32 research outputs found

    “There is a Fabulous Play in the House of Cards:” Gender and Memory-Mapping in the Film Tasher Ghawr

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    The pandemic's collective memory features large-scale destruction in the public and private realms. This paper studies the latter by speculating on the complex interrelationship between gender, media, and collective memory. By foregrounding the potential of fictional experientialities to engage with real-life phenomena, the paper analyzes the movie Tasher Ghawr as an epitome of women’s experience of the COVID-19 lockdown. This movie was selected pertaining to its current relevance. The paper undertakes a qualitative investigation through a textual analysis of the movie’s narrative. The researchers use theories such as collective memory, gender performativity, affect, and counter-memory to illustrate how the protagonist Sujatha’s individual gendered memory constantly constructs and deconstructs the collective memory of women as it pertains to the pandemic. The notion of collective memory is highlighted as complexly entangled and dialogically engaged with the memories of the individuals. This paper demonstrates this by constructing Sujatha as a subject defined by the norms embedded in the female collective memory and then shedding light on her subversive brilliance in questioning the stronghold of these discourses. This act of subversion produces a new strand of collective memory where women are no longer simply victims. The results of this study indicate that while women are constructed as subjects through collective memory processes, they also demonstrate a potential to subvert and question the stronghold of this collective memory that presupposes their submissiveness and servility. For future researchers, this movie provides ample critical space to discuss the notion of traumatic memory

    Wearable Sensors for Evaluation Over Smart Home Using Sequential Minimization Optimization-based Random Forest

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    In our everyday life records, human activity identification utilizing MotionNode sensors is becoming more and more prominent. A difficult issue in ubiquitous computing and HCI is providing reliable data on human actions and behaviors. In this study, we put forward a practical methodology for incorporating statistical data into Sequential Minimization Optimization-based random forests. In order to extract useful features, we first prepared a 1-Dimensional Hadamard transform wavelet and a 1-Dimensional Local Binary Pattern-dependent extraction technique. Over two benchmark datasets, the University of Southern California-Human Activities Dataset, and the IM-Sporting Behaviors datasets, we employed sequential minimum optimization together with Random Forest to classify activities. Experimental findings demonstrate that our suggested model may successfully be utilized to identify strong human actions for matters related to efficiency and accuracy, and may challenge with existing cutting-edge approaches

    The Value of Self-Ligating Brackets in Orthodontics: About the Damon Protocol

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    In orthodontics there has been a change in the treatment plan of crowding cases from extraction protocol. This was mainly due to the introduction of self-ligating bracket and temperature activated wires. Even though there are certain exceptions, the self-ligating bracket have evolved in orthodontics because of its advantages such as low friction, shorter treatment duration and increased efficacy. Damon’s self-ligating system has been in existence since 1930 but it has been well developed in the past 30 years with the introduction of newer systems. Damon’s self-ligating brackets have been designed to overcome the drawbacks of conventional bracket system and are often considered as the pinnacle of bracket technology. The main advantage of Damon’s system was low friction and shorter treatment duration. But the efficiency of the appliance is influenced by several factors such as Biomechanics, frequency of dental visits and patient comfort. The chapter will highlight the efficiency of the appliance, the various possible outcomes and its influence on the ease of orthodontic therapy

    Ten simple rules to host an inclusive conference.

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    Conferences are spaces to meet and network within and across academic and technical fields, learn about new advances, and share our work. They can help define career paths and create long-lasting collaborations and opportunities. However, these opportunities are not equal for all. This article introduces 10 simple rules to host an inclusive conference based on the authors' recent experience organizing the 2021 edition of the useR! statistical computing conference, which attracted a broad range of participants from academia, industry, government, and the nonprofit sector. Coming from different backgrounds, career stages, and even continents, we embraced the challenge of organizing a high-quality virtual conference in the context of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and making it a kind, inclusive, and accessible experience for as many people as possible. The rules result from our lessons learned before, during, and after the organization of the conference. They have been written mainly for potential organizers and selection committees of conferences and contain multiple practical tips to help a variety of events become more accessible and inclusive. We see this as a starting point for conversations and efforts towards building more inclusive conferences across the world. * Translated versions of the English abstract and the list of rules are available in 10 languages in S1 Text: Arabic, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Tamil, and Thai

    Social Assistance in Developing Countries Database Version 5.0

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    The Social Assistance in Developing Countries Database is a user-friendly tool that provides summary information on social assistance interventions in developing countries. It provides a summary of the evidence available on the effectiveness of social assistance interventions in developing countries. It focuses on programmes seeking to combine the reduction and mitigation of poverty, with strengthening and facilitating household investments capable of preventing poverty and securing development in the longer term. The inclusion of programmes is on the basis of the availability of information on design features, evaluation, size, scope, or significance. Version 5 of the database updates information on existing programmes and incorporates information on pilot social assistance programmes in Latin America, Asia and Africa. It also adopts a new typology that distinguishes between social assistance programmes providing pure income transfers; programmes that provide transfers plus interventions aimed at human, financial, or physical asset accumulation; and integrated poverty reduction programmes. This new typology has, in our view, several advantages. It is a more flexible, and more accurate, template with which to identify key programme features. It provides a good entry point into the conceptual underpinnings of social assistance programmes

    Variations on a theme: evolution of the phage-shock-protein system in Actinobacteria

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    The phage shock protein (Psp) stressresponsesystem protects bacteria from envelope stressthrough a cascade of interactions with other proteinsand membrane lipids to stabilize the cell membrane. Akey component of this multi-gene system is PspA, aneffector protein that is found in diverse bacterial phyla,archaea, cyanobacteria, and chloroplasts. Other membersof the Psp system include the cognate partners ofPspA that are part of known operons: pspF||pspABC inProteobacteria, liaIHGFSR in Firmicutes, and clgRpspAMNin Actinobacteria. Despite the functionalsignificance of the Psp system, the conservation ofPspA and other Psp functions, as well as the variousgenomic contexts of PspA, remain poorly characterizedin Actinobacteria. Here we utilize a computationalevolutionary approach to systematicallyidentify the variations of the Psp system in *450completed actinobacterial genomes. We first determinedthe homologs of PspA and its cognate partners(as reported in Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis, andMycobacterium tuberculosis) across Actinobacteria.This survey revealed that PspA and most of itsfunctional partners are prevalent in Actinobacteria.We then found that PspA occurs in four predominantgenomic contexts within Actinobacteria, the primarycontext being the clgRpspAM system previouslyidentified in Mycobacteria. We also constructed aphylogenetic tree of PspA homologs (including paralogs)to trace the conservation and evolution of PspAacross Actinobacteria. The genomic context revealedthat PspA shows changes in its gene-neighborhood.The presence of multiple PspA contexts or of otherknown Psp members in genomic neighborhoods thatdo not carry pspA suggests yet undiscovered functionalimplications in envelope stress responsemechanisms.Keywords Actinobacteria Evolution Genomiccontext/neighborhood Phage shock protein Phylogeny Psp
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