2,001 research outputs found

    Trust and Distrust in Rebel-Held Côte d’Ivoire

    Get PDF
    This thesis offers a unique view of everyday life during the war and rebel rule in the town of Man in the West of Côte d’Ivoire between 2002 and 2010. It compellingly shows how the rebel-civilian relationship was transformed in the course of the conflict from a war-like situation to a more stable governance situation. Drawing on the author’s own experience of living in the rebel-controlled town of Man, the ethnography develops the argument that those who stayed in the rebel-held areas developed attitudes and practices of trust and distrust that allowed them to continue living along with the rebels. From a theoretical point of view, the thesis uses the analytical lens of ‘trust’ to look at how local people dealt with the massive transformation induced by the violent conflict. It adopts a Simmelian notion of trust, describing trust as a state between knowing and not-knowing. Trust may be defined as a confident expectation that others will act in a benevolent way. As misplaced trust may have fatal consequences, particularly in violent conflicts, people seek signs of trustworthiness before they trust. Nevertheless, trust always contains an element of uncertainty. In order to experience the fulfilment of trust, we have to risk disappointment, as well. Based on these different qualities of trust, I argue that trust may be re-established not only after the political situation has improved, but also prior to political transformations since actors who are willing to trust are crucial for the initiation of political transformations. This forward-pushing dimension of trust has been largely neglected by rational choice-based theories of trust, but proved salient in my study for the return of a new normality in everyday life and for peace. Trust has become established as a recognized object of social science research over the last three decades, although anthropology has only made minor contributions to this field so far. The major contribution of the thesis to trust research is its theorisation of negative forms of trust, proposing a distinction between ‘distrust’ and ‘mistrust’ on the basis of predictability

    Nuclear Subcompartments Divide and Conquer Late-Replicating DNA

    Get PDF

    Alpha-particle formation and clustering in nuclei

    Full text link
    The nucleonic localization function has been used for a decade to study the formation of alpha-particles in nuclei, by providing a measure of having nucleons of a given spin in a single place. However, differences in interpretation remain, compared to the nucleonic density of the nucleus. In order to better understand the respective role of the nucleonic localization function and the densities in the alpha-particle formation in cluster states or in alpha-decay mechanism, both an analytic approximation and microscopic calculations, using energy density functionals, are undertaken. The nucleonic localization function is shown to measure the anti-centrifugal effect, and is not sensitive to the level of compactness of the alpha-particle itself. It probes the purity of the spatial overlap of four nucleons in the four possible (spin, isospin) states. The density provides, in addition, information on the compactness of an alpha-particle cluster.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure

    Skin microstructure deformation with displacement map convolution

    Full text link

    Thromboelastometry (ROTEM®) in children: age-related reference ranges and correlations with standard coagulation tests

    Get PDF
    Background The small sample volume needed and the prompt availability of results make viscoelastic methods like rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM®) attractive for monitoring coagulation in small children. However, data on reference ranges for ROTEM® parameters in children are scarce. Methods Four hundred and seven children (ASA I and II) undergoing elective surgery were recruited for this prospective, two-centre, observational study. Subjects were grouped as follows: 0-3, 4-12, 13-24 months, 2-5, 6-10, and 11-16 yr. Study objectives were to establish age-dependent reference ranges for ROTEM® assays, analyse age dependence of parameters, and compare ROTEM® data with standard coagulation tests. Results Data from 359 subjects remained for final analysis. Except for extrinsically activated clot strength and lysis, parameters for ROTEM® assays were significantly different among all age groups. The most striking finding was that subjects aged 0-3 months exhibited accelerated initiation (ExTEM coagulation time: median 48 s, Q1-Q3 38-65 s; P=0.001) and propagation of coagulation (α angle: median 78o, Q1-Q3 69-84o; P<0.001) and maximum clot firmness (median 62 mm, Q1-Q3 54-74 mm), although standard plasma coagulation test results were prolonged (prothrombin time: median 13.2 s, Q1-Q3 12.6-13.6 s; activated partial thromboplastin time: median 42 s, Q1-Q3 40-46 s). Lysis indices of <85% were observed in nearly one-third of all children without increased bleeding tendency. Platelet count and fibrinogen levels correlated significantly with clot strength, and fibrinogen levels correlated with fibrin polymerization. Conclusions Reference ranges for ROTEM® assays were determined for all paediatric age groups. These values will be helpful when monitoring paediatric patients and in studies of perioperative coagulation in childre

    Individualized metacognitive therapy for delusions: A randomized controlled rater-blind study

    Get PDF
    Theory-driven interventions targeting specific factors that contribute to delusions are receiving increased interest. The present study aimed to assess the efficacy of individualized metacognitive therapy (MCT+), a short manualized intervention that addresses delusion-associated cognitive biases.; 92 patients with current or past delusions were randomized to receive 12 twice-weekly sessions of either MCT+ or a control intervention within a randomized controlled rater-blind design. Psychopathology and cognitive biases were assessed at baseline, 6 weeks and 6 months. ANCOVAs adjusted for baseline scores were used to assess differences between groups regarding outcome variables. Both per-protocol and intention-to-treat analyses were conducted.; At 6 weeks, there was a significant difference in favor of MCT+ regarding decrease in delusion severity and improvement of self-reflectiveness (medium effect size), and a trend-wise difference regarding probability thresholds to decision. These effects increased, when only patients attending a minimum of 4 therapy sessions were considered. Control group patients subsequently showed further improvement while patients in the MCT+ group remained stable, such that there were no differences between groups at the 6-month follow-up.; Lower attendance rates in the control group possibly leading to unequal therapeutic effort; lower baseline delusion severity in the MCT+ group.; The result pattern suggests that MCT+ led to earlier improvement in delusions and cognitive biases compared to the control intervention. The absence of a long-term effect might reflect floor effects in the MCT+ group, but may also indicate the need for further measures to promote sustainability of MCT+ effects

    Microscopic description of α\alpha, 2α2\alpha, and cluster decays of 216,218^{216,218}Rn and 220224^{220-224}Ra

    Full text link
    Alpha and cluster decays are analyzed for heavy nuclei located above 208^{208}Pb on the chart of nuclides: 216,218^{216,218}Rn and 220224^{220-224}Ra, that are also candidates for observing the 2α2 \alpha decay mode. A microscopic theoretical approach based on relativistic Energy Density Functionals (EDF), is used to compute axially-symmetric deformation energy surfaces as functions of quadrupole, octupole and hexadecupole collective coordinates. Dynamical least-action paths for specific decay modes are calculated on the corresponding potential energy surfaces. The effective collective inertia is determined using the perturbative cranking approximation, and zero-point and rotational energy corrections are included in the model. The predicted half-lives for α\alpha-decay are within one order of magnitude of the experimental values. In the case of single α\alpha emission, the nuclei considered in the present study exhibit least-action paths that differ significantly up to the scission point. The differences in alpha-decay lifetimes are not only driven by Q values, but also by variances of the least-action paths prior to scission. In contrast, the 2α2 \alpha decay mode presents very similar paths from equilibrium to scission, and the differences in lifetimes are mainly driven by the corresponding Q values. The predicted 14^{14}C cluster decay half-lives are within three orders of magnitudes of the empirical values, and point to a much more complex pattern compared to the alpha-decay mode.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figure
    corecore