Academic literature on the topic 'Subjectivity Middle age Middle age Middle age'

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Journal articles on the topic "Subjectivity Middle age Middle age Middle age"

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González Bueno, María Auxiliadora, Noemí Parra Abaúnza, and María Dolores Robledano Celis. "AMOR, DESEO Y SEXUALIDAD EN LA EDAD MADURA." International Journal of Developmental and Educational Psychology. Revista INFAD de Psicología. 1, no. 2 (October 28, 2016): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.17060/ijodaep.2016.n2.v1.661.

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Abstract.The workshop “Love, desire and sexuality in the middle age” is a guided reflection around the social determinants of sexuality in middle age. These are based on a model of natural sexuality that hides and stereotype the sexuality of elder people, impacting on their own subjectivity and the care offered (or ignored) to their needs of sexuality. Sexuality is a closely related aspect to the psychosocial well-being, so it is crucial to think about on those elements that obstruct a satisfactory experience of it.Keywords: sexuality, elderlyResumen.El taller “Amor, deseo y sexualidad en la edad madura” favorece una reflexión guiada en torno a los condicionantes sociales de la sexualidad en la edad madura. Éstos se basan en un modelo de sexualidad natural que invisibiliza y estereotipa la sexualidad de las personas mayores, impactando tanto en su propia subjetividad como en la atención que se ofrece (o se ignora) a sus necesidades en materia de sexualidad. La sexualidad es un aspecto íntimamente relacionado con el bienestar psicosocial, por lo que es fundamental reflexionar sobre qué elementos dificultan una vivencia satisfactoria de la misma.Palabras clave: sexualidad, mayores
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Merback, Mitchell. "Pain and Memory in the Formation of Early Modern Habitus." Representations 146, no. 1 (2019): 59–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/rep.2019.146.1.59.

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Between the Middle Ages and Early Modern period, pain and memory became interdependent in three domains of social and religious life: religious devotion, education, and criminal justice. The grounds for this affiliation were prepared by a training of individuals in the control of affect and the acceptance of memory training as a regimen of virtual self-wounding, often facilitated by violent imagery. Across the three domains examined here Christian subjectivity was quietly reformed, and an embodied habitus inculcated, to meet the demands of an age no longer anchored in unquestioned truths.
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Schwartz, Gregory. "Class mediations, working-class lives and labour subjectivity in post-socialist Ukraine." Sociological Review 68, no. 6 (April 21, 2020): 1338–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0038026120915150.

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This article contributes a post-socialist working-class lives perspective to the literature on class (dis)identification. Based on an ethnographic study of middle-age workers in the western Ukrainian city of Ľviv, the article problematises the apparent absence of workers’ class identification despite significant commodification and marketisation of society. Evidence presented here points to the potency of gendered, national, regional and post-colonial constitutions of the subjectivity of labour. Rather than being fragmented identities competing with notions of ‘class’, these constitutions represent a ‘site of conjunction’ of the changing global processes and local social forms mediating class. The article illustrates empirically and analytically the specific social forms that shape labour subjectivity in Ukraine, while theoretically locating subjectivities as arising from the intersection of various determinations, where social forms and material relations are internally related with and through each other, representing a complex unity of the diverse.
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VOSKUHL, ADELHEID. "EMANCIPATION IN THE INDUSTRIAL AGE: TECHNOLOGY, RATIONALITY, AND THE COLD WAR IN HABERMAS’S EARLY EPISTEMOLOGY AND SOCIAL THEORY." Modern Intellectual History 13, no. 2 (December 15, 2014): 479–505. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1479244314000717.

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In his 1968 essay “Technology and Science as ‘Ideology’,” Jürgen Habermas deals more explicitly than in other works with phenomena related to modern technology and science.1He is well known for his social theory, legal theory, and theories of subjectivity and intersubjectivity, and has been a major figure in the intellectual history of modern Europe due to the twin role he has played as both a voice and a representative of the political and philosophical movements of postwar and post-Holocaust West Germany. Exploring the role of technology in his thinking brings into focus technology's ambiguous status in critical social theory as well as the general relationship between intellectual history and the history of technology. The disturbingly open-ended question whether technology is modernity's blessing or its curse has mobilized critics and commentators at least since the Industrial Revolution and has divided them at political, epistemic, and moral levels. Habermas's project sits in the middle of such traditions, and his 1968 essay “updates” long-standing concerns about industrial modernity for the specific technological, philosophical, and political conditions of the early Cold War. Intersections between technology and his signature fields—intersections that he has both forged and contributed to—are found in political theories of technology and democracy (in the forms, for example, of technocracy and technological determinism), epistemologies of scientific knowledge and their relevance for theories of the reasonable subject and of knowledge communities, and theories of secularization and modern state-building.2
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Andriamampionona, Ginnot B., M. R. Razafimandimby, A. D. Rabarijaona, and A. H. N. Rakotoarisoa. "Place of Middle Meatotomy in the Management of Rhinologic Chronic Sinusitis." European Journal of Clinical Medicine 2, no. 3 (June 17, 2021): 30–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.24018/clinicmed.2021.2.3.76.

