821 research outputs found
Consuela Francis, The Critical Reception of James Baldwin 1963ā2010: āAn Honest Man and a Good Writerā; Michele Elam, ed. The Cambridge Companion to James Baldwin
Consuela Francis, The Critical Reception of James Baldwin 1963ā2010: āAn Honest Man and a Good Writerā Rochester, NY: Camden House, 2014. Pp. 165. ISBN: 1571133259. Michele Elam, ed. The Cambridge Companion to James Baldwin Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015. Pp. 274. ISBN: Ā 9781107043039. Ben Robbins In the contemporary moment, James Baldwinās works, words, and influence seem to be everywhere. The enduring relevance of his work has been surveyed and reassessed with recent prominent ..
Consuela Francis, The Critical Reception of James Baldwin 1963ā2010: āAn Honest Man and a Good Writerā; Michele Elam, ed. The Cambridge Companion to James Baldwin
Consuela Francis, The Critical Reception of James Baldwin 1963ā2010: āAn Honest Man and a Good Writerā Rochester, NY: Camden House, 2014. Pp. 165. ISBN: 1571133259. Michele Elam, ed. The Cambridge Companion to James Baldwin Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015. Pp. 274. ISBN: Ā 9781107043039. Ben Robbins In the contemporary moment, James Baldwinās works, words, and influence seem to be everywhere. The enduring relevance of his work has been surveyed and reassessed with recent prominent ..
The Consequences of Fairness for a Small Professional Services Firm
Ā This paper distinguishes among client perceptions of outcome, procedural and interactional justice in professional services. We surveyed clients of a small accounting firm and focused specifically on fairness perceptions in income tax services. We predicted that procedural and interactional fairness would be more influential than distributive fairness on evaluations of the service. The results suggest that interactional fairness, the interpersonal treatment in the delivery of the service, is the most significant predictor of client perceptions of service quality, loyalty, and trust. Implications for managers of small businesses as well as sole practitioners that offer professional services are discussed.
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Value generalization in human avoidance learning.
Generalization during aversive decision-making allows us to avoid a broad range of potential threats following experience with a limited set of exemplars. However, over-generalization, resulting in excessive and inappropriate avoidance, has been implicated in a variety of psychological disorders. Here, we use reinforcement learning modelling to dissect out different contributions to the generalization of instrumental avoidance in two groups of human volunteers (N = 26, N = 482). We found that generalization of avoidance could be parsed into perceptual and value-based processes, and further, that value-based generalization could be subdivided into that relating to aversive and neutral feedback - with corresponding circuits including primary sensory cortex, anterior insula, amygdala and ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Further, generalization from aversive, but not neutral, feedback was associated with self-reported anxiety and intrusive thoughts. These results reveal a set of distinct mechanisms that mediate generalization in avoidance learning, and show how specific individual differences within them can yield anxiety.Wellcome, Arthritis Research U
Michael K. Glenday, F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Michael K. Glendayās book titled simply F. Scott Fitzgerald seeks to offer critical approaches to all of Fitzgeraldās novels in a reader-friendly study. The book aims to provide new readings of the authorās canonical works and to reassess the ideas and significance of Fitzgeraldās major novels by exploring their core themes and positioning them within modern-day American culture. With the purpose of being reader-friendly, the book assumes no prior knowledge and is designed to provide a genera..
"Marriages ought to be secret"
In histories of exile and migration, LGBTQ+ people have often entered marriages of convenience. Within these arrangements, a gay man and lesbian woman typically enter a marriage to expedite immigration processes or to placate conservative family members. Most commonly, these relationships do not produce children, and they consequently call into question the pronatalism that is often associated with hetero-normative conceptions of marriage. This article explores the complex dynamics of these relationship structures through an analysis of childfree married women in the novels of two female queer exile writers: Jane Bowles and Patricia Highsmith. In Bowles's Two Serious Ladies (1943), a US-American upper middle-class couple, Mr. and Mrs. Copperfield, journey to Panama, where Mrs. Copperfield begins an affair with a female sex worker called Pacifica and refuses to return to the United States with her husband. In Highsmith's Ripley Under Ground (1970), the union between the US-American Tom Ripley and the French heiress Heloise Plisson provides a cover for Tom's ambiguous sexuality, as well as his diverse criminal activities, and allows Heloise to enjoy a life of aimless pleasure. In both these novels, queer marriages of convenience permit transnational mobility within unions that are markedly non-procreative and thereby occupy non-future oriented temporalities. This article demonstrates how these writers used the alternative temporal organization of the marriage of convenience plot to undermine the conventional structures of patriarchal genres, including the modernist quest narrative and suspense or crime fiction
Panel. Other Faulkners
