18 research outputs found

    The influence of cholesterol, progesterone, 4-androstenedione and testosterone on the growth of Treponema denticola ATCC 33520 in batch cultures

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    This critical review of the literature on female entrepreneurship problematizes the metanarrative of economic growth and the mechanisms through which it both operates and is maintained. Central to this is the axiomatic ‘underperformance hypothesis’, which states that ‘all else being equal, female entrepreneurs tend to be less successful than their male counterparts in terms of conventional economic performance measures’ (Du Rietz and Henrekson (2000, p. 1). As an axiom, the truth of the ‘underperformance hypothesis’ is taken for granted, and thus it invisibly serves as a starting point, delimiter and interpretive lens for analysis in this field. While it remains invisible, the hypothesis will continue to reproduce the differences between male and female entrepreneurs, and thus the subordination of women to men in the realm of entrepreneurship. The review illustrates how, by associating females with underperformance, the persistent influence of the metanarrative of economic growth has been masked and the image of the female entrepreneur as problematic and inferior to her male counterpart has been reinforced. The authors argue that a postmodern feminist epistemology will destabilize both the metanarrative of economic growth, and the axiomatic ‘underperformance hypothesis’ it supports, thus opening up space for a heterogeneous understanding of (female) entrepreneurship. By questioning accepted knowledge about female entrepreneurs, the review sets the platform for the exploration of new research questions and a broad agenda for future research. Such an agenda is crucial in order to move future research beyond the pervasive influence of the metanarrative of economic growth and its attendant underperformance hypothesis

    Thermodynamics and Long-Range Order of Nitrogen in γ'-Fe4N1-x

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    Models are given for the description of the chemical potential of nitrogen in γ'-Fe4N1-x. In previous work, γ'-Fe4N1-x was treated as a (sub)regular solution, thereby assuming that the N atoms are distributed randomly on the sites of their own sublattice. However, in γ'-Fe4N1-x, long-range ordering occurs of the N atoms over the sites of their own sublattice. Then, the expression for the configurational entropy should account for the occurrence of ordering. In the present article, the descriptions adopted and tested for γ'-Fe4N1-x are based on a Langmuir-type approach, the Wagner-Schottky (WS) approach, and the Gorsky-Bragg-Williams (GBW) approach. Application of the various models to data of nitrogen-absorption isotherms for the γ' iron-nitride phase shows that the subregular solution concept fails to describe the experimental data satisfactorily, whereas a very good agreement between theory and experiment is obtained for the WS and GBW approaches. It is shown that, in particular, accounting for the occupation of disorder (octahedral) sites by N atoms is necessary to obtain an accurate description of the chemical potential of nitrogen in γ'-Fe4N1-x.
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