218 research outputs found
The role of external broadcasting in a closed political system
This article investigates the role and impact of external broadcasting (radio and television) on a closed political system, through the example of the two post-war German states: the West German Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) and the East German German Democratic Republic (GDR). The aim is to debunk myths about the influence of external broadcasting on the events that led to German reunification in 1990. The study follows a historical approach and discusses what role external media played during the years of a divided Germany. The findings are based on several historical sources, research reports from the 1950s and 1960s and over 100 biographical interviews with former residents of the German Democratic Republic (GDR). The article analyses the impact of external broadcasting on citizens and the political elite in times of crisis as well as during everyday life
Emerging media and press freedoms as determinants of nonviolent and violent political conflicts, 1990–2006
© 2016, © The Author(s) 2016. Using aggregate-level data, this study compares instances of intrastate political conflict that occurred in both nonviolent and violent forms. Specifically, analyses presented in this study examine the relationships that exist between diffusion rates of emerging media and enhanced press freedoms in countries that experienced differing types of conflicts from 1990 through 2006. Through a series of analytic models, the results observed here indicate that higher levels of emerging media and press freedoms are better predictors of nonviolent—as opposed to violent—conflict. Findings from this study thus bridge an important gap in the literature between communication and political science research in establishing linkages between emerging media technologies and press freedoms and their interconnections with nonviolent and violent political conflict. Implications for related interdisciplinary fields are discussed
Towards a characterization of behavior-disease models
The last decade saw the advent of increasingly realistic epidemic models that
leverage on the availability of highly detailed census and human mobility data.
Data-driven models aim at a granularity down to the level of households or
single individuals. However, relatively little systematic work has been done to
provide coupled behavior-disease models able to close the feedback loop between
behavioral changes triggered in the population by an individual's perception of
the disease spread and the actual disease spread itself. While models lacking
this coupling can be extremely successful in mild epidemics, they obviously
will be of limited use in situations where social disruption or behavioral
alterations are induced in the population by knowledge of the disease. Here we
propose a characterization of a set of prototypical mechanisms for
self-initiated social distancing induced by local and non-local
prevalence-based information available to individuals in the population. We
characterize the effects of these mechanisms in the framework of a
compartmental scheme that enlarges the basic SIR model by considering separate
behavioral classes within the population. The transition of individuals in/out
of behavioral classes is coupled with the spreading of the disease and provides
a rich phase space with multiple epidemic peaks and tipping points. The class
of models presented here can be used in the case of data-driven computational
approaches to analyze scenarios of social adaptation and behavioral change.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figure
The Neanderthal teeth from Marillac (Charente, Southwestern France): Morphology, comparisons and paleobiology
Few European sites have yielded human dental remains safely dated to the end of MIS 4/beginning of MIS 3. One of those sites is Marillac (Southwestern France), a collapsed karstic cave where archeological excavations (1967–1980) conducted by B. Vandermeersch unearthed numerous faunal and human remains, as well as a few Mousterian Quina tools. The Marillac sinkhole was occasionally used by humans to process the carcasses of different prey, but there is no evidence for a residential use of the site, nor have any hearths been found. Rare carnivore bones were also discovered, demonstrating that the sinkhole was seasonally used, not only by Neanderthals, but also by predators across several millennia. The lithostratigraphic units containing the human remains were dated to ∼60 kyr. The fossils consisted of numerous fragments of skulls and jaws, isolated teeth and several post-cranial bones, many of them with traces of perimortem manipulations. For those already published, their morphological characteristics and chronostratigraphic context allowed their attribution to Neanderthals. This paper analyzes sixteen unpublished human teeth (fourteen permanent and two deciduous) by investigating the external morphology and metrical variation with respect to other Neanderthal remains and a sample from modern populations. We also investigate their enamel thickness distribution in 2D and 3D, the enamel-dentine junction morphology (using geometric morphometrics) of one molar and two premolars, the roots and the possible expression of taurodontism, as well as pathologies and developmental defects. The anterior tooth use and paramasticatory activities are also discussed. Morphological and structural alterations were found on several teeth, and interpreted in light of human behavior (tooth-pick) and carnivores' actions (partial digestion). The data are interpreted in the context of the available information for the Eurasian Neanderthals
STIGMA: NOTES ON THE MANAGEMENT OF SPOILED IDENTITY. By Erving Goffman. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1963. 147 pp. Cloth, 1.95
GABRIEL TARDE ON COMMUNICATION AND SOCIAL INFLUENCE. Edited by Terry N. Clark. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1969. 324 pp. $11.00
The Acceptability of a Doctoral Degree Earned Online as a Credential for Obtaining a Faculty Position
Completeness and Accuracy of Recall in the Diffusion of the News From a Newspaper vs. a Television Source
Evidence for a differentiated chromosomal race north of classical south European refuge areas in the garden dormouse Eliomys quercinus
The dormouse Eliomys quercinus is a forest rodent
undergoing long periods of winter hibernation. The species
presents a surprisingly large diversity of chromosomal races,
which geographic distribution was shown recently to predate
the Pleistocene glaciations. Previously reported data on the
karyotypes of the garden dormouse in France come from the
northeast of the country, where the 2N050 race occurs. New
data are presented from specimens trapped near the Atlantic
coast (departments of Vendée and Charente-Maritime), in the
Pyrenees, the Alps and in the Massif Central. The French
Alpine chain, close to the Italian border, is inhabited by the
2N054 race. A karyotype with 2N048 chromosomes, of
Iberian type, is found north of the Pyrenees, near the central
Atlantic coast and also in the south of the Massif Central, whereas the 2N050 race occurs in the north of the massif. A hybrid between these two races (2N049) was found in Vendée.
These facts reveal that neither the Pyrenees nor the Alps constitute
a biogeographic barrier to the dormouse and strongly
suggest that the present population of northern France derives
from a postglacial recolonisation movement initiated in the
southernmost regions of France or in the Rhône valley.project no. POCTI/BSE/36626/9
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