Door

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences

Kinds of Door

  • back door
  • new door
  • revolving door


  • Selected Abstracts


    A Door of Hope Re-opened: The Fifth Monarchy, King Charles and King Jesus

    JOURNAL OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY, Issue 1 2008
    BERNARD CAPP
    A Door of Hope was the manifesto of the Fifth Monarchists' desperate uprising in London in January 1661, a few months after the Restoration of Charles II. While the rising itself is well known, its manifesto has never been examined in detail. Probably based on a sermon to Venner's congregation, it displays a defiant conviction that the Restoration could be understood as part of God's providential plan, the next step towards the imminent kingdom of Christ on earth. But it also reaches out to a much wider constituency, all the supporters of the "Good Old Cause," offering a programme that might appeal to many radicals. And the author draws on secular, republican discourse to buttress his apocalyptic claims, revealing close links between even the most extreme Fifth Monarchists and wider currents of interregnum radicalism. [source]


    Duty and Justice at "Every Man's Door": The Grand Jury Charges of Chief Justice John Jay, 1790,1794

    JOURNAL OF SUPREME COURT HISTORY, Issue 3 2006
    JOHN P. KAMINSKI
    "It is the Fortune of few to chuse their Situation,it is the Duty & Interest of all to accommodate themselves to the one which Providence chuses for them."1 So said John Jay, Chief Justice of the United States. Duty was paramount in the lives of Jay and many of his contemporaries of the founding generation. [source]


    Stopping the Revolving Door: Increasing Teacher Retention

    POLITICS & POLICY, Issue 5 2008
    Sam Brill
    Schools around the nation are facing an alarming phenomenon: beginning teachers are leaving schools at a startling rate. Thirty-three percent of teachers leave their schools in the first three years, 46 percent after five years. These high attrition rates result in inexperienced teachers, high economic costs as teachers must be continually hired and trained, and a lack of continuity that makes institutional development and planning difficult. There is a plethora of causes for teacher attrition, although most involve nonsalary-related dissatisfaction, such as excessive workloads and high-stakes testing, disruptive student behavior, poor leadership and administration within schools, and views of teaching as a temporary profession. Likewise, the most successful remedies to increase teacher retention are not salary-based. Several studies have found that moderate salary increases are only marginally effective; raises of 20 percent would be needed to make a significant impact. Rather, improving teachers' work environment and professional development are more cost effective and influential in convincing teachers to remain. An induction and mentoring program in California, for example, reduced teacher attrition by 26 percent in just two years. We conclude, therefore, that well-operated induction and mentoring programs are the best method for increasing teacher retention. [source]


    The Long and Winding Road: Can Psychogeriatrics Point a Way to the Door of Psychiatric Services in Japan?

    PSYCHOGERIATRICS, Issue 4 2001
    Heii Arai
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Finding a Way Through the Hospital Door: The Role of EMTALA in Public Health Emergencies

    THE JOURNAL OF LAW, MEDICINE & ETHICS, Issue 4 2003
    Sara Rosenbaum
    First page of article [source]


    Jimmying the Back Door of Literature: Dashiell Hammett's Blue-Collar Modernism

    THE JOURNAL OF POPULAR CULTURE, Issue 5 2008
    W. RUSSEL GRAY
    First page of article [source]


    Ignoring the Front Door: U.S. Hospital Operations circa 2009

    ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 7 2009
    Brent R. Asplin MD
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Preparing for Your Next Shift: Check Bias at the Door

    ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 10 2008
    Robert E. O'Connor MD
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    How Elephants are Opening Doors: Developmental Neuroethology, Attachment and Social Context

