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1

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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2

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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11

Burley, Mikel. "Middle Age." International Journal of Philosophical Studies 18, no. 1 (February 2010): 136–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09672550903541565.

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Morrison, S. Bergen. "Middle Age?" Southern Medical Journal 80, no. 2 (February 1987): 278. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00007611-198702000-00043.

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Smith, Katharine Capshaw. "Middle Age." Children's Literature Association Quarterly 38, no. 2 (2013): 133–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/chq.2013.0022.

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14

Naftali, Zulfikar, Suprihati ., Dharmana E., and Setyawan H. "Anterior epitympanic attic antrum space obstruction and symptom onset associated with myringosclerosis in benign chronic suppurative otitis media." International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences 8, no. 6 (May 26, 2020): 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.18203/2320-6012.ijrms20202235.

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Background: The AAA (Anterior epitympanic, Attic, and Antrum) space is the space between the mastoid and middle ear which functions to balance the pressure in both organs (buffer). Pathological tissue in the AAA cavity due to chronic infection would disrupt the buffer function and could change the morphology of the mucosa in the tympanic membrane and middle ear. Obstruction in the AAA space measured subjectively by observing the smoothness of the flow using saline solution has been shown to be associated with a plaque in the tympanic membrane (myringosclerosis) in Chronic Otitis Media (COM) patients. This study aims to determine the relationship between AAA space obstructions with myringosclerosis using CT-Scan for an objective result.Methods: Retrospective study with case-control approach used in this study. Case criterias are Chronic Suppurative Otitis Media (CSOM) patients with myringosclerosis, both men and women and age 15-50 years, while the control group are benign CSOM patients without myringosclerosis. Data were analyzed with the chi-square test to prove the association between the AAA space status and length of symptom onset with myringosclerosis.Results: During January 2017-December 2019 there were 33 respondents, 19 cases and 14 controls, 21 men and 12 women with an average age of 35 years (cases) and 23.5 years (control). The length of symptom onset more than 5 years (p <0.05, OR 6.94 with CI 0.5-1.5) and AAA space obstruction (p <0.05 OR 34.25 with CI 0.8-1.8) has been shown to be associated with myringosclerosis in people with benign CSOM.Conclusions: AAA space obstruction and symptom onset more than 5 years significantly associated with myringosclerosis.
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Berezina, Tatiana N., and Stanislav Rybtsov. "Acceleration of Biological Aging and Underestimation of Subjective Age Are Risk Factors for Severe COVID-19." Biomedicines 9, no. 8 (July 29, 2021): 913. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9080913.

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In an epidemic, it is important to have methods for reliable and rapid assessment of risk groups for severe forms of the disease for their priority vaccination and for the application of preventive lockdown measures. The aim of this study was to investigate risk factors for severe forms of COVID-19 in adults using indicators of biological and subjective aging. Longitudinal studies evaluated the severity of the disease and the number of cases. Respondents (447) were divided into “working group” and “risk group” (retirees with chronic diseases). During the lockdown period (in mid-2020), accelerated aging was observed in the group of workers (by 3.9–8 years for men and an increase at the tendency level for women). However, the respondents began to feel subjectively younger (by 3.3–7.2 years). In the risk group, there were no deviations from the expected biopsychological aging. The number of cases at the end of 2020 was 31% in workers and 0% in the risk group. Reasonably, the risk group followed the quarantine rules more strictly by 1.5 times. In working men, indicators of relative biological and relative subjective aging (measured in both 2019 and mid-2020) significantly influenced the incidence at the end of 2020. In women, only the indicators obtained in mid-2020 had a significant impact. The relative biological aging of an individual tested in the middle of 2020 had a direct impact on the risk of infection (p < 0.05) and on the probability of death (p < 0.0001). On the contrary, an increase in the relative subjective (psychological) aging index reduced the risk of infection (at the tendency level, p = 0.06) and the risk of death (p < 0.0001). Both the risk of infection and the risk of death increased with calendar age at the tendency level. Conclusions: Indicators of individual relative biological and subjective aging affect the probability of getting COVID-19 and its severity. The combination of high indicators of biological aging and underestimated indicators of subjective aging is associated with increased chances of developing severe forms of the disease.
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Parkhomenko, Tatiana A. "A. N. BENOIS ON ART IN THE GERMAN COLLECTION OF THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY “RUSSIANS ABOUT RUSSIA”." Vestnik slavianskikh kul’tur [Bulletin of Slavic Cultures] 58 (2020): 268–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.37816/2073-9567-2020-58-268-277.

