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1

Wills, Jeanie, et Krystl Raven. « The founding five : transformational leadership in the New York League of Advertising Women’s club, 1912–1926 ». Journal of Historical Research in Marketing 12, no 3 (20 mai 2020) : 377–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jhrm-04-2019-0015.

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Purpose This paper uses archival documents to begin to recover a history of women’s leadership in the advertising industry. In particular, this paper aims to identify the leadership styles of the first five presidents of the New York League of Advertising Women’s (NYLAW) club. Their leadership from 1912 to 1926 set the course for and influenced the culture of the New York League. These five women laid the foundations of a social club that would also contribute to the professionalization of women in advertising, building industry networks for women, forging leadership and mentorship links among women, providing advertising education exclusively for women and, finally, bolstering women’s status in all avenues of advertising. The first five presidents were, of course, different characters, but each exhibited the traits associated with “transformational leaders,” leaders who prepare the “demos” for their own leadership roles. The women’s styles converged with their situational context to give birth to a women’s advertising club that, like most clubs, did charity work and hosted social events, but which was developed by the first five presidents to give women the same kinds of professional opportunities as the advertising men’s clubs provided their membership. The first five presidents of the Advertising League had strong prior professional credibility because of the careers they had constructed for themselves among the men who dominated the advertising field in the first decade of the 20th century. As presidents of the NYLAW, they advocated for better jobs, equal rights at work and better pay for women working in the advertising industry. Design/methodology/approach This paper draws on women’s advertising archival material from the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe and Wisconsin Historical Society to argue that the five founding mothers of the NYLAW provided what can best be described as transformational feminist leadership, which resulted in building an effective club for their members and setting it on a trajectory of advocacy and education that would benefit women in the advertising industry for the next several decades. These women did not refer to themselves as “leaders,” they probably would not have considered their work in organizing the New York club an exercise in leadership, nor might they have called themselves feminists or seen their club as a haven for feminist work. However, by using modern leadership theories, the study can gain insight into how these women instantiated feminist ideals through a transformational leadership paradigm. Thus, the historical documents provide insight into the leadership roles and styles of some of the first women working in American advertising in the early parts of the 20th century. Findings Archival documents from the women’s advertising clubs can help us to understand women’s leadership practices and to reconstruct a history of women’s leadership in the advertising industry. Eight years before women in America could vote, the first five presidents shared with the club their wealth of collective experience – over two decades worth – as advertising managers, copywriters and space buyers. The first league presidents oversaw the growth of an organization would benefit both women and the advertising industry when they proclaimed that the women’s clubs would “improve the level of taste, ethics and knowledge throughout the communications industry by example, education and dissemination of information” (Dignam, 1952, p. 9). In addition, the club structure gave ad-women a collective voice which emerged through its members’ participation in building the club and through the rallying efforts of transformational leaders. Social implications Historically, the advertising industry in the USA has been “pioneered” by male industry leaders such as Claude Hopkins, Albert Lasker and David Ogilvy. However, when the authors look to archival documents, it was found that women have played leadership roles in the industry too. Drawing on historical methodology, this study reconstructs a history of women’s leadership in the advertising and marketing industries. Originality/value This paper helps to understand how women participated in leadership roles in the advertising industry, which, in turn, enabled other women to build careers in the industry.
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Ting, D., B. Bailey, F. Scheuermeyer, T. Chan et D. Harris. « P018 : Journal club functions as a community of practice that safeguards quality assurance in the era of free open access medical education : a qualitative study ». CJEM 22, S1 (mai 2020) : S70—S71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cem.2020.226.

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Introduction: The ways in which Emergency Medicine (EM) physicians interact with the medical literature has been transformed with the rise of Free Open Access Medical Education (FOAM). Although nearly all residents use FOAM resources, some criticize the lack of universal quality assurance. This problem is a particular risk for trainees who have many time constraints and incompletely developed critical appraisal skills. One potential safeguard is journal club, which is used by virtually all EM residency programs in North America to review new literature. However, EM resident perspectives have not been studied. Our research objective was to describe how residents perceive journal club to influence how they translate the medical literature into their clinical practice. Our research question was whether FOAM has influenced residents’ goals and perceived value of journal club. Methods: We developed a semi-structured interview script in conjunction with a methods expert and refined it via pilot testing. Following constructivist grounded theory, and using both purposive and theoretical sampling, we conducted a focus group (n = 7) and 18 individual interviews with EM residents at the 4 training sites of the University of British Columbia. In total, we analyzed 920 minutes of recorded audio. Two authors independently coded each transcript, with discrepancies reconciled by discussion and consensus. Constant comparative analysis was performed. We conducted return of findings through public presentations. Results: We found evidence that journal club works as a community of practice with a progression of roles from junior to senior residents. Participants described journal club as a safe venue to compare practice patterns and to gain insight into the practical wisdom of their peers and mentors. The social and academic activities present at journal club interacted positively to foster this environment. In asking residents about ways that journal club accelerates knowledge translation, we actually found that residents cite journal club as a quality check to prevent premature adoption of new research findings. Residents are hesitant to adopt new literature into their practice without positive validation, which can occur during journal club. Conclusion: Journal club functions as a community of practice that is valued by residents. Journal club is a primary way that new evidence can be validated before being put into practice, and may act as quality assurance in the era of FOAM.
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Peterson, C. S. « Sierra Club : 100 Years of Protecting Nature. By Tom Turner. New York : Harry N. Abrams, Inc. in association with the Sierra Club, 1991. 288 pp. Illustrations, notes, chronology, bibliography, index. $49.50 ». Forest & ; Conservation History 37, no 1 (1 janvier 1993) : 39–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3983822.

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Darda, Joseph. « The Great American Baseball Novel : How Literature Invented the National Pastime ». American Literary History 34, no 4 (18 novembre 2022) : 1335–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajac156.

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Abstract From 1846, when the Knickerbocker Base Ball Club lost their first game under a consolidated set of rules, transforming the “New York game” into “base ball,” and Walt Whitman, then a roving editor with the Brooklyn Eagle, observed neighborhood kids engaged in “a certain game of ball,” to the rise of television and football, literature elevated baseball from another bat-and-ball game to a national institution, a distorted mirror through which the nation identified itself. MLB commissioners and novelists have described baseball as a form of writing and as the literature of their childhoods because the game first achieved national status through writing and literature. From Whitman to Bernard Malamud, American authors turned to baseball to determine the health of the nation, encouraging their readers to invest in the health of the game. First came the great American baseball novel, then the national pastime.Baseball nationalism needed the hard sell of sportswriters and the soft touch of literature.
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Cohen, Nevin, Katherine Tomaino Fraser, Chloe Arnow, Michelle Mulcahy et Christophe Hille. « Online Grocery Shopping by NYC Public Housing Residents Using Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Benefits : A Service Ecosystems Perspective ». Sustainability 12, no 11 (9 juin 2020) : 4694. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12114694.

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This paper examines adoption of online grocery shopping, and potential cost and time savings compared to brick and mortar food retailers, by New York City public housing residents using Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. A mixed methods action research project involving the co-creation of an online shopping club, the Farragut Food Club (FFC), recruited 300 members who registered to shop online using SNAP, and received waivers on delivery minimums and provided technical assistance and centralized food delivery. We conducted a survey (n = 206) and focus groups to understand shopping practices; FFC members collected receipts of groceries over two weeks before and after the pilot to measure foods purchased, stores patronized, and prices. We interviewed FFC members to elicit experiences with the pilot, and estimated cost differences between products purchased in brick and mortar stores and equivalent products online, and transportation time and cost differences. Online shopping represented a small (2.4%) percentage of grocery spending. Unit prices for products purchased on Amazon ($0.28) were significantly higher than for equivalent products purchased in brick and mortar stores ($0.23) (p < 0.001.) Compatibility with existing routines, low relative advantage, and cost of online products limited the adoption of online shopping among SNAP users.
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John, Steven A., Jeffrey T. Parsons, H. Jonathon Rendina et Christian Grov. « Club drug users had higher odds of reporting a bacterial STI compared with non-club drug users : results from a cross-sectional analysis of gay and bisexual men on HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis ». Sexually Transmitted Infections 95, no 8 (20 août 2018) : 626–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-2018-053591.

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ObjectivesPre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) can reduce HIV transmission risk for many gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men. However, bacterial STI (BSTI) associated with decreasing condom use among HIV PrEP users is a growing concern. Determining the characteristics of current PrEP users at highest BSTI risk fills a critical gap in the literature.MethodsGay and bisexual men (GBM) in New York City on HIV PrEP for 6 or more months (n=65) were asked about chlamydia, gonorrhoea and syphilis diagnoses in the past 6 months. By design, half (51%) of the sample were club drug users. We examined the associations of length of time on PrEP, type of PrEP care provider, PrEP adherence, number of sexual partners, number of condomless anal sex acts and club drug use on self-reported BSTI using multivariable, binary logistic regressions, adjusting for age, race/ethnicity, education and income.ResultsTwenty-six per cent of GBM on HIV PrEP reported a diagnosis of BSTI in the past 6 months. Men who reported club drug use (adjusted OR (AOR)=6.60, p<0.05) and more frequent condomless anal sex in the past 30 days (AOR=1.13, p<0.05) had higher odds of reporting a BSTI. No other variables were significantly associated with self-reported BSTI in the multivariable models.ConclusionsClub drug users could be at a unique BSTI risk, perhaps because of higher risk sexual networks. Findings should be considered preliminary, but suggest the importance of ongoing BSTI screening and risk-reduction counselling for GBM on HIV PrEP.
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Nicholson, Bob. « ‘You Kick the Bucket ; We Do the Rest!’ : Jokes and the Culture of Reprinting in the Transatlantic Press1 ». Journal of Victorian Culture 17, no 3 (1 septembre 2012) : 273–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2012.702664.

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Abstract In December 1893 the Conservative candidate for Flintshire addressed an audience at Mold Constitutional Club. After he had finished attacking Gladstone and the local Liberal incumbent, he ended his speech with a joke. He advised the Conservative party to adopt, with regard to the government, the sign of an American undertaker: ‘You kick the bucket; we do the rest’. How did a sign belonging to a Nevadan undertaker become the subject of a joke told at a political meeting in North Wales? This unlikely question forms the basis of this article. Using new digital archives, it tracks the journey of the gag from its origins in New York, its travels around America, its trip across the Atlantic, its circulation throughout Britain and its eventual leap into political discourse. The article uses the joke to illuminate the workings of a broader culture of transatlantic reprinting. During the final quarter of the nineteenth century miscellaneous ‘snippets’ cut from the pages of the American press became a staple feature of Britain's bestselling newspapers and magazines. This article explores how these texts were imported, circulated and continually rewritten in dynamic partnership between authors, editors and their readers.
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Besteman, Nathan, et John Ferdinands. « Another Way to Divide a Line Segment into n Equal Parts ». Mathematics Teacher 98, no 6 (février 2005) : 428–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/mt.98.6.0428.

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In summer 1995, two high school students, David Goldenheim and Dan Litchfield, discovered a way to divide a line segment into any number of equal parts. Their method differed from the standard method of Euclid. Together with their teacher Charles Dietrich, they wrote an article on their method, which appeared in the January 1997 issue of the Mathematics Teacher (Litchfield, Goldenheim, and Dietrich 1997). The discovery received considerable publicity in the popular media and was written up in the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times. The authors gave talks at several professional conferences and were invited to meet the secretary of education.
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Meunier, Étienne, et Karolynn Siegel. « Sex club/party attendance and STI among men who have sex with men : results from an online survey in New York City ». Sexually Transmitted Infections 95, no 8 (13 mars 2019) : 584–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-2018-053816.

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ObjectivePrior studies have shown that men who have sex with men (MSM) who attend sex clubs or parties are at higher risk for HIV and other STIs than those who do not. We sought to provide data about MSM who attend sex clubs/parties in New York City (NYC) in the era of biomedical HIV prevention.Methods: We conducted an online survey among MSM in NYC (n=766) in 2016–2017 and investigated differences between those who reported never attending a sex club/party (non-attendees 50.1%), those who had attended over a year ago (past attendees 18.0%) and those who attended in the prior year (recent attendees 30.1%). We also conducted multivariable analyses to explore associations with past-year STI diagnosis.Results: Recent attendees were not more likely to be HIV positive than non-attendees. Among participants never diagnosed with HIV, recent attendees were more likely to use pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP, 32.6%) than non-attendees (14.5%) and past attendees (18.8%; p<0.001). Recent attendees reported the highest numbers of recent sex partners, including partners with whom they had condomless anal sex. Significantly more recent attendees reported an STI diagnosis in the prior year (27.9%) compared with non-attendees (14.0%) and past attendees (16.5%; p<0.001). However, 13.8% of non-attendees and 11.5% of past attendees reported having never tested for STIs, significantly more than recent attendees (6.0%, p=0.010). Multivariable analysis showed recent attendees to have 2.42 times the odds (compared with non-attendees) of reporting past-year STI diagnosis (95% CI 1.52 to 3.87, p<0.001).ConclusionsCompared with those who had not done so, MSM who attended sex clubs/parties in NYC in the prior year were not only more likely to report past-year STI diagnoses but also more likely to report PrEP use or recent HIV/STI testing. Sexual health promotion among MSM who attend sex clubs/parties should address STI risk and prevention.
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Ramaswamy, Chitra, Emily Westheimer et Sarah Braunstein. « Cancer Mortality among Persons with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection in New York City, 2001–2015 ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 4, suppl_1 (2017) : S58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx162.135.

