7,694 research outputs found
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Sonchus asper (L.) HillSpiny Annual SowthistleLaiteron annuel épineuxAHRC, Plot 34Peggy Morton and Delores Peter
tectorum
Crepis tectorum L.Narrow-leaved Hawk's-beardBarbe à feuilles étroitesAHRC, Plot 34Peggy Morton and Delores Peter
FIGURE 6. Indopinnixa moosai n in Two new species of Indopinnixa Manning & Morton, 1987 (Crustacea: Brachyura: Pinnotheridae) from Lombok, Indonesia
FIGURE 6. Indopinnixa moosai n. sp. A–D, G, male holotype (5.10 × 2.70 mm) (MZB Cru 2662); F, female paratype (4.20 × 2.30 mm) (MZB Cru 2664); G, H, male paratype (4.00 x 2.00 mm) (ZRC 2010.0098). A, B, G1; B,C, G1 tip; E, male abdomen; F, female abdomen; G, right third maxilliped, inner view; H. right third maxilliped, outer view. Setae partially omitted, scales = 0.5 mm.Published as part of Rahayu, Dwi Listyo & Ng, Peter K. L., 2010, Two new species of Indopinnixa Manning & Morton, 1987 (Crustacea: Brachyura: Pinnotheridae) from Lombok, Indonesia, pp. 59-68 in Zootaxa 2478 on page 66, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19536
Transfer of metyrapone and Its metabolite, rac-Metyrapol, into Breast milk
Metyrapone, an inhibitor of corticosteroid biosynthesis, is used in the diagnosis and treatment of adrenocortical hyperfunction. The authors describe the excretion of metyrapone and its metabolite, rac-metyrapol, in milk from a lactating woman requiring metyrapone treatment (250 mg 4 times daily). At steady state, the average concentrations in milk and absolute and relative infant doses were 11 microg/L, 1.7 microg/kg/d, and 0.02%, respectively, for metyrapone, and 48.5 microg/L, 7.3 microg/kg/d, and 0.08%, respectively, for rac-metyrapol. The findings suggest that maternal metyrapone use during breastfeeding is extremely unlikely to be a significant risk for the breastfed infant.Neil J. Hotham, Kenneth F. Ilett, L. Peter Hackett, Mark R. Morton, Peter Muller and William M. Hagu
Zechariah 9-14 as the substructure of 1 Peter’s eschatological program
The principal aim of this study is to discern what has shaped the author of 1 Peter to regard Christian suffering as a necessary (1.6) and to-be-expected (4.12) component of faithful allegiance to Jesus Christ. Most research regarding suffering in 1 Peter has limited the scope of inquiry to two particular aspects—its cause and nature, and the strategies that the author of 1 Peter employs in order to enable his addressees to respond in faithfulness. There remains, however, the need for a comprehensive explanation for the source that has generated 1 Peter’s theology of Christian suffering. If Jesus truly is the Christ, God’s chosen redemptive agent who has come to restore God’s people, then how can it be that Christian suffering is a necessary part of discipleship after his coming, death and resurrection? What led the author of 1 Peter to such a startling conclusion, which seems to runs against the grain of the eschatological hopes and expectations of Jewish restoration ideology?
This thesis analyzes the appropriation of shepherd and fiery trials imagery,
and argues that the author of 1 Peter is dependent upon Zechariah 9-14 for his
theology of Christian suffering. Said in another way, the eschatological program of
Zechariah 9-14, read through the lens of the Gospel, functions as the substructure
for 1 Peter’s eschatology and thus its theology of Christian suffering.
In support of this hypothesis, this study highlights the fact that Zechariah 9-
14 was available and appropriated in early Christianity, in particular in the Passion
Narrative tradition; that the shepherd imagery of 1 Pet 2.25 is best understood
within the milieu of the Passion Narrative tradition, and that it alludes to the
eschatological program of Zechariah 9-14; that the fiery trials imagery found in 1
Peter 1.6-7 and 1 Pet 4.12 is distinct from that which we find in Greco-Roman and OT
wisdom sources, and that it shares exclusive parallels with some unique features of
the eschatological program of Zechariah 9-14; that Zechariah 9-14 offers a more
satisfying explanation for the modification of Isa 11.2 in 1 Pet 4.14, the transition
from 4.12-19 to 5.1-4, why Peter has oriented his letter with the term διασπορά,
and why he has described his addresses as οἶκος τοῦ θεοῦ; and finally that 1 Peter
contains an implicit foundational narrative that shares distinct parallels with the
eschatological program of Zechariah 9-14.
