2,458 research outputs found

    Erratum: Medication Adherence Reminder System for Virtual Home Assistants: Mixed Methods Evaluation Study (Jmir Form Res (2021)5:7 (E27327) Doi: 10.2196/27327)

    No full text
    In “Medication Adherence Reminder System for Virtual Home Assistants: Mixed Methods Evaluation Study” (JMIR Form Res 2021;5(7):e27327), three errors were noted. Due to a system error, the name of one author, Cynthia F Corbett, was replaced with the name of another author on the paper, Elizabeth M Combs. In the originally published paper, the order of authors was listed as follows: Elizabeth M Combs, Elizabeth M Combs, Peyton S Chandarana, Isabel Stringfellow, Karen Worthy, Thien Nguyen, Pamela J Wright, Jason M O\u27Kane This has been corrected to: Cynthia F Corbett, Elizabeth M Combs, Peyton S Chandarana, Isabel Stringfellow, Karen Worthy, Thien Nguyen, Pamela J Wright, Jason M O\u27Kane In the originally published paper, the ORCID of author Cynthia F Corbett was incorrectly published as follows: 0000-0002-2254-6958 This has been corrected to: 0000-0003-2706-2116 In the originally published paper, the email of the Corresponding Author was incorrectly published as follows: [email protected] This has been corrected to: [email protected] The correction will appear in the online version of the paper on the JMIR Publications website on January 27, 2022, together with the publication of this correction notice. Because this was made after submission to PubMed, PubMed Central, and other full-text repositories, the corrected article has also been resubmitted to those repositories

    British Women Travellers And The Harems: Liberties, Enslavement and Domesticity

    No full text
    This thesis examines the complex perspective of a woman traveller. Wortley Montagu, Martineau, Burton and their contemporaries, represented the harem through various lenses. The Oriental harem has fascinated Western civilization since time immemorial. This sacred place, reserved for the women and children of the Muslim household, had long been a terra incognita to British outsiders, until the publication of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu’s (1689-1762) Turkish Embassy Letters (1763), which gave impetus to a whole tradition of travel writings, particularly harem accounts, penned by British women. The aristocratic Wortley Montagu recasts Turkish women from their previous Western image as over-sexed and soulless beings to idealized domestic goddesses, living in an ideal world, the harem. Harriet Martineau(1802-1876) , travelled to the Ottoman Empire more than a century after Wortley Montagu’s residency in Oriental lands. Martineau was a rare talent. She was an accomplished journalist and a pioneering figure in Western sociology. She spent her life validating a place for herself and her sex in a patriarchal and male-dominated society; she earned her own keeping, and lived independently. Martineau related her eastern experience in Eastern Life: Past and Present (1848), in which the Oriental harem figures very little. Martineau pitied the women she encountered in Egypt, and depicted them as slaves of a corrupt system, the harem and the practice of polygamy. My thesis ends with the travel writings of Lady Isabel Burton (1831-1896) whose view of the Oriental women she met in Syria is the most tempered. Her Inner Life of Syria, Palestine and the Holy Lands: from my Private Journal (1875) displays a tolerance of other cultures and a move toward moral and cultural relativisms. Each of the women considered in this thesis formed her own harem, projecting on to this distant Oriental structure her fears, hopes and desires. Wortley Montagu’s harem was a utopia for women only. The Victorian Martineau opined that the Oriental harem was a hell on earth. Lady Isabel Burton constructed a happy medium between the two. Although at times ambivalent towards the Syrian women she encountered, she partook in their customs and manners, particularly public bathing, smoking and other Eastern indulgences. Her attitude illustrates that the British home and the Oriental harem are not so dissimilar, bridging the gap between us and them