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Abstract Background With the prolonged life-span of persons with HIV (PWH) due to anti-retroviral therapy, their cancer burden has increased. Cancer continues to be a leading cause of death among PWH. Studying cancer mortality can inform and guide the development of cancer screening and prevention strategies for PWH. Methods We analyzed data for all persons &gt; = 13 years who were diagnosed with HIV from 2001 to 2015 and reported to the New York City (NYC) HIV surveillance registry (HSR). Using the HSR and the underlying cause of death obtained from the NYC vital statistics registry and the National Death Index, we examined age-specific and age-standardized mortality rates from cancer and compared time trends of deaths due to HIV-related8 cancer to deaths from non-HIV-related cancers. Results There were 34,190 deaths reported among 154,688 PWH of whom nearly half (n = 16,804; 49.1%) died due to HIV (excluding HIV-related cancers). Among all deaths, HIV was the leading cause, followed by cancer (both HIV and non-HIV-related) (n = 5,271; 15.4%) and cardiovascular disease (n = 3,724, 10.9%). The top three causes of non-HIV-related cancer deaths were lung cancer (n = 1,040; 19.7%), liver cancer (n = 552; 10.5%), and colorectal cancer (n = 315; 5.6%). Although the mortality rate among PWH decreased over time (24.4 to 13.9 per 1,000 person-years from 2001 to 2015), the proportion of deaths attributable to all cancers increased (10.6% in 2001 to 19.9% in 2015, p &lt; .0001). This increase was driven by non-HIV-related cancers (6.1% of all deaths in 2001 to 15.8% in 2015, p &lt; .0001). The mean age increased from 2001 to 2015 among the dead (46 to 56 years) and among the censored (35 to 49 years). After controlling for demographic factors, transmission risk, and last CD4 count, the hazard ratio for cancer deaths was higher among people who inject drugs (HR = 1.5; 95% CI = 1.4–1.7) and those with last CD4 count &lt; 200 (HR = 9.3; 95% CI = 8.3–10.5). Conclusion Although mortality rates are decreasing in PWH, deaths due to non-HIV-related cancers are increasing. The upward trend in the mean age suggests that aging may be contributing to this increase. Routine screening for liver and colon cancers along with smoking cessation may reduce lung, liver and colon cancer deaths. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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SABIN, JAMES. « Mental Health Practice under Managed Care : Vols. 1–6. Various authors. Brunner-Mazel : New York. 1996. The Clinician's Guide to Managed Behavioral Care. By N. Wineger. Haworth Press : New York. 1996. » Psychological Medicine 29, no 1 (janvier 1999) : 237–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s003329179824760x.

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Evans, Mary, Anne Patala, Ellsworth Campbell, Emily Westheimer, Cynthia L. Gay, Stephanie E. Cohen, William M. Switzer et Philip J. Peters. « Characterization of New HIV Infections among Adults ≥45 Years—New York City, North Carolina, San Francisco, 2011–2013 ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 4, suppl_1 (2017) : S15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx162.036.

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Abstract Background While HIV prevention activities are often focused on younger people, older people can also be at risk for HIV infection. We aimed to characterize HIV transmission in older adults. Methods The STOP study was a multi-site prospective study of persons with acute HIV infection (AHI) from 2011 to 2013. Older adults were defined as ≥45 years and younger persons were 13–44 years. AHI was defined by a negative rapid test but a reactive antigen/antibody or HIV RNA test. We performed bivariate analysis using Pearson’s chi-square and odds ratios to examine associations between older age and transmission characteristics. Among persons with HIV-1 polymerase (pol) sequences, transmission linkages were inferred when the genetic distance between sequences was &lt;1.5% and did not indicate directionality of transmission. Results Among 86,836 participants (median age, 29 years; 75.0% male; 51.8% MSM), HIV infection was diagnosed in 176 (1.46%) of 12,036 older adults compared with 1,150 (1.53%) of 74,800 younger people (P = 0.56). Among HIV-infected persons, AHI was diagnosed in similar proportions of older and younger people (13.1% vs. 12.6%; P = 0.86). Among HIV-infected persons who participated in partner notification (n = 1,326), older adults were less likely to report meeting a sex partner online (11.3% vs. 26.9%; OR 0.52, 95% CI = 0.35–0.78) and were less likely to name ≥2 sex partners (31.5% vs. 46.8%; OR = 0.28, 95% CI = 0.15–0.53) compared with younger people. Among HIV-infected persons with HIV-1 pol sequences (n = 537), similar proportions of older and younger people had viruses that genetically linked with another study participant (15.9% vs. 23.5%; OR 0.62, 95% CI 0.31–1.22) (Figure). Conclusion In this study, older adults had a similar frequency of newly diagnosed HIV infection, acute infection, and genetic linkage compared with younger people, suggesting that increased HIV prevention efforts may be needed in this population. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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Landing, Ed, Christopher R. Barnes et Robert K. Stevens. « Tempo of earliest Ordovician graptolite faunal succession : conodont-based correlations from the Tremadocian of Quebec ». Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 23, no 12 (1 décembre 1986) : 1928–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/e86-180.

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Successive Tremadocian planktic dendroid graptolite assemblages from continental slope sequences in Quebec can be correlated with North American platform biozonations on the basis of conodonts. Anisograptid-bearing (Assemblage 2), middle Tremadocian "Matane faunas" are associated with Early Ordovician Rossodus manitouensis Zone (new designation) conodonts. Younger middle Tremadocian faunas with adelograptids (Assemblage 3) are no younger than the Rossodus manitouensis Zone. Key dendroid evolutionary–immigration events take place within the lower conodont Fauna B interval. Rooted dendroids near Cap des Rosiers, Quebec, and in eastern New York State occur with lower Fauna B conodonts and the trilobites Pareuloma and Borthaspidella. However, the earliest Tremadocian (and earliest Ordovician) dendroid immigration event, represented by the local lowest occurrence of faunas with Dictyonema flabelliforme s.l. at localities in western Newfoundland, eastern New York State, Norway, and eastern China, also lies within the lower Fauna B interval. Finally, the lowest occurrence of key Assemblage 2 dendroid taxa falls within the lower Fauna B interval at the latter localities.The Rossodus manitouensis Zone is proposed as a new designation for a biostratigraphic unit that is appropriate for North American marginal and open shelf sequences. This zone is approximately equivalent to the "Loxodus bransoni Interval" of other authors and is characterized by Fauna C conodonts. Newly described taxa include Rossodus? highgatensis n. sp., Scolopodus? praecornuformis n. sp., and Variabiloconus n. gen.
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Lisowska, Katarzyna. « Women and Intertextuality : On the Example of Margaret Atwood’s The Penelopiad ». Analyses/Rereadings/Theories : A Journal Devoted to Literature, Film and Theatre 2, no 1 (1 janvier 2014) : 18–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/2353-6098.2.03.

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The aim of the study is to consider feminist retellings of myths and legends. As an example, Margaret Atwood’s book The Penelopiad is analyzed. The interpretation is situated in a broader context of intertextual practices characteristic of the feminist vision of literature. I present the ideas which Atwood shares with authors engaged in women’s movement. Among these there is Atwood’s understanding of intertextuality (noticeable especially in The Penelopiad). Bibliographical basis of the study comprises books which are fundamental to feminist and gender criticism (e.g. Poetics of Gender, ed. by N. Miller, New York 1986; S. M. Gilbert, S. Gubar The Madwoman in the Attic. The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth- Century Literary Imagination, New Haven and London 1984). What is more, the study refers to the books which allow considering the notion of intertextuality (G. Allen, Intertextuality, London and New York 2010, J. Clayton. E. Rothstein (eds.), Influence and Intertextuality in Literary History, Wisconsin 1991) and connecting the interpretation with the problems crucial to contemporary literary studies (L. Hutcheon L. A Poetics of Postmodernism. History, Theory, Fiction, New York and London 1988, B. Johnson, A World of Difference, Baltimore and London 1989).
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Wills, Jeanie. « Dorothy Dignam’s advocacy for women’s careers in advertising : 1920-1950 ». Journal of Historical Research in Marketing 10, no 1 (19 février 2018) : 21–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jhrm-01-2016-0001.

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Purpose This paper aims to examine how women working in the advertising industry during the 1920s and 1930s encouraged and resisted stereotypes about women to establish a professional identity. This seemingly paradoxical approach provided women with opportunities for professional development and network building. Dorothy Dignam is presented as a case study of one such advertising woman. She was a market researcher, a teacher, an advocate for women’s employment in advertising, a historian of women’s advertising clubs and a supporter of and a contributor to women’s professional networking. Design/methodology/approach Archival material is drawn from the N. W. Ayer and Son archives at the Smithsonian Institute, the Advertising Women of New York archives and the Dorothy Dignam Papers at the Schlesinger Library, the Philadelphia Club of Advertising Women papers at Bryn Mawr, the Dignam Collection at the Wisconsin Historical Society and the Women’s Advertising Club of Chicago (WACC) archives at the University of Illinois, Chicago. A close reading method of analysis places the material in a historical context. Additionally, it provides a narrative structure to demonstrate the complementary relationship between advertising club work and professional identity. Findings Dignam’s career strategies helped her to construct a professional identity that situated her as a guide, teacher and role model for other women who worked in advertising. She supported and created an attitude that enabled aspiring career women to embark on their careers, and she assisted in creating a coalition of women who empowered each other through their advertising club work. Practical implications Dignam’s published work about careers for women in advertising, her own career and its advancement and her involvement with women’s advertising clubs all served a rhetorical purpose. Her professional life sought to change both men’s and women’s attitudes about the impact of women in professional roles. In turn, the influence of attitudes helped to create space for women in business, especially those seeking advertising careers. Originality/value This paper illustrates how Dignam’s career, accomplishments and publications coalesce to provide evidence of how women negotiated professional identities and claimed space for themselves in the business world and in the advertising industry.
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Marcos, Luis, Kalie Smith, Fredric Weinbaum et Eric Spitzer. « 667. An Emerging Tick-Borne Disease in Long Island, New York : Relapsing Fever Caused by Borrelia miyamotoi ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 5, suppl_1 (novembre 2018) : S241. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.674.

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Abstract Background Suffolk County (Long Island, New York) reports annually the highest absolute number of tick-borne diseases in New York. A new Borrelia species, Borrelia miyamotoi which causes a relapsing fever, has been reported in New York recently. The aim of this study was to identify the number of cases of B. miyamotoi diagnosed in Suffolk county. Methods A retrospective chart review was performed in Stony Brook (SB) Medicine hospitals, SB University Hospital (the only tertiary medical center in Suffolk County) and Southampton Hospital (a major hospital in the east end of Suffolk County). Laboratory records were queried for a positive B. miyamotoi PCR test from blood or a positive IgG antibody with a B. miyamotoi-specific EIA that utilizes a recombinant GlpQ antigen (both tests performed in a commercial laboratory). Results Twenty-eight cases were positive for serology (IgG EIA; n = 19) or PCR (n = 9). None of the IgG-positive cases had a positive PCR result indicating that individuals were likely exposed to B. miyamotoi in the past. Of the nine PCR-positive cases (median age:67 years), eight were men, three were diagnosed in the outpatient clinic (33.3%) and six were diagnosed through the emergency department and required hospitalization (66.6%). Thrombocytopenia and transaminitis were common findings. Two-thirds of these nine cases were diagnosed in the period of 2016–2017 and one-third in the period, 2013–2015 (P = 0.17). Conclusion An increasing number of cases of B. miyamotoi were observed in Suffolk County during 2013–2017 and two-thirds required hospitalization. The real burden of this tick borne disease in Suffolk County and the rest of the state is unknown. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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Sintserov, Leonid Leonidovich. « Techniques of manipulation in the articles of the newspaper The New York Times ». Исторический журнал : научные исследования, no 3 (mars 2022) : 33–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.7256/2454-0609.2022.3.38219.

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The subject of this article is manipulation techniques used by journalists of one of the most authoritative newspaper (The New York Times) in order to create an image of the USSR during the Perestroika period. The purpose of the article is to show the potential of the publications of The New York Times, which captured the image of Perestroika in the USSR. The article discusses such manipulative techniques as stereotepization, information selection, fabrication of facts, and so on. In addition, this article shows how language techniques – periphrasis, antithesis, hyperbole can be used to manipulate readers' opinions. The research includes articles of the newspaper 1987-1991 devoted to the events in the Baltic States, the activities of M. S. Gorbachev, B. N. Yeltsin, A.D. Sakharov. The analysis shows how the methods of affirmation and repetition allow the readers of the newspaper to form geopolitical ideas about the Baltic states, methods of stereotyping, mixing fact and opinion help to create stable images of politicians and public figures of the period of Perestroika, and cliched formulas fix the image of the USSR leadership in the minds of readers. The study of language techniques resorted to by the authors of the publication makes it possible to identify the implicit meanings contained in the texts of publications. The correlation of the created image and manipulation technique revealed in this article can be extrapolated to a fairly wide field of application – the study of the press as a source. The publications of The New York Times are considered for the first time from the point of view of manipulative techniques that contribute to the creation of the image of the USSR during the Perestroika period.
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Vallas, Steven P., et Angèle Christin. « Work and Identity in an Era of Precarious Employment : How Workers Respond to “Personal Branding” Discourse ». Work and Occupations 45, no 1 (17 octobre 2017) : 3–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0730888417735662.