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Introduction: Middle meatotomy is an effective surgical technique in the management of chronic sinusitis rebels to medical treatment. It is an optimal therapeutic option in the face of a chronic sinusitis particularly of rhinological origin. Patients and method: It is a descriptive retrospective study over an 11-year period from January 2009 to December 2019 at the service of Otolaryngology and Cervico-facial surgery (ORL-CCF) at the Andohatapenaka University Hospital Antananarivo Madagascar. Our study includes subjects who have benefited from an average meatotomy on chronic sinusitis. Results: We collected 320 patients of average age of 33.78 years. Repetitive maxillary sinusitis and rhinogenic allergies are the determinants of chronic sinusitis. Nasal obstruction was the constant functional sign and anterior rhinoscopy revealed a red nasal mucosa with enlarged inferior turbinate. All of our patients received an incidence X-ray of Blondeau. The average meatotomy was achieved in all our patients and among them, a proportion of 12.50% of the cases operated at the same time of a medium meatotomy and opening of other meatus. Complementary turbinal surgery was used in 25% of cases. Therapeutic efficacy was assessed subjectively by the subject’s functional signs. Favourable trends were reported in 75.30% of cases. Conclusion: Chronic sinusitis is a naso-sinus condition requiring medical-surgical management. The middle meatotomy is the first step in the surgical management of chronic rhinological sinusitis rebellious to medical means.
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Kaczmarek, Maria, and Magdalena Skrzypczak. "Perceived health status among middle-aged Polish people in relation to selected demographic and social factors." Anthropological Review 75, no. 2 (July 1, 2012): 93–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10044-012-0008-0.

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Abstract Self-rated health is an important measure of health status and outcomes and plays a significant role in the quality of life. The main purpose of the study was to estimate selected demographic and socio-economic factors associated with perceived health status among middle-aged Polish people. The sample being studied consisted of 5,776 women and 2,191 men aged 35-65 years, participants of two nation-wide cross-sectional surveys: the survey on middle-aged women’s health and quality of life (WOMID) and the survey on men’s health and quality of life, both conducted in 2000-2004. Participants were administered a gender-specific questionnaire on demographic, socio-economic status, lifestyle behaviours and self-rated health. The subjectively evaluated health status was then correlated with sex, age, marital status, place of residence, education level, financial situation, types of leisure time and the tobacco use. Data were processed using uni- and multivariate statistical procedures including the logistic regression models LOGITs and multiple correspondence analysis (MCA). It was found that the perceived health status was associated with women’s and men’s age, and in women with their menopausal status. Women were likely to evaluate their health significantly worse than men. It was found that marital status, educational attainment and financial well-off were the factors significantly associated with perceived health status in both women and men. In concluding remarks it should be stated that the health perception of women and men in mid-life is significantly related to their socio-economic status.
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Rosemann, Stephanie, and Christiane M. Thiel. "Neuroanatomical changes associated with age-related hearing loss and listening effort." Brain Structure and Function 225, no. 9 (September 22, 2020): 2689–700. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00429-020-02148-w.

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AbstractAge-related hearing loss is associated with a decrease in hearing abilities for high frequencies and therefore leads to impairments in understanding speech—in particular, under adverse listening conditions. Growing evidence suggests that age-related hearing loss is related to various neural changes, for instance, affecting auditory and frontal brain regions. How the decreased auditory input and the increased listening effort in daily life are associated with structural changes is less clear, since previous evidence is scarce and mostly involved low sample sizes. Hence, the aim of the current study was to investigate the impact of age-related untreated hearing loss and subjectively rated daily life listening effort on grey matter and white matter changes in a large sample of participants (n = 71). For that aim, we conducted anatomical MRI and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in elderly hard-of-hearing and age-matched normal-hearing participants. Our results showed significantly lower grey matter volume in the middle frontal cortex in hard-of-hearing compared to normal-hearing participants. Further, higher listening effort was associated with lower grey matter volume and cortical thickness in the orbitofrontal cortex and lower grey matter volume in the inferior frontal cortex. No significant relations between hearing abilities or listening effort were obtained for white matter integrity in tracts connecting auditory and prefrontal as well as visual areas. These findings provide evidence that hearing impairment as well as daily life listening effort seems to be associated with grey matter loss in prefrontal brain regions. We further conclude that alterations in cortical thickness seem to be linked to the increased listening effort rather than the hearing loss itself.
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Benussi, Matteo (Teo). "Public spaces and inner worlds: Emplaced askesis and architectures of the soul among Tatarstani Muslims." Ethnicities 20, no. 4 (February 20, 2020): 685–707. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468796820905017.

