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14.01.2012, 16:47 | #1 |
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Доступ к Web of knowledge
Коллеги, у меня появился доступ к Web of knowledge. Это база доступа к научной информации. В нее входит: Web of Science, "Journal Citation Reports". В подписке Web of Science есть "Social Science Citation Index" (в нем указатель 2474 журналов (50 предметных областей) и "Arts and Humanities Citation Index" (указатель 1395 журналов по искусству и гуманитарным наукам). Информация о базе
Обращайтесь P.S. Помощь оказывается абсолютно безвозмездно. NB! В настоящий момент имеется подписка на следующие разделы (пожалуйста, учитывайте при запросе): 1. Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) --1900-present 2. Arts & Humanities Citation Index (A&HCI) --1975-present 3. Также выборочно есть статьи по другим наукам (6800 журналов). База Web of Science подразделяется на две подкатегории: JCR Science Edition и JCR Social Sciences Edition. Список категорий для каждой базы (Category Names Science и Category Names Social Sciences) см. во вложенных файлах. Для точного поиска при запросе в этой теме указывайте ISSN журнала. Справочно: видеозапись о возможностях WoK и поиск информации в WoS Пошаговая инструкция для получения идентификатора (Accession Number) своей статьи без доступа в WoS Последний раз редактировалось watteau; 09.02.2014 в 18:34. |
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09.01.2013, 20:49 | #151 |
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Ilona, к сожалению, не могу сформировать по тем категориям, что Вы просите.
В "Journal Citation Reports" не куплена та часть, что Вам нужна. Могу предложить следующий вариант: сформируйте список самостоятельно по ссылке, указанной выше; выберите журналы, которые Вам покажутся интересными. Затем я посмотрю IF внутри Web по каждому отдельному журналу. |
09.01.2013, 21:05 | #152 | |
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Добро всегда побеждает Зло, кто победил - тот и Добро (с)
That love is all there is, Is all we know of love (c) |
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10.01.2013, 20:06 | #153 |
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Коллеги, сформирован список украинских журналов из базы WoS и добавлен в первое прикрепленное сообщение этой темы.
Добавлено через 21 час 38 минут Сформирован список журналов Азербайджана, Армении и Литвы. Добавлен в первое прикрепленное сообщение этой темы. |
11.01.2013, 11:40 | #154 |
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watteau, возможно, мой вопрос нелеп, но я на стадии освоения материала.
Посмотрите, публиковались ли в журналах из WoS (помимо входящего туда российского журнала "Российская история") статьи посвященные теме Древняя Русь (X - XIII в.): социальная история, политическая история, история культуры Древней Руси (X - XIII в.) И если найдется, не могли бы Вы скачать для меня 3-4 штучки из самых крутых журналов? |
11.01.2013, 13:56 | #155 |
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Лучник, нашлось 24 публикации на историю Древней Руси. Посмотрите, выберите - не на все из них есть полные тексты.
Лучнику
Record 1 of 24
Author(s): Kahn, Andrew Title: The Cambridge History of Russia, I: From early Rus' to 1689 Source: JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY Volume: 63 Issue: 3 Pages: 568-576 Published: JUL 2012 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0022-0469 Accession Number: WOS:000310213600008 Record 2 of 24 Author(s): Okenfuss, Max J. Title: The Cambridge History of Russia, vol 1, From Early Rus' to 1689 Source: JAHRBUCHER FUR GESCHICHTE OSTEUROPAS Volume: 58 Issue: 4 Pages: 569-572 Published: 2010 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0021-4019 Accession Number: WOS:000287468300006 Record 3 of 24 Author(s): Halperin, Charles J. Title: "National Identity in Premodern Rus"' Source: RUSSIAN HISTORY-HISTOIRE RUSSE Volume: 37 Issue: 3 Pages: 275-294 DOI: 10.1163/187633110X510446 Published: 2010 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0094-288X Accession Number: WOS:000283960200005 Record 4 of 24 