93,196 research outputs found
DIETARY CONDITIONS AND DIFFERENTIAL ACCESS TO FOOD RESOURCES AMONG THE VARIOUS CLASSES DURING THE HAN PERIOD
In this thesis, I study how food resources and dietary conditions were determined by social and economic status during the Han period in China, B.C. 206~A.D.220. Even though earlier scholars have published research concerning the Chinese food culture of this period, these studies were limited in that they only illustrated the dietary culture of the upper class or the available food resources in one geographic area. Also, without any persuasive data, it has been assumed by these earlier scholars that there were big differences in food resources and food consumption between the upper and lower classes. In this thesis, for comparison among the classes, I divide the social and economic classes into five stratified groups: nobles, officials, peasants, soldiers and convicts. After a brief introduction of the nature of each social class, I examine the food resources and nutritional condition of each group using information such as the wealth and income of each group, the market price of food resources, the agricultural products of peasants, and the amount of food distribution to soldiers and convicts. I found these data from archaeological remains, received historical records and pictorial data, and excavated texts. This research shows a broader view of Chinese dietary condition focusing not only on the variety of food resources of nobles, but also on the different food accessibilities among the officials, and the food deficiencies of peasants. It also deals with the situations of food supply for soldiers and convicts in an effort to reveal the true dietary consumption and nutritional conditions for all Chinese. This research proves that the various classes during the Han period in China had different food resources and dietary conditions
PHOSA anterior cruciate ligament: Rasch-analysis
Background: Fear of Movement is an important factor predicting return to sports in Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction (ACLR). Fear for specific ACLR related movements can be addressed measuring the Photographic Sports Activities for ACLR (PHOSA-ACLR). This study was conducted to determine whether Fear of Movement assessed using the PHOSA-ACLR is a latent trait, and to analyse differences in PHOSA-ACLR in athletes with or without an ACL rupture.
Methods: Data from three groups of participants were included in this study: 1) ACLR patients participated in a previous study measuring psychological dimensions after ACLR (n = 58 ); 2) first year physical therapy students at the HAN University of Applied Sciences (n = 169), and 3) junior football players that were enrolled in a training programme of the Professional Soccer club Vitesse (Arnhem) (n = 30). All participants completed the PHOSA-ACLR (scale score 0-10), and questions related to demographics. ACLR patients completed additional questionnaires to assess functioning and Fear of Harm. PHOSA-ACLR items were analysed with Item Response Theory using the Graded Response Model (GRM). Differences between three groups of participants were analysed using Univariate Analysis of Variance.
Results: The two-parameter GRM with both location and discrimination (-2LL = -5485.05) showed a significantly better fit than the one-parameter model (-2LL = -5515.36), χ^2(1) = 30.31, p = 0.00). The items of the PHOSA-ACLR thus constitute a latent trait. The three groups of participants differed in reported fear of movement assessed with the PHOSA-ACLR after controlling for covariates gender and age. Physical therapy students reported higher levels of fear of movement compared to either ACLR patients and healthy soccer players (respectively 4.9 (95%CI 4.6-5.3); 3.6 (95%CI 2.5-3.7); 2.6 (95%CI 1.6-3.6)).
