1,386 research outputs found
WOMAN’S STRENGTH IN EKA KURNIAWAN’S NOVEL BEAUTY IS A WOUND
The research aims to reveal the woman’s strength in Eka Kurniawan’s novel entitled Beauty Is a Wound. Strength is the emotional qualities necessary in dealing with situation or events that are distress or difficult. Strength is divided into two categories. They are strength to be tough and strength to solve the problem. The research design adopted in this study is descriptive qualitative, and the approach applied is adopting feminism one as this research describes the strength of the first female character by the name of Dewi Ayu. Dewi Ayu, as the protagonist, is reflected as  a classy prostitute in Indonesia town of Halimunda. She is an indonesian-netherlands crossbreed. She is beautiful, cold, practical, logical, at the same time full of sympathy and she is also a good mother. She never tears herself. She has high adrenalin in her self. She never feels tired to do something. This story inspires all people to have more strength and tough to go on in life. Furthermore, the finding of this study shows that Dewi Ayu has strength to be tough and to solve her complicated problems
Canadian democracy promotion strategies: Success and/or failure?
The Canadian International Development Agency plays an integral role in the promoting of democracy abroad. In fact, CIDA has spent more than $1 billion in meaningful democratic aid since 1990 on both multilateral and bilateral programmes. Despite this, CIDA policies are not conducive to developing effective and quality projects in recipient nations, due to the secretive nature of the institution. This study examines the organization\u27s Democracy Project Database, which contains the listing of all democracy projects for all nations from 1990-2005. Additionally, it evaluates the availability of reports and conducts interviews with CIDA personnel. Various CIDA human rights and democracy programme studies, CIDA project evaluations and the Auditor General\u27s reports are all examined to provide a comprehensive view on the agency. The findings illustrate that while CIDA does distribute more funds to more democratizing nations, aid is greatly dispersed and this results in a loss of effectiveness. In addition, no comprehensive database of information exists to the public, with reports that are often done on an ad hoc basis. The OAG reports indicate that the organization, in the past, has not been evaluating their programmes and much of the information is informal in nature. Yet, it is only through evaluations that a knowledge process can occur. CIDA cannot learn from its mistakes and this is also evident from the interview process. The interview phase of this study elicited little participation from CIDA officials and the personal experiences of the author also reinforced the closed-nature of the institution. This creates an obvious problem with donor coordination, cooperation and learning. It also produces difficulties in fund distribution. Results indicate that CIDA has overpaid for certain agreements and has even released ineligible expenses to executing agencies. Together, the faulty fund disbursals, inadequate evaluation methods, and lack of concentration of assistance have created an institution that is not effective at promoting democracy. Interview and programme reports indicate that democracy projects need to increase the recipient government\u27s involvement, the sustainability of funds, and more localized involvement.Dept. of History, Philosophy, and Political Science. Paper copy at Leddy Library: Theses & Major Papers - Basement, West Bldg. / Call Number: Thesis2005 .P365. Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 44-03, page: 1217. Thesis (M.A.)--University of Windsor (Canada), 2005
Hybrid Marriage Breakdown in Hamka’s Novel Merantau Ke Deli
The two main characters in the novel, a man from Minang ethnic and a Javanese woman, meet and unite in a hybrid marriage institution, referring to the concept of combining two objects in one unit, part of a cultural hybrid and then analyzed through descriptive qualitative method reviewing the existence of marriage of different ethnics, part of a social problem in accordance with the function of literature as a medium for disclosure of social problems. Data and sources of data obtained are novels and words, phrases and sentences in the novel pointing to the discussion points. Tolerance, mutual understanding, solidarity, mutual support and not disputing cultural background are the main requirements in carrying out a hybrid marriage and all these requirements do not exist enough in the male character of this novel and eventually the marriage experiences a severe shock and ends in divorce. Disclosure of causal factors is the purpose of this study and the results are the norms of cultural traditions conveyed by a group of people and self-centeredness triggers the breakdown of the marriage.