    ETHOLOGY, Issue 5 2007
    G. A. Bradshaw
    Ethology's renewed interest in developmental context coincides with recent insights from neurobiology and psychology on early attachment. Attachment and social learning are understood as fundamental mechanisms in development that shape core processes responsible for informing behaviour throughout a lifetime. Each field uniquely contributes to the creation of an integrated model and encourages dialogue between Tinbergen's four analytical levels: ethology in its underscoring of social systems of behaviour and context, psychology in its emphasis on socio-affective attachment transactions, and neuroscience in its explication of the coupled development of brain and behaviour. We review the relationship between developmental context and behaviour outcome as a topic shared by the three disciplines, with a specific focus on underlying neuroethological mechanisms. This interdisciplinary convergence is illustrated through the example of abnormal behaviour in wild African elephants (Loxodonta africana) that has been systematically observed in human-caused altered social contexts. Such disruptions impair normative socially mediated neuroendocrinological development leading to psychobiological dysregulation that expresses as non-normative behaviour. Aberrant behaviour in wild elephants provides a critical field example of what has been established in ex situ and clinical studies but has been largely absent in wild populations: a concrete link between effects of human disturbance on social context, and short- and long-term neuroethology. By so doing, it brings attention to the significant change in theories of behaviour that has been occurring across disciplines , namely, the merging of psychobiological and ethological perspectives into common, cross-species, human inclusive models. [source]


    Opening Windows, Closing Doors: Ethical Dilemmas in Educational Action Research

    JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY OF EDUCATION, Issue 3 2001
    Les Tickle
    The chapter records personal accounts of the author's dealings with dilemmas encountered in the research methods literature and in the field of practice, as an action researcher and teacher educator. It draws on Mary Chamberlain's Fenwomen to illustrate some of the dangers of ethnographic research. Using data from two instances, one in a pre-service initial teacher-training programme and the other in teacher induction, the author draws out the tensions between the ,need to know' in order to act professionally, and the ,need to protect' in order to do the same. [source]


    Behind Closed Doors: Publicity, Secrecy, and the Quality of Deliberation

    THE JOURNAL OF POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY, Issue 4 2004
    Simone Chambers
    First page of article [source]


    Revolving Doors: New Zealand's Health Reforms , The Continuing Saga

    AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, Issue 4 2010
    Article first published online: 3 AUG 2010
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    A Polymorphic Dynamic Network Loading Model

    COMPUTER-AIDED CIVIL AND INFRASTRUCTURE ENGINEERING, Issue 2 2008
    Nie Yu (Marco)
    The polymorphism, realized through a general node-link interface and proper discretization, offers several prominent advantages. First of all, PDNL allows road facilities in the same network to be represented by different traffic flow models based on the tradeoff of efficiency and realism and/or the characteristics of the targeted problem. Second, new macroscopic link/node models can be easily plugged into the framework and compared against existing ones. Third, PDNL decouples links and nodes in network loading, and thus opens the door to parallel computing. Finally, PDNL keeps track of individual vehicular quanta of arbitrary size, which makes it possible to replicate analytical loading results as closely as desired. PDNL, thus, offers an ideal platform for studying both analytical dynamic traffic assignment problems of different kinds and macroscopic traffic simulation. [source]


    Alternative therapy in pruritus

    DERMATOLOGIC THERAPY, Issue 2 2003
    Larry E. Millikan
    ABSTRACT: Because of its multitude of origins, the symptom complex of pruritus has a plethora of purported remedies and few therapeutic indications. Very few topical and systemic FDA approved medications have the indication of pruritus. Specific therapy still awaits a better definition of the exact physiologic events in chronic pruritus. Hence most medications actually focus on the central nervous system,the peripheral receptors,and the lack of specific physiologic targets has inhibited pharmacologic development. The resulting gap has opened the door to a variety of alternative therapies. [source]


    Neurophysiologic evaluation of early cognitive development in high-risk infants and toddlers

    DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES RESEARCH REVIEW, Issue 4 2005
    Raye-Ann deRegnier
    Abstract New knowledge of the perceptual, discriminative, and memory capabilities of very young infants has opened the door to further evaluation of these abilities in infants who have risk factors for cognitive impairments. A neurophysiologic technique that has been very useful in this regard is the recording of event-related potentials (ERPs). The event-related potential (ERP) technique is widely used by cognitive neuroscientists to study cognitive abilities such as discrimination, attention, and memory. This method has many attractive attributes for use in infants and children as it is relatively inexpensive, does not require sedation, has excellent temporal resolution, and can be used to evaluate early cognitive development in preverbal infants with limited behavioral repertories. In healthy infants and children, ERPs have been used to gain a further understanding of early cognitive development and the effect of experience on brain function. Recently, ERPs have been used to elucidate atypical memory development in infants of diabetic mothers, difficulties with perception and discrimination of speech sounds in infants at risk for dyslexia, and multiple areas of cognitive differences in extremely premature infants. Atypical findings seen in high-risk infants have correlated with later cognitive outcomes, but the sensitivity and specificity of the technique has not been studied, and thus evaluation of individual infants is not possible at this time. With further research, this technique may be very useful in identifying children with cognitive deficits during infancy. Because even young infants can be examined with ERPs, this technique is likely to be helpful in the development of focused early intervention programs used to improve cognitive function in high-risk infants and toddlers. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. MRDD Research Reviews 2005;11:317,324. [source]


    ICNA: an open door to citizenship of the world

    DEVELOPMENTAL MEDICINE & CHILD NEUROLOGY, Issue 7 2007
    Robert Ouvrier
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Default and Punishment in General Equilibrium,

    ECONOMETRICA, Issue 1 2005
    Pradeep Dubey
    We extend the standard model of general equilibrium with incomplete markets to allow for default and punishment by thinking of assets as pools. The equilibrating variables include expected delivery rates, along with the usual prices of assets and commodities. By reinterpreting the variables, our model encompasses a broad range of adverse selection and signalling phenomena in a perfectly competitive, general equilibrium framework. Perfect competition eliminates the need for lenders to compute how the size of their loan or the price they quote might affect default rates. It also makes for a simple equilibrium refinement, which we propose in order to rule out irrational pessimism about deliveries of untraded assets. We show that refined equilibrium always exists in our model, and that default, in conjunction with refinement, opens the door to a theory of endogenous assets. The market chooses the promises, default penalties, and quantity constraints of actively traded assets. [source]


    The impact of cigarette deprivation and cigarette availability on cue,reactivity in smokers

    ADDICTION, Issue 2 2010
    Steffani R. Bailey
    ABSTRACT Aims This experiment was conducted to determine the impact of cigarette deprivation and cigarette availability on reactivity measures to cigarette cues. Participants Smokers were recruited who were 18 years of age or older, not attempting to quit or cut down on their smoking, smoked at least 20 cigarettes daily, had been smoking regularly for past year and had an expired carbon monoxide level of at least 10 parts per million. Design Smokers were assigned randomly to abstain from smoking for 24 hours (n = 51) or continue smoking their regular amount (n = 50). Twenty-four hours later, they were exposed to trials of either a lit cigarette or a glass of water with a 0, 50 or 100% probability of being able to sample the cue on each trial. Craving, mood, heart rate, skin conductance, puff topography and latency to access door to sample the cue were measured. Findings Both exposure to cigarette cues and increasing availability of those cues produced higher levels of craving to smoke. Deprivation produced a generalized increase in craving. There was no consistent evidence, however, that even under conditions of high cigarette availability, deprived smokers were sensitized selectively to presentations of cigarette cues. Conclusions The data suggest that, even under conditions of immediate cigarette availability, deprivation and cue presentations have independent, additive effects on self-reported craving levels in smokers. [source]


