3,962 research outputs found
Erica whyteana Britten
Erica whyteana Britten — Habit: Shrub. Habitat: BZ, UMF, HZ, AZ; 2 500–4 000 m. Distribution: II. Voucher: Kamweti Track, Alt. 3 350 m, 2 Feb. 2015, SAJIT 003078 (HIB). References: Fries & Fries (1924), Bussmann (1993, 1994), Beentje (2006), Agnew (2013).Published as part of Zhou, Ya-Dong, Mwachala, Geoffrey, Hu, Guang-Wan & Wang, Qing-Feng, 2022, Annotated checklist of the vascular plants of Mount Kenya, East Africa, pp. 1-108 in Phytotaxa 546 (1) on page 72, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.546.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/655046
Erica filago Beentje
Erica filago (Alm & T.C.E.Fr.) Beentje — Habit: Shrub. Habitat: HZ, AZ, NZ; 2 900–4 500 m. Distribution: II. Voucher: Chogoria Track, Alt. 4 361 m, 20 Jul. 2014, SAJIT 001917 (HIB). References: Fries & Fries (1924), Blundell (1987), Rehder et al. (1981), Young & Peacock (1985), Bussmann (1993, 1994), Beentje (2006), Agnew (2013).Published as part of Zhou, Ya-Dong, Mwachala, Geoffrey, Hu, Guang-Wan & Wang, Qing-Feng, 2022, Annotated checklist of the vascular plants of Mount Kenya, East Africa, pp. 1-108 in Phytotaxa 546 (1) on page 72, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.546.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/655046
Erica arborea L.
Erica arborea L. — Habit: Shrub or small tree. Habitat: LMDF, BZ, UMF, HZ, AZ, NZ; 1 700–4 500 m. Distribution: I. Voucher: Around Lake Michaelson, Alt. 4 112 m, 24 Jan. 2015, SAJIT 002806 (HIB). References: Fries & Fries (1924), Rehder et al. (1981), Young & Peacock (1985), Bussmann (1993, 1994, 1996, 2006), Bussmann & Beck (1998), Beentje (2006), Abdi (2013), Agnew (2013).Published as part of Zhou, Ya-Dong, Mwachala, Geoffrey, Hu, Guang-Wan & Wang, Qing-Feng, 2022, Annotated checklist of the vascular plants of Mount Kenya, East Africa, pp. 1-108 in Phytotaxa 546 (1) on page 72, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.546.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/655046
Erica mannii Beentje
Erica mannii (Hook.f.) Beentje — Habit: Shrub or small tree. Habitat: LMDF, BZ, UMF, HZ; up to 4 100 m. Distribution: II. Voucher: Meru Mount Kenya Lodge area and tracks to waterfall and Lake Ellis, Alt. 3000– 3500 m, 16–18 Aug. 1985, Robertson et al. 4012 (EA). References: Fries & Fries (1924), Young & Peacock (1985), Bussmann (1993, 1994), Beentje (2006).Published as part of Zhou, Ya-Dong, Mwachala, Geoffrey, Hu, Guang-Wan & Wang, Qing-Feng, 2022, Annotated checklist of the vascular plants of Mount Kenya, East Africa, pp. 1-108 in Phytotaxa 546 (1) on page 72, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.546.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/655046
Erica trimera subsp. keniensis Beentje
E Erica trimera (Engl.) Beentje subsp. keniensis (S.Moore) Beentje — Habit: Shrub. Habitat: HZ, AZ, NZ; 2 900–4 500 m. Distribution: IIIc. Voucher: Sirimon Track, Alt. 4 265 m, 19 Jul. 2014, CPG 28450 (HIB). References: Fries & Fries (1924), Young & Peacock (1985), Beentje (2006), Bussmann (2006), Abdi (2013).Published as part of Zhou, Ya-Dong, Mwachala, Geoffrey, Hu, Guang-Wan & Wang, Qing-Feng, 2022, Annotated checklist of the vascular plants of Mount Kenya, East Africa, pp. 1-108 in Phytotaxa 546 (1) on page 72, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.546.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/655046
Changes in the competition for city trash collection may mean efficiencies come at the expense of social equity
Few of us would think of looking to the trash can in search of social equity issues. But a multi-year study by Jing Wang and Erica McFadden in a southwestern US city raises the question of whether cities using private contractors for trash collection are trading social equity for efficiency, with Latino areas served by private contractors rating their trash services far lower than those living in other areas
Healing through mirroring the other: a single case on sharing vulnerability in the therapeutic relationship
Research in psychotherapy has tried to identify which elements favor and hinder the therapeutic alliance.
