BEYOND KNITWEAR LABORATORY: A CRITICAL OBSERVATION

Author(s):  
Sandra Regina Rech ◽  
Giovanni Maria Conti
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Thornton ◽  
Elisa Palazzi ◽  
Nicholas Pepin ◽  
Paolo Cristofanelli ◽  
Richard Essery ◽  
...  

<p>Numerous applications, including generating future predictions via numerical modelling, establishing appropriate policy instruments, and effectively tracking progress against them, require the multitude of complex processes and interactions operating in rapidly changing mountainous environmental systems to be well monitored and understood. At present, however, not only are environmental available data pertaining to mountains often severely limited, but interdisciplinary consensus regarding which variables should be considered absolute observation priorities remains lacking. In this context,  the concept of so-called Essential Mountain Climate Variables (EMCVs) is introduced as a potential means to identify critical observation priorities and thereby ameliorate the situation. Following a brief overview of the most critical aspects of ongoing and expected future climate-driven change in various key mountain system components (i.e. the atmosphere, cryosphere, biosphere and hydrosphere), a preliminary list of corresponding potential EMCVs – ranked according to perceived importance – is proposed. Interestingly, several of these variables do not currently feature amongst the globally relevant Essential Climate Variables (ECVs) curated by GCOS, suggesting this mountain-specific approach is indeed well justified. Thereafter, both established and emerging possibilities to measure, generate, and apply EMCVs are summarised. Finally, future activities that must be undertaken if the concept is eventually to be formalized and widely applied are recommended.</p>


Author(s):  
Richard D Brower

Abstract Evaluation of the developing nervous system is a standard and relatively sensitive component of routine fetal ultrasonography. Medical school learning objectives should direct students to consolidate core concepts related to normal and abnormal fetal nervous system development through critical observation of this commonly performed clinical procedure.


2010 ◽  
Vol 84 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 253-268
Author(s):  
Renée Figuera

"Convention, Context and Critical Discourse Analysis: 'Jim The Boatman' and The Early Fiction of Trinidad" re-evaluates the claim of colored authorship which has been attributed to a short story published anonymously, in the Trinidad Spectator in 1846. This re-evaluation is significant since 'Jim the Boatman" has been cited as part of a collection of writing in the emerging literary tradition of nonwhite authors of nineteenth century Trinidad. A critical discourse approach to identifying the writer, in this essay, proposes an alternative paradigm to traditional "plantation power structures" which have been used for identifying writers of anonymous texts, as they may override the cultural context of literary discourse formation in complex Anglophone Caribbean societies like Trinidad. Critical Discourse Analysis focuses specifically on the ways in which writers’ discursive behavior is the result of external sociopolitical pressures, and the strategies they use for textualizing their worldview, in their cultural contexts. This alternative paradigm is based on the researcher’s critical observation of the social context, discourse conventions, and language use in relation to anonymous texts.


1996 ◽  
Vol 75 (4) ◽  
pp. 1601-1618 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Rajan

1. An additivity model for the accretion of cochlear sensorineural hearing losses has been described from studies in the guinea pig cochlea. Among other aspects, the model allows determination of how residual hearing losses after an initial exposure (E1) affect hearing losses to be expected to a subsequent second exposure (E2). In the present study, the model was applied to temporary hearing losses produced in the cat cochlea by loud pure tones at a frequency from 3 to 15 kHz, affecting regions from 2 to 28 kHz. Successive identical exposures, generally with an interexposure interval of approximately equal to 35 min, were used to produce compound action potential (CAP) threshold losses. Total losses after E2 were compared with those predicted by the model. Testing was carried out under conditions where olivocochlear bundle (OCB)-mediated protection was or was not activated. (As shown elsewhere, OCB-mediated protection is activated by particular binaural exposures, but not monaural exposure, and reduces threshold losses in the binaural condition with intact OCB compared with losses in either the monaural condition, or the binaural condition where the OCB was cut before loud sound.) 2. The additivity model was a very good predictor of total losses under a variety of conditions; different exposure frequencies, monaural and binaural exposures, and with intact or cut OCB pathways. In these exposures, the model's application could be generalized so that as long as residual losses just pre-E2 were well specified in an animal, total losses could be as well predicted using normative data bases of a single exposure with the same parameters. 3. The model also allowed determination of whether OCB-mediated protection was exercised during E2 in dual identical exposures. Expression of protection for E2 depended on whether E1 elicited protection. When tested with monaural (at 7 or 15 kHz) or binaural exposures (at kHz) for which E1 did not elicit protection, neither did E2. However, when tested with a binaural E1 (at 7, 11, or 15 kHz), which activated protection, E2 also elicited protection. In the latter case, for 7- and 11-kHz exposures, the amount of E2 protection increased with total hearing loss, a relationship similar to that seen for single exposures in cat and guinea pig. For 15-kHz exposure, the amount of E2 protection was constant across test frequencies. 4. Finally, a critical observation with 11-kHz exposure was that a binaural E1 eliciting protection was able to "prime" the OCB so that protection could be elicited by a subsequent monaural E2, which, by itself as a singel exposure, does not evoke protection. This result has important implications in terms of the physiology of the protective OCB pathways and clinically in terms of the manner in which loud-sound-induced hearing loss accumulated.


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