    The Public Role of Teaching: To keep the door closed

    EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY AND THEORY, Issue 5-6 2010
    Goele Cornelissen
    Abstract In this article, I turn my attention to the figure of the ignorant master, Joseph Jacotot, that is depicted in The Ignorant Schoolmaster. Five Lessons in Intellectual Emancipation (1991). I will show that the voice of Jacotot can actually be read as a reaction against the progressive figure of the teacher which, following Rancière's view, can be seen as effecting a stultification. In some respects, however, Rancière's analysis of the pedagogical order no longer seems to be valid in today's partly reconfigured, pedagogical order that depicts the teacher in terms of facilitation. Yet, the figure of the facilitator can be seen as effecting a stultification as well. Therefore, I will stress that Jacotot's voice is highly relevant today. The most important difference between the figure of the (old and current) figure of the stultifyer and that of the ignorant master is identified in their starting point. The stultifying master starts from the assumption of inequality. S/he transforms taught material (words, text, images, etc.) into objects of knowledge or resources for competence development that open the door to another world. The ignorant master (Jacotot) assumes equal intelligence and draws attention to a thing in common. According to Rancière, the ignorant master keeps the door closed and puts his/her students in the presence of a thing in common. [source]


    New Mexico's 1998 drive-up liquor window closure.

    ADDICTION, Issue 5 2004
    Study II: economic impact on owners
    ABSTRACT Aims This study examined the economic impact of the New Mexico legislative action closing drive-up liquor windows on the retail establishments that operated them. Design A telephone survey was conducted 20 months after the closure seeking information and owners' opinions about how their outlets had changed since the closure and how this affected their business. In addition, 2 years of aggregated pre- and post-closure total gross receipts revenues were obtained from the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department, with convenience stores as a comparison group. Findings Interviews were completed for 149 of 220 establishments. Over one-quarter of former drive-up liquor windows (28%) had been converted to ,step-in' sales, defined as an outside door where customers can stop and enter the premises while their car is running. Almost two-thirds (61%) of owners reported decreased annual gross revenues following closure, with a reported average 15% reduction in alcohol sales. This is consistent with findings of decreased gross receipts for operators of non-urban, but not urban, drive-up liquor windows compared to convenience store gross receipts. Almost three-quarters (72%) of those surveyed would re-open the drive-up window if the law were rescinded. Conclusion Over one-quarter of the drive-up owners converted to step-in alcohol sales that still allow a form of drive-up liquor sales. Despite this, the forced closure of New Mexico's drive-up liquor windows negatively impacted total sales and liquor sales revenues of establishments that operated them. [source]


    After the Health Check What is the Future for the Common Agricultural Policy?

