8,995 research outputs found

    Hero brands, brand heroes: How R.M. Williams inspired a cult following and created a shared sense of meaning

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    Hero brands, brand heroes: How R.M. Williams inspired a cult following and created a shared sense of meanin

    Williams Monoplane

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    "Williams Monoplane, Temple OX5, about 1926, Austin Lawrence (first left), R.M. [Con..hney], H. Woodall (second from right) working for Bill Erwin, Urnship (first from right)." Men standing shoulder-to-shoulder in front of Temple monoplane

    A visual conflict hypothesis for global-local visual deficits in Williams Syndrome: simulations and data

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    Individuals with Williams Syndrome demonstrate impairments in visuospatial cognition. This has been ascribed to a local processing bias. More specifically, it has been proposed that the deficit arises from a problem in disengaging attention from local features. We present preliminary data from an integrated empirical and computational exploration of this phenomenon. Using a connectionist model, we first clarify and formalize the proposal that visuospatial deficits arise from an inability to locally disengage. We then introduce two empirical studies using Navon-style stimuli. The first explored sensitivity to local vs. global features in a perception task, evaluating the effect of a manipulation that raised the salience of global organization. Thirteen children with WS exhibited the same sensitivity to this manipulation as CA-matched controls, suggesting no local bias in perception. The second study focused on image reproduction and demonstrated that in contrast to controls, the children with WS were distracted in their drawings by having the target in front of them rather than drawing from memory. We discuss the results in terms of an inability to disengage during the planning stage of reproduction due to over-focusing on local elements of the current visual stimulus

    Outcome of nutritional screening in the acute paediatric setting

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    Introduction: multiple nutritional risk assessment tools are available, but there are limited data on their application in the acute setting. We explored the validity of two tools in a tertiary Children's Hospital's acute unit and the cohort's nutritional status using WHO definitions.Methods: prospective study n=300 (median 38 months; 44.6% female; 25.7% ≤12 months). Participants had standard anthropometry measured, all were screened using the Screening Tool for the Assessment of Malnutrition in Paediatrics (STAMP), the Paediatric Malnutrition Screening Tool (PMST) (modified STAMP) and 125 were additionally screened using the Paediatric Yorkhill Malnutrition Screening (PYMS) tool.Results: the percentages with medium/high nutritional risk were as follows: STAMP 73.1%, PMST 79.3% and PYMS 30%. Height/weight were normally distributed with: 3.4% stunted (height-for-age z-score <-2); aged ≤ 5 years, 6.8% wasted (weight-for-height z-score (WHZ) <-2), 17.9% overweight (WHZ 1-2) and 6.2% obese (WHZ >2); aged >5 years, 5.8% thin (body mass index (BMI)-z-score (BAZ) <-2), 17.3% overweight (BAZ 1-2) and 5.8% obese (BAZ >2). The tools showed poor specificity and variable sensitivities when compared with WHO malnutrition criteria, with positive predictive values of <50%. κ-Analysis also showed poor agreement between the tools and the WHO cut-offs.Conclusions: these results suggest that nutritional screening tools have poor sensitivity and are difficult to interpret in the acute setting. It may be more effective to include the assessment of weight and height and nutritional intake in the context of the acute presentation as part of routine clinical assessment rather than relying on screening tools to identify those at risk

    R.M. Simmons presentation, Rena Smart book review

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    R.M. Simmons of the Gospel Music Workshop of America gives a presentation on the African influence in the African American religious experience. He explains how African slaves brought to America their concept of music (utilitarian concept of music). Simmons further discusses the fusion between the utilitarian concept and the Western concept of religion resulting in spirituals. He also describes hymn categories in early forms of formal African American worship experiences. Simmons takes questions from the audience among which is Dr. Riggins Earl Jr. Video concludes with a book review on Christian Theology and Ethics by Rena Smart.The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the National Endowment for Humanities - Humanities Collections and Reference Resources Implementation Project Grant in supporting the processing and digitization of a number of its major archival collections as part of the project: Spreading the Word: Expanding Access to African American Religious Archival Collections at the Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library.</em