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The emergence of Islamic piety movements in post-Soviet Tatarstan has set afoot two parallel processes: (1) religion has progressively left the narrow sphere to which it was relegated during the Soviet era – old age, the private domain and ethnically connoted rural contexts – through a series of steps including the early appearance of makeshift shops catering to a Muslim clientele, the boom of self-cultivation techniques among the region’s youthful Muslim middle class, the subsequent development of a full-blown halal industry and the appearance of a whole range of new places for pietists. The deprivatisation of Islam has thus changed the urban fabric of Tatarstan, making Islamic piety visible in cities and towns. Concomitantly, (2) the ‘inner world’ – the soul ( nafs), self or subjectivity – of Muslims has taken centre stage as one of the most (if not the most) central sites of religious life, the main interface for encountering the divine and a ‘space’ that needs constant maintenance through discipline and ascetical practice ( askesis) framed in terms of care of one’s soul. Thus, the appearance of new ‘outside’ spaces (halal places) appears to correspond to the configuration of new ‘inside’ spaces (the subjectivity of religionists). This paper aims to explore this correspondence and to investigate its anthropological implications.
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Chakraborty, Rituparna, and Sonali De. "Be(com)ing a Woman: Body, Authority and Society." Psychology and Developing Societies 31, no. 2 (September 2019): 283–314. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0971333619863236.

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The contemporary Indian society apparently seems to be at a juncture where it claims more number of women to be educated and independent but, on the other hand, the incidents of vicious mental, social and corporeal violations of women are at peak. Amidst all the ongoing blazing talks and movements, this study is a small attempt of delving into the tale of being women, which may help in cognising the discourse which might be at the core of this double-bind social picture. For this purpose, 30 Bengali (Indian) married women were selected through purposive sampling technique for interview, all of whom were within the age range of 18–40 years. Participants had minimum school-level education and belonged to lower middle to upper middle socio-economic status. They were reportedly free from any mental or physical handicap. The data gathered through open-ended semi-structured in-depth interviews were analysed using thematic analysis procedure. Analytical readings of findings explored a socially structured world of women; the becoming rather than being of women. The findings indicated how every sphere of their lives—mental, social or corporeal—seems to be under several mediums of authoritative forces; how their lived life, myths about womanhood and socialisation construct their present life, and how the historicised power-politics of gender craft their conceptualisations of body, rights, independence and subjectivity. This study aspires to contribute to the knowledge of women’s subjective positioning in an attempt to depict the backdrop which makes their lives accessible for violation.
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Ritts, Max. "Environmentalists abide: Listening to whale music – 1965–1985." Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 35, no. 6 (June 1, 2017): 1096–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0263775817711706.

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Music can enrich geographical efforts to understand ideology as a lived experience. This paper explores the history of whale music – instrumental music that samples or thematizes whale sound. For environmentalists who came of age in the late 1960s, whale music fostered new interrogations about the identity of nature and the nature of identity, interrogations that reflected structural changes in North American society. To understand whale music’s surprising ideological power, I draw on Althusser’s formative idea of interpellation, and refine it with insights from Antonio Gramsci, John Mowitt, and Neil Smith. As examples from British Columbia’s Lower Mainland and California’s Bay Area reveal, whale music interpellated environmentalists, capturing the energies of predominantly white middle-class subjects eager to develop new relationships with nature. Whale music was not discovered, as its devotees proposed it was, but invented, through a combination of animal sounds, recording techniques, consumer trends, and ideologies of nature. It reveals environmentalism as a sonorous formation – a system that recruits listeners into sonically-mediated realms of thought, action, and subjectivity.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Subjectivity Middle age Middle age Middle age"

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Murphy, Chandra L. "Perception is reality the power of subjective age and its effect on physical, psychological, and cognitive health /." Waltham, Mass. : Brandeis University, 2009. http://dcoll.brandeis.edu/handle/10192/23192.

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Tullett, Andrew Stewart. "Social transformations from the Middle Bronze Age to the Middle Iron Age in Central Southern Britain." Thesis, University of Leicester, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2381/10305.

