474 research outputs found
Primary structure and functional expression of the mouse and frog α-subunit of the gastric H<sup>+</sup>-K<sup>+</sup>-ATPase
Pages C1207-C1214: Paul M. Mathews, Dirk Claeys, Frédéric Jaisser, Käthi Geering, Jean-Daniel Horisberger, Jean-Pierre Kraehenbuhl, and Bernard C. Rossier. “Primary structure and functional expression of the mouse and frog agr-subunit of the gastric H+-K+-ATPase.” Page C1214: the following sentence was inadvertently omitted from the acknowledgments: Paul M. Mathews and Dirk Claeys contributed equally to this study. </jats:p
Introduction: Building an International Community of Research in Career Guidance and Counseling
The ECADOC program has brought together doctoral students working on
topical issues in the field of CGC, using various theoretical references and meth-
odologies. The aim of the current volume is to disseminate this research to stu-
dents and researchers all over the word, as well as informing practitioners about
this very current work to support them in developing innovative interventions.
To prepare this compilation, a call for contributing authors was addressed to
the teams of researchers (doctoral students, researchers, and academics) who
have participated in one of the ECADOC summer schools. The objectives of the
volume are:
– to present the current questions and preoccupations of young researchers all
around the world in the field of CGC;
– to gradually develop a community of researchers who publish together;
– to offer the opportunity to doctoral students and collaborators to present their
research to a larger audience than that reached by scientific articles; and
– to provide a concrete product that will persist beyond the end of ECADOC
program.
ECADOC researchers (doctoral students, scientists, and academics) were asked
to make chapter proposals alone or as a team. Proposals could be related to doctoral
research or to another study in which they participated, with or without the involve-
ment of a doctoral supervisor. The editors of this book received many proposals
leading to an initial selection based on a set of criteria, including the scientific qual-
ity of the proposal and its empirical foundation. The selection was then refined to
underline the diversity of student profiles and of the territories in which the research
was conducted. We also wanted to show the diversity of the research topics, of the
theoretical frameworks, and of the methods used by the doctoral students. At that
point, each selected proposal was peer-reviewed by two experts in the field of
career counseling and guidance, most of whom were involved in the ECADOC pro-
gram. The final decision was made by the editors based on these reviews. The edi-
tors of this book also asked some senior researchers to write a chapter to share their
perception of the evolution of research in the field and to provide some direction
for the future. Jean Guichard, as director of the UNESCO Chair on Life Long
Guidance and Counseling and professor at Cnam-Inetop proposed one chapter, and
Lea Ferrari, Teresa Maria Sgaramella, and Salvatore Soresi, as professors at the
University of Padova and organization head of the ECADOC program proposed
another. The seven members of the Scientific Committee worked together to contri-
bute to the final chapter, which proposes a European Research Agenda for the
future of career counseling and research. These three additional chapters were also
thoroughly reviewed. As an ensemble, the book provides a broad overview of the
research interests, theoretical frameworks, methodologies, and career counseling
devices that are useful in analyzing the variety of career counseling and guidance
situations for individuals living in different parts of the world
Utopia 3000 - Maison des arts
SAR-DCote: 1987.036Archive: Aucun document n'est archivé pour ce PDMGroupe de suivi: Décoppet Alin; Herzen Michel; Rossier Jean-Françoi
Identité, écriture et mémoire : l'exemple de quelques personnalités de la Somme du milieu du XIXe siècle à la Grande Guerre
Jean-Marie Wiscart, Identity, Writings and Memory : the example of some Personnalities of the Somme from the Middle of the XIXth Century to the Great War.
An often-invaded, corn-growing land, the Somme has never been a writers' land. Yet, between 1848 and 1914, a small number of ministers, squires or bourgeois take their pens to preserve a threatened social, provincial or religious identity. In this paper one will thus study, through the examples of Reverend Rossier, the Marquis of Belleval, or Albéric de Calonne, of local writers like Edouard David, the work of memory of minority groups and their relation to writing.Terre céréalière, terre d'invasion, la Somme n'a jamais été terre d'écrivains. Cependant, entre 1848 et 1914, un petit nombre de ministres du culte, de châtelains ou de bourgeois prend la plume pour sauvegarder une identité sociale, provinciale ou religieuse, menacée. Ici sont donc étudiées à travers les exemples du pasteur Rossier, du marquis de Belleval ou d'Albéric de Calonne, d'écrivains locaux tel Edouard David, le travail de mémoire de groupes minoritaires et le rapport à l'écriture.Jean-Marie Wiscart, Identiteit, het schrijven en de herinnering, een paar voorbeelden uit de Somme, van het midden van de 19de eeuw tot W.O. I.