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The paper explores the work of A. N. Benois “Contemporary Art”, which was published in 1906 in German in Frankfurt-am-Main in the collection of articles “Russians about Russia”. It focused on the analysis of artistic situation in Russia at the beginning of the 20th century, consideration of the work of Russian masters of the older, middle and new generations, and assessment of their contribution to the culture and cultural heritage of the country. Acting as a historian of art, critic and artist, Benois provided foreign readers with a rich tapestry of Russian art life with all its participants and auxiliary commentaries according to his vision of their talent, originality and value. In his lifetime his judgments about art were often subjected to accusations in bias and subjectivity, however over the course of a century they acquired exceptional significance for understanding complex historical and cultural context of the era, called the Silver Age of Russian culture. Currently the works of Alexandre Benois are included in the golden fund of the national cultural heritage, highly valued and studied all over the world. Their unique, extremely wide and diverse creative content has retained its relevance and continues to be in high demand in modern art, educational and socio-cultural practice.
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Wittmann, Marc, and Nathalie Mella. "Having Children Speeds up the Subjective Passage of Lifetime in Parents." Timing & Time Perception 9, no. 3 (January 13, 2021): 275–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134468-bja10023.

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Abstract A widely reproduced finding across numerous studies of different cultures is that adults perceive the most recent 10 years of their lives to have passed particularly fast, and that this perceived speed increases as they grow older. Potential explanatory factors for this effect are believed to be more routines in life as we age as well as an increase in time pressure during middle adult age, both factors that would lead to a reduced autobiographical memory load. Fewer contextual changes in life are known to cause the passage of time to be perceived as faster. Taking advantage of the database created for the study that first captured this age effect on subjective time (Wittmann & Lehnhoff, 2005), we investigated the role that having children plays in the subjective speeding of time. Adults aged between 20 and 59 who had children reported that time over the last 10 years passed subjectively more quickly than adults of the same age group without children. Factors such as education or gender did not influence subjective time. A small correlation effect could be seen in the fact that parents with more children reported that time passed more quickly. Experienced time pressure was not a differentiating factor between the two groups, as time pressure was associated with a faster passage of time in all adults. Future systematic studies will have to reveal what factors on autobiographical memory and time might be accountable for this clear effect that raising children has on perceived time.
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Agarwal, Brijesh Kumar, and Namita Agarwal. "Urinary incontinence: prevalence, risk factors, impact on quality of life and treatment seeking behaviour among middle aged women." International Surgery Journal 4, no. 6 (May 24, 2017): 1953. http://dx.doi.org/10.18203/2349-2902.isj20172131.

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Background: Urinary incontinence (UI) is one of the priority health issue recognized by WHO. Urinary incontinence (UI) is defined by the international continence society as "a condition in which involuntary loss of urine is objectively demonstrable and is a social and hygiene problem. It is a common and distressing medical condition severely affecting quality of life (QOL). Urinary incontinence is a common health problem among women, with the prevalence varying from 8-45% in different studies.Methods: This study was based among the population around SRM-IMS, Bareilly. Total 464 women were interviewed out of 2860 total inhabitants.Results: Out of 464, 236 females were selected for this study. 28 women had urinary incontinence. The overall prevalence of urinary incontinence in our study was about 12%. There was significant association of increasing age and presence of urinary incontinence. Urinary incontinence does impact on quality of life of a woman having urinary incontinence. Impact of personal factors do not have much impact on urinary incontinence. 22% women had stress urinary incontinence, 38% had urgency incontinence and 38% had mixed type of urinary incontinence.Conclusions: Various obstetrical factors do contribute to urinary incontinence. Urinary incontinence is a significant health problem in the society leading to restriction in social and sexual activities. Almost 1 in 12 women suffering from urinary incontinence. Simple epidemiological tools such as a questionnaire can unveil the urinary incontinence subjectively. Further efforts are to be done to improve the quality of life and minimizing the urinary incontinence by pursuing them for treatment.
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Buckley, Christopher. "Observations: Middle Age." Hudson Review 50, no. 3 (1997): 461. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3853189.

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Dubrow, Heather. "Middle Age (II)." English Journal 93, no. 1 (September 2003): 118. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3650589.

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Cawood, Peter A., and Chris J. Hawkesworth. "Earth’s middle age." Geology 42, no. 6 (June 2014): 503–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/g35402.1.