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The Later Prehistory of Wiltshire is included within social models built on the neighbouring counties of Dorset (Sharples 1991a) and Hampshire (Cunliffe 1984a) or general accounts of southern Britain (Barrett 1980b; Brück 1999a; Hill 1995a; Rowlands 1980). These focus on hillforts, bronze or independent farmsteads. Utilizing the wealth of new data accumulated by developer funded work, this study re-examines the evidence using a landscape scale approach influenced by community studies. It reveals that current approaches fail to explain the evidence from the study area. Towards the end of the Bronze Age, there is a trend towards transhumance with seasonal, pastoral camps and linear earthworks. Coinciding with the fall from grace of bronze as social mediator, animals became one way through which relations were negotiated. The trend continues into the Earliest Iron Age when large midden sites around Pewsey indicate the exploitation of iron deposits. The middens become centres of craft production for these transhumant communities and facilitate the growth of a broad affinity across the region. The supremacy of the middens lasts as little as 200 years before new sources of iron, continental imports and recycling cause many to be abandoned. However, the contacts made between communities at these sites facilitate the mobilization of the labour required for hillfort construction. The rational for their construction varies according to the prevailing social and economic needs but most of these goals are achieved by the Early Iron Age when most are abandoned. The developed hillforts of the later Middle Iron Age are different to their forebears, sit within an otherwise unsettled landscape and indicate a rise in the level of conflict along the western margin of the area.
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Ramsey, William Greer. "Middle Bronze Age weapons in Ireland." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.296789.

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Davies, Alexander John. "Social organisation in the Upper and Middle Thames Valley from the Late Bronze Age to the Middle Iron Age." Thesis, Cardiff University, 2016. http://orca.cf.ac.uk/99203/.

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This thesis is an account of social organisation in the Upper and Middle Thames Valley from the Late Bronze Age to the end of the Middle Iron Age, c.1150-100 BC. This is approached through the integration and synthesis of various different types of evidence, including houses and settlements; metalwork; pottery; depositional practices; human and animal remains; 'special deposits'; monuments; and landscape boundaries. Patterns have been found within each period that cross different types of evidence. These patterns relate to underlying internal social and conceptual logical systems. Qualitative and quantitative methods are used, and comparison between periods is an important feature of the analysis. This demonstrates the 'non-functional', culturally specific nature of many aspects of material under study and how it was treated in the past. The thesis begins with an exploration of the role that material culture plays in ways that people create identities and community relationships. The following four chapters each discuss the archaeology and interpret the social organisation of a different period. Much of the Late Bronze Age archaeology is characterised by two features: the repeated destruction and abandonment of objects, settlement and place; and the plain, undifferentiated nature of the material culture. It is argued that Late Bronze Age communities were relatively fluid; identity was not structured around lineage, and differences in status not particularly marked. In the Late Bronze Age, three distinct areas within the study region have been identified, each with differences in various types of material culture and depositional habits. The Late Bronze Age/Early Iron Age Transition is argued to have been a truly transitional period between two distinct types of social organisation. In the Early Iron Age, ancestors were being increasingly identifed with, as material culture, settlements and hillforts were passed down and used by multiple generations. Ancient and foreign exotica were acquired and appear to have been employed in the negotiation of power relationships. Aspects of ritual practice and material culture were becoming more heterogeneous. The segregation of smaller, more distinct social groups continued in the Middle Iron Age, shown in part by the construction of boundaries around the household. Hillforts were a focus for deposition. The final chapter charts changes in various aspects of the archaeology before discussing process and causes of social change. A reassessment of the pottery chronology of the period is also included.
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Ginn, Victoria Ruth. "Settlement structure in middle-late bronze age Ireland." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 2013. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.601619.

