24 research outputs found
Kronik ürtiker hastalarının omalizumab tedavisi sonrası relaps oranlarının değerlendirilmesi
841334 tez no</p
Plasma amino acid analysis of mice from different age groups (pooled) measured at humane endpoint.
<p>Values are mean ± SEM for n = 11–12 and are expressed as micromoles per liter (µmol/L). BCAA, branched chain amino acid; NS, not significant.</p
Vista del mar desde la orilla
I.O. En la parte inferior: "Técnica: Goma bicromatada (sistema similar al de Ducos du Hauron) C.JURADO-84-". Louis Ducos du Hauron (8 de diciembre de 1837 - 31 de agosto de 1920) fue un pionero francés de la fotografía en color. Nació en Langon, Gironda y murió en Agen. En los años siguientes a su obra inédita de 1862 dispuso los modos prácticos de registrar imágenes en color usando los métodos aditivo (rojo, verde y azul) y sustractivo (cian, magenta y amarillo). En 1868 patentó algunos de sus métodos y en 1869 escribió Les Couleurs en Photographie (Los Colores en la Fotografía). En 1891 consiguió la impresión de relieve (anaglifos) mediante la yuxtaposición de dos planchas de colores complementarios. Louis Ducos du Hauron envió el día 2 de mayo de 1869, a la Sociedad Francesa de Fotografía métodos similares sobre la reproducción de los colores en fotografía. Ducos (1837-1920) obtenía sucesivamente tres negativos del mismo tema a través de un filtro colocado entre la placa y el objetivo. Un selector apropiado interceptaba uno de los colores primarios para cada negativo. Una de sus más tempranas fotografías en color es Landscape of Southern France (Paisaje del Sur de Francia), tomada con el método sustractivo en 1877 . Véase: wwwes.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Ducos_du_Hauron, (última consulta 15 de octubre de 2009). Carlos Jurado V.F. 842347, 470554,597551, 829230 y 841334. Catalogó: Ariadna Herrera R
The historical development of the clarinet with special reference to its musical repertoire
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 157-164.)The dissertation investigates the mechanical development of the clarinet from the eighteenth century to the end of the nineteenth century
sj-docx-1-hpq-10.1177_13591053231223882 – Supplemental material for Psychometric evaluation of the DePaul Symptom Questionnaire-Short Form (DSQ-SF) among adults with Long COVID, ME/CFS, and healthy controls: A machine learning approach
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-hpq-10.1177_13591053231223882 for Psychometric evaluation of the DePaul Symptom Questionnaire-Short Form (DSQ-SF) among adults with Long COVID, ME/CFS, and healthy controls: A machine learning approach by William J McGarrigle, Jacob Furst and Leonard A Jason in Journal of Health Psychology</p
THE JASMINE REVOLUTION AND ITS IMPACT ON WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT IN TUNISIA
On Saturday December 17, 2016, Tunisia celebrated the six year anniversary of the Jasmine Revolution which was sparked off by the self-immolation of Bouazizi that started in Sidi Bouzid, a small town in the center of the country. The revolution in Tunisia led to a regional wave of uprisings spreading rapidly to Egypt, Algeria, Libya, Yemen, Jordan and Syria. For over half a century, Tunisia lived under a dictatorial regime with a single powerful political party. The other parties, allowed in-between, had no power, being restricted in their movements and actions and only served to make the world believe that Tunisia was indeed democratic, as daily reported by Ben Ali’s media. Since the independence of their country from colonial rule in 1956 Tunisia sustained major progress in relation to women’s access to health and education services and the labor market; maternal mortality and fertility rates were halved, girls’ enrolment in secondary school more than doubled and women were increasingly in paid employment. Moreover, despite the limited democratic space, the number of women in government grew significantly and women’s organizations began to play a role in shaping social and political transformation. This paper argues that women’s empowerment in Tunisia is largely rooted in the particular features of the elite post-independence bargain, early political choices regarding state–society relations and the associated policies in the areas of education, health and labor, which increased women’s access to resources. It also highlights the interaction between changes in law, policies promoting gender equality and women’s capacity to mobilize. Women’s increasing individual and collective agency in both the public and private spheres explains the existence of opportunities to consolidate women’s empowerment in contemporary Tunisia. Cumulative change in different spheres has been mutually reinforcing, and may also have created resilience regarding potential reversals associated with the political changes brought about by the ‘Arab Spring’. Tunisia’s progress in women’s empowerment provides valuable lessons on how women can obtain access to new resources and the way in which politics and power, and the struggles, dynamics and contestation that these generate can be used to challenge gender and social power relations. It demonstrates the importance of locating political paths of change – such as processes of women’s empowerment – in the context of wider political settlements
Empirical complement cumulative density functions (CCDF) vs maximum likelihood approximations.
<p>A-F: CCDF vs maximum likelihood approximations for the recordings labeled in <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0145870#pone.0145870.t003" target="_blank">Table 3</a>.</p
Tracker hardware.
<p>A: The tracker hardware consists of a base, the housing, and a computer. B: The housing includes a 150mm diameter agar plate on which the nematode crawls. C: The base comprises an X-Y translation stage, a camera, and two stepper motors.</p