    Bimeria vestita Wright 1859

    No full text
    <i>Bimeria vestita</i> Wright, 1859 <p> Synonyms in the area: <i>Garveia humilis</i> —Vervoort 1967; Wedler 1975 [polyp].</p> <p>Distribution in South America: polyp—Pacific Ocean, Ecuador, at 0.56°N 80.01°W in San Francisco Bay, Chile, at 29.18°S 71.50°W, and from 41.76°S to 53.78°S (Fraser 1938a, 1948; Hartlaub 1905 p. 535; Galea 2007 p.</p> <p> 17; Galea <i>et al.</i> 2009a p. 308; Galea & Schories 2012a p. 22); Atlantic Ocean, Colombia, at Santa Marta coast, Venezuela, from Puerto Cabello to La Guaira, Brazil to Argentina, from 3°S to 4°S, at 9.84°S 35.85°W, from 10.50°S to 43°S (Vervoort 1967; Blanco 1974, 1994a; Wedler 1975; Genzano 1992, 1994a, 1994b, 1998, 2001; Migotto 1996; Grohmann 1997; Grohmann <i>et al.</i> 1997; Rosso & Marques 1997; Genzano & Zamponi 1997, 1999, 2003; Genzano & Rodriguez 1998; Kelmo & Santa Isabel 1998; Migotto <i>et al.</i> 2002; Marques & Migotto 2003; Oliveira 2003; Grohmann 2006; Marques <i>et al.</i> 2006; Miranda & Marques 2006, abstract; Oliveira <i>et al.</i> 2006; Shimabukuro & Marques 2006a, abstract; Shimabukuro <i>et al.</i> 2006; Shimabukuro 2007; Oliveira & Marques 2007, 2 0 11; Maronna <i>et al.</i> 2008, abstract; Amaral <i>et al.</i> 2009; Genzano <i>et al.</i> 2009a, 2011; Grohmann <i>et al.</i> 2011; Silveira & Morandini 2011; Miranda <i>et al.</i> 2011, 2015; Bumbeer & Rocha 2012; Fernandez <i>et al</i>. 2014, 2015).</p> <p> Habitat: polyp—shallow waters, at intertidal zone (below the <i>Phragmatopoma</i> sp. zone) to 90m depth, in sheltered places, on algae, fouling, bryozoans, hydroids (mainly on colonies of eudendriids, tubulariids and sertulariids), rock, sponges (Fraser 1938a; Blanco 1974, 1994a; Migotto 1996; Genzano & Zamponi 1999, 2003; Genzano & Rodriguez 1998; Kelmo & Santa Isabel 1998; Marques & Migotto 2003; Oliveira 2003; Marques <i>et al.</i> 2006; Oliveira <i>et al.</i> 2006; Shimabukuro <i>et al.</i> 2006; Shimabukuro & Marques 2006a; Galea 2007; Oliveira & Marques 2007, 2011; Shimabukuro 2007; Galea <i>et al.</i> 2009a; Miranda <i>et al.</i> 2011; Fernandez <i>et al</i>. 2014, 2015).</p>Published as part of <i>OLIVEIRA, OTTO M. P., MIRANDA, THAÍS P., ARAUJO, ENILMA M., AYÓN, PATRICIA, CEDEÑO-POSSO, CRISTINA M., CEPEDA-MERCADO, AMANCAY A., CÓRDOVA, PABLO, CUNHA, AMANDA F., GENZANO, GABRIEL N., HADDAD, MARIA ANGÉLICA, MIANZAN, HERMES W., MIGOTTO, ALVARO E., MIRANDA, LUCÍLIA S., MORANDINI, ANDRÉ C., NAGATA, RENATO M., NASCIMENTO, KARINE B., JÚNIOR, MIODELI NOGUEIRA, PALMA, SERGIO, QUIÑONES, JAVIER, RODRIGUEZ, CAROLINA S., SCARABINO, FABRIZIO, SCHIARITI, AGUSTÍN, STAMPAR, SÉRGIO N., TRONOLONE, VALQUÍRIA B. & MARQUES, ANTONIO C., 2016, Census of Cnidaria (Medusozoa) and Ctenophora from South American marine waters, pp. 1-256 in Zootaxa 4194 (1)</i> on pages 50-51, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4194.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10068449">http://zenodo.org/record/10068449</a&gt

    Correction to: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing in Child and Adolescent Psychology: a Narrative Review (Current Treatment Options in Psychiatry, (2021), 8, 3, (95-109), 10.1007/s40501-021-00244-0)

    No full text
    The original publication of this article contained mistakes and the author would like to correct them. There is an error in the affiliation of author Isabel Fernandez. Isabel Fernandez is not affiliated to Catholic University. She is only affiliated to “Centro di Ricerca e Studi in Psicotraumatologia (C.R.S.P.), Milan, Italy.” The original article has been corrected

    Estudio reflexivo sobre la práctica pedagógica desarrollada con estudiantes sordos del Colegio Isabel II, IED de Bogotá.

