739 research outputs found
Bianca Garavelli studiosa e scrittrice
Bianca Garavelli (Vigevano, 1958-2021) was a highly regarded figure in the literary world, both on the critical and creative side. Author of important critical studies on Dante and of a successful commentary on the Commediam (begun under the supervision of Maria Corti but then continued independently), as well as critic and reviewer for newspapers and periodicals, Garavelli also wrote and published poems, novels and short stories. This article offers an exhaustive bio-bibliographical profile of Bianca Garavelli, whose literary work in various fields is reconstructed and critically examined
Let´s (watch me) play : which factors relate to Let´s Play addiction?
Author Bianca Haun, BScZusammenfassungen in englischer SpracheMasterarbeit Universität Linz 201
Due process in sports arbitration: The applicability of article 6 echr to cas proceedings
Objective: The objective of this study is to investigate the applicability and enforceability of Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) in the context of arbitration before the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), with the aim of assessing whether CAS proceedings comply with the procedural guarantees of a fair trial, particularly in light of their quasi-mandatory nature for professional athletes.
Theoretical Framework: This research is grounded in the legal theory of human rights enforcement, international arbitration law, and the principle of procedural fairness. The work draws upon jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights, Swiss arbitration doctrine, and scholarly contributions regarding binding arbitration and access to justice. Jan Paulsson’s theory on the state’s role in legitimizing arbitral authority, as well as the European Court’s evolving interpretation of Article 6, provides a foundation for analyzing the legal status of CAS.
Method: The methodology adopted for this research comprises a qualitative, doctrinal legal analysis of primary legal sources (e.g., ECHR, CAS Code, Swiss arbitration laws) and case law (ECtHR and Swiss Federal Tribunal rulings). Data collection was conducted through legal document review, including academic commentary, international arbitration jurisprudence, and comparative legal frameworks. The approach is analytical and interpretive, aiming to identify how procedural rights are conceptualized and applied within CAS proceedings.
Results and Discussion: The results revealed that CAS, although structured as a private arbitral body, performs a quasi-judicial function and is bound to uphold the guarantees of Article 6 of the ECHR. The discussion contextualizes this finding by comparing sports arbitration with traditional voluntary arbitration, highlighting the structural imbalance between athletes and sports federations. The Mutu and Pechstein judgment is examined as a turning point in recognizing CAS’s obligations under human rights law. The study also acknowledges limitations related to the limited scope of judicial review available under Swiss law.
Research Implication: The practical and theoretical implications of this research suggest that procedural safeguards in sports arbitration must be reinforced through further reforms of CAS rules and closer judicial scrutiny by the Swiss Federal Tribunal. These insights are relevant for international sports law, human rights compliance in private legal orders, and institutional governance of dispute resolution in global athletics.
Originality/Value: This study contributes to the literature by offering a focused legal analysis of CAS’s compatibility with Article 6 ECHR, emphasizing its unique status as a de facto mandatory arbitral body. The originality lies in synthesizing ECtHR and Swiss jurisprudence to assess how fundamental rights operate within a specialized, non-state adjudicative mechanism. The relevance of this research is demonstrated by its implications for athlete protections and the legitimacy of international sports governance
DUE PROCESS IN SPORTS ARBITRATION: THE APPLICABILITY OF ARTICLE 6 ECHR TO CAS PROCEEDINGS
Objective: The objective of this study is to investigate the applicability and enforceability of Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) in the context of arbitration before the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), with the aim of assessing whether CAS proceedings comply with the procedural guarantees of a fair trial, particularly in light of their quasi-mandatory nature for professional athletes.
Theoretical Framework: This research is grounded in the legal theory of human rights enforcement, international arbitration law, and the principle of procedural fairness. The work draws upon jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights, Swiss arbitration doctrine, and scholarly contributions regarding binding arbitration and access to justice. Jan Paulsson’s theory on the state’s role in legitimizing arbitral authority, as well as the European Court’s evolving interpretation of Article 6, provides a foundation for analyzing the legal status of CAS.
Method: The methodology adopted for this research comprises a qualitative, doctrinal legal analysis of primary legal sources (e.g., ECHR, CAS Code, Swiss arbitration laws) and case law (ECtHR and Swiss Federal Tribunal rulings). Data collection was conducted through legal document review, including academic commentary, international arbitration jurisprudence, and comparative legal frameworks. The approach is analytical and interpretive, aiming to identify how procedural rights are conceptualized and applied within CAS proceedings.
Results and Discussion: The results revealed that CAS, although structured as a private arbitral body, performs a quasi-judicial function and is bound to uphold the guarantees of Article 6 of the ECHR. The discussion contextualizes this finding by comparing sports arbitration with traditional voluntary arbitration, highlighting the structural imbalance between athletes and sports federations. The Mutu and Pechstein judgment is examined as a turning point in recognizing CAS’s obligations under human rights law. The study also acknowledges limitations related to the limited scope of judicial review available under Swiss law.
Research Implication: The practical and theoretical implications of this research suggest that procedural safeguards in sports arbitration must be reinforced through further reforms of CAS rules and closer judicial scrutiny by the Swiss Federal Tribunal. These insights are relevant for international sports law, human rights compliance in private legal orders, and institutional governance of dispute resolution in global athletics.
