One

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Kinds of One

  • number one

  • Terms modified by One

  • one ability
  • one action
  • one adult
  • one adult male
  • one advantage
  • one adverse event
  • one affected child
  • one agent
  • one aliquot
  • one allele
  • one allergen
  • one amino acid
  • one animal
  • one another
  • one antibody
  • one application
  • one approach
  • one area
  • one arm
  • one aspect
  • one author
  • one base
  • one based
  • one batch
  • one being
  • one biopsy
  • one body
  • one boy
  • one branch
  • one breeding season
  • one case
  • one case only
  • one cat
  • one category
  • one cause
  • one cell
  • one cell line
  • one cell type
  • one center
  • one centre
  • one characteristic
  • one child
  • one chromosome
  • one clade
  • one class
  • one cohort
  • one combination
  • one community
  • one company
  • one component
  • one compound
  • one concentration
  • one conclusion
  • one condition
  • one consequence
  • one consisting
  • one context
  • one control
  • one copy
  • one corresponding
  • one country
  • one county
  • one course
  • one criterion
  • one crystal form
  • one culture
  • one cycle
  • one data set
  • one day
  • one death
  • one decade
  • one degree
  • one derivative
  • one described
  • one device
  • one diagnosis
  • one diastereomer
  • one difficulty
  • one dimension
  • one dimer
  • one direction
  • one disease
  • one disorder
  • one dog
  • one domain
  • one donor
  • one dose
  • one drug
  • one edge
  • one egg
  • one electron
  • one element
  • one enantiomer
  • one end
  • one entity
  • one enzyme
  • one episode
  • one equation
  • one equivalent
  • one ethnic group
  • one event
  • one examiner
  • one example
  • one exception
  • one expected
  • one experience
  • one experiment
  • one explanation
  • one extreme
  • one eye
  • one face
  • one facet
  • one factor
  • one failure
  • one family
  • one female
  • one fetus
  • one field
  • one fifth
  • one finding
  • one firm
  • one foot
  • one form
  • one found
  • one fourth
  • one fraction
  • one gene
  • one generation
  • one genotype
  • one genus
  • one goal
  • one grade
  • one group
  • one growing season
  • one habitat
  • one half
  • one hand
  • one haplotype
  • one hemisphere
  • one horse
  • one hospital
  • one host
  • one host species
  • one hour
  • one hypothesis
  • one identity
  • one implant
  • one implication
  • one important conclusion
  • one incident
  • one indicator
  • one individual
  • one infant
  • one infection
  • one infusion
  • one injection
  • one instance
  • one institution
  • one interpretation
  • one intervention
  • one item
  • one job
  • one jurisdiction
  • one kind
  • one laboratory
  • one layer
  • one lesion
  • one level
  • one life
  • one ligand
  • one limitation
  • one line
  • one lineage
  • one locality
  • one location
  • one locus
  • one male
  • one man
  • one marker
  • one market
  • one measure
  • one measurement
  • one mechanism
  • one medication
  • one member
  • one method
  • one methyl group
  • one might
  • one minute
  • one missense mutation
  • one mode
  • one model
  • one molecule
  • one monolayer
  • one monomer
  • one month
  • one mutant
  • one mutation
  • one n
  • one neonate
  • one new species
  • one night
  • one nucleus
  • one o atom
  • one object
  • one objective
  • one observed
  • one observer
  • one obtained
  • one occasion
  • one operation
  • one operator
  • one option
  • one order
  • one organ
  • one organization
  • one other case
  • one other patient
  • one outcome
  • one own
  • one pair
  • one parameter
  • one parent
  • one part
  • one participant
  • one partner
  • one party
  • one pass
  • one pathway
  • one patient
  • one patient group
  • one pattern
  • one peak
  • one percent
  • one period
  • one person
  • one perspective
  • one phase
  • one piece
  • one place
  • one plane
  • one plot
  • one point
  • one polymorphism
  • one population
  • one portion
  • one position
  • one possibility
  • one possible exception
  • one possible explanation
  • one possible mechanism
  • one possible reason
  • one possible solution
  • one pot
  • one practice
  • one pregnancy
  • one prescription
  • one problem
  • one procedure
  • one process
  • one product
  • one protein
  • one quarter
  • one question
  • one race
  • one reaction
  • one reason
  • one recent study
  • one recommendation
  • one recurrence
  • one region
  • one report
  • one representative
  • one residue
  • one response
  • one reviewer
  • one risk factor
  • one route
  • one sample
  • one scale
  • one school
  • one season
  • one second
  • one section
  • one sector
  • one seizure
  • one self
  • one semester
  • one sense
  • one series
  • one session
  • one set
  • one sex
  • one sibling
  • one side
  • one site
  • one size
  • one smoker
  • one solution
  • one source
  • one space dimension
  • one species
  • one specimen
  • one stage
  • one standard deviation
  • one state
  • one step
  • one strain
  • one strand
  • one strategy
  • one student
  • one study
  • one subgroup
  • one subject
  • one subunit
  • one summer
  • one surface
  • one surgeon
  • one symptom
  • one system
  • one technique
  • one term
  • one test
  • one theme
  • one theory
  • one thing
  • one third
  • one time
  • one tissue
  • one tool
  • one tooth
  • one trait
  • one treatment
  • one trial
  • one tumor
  • one twin
  • one type
  • one unit
  • one university
  • one urban
  • one used
  • one variable
  • one variant
  • one version
  • one vertex
  • one virus
  • one visit
  • one voice
  • one water molecule
  • one wavelength
  • one way
  • one week
  • one woman
  • one work
  • one year
  • one year period
  • one zone

  • Selected Abstracts


    NO ONE CAN SERVE TWO MASTERS

    ADDICTION, Issue 5 2008
    ILANA PINSKY
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    PREFERENCE FOR ONE OF TWO IDENTICAL STIMULI: EXPECTATIONS, EXPLICIT INSTRUCTIONS AND PERSONAL TRAITS

