... investigation into the role of metaphor in description of emotion in poetic discourseclauseCircumstanceparticipant Process CircumstancePlace in her heartProcess has grownActor a secret loveTimeLatelyClauseThemeLatelyRhemea ... The objective ofthe study is:- To examine the characteristics of metaphor in poetry from the approach of Systemic Functional Linguistics. More details on the aimed objective ofthe study ... both thetypesof speech role that they are taking on in the dialogue and the whole cluster of socially significant relationships in which they are involved?+ The MODE OF DISCOURSE concerns...
... Sector Center* Increase physical security including:- Enhance remote site surveillance and security* Increase network security including:- Restricted access to Internet- Increase frequency ... Round -the- clock staffing of Sector Center* Report new Category I and II incidents within 24 hrs to Sector Center* Increase physical security including:- Enhance remote site surveillance and security* ... Physical protection of critical network elements* Further increase network security including:- Restrict access to Internet- Further restrict remote access to key system elements* Increase...
... string'' because the normal Cdatatypes are not the same size on all architectures. To show the data size ofthe various C types, the datasize program has been included in the sample files ... struct list_head being used, type _of_ struct is the type ofthe structure containing the ptr, and field _name is thenameofthe list field within the structure. In our todo_struct structure ... matter of fact, the compiler signals type inconsistencies even if the two types are just different names for the same object, like unsigned long and u32 on the PC. Interface-Specific Types...
... !"#"!5 Typesof Pacemakers and the Hemodynamics of PacingPermanent Pacemaker Types Pacemaker Code""$ ... &'!>%NN5%L:%7' Authors: Moses, H. Weston; Mullin, James C. Title: A Practical Guide to Cardiac Pacing, 6th Edition ... L"""000'>E")"(*5"@AB@AC"'-*(""@AB'@AC"*""(")*")M)$""L&'"""("))"")*"'"/...
... disaggregation of urban data by socioeconomic criteria and location ã Lack of agreement on what constitutes a slum or where slums are located ã Lack of official recognition ofthe existence of slum settlements ... status of current urban programming 7. “Conclusions and Recommendations for Action” Discussion ofthe Nature of Existing Urban Health Data The search for data on child health specifically in ... around Cairo were created in the last decade. The inhabitants are among the poorest ofthe poor in Greater Cairo.44 The results of sociological and other urban studies are extremely hard to access,...
... thepopulation.Thenumberofwomensherepresentsinthepopulationiscalledhersamplingweight.Samplingweightsmayvaryconsiderablyfromthisaveragevaluedependingontherespondentsrace,theresponserateforsimilarwomen,andotherfactors.Aswithanysamplesurvey,theestimatesinthisreportaresubjecttosamplingvariability.SignicancetestsonNSFGdatashouldbedonetakingthesamplingdesignintoaccount.Nonsamplingerrorswereminimizedbystringentquality-controlproceduresthatincludedthoroughinterviewertraining,checkingtheconsistencyofanswersduringandaftertheinterview,imputingmissingdata,andadjustingthesamplingweightsfornonresponseandundercoveragetomatchnationaltotals.Estimatesofsamplingerrorsandotherstatisticalaspectsofthesurveyaredescribedinmoredetailinanotherseparatereport(13).Thisreportshowsndingsbycharacteristicsofthewomaninterviewed,includingherage,maritalstatus,education,parity,householdincomedividedbythepovertylevel,andraceandHispanicorigin.IthasbeenshownthatblackandHispanicwomenhavemarkedlylowerlevelsofincome,education,andaccesstohealthcareandhealthinsurance,thanwhitewomen(14).Theseandotherfactors,