.
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Sandstrom, Robert W. "The Meanings of Autonomy for Physical Therapy." Physical Therapy 87, no. 1 (January 1, 2007): 98–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.2522/ptj.20050245.

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The purpose of this article is to explore the social context and meanings of autonomy to physical therapy. Professional autonomy is a social contract based on public trust in an occupation to meet a significant social need and to preserve individual autonomy. Professional autonomy includes control over the decisions and procedures related to one’s work (technical autonomy) and control over the economic resources necessary to complete one’s work (socioeconomic autonomy). Professional autonomy is limited and weakened by the relationship of one profession to another (dominance), by the influence of other social institutions (rationalization and deprofessionalization), and by the internal disposition of the profession itself (insularity). Professional autonomy for physical therapists is increasing as medical dominance has declined but is limited by the trends of rationalization and deprofessionalization in health care. Physical therapists must recognize that professional autonomy represents a social contract based on public trust and service to meet the health needs of people who are experiencing disablement in order to maintain their individual autonomy.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Physical dominance"

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Wang, Renshen. "Physical planning to embrace interconnect dominance in power and performance." Diss., [La Jolla] : University of California, San Diego, 2010. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/fullcit?p3404703.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, San Diego, 2010.
Title from first page of PDF file (viewed June 15, 2010). Available via ProQuest Digital Dissertations. Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 49-50).
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Sharp, Martin A. "Social dominance and biology : investigating female hormonal response to non-physical competition." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/29359.

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The thesis explores the relationship between salivary testosterone (T), cortisol (F), and non-physical competition in women. In order to address widely acknowledged difficulties with determining levels of female T, particularly the biologically active ‘free’ fraction as measured in saliva, a highly sensitive ‘in-house’ enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay (ELISA) was optimised and validated. Assay sensitivity was 0.5pg/mL. By determining a comprehensive picture of the daily activity of salivary T in 34 healthy female subjects, it was possible to demonstrate that T follows a circadian rhythm the relative levels of which differ over two non-consecutive days. Moreover, throughout the course of the day T levels were highly variable, with episodic fluctuation of individual data points exceeding 83% of 9am levels. A quasi-experimental study examined changes in T and F in relation to non-physical dyadic encounters. Twenty-four females (ages 19-24 years) competed in a knockout tournament involving the wood-block game ‘Jenga’. They collected comprehensive salivary samples for baseline, pre- and post-competition phases. Subjects additionally reported mood states and answered questions concerning their participation in the competition. Whilst the comprehensive T data resist easy interpretation, compared against baseline, pre-comp T appeared un-responsive in anticipation of competition even though F levels did rise in the 3 hours prior to competition. Compared with levels immediately pre-competition, 1 hr post-competition T levels were higher in winners than losers. F-levels, conversely, rose in losers and fell in winners. These results illustrate that, similar to males, women demonstrate a dynamic endocrine response to competition. Moreover, choice of competitive task and salivary sampling regimens may, to a large extent, account for the equivocal findings in the literature.
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Howard, III James Thomas. "Physical Guidance in Motor Learning." Queensland University of Technology, 2003. http://eprints.qut.edu.au/15899/.

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Previous studies of physical guidance (PG - physically constraining error during practice of a motor task) have found it to be ineffective in enhancing motor learning. However, most studies have used a highly constraining form of physical guidance that may have encouraged undue dependency. In addition, previous research has not fully considered the interaction between visual feedback and PG, and many of the studies have failed to use standard delayed retention tests with knowledge of results unavailable (no-KR). The current experiment examine the effects of varying levels of constraint in PG, as well as the interaction of PG and visual guidance (VG), using no-KR retention tests. This study involved 99 subjects divided into nine acquisition trial condition groups, forming from a 3 x 3 factorial design with factors of PG x VG, each presented at levels designated as tight, bandwidth, or none. Subjects undertook a two-dimensional pattern drawing task with no KR, PG, or VG as a pre-test, before completing 100 practice trials under one of the nine conditions. The same test was given as a retention test (immediately after practice) and as a delayed retention test (two days later). A transfer test, using a different pattern, was also administered on the second day. Almost all groups performed better on the immediate transfer test than they had on the pre-test. However, after two days only three groups (PG bandwidth-VG tight, PG none-VG bandwidth, and PG none-VG none) retained this improvement and only two groups (PG bandwidth-VG bandwidth and PG none-VG none) performed significantly better on the transfer task than their pre-test. It is proposed that bandwidth guidance generally promotes learning and that bandwidth physical guidance may enhance proprioceptive cues. Independent of PG and VG effects, KR (an overall error score) also facilitated learning.
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Keddie, Amanda, and edu au jillj@deakin edu au mikewood@deakin edu au wildol@deakin edu au kimg@deakin. "Little boys: the potency of peer culture in shaping masculinities." Deakin University. School of Education / School of Social & Cultural Studies, 2001. http://tux.lib.deakin.edu.au./adt-VDU/public/adt-VDU20041216.100720.