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This thesis examines Middle-Late Bronze Age (c. 1750--600 BC) domestic settlement patterns in Ireland. Recent archaeological investigations have extended the knowledge of habitation, but no detailed, systematic attempts have been made to understand the domestic evidence, or to substantially revise the existing models for the development of complex Bronze Age societies. All available data relating to settlements dating to Middle-Late Bronze Age have been collated. An evidence-based chronology for settlement is established for the first time. The data are examined at multiple scales to investigate any spatial or chronological trends in settlement character or distribution. The relationships between settlements and the surrounding environmental and social landscapes are analysed through a GIS. The new data are investigated to see how domestic settlements operated, and if traditional concepts regarding the structure of Bronze Age society can still be upheld. Agent-based modelling and social network analysis provide another dimension to the discussion regarding power, regionalism and hierarchy within the settlement network. The results reveal a distinct rise in the visibility, and a rapid adaption, of domestic architecture, which seems to have occurred earlier in Ireland than elsewhere in western and northern Europe. The ways in which Bronze Age communities socialised their landscapes were similar throughout Ireland, highlighting a high degree of communication and shared preference for location, but by the Late Bronze Age differences became more obvious, reflecting an increased regionalism. Overall, a strong, socio-economic hierarchy is not evident A distinct class of independent farmers existed, but on the whole there is little wealth and power overtly present in the extant settlement record. This thesis provides a major contribution to the continued appreciation of the Middle Bronze Age as a distinctive period. It also presents a wellordered. integrated, alternative interpretation to the traditional perception of stratification in the Bronze Age.
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Koliński, Rafał. "Tell Rijim, Iraq : the Middle Bronze Age layer /." Oxford : Archaeopress, 2000. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb37199315d.

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Texte remanié de: Ph.D. thesis--Warsaw university.
La p. de titre porte : "Eski Mosul Dam salvage project excavations of the Polish center of archaeology, University of Warsaw" Bibliogr. p. 81-87.
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Tindall, Susan P. "A study of middle age women and self esteem." DigitalCommons@Robert W. Woodruff Library, Atlanta University Center, 1994. http://digitalcommons.auctr.edu/dissertations/1404.

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The objective of this study was to explore and describe the relationship between self esteem among middle age women. Thirty women between the ages of forty-two and fifty-nine were evaluated according to the Index of Self-Esteem and the women were ranked according to each score. The result of the study indicates that no significant relationship exists between self-esteem of married women, divorced, and those who never married. No relationship exists in the level of self-esteem and income. There is no statistical difference in the level of self-esteem between those who are employed meaningfully employed, and never employed. No statistical difference exists in the level of self esteem between those who have graduated from high school and those who have graduated from college. Similar results were found in ethnicity and respondents.
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Wurz, Sarah (Sarah Jacoba Deborah). "The middle stone age at Klasies River, South Africa." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/51998.

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Thesis (D Phil)--Stellenbosch University, 2000.
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The Late Pleistocene, Middle Stone Age artefact sequence at the Klasies River main site, was studied to establish what information this held for inferences on the emergence of symbolic thought and communication. The approach adopted was to complement traditional typological analysis by a technological study of artefact production within the framework of the chafne opératoire. The results show that technology was aimed at producing preformed blanks. In the choice of materials, the technique and method of blank production and the retouch of blanks, arbitrary or stylistic choices were made. Changes in stylistic conventions can be documented through the sequence. Changing conventions in artefact production show that the lives of the people who made the artefacts were structured in a symbolic web. These results together with evidence from evolutionary biology, show that by at least 115 000 years ago, people were able to think and speak symbolically. This African archaeological evidence for the emergence of symbolism, a defining attribute of modem peoples, is much older than previously considered. KEYWORDS: Klasies River, Middle Stone Age, technology, symbolic communication, human evolution.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die Latere Pleistoseen, Middel Steentydperk artefakte by Klasiesrivier vindplaas is bestudeer om te bepaal watter kennis ingewin kan word aangaande die ontstaan van simboliese denkwyse en kommunikasie. Die benadering wat gevolg is, was om tradisionele tipologiese analise te komplementeer met 'n tegnologiese studie van artefak produksie binne die raamwerk van die chafne opératoire. Die resultate demonstreer dat tegnologie gemik was op die produksie van voorafgevormde skilfers. Die keuse van roumateriaal, die tegniek en metode van produksie en die herafwerk van skilfers is gelei deur arbitrêre stilistiese keuses. Veranderinge in hierdie konvensies kan gedokumenteer word deur die hele sekwens. Hierdie verandering is tipies van mense wie se lewens gestruktureer word deur 'n simboliese web. Dié resultate, en dié van evolusionêre biologie, dui daarop dat mense reeds teen 115 000 jaar gelede simboliese denke en spraak magtig was. Hierdie bewyse vanuit Afrika vir die ontstaan van simboliese gedrag is veel vroeër as vantevore gereken. SLEUTEL WOORDE: Klasiesrivier, Middel Steentydperk, tegnologie, simboliese kommunikasie, menslike evolusie.
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Burrup, Rachelle. "Strength Training and Body Composition in Middle-Age Women." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2015. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/6162.

