Search results for "RIMI"

showing 10 items of 3981 documents

The Press Coverage of Celebrity Suicide and the Development of Suicide Frequencies in Germany

2014

The existence of the so-called "Werther effect" is well confirmed, and there are several recommendations on how the media should (not) report suicide to minimize the risk of copycat behavior. Unfortunately, very little is known about how suicide is actually reported. The article examines the German press coverage of six celebrity suicides with respect to compliance with guidelines on suicide reporting and analyzes changes in suicides in the wake of the reporting. It concludes that German media do not respect the recommendations in a substantial number of their articles. In addition, a significant increase in suicides and similar suicides is found.

Health (social science)Famous Personsbusiness.industryCommunicationHuman factors and ergonomicsPoison controlCriminologyComputer securitycomputer.software_genreSuicide preventionOccupational safety and healthlanguage.human_languageCompliance (psychology)GermanSuicideGermanyCopycatInjury preventionlanguageHumansMedicineMass MediabusinesscomputerHealth Communication
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Comparative Study of Several Machine Learning Algorithms for Classification of Unifloral Honeys

2021

Unifloral honeys are highly demanded by honey consumers, especially in Europe. To ensure that a honey belongs to a very appreciated botanical class, the classical methodology is palynological analysis to identify and count pollen grains. Highly trained personnel are needed to perform this task, which complicates the characterization of honey botanical origins. Organoleptic assessment of honey by expert personnel helps to confirm such classification. In this study, the ability of different machine learning (ML) algorithms to correctly classify seven types of Spanish honeys of single botanical origins (rosemary, citrus, lavender, sunflower, eucalyptus, heather and forest honeydew) was investi…

Health (social science)OrganolepticPlant ScienceTP1-1185Machine learningcomputer.software_genre01 natural sciencesHealth Professions (miscellaneous)MicrobiologyArticle0404 agricultural biotechnologyPartial least squares regressionMathematicsAliments Consumbotanical originArtificial neural networkbusiness.industryIntel·ligència artificialChemical technology010401 analytical chemistryphysicochemical parameters04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesLinear discriminant analysis040401 food science0104 chemical sciencesRandom forestSupport vector machineTree (data structure)machine learningclassificationTest setArtificial intelligencebusinessApiculturaAlgorithmcomputerunifloral honeysFood ScienceFoods
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Frictions, cracks and micro-resistances: physical activity and sport as strategies to dignify imprisoned women

2018

Discipline and control are key concepts within industrial and capitalist societies. In this context, prisons are a warning tool about the consequences of non-conformity [Foucault, M., 1995. Discipline and Punish: The birth of Prison. NY: Vintage Books]. As a result, punitive power is used as a corrective technique to transform prisoners into docile and useful citizen. However, power in prison is no static and inmates can create various strategies of resistance. The aim of this research is to understand how physical activity and sport are used by incarcerated women to confront social control and negotiate power relations. Underpinned within a critical feminist epistemology, we interviewed 16…

Health (social science)Social Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationPrisonContext (language use)030229 sport sciencesSociology of sportCriminology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineTotal institution0502 economics and businessFeminist epistemologySociologyEmpowerment050212 sport leisure & tourismSocial controlAutonomymedia_common
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The Relationship Between Internalized Homophobia and Intimate Partner Violence in Same-Sex Relationships: A Meta-Analysis

2018

A meta-analysis was conducted to investigate the association between internalized homophobia and intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration and victimization in same-sex relationships. The literature search and the application of the inclusion criteria made it possible to identify 10 studies, 2 of which were excluded due to missing data. Therefore, eight studies were finally included in the meta-analysis. The results showed positive and statistically significant associations between internalized homophobia and IPV perpetration and victimization, indicating that higher levels of internalized homophobia were related to higher levels of IPV. Specifically, the pooled effect size for the relat…

Health (social science)intimate partner violencePoison controlinternalized homophobia; intimate partner violence; meta-analysis; same-sex partnerInjury preventionHumansInterpersonal Relations0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesCrime VictimsApplied PsychologyInternalized homophobia050901 criminology05 social sciencesinternalized homophobiaPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthHuman factors and ergonomicsHomosexualityConfidence intervalmeta-analysisMeta-analysisSame sexsame-sex partnerDomestic violenceHomophobia0509 other social sciencesPsychologySocial psychology050104 developmental & child psychologyClinical psychology
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Migrants' and refugees' health status and healthcare in Europe: A scoping literature review

2020

Abstract Background There is increasing attention paid to the arrival of migrants from outwith the EU region to the European countries. Healthcare that is universally and equably accessible needs to be provided for these migrants throughout the range of national contexts and in response to complex and evolving individual needs. It is important to look at the evidence available on provision and access to healthcare for migrants to identify barriers to accessing healthcare and better plan necessary changes. Methods This review scoped 77 papers from nine European countries (Austria, Cyprus, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Malta, Spain, and Sweden) in English and in country-specific languages i…

Healthcare useEconomic growthHealth StatusServices050109 social psychologyHealth Services Accessibility0302 clinical medicineOrder (exchange)EpidemiologyHealth careDiscrimination030212 general & internal medicine10. No inequalityMigrationmedia_commonTransients and MigrantsRefugeesSocial care030503 health policy & serviceslcsh:Public aspects of medicine05 social sciencesHealthcarevirus diseasesPublic Health Global Health Social Medicine and Epidemiology3. Good healthEuropePolicypopulation characteristics0305 other medical sciencegeographic locationsResearch ArticleHälso- och sjukvårdsorganisation hälsopolitik och hälsoekonomimedicine.medical_specialtyInequalitymedia_common.quotation_subjectRefugeeAsylum seekers050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesEqualitymedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesbusiness.industryPublic healthVulnerable migrantsPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthlcsh:RA1-1270Health Care Service and Management Health Policy and Services and Health Economy[SHS.SCIPO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Political scienceFolkhälsovetenskap global hälsa socialmedicin och epidemiologi[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologieBiostatisticsbusiness
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Priming of cytotoxic T cell responses to exogenous hepatitis B virus core antigen is B cell dependent

