61 research outputs found

    IN THIS ISSUE: What Are Characteristics of Significant Research?

    Full text link
    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/67303/2/10.1177_108056999505800214.pd

    Openings and closings in Spanish email conversations

    Get PDF
    Despite the increasing interest scholarly research has shown in the study of computer-mediated communication, there is still a need to investigate the empirical validity of assumed homogeneity of language usage over the net and focus on the social diversity and variation that characterizes any communication. With this in mind, the present paper is an investigation into the stylistic choices that a particular group of email users made when engaged in a specific activity type. More specifically, it explores the variation in the discourse practices employed to open and close emails in conversation alongside the institutional power of participants and the interactional position of each email contributing to the conversation. To carry out this study a corpus of short email conversations in Peninsular Spanish was collected (n = 240). The analysis focused on the opening and closing sequences of the emails that made up the conversations and considered opening and closing linguistic conventions as discursive practices that members of a community may use strategically. The findings revealed that the discursive practices under scrutiny were subject not only to technological but also to social and interactional constraints and thus highlighted contextual variability. Further, the high degree of sociability in the electronic episodes studied was interpreted as reflecting a Âżpeople first, business secondÂż communicative style

    Discerning natural and anthropogenic organic matter inputs to salt marsh sediments of Ria Formosa lagoon (South Portugal)

    Get PDF
    Sedimentary organic matter (OM) origin and molecular composition provide useful information to understand carbon cycling in coastal wetlands. Core sediments from threors' Contributionse transects along Ria Formosa lagoon intertidal zone were analysed using analytical pyrolysis (Py-GC/MS) to determine composition, distribution and origin of sedimentary OM. The distribution of alkyl compounds (alkanes, alkanoic acids and alkan-2-ones), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), lignin-derived methoxyphenols, linear alkylbenzenes (LABs), steranes and hopanes indicated OM inputs to the intertidal environment from natural-autochthonous and allochthonous-as well as anthropogenic. Several n-alkane geochemical indices used to assess the distribution of main OM sources (terrestrial and marine) in the sediments indicate that algal and aquatic macrophyte derived OM inputs dominated over terrigenous plant sources. The lignin-derived methoxyphenol assemblage, dominated by vinylguaiacol and vinylsyringol derivatives in all sediments, points to large OM contribution from higher plants. The spatial distributions of PAHs (polyaromatic hydrocarbons) showed that most pollution sources were mixed sources including both pyrogenic and petrogenic. Low carbon preference indexes (CPI > 1) for n-alkanes, the presence of UCM (unresolved complex mixture) and the distribution of hopanes (C-29-C-36) and steranes (C-27-C-29) suggested localized petroleum-derived hydrocarbon inputs to the core sediments. Series of LABs were found in most sediment samples also pointing to domestic sewage anthropogenic contributions to the sediment OM.EU Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate fellowship (FUECA, University of Cadiz, Spain)EUEuropean Commission [FP7-ENV-2011, 282845, FP7-534 ENV-2012, 308392]MINECO project INTERCARBON [CGL2016-78937-R]info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Age-related changes in serum insulin-like growth factor-binding proteins in women.

    No full text
    Plasma insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) concentrations are reported to decline with advancing age. Five IGF-binding proteins (IGF-BPs) have recently been characterized in human serum, although their biological role beyond circulatory transport of IGF-I is unknown. We studied plasma IGF-I (by RIA) and serum IGF-BPs (by Western ligand blotting) in healthy elderly (n = 21) and healthy young (n = 22) women to determine if aging alters IGF-I and its high affinity BPs. Plasma IGF-I was significantly lower in the elderly than in the young group (0.78 +/- 0.08 vs. 1.22 +/- 0.11 U/ml; P less than 0.005). The number and size of IGF-BPs did not differ between age groups, but the IGF-BP binding ratios (binding of one BP fraction/binding of all fractions) for the BP-53 acid-stable complex (41.5K and 38.5K BPs), the 30K IGF-BP, and the 24K IGF-BP were all lower in the elderly than in the young group (P less than 0.01 for each fraction, elderly vs. young). In contrast, the 34K IGF-BP binding ratio was significantly greater in the elderly than in the young (0.30 +/- 0.03 vs. 0.12 +/- 0.01; P less than 0.001) and correlated closely with advancing age (r = 0.64; P less than 0.01). The changes in IGF-BPs found in the elderly are quite similar to alterations in serum IGF-BPs previously reported in GH deficiency. Since several IGF-BPs in vitro have been shown to modulate the mitogenic activity of IGF-I, the serum IGF-BP changes noted above may be important for the growth and maintenance of connective tissue, muscle, and bone during the aging process
    • …
    corecore