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OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between strength training and body composition before and after controlling for several covariates. A cross-sectional study including 257 female subjects was conducted. METHODS: Subjects' level of involvement in strength training was determined via questionnaire. Body composition was assessed using dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA). Diet was assessed using 7-d weighed food records. RESULTS: Strong linear relationships between subjects' level of involvement in strength training and body composition were identified. For each additional day of strength training reported per week, body fat was 1.32 percentage points lower (F = 14.8, p = 0.0002) and fat-free mass was 656.4 g (1.45 lb) higher (F = 18.9, p < 0.0001), on average. Likewise, the more time subjects spent lifting and the more intensely they trained, the better their body composition tended to be. Adjusting for differences in age, menopause status, objectively measured physical activity, energy intake, and protein intake tended to weaken each association. Controlling for differences in physical activity weakened each relationship the most. CONCLUSION: Women who strength train regularly tend to have significantly lower body fat percentages and significantly higher levels of fat-free mass compared to their counterparts, regardless of differences in several potential confounding variables.
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Henry, Susan Hogue. "Hourly fluctuation of middle ear pressure as a function of age in school-age children." PDXScholar, 1989. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/4093.

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Tympanometry is a useful means of evaluating the status of the middle ear. For the pediatric population, tympanometry is particularly valuable for determining the presence of middle ear effusion. The test has been incorporated in many school hearing conservation programs because of its ease of administration, objectivity, and diagnostic value. In a study by deJonge and Cummings (1985), the hourly fluctuation of middle ear pressure was reported in a group of kindergarten-age children. The variability of middle ear pressure for that group of children averaged 150 daPa. In the present study, a maturational effect of this hourly fluctuation was observed between a group of first-grade age students and sixth-grade age students. Results indicated the younger group averaged a range of 145 daPa, correlating well with the deJonge and Cummings study, while the older group averaged a range of 92 daPa. Thus, as a child matures, the hourly fluctuation of middle ear pressure decreases significantly.
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Books on the topic "Subjectivity Middle age Middle age Middle age"

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Middle age. Stocksfield [England]: Acumen, 2009.

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Hamilton, Christopher. Middle age. Stocksfield [England]: Acumen, 2009.

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Hamilton, Christopher. Middle age. Stocksfield [England]: Acumen, 2009.

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At middle age. Beijing, China: Panda Books, 1987.

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Woodham, Kerre. Musings from middle age. Auckland, New Zealand: HarperCollins Publishers, 2013.

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Oates, Joyce Carol. Middle age: A romance. London: Fourth Estate, 2001.

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Oates, Joyce Carol. Middle age: A romance. New York: Ecco, 2001.

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Oates, Joyce Carol. Middle age: A romance. New York: Ecco Press, 2001.

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Mullen, Thomas James. Middle age & other mixed blessings. Tarrytown, N.Y: F.H. Revell, 1991.

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Middle age: A natural history. London: Portobello Books, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Subjectivity Middle age Middle age Middle age"

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Golden, Jonathan M. "Middle Bronze Age." In Encyclopedia of Prehistory, 293–305. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-0023-0_30.

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Treadgold, Warren. "The Dark Age." In The Middle Byzantine Historians, 1–37. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137280862_1.

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Brockmann, Hilke. "Depression in Middle Age." In Encyclopedia of Quality of Life and Well-Being Research, 1571–75. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0753-5_3804.

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Brockmann, Hilke. "Depression in Middle Age." In Encyclopedia of Quality of Life and Well-Being Research, 1–7. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69909-7_3804-2.

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Treadgold, Warren. "Historians of the Age of Expansion." In The Middle Byzantine Historians, 225–70. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137280862_7.

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Howard-Johnston, James. "The fur trade in the early middle ages." In Viking-Age Trade, 57–74. Title: Viking-age trade : silver, slaves and Gotland / edited by Jacek Gruszczyński, Marek Jankowiak and Jonathan Shepard.Description: Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021. | Series: Routledge archaeologies of the Viking world: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315231808-4.

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Coward, Barry, and Peter Gaunt. "Continuity: 1714 – the end of the Middle Ages?" In The Stuart Age, 536–41. Fifth edition. | London ; New York : Routledge, 2017.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315271552-21.

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Castles, Stephen, Hein de Haas, and Mark J. Miller. "Migration in Africa and the Middle East." In The Age of Migration, 172–97. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-230-36639-8_8.

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Jensen, Gordon L., and Melanie Berg. "Obesity in Middle and Older Age." In Handbook of Clinical Nutrition and Aging, 517–29. Totowa, NJ: Humana Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-59259-391-0_22.

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Poole, Sarah, and John Snarey. "Generativity versus Stagnation (Erikson’s Middle Age)." In Encyclopedia of Child Behavior and Development, 695–96. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-79061-9_1218.