Author(s): Thatcher, Ian D. Title: The Cambridge History of Russia, vol 1, From Early Rus' to 1689 Source: SLAVONIC AND EAST EUROPEAN REVIEW Volume: 87 Issue: 4 Pages: 755-756 Published: OCT 2009 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0037-6795 Accession Number: WOS:000271771900020 Record 5 of 24 Author(s): Karnaukhov, D., V Title: The conception of the early ethnic history of Rus' and Muscovy in the Chronicle by Martin Kromer Source: OTECHESTVENNAYA ISTORIYA Issue: 1 Pages: 180-188 Published: JAN-FEB 2009 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0869-5687 Accession Number: WOS:000263372600017 Record 6 of 24 Author(s): Woodworth, Cherie K. Title: The Cambridge history of Russia, vol 1, From early Rus' to 1689 Source: TLS-THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT Issue: 5476 Pages: 28-28 Published: MAR 14 2008 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0307-661X Accession Number: WOS:000254076900042 Record 7 of 24 Author(s): Bushkovitch, Paul Title: The Cambridge history of Russia, vol 1, from early Rus' to 1689 Source: SLAVIC REVIEW Volume: 67 Issue: 1 Pages: 228-229 Published: SPR 2008 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0037-6779 Accession Number: WOS:000253610700047 Record 8 of 24 Author(s): Dunning, Chester Title: The Cambridge history of Russia, vol 1, From early Rus ' to 1689 Source: RUSSIAN REVIEW Volume: 66 Issue: 4 Pages: 708-710 Published: OCT 2007 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0036-0341 Accession Number: WOS:000249357900017 Record 9 of 24 Author(s): Marker, Gary Title: The Cambridge history of Russia. volume I: From early Rus' to 1689 Source: SOCIAL HISTORY Volume: 32 Issue: 3 Pages: 336-338 Published: AUG 2007 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0307-1022 Accession Number: WOS:000248769400011 Record 10 of 24 Author(s): Daehne, Burkart Title: Staraja Rjazan - The history of the centre of princedom Rjazan until the Mongolians invasion 1237 based on archaeological sources Source: JAHRBUCHER FUR GESCHICHTE OSTEUROPAS Volume: 55 Issue: 3 Pages: 321-330 Published: 2007 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0021-4019 Accession Number: WOS:000249949100001 Record 11 of 24 Author(s): Frotschner, R Title: Holy Russia, the new Israel, the third Rome. The cult of the Icon of the Virgin of Tikhvin as an element of political mythology in Muscovite Rus' in the time of the Grand Prince Vasilij III and Tsar Ivan IV Source: JAHRBUCHER FUR GESCHICHTE OSTEUROPAS Volume: 52 Issue: 2 Pages: 188-234 Published: 2004 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0021-4019 Accession Number: WOS:000222594300002 Record 12 of 24 Author(s): Kaiser, DH Title: Two histories of Rus' in the fifteenth century: Early and late, independent and official chronicles of the formation of the Muscovite state - German - Lure,IS Source: AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW Volume: 101 Issue: 2 Pages: 527-527 DOI: 10.2307/2170509 Published: APR 1996 Times Cited in Web of Science: 1 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 1 ISSN: 0002-8762 Accession Number: WOS:A1996UF73900121 Record 13 of 24 Author(s): SKRYNNIKOV, RG Title: WARS IN OLD RUS + EARLY HISTORY OF EASTERN SLAVS Source: VOPROSY ISTORII Issue: 11-12 Pages: 24-38 Published: 1995 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0042-8779 Accession Number: WOS:A1995TV63300002 Record 14 of 24 Author(s): NAZARENKO, AV Title: URBAN TRADE CENTERS IN NORTH-WESTERN RUS - ORIGINS AND EARLY HISTORY OF OLD-RUSSIAN CITIES (UP TO THE LATE 12TH-CENTURY) - GERMAN - MUHLE,E Source: OTECHESTVENNAYA ISTORIYA Issue: 3 Pages: 202-208 Published: MAY-JUN 1993 Times Cited in Web of Science: 1 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 1 ISSN: 0869-5687 Accession Number: WOS:A1993LN08100015 Record 15 of 24 Author(s): LUNT, HG Title: HISTORY, NATIONALISM, AND THE WRITTEN LANGUAGE OF EARLY RUS Source: SLAVIC AND EAST EUROPEAN JOURNAL Volume: 34 Issue: 1 Pages: 1-29 DOI: 10.2307/309309 Published: SPR 1990 Times Cited in Web of Science: 2 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 2 ISSN: 0037-6752 