    JOURNAL OF SENSORY STUDIES, Issue 2010
    KATHRYN W. CHAPMAN
    ABSTRACT Most consumers, given two identical food samples, express a preference for one, rather than choosing a no-preference option. The stability and potential causes of this seemingly irrational preference were examined across three trials under different conditions, specifically, when the first test pair was identical or different, and when participants were explicitly told that the pairs would often be identical. Choice of no preference typically increased from the first to second trial, especially for groups who saw a pair of different samples on the first trial. The explicit instruction that samples might be the same failed to reduce expressing a preference on the initial trial although it had some effect on later trials. Analysis, by individuals, of sequences of preference or no-preference responses across trials support independence of sequential responses and argue against stable personal traits as a predictor of preference choice. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS More research needs to be done to understand the origins and operation of biases in preference tests. When tested under conditions in which the samples differ only slightly, participants tend to avoid the no-preference option. This is potentially important when interpreting the results of preference tests and assigning practical significance to their outcomes. Also, single trial testing may produce somewhat different results from multi-trial testing, the latter allowing for examination of effects of variation in recent experience. [source]


    Latest news and product developments

    PRESCRIBER, Issue 23-24 2007
    Article first published online: 8 JAN 200
    Cervical cancer risk falls after COC use ends Combined oral contraceptives (COCs) are associated with a slight increase in the risk of cervical cancer but this diminishes with time after use ends, an international study has shown (Lancet 2007;370:1609,21). Analysis of data for 16 573 women with and 35 509 women without cervical cancer confirmed that using a COC for 10 years between the ages of 20 and 30 increases the incidence of invasive cervical cancer from 3.8 to 4.5 per 1000 by age 50. However, the excess risk disappears 10 years after cessation of use. , A new analysis of the US Nurses' Health Study suggests that protection against ovarian cancer does not persist beyond 20 years after cessation of COC use. This study also showed that tubal ligation is associated with reduced risk of ovarian cancer (Am J Epidemiol 2007; 166;894,901). Pharmaceutical services fund moves to PCTs The ,global sum' that provides central funding for NHS pharmaceutical services is being shifted to PCTs. The Government has included legislation for the change in the recent Health and Social Care Bill. The fund pays the fees and allowances for pharmacy contractors and appliance contractors. The Government says this is a ,natural progression and in keeping with moves to devolve NHS funds to the frontline' that will enable PCTs to manage pharmacy services better by ,encouraging best prescribing practice'. Fewer fluoroquinolones in the community Restricting prescribing of fluoroquinolone antibacterials does not increase hospital admissions for infection among older people, say Canadian researchers (Am J Med 2007;120:893,900). Their analysis of an Ontario medical database shows that, in a community where fluoroquinolones were the most widely prescribed antibacterials, a one-third reduction in prescribing was not followed by an increase in hospital admissions for infectious episodes in the over,65s. On the contrary, there was a 32 per cent reduction in admissions for gastrointestinal conditions. FDA reports increased TB risk with infliximab The US Food and Drug Administration has published an analysis of cases of TB associated with infliximab (Remicade) detected via its spontaneous adverse event reporting scheme (Ann Intern Med 2007;147: 699,702). In 2001 the FDA placed a warning about the risk of TB on product labelling for infliximab and advised testing for TB before initiating treatment. This analysis of 130 cases of TB since reported in patients treated with infliximab found that 45 per cent had developed extra-pulmonary disease; risk factors included use of immunosuppressants (including methotrexate), a history of TB and time spent in an endemic area. Of 67 cases in which treatment was initiated after the warning was issued, 34 with a negative tuberculin skin test developed TB after receiving infliximab. MHRA announces anticounterfeit strategy The UK is a transit point, distribution hub and end-user of counterfeit medicines, says the MHRA in its first anti-counterfeiting strategy (www.mhra.gov.uk). Counterfeits have been detected in the legitimate supply chain with increasing frequency since 2004, resulting in nine batch recalls and a further five incidents detected at wholesale level. The MHRA's proposed approach includes: communication to raise awareness of the risk and facilitate reporting, collaboration with the WHO, the industry and law enforcement agencies, and targeted surveillance, prosecution and regulation. Evidence lacking for choosing DMARD There is insufficient evidence to choose one DMARD or biological agent over another in patients with RA, US investigators say (www.annals.org/cgi/content/abstract/0000605,20080115000192v1). Their systematic review of meta-analyses and intervention and observational trials found no evidence of differences among DMARDs or anti-TNF agents. Mono-therapy with an anti-TNF agent was associated with superior radiographic but not clinical outcomes; methotrexate plus an anti-TNF agent was superior in clinical and functional terms to either drug given alone. Be alert to psychiatric ADRs with rimonabant Clinicians should remain alert for the development of anxiety, depression and an increased risk of suicide with rimonabant (Acomplia), say Danish investigators (Lancet 2007;370:1706,13). Their meta-analysis of four randomised trials involving a total of 4105 patients showed that rimonabant was associated with an increased risk of serious adverse events (odds ratio 1.4; number needed to harm, NNH, 59), including a 2.5,fold increased risk of depression (NNH 49) and a threefold increased risk of anxiety (NNH 166). Following a warning from the FDA of an increased risk of suicide with rimonabant, the authors say their findings indicate a need for ,increased alertness by physicians to these potentially severe psychiatric adverse reactions'. New strategy for NHS medicines information The UK Medicines Information Service (www.ukmi.nhs.uk) has published its new management strategy setting out how it will respond to recent developments in the NHS. Developments include greater access to information for patients, support for nontraditional prescribers and new commissioning arrangements. New antiretroviral Maraviroc (Celsentri) is the first CCR5 antagonist to be introduced for the treatment of HIV infection. CCR5 is one of two co-receptors to which the HIV virus must attach to achieve cell entry. Maraviroc is licensed for use by treatment-experienced patients in whom only CCR5-tropic HIV-1 is detectable. The recommended dose ranges from 150 to 600mg twice daily depending on interactions with concurrent medication. Dimeticone superior Dimeticone 4 per cent lotion (Hedrin) is superior to malathion 0.5 per cent in the eradication of head lice, a UK study in 58 children and 15 adults has shown (PLoS ONE 2007;2: e1127. doi:10.1371/journal.pone. 0001127). Two applications of dimeticone lotion one week apart cleared active infestation in 70 per cent of participants compared with 33 per cent in those who used a single application of malathion. Copyright © 2007 Wiley Interface Ltd. [source]


    Determination of cellular redox status by stable isotope dilution liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis of glutathione and glutathione disulfide