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Recent efforts to understand the significance of precarious work have been limited in at least two important respects. One is the neglect of the ideological constructs that workers are led to embrace concerning the employment relation, and the other is the undertheorized nature of much research in this field. To address these limits, the authors adopt a two-pronged strategy in this article. In empirical terms, the authors focus on an important source of popular thinking about work: the career advice genre, which has recently evolved into a growing literature on “personal branding.” In theoretical terms, the authors appeal to Foucault’s theory of governmentality in order to understand how and why workers respond to personal branding discourses. Data are drawn from two linked qualitative studies bearing on workers employed in distinct settings: freelance journalists in Paris and New York ( N = 101) and a broader set of white-collar employees who have faced market adversity in Boston ( N = 62). Findings reveal that personal branding discourse has become both prevalent and potent, encouraging many workers to conform to what Foucault referred to as the “enterprising self.” Yet the authors also find that workers respond to personal branding in a multiplicity of ways, some of which Foucault left unaddressed. The article thus finds qualified support for Foucault’s arguments but identifies issues—especially that of agency and resistance—which stand in need of additional elaboration.
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BAILEY, WALTER B. « Ima Hogg and an Experiment in Audience Education : The Rice Lectureship in Music (1923–33) ». Journal of the Society for American Music 5, no 3 (13 juillet 2011) : 395–426. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1752196311000186.

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AbstractDuring the 1920s, in a bid to elevate musical taste in Houston, Texas, arts patron Ima Hogg anonymously underwrote a series of public lectures on music at the Rice Institute, now Rice University. A trained musician who had spent considerable time in New York and Europe, Hogg recommended potential lecturers for the series, and her collaborator, the music-loving president of the Institute, Edgar Odell Lovett, worked to engage them. Not all of Hogg's candidates were available, and Lovett used his own contacts to supplement them. The resulting slate of lecturers was a diverse mix of musicians and scholars: Maurice Ravel, Arthur Honegger, Nadia Boulanger, John Powell, Harold Morris, George Birkhoff, and Henry Hadow. Their lectures survive in printed form in a scholarly journal published by Rice; they provide some of the most important statements about music by their authors. Hogg's patronage was made possible by an increase in her family's wealth, but her goal of public enlightenment was inspired by her family's tradition of public service (her father had been the governor of Texas) and by her longtime involvement in women's music clubs. Her model for the lectures may have been the didactic music club meeting; Lovett's was the university extension lecture directed toward a community audience. This article details and contextualizes Hogg's patronage in light of contemporary views of women's involvement in the support of music.
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Rajagopalan, Saranathan, Wendy Szymczak, William Jacobs, Daniel Behin, Debra Pan et Michael Levi. « 2165. Helicobacter pylori Infections in the Bronx, New York : Whole-Genome Sequencing for Rapid Genotypic Susceptibility Testing ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 6, Supplement_2 (octobre 2019) : S734—S735. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1845.

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Abstract Background Susceptibility-guided treatment of H. pylori is superior to empiric therapy. We determined the accuracy of whole-genome sequencing (WGS) compared with phenotypic testing using CLSI/EUCAST breakpoints. Methods Thirty-three clinical isolates of H. pylori cultured from gastric biopsies were sequenced with a coverage range between 40x and 80x using Illumina Miseq platform and the reads were assembled and annotated with PATRIC. Phenotypic susceptibility tests were performed using E-test strips under microaerophilic conditions for 72 hours. Mutations associated with amoxicillin, tetracycline, clarithromycin, levofloxacin, metronidazole and rifampin resistance were examined. Results Of the 33 isolates, two were phenotypically resistant to amoxicillin: one carried a β-lactamase gene (blaTEM-116) and the other exhibited a point mutation pbp2 (A541T). All isolates were tetracycline susceptible phenotypically, but three isolates had point mutations in 16S rRNA that are associated with resistance (A926G). Clarithromycin results showed a good correlation between methods. Nine clarithromycin-resistant isolates demonstrated point mutations in 23S rRNA (A2142G/A2143G). Fifteen isolates were phenotypically resistant to levofloxacin, but resistance mutations were found in only 14 strains (N87I/N87K/D91Y/D91N/D91G/D99N in gyrA). We analyzed our strains for the presence of intact genes rdxA and frxA, either of which convert the prodrug form of metronidazole into the active form. Twenty-four of 33 isolates were tested phenotypically. We found 3 isolates with truncations in both genes. These isolates had metronidazole MICs >256. The presence of one or both intact genes did not always result in low MICs, indicating that there may be significant point mutations that contribute to resistance. Rifampin was not tested phenotypically, but no mutations in rpoB were found. In summary, the correlation of WGS and phenotypic testing was 100% for amoxicillin and clarithromycin, 97% for levofloxacin, 91% for tetracycline (n = 33), and 67% for metronidazole (n = 24). Conclusion WGS provides a detailed analysis of H. pylori resistance and a broader analysis of antimicrobials that may be of clinical value. Additional studies are needed for genotypic prediction of metronidazole resistance. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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Wrzesińska, Katarzyna. « Czy jesteśmy „ludzkim zoo” ? » Sprawy Narodowościowe, no 48 (2 août 2016) : 251–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.11649/sn.2016.016.

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Are we "human zoo"?Review: The Invention of Race. Scientific and Popular Representation, N. Bancel, T. David, D. Thomas (ed.), Routlege: New York-Abington, 2014, ss. 320.The book under review is a collection of articles presenting the functioning of the idea of the human race in the scientific, social and cultural backgrounds. The main purpose is to demonstrate how the concept of race have circulated from the late 18th century in scholarship as well as in popular reception. Thus the authors focus their attention on the so-called ethnological expositions (such as Negro or Eskimo Villages) organized on the occasion of world‘s fairs, today known as “human zoo.” On the social level, this helped support the conviction of the supremacy of the white race. Czy jesteśmy „ludzkim zoo”?Recenzja: The Invention of Race. Scientific and Popular Representation, N. Bancel, T. David, D. Thomas (ed.), Routlege: New York-Abington, 2014, ss. 320.Recenzowana praca zawiera zbiór artykułów poświęconych przedstawieniu funkcjonowania koncepcji podziału ludzkości na rasy na szerokim tle: naukowym, społecznym i kulturowym. Główny cel stanowi zobrazowanie procesu cyrkulacji idei rasy – od ujęć naukowych począwszy od końca XVIII w. aż do ukazania problemu na płaszczyźnie odbioru masowego. Tu obiektem zainteresowań badawczych stały się tzw. ekspozycje etnologiczne (np. wioski murzyńskie, eskimoskie) organizowane przy okazji wystaw światowych, określane dzisiaj mianem „ludzkich zoo”. Płaszczyzna ta przyczyniła się do utrwalenia w świadomości społecznej poczucia supremacji białej rasy.
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Wrzesińska, Katarzyna. « Czy jesteśmy „ludzkim zoo” ? » Sprawy Narodowościowe, no 48 (2 août 2016) : 251–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.11649/sn.2016.16.

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Are we "human zoo"?Review: The Invention of Race. Scientific and Popular Representation, N. Bancel, T. David, D. Thomas (ed.), Routlege: New York-Abington, 2014, ss. 320.The book under review is a collection of articles presenting the functioning of the idea of the human race in the scientific, social and cultural backgrounds. The main purpose is to demonstrate how the concept of race have circulated from the late 18th century in scholarship as well as in popular reception. Thus the authors focus their attention on the so-called ethnological expositions (such as Negro or Eskimo Villages) organized on the occasion of world‘s fairs, today known as “human zoo.” On the social level, this helped support the conviction of the supremacy of the white race. Czy jesteśmy „ludzkim zoo”?Recenzja: The Invention of Race. Scientific and Popular Representation, N. Bancel, T. David, D. Thomas (ed.), Routlege: New York-Abington, 2014, ss. 320.Recenzowana praca zawiera zbiór artykułów poświęconych przedstawieniu funkcjonowania koncepcji podziału ludzkości na rasy na szerokim tle: naukowym, społecznym i kulturowym. Główny cel stanowi zobrazowanie procesu cyrkulacji idei rasy – od ujęć naukowych począwszy od końca XVIII w. aż do ukazania problemu na płaszczyźnie odbioru masowego. Tu obiektem zainteresowań badawczych stały się tzw. ekspozycje etnologiczne (np. wioski murzyńskie, eskimoskie) organizowane przy okazji wystaw światowych, określane dzisiaj mianem „ludzkich zoo”. Płaszczyzna ta przyczyniła się do utrwalenia w świadomości społecznej poczucia supremacji białej rasy.
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Kaplun, Olga, Kalie Smith, Teresa Khoo, Eric Spitzer, Fredric Weinbaum et Luis A. Marcos. « 665. Key Clinical and Laboratory Features in Early Diagnosis of Ehrlichiosis in an Endemic Area of Long Island, New York ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 5, suppl_1 (novembre 2018) : S240—S241. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy210.672.

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Abstract Background Human monocytic ehrlichiosis (HME) is a tick-borne disease caused by Ehrlichia chafeensis in the northeast United States. Suffolk County, New York has the highest amount of HME cases in NY (176 from 2010 to 2014). Our aim is to identify risk factors for HME and compare clinical presentation and laboratory findings of young vs. older adults. Methods A retrospective chart review from January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2017 was performed on all patients ≥18 years who presented to the ER at Stony Brook University Hospital (SBUH) or Stony Brook Southampton Hospital (SBSH) with (i) ICD-9 code 082.4 or ICD-10 code A77.40 and (ii) a positive E. Chafeensis PCR. Data were collected on demographics, clinical presentation, and laboratory results. Results Twenty-seven cases of HME were found and separated into Group 1 (G1, n = 10) or Group 2 (G2, n = 17) based on age (Table 1). G1 had a significantly higher chance of being Hispanic than G2. Twenty-four of the 27 patients (89%) were hospitalized with an average length of stay of 3.4 days (range 1–14 days).The only significant difference in clinical presentation was that G1 was more likely to have myalgia (P = 0.02). 40% or more of patients in both groups presented with an acute kidney injury and the average length of hospital stay in days was 4.0 ± 2.9 and 3.2 ± 3.1 for G1 and G2, respectively. The number of cases overall have increased 6.0% per year between 2014 and 2017. Thrombocytopenia presented in all cases. Conclusion. HME is prevalent in Suffolk County. Clinical presentation and laboratory findings were largely similar between the two groups, except the younger population more often presented with myalgia. A risk factor in this study was to be young and Hispanic, likely due to occupational exposure. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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Basch, Corey H., et William D. Kernan. « Ingredients in Children’s Fluoridated Toothpaste : A Literature Review ». Global Journal of Health Science 9, no 3 (12 juillet 2016) : 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v9n3p1.

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<p>Children’s fluoridated toothpastes are supplemented with ingredients intended to increase appeal. A comprehensive list of children’s toothpastes and their ingredients was compiled from nine pharmacies in New York City. A broad literature review was then conducted to describe the purpose of the ingredient and the known contamination risks associated with chronic consumption of each ingredient. The final sample size comprised 26 children’s toothpastes and 45 unique ingredients. The purpose and known contamination risks of the 45 identified ingredients were documented. A proportion of ingredients (28.9% [n = 13]) were found to be both unnecessary to improving the oral health of children and solely used to increase their appeal. Of this list of unnecessary ingredients, 69.2% (n = 9) were shown to have contamination risks associated with chronic consumption, including enamel demineralization. The authors recommend that toothpaste manufacturing practices be limited to include only ingredients that are necessary for improved oral health and care and only using natural flavorings when needed.</p>
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Da Silva Filho, José Nunes. « Methods of evaluating postural deviations of the spine used in national studies : a systematic review. » Manual Therapy, Posturology & ; Rehabilitation Journal 12 (30 mars 2014) : 164. http://dx.doi.org/10.17784/mtprehabjournal.2014.12.164.

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Introduction: The spine related diseases have been increasing sharply and causing serious problems for public health. Having a postural assessment with one of the important factors in the prevention and/or treatment of these problems. Objectives: To determine which methods of spinal postural assessment has been used in studies and national journals published recently. Methods: This study is a systematic review, which followed the recommendations (PRISMA) "Transparent report of Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis." The search data Began with the choice of key terms and synonyms following the Health Sciences Descriptors DeSC and MeSH (Medical Subject Headings). Due to achieve the main objective of the research, we selected only studies of national authors and journals published between the year 2013 to Feb/2014, yet fitting, made any kind of spinal postural assessment. Conducted a descriptive statistical checking the frequency percentages by software (IBM ® SPSS ® Statistic, vs 21, New York/USA 2012. Results: 25 studies were included, and the methods of evaluation were: photogrammetry (36.7%, n =11); Posturógrafo (16.7%, n=5); X-Ray (10%, n=3); Postural Visual Evalution (23.3%, n=7) Goniometry (3.3%, n=1). Conclusions: it is concluded between national studies photogrammetry is the postural assessment methods most used today.
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Kang, Ki-Eun, et George C. Homsy. « Make Me a Better Offer : Developer Threats and Regional Competition for Land Development Projects ». Economic Development Quarterly 34, no 1 (29 décembre 2019) : 21–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0891242419897124.