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This study explores the peer group understandings of five male friends between the ages of six and eight years and seeks to examine the ways in which the group’s social dynamics interact to define, regulate and maintain dominant and collective understandings of masculinities. Within a self-selected affinity context, and drawing on their lived and imagined experiences, the boys’ enact and interpret their social worlds. Adopting the principles of ethnography within a framework of feminist poststructuralism and drawing on theories of ‘groupness’ and gender(ed) embodiment, the boys’ understandings of masculinities are captured and interpreted. The key analytic foci are directed towards examining the role of power in the social production of collective schoolboy knowledges, and understanding the processes through which boys subjectify and are subjectified, through social but also bodily discourses. The boys’ constructions of peer group masculinities are (re)presented through a narrative methodology which foregrounds my interpretation of the group’s personal and social relevances and seeks to be inductive in ways that ‘bring to life’ the boys’ stories. The study illuminates the potency of peer culture in shaping and regulating the boys’ dominant understandings of masculinity. Within this culture strong essentialist and hierarchical values are imported to support a range of gender(ed) and sexual dualisms. Here patriarchal adult culture is regularly mimicked and distorted. Underpinned by constructions of ‘femininity’ as the negative ‘other’, dominant masculinities are embodied, cultivated and championed through physical dominance, physical risk, aggression and violence. Through feminist poststructural analysis which enables a theorising of the boys’ subjectivities as fluid, tenuous and often characterised by contradiction and resistance, there exists a potential for interrupting and re-working particular masculinities. Within this framework, more affirmative but equally legitimate understandings and embodiments can be explored. The study presents a warrant for working with early childhood affinity groups to disrupt and contest the dominance and hierarchy of peer culture in an effort to counter-act broader gendered and heterosexist global, state and institutional structures. Framing these assertions is an understanding of the peer context as not only self-limiting and productive of hierarchies, but enabling and generative of affirmative subjectivities.
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ANDERSSON, ALEXANDER, and KARL ESSUNGER. "Physical or Digital Payments : Towards a Dominant Design?" Thesis, KTH, Industriell ekonomi och organisation (Inst.), 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-236483.

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Rapid digitalisation development has been stampeding widely across today’s societies, and not least in the payment industry. Though, the digitalisation in the payment industry has been very deviating, even between similar well-developed countries, and while there are positive and negative effects with both digital- and physical payment means, there is little knowledge that highlights the influencing factors and accompanied problems. This study therefore explore swhich, and how, different factors influence a country’s degree of digital payments, and creates further understanding of where the payment markets are heading in the future. It is done through a case study of four different industrialised countries, Sweden, Italy, Canada, and Switzerland which involves mapping the countries’ payment markets, as well as potential factors influencing a population’s payment habits, through a perspective of innovation theory in terms of dominant designs and technological discontinuities. Theory of network externalities and two-sided platforms are further used to explain and discuss how a two-sided market, likethe payment market, is affected by changes and other circumstances in different ways.Conclusions are then drawn from the used theories together with a comparison of the findings,and identifies certain influencers to a country’s distribution of payments, as well as provides indications of where the different payments markets are heading in the future. Data is mainly gathered through written material and credible databases, but also from semi-structured interviews.
Den snabba digitaliseringen har slagit sig fram i dagens samhällen, och inte minst i betalningsindustrin. Dock har digitaliseringen i betalningsindustrin varit mycket avvikande mellan liknande välutvecklade länder, och medan det finns positiva och negativa effekter med både digitala och fysiska betalningsmedel, finns det inte mycket kunskap om påverkandefaktorer och medföljande problem. Denna studie undersöker därför vilka, och hur, olika faktorer påverkar ett lands grad av digitala betalningar, och vidare skapar ytterligare förståelse för var betalningsmarknaderna är på väg framöver. Detta görs genom en fallstudie av fyra olika industrialiserade länder, Sverige, Italien, Kanada och Schweiz, som innebär en kartläggning av ländernas betalningsmarknader, och av potentiella faktorer som påverkar befolkningens betalningsvanor, genom ett perspektiv från innovationsteori i form av dominerande design och tekniska diskontinuiteter. Teori om nätverksexternaliteter och tvåsidiga plattformar används vidare för att förklara och diskutera hur en tvåsidig marknad som betalningsmarknadenpåverkas av förändringar och andra omständigheter. Slutsatser dras sedan från de användateorierna tillsammans med en jämförelse av resultaten och identifierar påverkande faktorer tillett lands betalningsdistribution, samt ger indikationer på var de olika betalningsmarknaderna är på väg framöver. Data samlades huvudsakligen in genom skriftligt material och från tillförlitliga databaser, men även från semistrukturerade intervjuer.
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Pierre, Darren Michael 1971. "Modeling orientation and ocular dominance columns in the visual cortex." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/43525.

