228 research outputs found
Wrist Angel - Qualitative Interview procedure
Describes qualitative interview procedure exploring experiences of OCD patients' and their parents' use of the E4 wristband for symptom monitoring.
The correct author list and order: Amalie Stougaard, Line Katrine Harder Clemmensen, Anne Katrine Pagsberg, & Nicole Nadine Lønfeld
The author in literary theory and theories of literature
We have become accustomed to regarding the question of the author in literary criticism and theory in anti-authorial terms. It is a quaintness of modern literary theory that the author, whom we would, commonsensically, expect to be the central agent in the production of the literary work, has, for the most part of the past century, been considered a liminal character of minor importance to literary criticism, and, if not completely dead, then at least a ghost haunting the limits of the literary work of art
Plant-specialized metabolism and its genomic organization in biosynthetic gene clusters in <em>Lotus japonicus</em>
in root colonization and arbuscule formation
The colonization of Lotus japonicus roots by the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus Glomus intraradices was analysed in plant mutants affected in the symbiosis genes, SYM15 or SYMRK. SYMRK encodes an LRR receptor-like kinase that is, like the SYM15 gene, essential for both mycorrhizal and rhizobial symbioses. Different colonization patterns were observed in growing vs meristematically arrested roots. Three steps in the interaction were differentially impaired in the mutants: surface opening, where the anticlinal cell walls of two adjacent epidermal cells separate from each other in the vicinity of fungal hyphae; intracellular passage of hyphae through an exodermal cell and an adjacent cell of the outermost cortical layer; and arbuscule formation in cells of the two innermost cortical layers. The combined results indicate that LjSYMRK is required for the intracellular passage through exodermis and outermost cortical cell layer whereas LjSYM15 is required for surface opening and arbuscule formation. (C) New Phytologist (2004)
Substrate‐dependent negative selection in plants using a bacterial cytosine deaminase gene
Agrobacterium rhizogenes as a Vector for Transforming Higher Plants: Application in Lotus corniculatus Transformation
Scandinavian Crime Fiction, or: A Few Words on Snow, Myth, and Murder
Artykuł jest recenzją książki Scandinavian Crime Fiction autorstwa Jakoba Stougaarda-Nielsena. Autor przejawia zdecydowanie krytyczną postawę zarówno wobec samej idei państwa opiekuńczego, jak i wobec jej realizacji. Udowadnia, że jest ona wynikiem prężnie rozwijającego się systemu kapitalistycznego i podkreśla jedynie różnice klasowe, zamiast je zacierać. Stougaard-Nielsen analizuje literackie i serialowe przykłady gatunku skandynawskiego kryminału, osadzając je w szerszym – kulturowym i ekonomicznym kontekście. Autor doszukuje się w fikcji kryminalnej odbicia kryzysu tożsamości skandynawskiego społeczeństwa, które odkryło, że idea państwa dobrobytu jest tak naprawdę fałszywą narracją.This article is a review of Jakob Stougaard-Nielsen’s book Scandinavian Crime Fiction. The author takes a firmly critical position towards the welfare state in practice and as an idea. He demonstrates that it is the consequence of the rampantly developing capitalist system and merely intensifies class differences rather than effacing them. Stougaard-Nielsen analyzes examples of Scandinavian crime fiction from both literature and television and presents them in their expansive cultural and economic contexts. The author identifies crime fiction’s capacity to reflect the identity crisis of Scandinavian society and in so doing, expose the idea of the welfare state as a false narrative
Root Nodulation: A Paradigm for How Plant-Microbe Symbiosis Influences Host Developmental Pathways
Legume plants have an exceptional capacity for association with microorganisms, ranging from largely nonspecific to very specific interactions. Legume-rhizobial symbiosis results in major developmental and metabolic changes for both the microorganism and host, while providing the plant with fixed nitrogen. A complex signal exchange leads to the selective rhizobial colonization of plant cells within nodules, new organs that develop on the roots of host plants. Although the nodulation mechanism is highly specific, it involves the same subset of plant phytohormones, namely auxin, cytokinin, and ethylene, which are required for root development. In addition, nodulation triggered by the rhizobia affects the development of the host root system, indicating that the microorganism can alter host developmental pathways. Nodulation by rhizobia is a prime example of how microorganisms and plants have coevolved and exemplifies how microbial colonization may affect plant developmental pathways
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