    RAPID COMMUNICATIONS IN MASS SPECTROMETRY, Issue 4 2008
    Peijuan Zhu
    Oxidation of glutathione (GSH) to glutathione disulfide (GSSG) occurs during cellular oxidative stress. The redox potential of the 2GSH/GSSG couple, which is determined by the Nernst equation, provides a means to assess cellular redox status. It is difficult to accurately quantify GSH and GSSG due to the ease with which GSH is oxidized to GSSG during sample preparation. To overcome this problem, a stable isotope dilution liquid chromatography/multiple reaction monitoring mass spectrometry (LC/MRM-MS) method has been developed using 4-fluoro-7-sulfamoylbenzofurazan (ABD-F) derivatization. ABD-F derivatization of the GSH thiol group was rapid, quantitative, and occurred at room temperature. The LC/MRM-MS method, which requires no sample clean-up, was validated within the calibration ranges of 5 to 400,nmol/mL in cell lysates for GSH and 0.5 to 40,nmol/mL in cell lysates for GSSG. Calibration curves prepared by adding known concentrations of GSH and GSSG to cell lysates were parallel to the standard curve prepared in buffers. GSH and GSSG concentrations were determined in two monocyte/macrophage RAW 267.4 cell lines with or without 15-LOX-1 expression (R15LO and RMock cells, respectively) after treatment with the bifunctional electrophile 4-oxo-2(E)-nonenal (ONE). R15LO cells synthesized much higher concentrations of the lipid hydroperoxide, 15(S)-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (15-HPETE), which undergoes homolytic decomposition to ONE. GSH was depleted by ONE treatment in both RMock and R15LO cells, leading to significant increases in their redox potentials. However, R15LO cells had higher GSH concentrations (most likely through increased GSH biosynthesis) and had increased resistance to ONE-mediated GSH depletion than RMock cells. Consequently, R15LO cells had lower reduction potentials at all concentrations of ONE. GSSG concentrations were higher in R15LO cells after ONE treatment when compared with the ONE-treated RMock cells. This suggests that increased expression of 15(S)-HPETE modulates the activity of cellular GSH reductases or the transporters involved in removal of GSSG. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Mutations in sarcomeric protein genes not only lead to cardiomyopathy but also to congenital cardiovascular malformations

    CLINICAL GENETICS, Issue 1 2008
    Marja W. Wessels
    Noncompaction of the ventricular myocardium is associated with de novo mutation in the beta-myosin heavy chain gene Budde et al. (2007) PLoS ONE 2: e1362 Homozygosity for a novel splice site mutation in the cardiac myosin-binding protein C gene causes severe neonatal hypertrophic cardiomyopathy Xin et al. (2007) Am J Med Genet 143: 2662,2667 Alpha-cardiac actin mutations produce atrial septal defects Matsson et al. (2008) Hum Mol Genet 17: 256,265 [source]


    Errors in the Interpretation of Mohs Histopathology Sections Over a 1-Year Fellowship

    DERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 12 2008
    MICHAEL E. MURPHY MD
    BACKGROUND Errors can occur in the interpretation of Mohs histopathology sections. Errors in histology interpretation can lead to incomplete removal of cancer and cancer persistence or the unnecessary removal of uninvolved tissue. Extensive proctored training is necessary to reduce these errors to an absolute minimum level. OBJECTIVE To analyze and quantify the number of cases and the amount of time required to reach a satisfactory level of expertise in the reading and interpretation of Mohs histopathology. METHODS A single-institution pilot study was designed to track errors in the interpretation and mapping of Mohs histopathology sections. A Mohs surgery fellow independently preread Mohs cases and rendered his interpretation on the Mohs map. One of the Mohs program directors subsequently reviewed and corrected all cases. Errors were scored on a graded scale and tracked over the 1-year fellowship to determine the number of cases and amount of time necessary to reduce errors to a baseline minimal level. RESULTS One thousand four hundred ninety-one Mohs surgery cases were required to generate 1,347 pathology specimens for review and grading over 6 months of Mohs surgery fellowship before reducing errors to a minimum acceptable level of less than 1 critical error per 100 cases read. CONCLUSIONS The number of cases and time required to reduce errors in the interpretation of Mohs histology is substantial. Direct and immediate mentored correction of errors is essential for improvement. These results can act as a guide for Mohs surgery training programs to help determine the minimum number of directly proctored cases required to obtain expertise in this crucial component of Mohs surgery. [source]


    Application of a New Intense Pulsed Light Device in the Treatment of Photoaging Skin in Asian Patients

    DERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 11 2008
    YUAN-HONG LI MD
    BACKGROUND Intense pulsed light (IPL) technology has long been used in the treatment of photoaging skin. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the efficacy and safety of a new IPL device in the treatment of photoaging skin in Asian patients. METHODS One hundred fifty-two Chinese women with photoaging skin were enrolled in this open-labeled study. Subjects received four IPL treatments at 3- to 4-week intervals. Changes of photoaging were evaluated using a global evaluation, an overall self-assessment, a Mexameter, and a Corneometer. RESULTS One hundred thirty-nine of 152 patients (91.44%) experienced a score decrease of 3 or 2 grades, according to the dermatologist. One hundred thirty-six of 152 patients (89.47%) rated their overall improvement as excellent or good. The mean skin melanin index (MI) and erythema index values deceased with each session. MI on forehead and EI on cheilion decreased most significantly. Adverse effects were limited to mild pain and transient erythema. CONCLUSION IPL treatment is a safe and effective method for photoaging skin in Asian patients. Adverse effects were minimal and acceptable. [source]


    A Validated Brow Positioning Grading Scale

    DERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 2008
    ALASTAIR CARRUTHERS MD
    BACKGROUND One of the first areas to show facial aging is the periorbital region, where brow malposition contributes to the overall appearance of aging. Movement and positioning of the brows are also sex specific. Men may desire a low brow, whereas women may prefer high, arched brows. OBJECTIVES To develop the Brow Positioning Grading Scale for objective quantification of eyebrow position and to establish the reliability of this photonumeric scale for clinical research and practice. MATERIALS AND METHODS A 5-point photonumeric rating scale was developed to objectively quantify positioning of eyebrows at rest. Nine experts rated photographs of 35 subjects twice with regard to positioning of the eyebrow in comparison with morphed images. Inter- and intrarater variability was assessed by computing intraclass correlation coefficients. RESULTS Bubble plots (bivariate scatter plots) demonstrated linearity in judgment by the experts. The test,retest correlation coefficients were acceptable for each expert. CONCLUSION The 5-point photonumeric scale generated spans the positioning of the eyebrow for which patients commonly seek correction. The scale is well stratified for consistent rating. [source]