ratherthanraceororiginperse,probablyaccountfordifferencesinthebehaviorsandoutcomesstudiedinthisreportamongwhite,black,andHispanicwomen(15).TableBshowsafactorthatshouldbeconsideredininterpretingtrendsinpregnancy-relatedbehaviorintheUnitedStates:thechangingagecompositionofthereproductive-agepopulation.In1982,therewere54.1millionwomenofreproductiveageintheUnitedStates;in1988,57.9million;andin1995,60.2million(16).Thelargebabyboomcohort,bornbetween1946and1964,was1834yearsofagein1982,2442yearsofagein1988,and3149yearsofagein1995.Theselargebirthcohortswerepreceded(upto1945)andfollowed(196580)bysmallercohorts.Whiletheoverallnumberofwomen1544yearsofageroseby6million,or11percentbetween1982and1995 ,the numberofteenagewomendroppedbyabout6percent,thenumberofwomen2024yearsofagedroppedby15percent,andthenumberofwomen2529droppedby6percent(tableB).Incontrast,thenumberofwomen3044yearsofageincreasedsharplyforexample,thenumberofwomen4044yearsofageincreasedby59percentbetween1982and1995.Also,women3044yearsofageaccountedfor54percentofwomen1544yearsofagein1995comparedwith44percentin1982.Thesedifferencesinagecompositionmayberelevantwhenevertimetrendsamongwomen1544yearsofagearebeingdiscussed.Publicuselesbasedonthe1995NSFGareavailableoncomputertape.TheywillalsobeavailableonCompactDiscRead-OnlyMemory(CD-ROM).QuestionsaboutthecostandavailabilityofthecomputertapesshouldbedirectedtotheNationalTechnicalInformationService(NTIS),5285PortRoyalRoad,Springeld,VA22161,703487-4650,or1800-553-NTIS.QuestionsregardingtheCD-ROMlesshouldbedirectedtoNCHSDataDisseminationBranchat301436-8500.ResultsTables117containmeasuresofpregnancyandbirthintheUnitedStates.ChildrenEverBornandTotalBirthsExpectedIn1995,women1544yearsofageintheUnitedStateshadhadanaverageof1.2birthsperwoman(table1).Thiscompareswith1.2in1988and1.3in1982(17).In1995,women1544yearsofageexpectedtonishtheirchildbearingwithanaverageof2.2childrenperwoman(table1)comparedwith2.2in1988and2.4in1982(17).Theproportionwhoreportthattheyhaveneverbeenpregnantwasmarkedlyhigherforcollegegraduatesthanforthosewhodidnotcompletehighschool(table3).Thissamepatternbyeducationisalsoseenwhendataforlivebirthsareexamined(tables45):about49percentofwomen2244yearsofagewhohadgraduatedfromcollegehadhadnolivebirthsasofthedateofinterviewcomparedwithjust8percentofwomen2244yearsofagewithoutahighschooldiploma(table4).WithinraceandHispanicorigingroups,thepatternwasthesame:collegegraduateshadmarkedlyhigherpercentschildlessthanwomenwithlesseducation(table5).Table6showsacomparisonbetweenlivebirthsreportedintheNSFGandlivebirthsregisteredonbirthcerticatesintheyears199194.Ineachindividualcalendaryearandforthesumoftheyears199194 ,the NSFGestimateofthenumberofbirthsisveryclosetothebirthcerticatetotalanddiffersfromitbylessthantheNSFGssamplingerror.TheNSFGestimateisalsoverycloseforwhitewomen.TheNSFGestimateforblackwomenisslightlylower,andtheestimateforotherracessomewhathigherthanthebirthcerticatedata.AdiscussionofthisdifferenceisgiveninthedenitionofRaceandHispanicoriginintheDenitionsofTerms.Overall,andbycharacteristicsotherthanrace,however,table6showsthatTableB.Numberofwomen,byage:UnitedStates,1982,1988,and1995Ageơ ... of women 15–44 years of age and percent distribution by number of pregnancies, according to selected characteristics:United States, 1995CharacteristicNumber inthousandsNumber of pregnancies1Total ... thepopulation.Thenumberofwomensherepresentsinthepopulationiscalledhersamplingweight.Samplingweightsmayvaryconsiderablyfromthisaveragevaluedependingontherespondentsrace,theresponserateforsimilarwomen,andotherfactors.Aswithanysamplesurvey,theestimatesinthisreportaresubjecttosamplingvariability.SignicancetestsonNSFGdatashouldbedonetakingthesamplingdesignintoaccount.Nonsamplingerrorswereminimizedbystringentquality-controlproceduresthatincludedthoroughinterviewertraining,checkingtheconsistencyofanswersduringandaftertheinterview,imputingmissingdata,andadjustingthesamplingweightsfornonresponseandundercoveragetomatchnationaltotals.Estimatesofsamplingerrorsandotherstatisticalaspectsofthesurveyaredescribedinmoredetailinanotherseparatereport(13).Thisreportshowsndingsbycharacteristicsofthewomaninterviewed,includingherage,maritalstatus,education,parity,householdincomedividedbythepovertylevel,andraceandHispanicorigin.IthasbeenshownthatblackandHispanicwomenhavemarkedlylowerlevelsofincome,education,andaccesstohealthcareandhealthinsurance,thanwhitewomen(14).Theseandotherfactors,ratherthanraceororiginperse,probablyaccountfordifferencesinthebehaviorsandoutcomesstudiedinthisreportamongwhite,black,andHispanicwomen(15).TableBshowsafactorthatshouldbeconsideredininterpretingtrendsinpregnancy-relatedbehaviorintheUnitedStates:thechangingagecompositionofthereproductive-agepopulation.In1982,therewere54.1millionwomenofreproductiveageintheUnitedStates;in1988,57.9million;andin1995,60.2million(16).Thelargebabyboomcohort,bornbetween1946and1964,was1834yearsofagein1982,2442yearsofagein1988,and3149yearsofagein1995.Theselargebirthcohortswerepreceded(upto1945)andfollowed(196580)bysmallercohorts.Whiletheoverallnumberofwomen1544yearsofageroseby6million,or11percentbetween1982and1995 ,the numberofteenagewomendroppedbyabout6percent,thenumberofwomen2024yearsofagedroppedby15percent,andthenumberofwomen2529droppedby6percent(tableB).Incontrast,thenumberofwomen3044yearsofageincreasedsharplyforexample,thenumberofwomen4044yearsofageincreasedby59percentbetween1982and1995.Also,women3044yearsofageaccountedfor54percentofwomen1544yearsofagein1995comparedwith44percentin1982.Thesedifferencesinagecompositionmayberelevantwhenevertimetrendsamongwomen1544yearsofagearebeingdiscussed.Publicuselesbasedonthe1995NSFGareavailableoncomputertape.TheywillalsobeavailableonCompactDiscRead-OnlyMemory(CD-ROM).QuestionsaboutthecostandavailabilityofthecomputertapesshouldbedirectedtotheNationalTechnicalInformationService(NTIS),5285PortRoyalRoad,Springeld,VA22161,703487-4650,or1800-553-NTIS.QuestionsregardingtheCD-ROMlesshouldbedirectedtoNCHSDataDisseminationBranchat301436-8500.ResultsTables117containmeasuresofpregnancyandbirthintheUnitedStates.ChildrenEverBornandTotalBirthsExpectedIn1995,women1544yearsofageintheUnitedStateshadhadanaverageof1.2birthsperwoman(table1).Thiscompareswith1.2in1988and1.3in1982(17).In1995,women1544yearsofageexpectedtonishtheirchildbearingwithanaverageof2.2childrenperwoman(table1)comparedwith2.2in1988and2.4in1982(17).Theproportionwhoreportthattheyhaveneverbeenpregnantwasmarkedlyhigherforcollegegraduatesthanforthosewhodidnotcompletehighschool(table3).Thissamepatternbyeducationisalsoseenwhendataforlivebirthsareexamined(tables45):about49percentofwomen2244yearsofagewhohadgraduatedfromcollegehadhadnolivebirthsasofthedateofinterviewcomparedwithjust8percentofwomen2244yearsofagewithoutahighschooldiploma(table4).WithinraceandHispanicorigingroups,thepatternwasthesame:collegegraduateshadmarkedlyhigherpercentschildlessthanwomenwithlesseducation(table5).Table6showsacomparisonbetweenlivebirthsreportedintheNSFGandlivebirthsregisteredonbirthcerticatesintheyears199194.Ineachindividualcalendaryearandforthesumoftheyears199194 ,the NSFGestimateofthenumberofbirthsisveryclosetothebirthcerticatetotalanddiffersfromitbylessthantheNSFGssamplingerror.TheNSFGestimateisalsoverycloseforwhitewomen.TheNSFGestimateforblackwomenisslightlylower,andtheestimateforotherracessomewhathigherthanthebirthcerticatedata.AdiscussionofthisdifferenceisgiveninthedenitionofRaceandHispanicoriginintheDenitionsofTerms.Overall,andbycharacteristicsotherthanrace,however,table6showsthatTableB.Numberofwomen,byage:UnitedStates,1982,1988,and1995Ageơ...