2003

The hepatitis B virus (HBV) core antigen (HBcAg) has a unique ability to bind a high frequency of naive human and murine B cells. The role of HBcAg-binding naive B cells in the immunogenicity of HBcAg is not clear. The HBcAg-binding properties of naive B cells were characterized using HBcAg particles with mutated spike region (residues 76-85) sequences. Deletion of residues 76-85 (HBcDelta76-85) destroyed naive B cell binding, whereas deletion of residues 79-85 did not. HBcAg particles with an Ile instead of the natural Ala at position 80 did not bind naive B cells, whereas reversion of Ile80--Ala restored B cell binding. Destroying the B cell-binding ability of HBcAg had a marginal effect …

Hepatitis B virusMolecular Sequence DataNaive B cellPriming (immunology)Biologymedicine.disease_causeMiceAntigenVirologymedicineAnimalsCytotoxic T cellHepatitis B VaccinesAmino Acid SequenceHepatitis B AntibodiesB cellHepatitis B virusB-LymphocytesVaccines SyntheticBinding SitesImmunogenicityVirionvirus diseasesHepatitis BHepatitis B Core AntigensVirologyRecombinant Proteinsdigestive system diseasesMice Inbred C57BLHBcAgmedicine.anatomical_structureImmunizationT-Lymphocytes Cytotoxic
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ChemInform Abstract: Antimicrobial Activity Characterization in a Heterogeneous Group of Compounds.

2010

In this work we carry out a study of pattern recognition to detect the microbiological activity in a group of heterogeneous compounds. The structural descriptors utilized are the topological connectivity indexes. The methods followed are stepwise linear discriminant analysis (linear analysis) and artificial neural network (nonlinear analysis). Although both methods are appropriate to differentiate between active and inactive compounds, the artificial neural network is, in this case, more adequate, since it shows in a test set a prediction success of 98%, versus 92% obtained with linear discriminant analysis.

Heterogeneous groupArtificial neural networkbusiness.industryChemistryTest setPattern recognition (psychology)Pattern recognitionGeneral MedicineArtificial intelligenceLinear analysisLinear discriminant analysisbusinessAntimicrobialChemInform
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Antimicrobial Activity Characterization in a Heterogeneous Group of Compounds

1998

In this work we carry out a study of pattern recognition to detect the microbiological activity in a group of heterogeneous compounds. The structural descriptors utilized are the topological connectivity indexes. The methods followed are stepwise linear discriminant analysis (linear analysis) and artificial neural network (nonlinear analysis). Although both methods are appropriate to differentiate between active and inactive compounds, the artificial neural network is, in this case, more adequate, since it shows in a test set a prediction success of 98%, versus 92% obtained with linear discriminant analysis.

Heterogeneous groupMolecular StructureArtificial neural networkbusiness.industryLinear modelDiscriminant AnalysisPattern recognitionGeneral ChemistryLinear analysisAntimicrobialLinear discriminant analysisPattern Recognition AutomatedComputer Science ApplicationsAnti-Infective AgentsNonlinear DynamicsComputational Theory and MathematicsTest setPattern recognition (psychology)Linear ModelsNeural Networks ComputerArtificial intelligencebusinessInformation SystemsMathematicsJournal of Chemical Information and Computer Sciences
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On Sets of Words of Rank Two

2019

Given a (finite or infinite) subset X of the free monoid A∗ over a finite alphabet A, the rank of X is the minimal cardinality of a set F such that X⊆ F∗. A submonoid M generated by k elements of A∗ is k-maximal if there does not exist another submonoid generated by at most k words containing M. We call a set X⊆ A∗ primitive if it is the basis of a |X|-maximal submonoid. This extends the notion of primitive word: indeed, w is a primitive set if and only if w is a primitive word. By definition, for any set X, there exists a primitive set Y such that X⊆ Y∗. The set Y is therefore called a primitive root of X. As a main result, we prove that if a set has rank 2, then it has a unique primitive …

Hidden repetitionPrimitive setExistential quantificationBinary rootk-maximal monoidPseudo-repetitionBasis (universal algebra)CombinatoricsSet (abstract data type)RepetitionCardinalityFree monoidRank (graph theory)Primitive root modulo nComputer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryWord (group theory)Mathematics
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Towards Hybrid Aesthetics

1998

In order to avoid limiting hybridity to sterile ‘racial’ considerations, it needs to be placed firmly in its cultural context. Cultures and civilisations have often been taken as synonyms. For E.B. Tylor in Primitive Culture, words such as ‘culture’ or ‘civilization’ refer to the body of sciences, arts, beliefs, moral principles, laws, customs, in short all the habits and faculties acquired by human beings as part of their social life. Tylor draws a distinction between three stages in the evolution of societies: the savage, the barbarian and the civilised. He thus reintroduces a hierarchy between ‘civilisation’, which is reserved for the highest point on his evolutionary scale, and ‘culture…

HierarchyBarbarianCivilizationHybridityAestheticsmedia_common.quotation_subjectMagic realismSociologyPrimitive cultureThe artsOrder (virtue)media_common
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