Als graanschuur en slagveld is de Somme nooit een schrijversland geweest. Tussen 1848 en 1914 hebben nochtans een aantal priesters, nobelen en burgers naar de pen gegrepen om een bedreigde sociale, provinciale en religieuze identiteit te ver- dedigen. Aan de hand van het voorbeeld van dominée Rossier, markies de Belleval of Alberic de Calonne, naast lokale schrijvers als Edouard David, bestudeert men hoe een minderheid een collectief geheugen opbouwt en welke roi het schrijven daarin speelt.Wiscart Jean-Marie. Identité, écriture et mémoire : l'exemple de quelques personnalités de la Somme du milieu du XIXe siècle à la Grande Guerre. In: Revue du Nord, tome 81, n°331, Juillet-septembre 1999. pp. 561-579
Chronic assessment of cerebral hemodynamics during rat forepaw electrical stimulation using functional ultrasound imaging
AbstractFunctional ultrasound imaging is a method recently developed to assess brain activity via hemodynamics in rodents. Doppler ultrasound signals allow the measurement of cerebral blood volume (CBV) and red blood cells' (RBCs') velocity in small vessels. However, this technique originally requires performing a large craniotomy that limits its use to acute experiments only. Moreover, a detailed description of the hemodynamic changes that underlie functional ultrasound imaging has not been described but is essential for a better interpretation of neuroimaging data.To overcome the limitation of the craniotomy, we developed a dedicated thinned skull surgery for chronic imaging. This procedure did not induce brain inflammation nor neuronal death as confirmed by immunostaining. We successfully acquired both high-resolution images of the microvasculature and functional movies of the brain hemodynamics on the same animal at 0, 2, and 7days without loss of quality. Then, we investigated the spatiotemporal evolution of the CBV hemodynamic response function (HRF) in response to sensory-evoked electrical stimulus (1mA) ranging from 1 (200μs) to 25 pulses (5s). Our results indicate that CBV HRF parameters such as the peak amplitude, the time to peak, the full width at half-maximum and the spatial extent of the activated area increase with stimulus duration. Functional ultrasound imaging was sensitive enough to detect hemodynamic responses evoked by only a single pulse stimulus. We also observed that the RBC velocity during activation could be separated in two distinct speed ranges with the fastest velocities located in the upper part of the cortex and slower velocities in deeper layers. For the first time, functional ultrasound imaging demonstrates its potential to image brain activity chronically in small animals and offers new insights into the spatiotemporal evolution of cerebral hemodynamics
Le dividende démographique en Afrique subsaharienne
Textes réunis par Daniel Delaunay et Jean-Pierre Guengant Consulter la monographie Cette monographie rassemble quelques-unes des contributions au colloque « Dividende démographique et évolution de la fécondité en Afrique sub-saharienne », organisé à Paris les 11-12 mai 2017 par Clémentine Rossier, Véronique Hertrich et Géraldine Duthé pour l’Ined, Jean-Pierre Guengant pour l’IRD, Henri Leridon pour l’Académie des sciences. La première journée (à l’AFD) portait sur les mesures et les singu..
From career adaptability to subjective identity forms
The life-design paradigm is among those rooted in Guichard's (2009) life self-construction model that describes the identity processes underlying the development of multiple social selves. In this chapter, which is a tribute to the major contribution of Jean Guichard to the field of educational and vocational guidance and counseling, we will try to explicate the links between career adaptability and subjective identity forms. Both highlight two different and important processes that are interdependent and which should be simultaneously considered in the life design paradigm. These processes allow people to behave as active agents in their environment and are of high importance in the contemporary socioeconomic context, characterized by globalization, an increase in employment insecurity, the destructuralization of one's life course, and individualization. This chapter argues that both career adapt-abilities and identity processes rely on reflexivity and self-awareness abilities. For this reason the system of subjective identity forms, as defined by Guichard, can be considered as a meta-competency allowing adaptation, meaning making, but also the allocation of process resources
Détection par amplification génomique de différentes espèces de Candida dans les candidoses disséminées
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