7,631 research outputs found

    Oaths, Roman

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    Names, Roman

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    Death By Water, Horace, Odes 1.28

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    Review Of Law And Family In Late Antiquity: The Emperor Constantine\u27s Marriage Legislation By J. Evans Grubbs

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    Tacitus, Stoic Exempla , And The Praecipuum Munus Annalium

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    Tacitus\u27 claim that history should inspire good deeds and deter bad ones (Annals 3.65) should be taken seriously: his exempla are supposed to help his readers think through their own moral difficulties. This approach to history is found in historians with clear connections to Stoicism, and in Stoic philosophers like Seneca. It is no coincidence that Tacitus is particularly interested in the behavior of Stoics like Thrasea Paetus, Barea Soranus, and Seneca himself. They, and even non-Stoic characters like Epicharis and Petronius, exemplify the behavior necessary if Roman freedom was to survive the monarchy

    External Review and Options Appraisal of the Global Fund for Community Foundations

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    This Strategic Review and Options Appraisal was undertaken for the Global Fund for Community Foundations (GFCF). This Report is not an evaluation of the work of the GFCF, while it nonetheless 'reviews' the work and achievements of the organisation, particularly in the light of where the organisation stands at the present time. In this sense, it is more of a 'snapshot' view of the GFCF, and the Report, recognising that the GFCF is at an important moment in its life at a time of both challenge and opportunity, then presents a set of Options for decision

    Therapeutic role of dietary nitrates on cardiorespiratory function in cancer survivors

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    Master of ScienceDepartment of KinesiologyCarl J. AdeIntroduction: The acute and chronic adverse physiological consequences of anticancer therapy include direct injury to the entire cardiovascular-skeletal muscle axis. As such, these patients are at an increased risk of both cancer therapy-related and age-related pathological outcomes; primary cardiovascular disease, exercise intolerance, and cancer-related fatigue. To date, however, therapeutic strategies that mitigate these negative effects within the human body have yet to be established. Previous work has demonstrated that dietary nitrate (NO₃⁻) supplementation can improve cardiac, vascular and cardiorespiratory exercise parameters, highlighting its potential therapeutic use in clinical populations. Therefore, we hypothesized that NO₃⁻ supplementation would improve both cardiac performance and exercise capacity. Methods: To date, 6 cancer survivors (57 ± 11 years) with a history of anticancer therapy completed a randomized, double-blind, crossover study with a single, acute-dose administration of NO₃⁻ or placebo (PL) [140 ml]. Transthoracic echocardiographic measures at rest were made to obtain left ventricular stroke volume. Patients performed a supine-cycling steady-state exercise test (30W) with measurements of arterial blood pressure, stroke volume, cardiac output, and a maximal-effort cardiopulmonary exercise test. Results: As intended, there was a statistically significant increase in plasma nitrite during the NO₃⁻ condition compared to PL (NO₃⁻ 1300 ± 963 µM vs. PL 111 ± 49 µM, respectively; P = 0.02). Additionally, we observed a decrease in relative oxygen uptake (VO₂) during steady-state exercise with NO₃⁻ compared to PL (NO₃⁻ 8.46 ± 2.2 vs. PL 8.98 ± 2.4 ml/kg/min; p = 0.01; Absolute VO₂: BRJ 0.64 ± 0.10 vs. PL: 0.68 ± 0.11 L/min; p = 0.01) indicating an improved exercise efficiency. Resting and steady-state arterial blood pressure, stroke volume, and cardiac output were not different between conditions. Furthermore, we did not observe any differences between conditions for peak relative VO₂ (NO₃⁻ 22.42 ± 3.86 vs. PL 23.14 ± 4.01 ml/kg/min; p = 0.23), total work done (NO₃⁻ 70.64 ± 29.5 vs PL 70.67 ± 30.71 kJ; p = 0.49), or for gross exercise efficiency (NO₃⁻ 5.23 ± 1.48 vs. PL 4.97 ± 1.41 kJ/L O₂; p = 0.14) during the maximal-effort cardiopulmonary exercise test. Conclusions: A single, acute-dose of inorganic nitrate supplementation in cancer survivors with a history of anticancer therapy enhanced steady-state exercise efficiency, but had no effect on exercise cardiac performance or peak exercise capacity

    A GeoSocial Intelligence Framework for Studying & Promoting Resilience to Seasonal Flooding in Jakarta, Indonesia

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    PetaJakarta.org is a web-based platform developed to harness the power of social media to gather, sort, and display information about flooding for Jakarta residents in real time. The platform runs on the open source software CogniCity—an OSS platform developed by the SMART Infrastructure Facility, University of Wollongong—which allows data to be collected and disseminated by community members through their location-enabled mobile devices. The project uses a GeoSocial Intelligence Framework to approach the complexity of Jakarta’s entangled hydraulic, hydrological and meteorological systems and thereby converts the noise of social media into knowledge about urban infrastructure and situational conditions related to flooding and inundation. In this paper, PetaJakarta.org co-directors Dr Tomas Holderness, Geomatics Research Fellow at the SMART Infrastructure Facility, Dr Etienne Turpin, Vice-Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the SMART Infrastructure Facility, and Dr Rohan Wickramasuriyam, GIS Research Fellow at the SMART Infrastructure Facility, will discuss their GeoSocial Intelligence Framework as it applies to their current research in Jakarta. They will also present their preliminary findings from their 2014 Twitter #DataGrant, which has allowed them to develop a correlative analysis between historic social media information, the Jakarta government’s flood maps, and the infrastructure used to manage critical flood emergencies. Finally, they will speculate on several future applications of the CogniCity OSS and suggest how it might be developed to further promote an integrated civic co-management platform with the support of business, industry, government and community organizations

    Acceptable Reforms of Agri-Environmental Policies

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    We consider a model of regulation for nonpoint source water pollution through non linear taxation/subsidization of agricultural production. Farmers are heterogenous along two dimensions, their ability to transform inputs into final production and the available area they possess. Asymmetric information and participation of farmers to the regulation scheme put constraints on the optimal policy that we characterize. We show that a positive relationship between size of land and ability may exacerbate adverse selection effects. We then introduce acceptability constraints and show that the intervention under acceptability amounts to reallocate production towards inefficient farmers who benefit from the reform at the expense of efficient producers. Last, we calibrate the model using datas on a french watershed (Don watershed). Simulations indicate that satisfying a high degree of acceptability does not entail high welfare losses compared to low degree of acceptability.Environmental Economics and Policy,
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