Reading The Body: Representations and Remains in the Archaeological Record. Alison E. Rautman, editor. 2000. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, PA. viii + 283 pp. $45.00 (cloth), ISBN 0-8122-3521-5; $22.50 (paper), ISBN 0-8122-1709-8.

2000 ◽  
Vol 65 (4) ◽  
pp. 780-781
Author(s):  
Silvia Tomaskova
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Axel Davies Vittersø ◽  
Monika Halicka ◽  
Gavin Buckingham ◽  
Michael J Proulx ◽  
Mark Wilson ◽  
...  

Representations of the body and peripersonal space can be distorted for people with some chronic pain conditions. Experimental pain induction can give rise to similar, but transient distortions in healthy individuals. However, spatial and bodily representations are dynamic, and constantly update as we interact with objects in our environment. It is unclear whether induced pain disrupts the mechanisms involved in updating these representations. In the present study, we sought to investigate the effect of induced pain on the updating of peripersonal space and body representations during and following tool-use. We compared performance under three conditions (pain, active placebo, neutral) on a visuotactile crossmodal congruency task and a tactile distance judgement task to measure updating of peripersonal space and body representations, respectively. We induced pain by applying 1% capsaicin cream to the arm, and for placebo we used a gel that induced non-painful warming. Consistent with previous findings, the difference in crossmodal interference from visual distractors in the same compared to opposite visual field to the tactile target was less when tools were crossed than uncrossed. This suggests an extension of peripersonal space to incorporate the tips of the tools. Also consistent with previous findings, estimates of the felt distance between two points (tactile distance judgements) decreased after active tool-use. In contrast to our predictions, however, we found no evidence that pain interfered with performance on either task when compared to the control conditions. This suggests that the updating of peripersonal space and body representations is not disrupted by induced pain. Therefore, acute pain does not account for the distorted representations of the body and peripersonal space that can endure in people with chronic pain conditions.


Parasitology ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 383-389 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Nutting ◽  
Patricia Woolley

Pathological manifestations occasioned by mites of the genus Demodex are reported from Antechinus stuartii, a marsupial mouse. Derangements from single mite invasion of a hair follicle to massive nodule formation are detailed. In heavy infestations mites are found well distributed in the skin of the body with nodules limited, however, to the head, hind legs, around the base of the tail, the cloacal regions and, in females, just anterior to the pouch area.Mites invade the hair follicle, where increase in their numbers leads to hypertrophy of the follicular epithelium which forms marked lobules surrounded by heavily vascularized connective tissue. It is thought that destruction of the lobule cells and penetration of the blood vessels due to increased mite numbers and activity leads to leucocytic infiltration with destruction of the mites and nodule deflation. In two instances of nodule deterioration a thickened skin plaque with markedly reduced mite populations remained in place of the nodule.Gross symptoms of demodicidosis are occasionally marked in animals maintained in the laboratory but have not been found in specimens from the field. This suggests that environmental or dietary factors may be important in the onset of gross symptoms of demodicidosis.This investigation was supported in part by a National Science Foundation (U.S.A.) grant (G-23321) and by a Commonwealth Scientific and an Industrial Research Organization (Australia) grant for marsupial research to the Zoology Department, A.N.U.Dr Herman Beerman, Professor and Chairman, Department of Dermatology, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, very kindly read and criticized our interpretation of the pathology. We are grateful for his help.We would like to thank Margaret Dahlquist, Research Assistant, for her excellent technical assistance in the preparation of material for this report.


Inner Asia ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 183-203 ◽  

AbstractThis paper aims to draw attention to the ways in which China's political authorities and intellectual elites have been using 'dress' either to imperialise or to nationalise the ethnic minorities of Southwestern frontiers since the late qing. it argues that the intensely politicised nature of costumed body and embodied dress of the Southwestern minorities is a stage for debates about civilisation, diversity, Darwinist evolution and the uniqueness of China's modernity. it suggests that the body of the Southwestern ethnic and the dress as its vestimentary representation form a mutually reinforcing semiotic system, functioning as a visual means to shape China's power structure.


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