113 research outputs found
Cost Analysis on Imaging Diagnostic Techniques in Cerebral and Abdominal Neonatal Pathology
Background: Improvement of health care quality and cost control are the main aims of the health care reform in Romania. Objective: The aims of the research are to analyse the trend of costs for imaging techniques used as diagnostic tools for cerebral and abdominal neonatal pathology and to study the relationship between cost and diagnostic benefits. Design: This is a retrospective observational study design without a control group, conducted in the Radio-Imaging Department, Cluj District University Hospital, Romania, from October 2000 to February 2006. Patients: The study population was represented by neonates investigated in the Radio-Imaging Department, Cluj District University Hospital. Intervention: Five imaging diagnostic techniques used in the diagnosis of cerebral and abdominal neonatal pathology were investigated. Measurements: The costs of the investigated techniques were calculated. The concordance between clinical and imaging diagnostic was recorded. Results: Magnetic resonance proved to be the most expensive investigation. The rate between the raising of costs on investigation type on year was constant. The average cost of imaging investigations for patients with identified pathological aspects (€ 42.72) was not statistically significant (p > 0.05) compared with the average cost for patients with no pathologic imaging aspects (€ 37.62). The concordance between the clinical suspicion and the radio-imaging diagnosis was of 52.35%. Conclusions: The raise of radio-imaging investigation costs had a decreasing tendency over the years studied, decrease explained by the stabilization of the Romanian monetary market. The results on concordance analysis lead to the necessity of training of both clinicians and radiologists
Simulation of an industrial-scale process for the SCR of NOx based on the loop reactor concept
Polyoxometalate-directed assembly of water-soluble AgCl nanocubes
"Out-of-pocket" association of Ag(+) to the tetradentate defect site of mono-vacant Keggin and Wells-Dawson polyoxometalate (POM) cluster-anions is used to direct the formation of water-soluble AgCl nanocubes
Prolegomena to the study of biomorphic Modernism, biocentrism, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy's New vision and Erno Kallai's Bioromantik
grantor:
University of TorontoFocusing on Weimar Germany, I ground the study of biomorphic Modernism in Ernö Kállai's 1932 identification of a trend he termed ' Bioromantik'. Kállai wrote from a 'biocentric' position, an amalgam of Nature Romanticism and biologism espoused by Nietzsche, Ernst Haeckel, Ludwig Klages, Oswald Spengler, Raoul Francé and Hans Prinzhorn in the early 20th century, here established as a politically-charged category of intellectual history. Kállai characterized 'Bioromantik ' as art, the imagery, forms or themes of which express Monist, Neo-Vitalist, ' lebensphilosophisch' and Organicist, i.e. 'biocentric' concepts such as the life-force, creative/destructive aspects of nature, and our unity with it. The work of artists he cited (Arp, Klee, Moore, Kandinsky, Ernst, etc.) is biomorphic Modernist in style. Kállai's conception derives from his realization of the similarity between biomorphic art and scientific photography, here termed the "naturamorphic analogy," a 'topos' traceable to Kandinsky's pre-war writing. Probably inspired by Walter Benjamin's review of Karl Blossfeldt's photographs, Kállai's epiphany occurred in the Moholy-Nagy-curated "Raum-1" of the 1929 ' Film and Foto' show in Stuttgart; in effect a three-dimensional statement of his "New Vision" that aestheticized scientific photography, and that--like Moholy's entire pedagogical project--I show to be rooted in biocentrism. Thus, the profound effect biocentric thinkers had on the milieux Moholy emerged from is discussed: The 'fin-de-siècle ' Haeckelian tradition of normative aestheticized scientific imagery is shown to underlie New Vision; the biocentric wing of the 'Jugendbewegung ' is revealed as a source of Moholy's biocentric pedagogy; inspired by Francé, "Biocentric Constructivism" is identified as a discourse engaged in by Mies, Moholy, Lissitzky, Hausmann and Meyer; the Bauhaus, with attention to Gropius, Klee, Kandinsky, Schlemmer and Meyer, is recast as a locus of biocentric ideas. Like others, Kállai proposed a "psychobiological" explanation for the naturamorphic analogy: the artists' identity with nature and their consequent intuitive imaging of its unseen aspects also revealed by science. I show how the aestheticization of scientific images effected by New Vision enabled Modernist artists and critics to be exposed to such imagery--an historical alternative to the essentialist explanation that constitutes a basis for research on biomorphic Modernist art.Ph.D
Prolegomena to the study of biomorphic Modernism, biocentrism, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy's New vision and Erno Kallai's Bioromantik
grantor:
University of TorontoFocusing on Weimar Germany, I ground the study of biomorphic Modernism in Ernö Kállai's 1932 identification of a trend he termed ' Bioromantik'. Kállai wrote from a 'biocentric' position, an amalgam of Nature Romanticism and biologism espoused by Nietzsche, Ernst Haeckel, Ludwig Klages, Oswald Spengler, Raoul Francé and Hans Prinzhorn in the early 20th century, here established as a politically-charged category of intellectual history. Kállai characterized 'Bioromantik ' as art, the imagery, forms or themes of which express Monist, Neo-Vitalist, ' lebensphilosophisch' and Organicist, i.e. 'biocentric' concepts such as the life-force, creative/destructive aspects of nature, and our unity with it. The work of artists he cited (Arp, Klee, Moore, Kandinsky, Ernst, etc.) is biomorphic Modernist in style. Kállai's conception derives from his realization of the similarity between biomorphic art and scientific photography, here termed the "naturamorphic analogy," a 'topos' traceable to Kandinsky's pre-war writing. Probably inspired by Walter Benjamin's review of Karl Blossfeldt's photographs, Kállai's epiphany occurred in the Moholy-Nagy-curated "Raum-1" of the 1929 ' Film and Foto' show in Stuttgart; in effect a three-dimensional statement of his "New Vision" that aestheticized scientific photography, and that--like Moholy's entire pedagogical project--I show to be rooted in biocentrism. Thus, the profound effect biocentric thinkers had on the milieux Moholy emerged from is discussed: The 'fin-de-siècle ' Haeckelian tradition of normative aestheticized scientific imagery is shown to underlie New Vision; the biocentric wing of the 'Jugendbewegung ' is revealed as a source of Moholy's biocentric pedagogy; inspired by Francé, "Biocentric Constructivism" is identified as a discourse engaged in by Mies, Moholy, Lissitzky, Hausmann and Meyer; the Bauhaus, with attention to Gropius, Klee, Kandinsky, Schlemmer and Meyer, is recast as a locus of biocentric ideas. Like others, Kállai proposed a "psychobiological" explanation for the naturamorphic analogy: the artists' identity with nature and their consequent intuitive imaging of its unseen aspects also revealed by science. I show how the aestheticization of scientific images effected by New Vision enabled Modernist artists and critics to be exposed to such imagery--an historical alternative to the essentialist explanation that constitutes a basis for research on biomorphic Modernist art.Ph.D
Forgács, Éva. 2016. Hungarian Art: Confrontation and Revival in the Modern Movement. Los Angeles: DopppelHouse Press.
Forgács, Éva. 2016. Hungarian Art: Confrontation and Revival in the Modern Movement. Los Angeles: DopppelHouse Press
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