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Pound, Susan Elizabeth. "Genetic and physical mapping of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/20118.

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A sample of 35 families with ADPKD from central Scotland, previously typed with two markers from the PKD1 region [3'HVR. However, there is one recombinant with CMM65 (D16S84), and one with 26-6 (D16S125), which localises PKD1 to between these markers. In order to obtain cloned DNA from this genetically defined region of interest, spanning approximately 750 kb of DNA, yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) were isolated from available libraries.
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Goodyear, Victoria A. "Participatory action research : challenging the dominant practice architectures of physical education." Thesis, University of Bedfordshire, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10547/297585.

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Research shows that the dominant pedagogical practices of physical education are irrelevant to young people in the 21st century, and that physical education currently exists in a time of innovation without change. Subsequently, physical education as a curriculum subject is at risk of becoming extinct unless the 'talked' about pedagogical innovations that provide authentic, relevant and transferable learning experiences can become sustainable 'actioned' futures. Therefore, the purpose of this thesis was to explore how a pedagogical innovation, the Cooperative Learning model, could be used over an enduring period of time. Participatory action research (PAR) was used as the methodology to scaffold the inquiry and to support eight secondary school physical education teachers' learning and use of Cooperative Learning during an academic year. This thesis considers how PAR enabled teachers to break the dominant practice architectures of physical education and how PAR supported teachers‘ use of an emergent pedagogical approach within and beyond the honeymoon period of implementation. In other words, how PAR facilitated teachers' ability to work beyond the dominant pedagogical practices of physical education and the practices endorsed by the school as an institution. Furthermore, how PAR sustained teachers' engagement with, and use of, the Cooperative Learning model. Indeed, Cooperative Learning was firstly immersed within the milieu of the practice architectures. Yet through the use of PAR the teachers were motivated to move beyond the honeymoon period and began to use the model within, with and then against the mess of the practice architectures. Subsequently, Cooperative Learning was emerging as the dominant pedagogical approach. However, this only occurred for some teachers where social connectivity and an emerging community of practice were significant variables in sustaining and adapting the use of Cooperative Learning. The contribution to knowledge is therefore the methodological processes of how to move beyond dominant pedagogical practices and facilitate innovation with change. In order for a pedagogical innovation to become a sustainable 'actioned' future its use is context dependent and PAR facilitates its sustainability. Furthermore, teacher learning should be advanced and teachers should be encouraged to create communicative spaces with colleagues and researcher facilitators.
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Wang, Mengchen. "Rheological Behavior of Wall-Slip Dominant Solutions." University of Akron / OhioLINK, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=akron1427994338.

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Hesling, Isabelle. "Le rôle de l'hémisphère cérébral droit dans la production et la perception de la parole : études physico-acoustiques ̱ investigations neurolinguistiques ̱ propositions pour un rééquilibrage de l'activité cérébrale." Toulouse 2, 2000. http://www.theses.fr/2000TOU20013.