... The NSFG conducted in 2002, being the sixth in the series, is referred to as Cycle 6. Cycle 6 ofthe NSFG was conducted under contract with the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social ... 53–66) The use of contraception and the specific methods of contraception used are major factors affecting the pregnancy and birth rates in the United States. A number of tables on contraceptive ... percent of white adoption seekers would prefer or accept a black child and 95 percent would prefer or accept a child of a race other than black or white. Use of Family Planning and Other...
... expres-sion of HO-2 promoter constructs in YN-1 cells(Fig. 7B). In contrast, hypoxia consistently increased the promoter activity of a construct, HRESV40, whichcontains four copies of HRE, but ... marginaleffects on the promoter activity of NHRESV40, a negat-ive control for hypoxic induction.Hypoxia increases cellular heme contents inhuman cell linesTo explore the implication for the reduced ... for the HRE constructs. This study wassupported by Grants-in-aid for Scienti c Research (B),for Scienti c Research on Priority Areas, and by the 21st Century COE Program Special Research Grant,the...
... CAGCAGGATCCTCTAGAGAGTTTAGTCTTTG-3Â)anda5Â-terminus primer (one of 5Â-AAGCTTCACCATGTACCCTGCCCACATGTACCAAGTGTAC-3Â,5Â-AAGCTTCACCATGCCGCACCGG CTCATCGAGAAAAAGAG-3Â,5Â-AAGCTTCACCATGGCAGTGGTTCTTGAACTTACCTTGAAGC-3Â ... ¢-AAGCTTCACCATGGAGCGGATCCCCAGCGCGCAACCAC-3¢)anda3¢-terminus primer (one of 5 ¢-TCTAGACTAGGAGCTGATCAGGTCACTGCTAGTGAAATGG-3¢,5¢-TCTAGACTACCCACTCGAGTGAGCGAAAGTCCGCTGG-3¢ or 5¢-TCTAGACTATTGACCTGTTTCGACATTTCTCCCTGACAGCTC-3¢)wereusedfor ... 5Â-CTTGCTGTCCTCGCTCCGCTTTATTCCC-3 Â for DEC1DbHLH andDEC1:4232DbHLH; 5Â-GACCGGATTAACGAGTGCATCGCCCAG-3Â and 5 Â-CTTGCTGTCCTCGCTCCGCFig. 1. Suppress ive activity of DEC1 against the CLOCK/BMAL1-activated...
... A char data type can hold one character and it requires one byte. If you need store a nameof a customer in the memory you have to declare an array of characters or use an object ofthe C+ + ... outfile.open("a:circle.txt"); /* assign a DOS name to the handle. creates a file called circle.txt in floppy drive A: */ outfile << "Enter the radius ofthe circle in cm? " ... character long, a dot, and 3 character extension. You may include the drive letter and path in front ofthe file name. For example: C: \mydocuments\cprograms\printfiles\carpet.txt 4. Place...
... shell ofthe program as follows, save it to the appropriate subdirectory. If you are using the campus computer, save to c: \temp\yourfilename.cpp. Replace yourfilename with whatever name you ... name you want to call it. Compile the program and make sure that there no errors. Remember to copy the yourfilename.cpp to your floppy disk before logging out ofthe computer. Once you logout ... chart and show the data flow. Next, write the psuedocode for each of the modules. A structure chart tells you what to do, a psuedocode tells you how to do it. I will cover this in class at great...