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To extract favorable terms from local governments, developers can take advantage of intermunicipal competition and threaten to relocate or abandon a land development project. Some say that model of regional competition undercuts the economic, environmental, and societal benefits of development while others claim it boosts the efficiency of municipal operations. The authors examine the likelihood that land developers will push local governments to compete against each other for projects. Their study of New York municipalities ( N = 306) finds that one third of local governments have been threatened and that one third of those reacted by reducing burdens or increasing incentives for developers. Their logistic regression model reveals that more cooperative intermunicipal relations across a region decrease the chances of developers threatening to move projects. Interestingly, the model suggests that public participation increases the chances of a threat.
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SELIGMAN, MARTIN E. P., PAUL R. VERKUIL et TERRY H. KANG. « WHY LAWYERS ARE UNHAPPY ». Deakin Law Review 10, no 1 (1 avril 2005) : 49. http://dx.doi.org/10.21153/dlr2005vol10no1art268.

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<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>[</span><span>According to the authors of this article, the growing unhappiness of law- yers, particularly young lawyers, stems from three causes: (1) Lawyers are selected for their pessimism (or “prudence”) and this generalizes to the rest of their lives; (2) Young associates hold jobs that are characterized by high pressure and low decision latitude, exactly the conditions that promote poor health and poor morale; and (3) American law is to some extent a zero-sum game, and negative emotions flow from zero-sum games. .. </span></p><p><span>This article has been shared with practitioners as well as academics. It grows out of faculty seminars held at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in the fall of 1999, which included managing partners of several major New York Law firms, and in spring 2001, as well as a meeting of the New York Chapter of the American Bar Foundation in the spring of 2000. The theory of positive psychology framed the discussion.</span><span>] </span></p></div></div></div>
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Vujanovic, Vladimir, Marc St.-Arnaud et Peterjürgen Neumann. « First Report of Naemacyclus fimbriatus Infecting Pitch Pine (Pinus rigida) ». Plant Disease 82, no 8 (août 1998) : 959. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis.1998.82.8.959a.

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This is the first report of Naemacyclus fimbriatus (Schwein.) DiCosmo, Peredo & Minter (Rhytismatales) on Pinus rigida, and the first observation of this fungus infecting living needles. N. fimbriatus is known to occur on cone scales of P. brucia, P. halepensis, P. nigra, P. resinosa, and P. sylvestris, as well as fallen needles of P. maritima and P. pinaster, in Europe and North America (1). In September 1997, chlorotic and necrotic second- and third-year needles of pitch pine were observed to have ascomata fruiting bodies that were amphigenous, dark brown to black, immersed to erumpent, circular to subcircular, and 200 to 500 × 150 to 250 μm in size. Asci were club-shaped, eight-spored, and 83 to 98× 8.9 to 9.7 μm. Mature ascospores were phragmo-scolecosporous, 7-septate, and 78 to 91 × 2 to 2.5 μm. From these symptomatic needles, N. fimbriatus was frequently (>70%) isolated on 2% malt agar. In October 1997, fruiting bodies were also observed on dead fallen cones. During the autumn, the fungus produced 1 to 3 brown mycelial cords, 50 to 100 μm in diameter, which grew throughout the litter from the ascomata. The nature of the cords is still unknown. Pitch pine is rare in Québec, and this northernmost population is located about 10 km north of New York State, in the St. Lawrence Valley of Québec. We found that pitch pine was colonized by the fungus in a wide range of edaphic conditions, but more frequently on dry rock outcrops. We believe that unfavorable conditions such as the more than 200 days with frost and thin organic or mineral soil layer may predispose pitch pine to infection by this fungus. Reference: (1) F. Di Cosmo et al. Mycotaxon 21:1, 1984.
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Ньюман Джон. « The Linguistics of Imaginary Narrative Spaces in Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca ». East European Journal of Psycholinguistics 5, no 2 (28 décembre 2018) : 42–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.29038/eejpl.2018.5.2.new.

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Daphne du Maurier’s 1938 novel Rebecca provides rich opportunities for the study of imaginary narrative spaces and the language associated with such spaces. The present study explores the linguistics of the imaginary narrative spaces in Rebecca, drawing upon three lines of linguistic research consistent with a Cognitive Linguistic approach: (i) an interest in understanding and appreciating ordinary readers’ actual responses (rather than merely relying upon “expert” readers’ responses), (ii) the construction of worlds or “spaces”, and (iii) the application of ideas from Cognitive Grammar. The study reveals a surprisingly intricate interplay of linguistic devices used in the construction of imaginary narrative spaces and the maintenance of such spaces in extended discourse. References Armitt, L. (2000). Contemporary women’s fiction and the fantastic. New York: St. Martin’s Press. Beauman, S. (2003). Afterword. In Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca (pp. 429-441). London: Virago Press. Biber, D., Johansson, S., Leech, G., Conrad, S., & Finnegan, E. (Eds.) (1999). Longman grammar of spoken and written English. Harlow, UK: Pearson Education Limited. Birch, D. (2007). Addict of fantasy. The Times Literary Supplement, 5447-5448, 17-18. Dancygier, B. (2012). The language of stories: A cognitive approach. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dancygier, B. (2017a). Introduction. In B. Dancygier (Ed.), The Cambridge handbook of cognitive linguistics (pp. 1-10). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Dancygier, B. (2017b). Cognitive Linguistics and the study of textual meaning. In B. Dancygier (Ed.) The Cambridge handbook of cognitive linguistics (pp. 607-622). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Du Maurier, D. (2012). Rebecca. London: Virago Press. Emmott, C. (1997). Narrative comprehension: A discourse perspective. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Evans, V., & Green, M. (2006). Cognitive linguistics: An introduction. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Fauconnier, G. (1985). Mental spaces: Aspects of meaning construction in natural language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Forster, M. (1993). Daphne Du Maurier. London: Chatto & Windus. Gavins, J. (2007). Text world theory: An introduction. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Hadiyanto, H. (2010). The Freudian psychological phenomena and complexity in Daphne Du Maurier’s “Rebecca” (A psychological study of literature). LITE: Jurnal Bahasa, Sastra, Dan Budaya 6(1), 14-25. Available at: https://publikasi.dinus.ac.id/index.php/lite/article/ view/1348/1014. Harrison, C., Nuttall, L., Stockwell, P., & Yuan, W. (Eds.) (2014). Cognitive grammar in literature. Amsterdam & New York: John Benjamins. Harrison, C., & Stockwell, P. (2014). Cognitive poetics. In J. Littlemore and J. R. Taylor (Eds.), The Bloomsbury companion to cognitive linguistics (pp. 218-233). London: Bloomsbury. Horner, A., & Zlosnik, S. (1998). Writing, identity, and the Gothic imagination. London: Macmillian. Huddleston, R. (2002). The verb. In R. Huddleston & G. K. Pullum (Eds.), The Cambridge grammar of the English language (pp. 71-212). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Kelly, R. (1987). Daphne du Maurier. Boston: Twayne Publishers. Lakoff, G., & Turner, M. (1989). More than cool reason: A field guide to poetic metaphor. Chicago & London: The University of Chicago Press. Langacker, R. W. (1991). Foundations of cognitive grammar. Vol. II: Descriptive application. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. Leech, G. N. (1969). A linguistic guide to English poetry. London: Longman Group Limited. Margawati, P. (2010). A Freudian psychological issue of women characters in Daphne Du Maurier’s novel Rebecca. LANGUAGE CIRCLE: Journal of Language and Literature IV(2), 121-126. Available at: https://journal.unnes.ac.id/nju/index.php/LC/article/viewFile/900/839 Naszkowska, K. (2012). Living mirror: The representation of doubling identities in the British and Polish women’s literature (1846–1938). Doctoral dissertation, The University of Edinburgh. Palmer, F. R. (1974). The English verb. London: Longman Group Limited. Stockwell, P. (2002). Cognitive poetics: An introduction. London & New York: Routledge. Turner, M. (1996). The literary mind. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press. Turner, M. (2015). Blending in language and communication. In E. Dąbrowska & D. Divjak (Eds.), Handbook of cognitive linguistics (pp. 211-232). Berlin & Boston: de Gruyter Mouton. Werth, P. (1999). Text worlds: Representing conceptual space in discourse (M. Short, Ed.). Harlow, UK: Longman. Wilde, O. (1996). The picture of Dorian Gray. In The complete Oscar Wilde: The complete stories, plays and poems of Oscar Wilde (pp. 11-161). New York: Quality Paperback Book Club. Winifrith, T. J. (1979). Daphne du Maurier. In J. Vinson (Ed.), Novelists and prose writers (Great writers of the English language) (pp. 354-357). New York: St. Martin’s Press.
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Vasanthi, Hannah R., Nitin ShriShri Mal et Dilip Kumar Das. « Retraction Notice : Phytochemicals from Plants to Combat Cardiovascular Disease ». Current Medicinal Chemistry 27, no 32 (25 septembre 2020) : 5444. http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/092986732732200825103533.

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The article entitled “Phytochemicals from Plants to Combat Cardiovascular Disease”, by Hannah R. Vasan-thi, Nitin ShriShri Mal, Dilip Kumar Das, published in Curr. Med. Chem. 2012; 19(14): 224251. https://www.eurekaselect.com/97287/article has been retracted on a complaint of plagiarism with a previously pub-lished article entitled “Resveratrol in cardiovascular health and disease” in the journal Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences as Ann N Y Acad Sci . 2011 Jan;1215:22-33. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2010.05843.x <p> The authors were informed of this complaint and were requested to give justification on the matter, in their de-fence. However, no reply was received from them in this regard. <p> Bentham Science apologizes to the readers of the journal for any inconvenience this may have caused. <p> The Bentham Editorial Policy on Article Withdrawal can be found at https://benthamscience.com/editorial-policies-main.php.
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Vilcarromero, Stalin, Ana M. Nunez, Katherine Vivas, Saadia Mahmood, Julianna Russo, Anna-Marie Wellins, Yun Xu, Xiaohua Yang, Chrisa Arcan et Benjamin J. Luft. « 1633. Human Co-infection with Borrelia burgdorferi and Babesia microti Among High-Risk Hispanic/Latino Workers on Eastern Long Island, New York : A Preliminary Cross-Sectional Analysis in 2016 ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 6, Supplement_2 (octobre 2019) : S596. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1497.

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Abstract Background Lyme disease has serious public health implications and has a high prevalence in Suffolk County, NY. Furthermore, there is a high risk for coinfection with Babesiosis, a potentially life-threatening tick-borne infection in the same area. This population-based cohort study was implemented in 2016 to assess the risk factors for Borreliosis among the Hispanic/Latino work population, which gave us the opportunity to measure clinical and epidemiological features of co-infection. Methods Invitation to participate in the study occurred during a Spanish educational lecture about tick-borne diseases. Following signed informed consent, a questionnaire and blood sample were obtained for each participant Borreliosis was defined based on 2-tiered serologic testing. Antibodies to B. microti were detected by indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA). Between June and December 2016, 126/199 (66%) with a completed visit 1 (survey and blood draw) were included in the first analysis. Results Sample characteristics include 60% 18–39 years old, 75% male, 79% had elementary school education or less, 86% reported having tick exposure, 79% lived in Eastern North Fork, 65% lived 10 or more years in the United States, and 48% were gardeners and landscapers. The seroprevalence for Borreliosis burgdorferi, Babesiosis microti, and co-infection were n = 13(10.3%), n = 36 (28.6%), and n = 7 (5.6%), respectively. In the univariate analysis having a fatigue severity score of <4 or having fatigue most of the time or stiff neck or joint pain or facial paralysis, or a previous diagnosis of other tick-borne diseases were associated with co-infection (Pearson chi-square, P < 0.05). Conclusion However, none of these factors were statistically significant in the multivariate analysis after adjusting for the above variables. In this initial study, a high prevalence of Babesiosis was found. A larger sample size may be needed to better assess the risk of coinfection in this Lyme endemic area. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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Cohen-Kdoshay, Oshrit, et Nachshon Meiran. « The Representation of Instructions Operates Like a Prepared Reflex ». Experimental Psychology 56, no 2 (janvier 2009) : 128–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/1618-3169.56.2.128.

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The prepared reflex (PR) metaphor (Woodworth, R. S. (1938). Experimental psychology. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston) suggests that stimulus–response (S–R) instructions held in working memory (WM) can lead to autonomous response activation even without any practice. Cohen-Kdoshay and Meiran (Cohen-Kdoshay, O., & Meiran, N. (2007). The representation of instructions in working memory leads to autonomous response activation: Evidence from the first trials in the flanker paradigm. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 60 (8), 1140–1154) showed that the flanker compatibility effect (FCE) is found in the eight trials following S–R instructions supporting the PR hypothesis. Nonetheless, performance in the first trials forms long-term memory (LTM) traces which link abstract categories with responses and the retrieval of these LTM traces may be the reason for the autonomous response activation seen in the FCE. This account predicts FCEs to be absent in the first trial and present afterwards. The authors show that the FCE was present in the first trial immediately following the instructions, thus providing unequivocal support for the PR metaphor.
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Meliakova, Yuliia Vasylivna, Inna Igorivna Kovalenko, Svitlana Borysivna Zhdanenko, Eduard Anatolievich Kalnytskyi et Tetiana Vasyliivna Krasiuk. « Posthuman Freedom as the Right to Unlimited Pleasure ». Revista Amazonia Investiga 10, no 39 (5 mai 2021) : 62–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.34069/ai/2021.39.03.6.