    No full text
    El presente trabajo de grado es fruto de mi práctica pedagógica en el Colegio Isabel II, IED de Bogotá. Aquí relato y reflexiono sobre dicha práctica, realizada con estudiantes sordos del mencionado colegio durante cuatro períodos lectivos, dos de forma presencial y dos con medicación TIC.Colegio Isabel IILicenciado en Artes VisualesPregrad

    The first Australian palynologist: Isabel Clifton Cookson (1893–1973) and her scientific work

    No full text
    Isabel Clifton Cookson (1893–1973) of Melbourne, Australia, was one of that country’s first professional woman scientists. She is remembered as one of the most eminent palaeontologists of the twentieth century and had a distinguished research career of 58 years, authoring or co-authoring 93 scientific publications. Isabel worked with great distinction on modern and fossil plants, and pioneered palynology in Australia. She was a consumate taxonomist and described, or jointly described, a prodigious total of 110 genera, 557 species and 32 subspecific taxa of palynomorphs and plants. Cookson was a trained biologist and initially worked as a botanist during the 1920s. At the same time she became interested in fossil plants and then, Mesozoic–Cenozoic terrestrial (1940s–1950s) and aquatic (1950s–1970s) palynomorphs. Cookson’s research into the late Silurian–Early Devonian plants of Australia and Europe, particularly the Baragwanathia flora, between the 1920s and the 1940s was highly influential in the field of early plant evolution. The fossil plant genus Cooksonia was named for Isabel in 1937 by her principal mentor in palaeobotany, Professor William H. Lang. From the 1940s Cookson focussed on Cenozoic floras and, with her students, elucidated floral affinities by comparative analyses of micromorphology, anatomy and in situ pollen/spores between fossil and extant taxa. This led to an interest in pre-Quaternary and Quaternary terrestrial pollen and spores; hence Isabel was the first palynologist in Australia. Her work on Paleogene and Neogene pollen and spores during the 1940s and 1950s provided incontrovertible evidence of the former widespread distribution of many important elements of Southern Hemisphere floras. During the early 1950s, while approaching her 60th year, Isabel turned her attention to marine palynomorphs. She worked with great distinction with Georges Deflandre and Alfred Eisenack, and also as a sole author, on acritarchs, dinoflagellate cysts and prasinophytes from the Jurassic to Quaternary of Australia and Papua New Guinea. She also co-authored papers on aquatic palynomorphs with Lucy M. Cranwell, Norman F. Hughes and Svein B. Manum. Isabel Cookson laid out the taxonomic basis for the study of Australasian Mesozoic and Cenozoic marine palynofloras by establishing, or jointly establishing, 76 genera and 386 species of marine microplankton. Her studies throughout her career, although especially in marine palynology, concentrated largely on taxonomy. However, she was one of the first palynologists to demonstrate the utility of dinoflagellate cysts for relative age dating and correlation in geological exploration

    On the Symbols of Strictly m-Null Elementary Operators

    No full text
    This paper extends the previous work by the author on m-null pairs of operators in Hilbert space. If an elementary operator L has elementary symbols A and B that are p-null and q-null, respectively, then L is (p+q−1)-null. Here, we prove the converse under strictness conditions, modulo some nonzero multiplicative constant—if L is strictly (p+q−1)-null, then a scalar λ≠0 exists such that λA is strictly p-null and λ−1B is strictly q-null. Our constructive argument relies essentially on algebraic and combinatorial methods. Thus, the result obtained by Gu on m-isometries is recovered without resorting to spectral analysis. For several operator classes that generalize m-isometries and are subsumed by m-null operators, the result is new

    Attualità di un classico. Rileggendo "The Child Savers" di Tony Platt

    No full text
    The essay reconstructs the history of the different editions of The Child Savers by Anthony M. Platt, not sticking to a merely philological perspective, but trying to highlight the theoretical transformations that pass through it in its three different editions (1969, 1977 and 2007). This is an intellectual evolution that is closely linked to the political biography of the Author and with the modulations of his research. Both the stratigraphy of meanings that characterizes Platt’s work and the relevance of his perspective on the topic of juvenile justice are highlighted. In fact, more than fifty years later, his work continues to spark discussions among generations of scholars, as demonstrated by the papers published in this sectio
    corecore