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La maitrise operationnelle de la langue anglaise n'est pas aisee pour bon nombre d'apprenants de notre systeme scolaire. La dimension lexico-grammaticale et syntaxique atteint un niveau acceptable mais ne permet pas de dominer la dimension orale de la langue en cours d'apprentissage. Les recentes recherches dans le domaine des neurosciences nous apprennent que la dimension prosodique d'une langue, support naturel de la parole sur lequel viennent se superposer les elements grammaticaux et syntaxiques, est principalement geree par l'hemisphere cerebral droit. La langue, produite et percue par le cerveau humain, est soumise a la subjectivite du cerveau, qui ne percoit pas les caracteristiques de la langue seconde en valeur absolue, mais en valeur relative (physique perceptive), chaque apprenant etant cerebralement conditionne par sa langue maternelle. Les connaissances en linguistique, acoustique et neurologie permettent de proposer aux candidats a l'apprentissage d'une langue des strategies variables en fonction de leur maturite cerebrale. Ainsi, les propositions d'intervention, visant a l'acquisition de la langue anglaise, basees sur le developpement preponderant de l'hemisphere cerebral droit chez les enfants de moins de 8 ans different des strategies de remediation pour les "durs d'oreille". Les difficultes d'acquisition des langues, tout comme le langage pathologique, sont envisages ici en terme de desequilibre de l'activite cerebrale. Une strategie concue sur le reequilibrage de l'activite cerebrale, par la sur-utilisation specifique de l'hemisphere cerebral droit, naturelle chez les tout-petits, exercee artificiellement (dispositif intolang) chez les apprenants adultes ou chez les cerebro-leses, entraine des progres non contestables. Chaque hemisphere cerebral est implique specifiquement dans la parole, mais leur activite est complementaire. Deux cerveaux pour apprendre. . . Ou reapprendre a parler.
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Books on the topic "Physical dominance"

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Gail, Dennison, ed. Cómo aplicar gimnasia para el cerebro: Técnicas de autoayuda para la escuela y el hogar. México: Pax México, 2003.

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Gail, Dennison, and Espinosa Guillermo, eds. Brain gym: Aprendizaje de todo el cerebro. México, D.F: Robinbook, 2000.

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Dennison, Paul E. Brain gym. Ventura, CA: Edu-Kinesthetics, 1994.

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Gail, Dennison, ed. Brain gym: Simple activities for whole brain learning. Ventura, Calif: Edu-Kinesthetics, Inc., 1986.

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Gail, Dennison, ed. Gimnasia para el cerebro. México, D.F: Editorial Pax México, 2003.

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Bedside manners: The troubled history of doctors and patients. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1985.

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Shorter, Edward. Bedside manners: The troubled history of doctors and patients. Harmondsworth: Viking, 1986.

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Shorter, Edward. Bedside manners: The troubled history of doctors and patients. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1985.

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Maggiore, Michele. Basics of FRW cosmology. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198570899.003.0008.

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An introduction to FRW cosmology. Comoving and physical coordinates and momenta. Background equation for single fluids and multi-components fluids. Radiation dominance, matter dominance, recombination and decoupling. Newtonian cosmology inside the horizon.
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Lemos, T. M. Of Dogs and Men. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198784531.003.0006.

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This chapter summarizes the evidence from the previous chapters, making clear that the conception of personhood most widespread in ancient Israel was one closely tied to dominance. Only the personhood of a socially dominant man was a complete personhood, and dominance was constructed in such a manner that dominant men were entitled to abrogate the personhood of subordinates through physical violence. This point leads to a comparison of the relationship between violence and personhood in ancient Israel and in certain contemporary American contexts. Examining the treatment of the bodies of military prisoners, those incarcerated in American prisons, or African-American men shot by police, one sees important similarities between Israelite violence and the violence seen in these contemporary contexts. These similarities arise because these contexts promote a specific type of personhood, one centered on a totalizing masculine domination that allows the extreme subjugation of others and the erasure of their personhood.
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Book chapters on the topic "Physical dominance"

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Tremblay, Richard E., Benoist Schaal, Bernard Boulerice, Louise Arseneault, Robert Soussignan, and Daniel Pérusse. "Male Physical Aggression, Social Dominance and Testosterone Levels at Puberty." In Biosocial Bases of Violence, 271–91. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-4648-8_16.

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Atintande, M’Bawine. "Digital Communication in Africa at Crossroads: From Physical Exploitation in the Past to Virtual Dominance Now." In Digital Communications at Crossroads in Africa, 41–69. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-42404-6_3.

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Piller, G., and W. Weise. "Vector meson dominance." In Lecture Notes in Physics, 1–18. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-52981-0_1.

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Raval, Haresh, and Urjit A. Yajnik. "Infrared Abelian Dominance in a Special Gauge." In Springer Proceedings in Physics, 55–60. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-25619-1_9.

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Schwartz, Sheree, Nikita Viswasam, and Phelister Abdalla. "Integrated Interventions to Address Sex Workers’ Needs and Realities: Academic and Community Insights on Incorporating Structural, Behavioural, and Biomedical Approaches." In Sex Work, Health, and Human Rights, 231–53. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-64171-9_13.