    Development and experimental validation of a nifH oligonucleotide microarray to study diazotrophic communities in a glacier forefield

    ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 8 2009
    Laurence Duc
    Summary Functional microarrays are powerful tools that allow the parallel detection of multiple strains at the species level and therefore to rapidly obtain information on microbial communities in the environment. However, the design of suitable probes is prone to uncertainties, as it is based so far on in silico predictions including weighted mismatch number and Gibbs free-energy values. This study describes the experimental selection of probes targeting subsequences of the nifH gene to study the community structure of diazotrophic populations present in Damma glacier (Swiss Central Alps) forefield soils. Using the Geniom® One in situ synthesis technology (Febit, Germany), 2727 in silico designed candidate probes were tested. A total of 946 specific probes were selected and validated. This probe set covered a large diversity of the NifH phylotypes (35 out of the 45) found in the forefield. Hybridization predictors were tested statistically. Gibbs free-energy value for probe-target binding gave the best prediction for hybridization efficiency, while the weighted mismatch number was not significantly associated to probe specificity. In this study, we demonstrate that extensive experimental tests of probe-hybridization behaviour against sequences present in the studied environment remain a prerequisite for meaningful probe selection. [source]


    Dose,response and time course relationships for vitellogenin induction in male western fence lizards (Sceloporus occidentalis) exposed to ethinylestradiol

    ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY & CHEMISTRY, Issue 7 2002
    Sandra M. Brasfield
    Abstract The long-term goal of this research is to develop and validate an in vivo reptile model for endocrine-mediated toxicity using fence lizards (Sceloporus spp.). One of the best defined estrogenic responses in oviparous vertebrates is induction of the yolk precursor protein, vitellogenin (Vtg). In this study, dose,response and time course relationships for Vtg induction were determined in male western fence lizards (Sceloporus occidentalis) given intraperitoneal injections of 17,-ethinylestradiol (EE2). Plasma Vtg was quantified directly with an antibody-capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and indirectly using plasma alkalinelabile phosphate (ALP) in order to compare these two methods. Both ELISA and ALP predicted similar median effective dose (ED50 [dose causing a 50% maximal response]) values for plasma Vtg induction (0.167 mg/kg for ELISA and 0.095 mg/kg for ALP). In addition, both ELISA and ALP detected significant Vtg induction at a dose of 0.0003 mg/kg of EE2, which was the lowest dose used in our study. A decrease in body weight at the highest dose (10 mg/kg) and an increase in hepatosomatic index at the four highest doses were observed. Serial dilutions of plasma from an EE2 -exposed male revealed a high correlation between plasma Vtg and ALP determinations in this species. In conclusion, our data show that plasma ALP may be a suitable alternative for measuring plasma Vtg compared with developing a Vtg ELISA in fence lizards exposed to estrogenic compounds. [source]


    A Series of One- to Three-Dimensional Copper Coordination Polymers Based on N-Heterocyclic Ligands

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 12 2006
    Xiang He
    Abstract A family of copper coordination polymers containing different N-heterocyclic ligands, namely [Cu(CN)(dmpyz)]n (1),[Cu2(CN)2(imz)]n (2), [Cu3(CN)(trz)2]n (3), [Cu6(CN)6(dmtrz)3]n(4), [Cu2(CN)(5-metta)]n (5), [Cu2(CN)(5-phtta)]n (6), and {[Cu6(CN)6(dmtrz)]2[Cu2(CN)2(dmtrz)2]}n (7) has been prepared and structurally characterized by X-ray crystallography. The crystal structures of 1 and 2 are 1D chain frameworks. Compound 3 is a twofold interpenetrating 2D supramolecular framework in which the cyanide groups act as bridging ligands to link the copper centers into an unusual bilayer motif with large channels. Compounds 4,6 all possess 3D networks. Compound 4 is constructed by two parts: 2D rectangular-grid layers and {Cu2(CN)2(dmtrz)2} building blocks. Compound 5 is built up by X-shaped chains that connect each other in an ABAB arrangement to generate the3D network. The structure of 6 is a 3D network includingone-dimensional square-grid channels, with a shortest Cu2···Cu2A (A: ,x + 1, ,y + 1, ,z) distance of about 2.347(1) Å. Compound 7 features a peculiar 3D + 1D network in which 1D guest metal-organic polymer chains are filled in an unusual 3D architecture constructed by double helical host tubes. Compounds 1,7 show a systematic variation in dimensionality from 1D to 3D to 3D + 1D. The luminescence properties of these compounds have been also studied. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2006) [source]


    (Pyrazole)silver(I) and -gold(I) Complexes with Strong and Weak Hydrogen-Bonding Interactions as the Basis of One- or Two-Dimensional Structures

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 15 2004
    M. Luz Gallego
    Abstract New AuI/AgI complexes containing one or two substituted pyrazole ligands [Au(Hpzbp2)(PPh3)](p -CH3C6H4SO3) [Hpzbp2 = 3,5-bis(4- n -butoxyphenyl)pyrazole] (1) and [M(HpzR2)2]nX [HpzR2 = Hpzbp2, M = Au, n = 1, X = p -CH3C6H4SO3 (2), NO3, (3); n = 2, X = 1,5-naphthalenedisulfonate (1,5nds) (4); HpzR2 = Hpzbp2, M = Ag, n = 1, X = BF4, (5), CF3SO3, (6); HpzR2 = HpzNO2 (3,5-dimethyl-4-nitropyrazole), M = Ag, n = 1, X = BF4, (7), CF3SO3, (8)], have been prepared and characterized. Compounds 1, 2, 5 and 8 have been proved to be useful for supramolecular assembly from their single X-ray diffraction analysis. In all cases strong hydrogen bonds maintain the cationic units bonded to their corresponding counterions. The crystal packing arrangement of 1, 2 and 5 is, however, determined by weak C,H···O/F hydrogen-bonding interactions involving the remaining O/F atoms of the counterion. By contrast, for 8 a two-dimensional layer-type polymeric network is formed by ,···, (NO2···NO2) and coordinative Ag···O interactions in which the NO2 substituent on the pyrazole is implicated. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2004) [source]