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Bauer, Dale M. "Refusing Middle Age." ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews 15, no. 1 (January 2002): 46–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08957690209602716.

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Huyck, Margaret. "Understanding Middle Age." Contemporary Psychology: A Journal of Reviews 33, no. 8 (August 1988): 708–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/025906.

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Hatta, Takeshi, Mari Higashikawa, and Taketoshi Hatta. "Subjective Age in a Modern Japanese Young, Middle-Age, and Upper Middle-Age Sample." Perceptual and Motor Skills 111, no. 1 (August 2010): 285–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/02.07.12.13.17.pms.111.4.285-290.

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Steitz, Jean A., and Alicia M. McClary. "Subjective age, age identity, and middle-age adults." Experimental Aging Research 14, no. 2 (June 1988): 83–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03610738808259728.

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Šota, Stanislav. "Treća životna dob kao subjekt pastoralnoga djelovanja – mogućnosti i perspektive." Diacovensia 26, no. 3 (2018): 483–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.31823/d.26.3.7.

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Given that the population in Europe and Croatia is increasingly getting older, and the pastoral work of people in the third age is a relatively new term, the article firstly analyzes the question why people of this age group are partially put (left) aside by pastoralists and pastoral workers in pastoral discourse in Croatia. The nature and characteristics of the third age in life presented in the first part show that the third age pastoral care includes the pastoral work with the most mature middle-aged people struggling with many life difficulties and stresses: separation from their children, the need for making personal and lifestyle adjustments, especially after retirement, after children moving out or after the loss of a life partner, as well as experiencing fast and progressive weakening of biological, psychological and mental health dimensions, a drop in life energy, strength, and general decline in vital and all other functions. Old age as a gift and possibility is depicted through several biblical characters as an evangelizing and pastoral possibility, opportunity and call to a God filled and more meaningful life. The second part presents the third age in the world and in the mentality of the society and the Church. By looking at the contemporary life context, we can state that words like old age, dying and death have become foreign in everyday discourse and that is just one of the many reasons why the third age people are often left to the side, and forsaken by their own families, society, friends and relatives, and partially forgotten also by the Church. In the world of the dictatorship of relativism, materialism, secularization, anarchism, atheism, subjectivism, individualism, and the selfie-culture, it is extremely difficult and demanding to accomplish the pastoral of the third age people. The Church, especially in Croatia, doesn't have a sufficiently designed, thought out, planned out and programmed systematic pastoral care which would include third age people. The new concept of pastoral discourse regarding the pastoral of the third age should develop in two basic directions: the first direction should consider to what extent can the third age be a subject of pastoral activity, and the second direction, based on pastoral sociology and demographic trends, should strive to recognize the third age as an object of pastoral activity. Besides the object, the third age can also be the subject of pastoral activity at different levels, areas and dimensions, especially at the parish level, the deanery level in some ways, at the regional level and (arch)diocesan level, in areas of apostolate, parish pastoral councils, charitable activities, liturgy, families, religious associations and movements, and work with Christians that have distanced themselves.
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Kennedy, John. "Gardening in Middle Age." College English 61, no. 4 (March 1999): 471. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/378923.

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Adams, Dale, and Robert Vogel. "Microfinance approaching middle age." Enterprise Development and Microfinance 25, no. 2 (June 2014): 103–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3362/1755-1986.2014.011.

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Dawes, Piers, Heather Fortnum, David R. Moore, Richard Emsley, Paul Norman, Karen Cruickshanks, Adrian Davis, et al. "Hearing in Middle Age." Ear and Hearing 35, no. 3 (2014): e44-e51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/aud.0000000000000010.

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Sugden, Andrew M. "Middle Stone Age cooking." Science 367, no. 6473 (January 2, 2020): 36.6–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.367.6473.36-f.

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Carson, John. "Middle Stone Age thinking." Nature Human Behaviour 2, no. 6 (May 3, 2018): 372. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41562-018-0348-x.

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Qinghua, Zhang, Gregory Pardlo, and Henry Zhang. "Dozing at Middle Age." Manoa 31, no. 1 (2019): 171. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/man.2019.0089.

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33

Wolpoff, Milford H., and Rachel Caspari. "On Middle Paleolithic/Middle Stone Age Hominid Taxonomy." Current Anthropology 31, no. 4 (August 1990): 394–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/203855.

