13,543 research outputs found

    Dialogical Interspecies Ethics: Ataraxia, Desire and Hope in the Post-Human World of Anne Carson\u27s Pastoral

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    This review essay implicitly revisits human and non-human power relations within a critical animal studies context that understands the affective conjunction between the manipulation of our worlds (action, partly through knowledge) and degrees of involvement with these others that live in our worlds (comportment via emotions). I take Louise Westling’s new study as the platform for an analysis of two book-length poems, The Autobiography of Red (1998) and red doc\u3e (2013), which centre on the life of a shepherd, Geryon. Rather than revisit classical pastoral, these texts extract power-relations that classical myth and pastoral spatialise. In so doing, I argue, they reclaim a site of the emotions within the scene of herding—itself a metaphor for containing animals, for channelling and managing resources, wildness. Carson’s treatment of emotions positions the reader to evaluate the border between human and non-human animals; to unpack and complicate the terms by which we might wish to make or unmake that very demarcation

    Preponderance of Late-spiking Neurons in Rat Lateral Amygdala

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    Whole-cell recordings from rat lateral amygdala (LA) revealed two populations of principal neurons, that have similar pyramid-like morphologies but differing in firing pattern: late-spiking (LS, 66%) and regular-spiking (RS, 34%). The presence of large numbers of LS neurons arguably supports recent suggestions that the LA should be considered to be a functional extension of perirhinal cortex

    A novel H.264 SVC encryption scheme for secure bit-rate transcoding

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    A participatory methodology for large scale field trials in the UK

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    Farmer participation was essential in developing a uniquely useful set of wheat variety trials data on a wide range of organic farms over two years. Although the trials were successful, it became clear that some of the participating farmers felt there were some limitations in the process. These included a lack of ownership in the project and a concern for more researcher help. It was clear that a greater time in-vestment was needed at the start of the project to help with farmer understanding and ownership. De-spite the negative comments, farmers appreciated their involvement, particularly in contrasting their own views and information with that from the wider scene. Farmer participation is essential for systems-level research and this project helped to develop a small core of trained farmers and researchers

    Scarlet & Silver Jubilee

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    A participatory approach to variety trials for organic systems

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    A participatory research methodology was used to compare the performance of UK wheat varieties under organic conditions. Plots of three breadmaking winter wheat varieties (Hereward, Solstice and Xi19) and a mixture (1:1:1) of the varieties were grown at 19 UK farms in two seasons (2003/04 and 2004/05). Meas-urements were taken of growth habit, yield and grain quality. Grain yields in both seasons showed significant site by variety interactions, although the variation among sites was greater than among varieties in both instances. Wheat grown at Western sites was significantly shorter and higher-yielding than that grown at Eastern sites in 2003/04 but significantly taller in 2004/05. As with grain yield, greater variation among site than variety was found in the Hagberg Falling Number and protein concentra-tion results in both seasons. The results from the two years of trials illustrate the variability of organic systems and the difficulty in selecting a single variety suitable for organic farms

    HPLC Analysis of Amino Acids in Algae

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    Elliptic flow from two- and four-particle correlations in Au+Au collisions at sqrt[sNN]=130 GeV