    Comparative development of fiber in wild and cultivated cotton

    EVOLUTION AND DEVELOPMENT, Issue 1 2001
    Wendy L. Applequist
    SUMMARY One of the most striking examples of plant hairs is the single-celled epidermal seed trichome of cultivated cotton. The developmental morphology of these commercial "fibers" has been well-characterized in Gossypium hirsutum, but little is known about the pattern and tempo of fiber development in wild Gossypium species, all of which have short, agronomically inferior fiber. To identify developmental differences that account for variation in fiber length, and to place these differences in a phylogenetic context, we conducted SEM studies of ovules at and near the time of flowering, and generated growth curves for cultivated and wild diploid and tetraploid species. Trichome initiation was found to be similar in all taxa, with few notable differences in trichome density or early growth. Developmental profiles of the fibers of most wild species are similar, with fiber elongation terminating at about two weeks post-anthesis. In contrast, growth is extended to three weeks in the A- and F-genome diploids. This prolonged elongation period is diagnosed as a key evolutionary event in the origin of long fiber. A second evolutionary innovation is that absolute growth rate is higher in species with long fibers. Domestication of species is associated with a further prolongation of elongation at both the diploid and allopolyploid levels, suggesting the effects of parallel artificial selection. Comparative analysis of fiber growth curves lends developmental support to previous quantitative genetic suggestions that genes for fiber "improvement" in tetraploid cotton were contributed by the agronomically inferior D-genome diploid parent. [source]


    Unto Every One That Hath Shall Be Given: The Subject Areas Under The HEFCE Formula

    FINANCIAL ACCOUNTABILITY & MANAGEMENT, Issue 3 2000
    Geoffrey Whittington
    The Higher Education Funding Council for England and Wales (HEFCE) has recently revised its formulae for the distribution of teaching and research funds between universities. The new formulae are intended to increase the transparency of the allocation process and reduce the reliance on historical patterns of allocation. Analysis shows that the coefficients (costs and prices) on which the formulae depend are estimated from historical data, so that reliance on historical patterns has not been eliminated. Moreover, the process by which the coefficients were derived is not transparent and the data used are not necessarily the most appropriate. Thus, the new formulae, which lead to significant shifts in the allocation of funds between subject areas, cannot be shown to have the transparency and sound empirical basis to which HEFCE aspires. [source]


    Capital One banks on Six Sigma for strategy execution and culture transformation

    GLOBAL BUSINESS AND ORGANIZATIONAL EXCELLENCE, Issue 6 2007
    Aravind Immaneni
    When a major shift in strategy propelled Capital One Direct Banking business in a new direction, the organization,arming itself with Six Sigma expertise and capabilities,set out to change its management model, redesign its major business processes, and nurture a culture centered around customer focus and continuous improvement. Three years later, the associates have embraced this new culture of customer focus and a commitment to continuous improvement,all with enviable results to the bottom line. The Direct Banking business has been recognized both internally within Capital One and by external organizations with numerous awards for accomplishing this impressive cultural transformation. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


    Two Heads Are Not Always Better Than One: Defining Parameters for Collaboration in Training

    INDUSTRIAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 4 2008
    AMY E. CROOK
    [source]


    Victims of Domestic Violence: A Proposal for a Community Diagnosis Based on One of Two Domains of NANDA Taxonomy II

    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING TERMINOLOGIES AND CLASSIFICATION, Issue 2003
    Patricia Serpa de Souza Batista
    PURPOSE To explore and identify diagnostic components to amplify NANDA nursing diagnoses by modifying the root violence. Whereas violence is nondebatable as a diagnostic concept in nursing, other alternatives have not been identified in the two existing diagnoses. METHODS Using the case study method, this qualitative study sought to identify commonalties in a population of women who were "donnas da casa" (homemakers) in a small rural community of approximately 100 families, typical of the Brazilian northeast. The sample of 7 women was identified through a larger study that had been based on health needs of the community. Data were obtained through observation during a home visit and a semistructured interview based on NANDA Taxonomy II. Observations were focused on hygiene, manner of dress, home environment, and physical and emotional state. Data were analyzed by content and clustered into major categories. From these a profile of the women and another of the partners emerged. FINDINGS Subjects ranged in age from 33 to 43 years, and number of children between 3 and 7. One of the 7 women was literate; 5 were underweight; all were slovenly attired. They appeared sad and older than their age. The majority seemed relieved to unburden themselves to the interviewers as they went through a gamut of emotions such as sadness, anguish, and irritability expressed through crying, restlessness, changes in body language, and tone of voice. The shortage of beds was supplemented by hammocks and mats or cardboard. The women spoke of being confined to their home and of male partners who drank on weekends, thus leaving them with little money for necessities of life. There were accounts of beatings when the partner returned home after drinking, overt nonacceptance of children from previous marriages, and general destruction of the family environment. New children were regarded as just another mouth to feed. DISCUSSION The profiles pointed to the necessity of identifying a new nursing diagnosis that would be linked, only tangentially, by the root violence to the two diagnoses in NANDA Taxonomies I and II. This insight led us to consider that a new method of listing NANDA diagnoses, by root only, is imperative in the evolution of Taxonomy II. Proposed descriptors, Victims of (Axis 3) and Domestic (Axis 6) would be identified by Axes, thereby facilitating the process of classifying in the Domains and Classes. The two existing NANDA diagnoses, risk for other-directed violence and risk for self-directed violence, are proposed for classification in Class 3, Violence, in Domain 11 of Taxonomy II. Safety/Protection could, by virtue of their modification power, find anchor in another domain such as Domain 6, Self-Perception. CONCLUSIONS Although Safety/Protection seems the most logical domain for classification by root, the axes, dimensions of human responses, could pull the diagnosis in another direction, thereby dictating other nursing interventions and nursing outcomes [source]


    Highly Efficient Ligands for the Palladium-Assisted Double N -Arylation of Primary Amines for One-Sep Construction of Carbazoles

    ADVANCED SYNTHESIS & CATALYSIS (PREVIOUSLY: JOURNAL FUER PRAKTISCHE CHEMIE), Issue 4 2010
    Yibo Zhou
    Abstract A highly efficient one-pot synthesis of carbazoles via palladium-catalyzed double N -arylation of primary amines with 2,2,-dihalobiphenyls is described using a catalyst system comprised of tris(dibenzylideneacetone)dipalladium(0) (Pd2dba3) and the proazaphosphatrane P(i -BuNCH2CH2)3N (8) or its derivative (t- Bu)2PNP(i- BuNCH2CH2)3N (9a) as the ligand. The process is effective for double N -arylation of 2,2,-biphenyl dibromide, diiodide, and even dichloride with a variety of primary amines including neutral, electron-rich, electron-deficient, and sterically hindered anilines as well as aliphatic amines. [source]


