105,640 research outputs found

    Il trionfo della fedeltà <franz.>

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    Verfasserin ermittelt in: GV, Bd. 147, S. 95Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Dresde, 1767. Imprimé chez C. S. Walther, Libraire-Imprimeur de la Cour

    "Soft" and "Hard" Policy Measures for Young People

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    Across Europe there is an increasing consensus that individuals need to become more active in their own social integration process. Participation in Transition focuses on young people’s motivation in their transitions from education to work. Through an analysis of case studies the book provides empirical insight into the transition experiences of young people and examines how different types of transition policies affect motivation. The key objective is to examine whether and under what conditions the principle of active participation is effective in re-motivating disengaged young people and argues that mainstream approaches to activation remain ineffective as they neglect young people’s subjective realities. The book adopts an innovative interdisciplinary approach that combines discrete research and policy perspectives on the labour market, youth and citizenship as well as learning and motivation. The study has been carried out in the framework of the European Group for Integrated Social Research (EGRIS). Contents: A. Walther/M. du Bois-Reymond/A. Biggart: Learning, Motivation and Participation in Youth Transitions: theoretical perspectives · A. Walther: Regulating Youth Transitions: trends, dilemmas and variations across different ‘regimes’ in Europe · T. Bechmann Jensen/B. Stauber: Researching Motivation and Participation in Youth Transitions in a Comparative Perspective · M. Cuconato/A. Hayes/G. Lenzi/ A. Walther: ‘Soft’ and ‘Hard’ Policy Measures for Young People · W. Plug/M. du Bois-Reymond: Transition Patterns between Structure and Agency · B. Stauber/A. Walther: Motivational Careers in Transition: expectations, experiences, and changes · B. Stauber/A. Holmboe/T. Bechmann Jensen/G. Lenzi/C. Laasch/ P. Leahy/A. López Blasco/W. Plug/H. Seifert: Experiences of Self-determination. Case studies into biographical effects of participatory practice · A. Pohl/M. du Bois-Reymond/P. Burgess/A. Holmboe/ A. Hayes/L. Iacob/J. Machado Pais/O. Marcovici/M. Santos: Learning Biographies. Case studies into dimensions and prerequisites of competence development · A. Walther/A. Pohl/P. Burgess: Potentials of Participation for Citizenship and Social Inclusio

    Walther Killy, ed, Deutsche biographische Enzyklopädie, t. 1

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    Grosser Alfred. Walther Killy, ed, Deutsche biographische Enzyklopädie, t. 1. In: Revue française de science politique, 45ᵉ année, n°3, 1995. pp. 498-499

    Freeze-thaw lysates of Plasmodium falciparum-infected red blood cells induce differentiation of functionally competent regulatory T cells from memory T cells.

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    In addition to naturally occurring regulatory T (nTreg) cells derived from the thymus, functionally competent Treg cells can be induced in vitro from peripheral blood lymphocytes in response to TCR stimulation with cytokine costimulation. Using these artificial stimulation conditions, both naïve as well as memory CD4(+) T cells can be converted into induced Treg (iTreg) cells, but the cellular origin of such iTreg cells in vivo or in response to more physiologic stimulation with pathogen-derived antigens is less clear. Here, we demonstrate that a freeze/thaw lysate of Plasmodium falciparum schizont extract (PfSE) can induce functionally competent Treg cells from peripheral lymphocytes in a time- and dose-dependent manner without the addition of exogenous costimulatory factors. The PfSE-mediated induction of Treg cells required the presence of nTreg cells in the starting culture. Further experiments mixing either memory or naïve T cells with antigen presenting cells and CFSE-labeled Treg cells identified CD4(+) CD45RO(+) CD25(-) memory T cells rather than Treg cells as the primary source of PfSE-induced Treg cells. Taken together, these data suggest that in the presence of nTreg cells, PfSE induces memory T cells to convert into iTreg cells that subsequently expand alongside PfSE-induced effector T cells

    Erinaceus ecaudatus Schreber 1778

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    193. - CLXV. Erinaceus ecaudatus - - - 584 BUFFON XII. t. 56. |Published as part of Schreber, Johann Christian Daniel, 1778, Die Säugethiere in Abbildungen nach der Natur, mit Beschreibungen. 3. Theil, Erlangen :Wolfgang Walther on page 990, DOI: 10.5962/bhl.title.6739

    Letter, [Author unclear] to Paulina T. Merritt

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    Handwritten letter to Paulina Merritt from an unknown author, October 1, 1876.

    Changing likes and dislikes through the back door: The US-revaluation effect

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    Walther E, Gawronski B, Blank H, Langer T. Changing likes and dislikes through the back door: The US-revaluation effect. Cognition and Emotion. 2009;23(5):889-917

    Subtyping schizophrenia: A comparison of positive/negative and system-specific approaches

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    BACKGROUND Schizophrenia is a heterogeneous disorder. Over the years, different approaches have been proposed to approach this heterogeneity by categorizing symptom patterns. The study aimed to compare positive/negative and system-specific approaches to subtyping. METHODS We used the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) and Bern Psychopathology Scale (BPS), which consists of subscales for three domains (language, affect and motor behavior) that are hypothesized to be related to specific brain circuits, to assess cross-sectional psychopathological characteristics in a sample of 100 inpatients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders. We then categorized participants into positive/negative and system-specific subgroups to allow comparisons of the two approaches. RESULTS The analyses revealed correlations between the PANSS positive subscore and the BPS affective subscore (r=.446, p<.001) and between the PANSS negative subscore and the BPS motor behavior subscore (r=.227, p=.023). As regards the positive and negative subtype, more participants were classified as positive in the language-dominant subtype (30.3%) and affect-dominant subtype (30.3%), whereas more were classified as negative in the motor behavior-dominant subtype (44.4%). However, most patients met the criteria for the mixed subtype. CONCLUSIONS The results suggest that the positive/negative and system-specific approaches can be regarded as complementary. Future studies should examine both approaches in a longitudinal assessment of psychopathological symptoms and link them with qualitative-phenomenological approaches

    The rotational spectra of conformers of biomolecules: tryptamine

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    The rotational spectra of two conformers of tryptamine have been assigned by free jet millimeter-wave absorption spectroscopy. Both of them are stabilized by an intramolecular N–H p bridge, formed between the amino group of the lateral chain in position 3 and the p system of the pyrrole unity. They correspond to the two most stable conformers found by resonant ion-dip infrared and UV–UV hole burning spectroscopies [J. R. Carney and T. S. Zwier, J. Phys. Chem, 2000, 104, 8677]

    Medicina Mentis, Sive Artis Inveniendi Praecepta Generalia

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    [E. W. D. T.]In: Tschirnhaus, Ehrenfried Walther von : Medicina Mentis Et Corporis. - Nicht identisch mit VD17 1:065402L (vgl. u.a. die Einfassung der Paginierung auf Bl. A recto; dort "[1]"
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