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AbstractSex workers experience multi-factorial threats to their physical and mental health. Stigma, human rights violations and occupational exposures to violence, STIs, HIV, and unintended pregnancy create complex health inequities that may not be effectively addressed through programmes or services that focus on a single disease or issue. Meeting cisgender female, male, and transgender sex workers’ unmet needs and realities effectively requires more nuanced, multi-faceted public health approaches. Using a community-informed perspective, this chapter reviews layered multi-component and multi-level interventions that address a combination of structural, behavioural, and biomedical approaches. This chapter addresses (1) what are integrated interventions and why they are important; (2) what types of integrated interventions have been tested and what evidence is available on how integrated interventions have affected health outcomes; (3) what challenges and considerations are important when evaluating integrated interventions. Key findings include the dominance of biomedical and behavioural research among sex workers, which have produced mixed results at achieving impact. There is a need for further incorporation and evaluation of structural intervention components, particularly those identified as highest priority among sex workers, as well as the need for more opportunities for leadership from the sex work community in setting and implementing the research agenda.
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Mokler, P. H., C. Beilmann, Z. Harman, C. H. Keitel, S. Bernitt, J. Ullrich, and J. R. Crespo López-Urrutia. "Dominance of Higher-Order Contributions to Electronic Recombination." In New Trends in Atomic and Molecular Physics, 57–66. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38167-6_4.

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Radecki-Pawlik, Artur. "Why Do We Need Bankfull and Dominant Discharges?" In Rivers – Physical, Fluvial and Environmental Processes, 497–518. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-17719-9_20.

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Wang, H., J. Shah, T. C. Damen, and L. N. Pfeiffer. "Dominant Biexcitonic Nonlinear Response in GaAs Quantum Wells." In Springer Series in Chemical Physics, 395–96. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-85176-6_148.

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Gibbs, H. M., N. Peyghambarian, Y. H. Lee, M. Warren, A. Chavez-Pirson, S. H. Park, J. Morhange, et al. "Room-Temperature Bulk GaAs: Dominant Nonlinearities, Fast-Recovery Gates, Arrays for Parallel Processing." In Springer Proceedings in Physics, 195–203. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-71907-3_16.

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Ghosh, Monojit. "Why T2K Should Run in Dominant Neutrino Mode to Discover CP Violation?" In XXII DAE High Energy Physics Symposium, 137–39. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-73171-1_30.

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Conference papers on the topic "Physical dominance"

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Jin, Xiongnan, Sejin Chun, Jooik Jung, and Kyong-Ho Lee. "IoT Service Selection Based on Physical Service Model and Absolute Dominance Relationship." In 2014 IEEE 7th International Conference on Service-Oriented Computing and Applications (SOCA). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/soca.2014.24.

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Alam, Tamanna, Wenming Li, Fanghao Yang, Ahmed Shehab Khan, Yan Tong, Jamil Khan, Jing Li, Zuankai Wang, and Chen Li. "Force Analysis of Bubble Dynamics in Flow Boiling Silicon Nanowire Microchannels." In ASME 2016 5th International Conference on Micro/Nanoscale Heat and Mass Transfer. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/mnhmt2016-6714.

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In microchannel flow boiling, bubble nucleation, growth and flow regime development are highly influenced by channel cross-section and physical phenomena underlying this mechanism are far from being well-established. Relative effects of different forces acting on wall-liquid and liquid-vapor interface of a confined bubble play an important role in heat transfer performances. Therefore, fundamental investigations are necessary to develop enhanced microchannel heat transfer surfaces. Force analysis of vapor bubble dynamics in flow boiling Silicon Nanowire (SiNW) microchannels has been performed based on theoretical, experimental and visualization studies. The relative effects of different forces on flow regime, instability and heat transfer performances of flow boiling in Silicon Nanowire microchannels have been identified. Inertia, surface tension, shear, buoyancy, and evaporation momentum forces have significant importance at liquid-vapor interface as discussed earlier by several authors. However, no comparative study has been done for different surface properties till date. Detailed analyses of these forces including contact angle and bubble flow boiling characteristics have been conducted in this study. A comparative study between Silicon Nanowire and Plainwall microchannels has been performed based on force analysis in the flow boiling microchannels. In addition, force analysis during instantaneous bubble growth stage has been performed. Compared to Plainwall microchannels, enhanced surface rewetting and critical heat flux (CHF) are owing to higher surface tension force at liquid-vapor interface and Capillary dominance resulting from Silicon Nanowires. Whereas, low Weber number in Silicon Nanowire helps maintaining uniform and stable thin film and improves heat transfer performances. Moreover, force analysis during instantaneous bubble growth shows the dominance of surface tension at bubble nucleation and slug/transitional flow which resulted higher heat transfer contact area, lower thermal resistance and higher thin film evaporation. Whereas, inertia force is dominant at annular flow and it helps in bubble removal process and rewetting.
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Low, H. C., C. J. Scott, and A. Veninger. "Correlated Fuel Property Effects on an F402-RR-406A (Pegasus) Engine Combustor." In ASME 1990 International Gas Turbine and Aeroengine Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/90-gt-276.

