Material Support (material + support)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


,A Very Sensible Man': Imagining Fatherhood in England c.1750,1830

HISTORY, Issue 319 2010
JOANNE BAILEY
Fathers are at once everywhere and nowhere in the historiography of eighteenth-century England. They interact with children in family history, bear authority in histories of women, gender and marriage, use the role to demonstrate virility, and the capacity for household mastery and citizenship in the history of masculinity, and are metaphors in political culture. Yet there is little sustained work on what constituted the key attributes of fatherhood before 1830. This article shows that the ideal father in the period c.1750 to 1830 was tenderly affectionate, sensitized and moved by babies; he provided hugs, material support and a protective guiding hand. Engrossed in his offspring to the exclusion of much else apart from his wife and national duties, he offered his children a moral example and instruction and possessed a deep understanding of his children's personalities. The genesis of this imagined fatherhood lay in fundamental eighteenth-century concerns about social, class, gender and familial relationships, and national strength. His form and the language used to describe him owed much to the combined forces of the culture of sensibility and of general Christian ideals antedating Evangelical revival. [source]


Computer solutions of Maxwell's equations in homogeneous media

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN FLUIDS, Issue 8 2003
O. Pironneau
Abstract This document is the material support for a talk given for JSIAM on the current methods for the computation of radar cross sections. The talk covers more than just computations of RCS and extends to any problem which involves the numerical solution of Maxwell's equations in homogeneous media. The talk is based on a review of the most recent papers in leading journals and on the author's experience. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Assessment of registration quality of trials sponsored by China

JOURNAL OF EVIDENCE BASED MEDICINE, Issue 1 2009
Xuemei Liu
Abstract Objective To evaluate the quality of the registration information for trials sponsored by China registered in the WHO primary registries or other registries that meet the requirements of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE). Methods We assessed the registration information for trials registered in the 9 WHO primary registries and one other registry that met the requirements of ICJME as of 15 October 2008. We analyzed the trial registration data set in each registry and assessed the registration quality against the WHO Trial Registration Data Set (TRDS). We also evaluated the quality of the information in the Source(s) of Monetary or Material Support section, using a specially prepared scale. Results The entries in four registries met the 20 items of the WHO TRDS. These were the Chinese Clinical Trial Registration Center (ChiCR), Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (NZCTR), Clinical Trials Registry , India (CTRI), and Sri Lanka Clinical Trials Registry (SLCTR). Registration quality varied among the different registries. For example, using the Scale of TRDS, the NZCTR scored a median of 19 points, ChiCTR (median = 18 points), ISRCTN.org (median = 17 points), and Clinical trials.org (median = 12 points). The data on monetary or material support for ChiCTR and ISRCTN.org were relatively complete and the score on our Scale for the Completeness of Funding Registration Quality ranged from ChiCTR (median = 7 points), ISRCTN.org (median = 6 points), NZCTR (median = 3 points) to clinicaltrials.gov (median = 2 points). Conclusion Further improvements are needed in both the quantity and quality of trial registration. This could be achieved by full completion of the 20 items of the WHO TRDS. Future research should assess ways to ensure the quality and scope of research registration and the role of mandatory registration of funded research. [source]


Solidarity and Conflict Between Adult Children and Parents: A Latent Class Analysis

JOURNAL OF MARRIAGE AND FAMILY, Issue 4 2006
Ruben I. Van Gaalen
Using multiple dimensions of solidarity and conflict in a latent class analysis, we develop a typology of adult child,parent relationships. The data (N= 4,990) are from the first wave of the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study. In descending order of relationship quality, the 5 types are harmonious (akin to relationships with friends), ambivalent (intensive exchange of material support accompanied by strain), obligatory (just keeping in touch), affective (emotionally supportive with few other meaningful exchanges), and discordant (predominantly negative engagement). The types are differentiated by gender, age, family size, geographic distance, and parental marital history, indicating that they are not fixed but are shaped by social-structural conditions. [source]


The appropriation of the Phoenicians in British imperial ideology

NATIONS AND NATIONALISM, Issue 4 2001
Timothy Champion
The Phoenicians played ambivalent roles in Western historical imagination. One such role was as a valued predecessor and prototype for the industrial and maritime enterprise of nineteenth-century imperial Britain. Explicit parallels were drawn in historical representations and more popular culture. It was widely believed that the Phoenicians had been present in Britain, especially in Cornwall, despite a lack of convincing historical evidence, and much importance was placed on supposed archaeological evidence. Ideological tensions arose from the need to reconcile ancient and modern Britain, and from the Semitic origin of the Phoenicians. This example shows the power of archaeological objects to provide material support for national and imperial constructions of the past. [source]


Meret Oppenheim , or, These Boots Ain't Made For Walking

ART HISTORY, Issue 3 2001
Edward D. Powers
Meret Oppenheim's point-blank rejection of the sexy sobriquet André Breton conjures up for her fur teacup ,Breakfast in Fur, and again, for her pair of boots , by her simply called Das Paar, but by him Undressing, a war of words more importantly veiling a battle of the sexes. At stake is not only Oppenheim's spectacularly ambivalent relationship to the Freudian theorizing which informs Breton's titles, and in turn, Surrealism far more generally. For even disavowing Freud in word, yet she avows the quintessential stuff of his fetish in deed, or more accurately, in fur and feet. But also at stake is a kind of literalism , an immediate, self-referential quality to the bodily material support of her objects , which both sets them apart from the endlessly metaphorical play of man -made Surrealist objects of these years, and even anticipates contemporary Feminisms. [source]


Detection of cometary amines in samples returned by Stardust

METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, Issue 1-2 2008
Daniel P. Glavin
A suite of amino acids and amines including glycine, L-alanine, ,-alanine (BALA), ,-amino- n -butyric acid (GABA), ,-amino- n -caproic acid (EACA), ethanolamine (MEA), methylamine (MA), and ethylamine (EA) were identified in acid-hydrolyzed, hot-water extracts of these Stardust materials above background levels. With the exception of MA and EA, all other primary amines detected in comet-exposed aerogel fragments C2054,4 and C2086,1 were also present in the flight aerogel witness tile that was not exposed to the comet, indicating that most amines are terrestrial in origin. The enhanced relative abundances of MA and EA in comet-exposed aerogel compared to controls, coupled with MA to EA ratios (C2054,4: 1.0 ± 0.2; C2086,1: 1.8 ± 0.2) that are distinct from preflight aerogels (E243,13C and E243,13F: 7 ± 3), suggest that these volatile amines were captured from comet Wild 2. MA and EA were present predominantly in an acid-hydrolyzable bound form in the aerogel, rather than as free primary amines, which is consistent with laboratory analyses of cometary ice analog materials. It is possible that Wild 2 MA and EA were formed on energetically processed icy grains containing ammonia and approximately equal abundances of methane and ethane. The presence of cometary amines in Stardust material supports the hypothesis that comets were an important source of prebiotic organic carbon and nitrogen on the early Earth. [source]