1,138 research outputs found

    Correction: Dermal Exposure Assessment to Pesticides in Farming Systems in Developing Countries: Comparison of Models. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2015, 12, 4670–4696

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    We wish to make the following changes to the published article [1], agreed upon by all authors. Claudia R. Binder has withdrawn her co-authorship. The corrected author list should therefore read: Camilo Lesmes-Fabian.[...

    Die Ringer-Kunst des Fabian von Auerswald /

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    In portfolio."Gedruckt zu Wittemberg durch Hans Lufft. M.D.XXXIX."--Colophon.85 full-page woodcuts by Lucas Cranach the Younger, representing the author in his 85 wrestling positions.Facsimile of the edition of 1539 with title: Ringen Kunst: fünff und achtzig Stücke, zu Ehren Kurfürstlichen Gnaden zu Sachsen [etc.] Durch Fabian von Auerswald zugericht.Mode of access: Internet

    Fabian lernt "schwimmen"

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    Mit der Absicht, eine Brücke zwischen deutschsprachiger Literatur und Humanistischer Psychologie zu konstruieren, geht die vorliegende Arbeit der Frage nach, ob es möglich ist, eine fiktive Person, die vor dem Hintergrund der Weltwirtschaftskrise von 1929 im Verlauf einer Romanhandlung arbeitslos geworden ist, durch Anwendung einer humanistischen Therapieform wieder in die Arbeitswelt zu integrieren. Die fiktive Person ist Jakob Fabian aus Erich Kästners neusachlichem Zeitroman Fabian. Die Geschichte eines Moralisten, erschienen 1931, und bei der humanistischen Therapieform handelt es sich um den „Klientenzentrierten Ansatz“ nach Carl Rogers. Die zentrale Forschungsfrage wird in zwei großen Schritten beantwortet: Im ersten Schritt werden themenrelevante Aspekte hinsichtlich Roman, Autor sowie Protagonist erläutert und analysiert, bis die Romanfigur Jakob Fabian zum Klienten Jakob Fabian wird und ein Anamnesebericht über diesen vorliegt. Basierend darauf, werden mit dem Ergebnis der beruflichen Rehabilitation im zweiten Schritt klientenzentriert-orientierte Therapiegespräche in einem realen Setting durchgeführt und transkribiert. Das Konzept dieser Arbeit kann als Modell auf weitere Arbeitslosenromane der Weimarer Republik angewendet werden. Zusätzlich besteht auch die Möglichkeit, das Setting an Beratungssituationen anzupassen.With the intention of constructing a bridge between German literature and “Humanistic Psychology”, the present thesis analyses the question, whether it is possible to reintegrate a fictitious man into the working environment by applying a humanistic type of therapy, who, against the background of the world economic crisis of 1929, in the course of a novel's plot has lost his job. Jakob Fabian is the fictional character in Erich Kästner’s new objectivity period novel Fabian. The story of a moralist, pub-lished in 1931, and the humanistic therapeutic method is the Rogerian Client-centered approach. The core issue is answered in two major steps: In the first step, issue-specific aspects regarding novel, author and protagonist are explained and analysed until the fictional character Jakob Fabian turns into the client Jakob Fabian and until an anamnesis report is available. Based on this, with the outcome of vocational rehabilitation in the second step, client-centred-oriented therapy sessions are conducted in a real setting and transcribed. The concept of this work can also be used as a model for other novels about unemployment during the Weimar Republic. In addition, it is also possible to adjust the setting of advisory situations

