11,262 research outputs found

    "We are GREAT Britain": British newspaper narratives during the London 2012 Olympic Games

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    British newspaper narratives were examined during the 2012 London Olympic Games to discern how the British press promoted specific ā€œnarratives of the nation.ā€ For the London-based British press, the home Olympics became the ideal medium not only to sell newspapers and electronic format subscriptions, but also to (re)present their views on Britain and what it stood for. Using a qualitative textual analysis methodology, this study drew on Andersonā€™s theory of the ā€œimagined communityā€ and Edmunds and Turnerā€™s concepts of benign and malign nationalism to provide insights about how Britishness was framed. For a country struggling to shake off the economic recession, early narratives about the Games were imbued with concerns about the escalating costs of hosting the Games and fears of terrorism. However, the critical early tone of British newspaper narratives was supplanted with uplifting, inspirational stories about the unprecedented success of Team GB athletes. This provided British journalists with an opportunity to reengineer Britishness to reinforce some traditional values and inject some new inclusive ones. Although at times, complex, contested and contradictory, the narratives generally linked the internationalism of the Olympics with a progressive, benign version of Britishness that emphasized inclusion, tolerance, and creativity and, at least temporarily, redefined how Britain regarded itself and was viewed.</jats:p

    Using self-categorization theory to uncover the framing of the 2015 Rugby World Cup: a cross-cultural comparison of three nationsā€™ newspapers

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    Research into the framing of sporting events has been extensively studied to uncover newspaper bias in the coverage of global sporting events. Through discourse, the media attempt to capture, build, and maintain audiences for the duration of sporting events through the use of multiple narratives and/or storylines. Little research has looked at the ways in which the same event is reported across different nations, and media representations of the Rugby World Cup have rarely featured in discussions of the framing of sport events. The present study highlights the different ways in which rugby union is portrayed across the three leading Southern Hemisphere nations in the sport. It also shows the prominence of nationalistic discourse across those nations and importance of self-categorizations in newspaper narratives.</jats:p

    Growth rates of the population in a branching Brownian motion with an inhomogeneous breeding potential

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    We consider a branching particle system where each particle moves as an independent Brownian motion and breeds at a rate proportional to its distance from the origin raised to the power pp, for pāˆˆ[0,2)p\in[0,2). The asymptotic behaviour of the right-most particle for this system is already known; in this article we give large deviations probabilities for particles following "difficult" paths, growth rates along "easy" paths, the total population growth rate, and we derive the optimal paths which particles must follow to achieve this growth rate.Comment: 56 pages, 1 figur

    Carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance spectra and mechanism of bridgeā€“terminal carbonyl exchange in di-Āµ-carbonyl-bis[carbonyl(Ī·-cyclopentadienyl)iron](Feā€“Fe)[{(Ī·-C5H5)Fe(CO)2}2]; cd-di-Āµ-carbonyl-f-carbonyl-ae-di(Ī·-cyclopentadienyl)-b-(triethyl -phosphite)di-iron(Feā€“Fe)[(Ī·-C5H5)2Fe2(CO)3P(OEt)3], and some related complexes

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    A mechanism involving carbonyl-bridge breaking, rotation about the Feā€“Fe bond, and bridge reformation is shown to account qualitatively for changes in the carbonyl region of the 13C n.m.r spectrum of the complex [(cp)(OC)[graphic omitted]e(cp){P(OEt)3}] and quantitatively for [(cp)(OC)[graphic omitted]e(CO)(cp)](cp =Ī·-cyclopentadienyl).The activation energy for this process, 49.0 Ā± 4 kJ mol^ā€“1(11.7 Ā± 1 kcal mol^ā€“1), is close to that reported for cisā€“trans-isomerization of the cp groups, in accord with this mechanism. Variable-temperature 13C n.m.r. spectra of the complexes [(cp)(OC)[graphic omitted]u(CO)(cp)] and [(cp)(OC)[graphic omitted]i(cp)] are also reported

    Micro-CT Characterization of Human Trabecular Bone in Osteogenesis Imperfecta

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    Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a genetic syndrome affecting collagen synthesis and assembly. Its symptoms vary widely but commonly include bone fragility, reduced stature, and bone deformity. Because of the small size and paucity of human specimens, there is a lack of biomechanical data for OI bone. Most literature has focused on histomorphometric analyses, which rely on assumptions to extrapolate 3-D properties. In this study, a micro-computed tomography (Ī¼CT) system was used to directly measure structural and mineral properties in pediatric OI bone collected during routine surgical procedures. Surface renderings suggested a poorly organized, plate-like orientation. Patients with a history of bone-augmenting drugs exhibited increased bone volume fraction (BV/TV), trabecular number (Tb.N), and connectivity density (Eu.Conn.D). The latter two parameters appeared to be related to OI severity. Structural results were consistently higher than those reported in a previous histomorphometric study, but these differences can be attributed to factors such as specimen collection site, drug therapy, and assumptions associated with histomorphometry. Mineral testing revealed strong correlations with several structural parameters, highlighting the importance of a dual approach in trabecular bone testing. This study reports some of the first quantitative Ī¼CT data of human OI bone, and it suggests compelling possibilities for the future of OI bone assessment

    The Rockefeller Foundation's International Program on Rice Biotechnology

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    Presents the product of a two-year intensive survey and analysis of the genetic prospects for the world's major food crops conducted in the early 1980s

    Automatic Detection of Seizures with Applications

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    There are an estimated two million people with epilepsy in the United States. Many of these people do not respond to anti-epileptic drug therapy. Two devices can be developed to assist in the treatment of epilepsy. The first is a microcomputer-based system designed to process massive amounts of electroencephalogram (EEG) data collected during long-term monitoring of patients for the purpose of diagnosing seizures, assessing the effectiveness of medical therapy, or selecting patients for epilepsy surgery. Such a device would select and display important EEG events. Currently many such events are missed. A second device could be implanted and would detect seizures and initiate therapy. Both of these devices require a reliable seizure detection algorithm. A new algorithm is described. It is believed to represent an improvement over existing seizure detection algorithms because better signal features were selected and better standardization methods were used
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