    What can developmental disorders tell us about the neurocomputational constraints that shape development? the case of Williams syndrome

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    The uneven cognitive phenotype in the adult outcome of Williams syndrome has led some researchers to make strong claims about the modularity of the brain and the purported genetically determined, innate specification of cognitive modules. Such arguments have particularly been marshaled with respect to language. We challenge this direct generalization from adult phenotypic outcomes to genetic specification and consider instead how genetic disorders provide clues to the constraints on plasticity that shape the outcome of development. We specifically examine behavioral studies, brain imaging, and computational modeling of language in Williams syndrome but contend that our theoretical arguments apply equally to other cognitive domains and other developmental disorders. While acknowledging that selective deficits in normal adult patients might justify claims about cognitive modularity, we question whether similar, seemingly selective deficits found in genetic disorders can be used to argue that such cognitive modules are prespecified in infant brains. Cognitive modules are, in our view, the outcome of development, not its starting point. We note that most work on genetic disorders ignores one vital factor, the actual process of ontogenetic development, and argue that it is vital to view genetic disorders as proceeding under different neurocomputational constraints, not as demonstrations of static modularity

    Hero brands, brand heroes: How R.M. Williams inspired a cult following and created a shared sense of meaning

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    Brands become relevant to consumers via storytelling, and archetypal myths in popular culture inform this effect. The hero is an archetype of enduring interest, yet as the marketing literature is replete with heroic undertones, the scope of empirical research is limited and dominated by North American perspectives. To address this shortcoming, this study explores Australian consumer relationships with hero archetypes to provide a contemporary view of how consumers enact brand myths. An in-depth case study of R.M. Williams, an iconic Australian brand, shows the relevance of iconic heroes and reveals how historical archetypes can evolve to address emergent consumer-brand storytelling needs. The study identifies several novel archetypal patterns which contribute to a deeper understanding of how consumers enact brand myths. These archetypes influence consumers in their consumption quests, reconciling social needs and facilitating their immersion in the brand's story. To improve consumer-brand engagement, marketers must focus on engaging consumers with the brand's narrative through the strategic use of archetypal myths

    A change of emphasis: waste to resource management

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    It is 40 years since the waste hierarchy was introduced in the European Union. During this period the World has changed significantly, with massive changes in population, socio-economic and demographic circumstances, politics, consumption of goods and services, range and type of products available, energy and water consumption, etc. We have seen an increase in public awareness and education relating to environmental issues, public consultation on matters such as the siting of waste facilities, and the development of thinking and actions relating to sustainable development. Nevertheless, we still generate enormous quantities of waste that require treatment, and in some cases, disposal.This Chapter will look at how waste management has evolved towards resource management during the last 40 years using the structure of the waste hierarchy as a template. It will discuss how our strategic approach to waste (resource) management has developed in the context of changing international and national policies, technology and consumption, and how our understanding of human behaviour relating to waste and resources has evolved. It will also consider how certain waste streams have altered or come on-line over this period and how the circular economy has burst onto the scene

    Velocity-Gradient Probability Distribution Functions in a Lagrangian Model of Turbulence

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    The Recent Fluid Deformation Closure (RFDC) model of lagrangian turbulence is recast in path-integral language within the framework of the Martin-Siggia-Rose functional formalism. In order to derive analytical expressions for the velocity-gradient probability distribution functions (vgPDFs), we carry out noise renormalization in the low-frequency regime and find approximate extrema for the Martin-Siggia-Rose effective action. We verify, with the help of Monte Carlo simulations, that the vgPDFs so obtained yield a close description of the single-point statistical features implied by the original RFDC stochastic differential equations

    David Williams and the capture of Andre : a paper read before the Tarrytown Historical Society /

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    "Tarrytown Argus supplement, March 28, 1903"--cover.Gephart, R.M. Revolutionary AmericaMode of access: Internet.New York Genealogical and Biographical Society;With autograph letter of Author
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