... sequencepreviously acquired by chemical sequencing, the oligonucle-otide ccNiR_GTPRNGPW, 5Â-GGIACICCIMGIAAYGGICCITGG-3Â, was synthesized and used together with the primer ccNiR_Cterm, 5Â-TCYTGICCYTCCCASACYTGYTC-3Â, ... involved.Purification attempt of a soluble form of ccNiRNitrite reductase activity was checked in the soluble cellfraction in order to investigate the existence of a solublemonomeric form of ccNiR, ... periplasmic pentahemic cytochrome c, NrfB [22].These important developments demand the re-examina-tion ofthe biochemical properties of D. desulfuri-cans ATCC 27774 ccNiR, and its implications on the existing...
... are deđned for the bFGF binding and for the recognition ofthe speci c bFGFreceptor, leading to the formation of a ternary complexcomprising HSPG±bFGF±FGFR. These oligosaccharidicmotifs are ... extraction, cells were incubated for 24 heither in the absence or in prese nce of FSH, dbcAMP,cholera toxin or bFGF, either in combination with FSH ordbcAMP or cholera toxin and bFGF.Extraction ... difference in cell attachment to substratum (data not shown) as the DNA content o f the cell layer at the end of the 24 h incubation period was i dentical in untreatedand bFGF-treated Sertoli cell cultures...
... ardsintovarious types. The waythatrelatesmostdirectlytoadashboard'svisualdesigninvolves the roleitplays,whetherstrategic,analytical,oroperational. The designcharacteristics ofthe dash boardcanbetailoredtoeffectivelysupport the needs of each of theseroles.Whilecertaindifferencessuchasthesewillaffectdesign,therearealsomanycommonalitiesthatspanalldashboardsandinviteastandardset of designpractices.www.it-ebooks.info ... the graphinFigure3‐12showslittleregardfor the viewer'stimeandnounderstanding of visualperception.Thisgraphcomparesrevenuetooperatingcostsacrossfivemonths,using the size of overlappingcircles(sometimescalledbubbles)toencode the quantities.Justaswith the slices of apie,usingcirclestoencodequantityrelieson the viewer'sabilitytocomparetwo‐dimensionalareas,whichwesimplycannotaccuratelydo.Take the valuesfor the month of Februaryasanexample.Assumingthatoperatingcostsequal$10,000,whatis the revenuevalue?Figure3‐12.Thisgraphuses the two‐dimensionalarea of circlestoencodetheirvalues,whichneedlesslyobscures the data. Ournaturaltendencyistocompare the sizes ofthe twocirclesusingasingledimensionlen gthorwidthequalto the diameter of each,whichsuggeststhatrevenueisaboutthreetimesthat of operatingcosts,orabout$30,000.Thisconclusioniswrong,however,toahugedegree. The two‐dimensionalarea of the revenuecircleisactuallyaboutninetimesbiggerthanthat ofthe operatingcostscircle,resultinginavalue of $90,000.Oops!Notevenclose.Nowcompareoperatingcostsfor the months of FebruaryandMay.ItappearsthatcostsinMayaregreaterthanthoseinFebruary,right?Infact, the interiorcirclesare the samesizemeasurethemandsee. The revenuebubbleinMayissmaller ... coverwhatiscausing the decreaseandhowitmightbecorrected. The dashboarditself,asamonitoringdevicethattells the analystwhattoinvestigate,neednotsupportall the subsequentinteractionsdirectly,butitshouldlinkasseamlesslyaspossibleto the meanstoanalyze the data. 2.1.1.3.DashboardsforoperationalpurposesWhendashboardsareusedtomonitoroperations,theymustbedesigneddifferentlyfromthosethatsupportstrategicdecisionmakingor data analysis. The characteristic of operationsthatuniquelyinfluences the design of dashboardsmostistheirdynamicandimmediatenature.Whenyoumonitoroperations,youmustmaintainawareness of activitiesandeventsthatareconstantlychangingandmightrequireattentionandresponseatamoment'snotice.If the roboticarmon the manufacturingassemblylinethatattaches the cardoorto the chassisrunsout of bolts,youcan'twaituntil the nextdaytobecomeaware ofthe problemandtakeaction.Likewise,iftrafficonyourwebsitesuddenlydropstohalfitsnormallevel,youwanttobenotifiedimmediately.Aswithstrategicdashboards, the displaymediaonoperationaldashboardsmustbeverysimple....