66,786 research outputs found
A Newly Discovered Manuscript of the Historia de los Reyes Moros de Granada by Hernando de Baeza
The Historia de los Reyes Moros de Granada, written by the chronicler Hernando de Baeza in the first half of the XVI century, in Spain, is a valuable text that provides a very different perspective from other late medieval Spanish official chronicles. In this article we give an account of the discovery of a previously unknown manuscript of this chronicle which, unlike the two others already known, is complete and includes the ending and the negotiations between the Catholic Kings of Spain and the last Nasrid sultan Boabdil for the Islamic surrender of Granada. We describe this previously unknown manuscript, give an account of the importance of the codex in which it is found, and show the importance of this discovery for Spanish historiography
Acerca de la escena artística de la Calle 10. Un clúster creativo pionero en la Ciudad de Nueva York
Since the beginning of the fifties, 10th
Street concentrated an artistic activity
unprecedented in the history of the
paradigmatic City of New York. A significant
number of artists and their diverse ways
of production were hosted in the buildings
of this urban artery. While the Greenwich
Village bohemia or the Coenties Slip’s artists
pioneered a sporadic and spontaneous
relationship with the city, this synergistic
model of multiple and connected art spaces
along this axis could be identified as a first
creative cluster, inspiring later important
phenomena such as the colonization of the
South of Houston Street at the hands of the
artistic counterculture. The 10th Street artists’
activity would range from singular spaces
and projects, such as the Tenth Street Studio
Building, to the first structures of artistic
cooperatives, Tenth Street Co-ops. While
showing the groundbreaking relationship
between this city and its art, this article
particularly investigates the architectural and
cultural scene of 10th Street, which would
ultimately influence the 1960s’ popular urban
model of the artistic district. Moreover, the
revelation of its history is intended to build
the antecedents of certain contemporary
intervention practices and theories that rely
on culture as a way of city improvement.Desde el comienzo de la década de los 50, la
Calle 10 concentró desde el inicio una actividad
artística sin precedentes en la historia de la
paradigmática ciudad de Nueva York. Un
número significativo de artistas y sus diversas
formas de producción encontraron acomodo
en los edificios de esta arteria urbana. Mientras
que la bohemia de Greenwich Village o los
artistas de Coenties Slip fueron pioneros en
una relación esporádica y espontánea con la
ciudad, este modelo sinérgico de espacios de
arte múltiples y conectados a lo largo de este
eje podría identificarse como un primer cluster
creativo, inspirando fenómenos posteriores
de reconocido alcance como la colonización
del South of Houston Street a manos de la
contracultura artística. La actividad de los
artistas de la Calle 10 abarcaría desde espacios
y proyectos singulares, como el edificio Tenth
Street Studio, hasta las primeras estructuras de
cooperativas artísticas, Tenth Street Co-ops. Al
mismo tiempo que se muestra la innovadora
relación entre esta ciudad y su arte, este
artículo investiga particularmente la escena
arquitectónica y cultural de la calle 10, que en
última instancia influiría en el popular modelo
urbano del distrito artístico de los años sesenta.
Además, la revelación de su historia pretende
construir los antecedentes de ciertas prácticas
y teorías de intervención contemporánea que
se basan en la cultura como una forma de
mejora de la ciudad
In vitro biocontrol activity of Trichoderma harzianum on Alternaria alternata in the presence of growth regulators
http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-34582001000200006&lng=es&nrm=isoThe in vitro biocontrol ability of Trichoderma harzianum on the phytopathogen
Alternaria alternata improved in the presence of the growth regulators gibberellic
acid (GA3), or indolacetic acid (IAA) or benzylaminopurine (BAP) or foliar nutrient at
concentrations similar or higher than those used at the field level. These plant hormones
decreased the secretion of endopolygalacturonase (endo-PG) of A. alternata by approximately
20%, did not modify endochitinase (endo-CH) secretion of T. harzianum and did not alter
germination of conidia or mycelia growth of any of these fungi. The presence of T. harzianum
decreased endo-PGase secretion of A. alternata by about 50%. This inhibitory effect was
independent of the presence of growth regulators. The level of secreted endo-PG of T.