Keywords: hybrid, cultural tradition, self-centeredness, marriage breakdow
Folding and unfolding phylogenetic trees and networks
Phylogenetic networks are rooted, labelled directed acyclic graphs which are commonly used to represent reticulate evolution. There is a close relationship between phylogenetic networks and multi-labelled trees (MUL-trees). Indeed, any phylogenetic network can be "unfolded" to obtain a MUL-tree and, conversely, a MUL-tree can in certain circumstances be "folded" to obtain a phylogenetic network that exhibits . In this paper, we study properties of the operations and in more detail. In particular, we introduce the class of stable networks, phylogenetic networks for which is isomorphic to , characterise such networks, and show that they are related to the well-known class of tree-sibling networks.We also explore how the concept of displaying a tree in a network can be related to displaying the tree in the MUL-tree . To do this, we develop a phylogenetic analogue of graph fibrations. This allows us to view as the analogue of the universal cover of a digraph, and to establish a close connection between displaying trees in and reconcilingphylogenetic trees with networks
Inhibitory top-down projections from zona incerta mediate neocortical memory
Top-down projections convey a family of signals encoding previous experiences and current aims to the sensory neocortex, where they converge with external bottom-up information to enable perception and memory. Whereas top-down control has been attributed to excitatory pathways, the existence, connectivity, and information content of inhibitory top-down projections remain elusive. Here, we combine synaptic two-photon calcium imaging, circuit mapping, cortex-dependent learning, and chemogenetics in mice to identify GABAergic afferents from the subthalamic zona incerta as a major source of top-down input to the neocortex. Incertocortical transmission undergoes robust plasticity during learning that improves information transfer and mediates behavioral memory. Unlike excitatory pathways, incertocortical afferents form a disinhibitory circuit that encodes learned top-down relevance in a bidirectional manner where the rapid appearance of negative responses serves as the main driver of changes in stimulus representation. Our results therefore reveal the distinctive contribution of long-range (dis)inhibitory afferents to the computational flexibility of neocortical circuits
Fetal nutrition : a review
Knowledge of fetal nutrient supply has greatly increased in the last decade due to the availability of fetal blood samples
obtained under relatively steady-state conditions. These studies, together with studies utilizing stable isotope methodologies,
have clarified some aspects of the supply of the major nutrients for the fetus such as glucose, amino acids and fatty acids. At the
same time, the relevance of intrauterine growth has been recognized not only for the well-being of the neonate and child, but
also for later health in adulthood. The major determinants of fetal nutrient availability are maternal nutrition and metabolism
together with placental function and metabolism. The regulation of the rate of intrauterine growth is the result of complex
interactions between genetic inheritance, endocrine environment and availability of nutrients to the fetus
Haptic-Guided Shared Control Grasping for Collision-Free Manipulation
We propose a haptic-guided shared control system that provides an operator with force cues during reach-to-grasp phase of tele-manipulation. The force cues inform the operator of grasping configuration which allows collision-free autonomous post-grasp movements. Previous studies showed haptic guided shared control significantly reduces the complexities of the teleoperation. We propose two architectures of shared control in which the operator is informed about (1) the local gradient of the collision cost, and (2) the grasping configuration suitable for collision-free movements of an aimed pick-and-place task. We demonstrate the efficiency of our proposed shared control systems by a series of experiments with Franka Emika robot. Our experimental results illustrate our shared control systems successfully inform the operator of predicted collisions between the robot and an obstacle in the robot's workspace. We learned that informing the operator of the global information about the grasping configuration associated with minimum collision cost of post-grasp movements results in a reach-to-grasp time much shorter than the case in which the operator is informed about the local-gradient information of the collision cost
The effects of a Variable IMF on the Chemical Evolution of the Galaxy
In this work we explore the effects of adopting an initial mass function
(IMF) variable in time on the chemical evolution of the Galaxy. In order to do
that we adopt a chemical evolution model which assumes two main infall episodes
for the formation of the Galaxy. We study the effects on such a model of
different IMFs. First, we use a theoretical one based on the statistical
description of the density field arising from random motions in the gas. This
IMF is a function of time as it depends on physical conditions of the site of
star formation. We also investigate the behaviour of the model predictions
using other variable IMFs, parameterized as a function of metallicity. Our
results show that the theoretical IMF when applied to our model depends on time
but such time variation is important only in the early phases of the Galactic
evolution, when the IMF is biased towards massive stars. We also show that the
use of an IMF which is a stronger function of time does not lead to a good
agreement with the observational constraints suggesting that if the IMF varied
this variation should have been small. Our main conclusion is that the G-dwarf
metallicity distribution is best explained by infall with a large timescale and
a constant IMF, since it is possible to find variable IMFs of the kind studied
here, reproducing the G-dwarf metallicity but this worsens the agreement with
other observational constraints.Comment: 7 pages, to appear in "The Chemical Evolution of the Milky Way: Stars
vs Clusters", Vulcano, September 1999, F. Giovannelli and F. Matteucci eds.
(Kluwer, Dordrecht) in pres
Reconstructing phylogenetic level-1 networks from nondense binet and trinet sets
Binets and trinets are phylogenetic networks with two and three leaves, respectively. Here we consider the problem of deciding if there exists a binary level-1 phylogenetic network displaying a given set T of binary binets or trinets over a taxon set X, and constructing such a network whenever it exists. We show that this is NP-hard for trinets but polynomial-time solvable for binets. Moreover, we show that the problem is still polynomial-time solvable for inputs consisting of binets and trinets as long as the cycles in the trinets have size three. Finally, we present an O(3^{|X|} poly(|X|)) time algorithm for general sets of binets and trinets. The latter two algorithms generalise to instances containing level-1 networks with arbitrarily many leaves, and thus provide some of the first supernetwork algorithms for computing networks from a set of rooted 1 phylogenetic networks
Estimating the resilience of, and targets for, a transport system using expert opinion
To ensure that transport infrastructure provides acceptable levels of service with respect to extreme events, the resilience of the infrastructure needs to be estimated and targets for it need to be set. Recent work in the European research project Future Proofing Strategies for Resilient Transport Networks against Extreme Events (Foresee) has shown how this can be done in situations with a wide range of available data, time frames for the estimation and expertise. This paper provides an example of how an infrastructure manager can use the guideline to estimate the resilience of, and set resilience targets for, an example transport system in a relatively short period of time, even in the case of limited expertise in all the relevant areas and limited knowledge and information on all the basic input variables. The example is fictive but realistic. It is based on a transport system consisting of a section of the A16 highway, in Italy, where a potential landslide could discharge enough material to damage road sections and bridges. The resilience is estimated using resilience indicators with differentiated weights, and the resilience targets are set using cost–benefit analysis, to identify the indicators to be improved first.This work has received funding from the EU Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement number 769373 (Foresee project). This paper reflects only the authors’ views. The European Commission and Innovation and Networks Executive Agency are not responsible for any use that may be made of the information contained therein
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