Accession Number: WOS:A1990DE05500001 Record 16 of 24 Author(s): Gurevics, S A Title: [Not Available]. Foreign Title: [Psychotherapeutical aspects of the old-Indian system of yoga] (Rus). Source: Orvostorteneti kozlemenyek Volume: 32 Issue: 3-4 Pages: 43-55 Published: 1986 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0010-3551 Accession Number: MEDLINE:11621965 Record 17 of 24 Author(s): Himes, J H Title: An early hand-wrist atlas and its implications for secular change in bone age. Source: Annals of human biology Volume: 11 Issue: 1 Pages: 71-5 DOI: 10.1080/03014468400006911 Published: 1984 Jan-Feb Times Cited in Web of Science: 6 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 3 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 2 Total Times Cited: 8 ISSN: 0301-4460 Accession Number: MEDLINE:6367618 Record 18 of 24 Author(s): ZURBA, RW Title: AN ESSAY ON THE EARLY HISTORY OF RUS AND THE UKRAINE - UKRAINIAN - MISHKO,S Source: JOURNAL OF UKRAINIAN STUDIES Volume: 9 Issue: 1 Pages: 110-112 Published: 1984 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0228-1635 Accession Number: WOS:A1984TS46000009 Record 19 of 24 Author(s): Gurevitsh, S A Title: [Not Available]. Foreign Title: [The pathographic method in the history of medicine.] (Rus). Source: Orvostorteneti kozlemenyek Volume: 93-96 Issue: 27 No 1-4 Pages: 155-69 Published: 1981 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0010-3551 Accession Number: MEDLINE:11629129 Record 20 of 24 Author(s): Kuzmin, M K Title: [Not Available]. Foreign Title: [Evolution of medicine in the principality of Moscow] (Rus). Source: Orvostorteneti kozlemenyek Volume: 87-88 Issue: 25 No 1-2 Pages: 91-104 Published: 1979 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0010-3551 Accession Number: MEDLINE:11628511 Record 21 of 24 Author(s): Bugajska, B; Gedl, M Title: [Investigations of the settlement complex of the population of the Tarnobrzeg group in Bachorze-Chodorowka]. Foreign Title: Badania zespolu osadniczego ludnosci grupy tarnobrzeskeij w Bachorzu-Chodorowce Source: Studia demograficzne Issue: 55 Pages: 111-22 Published: 1979 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0039-3134 Accession Number: MEDLINE:12337884 Record 22 of 24 Author(s): Gribanov, E D Title: [Not Available]. Foreign Title: [Coins as a subject of medical history] (Rus). Source: Orvostorteneti kozlemenyek Volume: 64-65 Pages: 33-59 Published: 1972 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0010-3551 Accession Number: MEDLINE:11626795 Record 23 of 24 Author(s): CLARKSON, JD Title: HISTORY OF USSR - FROM EARLIEST TIMES TO OUR DAYS - FROM EARLIEST TIMES TO GREAT OCTOBER SOCIALIST REVOLUTION .1. SYSTEM OF PRIMITIVE COMMUNISM - EARLIEST STATES OF TRANSCAUCASIA AND MIDDLE ASIA-ANCIENT RUS (BEGINNING OF 13TH CENTURY) .2. STRUGGLE OF PEOPLES OF OUR COUNTRY FOR INDEPENDENCE IN 13TH-17TH CENTURY - FORMATION OF A UNIFIED RUSSIAN STATE Source: AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW Volume: 73 Issue: 5 Pages: 1578-1579 DOI: 10.2307/1851491 Published: 1968 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0002-8762 Accession Number: WOS:A1968ZB36200125 Record 24 of 24 Author(s): BATURINA, E M Title: [THE EARLY PERIOD OF I. M. SECHENOV'S ACTIVITIES IN THE MEDICO-SURGICAL ACADEMY IN ST. PETERSBURG (MARCH, 1860-APRIL, 1862)]. Foreign Title: PERVYI PERIOD DEIATEL'NOSTI I. M. SECHENOVA V MEDIKO-KHIRURGICHESKOI AKADEMII V PETERBURGE (MART 1860 G.-APREL' 1862 G.)) (RUS) Source: Fiziologicheskii zhurnal SSSR imeni I. M. Sechenova Volume: 49 Pages: 1385-7 Published: 1963-Nov Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0015-329X Accession Number: MEDLINE:14140926 |
11.01.2013, 14:17 | #156 | |
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watteau, Огромное Спасибо, буду разбираться.
Еще вопрос: индексируется ли журнал Ab Imperio? И еще, watteau, Несколько публикаций разных авторов о Кембриджской истории России. Это что, аннотации или рецензии?? Добавлено через 7 минут Цитата:
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11.01.2013, 14:35 | #157 |
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да.