harzianum was not modified by the presence of A. alternata, but the presence of this
phytopathogen in cultures of T. harzianum, increased both the growth of the biocontroller and
its secretion of endo-CH
Planning clil units in primary education from a cognitive perspective
The Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) approach has experienced a considerable growth and it is being progressively integrated into curricula all across Europe. It is a dual educational approach in which content and language must be combined. This approach introduces a new cognitive dimension which is missing in other language learning approaches by the addition of a new competence: using the language to learn. This study intends to analyze a lesson planning process of a CLIL Primary School Science lesson at a Spanish state school focusing on the cognitive dimension of the learning process of both Science content and foreign language skills. Keywords: CLIL, cognition, lesson planning, Science, Primary Education
Homicide Profiles Based on Crime Scene and Victim Characteristics
One of the current trends in homicide research includes developing works based on scientific study and empirical evidence, which offer conclusions that can be used in an operational manner during police investigations. The objective of this study was to identify homicide characteristics from behaviors carried out on the crime scene and victim characteristics associated with those of the perpetrators of these crimes in Spain. The sample consisted of 448 homicide cases from the database of the Homicide Revision Project led by the Office of Coordination and Studies of the Secretary of State and Security. After creating six classification tree models, it was found that the modus operandi of the aggressor and the victim characteristics may permit hypothesizing about the demographic characteristics of the perpetrator (gender, age, and country of origin), his/her criminal record, and the type of relationship with the victim. Furthermore, the importance of the study of victimology during a criminal investigation is highlighted, as it may indirectly offer information about the potential perpetrator. The findings of this study suggest that criminal profiling contributes notably to the decision-making process to establish more rigorous suspect prioritization, improve the management of human resources and materials, and increase the efficiency of criminal investigations
Do recruiters prefer applicants with similar skills? Evidence from a randomized natural experiment
In this paper we examine the potential existence of a similar-to-me effect in terms of skills
between recruiters and applicants. Using evidence from entry exams to the Spanish Judiciary,
where applicants are randomly assigned across evaluation committees, we find that committee
members tend to be more demanding at those stages where they are more knowledgeable. As
a result, applicants who excel in the same dimensions as recruiters are more likely to be hire
Why do I like people like me?
In many dimensions the ability to assess knowledge depends critically on the observer's
own knowledge of that dimension. Building on this feature, this paper offers both
theoretical and empirical evidence showing that, in those tasks where multidisciplinary
knowledge is required, evaluations exhibit a similar-to-me effect: candidates who excel
in the same dimensions as the evaluator tend to be ranked relatively higher. It is also
shown that, if races or genders differ in their distribution of ability, group discrimination
will arise unless evaluators (i) are well informed about the extent of intergroup
differences and (ii) they may condition their assessments on candidates' group
belonging
Validity evidence of the organizational justice scale in Spain
Resumen tomado de la publicaciónEvidencias de validez de la Escala de Justicia Organizacional en España. Antecedentes: el interés por la medición de la percepción de justicia organizacional ha aumentado en los últimos años debido a su demostrada relación con resultados organizacionales significativos, como el bienestar y el agotamiento emocional. En España, se puede destacar la Escala de Justicia Organizacional (OJS) como un instrumento que ha mostrado buenas propiedades psicométricas en estudios previos en el sector hotelero. Este estudio complementa la evidencia de las características de la OJS utilizando una amplia muestra multisectorial. Método: los participantes fueron 849 empleados de diferentes sectores ocupacionales. La estructura de la OJS se estudió mediante análisis factorial exploratorio y confirmatorio dividiendo la muestra en dos submuestras aleatorias. Además, se analizó la fiabilidad y validez de cada dimensión. Resultados: los resultados indicaron que la escala está constituida por tres factores (distributiva, procedimental y en la interacción), con una fiabilidad y validez adecuadas. Por otra parte, como era de esperar, se encontraron correlaciones positivas entre la percepción de justicia organizacional y el bienestar, y negativas con el agotamiento emocional. Conclusiones: la OJS es una herramienta adecuada para su uso por parte de académicos y profesionales en el estudio de la percepción de justicia organizacional en España, garantizando una validez y fiabilidad adecuadas.Universidad de Oviedo. Biblioteca de Psicología; Plaza Feijoo, s/n.; 33003 Oviedo; Tel. +34985104146; Fax +34985104126; [email protected]
The Quest for Productivity Growth in Agriculture and Manufacturing
We develop a theory to explain the transition from stagnation to modern growth. We focus on the forces that shaped the evolution of total factor productivity in agriculture and manufacturing across history. More specifically, we build a multisector model of endogenous technical-change and economic growth. We consider an expanding-variety setup with rising labor specialization and two different R&D technologies, one for agriculture and another for manufacturing. As a consequence, total factor productivity in the model can increase via two different channels. First, population growth allows larger levels of specialization of land and labor in the economy that bring efficiency gains. This type of productivity improvement is capital saving, but can not generate sustained growth. Technical change is also possible by investing in R&D. Unlike specialization, new technologies generated in this way are land and labor augmenting, and are the key to modern growth. In the model, the economy has not incentives to invest in R&D until a minimum knowledge base is available to researchers. This is in line with ideas contained in Mokyr (2005). To make possible the accumulation of this minimum knowledge base, we assume that learning-by-doing is the implicit underlying force that leads to specialization. However, land and labor specialization is based on knowledge whose nature differs in agriculture and in manufacturing. More specifically, whereas this knowledge is farm-specific in agriculture, mainly concern with the acquisition of uncodified information about local conditions of soil and whether, specialization in manufacturing is the result of general knowledge, mainly codified, that contributes at a larger extent to the knowledge base.stagnation, modern growth, specialization, learning-by-doing, R&D, Knowledge base
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