    "The Outside Is the Result of an Inside": Some Sources of One of Modernism's Most Persistent Doctrines

    JOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURAL EDUCATION, Issue 1 2002
    THOMAS L. SCHUMACHER
    One of the most pervasive doctrines of composition for modernism was the necessary correspondence between the interior and the exterior as expressed in Le Corbusier's maxim, "The outside is the result of an inside." Many Modern movement architects interpreted this maxim as requiring that both "space" and "program" be expressed on the exterior of their buildings. Although Modern movement architects and theorists themselves wrote little on this subject, a number of earlier writings, including some nineteenth- and twentieth-century books by traditionalists, reveal the academic roots of these precepts. This paper traces the development of these ideas. [source]


    Diuretics Should Continue to Be One of the Preferred Initial Therapies in the Management of Hypertension

    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPERTENSION, Issue 2 2005
    Robert A. Phillips MD, Section Editor
    First page of article [source]


    Looking Out for Number One: Euphemism and Face

    JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, Issue 2 2003
    Matthew S. McGlone
    Communicators have two possible motives for referring to a distasteful topic euphemistically: to minimize threat to the addressee's face and to minimize threat to their own. The experiment reported here investigated the influence of these interrelated but distinct face motives on euphemism use. Participants described a series of photographs, one of which depicted a distasteful stimulus (e.g., dog urine), in electronic messages they sent to a fictitious remotely located recipient. Some participants were led to believe they would meet the recipient at the experiment's conclusion, whereas others believed they would not meet and therefore remain anonymous to the recipient. Euphemisms were used to describe the distasteful stimuli more frequently among participants who believed their identities would be disclosed to the recipient. These results suggest that communicators are inclined to use euphemisms more for self-presentational purposes than out of concern for their addressees' sensibilities. [source]


    The impact of multiple source feedback on management development: findings from a longitudinal study

    JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR, Issue 7 2002
    Caroline Bailey
    Despite the rapid uptake of multi-source multi-rater (MSMR) feedback systems by UK organizations, comparatively little research exists describing the actual impact on participant managers, in terms of changes in management competence. Ratings of 104 target managers (by self assessments, bosses-, first- and second-level subordinates) were investigated within the context of a developmental feedback programme in operation within an organization. The study compared ratings over two administrations (with two years between administrations) to determine: (1) changes in co-workers' perceptions of their target manager's competence, (2) changes in target managers' development needs over time, (3) factors influencing a target manager's revised self-assessment and co-workers ratings, (4) changes in congruence between self and co-workers ratings and (5) the relationship of feedback to the organization's formal performance appraisal process. Significant increases in managers' competence were perceived by the managers' themselves and by their subordinates, development needs were seen to reduce and self and co-workers ratings were largely seen to become more congruent. However, polynomial regression analyses revealed co-workers feedback at Time One was not predictive of targets' self-assessments at Time Two. The implications of these findings with regard to the utility of MSMR feedback as a tool for management development are discussed. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Changes in the Hierarchy of Value References Associated With Flying in Space

    JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY, Issue 5 2010
    Peter Suedfeld
    ABSTRACT One hundred twenty-five astronaut autobiographies, interviews, and oral histories were content analyzed and scored for references to values (Schwartz, 1992). The current study extended methods tested in 2 pilot studies of space veterans from many nations, of both sexes, and with different experiences within the history of human spaceflight. Value references reflected a high degree of concern with individualism, with Achievement, Enjoyment, and Self-direction ranked highest. There were relatively few value differences across demographic categories, demonstrating the impact of the spaceflight experience. After returning, the astronauts showed increased concern with Universalism, Spirituality, and Power (social recognition), a broadened set of references to values oriented toward the collective good. [source]


    One on One: An Interview with Patricia Hanson

    JOURNAL OF SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT, Issue 1 2002
    Patricia Hanson
    [source]


