21 research outputs found

    Rethinking journalism practice through innovative approaches to post conflict reporting

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    Journalism has a long history of interviewing vulnerable people caught up in natural disasters, conflict or tragedy. While it is widely recognised that journalists have an important role to play in telling the stories of those traumatised by such events, the concepts of ‘peace journalism’ or ‘journalism of attachment’ have often elicited a negative reaction in traditional journalistic circles. Drawing on the authors’ research project working with young people embroiled in Colombia’s civil conflict, this paper sets out an alternative and innovative approach to the retelling of the stories of others. It outlines how the research team engaged with the young people, some of whom had operated as child soldiers before Colombia’s peace accord with FARC rebels, and encouraged them to narrate their own stories in their own style. Through a series of workshops, the team experimented with oral and visual representations of their experiences, staying close to their accounts, enabling their voices to be heard. The participants combined traditional narrative with animation to produce a short documentary setting out their hopes for peace and reconciliation. This project, with its focus on immersion and listening, offers an alternative approach for journalists trying to relay the experiences of traumatised individuals marginalised in society as a result of their participation in the armed conflict. While the project was located in the specific context of Colombia, the paper argues that the journalistic approaches used could be applied more widely to the reporting of trauma in post conflict or marginalised communities

    Non-thermal plasma effects on the lipoxygenase enzyme activity, aroma and phenolic profiles of olive oil

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    Effects of non-thermal plasma (NTP) technology on the aroma and phenolic compositions and inactivation of lipoxygenase (LOX) enzyme activity of extra virgin olive oil were investigated for the first time. A short non-thermal plasma treatment with pure argon gas (2 standard liters per minute and an average voltage of 7 kV) was applied for 135 s on the olive oil sample. The LOX activity in the NTP treated oil was inhibited up to 42.9% in comparison with untreated oil. Mean values of the peroxides in both samples, expressed in meq oxygen/kg of oil, did not show any statistically significant difference. The values of the antioxidant potentials in the samples proved a mild reduction after NTP treatment. A total of 14 phenols and 31 volatiles were found in both samples with same profile. Although there was a slight difference in the test samples with regard to the concentration of individual phenolic and aroma compounds, this difference was not statistically significant. Therefore, NTP treatment had no statistically significant influence on the antioxidant activity, peroxide value, phenols and volatiles, except LOX activity. © 2019 Elsevier LtdFDK-2015-5285We thank the Çukurova University Research Found (No: FDK-2015-5285 ) for financial support. We also wish to thank Assoc. Prof. Dr. Muharrem Keskin from Hatay Mustafa Kemal University, Turkey and Prof. Dr. Abdul Malik from Aligarh Muslim University, India for their outstanding editing and proof reading

    Oral manifestations of asthmatic patients

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    The effect of asthma on oral health is the subject of debate among dental practitioners. The current study was planned to investigate the oral manifestations of asthmatics compared to healthy subjects. The study group composed of 100 asthmatics and 100 age-matched healthy controls. The caries status based on Decayed/Missing/Filled Teeth (DMFT) criteria and oral lesion were evaluated in all subjects. The mean age of the asthmatics group was 47.5±3.5 years and in the control group it was 43.5±3.0 years. Asthmatics included 45(45%) males and 55(55%) females. There was no statistical difference between caries prevalence in both groups. The most prevalent oral lesions in asthmatics group were geographic tongue 10(10%), fissured tongue 13(13%), chronic atrophic candidiasis13(13%), and in the control group were fissured tongue(11%) and lichenoid reaction(2%). The dental professional must be familiar with all signs and symptoms of this disease in order to offer effective and safe treatmen

    GC-MS-Olfactometric Differentiation of Aroma-Active Compounds in Turkish Heat-Treated Sausages by Application of Aroma Extract Dilution Analysis

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    Aroma and aroma-active compounds of the heat-treated Turkish sausages obtained from beef, turkey, and chicken meats were studied. Aroma compounds were isolated by using solvent-assisted flavor evaporation and analyzed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry-olfactometry (GC-MS-O) for the first time. A total of 47, 63, and 64 aroma compounds, including esters, terpenes, terpenols, aldehydes, phenols, ketones, acids, alcohols, lactones, furans, sulfur compounds, and pyrazines, were identified and quantified in the beef, turkey, and chicken sausages, respectively. The most prominent differences between the sausage samples were as follows: (E)-sabinene hydrate, ß-cubebene, 2-hexanol, 5-methyl-2-heptanol, 2-heptanol, 2-nonanol, 4-methyl-3-hexanol, and heptanoic acid were detected only in chicken sausage samples; (Z)-p-mentha-1(7)8-dien-2-ol, dimethylallyl alcohol, 1,2-ethanediol, furfuryl alcohol, furfural, 2-ethyl-6-methylpyrazine, trimethyl pyrazine, and 2(5H)-furanone were detected only in turkey sausage samples; and 2-butoxyethanol, octanoic acid, and nonanoic acid were detected only in beef sausage samples. The aroma-active compounds of sausages were elucidated by using aroma extract dilution analysis (AEDA) for the first time. A combined total of 31 different aroma-active compounds were detected. The aroma-actives with the greatest flavor dilution (FD) factors in beef (FD 1024 and odor activity value (OAV) 178.07), and chicken (FD 2048 and OAV 262.63) sausages were ?-terpinene, and in turkey (FD 2048 and OAV 353.86) sausages were linalool. © 2018, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature
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