We can conclude that 1 Peter offers a unique vista into the way in which at
least one early Christian witness came to understand and to communicate the fact
that Christian suffering was a necessary feature of faithful allegiance to Jesus Christ
Strange Attractors: A Commentary on Applications of Indeterminacy in my Recent Music
This commentary reflects on how indeterminacy has been used in the music I have written over the period of my doctoral studies, 2005-2008. Non-musical ideas play a major role in my compositional language and this is reflected in the use of 'strange attractors' as a metaphor for the philosophical and aesthetic stance behind composing with indeterminacy. After a brief introduction chapter, the links between strange attractors—and chaos theory in general—and indeterminate music are discussed. And applications of indeterminacy to pitch organisation techniques such as spectral modelling and frequency modulation are examined as part of a frequency-based harmonic continuum. Different methods of generating ambiguous pitch percepts that sit at the boundaries of the harmony/timbre duality are considered In pieces with text processes
The Gospel on the Margins: The Ideological Function of the Patristic Tradition on the Evangelist Mark
In spite of the virtually unanimous patristic opinion that the evangelist Mark was the interpreter of Peter, one of the most prestigious apostolic founding figures in Christian memory, the Gospel of Mark was mostly neglected in the patristic period. Not only is the text of Mark the least well represented of the canonical Gospels in terms of the number of patristic citations, commentaries and manuscripts, the explicit comments about the evangelist Mark reveal some ambivalence about its literary or theological value. In my survey of the reception of Mark from Papias of Hierapolis until Clement of Alexandria, I will argue that the reason why the patristic writers were hesitant to embrace the Gospel of Mark was that they perceived the text to be amenable to the Christological beliefs and social praxis of rival Christian factions. The patristic tradition about Mark may have little historical basis, but it had an important ideological function in appropriating the text in the name of an apostolic authority from the margins or periphery
Etiology and management of recurrent parotid pleomorphic adenoma
The objective of this review study was to encompass the relevant literature and current best practice options for this challenging, sometimes incurable problem. The source of the data was Ovid MEDLINE from 1946 to 2014. Review methods consisted of articles with clinical correlates. The most important cause of recurrence is enucleation with rupture and incomplete tumor excision at operation. Incomplete pseudocapsule, extracapsular extension, pseudopods of pleomorphic adenoma tissue, and satellite pleomorphic beyond the pseudocapsule are also likely linked to recurrent pleomorphic adenoma. Most recurrent pleomorphic adenoma are multinodular. Magnetic resonance imaging is the imaging study of choice for recurrent pleomorphic adenoma. Nerve integrity monitoring may reduce morbidity for recurrent pleomorphic adenoma. Treatment of recurrent pleomorphic adenoma must be individualized. Total parotidectomy, given the multicentricity of recurrent pleomorphic adenoma, is appropriate in many patients, but may be inadequate to control recurrent pleomorphic. There is accumulating evidence from retrospective series that postoperative radiation therapy results in significantly better local control.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE
NA Laryngoscope, 2014
Critical pedagogy in hard financial times
Peter Mayo takes issue with education financing not from an economic or technical
viewpoint, but from a philosophical and systemic one, drawing on critical pedagogy.
There is no sense, this article argues, to talk of higher education or its funding without
reference to the capitalist system which the mainstream education discourse reaffirms. The author concludes with an alternative vision of lifelong learning as a social act for the creation and enhancing of democratic spaces, reflected in the ongoing global “Occupy” protests for social equality.peer-reviewe
Review of "Fighting for the Higher Law: Black and White Transcendentalists against Slavery" by Peter Wirzbicki
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced version of an article accepted for publication in American Literary History following peer review. The version of record Laura L Mielke, Peter Wirzbicki, Fighting for the Higher Law: Black and White Transcendentalists against Slavery, American Literary History, Volume 34, Issue 4, Winter 2022, Pages 1544–1547is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajac17
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