    EUROCHOICES, Issue 1 2009
    Nach dem Gesundheitscheck: Wie geht es weiter mit der Gemeinsamen Agrarpolitik?
    Summary After the Health Check What is the Future for the Common Agricultural Policy? The CAP has now completed another stage in its development. The Health Check negotiating marathon has ended. The Czech Republic has been against unequal conditions for member states as these deform fair competition and the common market. Progressive modulation in the originally proposed form would have created barriers to a unified Europe, thus going against the motto of the Czech presidency ,Europe without Barriers'. The Czech Republic can certainly be satisfied with the essence of the compromise. The cancellation of the milk quota in 2015 is a liberalising measure, and as such we support it. The Health Check opens the door to the Czech presidency for a discussion on the elimination of unfair differences in direct payments between member states and we will definitely take up the opportunity. After 2013 the CAP will have to take much greater account of the situation following the unprecedented expansion of the EU in 2004 and 2006. For the Czech Republic, a further reinforcing of freedom in decision making for farmers and their focus on the specific needs of the local, community and global market is fundamental. Further simplification of the CAP and ,better regulation', focussing on a reduction in the administrative burden on farmers, is one of the priority challenges. La PAC a maintenant atteint un autre stade de son développement. Le marathon de négociation du bilan de santé a abouti. La République tchèque s'est opposée aux conditions inégales proposées aux pays membres car elles faussent la concurrence équitable et le marché commun. La modulation progressive sous sa forme initiale aurait créé des barrières dans une Europe unifiée, ce qui va à l'encontre de la devise de la présidence tchèque "Une Europe sans barrières". La République tchèque peut certainement être satisfaite de l'essence du compromis. La suppression du système des quotas laitiers en 2015 est une mesure de libéralisation et nous la soutenons en tant que telle. Le bilan de santé ouvre la porte à la présidence tchèque pour une discussion sur l'élimination des différences injustes entre paiements directs selon le pays membre et nous profiterons bien entendu de l'occasion. Après 2013, la PAC devra prendre davantage en compte la situation créée par l'élargissement sans précédent de l'UE entre 2004 et 2006. Pour la République tchèque, il est fondamental de renforcer encore la liberté qu'ont les agriculteurs pour prendre leurs décisions et de s'orienter vers les besoins spécifiques du marché local, communautaire et mondial. Un des défis prioritaires est de continuer à simplifier la PAC et d'améliorer la réglementation en s'orientant vers une réduction de la charge administrative qui pèse sur les agriculteurs. Eine weitere Phase in der Entwicklung der Gemeinsamen Agrarpolitik ist nun abgeschlossen. Der Verhandlungsmarathon hinsichtlich des Gesundheitschecks ist vorbei. Die Tschechische Republik war dagegen, dass für die Mitgliedsstaaten unterschiedliche Bedingungen gelten sollen, da diese den fairen Wettbewerb und den gemeinsamen Markt verzerren. Eine progressive Modulation in der ursprünglich vorgeschlagenen Form hätte einem einheitlichen Europa Steine in den Weg gelegt und somit dem Motto "Europa ohne Grenzen" der tschechischen Präsidentschaft widersprochen. Die Tschechische Republik hat zweifellos mit dem Kompromiss ein im Wesentlichen zufriedenstellendes Ergebnis erzielt. Die Abschaffung der Milchquote bis 2015 ist eine Maßnahme zur Liberalisierung, und als solche findet sie unsere Unterstützung. Der Gesundheitscheck eröffnet der tschechischen Präsidentschaft die Diskussion über die Beseitigung unterschiedlich hoher , und somit ungerechter , Direktzahlungen an die Mitgliedsstaaten. Diese Gelegenheit werden wir uns nicht entgehen lassen. Nach 2013 wird sich die GAP sehr viel mehr mit der Situation beschäftigen müssen, die sich aus der beispiellosen EU-Erweiterung aus den Jahren 2004 und 2006 ergibt. Für die Tschechische Republik ist es von grundlegender Bedeutung, die Entscheidungsfreiheit für Landwirte und deren Orientierung an den lokalen, regionalen und globalen Märkten fortwährend zu stärken. Die weitere Vereinfachung der GAP und eine "bessere Regulierung", die den Verwaltungsaufwand für Landwirte verringern soll, gehören zu den vorrangigen Zielen. [source]


    Current-Voltage Characterisation of Monolayer-Supported Au-Nanoclusters by Scanning Tunnelling Microscopy under Ambient Conditions

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 18 2005
    Volker Jacobsen
    Abstract The current-voltage characteristics of a double-tunnel junction based on a gold crystallite with a diameter of ca. 2 nm, separated from a gold surface by ca. 1 nm was investigated by scanning tunnelling microscopy. The sample architecture was built by attaching gold nanoparticles covered with 2-mercaptosuccinic acid to an atomically flat gold surface which was covered by a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) of 6-amino-1-hexanethiol. Surface plasmon and infrared spectroscopy as well as STM imaging were employed to identify suitable preparation conditions and prove the existence of the desired architecture. No reproducible steps in the current-voltage characteristics are observed on this system under ambient conditions. Nonetheless, a sound signature for tunnelling through the double-tunnel junction is established by a quantitative fit of the averaged experimental data to a theoretical model of a single-tunnel junction. Firstly, the current on the particle is strongly reduced at low absolute external voltage and secondly the current voltage characteristics are asymmetric. Since both deviations from theory are absent in reference experiments on the bare monolayer, they may serve as a robust signature for double-tunnel junctions and open the door to the investigation of single-electron tunnelling under ambient conditions. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2005) [source]


    Person-factors in the California Adult Q-Set: closing the door on personality trait types?,

