414 research outputs found
Electrodynamics of Media
Contains reports on two research projects.Joint Services Electronics Programs (U. S. Army, U. S. Navy, and U. S. Air Force) under Contract DA 28-043-AMC-02536(E)M. I. T. Sloan Fund for Basic ResearchNational Science Foundation (Grant GK-3370
Electrodynamics of Media
Contains research objectives and reports on four research projects.National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Contract NAS 12-1094)Joint Services Electronics Programs (U. S. Army, U.S. Navy, and U. S. Air Force) under Contract DA 28-043-AMC-02536(E)Sloan Fund for Basic Research (M. I. T. Grant 174
Electrodynamics of Media
Contains reports on four research projects.Joint Services Electronics Programs (U. S. Army, U. S. Navy, and U. S. Air Force) under Contract DA 28-043-AMC-02536(E
Long-Term Changes of Central Ocular Motor Signs in Patients with Vestibular Migraine
Background: A high percentage of patients with vestibular migraine (VM)were reported to have central ocular motor dysfunctions (COMD) in thesymptom-free interval. Since VM is a chronic disorder, it is of interestif COMD worsen over time. Methods: Thirty VM patients and 11 controlpatients participated in an 8-year-long observational study withfollow-up. All patients underwent standardized neuro-ophthalmologicaland neuro-otological examinations at the initial presentation and atfollow-up. The primary outcome measure was change in COMD at follow-up.Results: In general, COMD in the symptom-free interval were subtle,consisting of a saccadic horizontal and/or vertical pursuit
Electrodynamics of Media
Contains research objectives and reports on two research projects.Joint Services Electronics Programs (U. S. Army, U. S. Navy, and U. S. Air Force) under Contract DA 28-043-AMC-02536(E)National Science Foundation (Grant GK-3370
Internationalism, Regionalism, and National Culture: Music Control in Bavaria, 1945–1948
For many Germans in the immediate postwar period, all that remained of their country was its art. Subjugation, destruction, the pain of unfathomable guilt: these had ripped away at the national psyche, severing nation from nationalism, person from people, the present from the past. “We are,” wrote Wolfgang Borchert in 1946, “a generation without a homecoming, because we have nothing to which we can return.” Nation: what would that word now mean? An occupied state no longer possessing statehood, a conquered people starved even of the moral strength that might come from resisting. Even if the institutions of national governance could be recreated, they could have no historical legitimacy; if Bonn were not to be Weimar, it would equally not be the kaisers’ or the Führer’s Berlin. For many, refuge from the shaming of the nation lay, as Theodor Heuss reflected, in a “decentralizing of the emotions,” in a “flight” to those fields “where the violence of the great political world shake-up is not felt so directly.” This drove literate Germans back to Goethe and music lovers to the endlessly-performed postwar symphonic cycles of Brahms and Beethoven. And yet, escaping into what Jost Hermand aptly termed “the protective wall of self-absorption” did not completely preclude connection to the national community of Germans. In fact, a powerful communion with the whole might still come through the personal enjoyment of a shared art or culture. In art might reside the essence of the national community, a stateless collectivity, without territories perhaps, but with borders and guardians nonetheless
Stress, ageing and their influence on functional, cellular and molecular aspects of the immune system
The immune response is essential for keeping an organism healthy and for defending it from different types of pathogens. It is a complex system that consists of a large number of components performing different functions. The adequate and controlled interaction between these components is necessary for a robust and strong immune response. There are, however, many factors that interfere with the way the immune response functions. Stress and ageing now consistently appear in the literature as factors that act upon the immune system in the way that is often damaging. This review focuses on the role of stress and ageing in altering the robustness of the immune response first separately, and then simultaneously, discussing the effects that emerge from their interplay. The special focus is on the psychological stress and the impact that it has at different levels, from the whole system to the individual molecules, resulting in consequences for physical health
Researching the comparability of paper-based and computer-based delivery in a high-stakes writing test
International language testing bodies are now moving rapidly towards using computers for many areas of English language assessment, despite the fact that research on comparability with paper-based assessment is still relatively limited in key areas. This study contributes to the debate by researching the comparability of a highstakes EAP writing test (IELTS) in two delivery modes, paper-based (PB) and computer-based (CB). The study investigated 153 test takers' performances and their cognitive processes on IELTS Academic Writing Task 2 in the two modes, and the possible effect of computer familiarity on their test scores. Many-Facet Rasch Measurement (MFRM) was used to examine the difference in test takers' scores between the two modes, in relation to their overall and analytic scores. By means of questionnaires and interviews, we investigated the cognitive processes students employed under the two conditions of the test. A major contribution of our study is its use - for the first time in the computer-based writing assessment literature - of data from research into cognitive processes within realworld academic settings as a comparison with cognitive processing during academic writing under test conditions. In summary, this study offers important new insights into academic writing assessment in computer mode
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