2,614 research outputs found
Comparative effects of proximal and distal small intestinal glucose exposure on blood pressure, heart rate and mesenteric blood flow in health and type 2 diabetes
Abstract presented at 55th EASD Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of DiabetesT. Wu, X. Zhang, M. Horowitz, K.L. Jones, C.K. Rayne
Effects of the bitter taste receptor agonist, denatonium benzoate, on postprandial glycaemia, gastric emptying and energy intake in type 2 diabetes
Oral Presentation #198C. Xie, X. Wang, M.J. Bound, J. Grivell, R.L. Young, K.L. Jones, M. Horowitz, C.K. Rayner, T. W
Bitter taste signalling modulates bile acid-induced PYY, but not GLP-1 secretion in healthy humans
Poster session PS 27 Incremental studies on gut hormones - 439.
Published online: 25 August 2020C. Xie, X. Wang, M.J. Bound, R.L. Young, K.L. Jones, M. Horowitz, C.K. Rayner, T. W
Sex differences in the plasma glucagon responses to a high carbohydrate meal and a glucose drink in type 2 diabetes
Section Short Oral Discussions: SO 020 Holding hands with alpha cells in the islets - Abstract #416.
Published online: 12 September 2024C. Xie, K.L. Jones, M. Horowitz, C.K. Rayner, T. W
The language of C.K. Norwid
W niniejszym artykule ukazano różnice między polszczyzną obecną a współczesną C.K. Norwidowi. Autorka skupiła się na rozbieżnościach w zakresie leksyki i gramatyki, tj. fonetyki i fleksji. Materiał źródłowy stanowią utwory pochodzące z tomu Wiersze wybrane w opracowaniu M. Inglota z 1991 roku. Część słownictwa, którym posługiwał się C. Norwid, w dzisiejszych słownikach polszczyzny ogólnej opatrzona jest kwalifikatorami dawne czy przestarzałe. Analiza języka interesujących tekstów wykazuje dużo różnic z obecną polszczyzną także w zakresie fonetyki i fleksji. Stosowane formy są często typowe nie tylko dla XIX, ale także dla XVII czy XVIII wieku.The aim of this article was to present the differences between the present day Polish language and the one used by C.K. Norwid. The author highlighted lexical and grammatical discrepancies, focusing on phonetics and inflection in particular. The source materials were the poems included in the Wiersze wybrane poetry volume, compiled by M. Inglot in 1991. A part of the vocabulary used by Norwid is classified as obsolete or out of date in contemporary dictionaries. Language analysis of the relevant excerpts reveals plenty of differences when confronted with the present day language, also with regards to phonetics and inflection. The forms applied by the poet are typical of the XIXth, as well as XVIIth and XVIIIth century
Glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide and glucagon-like peptide-1 do not account for the entire incretin effect in healthy humans
Abstract #88, Session: OP 15 Incretins and glucagon in actionS. Veedfald, Y. Sun, C. Xiang, C. Xie, T. Wu, M. Bound, J. Grivell, B. Hartmann, K. Jones, M. Horowitz, J.J. Holst, C.K. Rayne
Autographed Photo From C.K. Steele to Joseph E. Lowery, April 1980
An autographed photo of C.K. Steele, Joseph E. Lowery, and Walter E. Fauntroy at a Southern Christian Leadership Conference National Board meeting. The photo is signed by C.K. Steele. The autograph states "Justice With Love - C.K. Steele, Sr.".The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Joseph & Evelyn Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights, the Joseph Echols Lowery Irrevocable Trust, and other donors in supporting the processing and digitization of Morehouse College's Joseph Echols and Evelyn Gibson Lowery Collection
New view of strategy: An interview with C.K. Prahalad
'Strategic intent', 'core competence' and 'strategy as stretch and leverage', are all management concepts that have become associated with C.K. Prahalad and his frequent co-author, Gary Hamel, most often in the pages of the Harvard Business Review, but also in other journals and books. These ideas now form the basis of much new thinking about competitiveness by strategic managers. With the publication in 1994 of Competing for the Future, C.K. Prahalad and Gary Hamel create a new view of strategy in one overall statement developing earlier HBR concepts like foresight, strategic architecture, global pre-emption and 'the need to forget'. Then, with new ideas like opportunity space, opportunity horizon, corporate challenge, and expeditionary marketing, the authors present a new language system to capture these ideas. Interviewed in Michigan by EMJ's editor, Paul Stonham, C.K. Prahalad points first that Competing for the Future is about 'democratizing' strategy -- how to engage a large number of people in creating a strategic direction, and that managers are now receptive to exploring ways of revitalizing companies. Continuing of the corporation, profitable growth, and ability to change, are all essential criteria for competitiveness. Wealth creation involves leveraging resources and creating new investment opportunities all the time. Shareholders and investors recognize this. C.K. Prahalad has views on the cultural springs of success, on innate competitive advantage, and on acquisitions as one of a number of alternative modes to acquire competence. He declines to be drawn into a close comparison of large and small companies, but prefers to focus on entrepreneurship and innovation. He points to the decreasing unilateral role of governments in international trade and finance, and to the need for innovative companies to search the global market for managerial talent. Business schools still produce functionally-biased managers; they should concentrate in future on producing at least four skills in their potential managers: teamwork, resolution of complex conflicts, languages, and operationalizing concepts. Finally, hinting in the interview of the next phase of his work, C.K. Prahalad does not lessen the anticipation of his readers.
Perspectives on ‘the lens of risk’ interview series: interviews with Tom Horlick-Jones, Paul Slovic and Andy Alaszewski
This article is the fourth and final of an interview series with a selection of significant contributors to the social science of risk. It provides quasi-verbatim interviews with Tom Horlick-Jones, Paul Slovic and Andy Alaszewski. Tom Horlick-Jones contributed to Chapter 6 of the Royal Society Risk monograph, on risk management. He offers further insights into the debates which underlay its production to those given by Nick Pidgeon in the first article of this series. Paul Slovic provides a North American perspective on risk social science. Andy Alaszewski, in the last of the eight interviews, discusses his views about risk in relation to the evolution of his journal, Health, Risk & Society
Holocence coastal development in an active arc-continent collision zone of eastern Taiwan
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