scholarly journals "Harlem Air Shaft": A True Programmatic Composition?

2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward Green

<span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Adobe Caslon Pro&quot;;">In 1944, Duke Ellington told a writer from <em>The</em></span><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Adobe Caslon Pro&quot;;"> <em>New Yorker</em></span><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Adobe Caslon Pro&quot;;"> that his composition “Harlem Air Shaft,” recorded four years earlier, was inspired by the myriad sounds heard in the air shaft of a Harlem apartment building (“You hear fights, you smell dinner, you hear people making love…”). Many scholars have contended that Ellington invented this “storyline” <em>after</em></span><span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: &quot;Adobe Caslon Pro&quot;;"> the composition was written. This article addresses the authenticity of “Harlem Air Shaft” as programmatic music. The author finds ample evidence—from unpublished manuscripts, unissued radio broadcasts, analysis of arranging devices and compositional design, and other Ellington testimony—that Ellington did indeed have the sounds and smells of a Harlem air shaft in mind as he wrote the composition.</span>

2012 ◽  
Vol 69 (12) ◽  
pp. 667-671 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henzen

Insulinome sind mit einer Inzidenz von 4 pro 100'000 eine seltene Erkrankung, vermeintliche Hypoglykämie-Symptome werden dagegen häufig auch von Menschen ohne Diabetes mellitus beschrieben. Die Liste der möglichen Ursachen ist sehr umfangreich, weshalb mittels Anamnese, Klinik und laborchemischen Untersuchungen der Verdacht auf ein Insulinom erhärtet werden bzw. ausgeschlossen werden muss. Wie bereits vor über 70 Jahren der New Yorker Chirurge Allen Whipple gefordert hat, ist eine strikte Beachtung der Trias: dokumentierte Hypoglykämie und Neuroglykopenie und Besserung auf Glukosezufuhr Voraussetzung für weitere diagnostische und therapeutische Schritte. Die hyperinsulinämische Hypoglykämie wird im Fastentest bewiesen, Ziel der bildgebenden Methoden ist die Lokalisation des Insulinoms für die chirurgische Resektion bzw. die Abgrenzung zur nicht-Insulinom bedingten pankreatogenen Hypoglykämie (Nesidioblastose). Als neue und hochsensitive Methode hat sich die GLP-1 Rezeptor Szintigraphie erwiesen, womit auch im vorliegenden Fallbeispiel eine zielgerichtete chirurgische Intervention möglich war.


Author(s):  
Petra Jahn ◽  
Johannes Engelkamp

There is ample evidence that memory for action phrases such as “open the bottle” is better in subject-performed tasks (SPTs), i.e., if the participants perform the actions, than in verbal tasks (VTs), if they only read the phrases or listen to them. It is less clear whether also the sole intention to perform the actions later, i.e., a prospective memory task (PT), improves memory compared with VTs. Inconsistent findings have been reported for within-subjects and between-subjects designs. The present study attempts to clarify the situation. In three experiments, better recall for SPTs than for PTs and for PTs than for VTs were observed if mixed lists were used. If pure lists were used, there was a PT effect but no SPT over PT advantage. The findings were discussed from the perspective of item-specific and relational information.


2006 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 172-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Hamama-Raz ◽  
Z. Solomon

The study examines the contributions of hardiness, attachment style, and cognitive appraisal to the psychological adjustment of 300 survivors of malignant melanoma: The findings show that the survivors' adjustment is by far better predicted by their personal resources and cognitive appraisal than by their sociodemographic features (with the exception of marital status) and features of their illness. Of all the variables, their adjustment was best predicted by their attachment style, with secure attachment making for greater well-being and less distress. These findings add to the ample evidence that personal resources help persons to cope with stressful or traumatic events.


2019 ◽  
pp. 53-65
Author(s):  
Renata Domingos ◽  
Emeli Guarda ◽  
Elaise Gabriel ◽  
João Sanches

In the last decades, many studies have shown ample evidence that the existence of trees and vegetation around buildings can contribute to reduce the demand for energy by cooling and heating. The use of green areas in the urban environment as an effective strategy in reducing the cooling load of buildings has attracted much attention, though there is a lack of quantitative actions to apply the general idea to a specific building or location. Due to the large-scale construction of high buildings, large amounts of solar radiation are reflected and stored in the canyons of the streets. This causes higher air temperature and surface temperature in city areas compared to the rural environment and, consequently, deteriorates the urban heat island effect. The constant high temperatures lead to more air conditioning demand time, which results in a significant increase in building energy consumption. In general, the shade of the trees reduces the building energy demand for air conditioning, reducing solar radiation on the walls and roofs. The increase of urban green spaces has been extensively accepted as effective in mitigating the effects of heat island and reducing energy use in buildings. However, by influencing temperatures, especially extreme, it is likely that trees also affect human health, an important economic variable of interest. Since human behavior has a major influence on maintaining environmental quality, today's urban problems such as air and water pollution, floods, excessive noise, cause serious damage to the physical and mental health of the population. By minimizing these problems, vegetation (especially trees) is generally known to provide a range of ecosystem services such as rainwater reduction, air pollution mitigation, noise reduction, etc. This study focuses on the functions of temperature regulation, improvement of external thermal comfort and cooling energy reduction, so it aims to evaluate the influence of trees on the energy consumption of a house in the mid-western Brazil, located at latitude 15 ° S, in the center of South America. The methodology adopted was computer simulation, analyzing two scenarios that deal with issues such as the influence of vegetation and tree shade on the energy consumption of a building. In this way, the methodological procedures were divided into three stages: climatic contextualization of the study region; definition of a basic dwelling, of the thermophysical properties; computational simulation for quantification of energy consumption for the four facade orientations. The results show that the façades orientated to north, east and south, without the insertion of arboreal shading, obtained higher values of annual energy consumption. With the adoption of shading, the facades obtained a consumption reduction of around 7,4%. It is concluded that shading vegetation can bring significant climatic contribution to the interior of built environments and, consequently, reduction in energy consumption, promoting improvements in the thermal comfort conditions of users.


2004 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Edward Hasse
Keyword(s):  

2000 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Cameron ◽  
John Forrester

The paper traces the psychoanalytic networks of the English botanist, A.G. Tansley, a patient of Freud's (1922-1924), whose detour from ecology to psychoanalysis staked out a path which became emblematic for his generation. Tansley acted as the hinge between two networks of men dedicated to the study of psychoanalysis: a Cambridge psychoanalytic discussion group consisting of Tansley, John Rickman, Lionel Penrose, Frank Ramsey, Harold Jeffreys and James Strachey; and a network of field scientists which included Harry Godwin, E. Pickworth Farrow and C.C. Fagg. Drawing on unpublished letters written by Freud and on unpublished manuscripts, the authors detail the varied life paths of these psychoanalytic allies, focusing primarily on the 1920s when psychoanalysis in England was open to committed scientific enthusiasts, before the development of training requirements narrowed down what counted as a psychoanalytic community.


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