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    Elliptic flow holds much promise for studying the early-time thermalization attained in ultrarelativistic nuclear collisions. Flow measurements also provide a means of distinguishing between hydrodynamic models and calculations which approach the low density (dilute gas) limit. Among the effects that can complicate the interpretation of elliptic flow measurements are azimuthal correlations that are unrelated to the reaction plane (nonflow correlations). Using data for Au + Au collisions at sqrt[sNN]=130 GeV from the STAR time projection chamber, it is found that four-particle correlation analyses can reliably separate flow and nonflow correlation signals. The latter account for on average about 15% of the observed second-harmonic azimuthal correlation, with the largest relative contribution for the most peripheral and the most central collisions. The results are also corrected for the effect of flow variations within centrality bins. This effect is negligible for all but the most central bin, where the correction to the elliptic flow is about a factor of 2. A simple new method for two-particle flow analysis based on scalar products is described. An analysis based on the distribution of the magnitude of the flow vector is also described.alle Autoren: C. Adler11, Z. Ahammed23, C. Allgower12, J. Amonett14, B. D. Anderson14, M. Anderson5, G. S. Averichev9, J. Balewski12, O. Barannikova9,23, L. S. Barnby14, J. Baudot13, S. Bekele20, V. V. Belaga9, R. Bellwied31, J. Berger11, H. Bichsel30, A. Billmeier31, L. C. Bland2, C. O. Blyth3, B. E. Bonner24, A. Boucham26, A. Brandin18, A. Bravar2, R. V. Cadman1, H. Caines33, M. Calderón de la Barca Sánchez2, A. Cardenas23, J. Carroll15, J. Castillo26, M. Castro31, D. Cebra5, P. Chaloupka20, S. Chattopadhyay31, Y. Chen6, S. P. Chernenko9, M. Cherney8, A. Chikanian33, B. Choi28, W. Christie2, J. P. Coffin13, T. M. Cormier31, J. G. Cramer30, H. J. Crawford4, W. S. Deng2, A. A. Derevschikov22, L. Didenko2, T. Dietel11, J. E. Draper5, V. B. Dunin9, J. C. Dunlop33, V. Eckardt16, L. G. Efimov9, V. Emelianov18, J. Engelage4, G. Eppley24, B. Erazmus26, P. Fachini2, V. Faine2, K. Filimonov15, E. Finch33, Y. Fisyak2, D. Flierl11, K. J. Foley2, J. Fu15,32, C. A. Gagliardi27, N. Gagunashvili9, J. Gans33, L. Gaudichet26, M. Germain13, F. Geurts24, V. Ghazikhanian6, O. Grachov31, V. Grigoriev18, M. Guedon13, E. Gushin18, T. J. Hallman2, D. Hardtke15, J. W. Harris33, T. W. Henry27, S. Heppelmann21, T. Herston23, B. Hippolyte13, A. Hirsch23, E. Hjort15, G. W. Hoffmann28, M. Horsley33, H. Z. Huang6, T. J. Humanic20, G. Igo6, A. Ishihara28, Yu. I. Ivanshin10, P. Jacobs15, W. W. Jacobs12, M. Janik29, I. Johnson15, P. G. Jones3, E. G. Judd4, M. Kaneta15, M. Kaplan7, D. Keane14, J. Kiryluk6, A. Kisiel29, J. Klay15, S. R. Klein15, A. Klyachko12, A. S. Konstantinov22, M. Kopytine14, L. Kotchenda18, A. D. Kovalenko9, M. Kramer19, P. Kravtsov18, K. Krueger1, C. Kuhn13, A. I. Kulikov9, G. J. Kunde33, C. L. Kunz7, R. Kh. Kutuev10, A. A. Kuznetsov9, L. Lakehal-Ayat26, M. A. C. Lamont3, J. M. Landgraf2, S. Lange11, C. P. Lansdell28, B. Lasiuk33, F. Laue2, A. Lebedev2, R. Lednický9, V. M. Leontiev22, M. J. LeVine2, Q. Li31, S. J. Lindenbaum19, M. A. Lisa20, F. Liu32, L. Liu32, Z. Liu32, Q. J. Liu30, T. Ljubicic2, W. J. Llope24, G. LoCurto16, H. Long6, R. S. Longacre2, M. Lopez-Noriega20, W. A. Love2, T. Ludlam2, D. Lynn2, J. Ma6, R. Majka33, S. Margetis14, C. Markert33, L. Martin26, J. Marx15, H. S. Matis15, Yu. A. Matulenko22, T. S. McShane8, F. Meissner15, Yu. Melnick22, A. Meschanin22, M. Messer2, M. L. Miller33, Z. Milosevich7, N. G. Minaev22, J. Mitchell24, V. A. Moiseenko10, C. F. Moore28, V. Morozov15, M. M. de Moura31, M. G. Munhoz25, J. M. Nelson3, P. Nevski2, V. A. Nikitin10, L. V. Nogach22, B. Norman14, S. B. Nurushev22, G. Odyniec15, A. Ogawa21, V. Okorokov18, M. Oldenburg16, D. Olson15, G. Paic20, S. U. Pandey31, Y. Panebratsev9, S. Y. Panitkin2, A. I. Pavlinov31, T. Pawlak29, V. Perevoztchikov2, W. Peryt29, V. A. Petrov10, M. Planinic12, J. Pluta29, N. Porile23, J. Porter2, A. M. Poskanzer15, E. Potrebenikova9, D. Prindle30, C. Pruneau31, J. Putschke16, G. Rai15, G. Rakness12, O. Ravel26, R. L. Ray28, S. V. Razin9,12, D. Reichhold8, J. G. Reid30, G. Renault26, F. Retiere15, A. Ridiger18, H. G. Ritter15, J. B. Roberts24, O. V. Rogachevski9, J. L. Romero5, A. Rose31, C. Roy26, V. Rykov31, I. Sakrejda15, S. Salur33, J. Sandweiss33, A. C. Saulys2, I. Savin10, J. Schambach28, R. P. Scharenberg23, N. Schmitz16, L. S. Schroeder15, A. Schüttauf16, K. Schweda15, J. Seger8, D. Seliverstov18, P. Seyboth16, E. Shahaliev9, K. E. Shestermanov22, S. S. Shimanskii9, V. S. Shvetcov10, G. Skoro9, N. Smirnov33, R. Snellings15, P. Sorensen6, J. Sowinski12, H. M. Spinka1, B. Srivastava23, E. J. Stephenson12, R. Stock11, A. Stolpovsky31, M. Strikhanov18, B. Stringfellow23, C. Struck11, A. A. P. Suaide31, E. Sugarbaker20, C. Suire2, M. Sumbera20, B. Surrow2, T. J. M. Symons15, A. Szanto de Toledo25, P. Szarwas29, A. Tai6, J. Takahashi25, A. H. Tang14, J. H. Thomas15, M. Thompson3, V. Tikhomirov18, M. Tokarev9, M. B. Tonjes17, T. A. Trainor30, S. Trentalange6, R. E. Tribble27, V. Trofimov18, O. Tsai6, T. Ullrich2, D. G. Underwood1, G. Van Buren2, A. M. VanderMolen17, I. M. Vasilevski10, A. N. Vasiliev22, S. E. Vigdor12, S. A. Voloshin31, F. Wang23, H. Ward28, J. W. Watson14, R. Wells20, G. D. Westfall17, C. Whitten, Jr.6, H. Wieman15, R. Willson20, S. W. Wissink12, R. Witt33, J. Wood6, N. Xu15, Z. Xu2, A. E. Yakutin22, E. Yamamoto15, J. Yang6, P. Yepes24, V. I. Yurevich9, Y. V. Zanevski9, I. Zborovský9, H. Zhang33, W. M. Zhang14, R. Zoulkarneev10, and A. N. Zubarev