    A fundus-centric view of myopia

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    The seemingly innocuous, easily remediable symptom of myopia—blurred distance vision—belies an insidious reality: myopia predisposes the eye to a range of sight-threatening diseases, including, but not limited to, pathologic myopia (PM) and retinal detachment. With a rapidly rising prevalence where half of humanity is predicted to be myopic by 2050, we are witnessing not just the emergence of a bespectacled generation, but also an increasing burden of irreversible visual impairment caused by myopia-related diseases. My PhD focuses on two important knowledge gaps. First, the epidemiology of PM has never been systematically investigated in the UK. To address this, I estimated the prevalence of PM using a random sample of mid-life adults with high myopia (spherical equivalent refraction ≤ -5D) from the population-based UK Biobank cohort. The results revealed a prevalence of 41.7%—with most cases being relatively mild (diffuse chorioretinal atrophy); however, the age-related and progressive nature of PM means an elevated risk of irreversible visual impairment for those affected later in life. Second, existing clinical predictors of the risks of myopia-related diseases—notably spherical equivalent refraction (SER) and axial length (AL)—do not provide personalised information about the anatomy of the posterior eye. This limitation partly explains why, despite both metrics being strong predictors at the population level, substantial variations in individual risks remain uncaptured. In myopia, an excessive enlargement of the globe puts significant stress on (or stretches) important structures in the posterior segment, which may explain the increased susceptibility to diseases affecting the posterior eye. To address the second gap, I argue for a ‘fundus-centric’ view of myopia: the characterisation of myopia at a more anatomically relevant fundus level using computational methods—as a supplement to conventional on-axis (along the visual axis) descriptors of myopia (SER and AL). The underlying premise is that fundus imaging offers a valuable first approximation of the degree of ocular stretching in an individual eye, thus providing personalised information about the risks of myopia-related diseases. I first investigated how fundus features varied across a broad spectrum of SER in healthy eyes from 23,000 adults in the UK Biobank. A wide range of fundus features were found to vary non-linearly as SER progressed from hyperopia to myopia: the optic disc became larger, less circular and orientated with its superior pole tilting towards the fovea; the disc-fovea distance increased; the vasculature became less tortuous with decreased branching complexity; and the vascular arcades curved more inwardly towards the fovea. In myopia, these changes appeared to be exponential—consistent with the known exponential increase in the risks of PM and retinal detachment with increasing myopia. In another study, I observed an increase in neuroretinal rim pallor with decreasing SER, with the temporal horizontal/inferior rim exhibiting the steepest rate of increase—consistent with the expectation that the papillomacular nerve fibre bundle, linked to the temporal rim, is particularly susceptible to damage from ocular stretching due to its straighter course. Importantly, I found evidence indicating that fundus imaging reflected differences in posterior eye shape, even when SER, age and sex were held constant. These findings support the premise that fundus imaging contains information—beyond what is available from on-axis descriptor of myopia alone—about ocular changes that may collectively be relevant to risk stratification. This culminated in the development of a deep learning-based metric—fundus refraction offset (FRO)—intended as a summary of how ‘anatomically myopic’ a fundus appears. A more negative FRO value indicated a more ‘myopic looking’ fundus than typical for an eye with the same SER. In the first (cross-sectional) validation study, I found evidence that FRO reflected differences in macular thickness and choroidal vascularity index, both derived from optical coherence tomography, even after controlling for AL or SER, as well as age, sex and ethnicity. In the second (longitudinal) validation study, a more negative baseline FRO was found to be associated with an increased risk of retinal detachment or breaks over 12 years, even among individuals with similar baseline SER (AL information not available), age, sex, macular thickness and history of cataract surgery. To conclude, myopia severity can be further quantified at the fundus level: such a ‘fundus-centric’ view of myopia allows the risks of complications to be captured at a level more personalised than is currently achievable using on-axis descriptors

    Junges Wasser in einem hoch-gelegenen Einzugsgebiet: zeitliche Variabilität und Verhältnis zu meteorologischen und glazial-hydrologischen Proxies des Klimawandels

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    author: Fabian MaierAbweichender Titel laut Übersetzung des VerfassersMasterarbeit University Innsbruck 201

    Junges Wasser in einem hoch-gelegenen Einzugsgebiet: zeitliche Variabilität und Verhältnis zu meteorologischen und glazial-hydrologischen Proxies des Klimawandels

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    author: Fabian MaierAbweichender Titel laut Übersetzung des VerfassersMasterarbeit University Innsbruck 201

    Junges Wasser in einem hoch-gelegenen Einzugsgebiet: zeitliche Variabilität und Verhältnis zu meteorologischen und glazial-hydrologischen Proxies des Klimawandels

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    author: Fabian MaierAbweichender Titel laut Übersetzung des VerfassersMasterarbeit University Innsbruck 201

    Migration from East to West : investigation from the EU enlargements on the city-size level

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    author Fabian Kranebitter and Carolin WildMasterarbeit Universität Innsbruck 201

    Utilization of an Augmented Salen-Type Ligand for the Pyrolytic Syntheses of Heterogeneous Base Metal Catalysts

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    Author Fabian SchmiedbauerMasterarbeit Universität Linz 2023Arbeit auf den öffentlichen PCs in den Bibliotheken der JKU+Medizin abrufba

    Challenges and Opportunities associated with integrating Stakeholder Analysis into a Startup

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    Author Fabian Pischinger, Bsc.Masterarbeit Johannes Kepler Universität Linz 2024Arbeit auf den öffentlichen PCs in den Bibliotheken der JKU+Medizin abrufba
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