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Berdyaev, N. A. (1951). The kingdom of the spirit and the kingdom of Caesar. Paris: Umca-Press. Recovered from: https://vtoraya-literatura.com/pdf/berdyaev_tsarstvo_dukha_i_tsastvo_kesarya_1951__ocr.pdf. Berlinger, N., & Solomon, M. Z. (2018). Becoming Good Citizens of Aging Societies. Hastings center report, Vol. 48(3), 2–9. Bostrom, N. (2003). Are You Living in a Simulation? Philosophical Quarterly, Vol. 53(211), 243–255. Bostrom, N. (2016). Development of values. Artificial Intelligence: Stages. Threats. Strategies. Moscow: Publishing House "Mann, Ivanov and Ferber". Recovered from: https://element.ru/bookclub/chapters/433044/Iskusstvennyy_intellekt_Glava_iz_knigi. Goryachkovskaya, A. N. (2014). Philosophy of transhumanism: on the surrogates of being, the abduction of identity and euthanasia of humanity. Bulletin of V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University. Series: Theory of Culture and Philosophy of Science, Vol. 1092, Issue 50. Recovered from: http://periodicals.karazin.ua/thcphs/issue/view/209. Gould, C. C. (2018). Solidarity and the problem of structural injustice in healthcare. Bioethics, Vol. 32(9), 541–552. Guerrini, C., Lewellyn, M., Majumder, M. et al. (2019). Donors, authors, and owners: how is genomic citizen science addressing interests in research outputs? BMC Medical Ethics, Vol. 20, Issue 1, Article number 84. Habermas, J. (2002). The future of human nature. Towards liberal eugenics. Moskva: Ves' Mir. Haker, H. (2019). Habermas and the Question of Bioethics. European journal for Philosophy of Religion, Issue 4, 61–86. Heidegger, M. (1967). Being And Time. Max Niemeyer loading facility in Tübinge. Recovered from: https://taradajko.org/get/books/sein_und_zeit.pdf. Kakkori, L. (2018). Postmodern as Secularization in Philosophy of Education. Educational Philosophy and Theory, Vol. 50(14), Special issue: SI, 1639–1640. Kroker, A., & Cook, D. (1986). The Postmodern Scene. Excremental Culture and Hyper-Aesthetics. Montreal: New World Perspectives. Kurzweil, R. (2012). How to create a mind: the secret of human thought revealed. New York: Penguin Books. Lipovetsky, G. (2015). Time Against Time, or The Hypermodern Society. In D. Rudrum and N. Stavris (Ed.), Supplanting the Postmodern. An Anthology of Writings on the Arts and Culture of the Early 21st Century (p. 191–208). New York; London; New Delhi; Sydney: Bloomsbury Academic. Lobanov, V.A (2020). Transhumanism in the interpretation of V. A. Lobanov. Samizdat Magazine. Recovered from: http://samlib.ru/l/lobanow_w_a/samlibrullobanow_w_amsworddocshtml-2.shtml. Meliakova, Y., Kovalenko, I., Zhdanenko, S., & Kalnytskyi, E. (2020). Performance in the Postmodern Culture and Law. Amazonia Investiga, 9(27), 340–348. https://amazoniainvestiga.info/index.php/amazonia/article/view/1247 Melyakova, Yu. V. (2018). Being of law and being in law: from performative to performance. Bulletin of the National University "Yaroslav the Wise Law Academy of Ukraine". Series: Philosophy, Vol. 1(36), 90–113. Odorcak, J. (2019). Exorganic Posthumanism and Brain-Computer Interface Technologies (BCI). Postmodern openings, Vol. 10(4), 193-208. Pavlov, A. V. (2019). Images of modernity in the 21st century: hypermodernism. Philosophical Journal, Vol. 12(2), 20–33. Piarce, D. (2015). The Hedonistic Imperative. eBook. Recovered from: https://ubq124.wordpress.com/2019/12/22/the-hedonistic-imperative-pdf. Polyakova, O. V. (2017). Commodification of the dead body: ethical and legal aspects. Bulletin of the RSUH. Series "Psychology. Pedagogy. Education", Vol. 2(8), 118–128. Recovered from: http://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/kommodifikatsiya-mertvogo-tela-etiko-pravovye-aspekty Popova, O. V. (2016). Man, its price and value: to the problem of body commodification in scientific knowledge. Epistemology and philosophy of science, Vol. 49(3), 140-157. Recovered from: http://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/chelovek-ego-tsena-i-tsennost-k-probleme-kommodifikatsii-tela-v-nauchnom-poznanii. Popova, O. V., Tishchenko, P. D., & Shevchenko, S. Yu. (2018). Neuroethics and biopolitics of biotechnology for cognitive improvement of human improvement. Philosophy questions, Vol. 7, 96–108. Russian Transhumanist Movement (2020). About the possibilities of self-upgrade and life extension. Recovered from: http://transhumanism-russia.ru/content/view/629/94/ Sandu, A., Vlad, L. (2018). Beyond Technological Singularity – the Posthuman Condition. Postmodern openings, Vol. 9(1), 91-102. Sartre, J.P. (1989). Existentialism is humanism. In: Twilight of the Gods. Moscow: Politizdat, 319-344. Strandbrink, P. (2018). Nostalgia and Shrinkage: Philosophy and culture under post-postmodern conditions. Educational Philosophy and Theory, Vol. 50(14), 1407–1408. Twenge, J. M. (2006). Generation Me: Why Today’s Young Americans Are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled – and More Miserable Than Ever Before. New York: ATRIA paperback. Retrieved from http://www.amazon.co.uk/Generation-Americans-Confident-Assertive-Entitled/dp/1476755566. Twenge, J. M. (2017). iGen: Why Today’s Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy – and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood. New York: ATRIA books. Retrieved from http://www.amazon.com/iGen-Super-Connected-Rebellious-Happy-Adulthood/dp/1501151983. United Nations (1997). Universal Declaration on the Human Genome and Human Rights. Recovered from http://www.un.org/ru/documents/decl_conv/declarations/human_genome.shtml United Nations (2005). Universal Declaration on Bioethics and Human Rights. Recovered from: http://www.un.org/ru/documents/decl_conv/declarations/bioethics_and_hr.shtml Yong, L. (2019). Moral Ambivalence: Relativism or Pluralism? Acta analytica-international periodical for Philosophy in the analytical tradition, Vol. 34(4), 473–491. Zinovyev, A. (2006). Global Human. Booksonline. Recovered from: http://booksonline.com.ua/view.php?book=97560 (in Russian).
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Kennedy, Benjamin C., Michael M. McDowell, Peter H. Yang, Caroline M. Wilson, Sida Li, Todd C. Hankinson, Neil A. Feldstein et Richard C. E. Anderson. « Pial synangiosis for moyamoya syndrome in children with sickle cell anemia : a comprehensive review of reported cases ». Neurosurgical Focus 36, no 1 (janvier 2014) : E12. http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2013.10.focus13405.

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Object Pediatric patients with sickle cell anemia (SCA) carry a significant risk of developing moyamoya syndrome (MMS) and brain ischemia. The authors sought to review the safety and efficacy of pial synangiosis in the treatment of MMS in children with SCA by performing a comprehensive review of all previously reported cases in the literature. Methods The authors retrospectively reviewed the clinical and radiographic records in 17 pediatric patients with SCA treated at the Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital of New York (MSCHONY) who developed radiological evidence of MMS and underwent pial synangiosis between 1996 and 2012. The authors then added any additional reported cases of pial synangiosis for this population in the literature for a combined analysis of clinical and radiographic outcomes. Results The combined data consisted of 48 pial synangiosis procedures performed in 30 patients. Of these, 27 patients (90%) presented with seizure, stroke, or transient ischemic attack, whereas 3 (10%) were referred after transcranial Doppler screening. At the time of surgery, the median age was 12 years. Thirteen patients (43%) suffered an ischemic stroke while on chronic transfusion therapy. Long-term follow-up imaging (MR angiography or catheter angiography) at a mean of 25 months postoperatively was available in 39 (81%) treated hemispheres. In 34 (87%) of those hemispheres there were demonstrable collateral vessels on imaging. There were 4 neurological events in 1590 cumulative months of follow-up, or 1 event per 33 patient-years. In the patients in whom complete data were available (MSCHONY series, n = 17), the postoperative stroke rate was reduced more than 6-fold from the preoperative rate (p = 0.0003). Conclusions Pial synangiosis in patients with SCA, MMS, and brain ischemia appears to be a safe and effective treatment option. Transcranial Doppler and/or MRI screening in asymptomatic patients with SCA is recommended for the diagnosis of MMS.
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KITLV, Redactie. « Book Reviews ». New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids 61, no 1-2 (1 janvier 1987) : 55–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/13822373-90002056.

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-Sidney W. Mintz, Mats Lundahl, The Haitian economy: man, land and markets. New York: St. Martins Press, 1983. 290 pp.-Regine Altagrace Latortue, Léon-Francois Hoffmann, Essays on Haitian Literature. Washington D.C.: Three Continents Press, 1984. 184 pp.-Robert Forster, Lieutenant Howard, The Haitian journal of lieutenant Howard, York Hussars, 1796-1798. Edited with an introduction by Roger Norman Buckley. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1985. liv + 194.-David Bray, Bernardo Vega, Los Estados Unidos y Trujillo, año 1930. Santo Domingo: Fundación Cultural Dominicano, 1986. 2 vols. xi + 1120 pp.-David Bray, Bernardo Vega, Los Estados Unidos y Trujillo, año 1947. Santo Domingo: Fundación Cultural Dominicana, 1984. 2 vols. xi + 1018 pp.-David Bray, Bernardo Vega, Nazismo, fascismo y falangismo en la Republica Dominicana. Santo Domingo: Fundación Cultural Dominicana, 1985. 415 pp.-Tony Thorndike, Bruce J. Calder, The impact of intervention: The Dominican Republic during the US occupation of 1916-1924. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1984. 358 pp.-Marcella M. Little, Jacques Barbier ,The North American role in the Spanish imperial economy 1760-1819. Manchester, England, 1984: Manchester University Press. pp. 232., Allan J. Kuethe (eds)-Janette Forte, Peter Riviere, Individual and society in Guiana: a comparative study of Amerindian social organisation. Cambridge, London, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1984. 127 pp.-Stephen D. Glazier, Jay D. Dobbin, The Jombee dance of Montserrat: a study of trance ritual in the West Indies. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1986. 202 pp.-Robert J. Stewart, Stephen D. Glazier, Marchin' the Pilgrims home: leadership and decision-making in an Afro-Caribbean faith. Connecticut and London: Greenwood Press, 1983. xv + 165 pp.-Sidney M. Greenfield, Karen Fog Olwig, Cultural adaptation and resistance on St. John: three centuries of Afro-Caribbean life. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1985. xii + 226 pp.-Adam Kendon, William Washabaugh, Five fingers for survival. Ann Arbor: Karoma Publishers, Inc., 1986. xiv + 198 pp.-Evelyne T. Menard, Carnot (F. Moloen), Alors ma chére...Propos d'un musicien guadeloupéen recueillis et traduits par Marie-Céline Lafontaine. Paris: Editions Caribéennes, 1986. 159 pp.-Sally Price, Suzanne Slesin ,Caribbean style. Authors include Daniel Rozensztroch. Photographs by Gilles de Chabaneix. New York: Clarkson N. Potter, 1985. 290 pp., Stafford Cliff, Jack Berthelot (eds)-Allison Blakely, Gert Oostindie ,In het land van de overheerser. Deel II. Antillianen en Surinamers in Nederland, 1634/1667-1954. Dordrecht (Holland) and Providence RI (U.S.A.): Foris Publications, 1986. xi + 255 pp., Emy Maduro (eds)-Rosemarijn Hoefte, E. van de Boogaart ,Overzee: Nederlandse koloniale geschiedenis, 1590-1975. Haarlem: Fibula-van Dishoek, 1982. 291 pp., P.J. Drooglever et al (eds)-Frederick J. Conway, P.I. Gomes, Rural development in the Caribbean. London: C. Hurst and Company. New York: St. Martins Press, 1985. xxi + 246 pp.-Steve M. Slaby, Charles Edquist, Capitalism, socialism and technology: a comparative study of Cuba and Jamaica. London: Zed Books Ltd., 1985. xiii + 182 pp.-Joan D. Mandle, June Nash ,Women and social change in Latin America. South Hadley, Mass.: Bergin and Garvey Publishers, 1986. 372 pp., Helen Safa (eds)-Bonham C. Richardson, Michael L. Conniff, Black labor on a white canal: Panama, 1904-1981. Pittsburgh, Pa.: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1985. xv + 221 pp.-Brackette F. Williams, Stephen Glazier, Caribbean ethnicity revisited. A special edition of Ethnic Groups, International periodical of ethnic studies. New York, London, Paris, Montreaux, Tokyo: Gordon Breach Science Publishers, 1985. 164 pp.-Gert J. Oostindie, Frauke Gewecke, Die Karibik; zur Geschichte, Politik und Kultur einer Region. Frankfurt/M: Verlag Klaus Dieter Vervuert 1984. 165 pp.
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Watson, Vaughn W. M., et Michelle G. Knight-Manuel. « Humanizing the Black Immigrant Body : Envisioning Diaspora Literacies of Youth and Young Adults from West African Countries ». Teachers College Record : The Voice of Scholarship in Education 122, no 13 (avril 2020) : 1–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/016146812012201304.