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY, Issue 1 2006
    Robert R. McCrae
    To investigate recent hypotheses of replicable personality types, we examined data from 1540 self-sorts on the California Adult Q-Set (CAQ). Conventional factor analysis of the items showed the expected Five-Factor Model (FFM). Inverse factor analysis across random subsamples showed that none of the previously reported person-factors were replicated. Only two factors were replicable, and, most importantly, these factors were contaminated by mean level differences in item endorsement. Results were not due to sample size or age heterogeneity. Subsequent inverse factor analysis of standardized items revealed at least three replicable factors; when five person-factors were extracted, they could be aligned precisely with the dimensions of the FFM. The major factors of person similarity can be accounted for entirely in terms of the FFM, consistent with the hypothesis that there are no replicable personality types in the CAQ. Published in 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Death-associated protein kinase (DAPK) and signal transduction: blebbing in programmed cell death

    FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 1 2010
    Miia Bovellan
    Death-associated protein kinase (DAPK) regulates many distinct signalling events, including apoptosis, autophagy and membrane blebbing. The role of DAPK in the blebbing process is only beginning to be understood and, in this review, we will first summarize what is known about the cytoskeletal proteins and signalling cascades that participate in bleb growth and retraction and then highlight how DAPK integrates with these processes. Membrane blebs are quasispherical cellular protrusions that have a lifetime of approximately 2 min. During expansion, blebs are initially devoid of actin, although actomyosin contractions provide the motive force for growth. Once growth slows, an actin cortex reforms and actin-bundling and contractile proteins are recruited. Finally, myosin contraction powers bleb retraction into the cell body. Blebbing occurs in a variety of cell types, from cancerous cells to embryonic cells, and can be seen in cellular phenomena as diverse as cell spreading, movement, cytokinesis and cell death. Although the machinery that executes this is still undefined in detail, the conservation of blebbing phenomenon suggests a fundamental role in metazoans and DAPK offers a door to further dissect this fascinating process. [source]


    Full-scale study on combustion characteristics of an upholstered chair under different boundary conditions,Part 1: Ignition at the seat center

    FIRE AND MATERIALS, Issue 6 2009
    Q. Y. Xie
    Abstract The objective of this work is to investigate the effects of boundary conditions on the combustion characteristic of combustible items in a room. A series of full-scale experiments were carried out in the ISO 9705 fire test room with an upholstered chair at four typical locations, i.e. at the middle of side wall, at the center of the room with the seat toward the door, at the center of the room with the seat toward inside of the room, at the room corner, respectively. Ignition was achieved through a BS No.7 wooden crib at the geometric center of the seat surface for each test. Besides the heat release rate (HRR), four thermocouple trees were placed around the chair to monitor detailed temperature distributions during the combustion process of an upholstered chair. The results indicated that the boundary conditions had some effects on the combustion behavior of a chair in a room. It was shown that there were clearly two main peak HRRs for the cases of a chair being clung to the side wall or at the corner. However, there was only one main peak HRR when the chair was placed at the center of the room, either outwards or inwards. In addition, the results of the two cases of chairs being at the center indicate that the maximum HRR (about 829,kW) for the chair seat toward the door was relatively larger than the maximum HRR (about 641,kW) for the chair seat toward inside of the room. It was suggested that the special complex structure of a chair was also a considerable factor for the effect of boundary conditions on the combustion behavior of a chair in an enclosure. Furthermore, the measured temperature distributions around the chair also illustrated the effects of boundary condition on the combustion behavior of a chair in a room. It was suggested that although HRR was one of the most important fire parameters, HRR mainly represented the comprehensive fire behavior of a combustible item. In order to develop more suitable room fire dynamic models, more detailed information such as the surrounding temperature distributions measured by the thermocouple trees are useful. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    High Mechanical Performance Composite Conductor: Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotube Sheet/Bismaleimide Nanocomposites