However, few studies have analyzed how these processes come into play when patients and therapists share the same psychological vulnerability factors. The innovation of this contribution is twofold: 1. For the first time, patient and therapist expose, in a single work, their point of view in moments of impasse regarding their respective roles in the relationship and the emotions and tendencies to action activated by each other; 2. The Cognitive Model of Pathological Affective Dependencies (Pugliese et al., 2023), which focuses on the frustration of basic needs as an antecedent for traumatic relationships, is first applied to therapeutic alliance breakdowns. In relational trauma, there are feelings of distrust, a perception of the world as dangerous and unpredictable, and, concerning others, a belief in unlovability prevails. While the therapeutic relationship provides the basis for processing traumatic experiences through a new relational experience, it is the patient's compromised capacity for trust that makes it difficult to achieve stability. The feeling of powerlessness and helplessness underlying the trauma leads the relationship to oscillate between needs for closeness and distance, triggering an emotional spiral that leads to the interruption of emotional
expressiveness, communication, and intimacy. Through a single case, we illustrate the complexity that the
therapeutic relationship assumes when it is embedded in a disabling interpersonal cycle in which the patient
feels drawn to destroy the therapist's image, even though she feels the need for the relationship and the pain resulting from its loss. The need for security and attachment, coupled with the terrifying fear of losing the other, activates attempts at a solution based on control and the use of power that will constitute the leading cause of the break of the bond and the primary factor in maintaining a long impasse in the therapeutic process, leading to a collapse of metacognition and confusion of roles. The therapeutic setting takes the form of a courtroom in which the patient and therapist remain for a long time trying, through their clinical expertise, to find answers to a single question: Who is the abuser, and who is the victim? This contribution allows careful analysis of interpersonal cycles in relational trauma through an integrated clinical reading of the patient and therapist, supporting the progress of research in psychotherapy aimed at developing increasingly precise strategies to ensure effectiveness
Fig. 1 in Study of some European wild hybrids of Erica L. (Ericaceae), with descriptions of a new nothospecies: Erica nelsonii Fagúndez and a new nothosubspecies: Erica veitchii nothosubsp. asturica Fagúndez
Fig. 1. – Erica ×nelsonii Fagúndez. A. Synflorescence of upper left fragment (typus); B. General view of upper right fragment. [P. F. Hunt 1636, K] [Drawn by the author]Published as part of Fagúndez, Jaime, 2012, Study of some European wild hybrids of Erica L. (Ericaceae), with descriptions of a new nothospecies: Erica nelsonii Fagúndez and a new nothosubspecies: Erica veitchii nothosubsp. asturica Fagúndez, pp. 51-57 in Candollea 67 (1) on page 53, DOI: 10.15553/c2012v671a7, http://zenodo.org/record/576238
Rand, Erica - 2022 Follow Up
Erica Rand is a professor of Arts and Visual Culture at Bates College, an adult figure skater, author and activist. This is a follow-up interview to her previous interview for Querying the Past in 2017. Erica Rand was heavily involved with ACT- UP Portland and more specifically the branch of ACT UP called: Pissed Off Dyke Cell and Women’s Health Action Crew. But more recently she has been involved with a new form of activism through sports and writing. At Bates, she is pushing the importance of trans-inclusion policies in sports and even testing the gender limitations put in place in figure skating.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/querying_ohproject/1095/thumbnail.jp
Veterinary science : humans, animals and health
This living book is a collection of open access materials bringing scientific papers to a humanities audienc
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