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Background/Context This conceptual essay contributes to recent education research on immigrant youth from West African countries that examines the interplay of popularized narratives of immigrant youth and young adults, and their Diasporic literacy practices. Specifically, we examine embodied Diaspora literacies as affirming and extending presences and absences of Black immigrant bodies across two contexts: an after-school African Club, and a qualitative inquiry of civic learning and action-taking of immigrant youth and young adults from West African countries. Purpose We theorize in this conceptual essay the interplay of the humanity of Black immigrant youth and young adults and their embodied Diaspora literacy practices. We highlight possibilities for research, literacy teaching, and teacher education when intentionally naming, affirming, and building with the humanity of Black immigrant youth and young adults from West African countries—what we conceptualize as humanizing the Black immigrant body. We conceptualize humanizing the Black immigrant body as an enacting of embodied Diaspora literacies. In theorizing embodied Diaspora literacies, we build with African Indigenous lensings, and African, Black, and Chicana/Latina feminisms. We further contextualize humanizing the Black immigrant body as an enacting of embodied Diaspora literacies expressed in the creative and artistic practices and artifacts of artists, literary authors, playwrights, and youth and young adults who have long authored and told narratives that affirm, extend, and historicize the strengths of Black immigrant communities. Interpretive Analysis We highlight in this conceptual essay the urgency of humanizing the Black immigrant body across four moments, or tellings of embodied Diaspora literacies. Our use of Diasporic tellings, an intentional naming and humanizing research approach, draws on the words of Chinua Achebe, the Nigerian author who refected on the urgency of a global “balance of stories.” We examine four Diasporic tellings: (1) youth in an African Club in a high school in New York City attending an off-Broadway play authored by a daughter of Ghanaian immigrants, (2) participating in a group discussion following the play, and (3) engaging in Youth Participatory Action Research inquiries; and (4) youth and young adults from West African countries discussing their creative and artistic embodied Diaspora literacies, and civic learning and action-taking across contexts of peers, schooling, and families. Conclusion / Recommendations We theorize humanizing the Black immigrant body as a vibrant, necessary research and teaching stance to recognize the humanity of Black immigrant youth who daily negotiate and render visible their language and literacy practices. These practices comprise the coalescing of Black immigrant bodies, discursive perspectives, and material artifacts of teaching and learning, and their racialized, social, and educational experiences across contexts of schools and communities. These Diasporic tellings provide important insights for productive approaches in research, teaching, and teacher education with youth and young adults making sense of the lives of Black immigrants, across contexts of literacy learning and lived experiences that meaningfully recognize the humanity of Black immigrant youth from West African countries.
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KITLV, Redactie. « Book Reviews ». New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids 61, no 3-4 (1 janvier 1987) : 183–210. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/13822373-90002052.

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-Richard Price, C.G.A. Oldendorp, C.G.A. Oldendorp's history of the Mission of the Evangelical Brethren on the Caribbean Islands of St. Thomas, St. Croix, and St. John. Edited by Johann Jakob Bossard. English edition and translation by Arnold R. Highfield and Vladimir Barac. Ann Arbor MI: Karoma, 1987. xxxv + 737 pp.-Peter J. Wilson, Lawrence E. Fisher, Colonial madness: mental health in the Barbadian social order. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1985. xvi + 215 pp.-George N. Cave, R.B. le Page ,Acts of identity: Creloe-based approaches to language and ethnicity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985. x + 275 pp., Andree Tabouret-Keller (eds)-H. Hoetink, Julia G. Crane, Saba silhouettes: life stories from a Caribbean island. Julia G. Crane (ed), New York: Vantage Press, 1987. x + 515 pp.-Sue N. Greene, Anne Walmsley ,Facing the sea: a new anthology from the Caribbean region. London and Kingston: Heinemann, 1986. ix + 151 pp., Nick Caistor, 190 (eds)-Melvin B. Rahming, Mark McWatt, West Indian literature and its social context. Cave Hill, Barbados, Department of English, 1985.-David Barry Gaspar, Rebecca J. Scott, Slave emancipation in Cuba: the transition to free labor, 1860-1899. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1985. xviii + 319 pp.-Mary Butler, Louis A. Perez Jr., Cuba under the Platt agreement, 1902-1934. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1986. xvii + 410 pp.-Ana M. Rodríguez-Ward, Idsa E. Alegria Ortega, La comisión del status de Puerto Rico: su historia y significación. Río Piedras, Puerto Rico: Editorial Universitaria. 1982. ix + 214 pp.-Alain Buffon, Jean Crusol, Changer la Martinique: initiation a l'économie des Antilles. Paris: Editions Caribeennes, 1986. 96 pp.-Klaus de Albuquerque, Bonham C. Richardson, Panama money in Barbados, 1900-1920. Knoxville: University of Tennesse Press, 1985. xiv + 283 pp.-Steven R. Nachman, Marcel Fredericks ,Society and health in Guyana: the sociology of health care in a developing nation. Authors include Janet Fredericks. Durham: Carolina Academic Press, 1986. xv + 173 pp., John Lennon, Paul Mundy (eds)
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Aydin, Sibel Z., W. P. Maksymowych, A. N. Bennett, D. McGonagle, P. Emery et H. Marzo-Ortega. « Validation of the ASAS criteria and definition of a positive MRI of the sacroiliac joint in an inception cohort of axial spondyloarthritis followed up for 8 years ». Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 71, no 1 (6 septembre 2011) : 56–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ard.2011.153064.

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BackgroundThe new Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society (ASAS) criteria classify axial spondyloarthritis (SpA) into human leucocyte antigen-B27 and/or imaging-based arms. To aid implementation, ASAS has proposed a definition of a positive MRI for active sacroiliitis.ObjectiveThe authors aimed to test the diagnostic and predictive value of the ASAS criteria and definition of a ‘positive’ MRI.MethodsBaseline MRI scans on 29 patients with early inflammatory back pain and 18 controls were read independently by four experienced rheumatologists. Both arms of the criteria were tested against a ‘gold standard’ of physician diagnosis of SpA. MRI abnormalities were assessed according to a global assessment of MRI and the ASAS definition. Sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratios for individual and concordant reader data were calculated for axial SpA diagnosis at baseline and the development of radiographic sacroiliitis, fulfilling the modified New York criteria at 8 years.ResultsAll patients were classified as having axial SpA, with more patients fulfilling the imaging arm (83%, n=24/29) than the human leucocyte antigen B27 arm (62%, n=18/29). Concordant reader data showed that the baseline MRI had high diagnostic utility for SpA according to global assessment (sensitivity/specificity: 66%/94%, LR+ (positive likelihood ratio) 11.8, LR− (negative likelihood ratio) 0.4) and ASAS definition (sensitivity/specificity: 79%/89%, LR+ 7.1, LR− 0.2). Likewise, a positive baseline MRI had 100% sensitivity for subsequent radiographic sacroiliitis by either assessment, although specificity was lower (56% for global assessment and 33% for ASAS definition).ConclusionBoth arms of the ASAS criteria have good diagnostic utility in early SpA, although they are of limited value for the prediction of radiographic progression. This may be due to the definition of a positive MRI for sacroiliitis that lacks specificity at baseline.
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Baneman, Emily, Ajai Chari, Meenakshi Rana, Dallas Dunn, Timothy Sullivan, Sarah Taimur, Larysa Sanchez et Samantha E. Jacobs. « 1741. Invasive Fungal Infections in Patients with Multiple Myeloma in the Era of Novel Therapies ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 6, Supplement_2 (octobre 2019) : S637—S638. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz360.1604.

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Abstract Background Rapid advances in multiple myeloma (MM) therapy have led to improved survival, yet the impact of novel agents on the risk of invasive fungal infection (IFI) is largely unknown. We aim to describe the epidemiology of IFIs in MM patients in the current era of chemotherapy. Methods We performed a retrospective chart review of MM patients at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, NY who entered care between December 2009 and October 2016 and had proven or probable IFI between January 2011 and October 2017. Probable and proven IFIs were defined by revised EORTC/MSG criteria. Descriptive statistics are reported as median (range). We evaluated factors associated with mortality by univariate analysis using Fisher’s exact and Mann–Whitney U tests. Results 2,960 MM patients entered care during the study period. We identified 30 episodes of IFI among 29 patients. Median age was 59 (42–80) years and 21 (70%) were men. IFI occurred at a median of 3.7 (0.3–18) years from MM diagnosis. At the time of IFI diagnosis, patients had received a median of 4 (1–12) lines of chemotherapy, 18 (60%) had undergone autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT), and 21 (70%) had progressive disease status. Agents received immediately prior to IFI were immunomodulators (n = 14), proteasome inhibitors (n = 14), conventional chemotherapy (n = 11), monoclonal antibodies (n = 6), checkpoint inhibitors (n = 3) and other (n = 3). Twenty-two (73%) patients received corticosteroids in the prior 30 days. Neutropenia and lymphopenia were present in 12 (40%) and 13 (43%) patients, respectively. There were 9 proven and 21 probable IFIs: invasive aspergillosis (n = 19), candidemia (n = 5), cryptococcosis (n = 3), talaromycosis (n = 1), mucormycosis (n = 1) and other (n = 2). Bacterial and viral respiratory co-infections occurred in 7 and 4 patients, respectively. Eight (27%) patients required ICU admission and 9 (30%) died within 30 days of IFI diagnosis. In univariate analysis, number of lines of chemotherapy (P = 0.05), progressive disease status (P = 0.03), and prior ASCT (P = 0.004) were associated with 30-day mortality. Conclusion IFIs are uncommon in MM patients receiving newer agents but are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Further study is needed to identify high-risk subgroups that may benefit from antifungal prophylaxis or increased surveillance. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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Agarwal, Namita, et Brijesh K. Agarwal. « Unusual Complication of Intrauterine Contraceptive Device ». Journal of South Asian Federation of Obstetrics and Gynaecology 8, no 3 (2016) : 243–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.5005/jp-journals-10006-1426.

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ABSTRACT Intrauterine foreign bodies have been used in animals as a contraceptive since times immemorial. The use of pebbles in camels as a contraceptive has been reported in Arabs. Intrauterine contraceptive devices (IUCDs) have been used since 1962 when the first International Conference of Population Council, New York reported encouraging data on Margulies coil and Lippes loop as IUCDs. According to the World Health Organization, IUCDs are the second most widely used reversible contraceptive method after voluntary female sterilization. Intrauterine contraceptive devices have undergone extensive evolution from Grafenberg ring to Ota ring, Margulies coil, Lippes loop, Birnberg bows, Saf T-coil followed by Cu T 200, Cu 7, Multiload Cu 250/375, Cu T 380 Ag, Cu T 380 S [slimline]. Hormonereleasing IUCDs were developed in 1973. Ombrelle 250/380 and FlexiGard are the latest in this series. The common complications encountered with IUCD insertion are pelvic infections, infertility, the risk of both intrauterine and extrauterine pregnancy, pain, altered bleeding pattern, expulsion of the device, and its migration. Migration of IUCD into the bladder has been rarely reported in the literature. The authors report an unusual case of a secondary vesical calculus formed around a migrated IUCD. How to cite this article Agarwal N, Agarwal BK. Unusual Complication of Intrauterine Contraceptive Device. J South Asian Feder Obst Gynae 2016;8(3):243-245.
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South, David B. « Use of sulphur in bareroot pine and hardwood nurseries ». REFORESTA, no 15 (14 juillet 2023) : 12–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.21750/refor.15.03.105.

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During the 20th century, managers at sandy nurseries utilized sulphur (S) to lower soil pH and mitigate the risk of iron deficiency. During that time, however, applying S as a fertilizer was a rare event. At many nurseries, S in rain and irrigation water was sufficient to avoid visual deficiency symptoms. The S status of soil and foliage was typically unknown, and many researchers did not test for S due to the additional cost. Consequently, S became the most neglected macronutrient. While a few nursery trials demonstrated that elemental S reduced damping-off and increased height growth, a majority showed no benefit after applying S at rates lower than 100 kg ha-1. Even so, by 1980, S-deficiencies occurred at bareroot nurseries in Alabama, Oklahoma, Virginia, Wisconsin, the United Kingdom, and likely in North Dakota and New York. The risk of a deficiency increases when N-only fertilizers are applied to seedbeds. Due to research, experience and the precautionary principle, several managers transitioned to using ammonium sulfate instead of, less expensive, N-only nitrogen fertilizers. After soil tests became affordable, managers began to ask questions about the need to apply S to seedbeds. Only a few hydroponic trials with small pine seedlings have been used to estimate “threshold” or “critical values” for foliar S. Since an initial 1,500 μg g-1 S value is “unreliable” for pine seedlings, some authors lowered the value to 1,100 μg g-1 and even as low as 500 μg g-1 S. Others ignore all estimates based on total S concentrations and, instead, monitor only foliar SO4 levels.
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Tanweer, Omar, Akwasi Boah et Paul P. Huang. « Risks for hemorrhagic complications after placement of external ventricular drains with early chemical prophylaxis against venous thromboembolisms ». Journal of Neurosurgery 119, no 5 (novembre 2013) : 1309–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2013.7.jns13313.