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Conference papers on the topic "Subjectivity Middle age Middle age Middle age"

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Risky, Ikke Amalia, Tri Harsono, and Riyanto Sigit. "Middle finger bone assessment for age identification." In 2017 International Electronics Symposium on Knowledge Creation and Intelligent Computing (IES-KCIC). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/kcic.2017.8228601.

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Kulieva, Fizze. "Relations middle chalcolithic age pottery of Nakhichevan with the Middle Eastern countries." In Antiquities of East Europe, South Asia and South Siberia in the context of connections and interactions within the Eurasian cultural space (new data and concepts). Institute for the History of Material Culture Russian Academy of Sciences, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.31600/978-5-907053-34-2-121-123.

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Qutob, Shereen. "The Shift from the Industrial Age to the Talent Age: Strategies to Maximize the Engagement, Retention and Deployment of Today's Talent." In SPE Middle East Oil and Gas Show and Conference. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/140996-ms.

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Evdokimova, E. V. "Psychological Support For The Middle Age In A Crisis Condition." In Psychology of subculture: Phenomenology and contemporary tendencies of development. Cognitive-Crcs, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2019.07.20.

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Tandra, Melvin, Michael Abramson, Adrian Lowe, Haydn Walters, Paul Thomas, Gayan Bowatte, Jenny Perret, Shyamali Dharmage, and Dinh Bui. "Association between birth weight and lung function in middle age." In ERS International Congress 2020 abstracts. European Respiratory Society, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/13993003.congress-2020.1402.

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Soroceanu, Tudor, and Eugen Sava. "Metal and ceramic vessels of the Middle and Late bronze age — Early Iron age in Eurasia:possible interrelations." In Antiquities of East Europe, South Asia and South Siberia in the context of connections and interactions within the Eurasian cultural space (new data and concepts). Institute for the History of Material Culture Russian Academy of Sciences, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.31600/978-5-907053-35-9-200-201.

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Zhamsaranova, Raisa. "Onomaconcept as a verbal sign of nomadic Middle-Age conceptual sphere." In The Fourth International Conference on Onomastics „Name and Naming”, Sacred and Profane in Onomastics. Editura Mega, Editura Argonaut, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.30816/iconn4/2017/90.

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Perraud, J. B., H. Balacey, A. Lejeune, M. Fabre, and P. Mounaix. "Middle age parchment studied by THz time domain spectroscopy and imaging." In 2016 41st International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz waves (IRMMW-THz). IEEE, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/irmmw-thz.2016.7758844.

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Bui, Dinh, Caroline Lodge, John Burgess, Jennifer Perret, Adrian Lowe, Gayan Bowatte, Bruce Thompson, et al. "Childhood respiratory risk factor profiles and lung function in middle age." In ERS International Congress 2017 abstracts. European Respiratory Society, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/1393003.congress-2017.oa4422.

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Bui, Dinh, Jennifer Perret, Hayden Walters, Michael Abramson, John Burgess, Minh Bui, Gayan Bowatte, et al. "Allergic respiratory patterns, their exposures and COPD risk in middle age." In ERS International Congress 2019 abstracts. European Respiratory Society, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/13993003.congress-2019.oa1590.

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Reports on the topic "Subjectivity Middle age Middle age Middle age"

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Rodrigues de Oliveira, Ana Maria. Memory, Medicine and Childhood in Middle Age. Edicions de la Universitat de Lleida, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.21001/itma.2019.13.10.

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Vatter, Bonnie. Menopause, Middle Age, and the Social Worker. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.2711.

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Henry, Susan. Hourly fluctuation of middle ear pressure as a function of age in school-age children. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.5976.

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Fulton, R. J. Proboscidean tusk of Middle Wisconsinan age from sub-till gravel, near Turtle Mountain, southwestern Manitoba. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/205192.

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Phil Silvia, Phil Silvia. Was the Middle Bronze Age Civilization North of the Dead Sea Destroyed by Fire from the Sky? Experiment, March 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.18258/6832.

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Dudko, A. A., and A. A. Tsybankov. THE MATERIALS FROM ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH OF THE EARLY IRON AGE – MIDDLE AGES SITES IN THE INUNDATION AREA OF THE LOWER BUREYA HYDRO POWER PLANT OF 2015–2016. "Росток", 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/dud-2018-13.

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Chauvin, Juan Pablo, Annabelle Fowler, and Nicolás Herrera L. The Younger Age Profile of COVID-19 Deaths in Developing Countries. Inter-American Development Bank, November 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0002879.