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Thorpe, Roland, and Carl Hill. "Discrimination, Stress, and Health Across the Life Course." Innovation in Aging 4, Supplement_1 (December 1, 2020): 580–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.1933.

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Abstract There is a paucity of research that seeks to understand why race disparities in health across the life course remain elusive. Two such explanations that have been garnering attention is stress and discrimination. This symposium contains papers seeking to address the impact of discrimination or stress on African American health or health disparities across the life course. First, Nguyen and colleagues examine 1) the associations between discrimination and objective and subjective social isolation and 2) how these associations vary by age in using data from the National Survey of American Life. Discrimination was positively associated with being subjectively isolated from friends only and family only. This relationship varied by age. Discrimination did not predict objective isolation. Second, Brown examines evidence of the black-white paradox in anxiety and depressive symptoms among older adults using data from 6,019 adults ages 52+ from the 2006 HRS. After adjusting for socioeconomic factors, everyday discrimination, chronic conditions, and chronic stress, there are no black-white differences in anxiety and depressive symptoms. Third, Cobb and colleagues investigate the joint consequences of multiple dimensions of perceived discrimination on mortality risk using mortality data from the 2006-2016 HRS. The authors report the number of attributed reasons for everyday discrimination is a particularly salient risk factor for mortality in later life. This collection of papers provides insights into how discrimination or stress impacts African American health or health disparities in middle to late life.
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Đurić, Sanja. "Middle age and new age idea of justice." Glasnik Advokatske komore Vojvodine 79, no. 9 (2007): 275–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/gakv0709275d.

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The idea of justice has been the main reflection of the philosophers and lawyers for centuries. It is one of the most brilliant concepts of our spiritual universe. It has been considered as a domina et regina virtutum - mistress and queen of virtues. Many people consider it as a highest civilization, social and legal value. This paper presents a brief review of the development of the idea of justice in the middle and new age.
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Gessert, C. E., B. A. Elliott, and I. V. Haller. "Mortality Patterns in Middle Age and Old Age." Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences 58, no. 11 (November 1, 2003): B967. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gerona/58.11.b967.

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Ross, Linda N. "Essentiality: Middle Age Dating Conversation." English Journal 92, no. 6 (July 2003): 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3650548.

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Kelly, Ivan William. "Middle Age: Setiya’s Philosophical Reflections." Open Journal of Philosophy 08, no. 04 (2018): 343–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ojpp.2018.84024.

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Terao, Takeshi. "Musical hallucinations in middle age." Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 104, no. 4 (July 7, 2008): 315–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0001-690x.2001.00001.x.

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Errington, Shelly. "Is Middle Age a Fiction?" Human Development 43, no. 3 (2000): 191–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000022676.

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Scannapieco, F. A. "Oral Biology in Middle Age." Journal of Dental Research 93, no. 5 (April 15, 2014): 433–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022034514525783.

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Gray, Harry. "The rediscovery of middle age." Research in Post-Compulsory Education 10, no. 1 (March 2005): 57–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13596740500200192.

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McNamee, David. "RCT reports reach middle age." Lancet 352, no. 9139 (November 1998): 1533. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(05)60350-9.

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Auwaerter, Paul G. "Infectious Mononucleosis in Middle Age." JAMA 281, no. 5 (February 3, 1999): 454. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.281.5.454.

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Boul, Lorraine A. "Men's health and middle age." Sexualities, Evolution & Gender 5, no. 1 (January 2003): 5–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616660310001594980.

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Aslin, Richard N. "Infancy Research Reaches Middle Age." Contemporary Psychology 45, no. 1 (February 2000): 84–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/002174.

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BERGENUDD, HANS, FOLKE LINDG??RDE, BO NILSSON, and CLAES J. PETERSSON. "Shoulder Pain in Middle Age." Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research &NA;, no. 231 (June 1988): 234???238. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00003086-198806000-00032.

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Yoshimura, Noriaki, Shuji Kubota, Yutaka Fukushima, Hajime Kudo, Hiroshi Ishigaki, and Yutaka Yoshida. "Down's Syndrome in Middle Age." Pathology International 40, no. 10 (October 1990): 735–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1827.1990.tb01538.x.

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Barr, Maureen M. "Middle Age Has Its Advantages." PLOS Genetics 12, no. 12 (December 1, 2016): e1006426. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006426.

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Krassen Covan, Eleanor. "Middle Age, Menopause, and Opportunity." Health Care for Women International 35, no. 5 (April 25, 2014): 493–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07399332.2014.909690.

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