Nothing Has Been Resolved: Mimesis and the Modern Dance Interpretations of As I Lay Dying / Michael P. Bibler, Manchester UniversityThis presentation introduces and discusses two important dramatic interpretations of Faulknerās As I Lay Dying: Jean-Louis Barraultās avant-garde French production Autour dāune MĆØre (1935) and Valerie Bettisās U.S. modern dance production As I Lay Dying (1949). Given the obvious emphasis on bodily expression, these interpretations raise interesting questions about the novelās use of language and the difficulty (even impossibility) of mimetic representation. Yet my purpose here is not just to show how these dances help illustrate or illuminate Faulknerās work. Rather, Iām more interested in exploring how these three works help decenter Faulknerās place in the modernist canon by placing greater attention on questions of performance, intertextuality, and collaborationāquestions already raised by the multi-vocal form of the novel itself. Toward a Camp Appreciation of Faulknerās Sanctuary / Ben Robbins, Freie UniversitƤt BerlinI would like to argue that both Faulknerās novel Sanctuary (1932) and the film treatments he made of the novel for MGM in the early 1930s can be read with a camp sensibility, since they possess many aesthetic hallmarks of camp, including heightened stylization, theatricality, amorality, exaggeration, failed seriousness, and a predilection towards artifice. I am particularly interested in exploring those moments where the novel particularly, to quote Susan Sontag in her landmark essay from 1964, āNotes on Campā, āproposes itself seriously, but cannot be taken seriously because it is ātoo much.āā I will show how a camp reading of Sanctuary can help us understand how the novel disturbs the high/low axes by which we judge the Faulknerian canon. William Faulkner and a Family Who Influenced Him / Sally Wolff-King, Emory UniversityWilliam Faulknerās celebrated heroine of The Sound and the Fury, Caddy Compson, may have had a real-life antecedent. That is a theory mentioned in Ledgers of History: William Faulkner, an Almost Forgotten Friendship, and an Antebellum Plantation Diary. More evidence to support that argument has come to light since the publication of Ledgers of History, however, and research indicates that a cousin of the McCarroll/Francisco/Leak family could be that person. The McCarroll/Francisco/Leak family of Holly Springs and Salem, Mississippi, came into focus recently when it became clear that they inherited and preserved a nineteenth-century plantation diary, in their possession for several generations. What Faulkner discovered in the diary of long ago informed his fiction in myriad ways, including plot, characterization, theme, and detail. Leak/McCarroll/Francisco family stories, however, also seem to have found their way into plotlines of The Sound and the Fury, Absalom, Absalom! and The Unvanquished. That Faulkner drew from the real life around him has been well known since his lifetime, but the case seems stronger than ever that members of this particular family, whom he knew well and visited often, may have beenāin ways not previously recognizedāsources for some of Faulknerās most famous novels
Dissociable Learning Processes Underlie Human Pain Conditioning.
Pavlovian conditioning underlies many aspects of pain behavior, including fear and threat detection [1], escape and avoidance learning [2], and endogenous analgesia [3]. Although a central role for the amygdala is well established [4], both human and animal studies implicate other brain regions in learning, notably ventral striatum and cerebellum [5]. It remains unclear whether these regions make different contributions to a single aversive learning process or represent independent learning mechanisms that interact to generate the expression of pain-related behavior. We designed a human parallel aversive conditioning paradigm in which different Pavlovian visual cues probabilistically predicted thermal pain primarily to either the left or right arm and studied the acquisition of conditioned Pavlovian responses using combined physiological recordings and fMRI. Using computational modeling based on reinforcement learning theory, we found that conditioning involves two distinct types of learning process. First,Ā a non-specific "preparatory" system learns aversive facial expressions and autonomic responses such as skin conductance. The associated learning signals-the learned associability and prediction error-were correlated with fMRI brain responses in amygdala-striatal regions, corresponding to the classic aversive (fear) learning circuit. Second, a specific lateralized system learns "consummatory" limb-withdrawal responses, detectable with electromyography of the arm to which pain is predicted. Its related learned associability was correlated with responses in ipsilateral cerebellar cortex, suggesting a novel computational role for the cerebellum in pain. In conclusion, our results show that the overall phenotype of conditioned pain behavior depends on two dissociable reinforcement learning circuits.Research was supported by National Institute for Information and Communications Technology (Japan), the Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) and The Wellcome Trust (UK). S.Z. was supported by the WD Armstrong Fund and the Cambridge Trust. G.G. was partially supported by the Kakenhi Research Grant B #13380602 from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. We thank the imaging team at the Center for Information and Neural Networks for their help in performing the study. The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest.This is the final version of the article. It was first available from Elsevier via http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2015.10.06
Fast battery-charging architecture
The disclosure describes a power-efficient, low-footprint, and fast battery charger based on a hybrid of the charge pump and the three-level chargers. The charger is low cost, reduces thermal dissipation, increases battery-charging speed, and is compatible with wired and wireless charging
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The control of tonic pain by active relief learning.
Tonic pain after injury characterises a behavioural state that prioritises recovery. Although generally suppressing cognition and attention, tonic pain needs to allow effective relief learning to reduce the cause of the pain. Here, we describe a central learning circuit that supports learning of relief and concurrently suppresses the level of ongoing pain. We used computational modelling of behavioural, physiological and neuroimaging data in two experiments in which subjects learned to terminate tonic pain in static and dynamic escape-learning paradigms. In both studies, we show that active relief-seeking involves a reinforcement learning process manifest by error signals observed in the dorsal putamen. Critically, this system uses an uncertainty ('associability') signal detected in pregenual anterior cingulate cortex that both controls the relief learning rate, and endogenously and parametrically modulates the level of tonic pain. The results define a self-organising learning circuit that reduces ongoing pain when learning about potential relief
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