2,557 research outputs found
Adolescent body dissatisfaction and the media
In this paper, an examination of the correlation between the use of sexual images in advertising and feelings of discontent with body image in adolescent girls will take place. It is this author’s opinion that the over-use of sexual images in advertising negatively effects how young girls perceive their bodies. This author’s research question examined whether the increased use of sex as an advertising tool is associated with the way that an adolescent girl perceives her own body. A literature search was also completed in which it was found that there is significant evidence to support this author’s claim. A broad internet search was done to obtain the most common keywords, and then a more in-depth search was done to find appropriate articles.M.A.L.S.Includes bibliographical referencesby Lisa M. Forber
Supplemental material for Demonstrating the value of the oncology pharmacist within the healthcare team
Supplemental Material for Demonstrating the value of the oncology pharmacist within the healthcare team by Eve M Segal, Jill Bates, Sara L Fleszar, Lisa M Holle, Julie Kennerly-Shah, Michelle Rockey and Kate D Jeffers in Journal of Oncology Pharmacy Practice</p
Grassroots Activisms: Public Rhetorics in Localized Contexts
Introduction: Valuing, learning from, and amplifying grassroots activisms / Sarah Warren-Riley, Julie Collins Bates, and Lisa L. Phillips -- Copwatching, police reform, and grassroots action : positioning video within strategies of rhetorical intervention on the street / Michael Knievel -- Nacogdoches accountability coalition : challenges to grassroots organizing in deep East Texas / Heather K. Olson Beal -- Behind the still life image : the word and Fannie Lou Hamer's activist impulses / Coretta M. Pittman -- "Creating a longer table' : a conversation about diversity in grassroots labor organizing / Ericka Wills -- Engaging the (counter)public through digital activism : a case study of the TFsUnite Protest / Rebecca Hallman Martini -- Mobilizing grassroots rhetorics for reproductive justice : a Q&A with Sara Finger, Executive Director of the Wisconsin Alliance for Women's Health / Maria Novotny -- Resisting extraction of the sacred : Indigenous-based grassroots resistance to frontier capitalism / Luhui Whitebear, Kenlea Pebbles, and Stephen P. Gasteyer -- Community gardening, food insecurity, and writing pedagogy : connecting classroom, campus, and city / Vani Kannan and Leah Lillanna Johnney -- The energy of place in Florida Springs activism / Madison Jones -- La conexión : advocating for Latinx immigrants in Northwest Ohio / April Conway -- Off the wall : the performance of graffiti and vandal art in grassroots movements / Angela Mitchell -- Urban affairs coalition : fifty years of organizational organizing in Philadelphia / Kalie M. Mayberry -- #RageAgainstRape : Nepali women's transnational assemblage and networked performances against rape / Sweta Baniya -- Organizing for action's legacy : building capacity through personal stories and local networks / Erica M. Stone -- Kairos, communities, and writing for DACA advocacy in Memphis / Alison A. Lukowski and Jeffrey Gross -- Voices from the anti-racist pedagogy collective : individual exigencies and collective actions / Molly Appel, Laura Decker, Rachel Herzl-Betz, Jollina Simpson, Katherine A. Durante, Rosemary Q. Flores, and Marian Azab -- Vernacular assessment activity in local community organizing / Joe Cirio -- Enacting invitational rhetorics : leveraging networks of care in the US asylum process / Monica Reyes, Randall Monty, Jorge M. Camarillo, and Cindy Bernal -- A counterstory afterword in vignettes : quisieron enterrarnos, pero se les olvido que somos semillas / Aja Y. Martinez
Singular influence : mapping the ascent of Daisy M. Bates in popular understanding and Indigenous policy
Daisy M. Bates’s influence on Indigenous affairs has often been attributed to her once romantic legend as ‘the saviour of the Aborigines’, obscuring the impact of the powerful news media position that she commanded for decades. The ideas advanced by the news media through its reports both by and about Bates exerted a strong influence on public understanding and official policies that were devastating for Indigenous Australians and have had lasting impacts. This paper draws on Bourdieu’s tradition of field-based research to propose that Bates’s ‘singular influence’ was formed through the accumulation of ‘symbolic capital’ within and across the fields of journalism, government, Indigenous societies, and anthropology, and that it operated to reinforce and legitimate the media’s representations of Indigenous people and issues as well as government policies
It’s the Collections that are Special
In the Library with the Lead Pipe is pleased to welcome another guest author, Lisa Carter! Lisa has just recently been appointed as Visiting Program Officer to work with the Association of Research Libraries Special Collections Working Group. Read more to learn about her vision and thought-provoking ideas about the future of special collections… I’m [...