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Object Patients undergoing placement of an external ventricular drain (EVD) are at increased risk for development of venous thromboembolisms (VTEs). Early chemical prophylaxis has been shown to decrease rates of embolism formation, but the risks for bleeding and the optimal time to initiate prophylaxis have not been clearly defined for this patient population. The authors evaluated the safety and risks for bleeding when chemical prophylaxis for VTEs was started within 24 hours of EVD placement. Methods To compare rates of hemorrhage among patients who received prophylaxis within 24 hours and those who received it later than 24 hours after admission, the authors conducted an institutional review board–approved retrospective review. Patients were those who had had an EVD placed and postprocedural imaging conducted at Bellevue Hospital, New York, from January 2009 through April 2012. Data collected included demographics, diagnosis, coagulation panel results, time to VTE prophylaxis and imaging, and occurrence of VTEs. The EVD-associated hemorrhages were classified as Grade 0, no hemorrhage; Grade 1, petechial hyperdensity near the drain; Grade 2, hematoma of 1–15 ml; Grade 3, epidural or subdural hematoma greater than 15 ml; or Grade 4, intraventricular hemorrhage or hematoma requiring surgical intervention. Results Among 99 patients, 111 EVDs had been placed. Low-dose unfractionated heparin had been given within 24 hours of admission (early prophylaxis) to 56 patients and later than 24 hours after admission (delayed prophylaxis) to 55 patients. There were no statistical differences across all grades (0–4) among those who received early prophylaxis (n = 45, 5, 5, 1, and 0, respectively) and those who received delayed prophylaxis (n = 46, 4, 1, 1, and 3, respectively) (p = 0.731). In the early prophylaxis group, 3 VTEs were discovered among 32 of 56 patients screened for clinically suspected VTEs. In the delayed prophylaxis group, 5 VTEs were discovered among 33 of 55 patients screened for clinically suspected VTEs (p = 0.71). Conclusions Hemorrhagic complications did not increase when chemical prophylaxis was started within 24 hours of admission. Also, the incidence of VTEs did not differ between patients in the early and delayed prophylaxis groups. Larger randomized controlled trials are probably needed to assess decreases in VTEs with earlier prophylaxis.
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Satlin, Michael J., Liang Chen, Gregory Weston, Angela Gomez-Simmonds, Tanaya Bhowmick, Susan K. Seo, Steven Sperber et al. « 1826. Impact of Rapid Diagnostics and Ceftazidime–Avibactam on Mortality after Bacteremia Caused by Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 6, Supplement_2 (octobre 2019) : S41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofz359.088.

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Abstract Background Patients with bloodstream infections (BSIs) due to carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) have long delays until receipt of appropriate antimicrobial therapy and high mortality rates. Rapid molecular diagnostics and novel therapies, such as ceftazidime–avibactam (CAZ-AVI), offer promise to improve outcomes, but their clinical impact is unclear. Methods We conducted an observational study of patients with CRE BSI from January 2016 to June 2018 at 8 New York and New Jersey medical centers. Patient demographics, comorbidities, clinical presentations, diagnostic methods, and treatments were compared between patients who died within 30 days of BSI onset and survivors. Independent risk factors for mortality were identified using logistic regression. We then compared time to receipt of active antimicrobial therapy between patients whose positive blood culture bottles underwent testing for the Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase gene (blaKPC PCR) and patients where this test was not used. Results We identified 178 patients with CRE BSI (K. pneumoniae: n = 104, 58%; Enterobacter cloacae: n = 26, 15%; Escherichia coli: n = 26, 15%). The 30-day mortality rate was 38%. An increasing Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II score (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.06, P = 0.005) was independently associated with increased 30-day mortality; whereas, use of blaKPC PCR (aOR 0.31, P = 0.005), urinary tract source (aOR 0.12, P = 0.001), and source control (aOR 0.25, P = 0.001) were independently associated with survival. Initial targeted therapy with CAZ-AVI was associated with a 28% 30-day mortality rate, compared with a 49% 30-day mortality rate among patients who received a polymyxin or aminoglycoside (P = 0.036). Patients whose blood culture underwent blaKPC PCR were more likely to receive active antimicrobial therapy within 24 hours of BSI onset (42% vs. 28%; P = 0.07) and had a decreased median time until receipt of active therapy (25 hours vs. 46 hours; P = 0.07), although these differences did not achieve statistical significance. Conclusion The use of PCR to rapidly identify blood cultures with blaKPC and definitive therapy with CAZ-AVI instead of polymyxins or aminoglycosides were associated with decreased mortality after CRE bacteremia. Disclosures All Authors: No reported Disclosures.
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NEMÉSIO, ANDRÉ. « Orchid bees (Hymenoptera : Apidae) of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest ». Zootaxa 2041, no 1 (16 mars 2009) : 1–242. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.2041.1.1.

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A detailed synopsis of all the orchid-bee species known to occur in the Atlantic Forest Domain, eastern Brazil, is provided, including synonymy, complete type data, diagnoses, relevant data on biology and geographic distribution (with detailed localities of known occurrence of each species), colorful illustrations of onomatophores (“name-bearing type specimens”), and a list with the main references dealing with each species. Fifty-four species are recognized to occur in the Atlantic Forest Domain. Identification keys are presented for each genus and their species occurring in the Atlantic Forest. Euglossa carinilabris Dressler, 1982, Euglossa cyanaspis Moure, 1968, Eulaema (Eulaema) niveofasciata (Friese, 1899) and Exaerete lepeletieri Oliveira & Nemésio, 2003, considered junior synonyms of other species by different authors, are reinstated as valid species. A full discussion on the status of the four orchid-bee species described by Linnaeus is presented, as well as colorful illustrations of the four onomatophores. The two existing onomatophores of orchid bee species described by Fabricius are also illustrated and his Apis cingulata has been shown to be the species recently described as Eulaema (Apeulaema) pseudocingulata Oliveira, 2006, which, thus, becomes a junior synonym (syn. n.). Euglossa aratingae sp. n., Euglossa carolina sp. n., Euglossa nanomelanotricha sp. n., Euglossa roderici sp. n., Euglossa roubiki sp. n., Eulaema (Eulaema) atleticana sp. n., and Eulaema (Apeulaema) marcii sp. n. are described as new species. Neotypes are designated for Eufriesea violacea (Blanchard, 1840) and Exaerete frontalis (Guérin-Méneville, 1844). Some corrections concerning the repository institutions of some onomatophores of orchid bees were also made: Eufriesea auriceps (Friese, 1899) holotype has been listed as belonging to the US National Museum (Washington) or to the American Museum of Natural History (New York) but, in fact, it belongs to the Zoologisches Museum der Humboldt Universität (Berlin); the lectotype of Eufriesea aeneiventris (Mocsáry, 1896) has been listed as belonging to the Istituto e Museo di Zoologia, Universita di Torino (Turin), but it actually belongs to the Hungarian Museum of Natural History (Budapest). Publication dates of both Exaerete frontalis Guérin-Méneville and Exaerete smaragdina Guérin-Méneville have been listed as 1845 but, in fact, the actual date is 1844. Based on the known geographic distribution and abundance of each species in orchid-bee inventories, IUCN criteria were applied and three species are recommended to be included in future lists of threatened species in one of the IUCN categories of risk: Eufriesea brasilianorum (Friese, 1899) and Euglossa cognata Moure, 1970 are suggested to be listed as “vulnerable”, and Euglossa cyanocholora Moure, 1996 is suggested to be listed as “endangered”. A fully annotated check list of all known orchid bee species is also presented as an Appendix.
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Tovar-Spinoza, Zulma, et Hoon Choi. « Magnetic resonance–guided laser interstitial thermal therapy : report of a series of pediatric brain tumors ». Journal of Neurosurgery : Pediatrics 17, no 6 (juin 2016) : 723–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.3171/2015.11.peds15242.

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OBJECTIVE Magnetic resonance–guided laser interstitial thermal therapy (MRgLITT) is a novel, minimally invasive treatment that has multiple advantages in pediatric use and broad applicability for different types of lesions. Here, the authors report the preliminary results of the first series of pediatric brain tumors treated with MRgLITT at Golisano Children's Hospital in Syracuse, New York. METHODS Pediatric brain tumors treated with MRgLITT between February 2012 and August 2014 at Golisano Children's Hospital were evaluated retrospectively. Medical records, radiological findings, surgical data, complications, and results of tumor volumetric analyses were reviewed. The Visualase thermal laser system (Medtronic) was used in all MRgLITT procedures. RESULTS This series included 11 patients with 12 tumors (pilocytic astrocytoma, ependymoma, medulloblastoma, choroid plexus xanthogranuloma, subependymal giant cell astrocytoma, and ganglioglioma). A single laser and multiple overlapping ablations were used for all procedures. The mean laser dose was 10.23 W, and the mean total ablation time was 68.95 seconds. The mean initial target volume was 6.79 cm3, and the mean immediate post-ablation volume was 7.86 cm3. The mean hospital stay was 3.25 days, and the mean follow-up time was 24.5 months. Tumor volume decreased in the first 3 months after surgery (n = 11; p = 0.007) and continued to decrease by the 4- to 6-month followup (n = 11; mean volume 2.61 cm3; p = 0.009). Two patients experienced post-ablation complications: transient right leg weakness in one patient, and transient hemiparesis, akinetic mutism, and eye movement disorder in the other. CONCLUSIONS Magnetic resonance–guided laser interstitial thermal therapy is an effective first- or second-line treatment for select pediatric brain tumors. Larger multiinstitutional clinical trials are necessary to evaluate its use for different types of lesions to further standardize practices.
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Semchenko, A. N., et I. I. Koshkin. « 50 years of the first mammary-coronary bypass grafting using microsurgical techniques and operating microscope in human (George E. Green, 1968) ». Patologiya krovoobrashcheniya i kardiokhirurgiya 22, no 3 (20 novembre 2018) : 86. http://dx.doi.org/10.21688/1681-3472-2018-3-86-94.

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<p>The use of an internal mammary artery in coronary artery bypass grafting operations is the gold standard nowadays. One of the pioneers of such a technique is George E. Green. He introduced a microsurgical technique in routine clinical practice when performing direct myocardial revascularization. The article presents a brief biography and data on the professional path of George E. Green, as well as the history of development and microscope-based performance of the first mammary-coronary bypass grafting operation, which was done in 1968.</p><p>Received 19 July 2018. Revised 15 August 2018. Accepted 17 August 2018.<br /><strong>Funding:</strong> The study did not have sponsorship.<br /><strong>Conflict of interest:</strong> Authors declare no conflict of interest.<br /><strong>Acknowledgment</strong> <br />We would like to express our gratitude to Vasily I. Kaleda, a cardiovascular surgeon at Central Clinical Hospital (Moscow, Russia), for providing access to the original documents and photos used in the present paper, as well as to B. Enosh, an employee of Columbia University (New York, USA), for sharing biographical data. <br /><strong>ORCID ID</strong><br />Andrey N. Semchenko, https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7132-0675 <br />Ivan I. Koshkin, https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4720-3433</p>
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Artanto, Franko Nanda, et Lukman Wijaya Baratha. « Berni's Social Capital in Developing Supporter Identity in Jember District ». Jurnal ENTITAS SOSIOLOGI 8, no 1 (4 février 2019) : 24. http://dx.doi.org/10.19184/jes.v8i1.16644.

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This research focuses on the efforts made by supporters of Berni in establishing her group's identity. By strengthening group solidarity and building networks with various parties, Berni's supporters have the goal of building a supporting character without conflict and making Jember a safe area for all supporters. Researchers use social capital theory to analyze the beliefs, norms, and social networks formed by Berni's supporters. This study uses a qualitative method with an ethnographic approach. The findings of this study include solidarity among members created through activities carried out by supporters of Berni, namely meeting, drinking coffee together, and coming to the stadium to provide support to Persid during the competition. While in the bridging aspect, Berni's supporters have succeeded in building a secure and reciprocal network with various parties such as the management of the Persid Jember club, the regional government, the police, supporters outside the region, and with the community. Berni's supporters also build trust in the broader community by not engaging in clashes or destruction that can disturb the community. Keywords: social capital, trust, norms, identity. Referensi: Afrizal. (2015). Metode Penelitian Kualitatif: Sebuah Upaya Mendukung Penggunaan Penelitian Kualitatif dalam Berbagai Disiplin Ilmu. Jakarta: PT. Raja Grafindo Persada Hasbullah, J. (2006). Social Capital: Menuju Keunggulan Budaya Manusia Indonesia. Jakarta: MR-United Press Lucky, N. dan Setyowati, N. (2013). Fenomena Perilaku Fanatisme Suporter Sepak Bola (Studi Kasus Suporter Persebaya Bonek di Surabaya). Jurnal Kajian Moral dan Kewarganegaraan No. 1 Vol. 1. Surabaya: Universitas Negeri Surabaya diakses pada 4 Juni 2018 melalui https://jurnalmahasiswa.unesa.ac.id/index.php/jurnal-pendidikan kewarganegaraa/article/view/1474 Maarif, S. (2011). Bahan Ajar Sosiologi: Kapital Sosial. Yogyakarta: Gress Publishing Narwoko, J. & Suyanto, B. (2006). Sosiologi: Teks Pengantar dan Terapan.Jakarta: Kencana Putnam, R. D. (1995). Bowling Alone: American’s Declining Social Capital. Journal of Democracy No. 1 Vol. 6. Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press diakses pada 17 Oktober 2017 melalui https://muse.jhu.edu/article/16643 Putnam, R. D. (2000). Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. New York: Simon and Schuster Paperbacks Soekanto, S. (2013).Sosiologi Suatu Pengantar. Jakarta: Rajawali Pers Sunoto, H. (2014). Modal Sosial: Definisi, Konsep-konsep Utama Dari Pemikiran Modal Sosial, dan Analisis Terhadap Masalah Kemasyarakatan. Bandung: Sekolah Tinggi Kesejahteraan Sosial diakses pada 29 Maret 2017 melalui https://www.academia.edu/8894781/Modal_Sosial_penjelasan_singkat_para_pakar Syahra, R. (2003). Modal Sosial: Konsep dan Aplikasi. Jurnal Masyarakat dan Budaya Vol. 5 No. 1. Jakarta: LIPI diakses pada 11 Maret 2018 melalui http://jmb.lipi.go.id/index.php/jmb/article/view/256 Wirawan, A. O. 2014. Berni Pride of The City: Kisah Sebuah Kelompok Suporter Sepak Bola. Jember: Berni
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Pérez Burgueño, Jorge. « Análisis cuantitativo de los diarios de pioneros durante las migraciones al Oeste americano (1840-1860). Una propuesta metodológica ». Vínculos de Historia Revista del Departamento de Historia de la Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, no 12 (28 juin 2023) : 388–407. http://dx.doi.org/10.18239/vdh_2023.12.21.

