98 research outputs found
GDP per capita: from measurement tool to ideological construct
It creates biased measures, particularly for economies with a low environmental impact, argues Pat Hudso
So They Can Know: Why Document Aboriginal Languages
Using film clips and anecdotes, Joyce Hudson AM (linguist) and Pat Lowe (writer) will talk about Aboriginal people’s responses to the documentation of their languages through grammars and orthographies, dictionaries and the recording of stories
Session 5: Nutrition communication: The challenge of effective food risk communication
A chronology of food scares combined with a rapid, unchecked, rise in lifestyle-related diseases such as obesity highlights the need for a focus on effective food risk communication. However, food risk communication is highly complex. Many factors will affect its success, including the demeanour and conduct of the source, its transparency, interaction with the public, acknowledgement of risks and timely disclosure. How the message is developed is also important in terms of language, style and pretesting with target audiences, as is the choice of appropriate channels for reaching target audiences. Finally, there are many personal factors that may affect risk perception such as previous experience, knowledge, attitudes and beliefs, personality, psychological factors and socio-demographic factors, many of which remain unexplored. While there is evidence that campaigns that communicate health risk have been associated with behaviour change in relation to major public health and safety issues in the past, it is unknown at this stage whether targeting risk information based on risk-perception segmentation can increase the effectiveness of the messages
Pneumonia in Bighorn Sheep: Testing the Super-Spreader Hypothesis
Following introduction of pneumonia, disease can persist in bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis) populations for decades as annual or sporadic pneumonia epidemics in lambs. Recurring years of depressed recruitment due to high rates of pneumonia-induced mortality in juveniles is a major obstacle to population recovery. Management strategies for resolving this problem have so far been elusive. We are investigating the feasibility of removing individual “super-spreaders” to improve lamb survival. Individual variation in infection and transmission is well documented in human diseases (e.g. “Typhoid Mary”). We are testing the hypothesis that pneumonia epidemics in lambs are initiated by transmission of pathogens from a few “chronic-shedder” ewes. We have completed the first year of a 5-year project in the Hells Canyon region of Idaho, Oregon, and Washington, and in a captive population at South Dakota State University. Through repeated testing of free-ranging individuals in Hells Canyon, we have identified individual differences in shedding of Mycoplasma ovipneumoniae, a primary pathogen in the bighorn sheep respiratory disease complex. We also found that when penned separately in captivity, lambs of ewes that consistently tested positive (chronic shedders) were infected and died of pneumonia, whereas lambs born to ewes from an infected population that tested negative (non-shedders), were not infected and survived. Over the next 4 years we plan to 1) continue and expand testing of free-ranging and captive animals, 2) determine whether removal of chronic-shedder ewes improves lamb survival in free-ranging populations, 3) expand and replicate chronic-shedder commingling experiments in captivity, and 4) establish and monitor a new population founded with non-shedders from an infected population
Collective invention during the British industrial revolution: the case of the Cornish pumping engine’,
ABSTRACT In this paper, we argue that together with individual inventors and firms, what Robert C. Allen (1983) has termed as collective invention settings (that is settings in which rival firms freely release each other pertinent technical information), were also a crucial source of innovation in the industrial revolution period. Until now, this has been very little considered in the literature. This paper focuses on one of these cases: the Cornish mining district. In Cornwall, during the early nineteenth century, a notable collective invention setting, gradually emerged. This case is particularly remarkable because it was capable of generating a continuous and sustained flow of improvements in steam pumping technology which in the end greatly contributed to improve the thermodynamic efficiency of the steam engine. In this paper we study in detail the specific economic circumstances that led to the formation of this collective invention setting and we analyses its consequences for the rate of technological innovatio
The Iowa Homemaker vol.23, no.1
For Wartime Beauty, Virginia Bates, page 4
Keeping Up With Today, Margaret Ralston, page 5
Women in Service Dress for Duty, Norma Dale, page 6
New Navy Kitchen Serves, Helen Hudson, page 7
Women as Food Inspectors, Dorothy Watt, page 8
Pioneering Textile Fibers, Ruth Herzig, page 9
Egg-Drying Increases Production, Helen James, page 10
Letter from a WAAC, Marjorie P. Hinkle, page 11
What’s New in Home Economics, Lily Houseman, page 12
Vicky Heralds Spring, Pat Hayes, page 14
Women Choose Engineering Careers, Frances Madigan, page 15
Campus Notions Dept., Joan Miller, page 16
For Today’s Bride, Grace Brown, page 18
Herbs Inspire Variety, Margaret Ralston, page 20
Across Alumnae Desks, Virginia Carter, page 22
Alums in the News, Rachel Ann Lusher, page 2
2018 Alumni Achievement Awards Presentation
2018 Alumni Achievement Awards presentation
The Vehicle, 1965, Vol. 7
Vol. 7
Table of Contents
CommentaryElaine Lancepage 3
Lost Island and The Unseen SeaDaun Alan Leggpage 5
ElegyWilliam Mosierpage 6
AwayDavid Dixpage 7
DulceyRoberta Mathewspage 8
Alarum Tuam JonneDavid Walkerpage 11
Little BrotherSteve Gibbspage 13
River RunningDaun Alan Leggpage 15
PortraitRobert D. Thomaspage 16
The RockRoger Lewis Hudsonpage 17
Jarman HospitalElaine Lancepage 18
Of Domes and DiamondsDwight Ashbypage 19
Friday NightRoger J. Barrypage 20
MurderHelen Coxpage 23
Vigil SongDaun Alan Leggpage 24
Had You But Been the OneDavid Helmpage 25
To A Useless WeaponDarlene Brewerpage 25
Out of the NightPat Hartpage 26
La MortAdrian Beardpage 28
Mrs. Milton\u27s LamentBob Millerpage 30
Cockle CoveSusan McCabepage 31
Loss of VirtueJim Rinnertpage 32
The KeepsakeDwight Ashbypage 33
The RuinsRoger Lewis Hudsonpage 35
Ante Major OdysseyDaun Alan Leggpage 38
ReligionAnthony Barrettepage 39
All JoyJim Rinnertpage 40
SesameElaine Lancepage 40
CenterpieceDwight Ashbypage 41
A Great White WaveJohn Rhodespage 42
QueryElaine Lancepage 44
PistachioRita Salyerspage 45
FacadeKathleen McCormackpage 46
Winter Wisp AwaySteve Gibbspage 46
ScenarioDavid Dixpage 47
Damn-GodSteve Gibbspage 48
AccidentElaine Lancepage 48https://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1013/thumbnail.jp
Language endangerment and language documentation in Africa
Non peer reviewe
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