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 20 2009
    Qunfeng Cheng
    Abstract Multi-walled carbon nanotube (MWNT)-sheet-reinforced bismaleimide (BMI) resin nanocomposites with high concentrations (,60,wt%) of aligned MWNTs are successfully fabricated. Applying simple mechanical stretching and prepregging (pre-resin impregnation) processes on initially randomly dispersed, commercially available sheets of millimeter-long MWNTs leads to substantial alignment enhancement, good dispersion, and high packing density of nanotubes in the resultant nanocomposites. The tensile strength and Young's modulus of the nanocomposites reaches 2,088,MPa and 169,GPa, respectively, which are very high experimental results and comparable to the state-of-the-art unidirectional IM7 carbon-fiber-reinforced composites for high-performance structural applications. The nanocomposites demonstrate unprecedentedly high electrical conductivity of 5,500,S cm,1 along the alignment direction. Such unique integration of high mechanical properties and electrical conductance opens the door for developing polymeric composite conductors and eventually structural composites with multifunctionalities. New fracture morphology and failure modes due to self-assembly and spreading of MWNT bundles are also observed. [source]


    Modesty and Excellence: Gender and Sports Culture in Dutch Catholic Schooling, 1900,40

    GENDER & HISTORY, Issue 1 2008
    Marjet Derks
    This article focuses on the construction of gendered identities in Dutch schools run by religious orders during the process of Catholic emancipation. It discusses the fragility of identity, the simultaneity of tradition and modernity, and the role that gender plays in all these interactions. Two schools in the city of Nijmegen, the Netherlands, are compared during the first half of the twentieth century: the Jesuit institution for boys, Canisius College, and the Ursuline college for girls next door, Mater Dei. At both, sport played an important role in the transmission of notions of Catholicism and gender. [source]


    Isolation of Solid Solution Phases in Size-Controlled LixFePO4 at Room Temperature

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 3 2009
    Genki Kobayashi
    Abstract State-of-the-art LiFePO4 technology has now opened the door for lithium ion batteries to take their place in large-scale applications such as plug-in hybrid vehicles. A high level of safety, significant cost reduction, and huge power generation are on the verge of being guaranteed for the most advanced energy storage system. The room-temperature phase diagram is essential to understand the facile electrode reaction of LixFePO4 (0,<,x,<,1), but it has not been fully understood. Here, intermediate solid solution phases close to x,=,0 and x,=,1 have been isolated at room temperature. Size-dependent modification of the phase diagram, as well as the systematic variation of lattice parameters inside the solid-solution compositional domain closely related to the electrochemical redox potential, are demonstrated. These experimental results reveal that the excess capacity that has been observed above and below the two-phase equilibrium potential is largely due to the bulk solid solution, and thus support the size-dependent miscibility gap model. [source]


    Efficient Luminescence from Rare-Earth Fluoride Nanoparticles with Optically Functional Shells,

    ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS, Issue 7 2006
    M. Lezhnina
    Abstract Rare-earth fluorides are a class of materials with considerable potential in optical applications. Fluoride lattices typically permit high coordination numbers for the hosted rare-earth ions, and the high ionicity of the rare-earth-to-fluorine bond leads to a wide bandgap and very low vibrational energies. These factors make rare-earth fluorides very useful in optical applications employing vacuum ultraviolet and near-infrared excitation. The preparation of nanometer-sized particles has opened the door for new properties and devices if the performance of their macroscopic counterparts can be conserved in the nanometer regime. However, at small particle sizes, defect surface states and adhering water reduce the optical efficiency. These shortcomings can be reduced by applying protective shells around the luminescent cores, which can also be involved in the luminescent process. [source]


    A Versatile "Click" Chemistry Precursor of Functional Polystyrene Nanoparticles

    ADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 28 2010
    Lorea Oria
    The synthesis of a versatile "click" chemistry precursor of functional polystyrene nanoparticles is reported. The resulting nanoparticles thereof offer inherent characteristics of ultrasmall polymeric nanoparticles (size ,4 nm) plus interesting functionalization possibilities, opening the door to new hybrid, soft nano-objects, bridging the gap between synthetic and natural polymers. [source]