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RESUMENEntre las muchas fuentes documentales que el historiador tiene a su disposición para abordar sus estudios, el diario personal se presenta, quizás, como una de las más interesantes. Este tipo de materiales no solo permiten conocer algo mejor los pensamientos y emociones de sus propios autores, sino también determinadas facetas del momento histórico en el que se concibieron, de ahí que su contenido resulte fundamental a la hora de comprender un fenómeno migratorio tan peculiar como el que tuvo lugar en el Oeste americano durante la segunda mitad del siglo xix.Partiendo de las propuestas de Ralph K. White y de John Mack Faragher, este artículo presenta una readaptación del Value analysis, proponiendo una selección de 65 valores y 7 grupos temáticos, que se han utilizado para determinar cuáles eran los principales intereses y preocupaciones de los pioneros estadounidenses, a partir del estudio de catorce diarios de la época. Palabras clave: historia cuantitativa, Oeste americano, migraciones, diarios de viaje, Overland TrailTopónimo: Estados UnidosPeríodo: siglo xix ABSTRACT Among the many documentary sources historians have at their disposal when dealing with studies, the personal diary is perhaps one of the most interesting ones. This type of material not only allows us to know a little better the thoughts and emotions of their own authors but also certain aspects of the historical moment in which they were conceived, therefore its content is fundamental when it comes to understand a migration phenomenon as unique as the one that took place in the American West during the second half of the nineteenth century.Based on the proposals of Ralph K. White and John Mack Faragher, this article presents a readaptation of ‘Value analysis’ proposing a selection of 65 values and 7 thematic groups which have been used to determine the main interests and concerns of the American pioneers revising for this purpose fourteen diaries of that time. Keywords: quantitative history, American West, migrations, overland diaries, Overland TrailPlace names: United StatesPeriod: 19th century REFERENCIASBillington, R. A. y Ridge, M. (2001): Westward Expansion: A History of the American Frontier, Albuquerque, University of New Mexico Press.Brown, D. (2004): The American West, Londres, Simon Schuster UK.Carter, R. W. (1995): “When I Hear the Winds Sigh”: Mortality on the Overland Trail, California History, vol. 74, nº. 2, pp. 146-161.Clark, D. H. (1953): “Remember the Winter of...? Weather and Pioneers”, Oregon Historical Quarterly, vol. 54, nº. 2, pp. 140-148.Cutlip, S. M. (1995): Public Relations History: From the 17th to the 20th Century. The Antecedents, Nueva York, Routledge. Dippie, B. W. (1991): “American Wests: Historiographical Perspectives” en Limerick, P. N., Millner II, C. A. y Rankin, C. E. (eds.), Trails toward a New Western History, Lawrence, University Press of Kansas, pp. 112-138. Etulain, R. W. (2002): “Introduction: The Rise of Western Historiography” en Etulain, R. W. (ed.), Writing Western History, Reno, University of Nevada Press, pp. 1-16.Faragher, J. M. (1979): Women and Men on the Overland Trail, New Haven, Yale University Press.Farber, B. (1957): “An Index of Marital Integration”, Sociometry, Núm. 20, pp. 117-139.Hine, R. V. y Faragher, J. M. (2000): The American West: A new interpretative history, Connecticut, Yale University Press.Hoagkand, A. K. (2004): Army Architecture in the West: Forts Laramie, Bridger, and D. A. Russell (1849-1912), Norman, University of Oklahoma Press.Holmes, K. L. (1995): Covered Wagon Women: Diaries Letters from the Western Trails Vol. 1, 1840-1849, Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press.— (1996): Covered Wagon Women: Diaries Letters from the Western Trails, vol. 2, 1850, Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press, 1996.Jiménez, A. (2001): “La Historia como fabricación del pasado: la frontera del Oeste o American West”, Anuario de estudios americanos, vol. 58, nº. 2, pp. 737-755.Lamar, H. R. (1978): “Rites of Passage: Young Men and Their Families in the Overland Trail Experience, 1843-69” en Alexander, G. T. (ed.), Soul-Butter and Hog Wash and Other Essays on the American West, Provo, Brigham Young University Press, pp. 33-67.Lavender, D. (1963): Westward Vision: The Story of the Oregon Trail, Lincoln, McGraw-Hill.Levinson, D. J. (1977): “The mid-life transition: a period in adult psychosocial development”, Psychiatry, nº. 40, pp. 99-112.Limerick, P. N. (1991): “What on Earth is the New Western History?” en Limerick, P. N., Millner II, C. A. y Rankin, C. E. (eds.), Trails toward a New Western History, Lawrence, University Press of Kansas, pp. 81-88.McCurdy, S. A. (1994): “Epidemiology of disaster: The Donner Party (1846-1847)”, Western Journal of Medicine, vol. 160, nº. 4, pp. 338-342.Ponsonby, A. (1923): English diaries; a review of English diaries from the sixteenth to the twentieth century with an introd. on diary writing, Londres, Methuen Co.Rokeach, M. (1973): The Nature of Human Values, Nueva York, Free Press.Schlissel, L. (1982): Women’s Diaries of the Westward Journey, Nueva York, Schocken Books.Smith, H. N. (1950): Virgin Land: The American West as Symbol and Myth, Cambridge (Massachusetts), Harvard University Press.Thompson, G. (1991): “Another look at Frontier / Western Historiography” en Limerick, P. N., Millner II, C. A. y Rankin, C. E. (eds.), Trails toward a New Western History, Lawrence, University Press of Kansas, pp. 89-96.Turner, F. J. (1920): The Frontier in American History, Nueva York, Henry Holt and Company.Unruh, J. D. (1982): The Plains Across: The Overland Emigrants and the Trans-Mississippi West (1840-60), Urbana, University of Illinois Press.Vandenbroucke, G. (2008): “The U.S. Westward Expansion”, International Economic Review, Vol. 49. Núm. 1, pp. 81-110.Webb, W. P. (1931): The Great Plains, Boston, Ginn and Company.White, R. K. (1944): “Value Analysis: A Quantitative Method for Describing Qualitative Data”, Journal of Social Psychology, Núm. 19, pp. 351-358.
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Soeters, Heidi, Amy Blain, How-Yi Chang, Melissa Whaley et Jessica Macneil. « Current Epidemiology of Serogroup W Meningococcal Disease—United States, 2010–2015 ». Open Forum Infectious Diseases 4, suppl_1 (2017) : S7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofx162.017.

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Abstract Background Serogroup W (NmW) meningococcal disease is a rare but severe infection. Following an NmW outbreak after the Hajj in 2000, NmW disease, predominantly caused by sequence type (ST)-11 clonal complex (cc), rapidly increased in South Africa, South America, and the UK. We describe NmW meningococcal disease epidemiology in the USA during 2010–2015. Methods Data were collected from the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System, Active Bacterial Core surveillance, and state health departments. Isolates were serogrouped via slide agglutination and real-time polymerase chain reaction. For cases lacking a serogroup result at CDC, the state result was used. Case-fatality ratios (CFR) were calculated using the proportion of cases with known outcomes as the denominator. cc and ST were determined using multilocus sequence typing (MLST). Results From 2010 to 2015, 3,504 meningococcal disease cases were reported to CDC; 2,976 (85%) had a serogroup result, of which 290 (10%) were NmW. Although the number of NmW cases reported annually remained fairly stable (range: 40–57), the total number of reported meningococcal disease cases decreased by 60%, and the proportion of cases due to NmW increased from 6% (42/830) in 2010 to 12% (40/332) in 2015. The majority of NmW cases were reported from five states: Florida (n = 106), California (n = 31), New York (n = 25), Georgia (n = 19), and Oregon (n = 11). Half of people with NmW disease were male, 185 (64%) were white, and 84 (29%) were Hispanic. The median age was 51 years (interquartile range: 26–70). Overall, 20% (52/259) of NmW cases were fatal, compared with CFRs for serogroups B (15%), Y (18%), or C (24%). NmW CFR was highest among adults aged 50–59 years (38%). MLST results were available for 119 (41%) of NmW cases: 76 (64%) were cc11, 40 (34%) were cc22, and 1 each were cc23, cc32, and an unassigned cc. cc appeared to be geographically associated: cc11 was concentrated in Florida and Georgia, while cc22 predominated on the West coast. Within cc11, the majority of isolates (86%) were ST-11, and within cc22 the majority (73%) were ST-22. Conclusion A rapid increase in NmW disease has not been observed in the USA. Most NmW cases were reported in a limited number of states, with geographic differences in clonal complex. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.
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Palmero, D., J. Gil-Serna, L. Gálvez, M. D. Curt, M. De Cara et J. Tello. « First Report of Fusarium verticillioides Causing Stalk and Root Rot of Sorghum in Spain ». Plant Disease 96, no 4 (avril 2012) : 584. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis-11-11-0958-pdn.

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Sweet sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L.) is considered one of the most promising crops for bioethanol production in many countries and is a focus of bioenergy research worldwide. In July 2011, plants of the sweet sorghum cv. Suchro 506 in Oropesa (Toledo, Spain, 40.048577°N, 5.360298°W) (European Datum 1950 UTM zone 30 N) were observed with severe wilting. Upon examination, the lower internodes were found to be straw colored. When the plant was split, the internal pith was reddish, soft, and disintegrating. Small pieces of symptomatic stems and roots were surface disinfected in sodium hypochlorite (0.5% wt/vol) for 2 min and air dried. The sections were then placed on either PDA (potato dextrose agar) medium or Komada agar and incubated for 5 days at 25°C. Isolations from diseased stem and root tissue consistently yielded Fusarium verticillioides (Sacc.) Nirenberg (3). The small, hyaline, mostly single-celled, oval to club-shaped microconidia of F. verticillioides were produced in long catenate chains arising from monophialides. PCR amplification of the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 was performed using the primers and protocols described elsewhere (4) and the fragments obtained were subsequently sequenced in both directions. Sequences were deposited in the EMBL Sequence Database (Accession Nos. HE652878, HE652879, HE652880, and HE652881). Four of the recovered F. verticilliodes isolates were tested in pathogenicity assays. One-week-old cultures of each isolate were homogenized in 400 ml of sterile water and 200 ml were used to inoculate water-growth-chamber-grown plants in 500-ml pots. Two pots each with three plants of cv. Suchro 506 were inoculated for each isolate. Water with sterile PDA was used as a control. All plants were kept at 20 to 25°C under a photoperiod of 14 h at 12,000 lux. After 21 days, above- and belowground parts were dried for 24 h at 60°C. Total length and dry weight of both sections were obtained. Inoculated plants produced root rot symptoms characteristic of F. verticillioides with dark red discolorations of the cortex of seedling roots (1), whereas the plants watered with water containing only PDA did not produce symptoms. Inoculated plants also had a decrease in dry weight for above- and belowground sections (P = 0.05) compared with the control with 43 and 47% reductions, respectively. The length of aerial parts was approximately 5% less in inoculated plants compared with control plants. F. verticillioides was reisolated from all inoculated plants. Sorghum stalk and root rot caused by F. verticillioides has been reported in different countries including India (2) and the United States (3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of F. verticillioides causing stalk and root rot of sorghum in Spain. An increase of production of this crop is expected to meet targets of the renewable energy share in Spain and any disease compromising yield may be a threat to this endeavour. References: (1) R. A. Frederiksen and G. N. Odvody. Compendium of Sorghum Diseases. The American Phytopathological Society. St. Paul, MN, 2000. (2) N. N. Khune et al. Indian Phytopathol. 37:316, 1984. (3) J. F. Leslie and B. A. Summerell. The Fusarium Laboratory Manual. Blackwell Publishing, Ames, IA, 2006. (4) T. J. White et al. PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. M. A. Innis et al., eds. Academic Press, New York, 1990.
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