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An F402-RR-406A (Pegasus) engine has been subjected to extensive sea-level and altitude operation on a wide range of viable emergency fuels. Sea-level main engine starting was successful for all six fuels and windmilling altitude relight tests were equally flawless, even outside the flight envelope. Cold soak sea-level starting was achieved with DFM of viscosities up to 12 centistokes. Clear inter-relationships between combustor metal temperatures, primary zone flame radiation and optically measured exhaust Smoke Numbers demonstrate a common dependence of these parameters upon the indeterminable primary zone soot concentration. Correlations against fuel properties illustrate the dominance of fuel chemistry over physical properties, even with respect to changes in carbon monoxide and unburned hydrocarbon emissions (and hence combustion inefficiency) at low power. The degrees of premixing and prevaporisation within the Rolls-Royce ‘vaporiser’ fuel injector are considered responsible for the diminished significance of physical properties relative to influences upon conventional fuel atomiser behaviour.
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Tikhonova, I. V., T. N. Adeeva, and U. Yu Sevastyanova. "Personality adaptation and internal picture of the defect in adolescents with different variants of dysontogenesis." In INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC AND PRACTICAL ONLINE CONFERENCE. Знание-М, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.38006/907345-50-8.2020.951.964.

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Disabilities are traditionally seen as development conditions involving personality desocialization risks. Features of the disorder are reflected in the consciousness of the individual. A person’s subjective perception of their disorder is important for social and psychological adaptation. Adaptive features and adolescent content of the inward disorder pattern (IDP) are presented in the article. The sample consisted of 109 participants — adolescents with visual impairments, with hearing impairments, with severe speech impairments, with delayed mental development. The optimal level of adaptation is typical for all respondents. Adolescents with hearing impairment demonstrate a high level of adaptability, indicate a high level of acceptance of themselves and others, emotional comfort, and internal orientation of self-control. At the same time, respondents demonstrate dependence on others. Respondents with delayed mental development have the opposite adaptation variant. A relatively critical level of acceptance of oneself and others, a moderate level of emotional comfort is observed in this group. Teenagers with delayed mental development often demonstrate dominance in relationships. A comparative analysis of the inward disorder pattern components shows a significant difference in the completeness of all components of the inward disorder pattern. Teenagers with visual impairment are best aware of their violation, know the causes and prevention factors. Adolescents with severe speech disorders show poor cognitive component IDP. Teenagers with delayed mental development are fixated on physical sensations. Children with hearing disorders do not notice physical sensations and discomfort associated with the disorder, and do not demonstrate motivation to change in response to the disorder. The greatest number of correlations exists between the motivational, physical component in the IDP and adaptation indicators. However, reliable correlations are established between the cognitive component and the manifestations of dominancedependence.
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Rosetti, Guilherme F., Guilherme Vaz, Martin Hoekstra, Rodolfo T. Gonçalves, and André L. C. Fujarra. "CFD Calculations for Free-Surface-Piercing Low Aspect Ratio Circular Cylinder With Solution Verification and Comparison With Experiments." In ASME 2013 32nd International Conference on Ocean, Offshore and Arctic Engineering. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2013-10963.

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The flow around free-surface piercing, low aspect-ratio circular cylinder is investigated by means of unsteady Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes (URANS) calculations together with verification procedures and comparison with small-scale experimental and Particle Image Velocimetry results. A two-phase interface capturing model is used to handle the free-surface flow, together with k-ω SST turbulence model. We investigate physical and modeling aspects of this problem in order to gain more knowledge about the interaction of free-surface and free-end effects so that this mechanism is better understood and taken into account when modeling the problem in engineering-applied situations, such as the vortex induced motion of spars, tension-leg platforms and semi-submersibles. The case herein presented is a captive, low aspect-ratio cylinder (L/D = 2.0) with flow velocity corresponding to Reynolds and Froude numbers (both based on diameter) of Re = 4.3 × 104 and FnD = 0.31, respectively. We will show that appreciable free-surface effects are perceived on the flow, but with dominance of free-end effects, at least in terms of forces. Furthermore, we investigate different boundary conditions that would represent this free-surface problem to show that the separation of viscous and free-surface effects is not valid in this instance. Therefore, the interaction between viscous and free-surface effects is also tangentially investigated. In order to support our conclusions, we will show forces with uncertainty estimation and field variables obtained with different modeling strategies, unveiling physical and numerical aspects of this problem.
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Mete, Ipek, and Yonca Toker. "Relative importance of college success predictors: fluid intelligence, crystallized intelligence, and grit." In Third International Conference on Higher Education Advances. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/head17.2017.5568.

