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Particular Moments (particular + moment)
Selected AbstractsWillingness to Communicate in the Second Language: Understanding the Decision to Speak as a Volitional ProcessMODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, Issue 4 2007PETER D. MACINTYRE Previous research has devoted a great deal of attention to describing the long-term patterns and relationships among trait-level or situation-specific variables. The present discussion extracts kernels of wisdom, based on the literatures on language anxiety and language learning motivation, that are used to frame the argument that choosing to initiate communication at a particular moment in time can be conceptualized as a volitional (freely chosen) process. The result is a degree of willingness to communicate (WTC) with the potential to rise and fall rapidly as the situation changes. Previous research based on both qualitative and quantitative methodologies is described that demonstrates the complexity of the processes involved in creating WTC. It is argued that methodologies must be adapted to focus upon the dynamic process of choosing to initiate or avoid second language communication when the opportunity arises. [source] Moment independent and variance-based sensitivity analysis with correlations: An application to the stability of a chemical reactorINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL KINETICS, Issue 11 2008E. Borgonovo Recent works have attracted interest toward sensitivity measures that use the entire model output distribution, without dependence on any of its particular moments (e.g., variance). However, the computation of moment-independent importance measures in the presence of dependencies among model inputs has not been dealt with yet. This work has two purposes. On the one hand, to introduce moment independent techniques in the analysis of chemical reaction models. On the other hand, to allow their computation in the presence of correlations. To do so, a new approach based on Gibbs sampling is presented that allows the joint estimation of variance-based and moment independent sensitivity measures in the presence of correlations. The application to the stability of a chemical reactor is then discussed, allowing full consideration of historical data that included a correlation coefficient of 0.7 between two of the model parameters. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 40: 687,698, 2008 [source] Negotiating conflict within the constraints of social hierarchies in Korean American discourseJOURNAL OF SOCIOLINGUISTICS, Issue 3 2003M. Agnes Kang This paper provides an interactional account of conflict negotiation strategies in Korean American discourse. With specific attention to the sociolinguistic phenomenon of codeswitching among Korean Americans, I argue that speaking Korean at particular moments evokes ideologies of social hierarchy that serve to mitigate potential conflicts. The Korean social ideology of relative status has a major influence on how bilingual Korean Americans interact with one another, regardless of whether they are using Korean or English. The use of codeswitching, among other mitigating strategies in discourse, serves to instantiate these hierarchical relationships and introduces particular social norms that guide the observable actions used in navigating meaning and social relations. The data analyzed here show how the evocation of Korean social ideologies may serve as an identifiable characteristic of Korean American discourse. [source] TRANSFORMATIONS OF CHINA'S POST-1949 POLITICAL ECONOMY IN AN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVEPACIFIC ECONOMIC REVIEW, Issue 3 2008R. Bin Wong This article lays out three different historical perspectives on China's post-1978 economic reform era. It argues that historical perspectives allow us to apprehend features of the Chinese economy as they are formed in particular moments and contexts at the same time as we can appreciate the ways in which the possibilities conceived and achieved both affirm certain past practices and reject others. Without such vantage points it is more difficult to explain the manner in which China's economy has changed in the past 30 years. [source] Smoke and Mirrors: Inverting the Discourse on TobaccoANTIPODE, Issue 4 2010Marv Waterstone Abstract:, Understanding the mechanisms that construct and maintain the taken-for-granted, "common sense" understandings of everyday life is an essential prerequisite for reconfiguring conditions in more progressive directions. Highlighting particular moments, when these processes can be made visible, and drawing appropriate insights from such interrogations is useful not only for illuminating the fundamental malleability of "common sense" (itself a crucial element of change), but also for providing suggestive strategies and tactics for effectuating change. Here the construction and reconstruction of the "common sense" around tobacco is offered as an instructive case. [source] |