6,145 research outputs found
L’editio priceps ritrovata del "De artificio dicendi" (1560) di Francesco Robortello
La Biblioteca Civica Vincenzo Joppi di Udine conserva un esemplare dell'editio princeps del "De ratione dicendi" di Francesco Robortello stampata nel 1560 a Bologna dai fratelli Giovanni Battista e Alessandro Benacci associati a Giovanni Rossi. Il volume costituisce l’unico testimone sopravvissuto di questa edizione, sconosciuta sia al Liruti che agli specialisti del Robortello e non recensita fino ad ora nei repertori e nei cataloghi italiani e internazionali
Improving Intercultural and Inclusive Competence of Higher Education Institutions. A Training Manual
The project STATUS (Steering Transition and Advancement of Tertiary Underrepresented Students) builds upon these recommendations from the Council of Europe, emphasizing the importance of higher education institutions in meeting diverse societal expectations and fulfilling multiple objectives beyond knowledge dissemination.
This Training Manual has been collaboratively developed by STATUS partners. It offers a series of theoretical insights and practical activities regarding intercultural, gender and communication issues so that HEIs staff (both teaching and non-teaching) may improve their competence in developing strategies and initiatives to increase the enrollment rates and academic performance of underrepresented and vulnerable students. It includes three modules.
The first module was developed by the Preschool Teacher Training and Medical College in Vršac, Serbia and is divided into two parts: the first part – Interculturality. (In)visible borders and potentials – was written by Ivana Đorđev, Tanja Nedimović, Adrijan Božin, Radmila Palinkašević, Biljana Vujasin, and Snežana Prtljaga; the second part – Heuristics and interculturality. A meeting point – was written by Danica Veselinov, Nataša Sturza Milić, Ljiljana
Kelemen Milojević, and Nevena Čolakov.
The second module – Gender stereotypes in the media, online culture and language – was written by Gianna Cappello and Paola Macaluso (University of Palermo) and Giulia Tarantino and Shu
De Francesco (CESIE, Palermo).
The third module – The fringes and the margins of interculturality. Socially-deprived areas students on the move – was written by Teodora Popescu and Maria-Crina Herţeg (“December 1,
1918” University, Romania) and Alcina Maria Pereira de Sousa and Gonçalo Nuno Ramos Ferreira de Gouveia (University of Madeira, Portugal)
Depleted uranium induces human carcinogenesis involving the immune and chaperoning systems: Realities and working hypotheses
Cancer is caused by a combination of factors, genetic, epigenetics and environmental. Among the latter, environmental pollutants absorbed by contact, inhalation, or ingestion are major proven or suspected culprits. Depleted uranium (DU) is one of them directly pertinent to the military and civilians working in militarized areas. It is considered a weak carcinogen but its implication in cancer development in exposed individuals is supported by various data. Since not all subjects exposed to DU develop cancer, it is likely that DU-dependent carcinogenesis requires cofactors, such as genetic predisposition and deficiencies of the chaperoning and immune systems. It is of the essence to adopt every possible protective measure as well as performing careful screening for early diagnosis to protect the military that work in war areas in which weapons with DU are, or have been, used. These topics are discussed here, along with a proposed working hypothesis for investigating the pathophysiology of DU-related carcinogenesis, including the possible role of the chaperoning system
HSP60 and HSP10 as diagnostic and prognostic tools in the management of exocervical carcinoma [3]
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