Conclusion: PHOSA-ACLR items constitute a latent trait of fear of movement for ACLR specific movements. Contrary to expectations, PHOSA-ACLR is higher in first year physiotherapy students compared to patients rehabilitating from ACLR, and healthy junior soccer players. The PHOSA-ACLR might be useful for clinicians to identify high levels of fear of movement related to ACLR, and provide a tool to help the patient overcome fear of movement using exposure techniques
Shades of the North in Zygmunt Krasiński’s Agaj-Han
The author of the article analyses Zygmunt Krasiński’s views concerning romantic idea of the North. Additionally, he examines the poet’s polemics with Joachim Lelewel. The final conclusion demonstartes that Krasiński developed his own vision of the North, and that it contradicts the generally accepted utopian image which dominated the early stage of Polish [email protected] Andruczyk, student filologii polskiej na Uniwersytecie w Białymstoku (I rok II stopnia), sekretarz koła naukowego Klub Humanistów, współorganizator cyklu interdyscyplinarnych konferencji naukowych pt. „Słowozofia”. W kręgu jego zainteresowań znajdują się kwestie związane z literackim obrazowaniem przestrzeni w twórczości polskich romantyków, geografią literacką pierwszej połowy XIX wieku oraz recepcją tradycji w literaturze romantycznej i współczesnej.Wydział Filologiczny, Uniwersytet w Białymstoku221-237622123
The relationship between civic attitudes and voting intention : an analysis of vocational upper secondary schools in England and Singapore
From 2009 to 2011, a team from the Centre for Learning and Life Chances in Knowledge Economies and Societies carried out a mixedmethods study of young people in England and Singapore. With regard to civic attitudes, the study showed that there was a greater sense of political self-efficacy and collective (school) efficacy in Singapore than in England. In addition, the group in Singapore scored higher on future voting relative to the group in England. Further, while both political self-efficacy and collective (school) efficacy were correlated with future voting in England, only the latter was correlated in the case of Singapore. For some, the results may seem counter-intuitive. The article reflects on these results, particularly those relating to democratic outcomes
Dataset to support the article "High-resolution 𝜙-OFDR using phase unwrap and nonlinearity suppression"
This dataset is used for realizing high resolution of phase-sensitive Optical Frequency Domain Reflectometer. It is associated with the research paper:
Guo Z, Yan J, Han G, Yu Y, Greenwood D and Marco J (2023) "High-Resolution φ-OFDR Using Phase Unwrap and Nonlinearity Suppression". Journal of Lightwave Technology, 41 (9), 2885-2891. (https://doi.org/10.1109/JLT.2023.3236775).
The data is presented as an excel file:
High_resolution_OFDR_using_phase_unwrap_and_nonlinearity_suppression.xlsx
This work was funded by High Value Manufacturing Catapult and the Engineer and Physical Sciences Research Council - EPSRC EP/V000624/1. The author Gaoce Han would like to acknowledge the China Scholarship Council for sponsoring.</span
Designing bidding strategies in sequential auctions for risk averse agents
Designing efficient bidding strategies for sequential auctions represents an important, open problem area in agent-mediated electronic markets. In existing literature, a variety of bidding strategies have been proposed and have been shown to perform with varying degrees of efficiency. However, most of strategies proposed so far do not explicitly model bidders attitudes towards risk which, in mainstream economic literature, is considered an essential attribute in modeling agent preferences and decision making under uncertainty. This paper studies the effect that risk profiles (modeled through the standard Arrow-Pratt risk aversion measure), have on the bidders strategies in sequential auctions. First, the sequential decision process involved in bidding is modeled as a Markov Decision Process. Then, the effect that a bidders risk aversion has on her decision theoretic optimal bidding policy is analyzed, for a category of expectations of future price distributions. This analysis is performed separately for the case of first price and second-price sequential auctions. Next, the bidding strategies developed above are simulated, in order to study the effect that an agents risk aversion has on the chances of winning a set of complementary-valued items. The paper concludes with an experimental study of how the presence of risk-averse bidders affects both bidder profits and auctioneer revenue, for different market scenarios of increasing complexity
Han Suyin (Chinese author) speaking at Dallas Brookes Hall.
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/276390Han Suyin (Chinese author) speaking at Dallas Brookes Hall.200056
Item: [1999.0081.00439] "Han Suyin (Chinese author) speaking at Dallas Brookes Hall.
sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447221107701 – Supplemental material for Demographics of Common Compressive Neuropathies in the Upper Extremity
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447221107701 for Demographics of Common Compressive Neuropathies in the Upper Extremity by Madeline C. Rocks, Megan R. Donnelly, Alexander Li, Steven Z. Glickel, Louis W. Catalano III, Martin Posner and Jacques H. Hacquebord in HAND</p
sj-pdf-1-han-10.1177_15589447211030692 – Supplemental material for Patient Perspectives on Telemedicine During the COVID-19 Pandemic
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-han-10.1177_15589447211030692 for Patient Perspectives on Telemedicine During the COVID-19 Pandemic by Farhan Ahmad, Robert W. Wysocki, John J. Fernandez, Mark S. Cohen and Xavier C. Simcock in HAND</p
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