scholarly journals Local neurodegeneration and global connectivity adaptation across the FTD‐AD spectrum

2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (S6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesse A. Brown ◽  
Alex Jihun Lee ◽  
Lorenzo Pasquini ◽  
Adit Friedberg ◽  
Gil D. Rabinovici ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Fiona Cameron ◽  
Sarah Mengler

The ‘networked object’ is a concept that resonates with the notion of the operation of virtual collections within mobile fluids and flows of culture outside and beyond the specific museum context concerns of traditional documentation systems. It acts as a mediator between the museum world and public culture, as it circulates between these spaces, and in various cultural, social, political and technological formations, consumed in many different and unexpected ways. The context in which the networked object now circulates and interacts is what cultural theorist Mike Featherstone (2000, pp.166-67) described as ‘global variability, global connectivity and global intercommunication’. This chapter interrogates what happens when the networked object re-connects with public culture in an uncertain, complex and globalising world and how this process intersects with, challenges and re-works the ‘authoritative’ position of heritage institutions.


2018 ◽  
pp. 211-221
Author(s):  
Zoltán Biedermann

The collapse of the inter-imperial dialogue in Sri Lanka calls for further extrapolations regarding the merits and shortcomings of connected history. Do commensurability and the potential for mutual understandings logically increase as societies talk to each other, or can they also decrease? What does the case examined in this book tell us about the interdependence of the global and the local? Does Sri Lanka enrich our understanding of the making of global power dynamics elsewhere? May it be worth engaging more systematically than before in ‘(dis)connected history’—an approach that explores the global connectivity of early modern polities along with the obstacles arising to it? A methodological state of grace would allow us to examine the profound, inextricable intertwinement of deeply contradictory processes of convergence and divergence as a core characteristic of early modernity at large.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. P415-P416
Author(s):  
Coraline D. Metzger ◽  
Martin Dyrba ◽  
Daniel Bittner ◽  
Xiaochen Hu ◽  
Stefan J. Teipel ◽  
...  

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