    Teaching & Learning Guide for: Victorian Life Writing

    LITERATURE COMPASS (ELECTRONIC), Issue 5 2007
    Valerie Sanders
    Author's Introduction The Victorian period was one of the great ages for life-writing. Though traditionally renowned for its monumental ,lives and letters', mainly of great men, this was also a time of self-conscious anxiety about the genre. Critics and practitioners alike were unsure who should be writing autobiography, and whether its inherent assertiveness ruled out all but public men as appropriate subjects. It was also a period of experimentation in the different genres of life-writing , whether autobiography, journals, letters, autobiographical novels, and narratives of lives combined with extracts from correspondence and diaries. Victorian life-writing therefore provides rich and complex insights into the relationship between narrative, identity, and the definition of the self. Recent advances in criticism have highlighted the more radical and non-canonical aspects of life-writing. Already a latecomer to the literary-critical tradition (life-writing was for a long time the ,poor relation' of critical theory), auto/biography stresses the hidden and silent as much as the mainstream and vocal. For that reason, study of Victorian life-writing appeals to those with an interest in gender issues, postcolonialism, ethnicity, working-class culture, the history of religion, and family and childhood studies , to name but a few of the fields with which the genre has a natural connection. Author Recommends A good place to start is the two canonical texts for Victorian life-writing: George P. Landow's edited collection, Approaches to Victorian Autobiography (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 1979) and Avrom Fleishman's Figures of Autobiography: The Language of Self-Writing in Victorian and Modern England (Berkeley and Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press, 1983). These two re-ignited interest in Victorian life-writing and in effect opened the debate about extending the canon, though both focus on the firmly canonical Ruskin and Newman, among others. By contrast, David Amigoni's recently edited collection of essays, Life-Writing and Victorian Culture (Aldershot: Ashgate 2006) shows how far the canon has exploded and expanded: it begins with a useful overview of the relationship between lives, life-writing, and literary genres, while subsequent chapters by different authors focus on a particular individual or family and their cultural interaction with the tensions of life-writing. As this volume is fairly male-dominated, readers with an interest in women's life-writing might prefer to start with Linda Peterson's chapter, ,Women Writers and Self-Writing' in Women and Literature in Britain 1800,1900, ed. Joanne Shattock (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), 209,230. This examines the shift from the eighteenth-century tradition of the chroniques scandaleuses to the professional artist's life, domestic memoir, and spiritual autobiography. Mary Jean Corbett's Representing Femininity: Middle-Class Subjectivity in Victorian and Edwardian Women's Autobiographies (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 1992) begins with material on Wordsworth and Carlyle, but ,aims to contest the boundaries of genre, gender, and the autobiographical tradition by piecing together a partial history of middle-class women's subjectivities in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries' (3). Corbett is particularly interested in the life-writing of actresses and suffragettes as well as Martineau and Oliphant, the first two women autobiographers to be welcomed into the canon in the 1980s and 90s. Laura Marcus's Auto/biographical Discourses, Theory, Criticism, Practice (Manchester and New York, NY: Manchester University Press, 1994) revises and updates the theoretical approaches to the study of life-writing, stressing both the genre's hybrid qualities, and its inherent instability: in her view, it ,comes into being as a category to be questioned' (37). Another of her fruitful suggestions is that autobiography functions as a ,site of struggle' (9), an idea that can be applied to aesthetic or ideological issues. Her book is divided between specific textual examples (such as the debate about autobiography in Victorian periodicals), and an overview of developments in critical approaches to life-writing. Her second chapter includes material on Leslie Stephen, who is also the first subject of Trev Lynn Broughton's Men of Letters, Writing Lives: Masculinity and Literary Auto/biography in the Late Victorian Period (London: Routledge, 1999) , her other being Froude's controversial Life of Carlyle. With the advent of gender studies and masculinities, there is now a return to male forms of life-writing, of which Martin A. Danahay's A Community of One: Masculine Autobiography and Autonomy in Nineteenth-Century Britain (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 1993) is a good example. Danahay argues that nineteenth-century male autobiographers present themselves as ,autonomous individuals' free of the constraints of social and familial contexts, thus emphasizing the autonomy of the self at the expense of family and community. Online Materials My impression is that Victorian life-writing is currently better served by books than by online resources. There seem to be few general Web sites other than University module outlines and reading lists; for specific authors, on the other hand, there are too many to list here. So the only site I'd recommend is The Victorian Web: http://.victorianweb.org/genre/autobioov.html This Web site has a section called ,Autobiography Overview', which begins with an essay, ,Autobiography, Autobiographicality and Self-Representation', by George P. Landow. There are sections on other aspects of Victorian autobiography, including ,Childhood as a Personal Myth', autobiography in Dickens and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and a list of ,Suggested Readings'. Each section is quite short, but summarizes the core issues succinctly. Sample Syllabus This sample syllabus takes students through the landmarks of Victorian life-writing, and demonstrates the development of a counter-culture away from the mainstream ,classic male life' (if there ever was such a thing) , culminating in the paired diaries of Arthur Munby (civil servant) and Hannah Cullwick (servant). Numerous other examples could have been chosen, but for those new to the genre, this is a fairly classic syllabus. One week only could be spent on the ,classic male texts' if students are more interested in pursuing other areas. Opening Session Open debate about the definition of Victorian ,life-writing' and its many varieties; differences between autobiography, autobiographical fiction, diary, letters, biography, collective biography, and memoir; the class could discuss samples of selected types, such as David Copperfield, Father and Son, Ruskin's Praeterita, and Gaskell's Life of Charlotte Brontė. Alternatively, why not just begin with Stave Two of Dickens's A Christmas Carol (1843), in which the First Spirit takes Scrooge back through his childhood and youth? This is a pretty unique type of life-writing, with Scrooge ,laughing and crying' as his childhood and youth are revealed to him in a series of flashbacks (a Victorian version of ,This is Your Life?'). The dual emotions are important to note at this stage and will prompt subsequent discussions of sentimentality and writing for comic effect later in the course. Week 2 Critical landmarks: discussion of important stages in the evolution of critical approaches to life-writing, including classics such as Georges Gusdorf's ,Conditions and Limits of Autobiography', in Autobiography: Essays Theoretical and Critical, ed. James Olney (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1980), 28,47; Philippe Lejeune's ,The Autobiographical Pact', in On Autobiography, ed. Paul John Eakin, trans. Katherine Leary (original essay 1973; Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1989), 3,30; and Paul De Man's ,Autobiography as De-Facement', Modern Language Notes 94 (1979): 919,30. This will provide a critical framework for the rest of the course. Weeks 3,4 Extracts from the ,male classics' of Victorian life-writing: J. S. Mill's Autobiography (1873), Ruskin's Praeterita (1885,89), and Newman's Apologia pro Vita Sua (1864). What do they think is important and what do they miss out? How open or otherwise are they about their family and personal lives? Are these essentially ,lives of the mind'? How self-aware are they of autobiographical structures? Are there already signs that the ,classic male life' is fissured and unconventional? An option here would be to spend the first week focusing on male childhoods, and the second on career trajectories. Perhaps use Martin Danahay's theory of the ,autonomous individual' (see above) to provide a critical framework here: how is the ,Other' (parents, Harriet Taylor) treated in these texts? Weeks 5,6 Victorian women's autobiography: Harriet Martineau's Autobiography (1877) and Margaret Oliphant's Autobiography (1899): in many ways these are completely unalike, Martineau's being ordered around the idea of steady mental growth and public recognition, while Oliphant's is deeply emotional and disordered. Can we therefore generalize about ,women's autobiography'? What impact did they have on Victorian theories of life-writing? Students might like to reconsider Jane Eyre as an ,autobiography' alongside these and compare scenes of outright rebellion. The way each text handles time and chronology is also fascinating: Martineau's arranged to highlight stages of philosophical development, while Oliphant's switches back and forth in a series of ,flashbacks' to her happier youth as her surviving two sons die ,in the text', interrupting her story. Week 7 Black women's autobiography: how does Wonderful Adventures of Mrs Seacole in Many Lands (1857) differ from the Martineau and Oliphant autobiographies? What new issues and genre influences are introduced by a Caribbean/travelogue perspective? Another key text would be Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the Life of a Slave-Girl (1861). How representative and how individual are these texts? Do these authors see themselves as representing their race as well as their class and sex? Week 8 Working-class autobiography: Possible texts here could be John Burnett's Useful Toil (Allen Lane, 1974, Penguin reprint); Carolyn Steedman's edition of John Pearman's The Radical Soldier's Tale (Routledge, 1988) and the mini oral biographies in Henry Mayhew's London Labour and the London Poor (1861,62) (e.g., the Water-Cress Seller). There is also a new Broadview edition of Factory Lives (2007) edited by James R. Simmons, with an introduction by Janice Carlisle. This contains four substantial autobiographical texts (three male, one female) from the mid-nineteenth century, with supportive materials. Samuel Bamford's Passages in the Life of a Radical (1839,42; 1844) and Early Days (1847,48) are further options. Students should also read Regenia Gagnier's Subjectivities: A History of Self-Representation in Britain 1832,1910 (Oxford University Press, 1991). Week 9 Biography: Victorian Scandal: focus on two scandals emerging from Victorian life-writing: Gaskell's Life of Charlotte Brontė (1857) (the Branwell Brontė/Lady Scott adultery scandal), and Froude's allegations of impotence in his Life of Carlyle (1884). See Trev Broughton's ,Impotence, Biography, and the Froude-Carlyle Controversy: ,Revelations on Ticklish Topics', Journal of the History of Sexuality, 7.4 (Apr. 1997): 502,36 (in addition to her Men of Letters cited above). The biographies of the Benson family written about and by each other, especially E. F. Benson's Our Family Affairs 1867,1896 (London: Cassell, 1920) reveal the domestic unhappiness of the family of Gladstone's Archbishop of Canterbury, Edward White Benson, whose children and wife were all to some extent homosexual or lesbian. Another option would be Edmund Gosse's Father and Son (1907) in which the son's critical stance towards his father is uneasy and complex in its mixture of comedy, pity, shame, and resentment. Week 10 Diaries: Arthur Munby's and Hannah Cullwick's relationship (they were secretly married, but lived as master and servant) and diaries, Munby: Man of Two Worlds: The Life and Diaries of Arthur Munby, ed. Derek Hudson (John Murray, 1972), and The Diaries of Hannah Cullwick: Victorian Maidservant, ed. Liz Stanley (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1984): issues of gender and class identity; the idealization of the working woman; the two diaries compared. Half the class could read one diary and half the other and engage in a debate about the social and sexual fantasies adopted by each diarist. It would also be sensible to leave time for an overview debate about the key issues of Victorian life-writing which have emerged from this module, future directions for research, and current critical developments. Focus Questions 1To what extent does Victorian autobiography tell an individual success story? Discuss with reference to two or three contrasting examples. 2,All life writing is time writing' (Jens Brockmeier). Examine the way in which Victorian life-writers handle the interplay of narrative, memory, and time. 3To what extent do you agree with the view that Victorian life-writing was ,a form of communication that appeared intimate and confessional, but which was in fact distant and controlled' (Donna Loftus)? 4,Bamford was an autobiographer who did not write an autobiography' (Martin Hewitt). If autobiography is unshaped and uninterpreted, what alternative purposes does it have in narrating a life to the reader? 5,Victorian life-writing is essentially experimental, unstable, and unpredictable.' How helpful is this comment in helping you to understand the genre? [source]


