331 research outputs found
Commensality and the Construction of Value
This paper explores the relationship between mundane domestic and more formal
meals in recent rural Greece, as a prelude to a diachronic examination of the
range of commensal behavior through the Neolithic and Bronze Age of the same
region. Analysis of recent practices highlights the role of a hierarchy of
low- to high-value foods. While Neolithic commensality beyond the household
emphasizes equality and collective cohesion, formal commensality takes a
strikingly and increasingly diacritical form through the Bronze Age. It is
argued that Bronze Age diacritical commensality was part of a broader strategy
of elite âchoreographyâ of social life. A hierarchy of foods, which linked
diacritical behavior, labor mobilization and risk buffering, may have played a
critical role in driving this trajectory of change
Feast, Food and Fodder in Neolithic-Bronze Age Greece: Commensality and the Construction of Value
This paper explores the relationship between mundane domestic and more formal
meals in recent rural Greece, as a prelude to a diachronic examination of the
range of commensal behavior through the Neolithic and Bronze Age of the same
region. Analysis of recent practices highlights the role of a hierarchy of
low- to high-value foods. While Neolithic commensality beyond the household
emphasizes equality and collective cohesion, formal commensality takes a
strikingly and increasingly diacritical form through the Bronze Age. It is
argued that Bronze Age diacritical commensality was part of a broader strategy
of elite âchoreographyâ of social life. A hierarchy of foods, which linked
diacritical behavior, labor mobilization and risk buffering, may have played a
critical role in driving this trajectory of change
Big flip graphs and their automorphism groups
In this paper, we study the relationship between the mapping class
group of an infinite-type surface and the simultaneous flip graph,
a variant of the flip graph for infinite-type surfaces defined by
Fossas and Parlier [6]. We show that the extended
mapping class group is isomorphic to a proper subgroup of the
automorphism group of the flip graph, unlike in the finite-type
case. This shows that Ivanov\u27s metaconjecture, which states that
any âsufficiently rich" object associated to a finite-type surface
has the extended mapping class group as its automorphism group, does
not extend to simultaneous flip graphs of infinite-type surfaces
Kinetics of Plasma Viremia and Soluble Nonstructural Protein 1 Concentrations in Dengue: Differential Effects According to Serotype and Immune Status
We describe the magnitude and kinetics of plasma viremia and nonstructural protein 1 (sNS1) levels in sequential samples from 167 children with acute dengue, enrolled early in a community study in Vietnam. All children recovered fully, and only 5 required hospitalization. Among those with dengue virus type 1 (DENV-1), plasma viremia was significantly greater in primary (49) than secondary (44) infections and took longer to resolve. In primary DENV-2 and 3 infections, viremia was significantly lower than among primary DENV-1 infections. Concentrations of sNS1 were significantly higher for DENV-1 than for DENV-2 after adjusting for viremia, with marked differences in the kinetic profiles between primary and secondary infections. Secondary infection and higher viremia were independent predictors of more severe thrombocytopenia, and higher viremia was associated with a small increase in hemoconcentration. Our findings identify clear serotype and immune-status related effects on the dynamics of dengue viremia and sNS1 responses, together with associations with important clinical parameters
The BICS Mycenaean Seminar 2016-17
This annual publication contains summaries of the Mycenaean Seminar convened by the Institute of Classical Studies. The seminar series has been running since the 1950s, when it focused largely on the exciting new research enabled by the decipherment of Linear B. The series has now evolved to cover Aegean Prehistory in general, and is well known among subject specialists throughout the world. Taken together, the summaries provide a rich resource for Aegean Prehistory, and often provide the only citable instance of new research projects, until their fuller publication becomes possible.
The summaries of the seminars have been published as part of BICS since 1963. Starting with the 2015â16 series, the Mycenaean summaries will be published separately online, retaining their original character and their close connection with BICS, and becoming far more widely available as Open Access publications via the Humanities Digital Library
Animal carcass processing, cooking and consumption at Early Neolithic Revenia-Korinou, northern Greece
The open-air settlement of Revenia-Korinou has yielded the largest Early Neolithic (7th millennium BC) faunal assemblage to date from Greece. The assemblage, recovered from numerous pits, is heavily dominated by domestic sheep, goats, pigs and cattle. Here we focus on the evidence for butchery and consumption of animals, to explore how carcass products were cooked (in the absence of cooking pots) and what if any role they played in commensal politics. Evidence for dismembering and filleting is sparse, implying butchery of domestic animal carcasses into large segments (including more or less complete limbs) for cooking, apparently in ovens or pits rather than on open fires. Subsequently limb bones were intensively smashed to extract marrow and probably grease, perhaps by boiling in organic containers. Dismembering, filleting and marrow extraction were most intensive for cattle, but bone grease was more systematically exploited in the case of sheep/goats, implying differences between taxa in contexts of consumption. Significant differences between pits in taxonomic composition and the incidence of gnawing and burning suggest that each represents short-term and/or localized discard, perhaps by a small residential group. Within individual pits, matching unfused diaphyses and epiphyses and joins between fragments broken in antiquity confirm rapid burial, but bones separated by dismembering seem to have been dispersed across the settlement before discard. The distribution of carcass products, both cooked and uncooked, played a role in shaping relationships between small residential units and the wider community at Early Neolithic Revenia-Korinou
Community-Based Participatory Research: Lessons Learned from the Centers for Childrenâs Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research
Over the past several decades there has been growing evidence of the increase in incidence rates, morbidity, and mortality for a number of health problems experienced by children. The causation and aggravation of these problems are complex and multifactorial. The burden of these health problems and environmental exposures is borne disproportionately by children from low-income communities and communities of color. Researchers and funding institutions have called for increased attention to the complex issues that affect the health of children living in marginalized communitiesâand communities more broadlyâand have suggested greater community involvement in processes that shape research and intervention approaches, for example, through community-based participatory research (CBPR) partnerships among academic, health services, public health, and community-based organizations. Centers for Childrenâs Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research (Childrenâs Centers) funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency were required to include a CBPR project. The purpose of this article is to provide a definition and set of CBPR principles, to describe the rationale for and major benefits of using this approach, to draw on the experiences of six of the Childrenâs Centers in using CBPR, and to provide lessons learned and recommendations for how to successfully establish and maintain CBPR partnerships aimed at enhancing our understanding and addressing the multiple determinants of childrenâs health
GĂĄsir in EyjafjörÄur: International Exchange and Local Economy in Medieval Iceland
The site of GĂĄsir in EyjafjörĂ°ur in northeast Iceland was excavated from 2001â2006, revealing details of one of the larger seasonal trading centers of medieval Iceland. Interdisciplinary investigations of the site have shed light upon the organization of the site and provided confirmation of documentary accounts of both prestige items (gyrfalcons, walrus ivory) and bulk goods (sulphur) concentrated for export. GĂĄsir was a major point of cultural contact as well as economic exchange between Icelanders and the world of medieval Europe, and the zooarchaeological analyses indicated a mix of foodways and the presence of exotic animals and a well-developed provisioning system, which supplied high-quality meat and fresh fish to the traders. The excavations demonstrated an unexpected regional-level economic impact of the seasonally occupied site on the surrounding rural countryside, and contribute to ongoing investigations of the extent and impact of overseas trade in medieval Iceland
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