Originality/Value: This study contributes to the literature by offering a focused legal analysis of CAS’s compatibility with Article 6 ECHR, emphasizing its unique status as a de facto mandatory arbitral body. The originality lies in synthesizing ECtHR and Swiss jurisprudence to assess how fundamental rights operate within a specialized, non-state adjudicative mechanism. The relevance of this research is demonstrated by its implications for athlete protections and the legitimacy of international sports governance
A combined intervention for executive deficits and anxiety in Parkinson's patients: a case study
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder most commonly associated with motor symptomatology, yet often presenting with deficits in attention, executive functioning (EF; e.g., planning, mental flexibility, complex attention), anxiety, and depression, with debilitating effects on patients’ quality of life. Current interventions, including pharmacological and surgical methods show efficacy in motor symptom management, yet produce equivocal results in addressing non-motor dysfunction. The goal of this paper was to describe and investigate the efficacy and patient acceptance of a nonpharmacological intervention for treatment of executive dysfunction (ED) and anxiety in PD, in the context of a case study (the case of Mr. K). Brain and Mind Fitness Program (BMFP) is a short-term intervention, consisting of a combination of cognitive remediation and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). BMFP was demonstrated to be fully acceptable to Mr. K, based on ratings of 4 feasibility dimensions (fatigue, effort, progress, and enjoyment). The program also proved to be efficacious in alleviating Mr. K’s anxiety and depression symptoms, with benefits extending over the treatment period. BMFP, elsewhere shown to be an effective cognitive re-training of EF in PD patients, exhibited limited gains in the case of Mr. K., possibly due to his relatively intact cognitive abilities at baseline. Despite its limitations, the case of Mr. K presents a novel approach to treatment of PD non-motor symptoms and a learning opportunity for researchers and clinicians interested in expanding their knowledge across disciplines.Psy. D.Includes bibliographical referencesby Bianca R. Georgesc
BIANCA (Brain Intensity AbNormality Classification Algorithm): a new tool for automated segmentation of white matter hyperintensities
Reliable quantification of white matter hyperintensities of presumed vascular origin (WMHs) is increasingly needed, given the presence of these MRI findings in patients with several neurological and vascular disorders, as well as in elderly healthy subjects. We present BIANCA (Brain Intensity AbNormality Classification Algorithm), a fully automated, supervised method for WMH detection, based on the k-nearest neighbour (k-NN) algorithm. Relative to previous k-NN based segmentation methods, BIANCA offers different options for weighting the spatial information, local spatial intensity averaging, and different options for the choice of the number and location of the training points. BIANCA is multimodal and highly flexible so that the user can adapt the tool to their protocol and specific needs. We optimised and validated BIANCA on two datasets with different MRI protocols and patient populations (a “predominantly neurodegenerative” and a “predominantly vascular” cohort). BIANCA was first optimised on a subset of images for each dataset in terms of overlap and volumetric agreement with a manually segmented WMH mask. The correlation between the volumes extracted with BIANCA (using the optimised set of options), the volumes extracted from the manual masks and visual ratings showed that BIANCA is a valid alternative to manual segmentation. The optimised set of options was then applied to the whole cohorts and the resulting WMH volume estimates showed good correlations with visual ratings and with age. Finally, we performed a reproducibility test, to evaluate the robustness of BIANCA, and compared BIANCA performance against existing methods. Our findings suggest that BIANCA, which will be freely available as part of the FSL package, is a reliable method for automated WMH segmentation in large cross-sectional cohort studies. © 2016 The Author
Dataset: Culturally Responsive Supervision
Thesis title: A Study Exploring the Supervisory Relationship in the Context of Culturally Responsive Supervision: A Supervisee’s Perspective
Quantitative and qualitative survey data on supervisee perspectives of culturally responsive supervision and their supervisory relationship. The data was collected by the primary author and can be viewed in SPSS.
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Il chiostro dell'abbazia benedettina di Monreale: documenti d'archivio inediti per ricostruire la storia degli interventi di restauro tra 1867 e 1907.
The Cloister of the Monreale Benedictine Abbey: New Archival Documents to Reconstruct the History of Restoration Work Between 1867 and 1907
Soon after the unification of Italy, the cloister of the Monreale benedictine Abbey underwent restoration work supervised by the architect Giuseppe Patricolo which transformed the cloister image, determining largely his current configuration. The history of these restoration interventions occurred between 1867 and 1907 has been reconstructed by the author through the examina- tion of unpublished archival documents and pictures, equally relevant to summarize in detail the most important works which changed the aspect of the cloister courtyard
Forecast horizon of 5th – 6th – 7th long wave and short-period of contraction in economic cycles
The purpose of this essay is to determine the forecast horizon of the fifth, sixth and seventh long wave. As the period of each long wave can change according to the data, it has been used a deterministic approach, based on historical chronologies of USA and UK economies worked out by several scholars, to determine average timing, period and forecast error of future long waves. In addition, the analysis shows that long waves have average upwave period longer than average downwave one. This result is also confirmed by US Business Cycles that have average contractions shorter than expansions phase over time.Forecast Horizon, Long Waves, Kondratieff Waves, Business Cycles, Asymmetric Path
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