    Global map of the prevalence of symptoms of rhinoconjunctivitis in children: The International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) Phase Three

    ALLERGY, Issue 1 2009
    N. Aļt-Khaled
    Background:, Phase One of the International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) measured the global patterns of prevalence and severity of symptoms of rhinoconjunctivitis in children in 1993,1997. Methods:, International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood Phase Three was a cross-sectional survey performed 5,10 years after Phase One using the same methodology. Phase Three covered all of the major regions of the world and involved 1 059 053 children of 2 age groups from 236 centres in 98 countries. Results:, The average overall prevalence of current rhinoconjunctivitis symptoms was 14.6% for the 13- to 14-year old children (range 1.0,45%). Variation in the prevalence of severe rhinoconjunctivitis symptoms was observed between centres (range 0.0,5.1%) and regions (range 0.4% in western Europe to 2.3% in Africa), with the highest prevalence being observed mainly in the centres from middle and low income countries, particularly in Africa and Latin America. Co-morbidity with asthma and eczema varied from 1.6% in the Indian sub-continent to 4.7% in North America. For 6- to 7-year old children, the average prevalence of rhinoconjunctivitis symptoms was 8.5%, and large variations in symptom prevalence were also observed between regions, countries and centres. Discussion:, Wide global variations exist in the prevalence of current rhinoconjunctivitis symptoms, being higher in high vs low income countries, but the prevalence of severe symptoms was greater in less affluent countries. Co-morbidity with asthma is high particularly in Africa, North America and Oceania. This global map of symptom prevalence is of clinical importance for health professionals. [source]


    Can One Sincerely Say What One Doesn't Believe?

    MIND & LANGUAGE, Issue 1 2006
    Steven Gross
    First page of article [source]


    The Difference Of Theology and Some Philosophies of Nothing

    MODERN THEOLOGY, Issue 3 2001
    Conor Cunningham
    This article argues that theology thinks differently than philosophy because it is able to think an ontological difference and differences. Theology is able to do this, I argue, because of a trinitarian understanding of creation. A trinitarian understanding of creation does not rest upon any dualism which could domesticate difference. For example, according to Aquinas, creation is not a change. Consequently, there is no dualism of before and after. This means that God does not look to some external register from which to understand what difference is (as is the case with the Neoplatonist One, who can ,create' only one effect, and must do so necessarily). God creates difference qua difference, from divine unity. Furthermore, I argue that all knowledge is related to difference. For this reason, knowledge is itself an eschatological anticipation of the beatific vision. [source]


    Providing the science, technology, engineering and mathematics skills of tomorrow

    NEW TECHNOLOGY, WORK AND EMPLOYMENT, Issue 3 2009
    Pooran Wynarczyk
    This paper investigates the impact of the F1 (Formula One) in Schools Challenge on the supply of future skilled workforce in the North East England. The findings, based on a survey of five schools (finalists), demonstrate the profound impact of this initiative on male and female school students' future education and career plans. [source]


    Management Lessons From Mayo Clinic: Inside One of the World's Most Admired Service Organizations by Leonard L. Berry and Kent D. Seltman

    PERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 2 2009
    Article first published online: 12 MAY 200
    First page of article [source]