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This study aimed to compare the predictive power of grit and two cognitive ability tests of fluid and crystallized intelligence used for university admission on the success of college students in Turkey. Utilizing Cattell’s Investment Theory and Ackerman’s PPIK Theory of Adult Intelligence, we hypothesized that knowledge tests would be a better predictor of academic achievement in college than tests of fluid intelligence. We collected data from 441 students enrolled in engineering, physical sciences, social sciences, and administrative sciences majors in a technical university. Our results based on hierarchical regression and dominance analyses provided support for our hypothesis. For science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) students, the test of crystallized intelligence not only was a better predictor of college GPA compared to the test of fluid intelligence but also explained incremental variance over and above the fluid intelligence test. For social-administrative sciences, the predictive powers of tests were equivalent to each other. We also found that the perseverance of effort dimension of grit was the best predictor of GPA. Our findings support the notions of the adult intelligence theories suggesting that domain knowledge is a better predictor of typical performance in adults.
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Nurhidayat, Eko Surdarmanto, Rony Syaifullah, and Agam Akhmad Syaukani. "Dominant Physical Factor Determinant to Play Football." In Proceedings of the 4th Progressive and Fun Education International Conference (PFEIC 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/pfeic-19.2019.10.

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Nugroho, Prihadi. "Bringing creative economy to community resilience towards better urban governance." In 55th ISOCARP World Planning Congress, Beyond Metropolis, Jakarta-Bogor, Indonesia. ISOCARP, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/xgsl2437.

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As a growing metropolis in the north coast Java region, Semarang City has been transforming from a port city to a multifunctioning city. Mercantilism tradition has brought forward the local economy into trade and service dominance, shifting the city to become an important marketplace beyond the peripheral boundaries. Interestingly, the city’s urbanisation growth does not follow ‘a common trend’ in Indonesia (and many parts of the world) characterized by modernized urban fabrics with mixed land use. The city is suffered from fragmented physical urban transformation and separated formal and informal economy. The urban sprawling forces are scattered around the city outskirt while the inner city’s development filled up by discontinued commercial properties. On the other hand, there is ‘a new direction’ of urban movement based on the bottom-up kampong revitalisation. Instead of encouraging more modernized physical and economic space, these kampong settlements have proposed creative economy from below useful to (re- )organising the economic space of the urban region. This paper aims to examine how the recent urban transformation in Semarang City has been fuelled by creative economy activities through which the kampong settlements promote local community resilience. Desk study method accompanied by focus group discussions and field observations is completed in pursuit of data collection and analysis. The primary data source is taken from the Local Development Planning Authority project on creative kampong development since 2016. The preliminary results show that kampong-based creative economy movement at the urban scale is beneficial to enhancing the informal economy and urban settlement development. Participatory governance has been strengthened following income generation in situ even though their contribution to community resilience in the long-term still requires further explorations.
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Cotanch, Stephen R., and Robert A. Williams. "Nucleon strangeness content through vector meson dominance." In INTERSECTIONS BETWEEN PARTICLE AND NUCLEAR PHYSICS. ASCE, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.54298.

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Szeto, K. Y. "Topology for Dominance for Network of Multi-Agent System." In NONEQUILIBRIUM STATISTICAL MECHANICS AND NONLINEAR PHYSICS: XV Conference on Nonequilibrium Statistical Mechanics and Nonlinear Physics. AIP, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2746731.

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Reports on the topic "Physical dominance"

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Tsybekmitova, G. Ts, L. D. Radnaeva, N. A. Tashlykova, V. G. Shiretorova, A. K. Tulokhonov, B. B. Bazarova, and M. O. Matveeva. THE EFFECT OF CLIMATIC SHIFTS ON BIODIVERSITY OF PHYTOCENOSIS: LAKE ARAKHLEY (EASTERN SIBERIA, RUSSIA). DOICODE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/0973-7308-2020-35-3-77-90.

