209 research outputs found
Reactions Of Difunctional Esters With Benzyl 2-Amino-4,6-0- Benzylidene-2-Deoxy-D-Glucopyranosides
This research is primarily interested in investigating the reactions of benzyl 2-amino-4,6-0-benzylidene-2- deoxy-D-glucopyranoside (I) with various esters. The advantage offered by this sugar is that an alcohol and an amine group are in close proximity, allowing studies of intermolecular vs. intramolecular reactions and observation on anchimeric assistance in intramolecular reactions
Notes on Recent Cases
Notes on recent cases by Seymour Weisberger, Lawrence Crowley, William L. Travis, Fred Ruiz, and Luther M. Swygert
My Hindoo Queen
Woman standing in Middle Eastern building watching men ride by on camelshttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cht-sheet-music/6372/thumbnail.jp
Pining
Woman with water and trees in background; flowers surrounding framehttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/cht-sheet-music/12130/thumbnail.jp
Attempting to discontinue antipsychotic medication: withdrawal methods, relapse and success
Few studies explore subjective experiences of attempting to discontinue antipsychotic medication, the withdrawal methods people use, or how their efforts affect their outcomes. People who take antipsychotics for off-label purposes are poorly represented in the literature. This study investigates experiences of attempting to discontinue antipsychotics in a cross-sectional sample and explores potential associations between withdrawal methods, relapse, and success. An anonymous online survey was completed by 105 adults who had taken antipsychotics for any reason and had attempted discontinuation at least once. A mixed methods approach was used to interpret the responses. Just over half (55.2%) described successfully stopping for varying lengths of time. Half (50.5%) reported no current use. People across diagnostic groups reported unwanted withdrawal effects, but these were not universal. Withdrawing gradually across more than one month was positively associated, and relapse was negatively associated with both self-defined successful discontinuation and no current use. Gradual withdrawal was negatively associated with relapse during withdrawal. We conclude it is possible to successfully discontinue antipsychotic medication, relapse during withdrawal presents a major obstacle to successfully stopping AMs, and people who withdraw gradually across more than one month may be more likely to stop and to avoid relapse during withdrawal
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They Be Taggin, Don\u27t They?: The Acquisition of Invariant Be
Does African-American English (AAE) have a separate grammar from Standard American English (SAE)? AAE has a number of distinctive features, several of which have been discussed extensively in the sociolinguistic literature: the variable use of third-person singular -s; the absence of plura -s; the variable use of copula; and others. (See Labov, 1966, 1969a, b, and Fasold, 1972 for discussion.) Perhaps the most distinctive feature of AAE is habitual or invariant be
EFFECT OF COPPER AND ZINC DEFICIENCIES ON THE PHOTOSYNTHETIC ACTIVITY OF OF THE FOLIAGE OF YOUNG TUNG TREES
Swings and roundabouts: the vagaries of democratic consolidation and ‘electoral rituals’ in Sierra Leone
YesThe history of the electoral process in Sierra Leone is at the same time tortuous and substantial. From relatively open competitive multi-party politics in the 1960s, which led to the first turnover of power at the ballot box, through the de facto and de jure one-party era, which nonetheless had elements of electoral competition, and finally to contemporary post-conflict times, which has seen three elections and a second electoral turnover in 2007, one can discern evolving patterns. Evidence from the latest local and national elections in 2012 suggests that there is some democratic consolidation, at least in an electoral sense. However, one might also see simultaneous steps forward and backward – What you gain on the swings, you may lose on the roundabouts. This is particularly so in terms of institutional capacities, fraud and violence, and one would need to enquire of the precise ingredients – in terms of political culture or in other words the attitudes and motivations of electors and the elected – of this evolving Sierra Leonean, rather than specifically liberal type, of democracy. Equally, the development of ‘electoral rituals’, whether peculiar to Sierra Leone or not and whether deemed consolidatory or not, has something to say as part of an investigation into the electoral element of democratic consolidation.1 The literature on elections in Africa most often depicts a number of broad features, such as patronage, ethno-regionalism, fraud and violence, and it is the intention of this article to locate contemporary Sierra Leone, as precisely as possible, within the various strands of this discourse
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