scholarly journals Origins of mitochondrial thymidine triphosphate: Dynamic relations to cytosolic pools

2003 ◽  
Vol 100 (21) ◽  
pp. 12159-12164 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Pontarin ◽  
L. Gallinaro ◽  
P. Ferraro ◽  
P. Reichard ◽  
V. Bianchi
Author(s):  
Milda Nordbø Rosenberg

AbstractThis paper examines the role of values in transformations toward sustainability. Values, generally defined as what people deem to matter, are increasingly gaining interest in and outside of academia. For example, sustainability aligns with specific values such as dignity, equality, safety, and harmony for people and nature. However, current approaches to values are mind-matter dualistic, and therefore failing to honor the inherently dynamic relations of socio-ecological systems. Drawing on new materialism, I explore values as part of the relations that make this world and propose to consider values as material-discursive practices. Ethnographic fieldwork was done in 2017 with coffee producers in Burundi who aimed to transform production by caring for the coffee and people that grow it. Based on interviews and participatory observation, I present how values were integral to transforming the relational aspects of coffee production. In this study, values of togetherness, care, dignity, and faith were dominant and were found to reconfigure the socio-ecological system of coffee production. I argue that values are inseparable from, and hence co-productive of, the material world that we experience and play a vital role in sustainability transformations.


2007 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 1222-1229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Na Lin ◽  
Jun Yan ◽  
Zhen Huang ◽  
Craig Altier ◽  
Minyong Li ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 28
Author(s):  
Chikashi Tsuji

<p>This study attempts to empirically examine the relations between the headline consumer price index (CPI) and several other CPIs in Japan by applying the vector error correction models (VECMs). Our investigations derive the following interesting findings. First, we reveal that as to our four combinations of the CPIs tested in this paper, 1) all variable coefficients in the cointegrating equations are statistically significant in our VECM models and the statistical significance is very strong. Thus, we understand that our four bivariate combinations of the CPIs tested in this paper are all strongly cointegrated and the VECM approach is very effective to capture the time-series effects of the categorized CPIs on the Japanese headline CPI. Further, we also find that 2) as far as judging by the results of our impulse response analyses, for the period from May 2011 to June 2015, the headline CPI for Japan is weakly or little affected by the CPI of energy and the CPI of food for Japan. We further clarify that 3) according to the results of our impulse response analyses, the Japanese headline CPI is positively affected by both the CPI of utilities for Japan and the CPI of transportation and communication expenses for Japan.</p>


Author(s):  
Michael Sonne Kristensen ◽  
Judy Edworthy ◽  
Elif Özcan

This article addresses the need of including acoustical perspectives in the debate on alarm fatigue within the healthcare domain. We show how conceptualisations and proposed solutions to alarm fatigue are unequally distributed across what could be called the ‘alarm chain’: a generic model of the core structural elements and dynamic relations that constitute any alarm scenario. A focal point in the alarm chain – the ‘alarm mediation cleft’ – seems to divide the alarm fatigue literature from the segment of the alarm literature that deals with auditory alarm design. The current healthcare discourse on alarm fatigue is centred around the ‘premediated alarm phase’, which has the consequence of an unfortunate dichotomous approach to the functionality of sound. We address some shortcomings of this approach and outline some methodological implications and potentials of searching for signs of alarm fatigue in the ‘post-mediated alarm phase’.


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