110,009 research outputs found

    Bobbles and values: An ethnography of de-bobbling garments in postsocialist urban Romania

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    Based on research on clothing consumption in a provincial Romanian town, this article focuses on bobbling (pilling) and on reflections on its appearances and progression. Bobbling is considered an index of a faulty or decaying materiality, and an index of usage and, possibly, carelessness and hardship. It limits an individual’s ability to project a desired self. It hints at an individual’s inability to present a renewed self. It not only disrupts a common process of value creation through the act of dressing, but also exposes a disputed process of value creation through the consumption of certain objects. It foregrounds a predisposition to equate the value of objects with the value of people. It affects a sense of self-worth. The author demonstrates that a preoccupation with bobbling reflects deeper concerns and frequent deliberations over value in postsocialist Romania

    Patterns of commutativity: the commutant of the full pattern

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    Identified are a number of conditions on square patterns that are closely related to allowing commutativity with the full pattern. Implications and examples that show non-implications are given, along with a graph that summarizes the provided information. A complete description of commutativity with the full pattern is given in both the irreducible case and the reducible case in which there are two irreducible components.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Introduction: The ecological relevance of chemically induced endocrine disruption in wildlife

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    This article is part of the monograph “The Ecological Relevance of Chemically Induced Endocrine Disruption in Wildlife.

    Intermittency in solutions of the three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations

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    Soccer schedules in Europe: an overview

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    In this paper, we give an overview of the competition formats and the schedules used in 25 European soccer competitions for the season 2008-2009. We discuss how competitions decide the league champion, qualification for European tournaments, and relegation. Following Griggs and Rosa (Bull. ICA 18:65-68, 1996), we examine the popularity of the so-called canonical schedule. We investigate the presence of a number of properties related to successive home or successive away matches (breaks) and of symmetry between the various parts of the competition. We introduce the concept of ranking-balancedness, which is particularly useful to decide whether a fair ranking can be made. We also determine how the schedules manage the carry-over effect. We conclude by observing that there is quite some diversity in European soccer schedules, and that current schedules leave room for further optimizing
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