    Konventionalisierung oder Vielfalt: Wohin entwickelt sich der Biolandbau?

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    Dem – österreichischen wie europäischen – Biolandbau stellt sich in jüngster Zeit verstärkt die Frage nach dem Wohin. Die Biologische Landwirtschaft steht an einer Weggabelung, die strategisch wichtige Entscheidungen für ihre weiteren Entwicklungspfade verlangt. Zum Einen schrieb der Biolandbau in den letzten Jahren Erfolgsgeschichte: - starker Zuwachs an umgestellten Betrieben und umgestellter Fläche, - sinkende Verarbeitungs- und Vermarktungskosten aufgrund steigender Mengen, - Umsatzzuwächse am Lebensmittelmarkt, - steigende Exporte, - erweiterte Vielfalt des Bio-Angebots, - verbesserte Verfügbarkeit von Bio-Produkten („Bio in jeder Lebenslage und für jede Geldbörse“), - Professionalisierung auf vielen Ebenen (Erzeugung, Verarbeitung, Vermarktung, Kontroll- und Zertifizierungswesen, Beratung etc.), - zunehmende Verankerung in politischen Programmen und institutionelle Etablierung. Der Biolandbau hat sich damit aus der Nische herausbewegt, und wird in landwirtschaftlicher Produktion, Ernährungswirtschaft, Konsum und Agrarpolitik breit wahrgenommen
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