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Lake Arakhley is located within the Lake Baikal basin in Eastern Siberia, Russia. The area is characterized by continental subarctic climate with considerate diurnal temperature range, long cold dry winters and short hot summers with more precipitation occurring during the latter half of the summer. Climatic shifts in high water years and low water years result in morphometric changes in the lake and in the chemical and physical parameters of the ecosystem. During low water years, concentrations of ammonium nitrogen and nitrite nitrogen are decreased, whereas nitrate concentration increases. High water years feature average concentrations of ammonium ions 1.5–2 times higher than the values of recent dry years. Redundancy analysis (RDA) of abiotic factors and biotic community indicated that the community structure shows the greatest correlation with physical and chemical parameters of water and biogenic elements (nitrites, ammonium, phosphates) along the first axis, and with the lake depth and transparency along the second axis. Changes in abiotic factors induce functioning and formation of characteristic communities of the primary producers in the trophic structure of the ecosystem. During low water years, with increased level of autochthonous organic matter, Lindavia comta dominance is observed, while during high water years, with increased allochthonous organic matter Asterionella formosa appeared as dominant. Currently, during low water years, the hydrophytes community is monodominant and composed of Ceratophyllum demersum. Meanwhile, such species indicating eutrophic conditions as Myriophyllum sibiricum, Potamogeton pectinatus are found in the lake vegetation.
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Sockwell, Kenneth, Pavel Bochev, J. Tucker, and Paul Kuberry. Automated Discovery of DOminaNt physics Informed Surrogates (ADDONIS) Framework for Improving Water Cycling Predictability. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), April 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1769678.

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Clausen, Jay, Susan Frankenstein, Jason Dorvee, Austin Workman, Blaine Morriss, Keran Claffey, Terrance Sobecki, et al. Spatial and temporal variance of soil and meteorological properties affecting sensor performance—Phase 2. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), September 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/41780.

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An approach to increasing sensor performance and detection reliability for buried objects is to better understand which physical processes are dominant under certain environmental conditions. The present effort (Phase 2) builds on our previously published prior effort (Phase 1), which examined methods of determining the probability of detection and false alarm rates using thermal infrared for buried-object detection. The study utilized a 3.05 × 3.05 m test plot in Hanover, New Hampshire. Unlike Phase 1, the current effort involved removing the soil from the test plot area, homogenizing the material, then reapplying it into eight discrete layers along with buried sensors and objects representing targets of inter-est. Each layer was compacted to a uniform density consistent with the background undisturbed density. Homogenization greatly reduced the microscale soil temperature variability, simplifying data analysis. The Phase 2 study spanned May–November 2018. Simultaneous measurements of soil temperature and moisture (as well as air temperature and humidity, cloud cover, and incoming solar radiation) were obtained daily and recorded at 15-minute intervals and coupled with thermal infrared and electro-optical image collection at 5-minute intervals.
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Ripey, Mariya. NUMBERS IN THE NEWS TEXT (BASED ON MATERIAL OF ONE ISSUE OF NATIONWIDE NEWSPAPER “DAY”). Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.50.11106.

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The article is devoted to the analysis of the digital content of publications of one issue of the daily All-Ukrainian newspaper “Den” (March 13-14, 2020). The author aims to identify the main thematic groups of digital designations, as well as to consider cases of justified and unsuccessful use of digital designations. Applying the content analysis method, the author identifies publications that contain numerical notations, determines the number of such notations and their affiliation with the main subject groups. Finds that the thematic group of digital designations “time” (58.6% of all digital designations) is much more dominant. This indicates that timing is the most important task of a newspaper text. The second largest group of digital designations is “measure” (15.8% of all digital designations). It covers dimensions and proportions, measurements of distance, weight, volume, and more. The third largest group of digital signage is money (8.2% of all digital signage), the fourth is numbering (5.2% of all digital signage), and the fifth is people (4.4% of all digital signage). The author focuses on the fact that the digits of the journalist’s text are both a source of information and a catch for the reader. Vivid indicators give the text a sense of accuracy. When referring digital data to the text, journalists must adhere to certain rules for the writing of ordinal numbers with incremental graduation; submission of dates; pointing to unique integers that are combined (or not combined) with units of physical quantities, monetary units, etc.; writing a numerator at the beginning of a sentence; unified presentation of data. This will greatly facilitate the reader’s perception of the information.
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