Distribution patterns of zoochlorellae and zooxanthellae hosted by two Pacific Northeast anemones, Anthopleura elegantissima and A. xanthogrammica
This study investigated patterns in the relative abundance of two photosynthetic algal symbionts, zoochlorellae (ZC) and zooxanthellae (ZX), hosted by two temperate anemones, Anthopleura elegantissima and A. xanthogrammica. Previous studies have documented varying proportions of each symbiont along environmental gradients, presumably determined by their respective physiological capabilities. To test for differences in the algal type between the two host species, we sampled anemone tissues (tentacle or tentacle and body column) of similarly sized polyps that were located close together in multiple habitats: tidepools, crevices, underneath rock ledges, and along natural light gradients in caves. The ZC-A. elegantissima symbiosis was rare on the west coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. Even in low-irradiance habitats, ZC were the dominant algae hosted by A. xanthogrammica, while nearby A. elegantissima hosted ZX or was algae-free. As a first step in determining whether symbiont growth rates differed between the two host species, we quantified mitotic index (MI), the percentage of cells with division furrows, under artificial light and in the field by simultaneously sampling tentacles from both species. MI was more stable in A. elegantissima: the MI of ZX isolated from the tentacles of A. xanthogrammica was slightly higher at a light level of 80 micromol quanta m(-2) s(-1) than it was for ZX from A. elegantissima (respectively, 7.3 vs. 6.2) and relatively lower at 40 micromol quanta m(-2) s(-1) (3.9 vs. 5.6). Our data indicate host-specific differences in symbiont distributions and MI when extrinsic physical parameters were similar
Electromagnetic Characterization of the LISA Verification Binary ZTF J0526+5934
© 2023. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. cc-byWe present an analysis of new and archival data to the 20.506 minute LISA verification binary J052610.42+593445.32 (J0526+5934). Our joint spectroscopic and photometric analysis finds that the binary contains an unseen M 1 = 0.89 ± 0.11 M ⊙ CO-core white dwarf primary with an M 2 = 0.38 ± 0.07 M ⊙ post-core-burning subdwarf, or low-mass white dwarf, companion. Given the short orbital period and relatively large total binary mass, we find that LISA will detect this binary with signal-to-noise ratio 44 after 4 yr of observations. J0526+5934 is expected to merge within 1.8 ± 0.3 Myr and likely result in a D6 scenario Type Ia supernova or form a He-rich star that will evolve into a massive single white dwarf
Juvenile problem/needs analysis : Oregon
submitted to: Youth Development Division, Oregon Department of Education ; submitted by: Adrian J. Johnson, M.S.W. Lisa M. Lucas, B. A. Juliette R. Mackin, Ph.D.Title from PDF cover (viewed on February 1, 2023).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Spacecraft and interplanetary contributions to the magnetic environment on-board LISA pathfinder
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society following peer review. The version of record Armano, Michele, et al. "Spacecraft and interplanetary contributions to the magnetic environment on-board LISA Pathfinder." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 494.2 (2020): 3014-3027. is available online at: https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article-abstract/494/2/3014/5822062?redirectedFrom=fulltextLISA Pathfinder (LPF) has been a space-based mission designed to test new technologies that will be required for a gravitational wave observatory in space. Magnetically driven forces play a key role in the instrument sensitivity in the low-frequency regime (mHz and below), the measurement band of interest for a space-based observatory. The magnetic field can couple to the magnetic susceptibility and remanent magnetic moment from the test masses and disturb them from their geodesic movement. LPF carried on-board a dedicated magnetic measurement subsystem with noise levels of 10 nT Hz-1/2 from 1 Hz down to 1 mHz. In this paper we report on the magnetic measurements throughout LPF operations. We characterize the magnetic environment within the spacecraft, study the time evolution of the magnetic field and its stability down to 20 µHz, where we measure values around 200 nT Hz-1/2¿, and identify two different frequency regimes, one related to the interplanetary magnetic field and the other to the magnetic field originating inside the spacecraft. Finally, we characterize the non-stationary component of the fluctuations of the magnetic field below the mHz and relate them to the dynamics of the solar wind.This work has been made possible by the LISA Pathfindermission, which is part of the space-science program ofthe European Space Agency. The French contribution hasbeen supported by CNES (Accord Specific de projet CNES1316634/CNRS 103747), the CNRS, the Observatoire deParis and the University Paris-Diderot. E. P. and H. I. wouldalso like to acknowledge the financial support of the Uni-vEarthS Labex program at Sorbonne Paris CiteÌ↪A (ANR-10-LABX-0023 and ANR-11- IDEX-0005-02). The Albert-Einstein-Institut acknowledges the support of the GermanSpace Agency, DLR. The work is supported by the Fed-eral Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy based on aresolution of the German Bundestag (FKZ 50OQ0501 andFKZ 50OQ1601). The Italian contribution has been sup-ported by Agenzia Spaziale Italiana and Instituto Nazionaledi Fisica Nucleare. The Spanish contribution has been sup-ported by Contracts No. AYA2010-15709 (MICINN), No.ESP2013-47637-P, and No. ESP2015-67234-P (MINECO).M. N. acknowledges support from Fundación General CSIC(Programa ComFuturo). F. R. acknowledges support froma Formación de Personal Investigador (MINECO) contract.The Swiss contribution acknowledges the support of theSwiss Space Office (SSO) via the PRODEX Programme ofESA. L. F. acknowledges the support of the Swiss NationalScience Foundation. The UK groups wish to acknowledgesupport from the United Kingdom Space Agency (UKSA),the University of Glasgow, the University of Birmingham,Imperial College, and the Scottish Universities Physics Al-liance (SUPA). J.I.T. and J.S. acknowledge the support ofthe U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration(NASA).Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Gender and Careers in the 21st Century
Lisa Mainiero is a contributing author, The Ethics of Office Romance .
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