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This paper examines why a larger share of COVID-19 deaths occurs among young and middle-aged adults in developing countries than in high-income countries. Using novel data at the country, city, and patient levels, we investigate the drivers of this gap in terms of the key components of the standard Susceptible-Infected-Recovered framework. We obtain three main results. First, we show that the COVID-19 mortality age gap is not explained by younger susceptible populations in developing countries. Second, we provide indirect evidence that higher infection rates play a role, showing that variables linked to faster COVID-19 spread such as residential crowding and labor informality are correlated with younger mortality age profiles across cities. Third, we show that lower recovery rates in developing countries account for nearly all of the higher death shares among young adults, and for almost half of the higher death shares among middle-aged adults. Our evidence suggests that lower recovery rates in developing countries are driven by a higher prevalence of preexisting conditions that have been linked to more severe COVID-19 complications, and by more limited access to hospitals and intensive care units in some countries.
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McNicoll, V. J., C. R. van Staal, D. Lentz, and R. Stern. Uranium-lead geochronology of Middle River rhyolite: implications for the provenance of basement rocks of the Bathurst mining camp, New Brunswick; Radiogenic Age and Isotopic Studies: Report 15. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/213625.

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Rosato-Scott, Claire, Dani J. Barrington, Amita Bhakta, Sarah J. House, Islay Mactaggart, and Jane Wilbur. How to Talk About Incontinence: A Checklist. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), October 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/slh.2020.006.

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Incontinence is the medical term used to describe the involuntary loss of urine or faeces. Women, men, girls, boys and people of all genders, at any age, can experience incontinence. A person with incontinence can experience leakage occasionally, regularly or constantly; and leakage can happen at any time, day or night. A person may also experience leakage of urinary or faecal matter due to not being able to get to the toilet in time or not wanting to use the toilet facilities available. This is known as social, or functional, incontinence. In many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) understanding of incontinence is still in its early stages: the term ‘incontinence’ may not be known, knowledge of the condition is rare, and the provision of support is lacking. Those who experience incontinence may face stigma due to having the condition, and this may affect their willingness or confidence to talk about it. There is a need to better understand incontinence in LMICs, and how best to support people living with the condition to improve their quality of life. This requires having conversations with individuals that experience the condition, and with individuals who care for those who do: they will have the lived experiences of what it means to live with incontinence practically, emotionally and socially for them and their families. Living with incontinence can have a range of impacts on the people living with it and their carers. These include increased stress and distress; additional needs for water and soap; and restricted ability to join in community activities, school or work. Living with incontinence can also lead to a range of protection issues. The potential challenges that people face may be quite diverse and may vary between people and households. The checklist below, and corresponding page references to ‘Incontinence: We Need to Talk About Leaks’ can be used to increase your understanding of incontinence and the options available to support people living with the condition; and provide guidance on how to have conversations to understand how best to support people living with incontinence in your area.
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Rosato-Scott, Claire, Dani J. Barrington, Amita Bhakta, Sarah J. House, Islay Mactaggart, and Wilbur Jane. How to Talk About Incontinence: A Checklist. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), October 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/slh.2020.012.

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Abstract:
Incontinence is the medical term used to describe the involuntary loss of urine or faeces. Women, men, girls, boys and people of all genders, at any age, can experience incontinence. A person with incontinence can experience leakage occasionally, regularly or constantly; and leakage can happen at any time, day or night. A person may also experience leakage of urinary or faecal matter due to not being able to get to the toilet in time or not wanting to use the toilet facilities available. This is known as social, or functional, incontinence. In many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) understanding of incontinence is still in its early stages: the term ‘incontinence’ may not be known, knowledge of the condition is rare, and the provision of support is lacking. Those who experience incontinence may face stigma due to having the condition, and this may affect their willingness or confidence to talk about it. There is a need to better understand incontinence in LMICs, and how best to support people living with the condition to improve their quality of life. This requires having conversations with individuals that experience the condition, and with individuals who care for those who do: they will have the lived experiences of what it means to live with incontinence practically, emotionally and socially for them and their families. Living with incontinence can have a range of impacts on the people living with it and their carers. These include increased stress and distress; additional needs for water and soap; and restricted ability to join in community activities, school or work. Living with incontinence can also lead to a range of protection issues. The potential challenges that people face may be quite diverse and may vary between people and households. The checklist below, and corresponding page references to ‘Incontinence: We Need to Talk About Leaks’ can be used to increase your understanding of incontinence and the options available to support people living with the condition; and provide guidance on how to have conversations to understand how best to support people living with incontinence in your area.
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