попозже посмотрю. Продолжение поиска - Древняя Русь, исключая историю. Лучнику
ecord 1 of 133
Author(s): Gippius, Alexey A.; Gzella, Holger; Mikheev, Savva M.; Schaeken, Jos Title: The oldest traces of Semitic (Hebrew and Syriac) in early Rus': two inscriptions in the St. Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod Source: RUSSIAN LINGUISTICS Volume: 36 Issue: 3 Pages: 271-284 DOI: 10.1007/s11185-012-9099-x Published: NOV 2012 Abstract: In the present article, we argue that two eleventh-century phrases inscribed many times on the walls of the St. Sophia Cathedral in Novgorod (D(0)D3/4N integral D1/2D NEuroD3/4D1/2D and DD degrees NEuroD mu N...NS D1/4D degrees NEuroD) are of Semitic provenance. We will provide the linguistic arguments which support the claim of a Hebrew source for D(0)D3/4N integral D1/2D NEuroD3/4D1/2D and a Syriac one for DD degrees NEuroD mu N...NS D1/4D degrees NEuroD. In addition, we offer a reconstruction of the historical pragmatic context in which the phrases can be situated. We will propose that the D(0)D3/4N integral D1/2D NEuroD3/4D1/2D inscriptions are a citation from the Book of Lamentations of the Hebrew Bible (verse 2:19) and that they can be connected with the seizure of Novgorod and the plundering of St. Sophia by Vseslav of Polotsk in the year 1066. They should be regarded as the oldest tangible proof of contact with Jews and Hebrew in Rus'. In the case of the DD degrees NEuroD mu N...NS D1/4D degrees NEuroD inscriptions, we will put forward the hypothesis that the author was a certain Efrem, a local citizen, possibly a clergyman, who carried the nickname 'the Syrian', because he may have been a Syrian by descent. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0304-3487 Accession Number: WOS:000309861400003 ________________________________________ Record 2 of 133 Author(s): Kahn, Andrew Title: The Cambridge History of Russia, I: From early Rus' to 1689 Source: JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY Volume: 63 Issue: 3 Pages: 568-576 Published: JUL 2012 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0022-0469 Accession Number: WOS:000310213600008 ________________________________________ Record 3 of 133 Author(s): Giffney, Noreen Title: Monstrous Mongols Source: POSTMEDIEVAL-A JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL CULTURAL STUDIES Volume: 3 Issue: 2 Pages: 227-245 DOI: 10.1057/pmed.2012.10 Published: SUM 2012 Abstract: This article traces discourses of monstrosity underpinning depictions of the Mongols in letters, official documents, purported eyewitness accounts, and so called travel narratives produced in Western Christendom during and in the immediate aftermath of the Mongol invasion of Eastern Europe and the Rus' principalities in the late 1230s-early 1240s. Much current historical work on the Mongol invasion is concerned with distinguishing fact from fiction, locating the historical sources of Western writers' information, and offering explanations for their reliance on myth. While keeping this research in mind, I argue that reports of monstrous Mongols constituted not simply ignorant attempts to explain an apparently inexplicable event, but served to contain irruptions of emotion in response to a deeply traumatic experience, while forming part of a propagandistic strategy to induce people out of passivity and toward military resistance. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 2040-5960 Accession Number: WOS:000308696000008 ________________________________________ Record 4 of 133 Author(s): Baker, Kimberly; Sanchez-de-Toledo, Joan; Munoz, Ricardo; Orr, Richard; Kiray, Shareen; Shiderly, Dana; Clemens, Michele; Wearden, Peter; Morell, Victor O; Chrysostomou, Constantinos Title: Critical congenital heart disease--utility of routine screening for chromosomal and other extracardiac malformations. Source: Congenital heart disease Volume: 7 Issue: 2 Pages: 145-50 DOI: 10.1111/j.1747-0803.2011.00585.x Published: 2012 Mar-Apr Abstract: Objective. Infants with critical congenital heart disease (CHD) can have genetic and other extracardiac malformations, which add to the short- and long-term risk of morbidity and perhaps mortality. We sought to examine our center's practice of screening for extracardiac anomalies and to determine the yield of these tests among specific cardiac diagnostic categories. Design. Retrospective review of infants admitted to the cardiac intensive care unit with a new diagnosis of CHD. Subjects were categorized into six groups: septal defects (SD), conotruncal defects (CTD), single-ventricle physiology (SV), left-sided obstructive lesions (LSO), right-sided obstructive lesions (RSO), and "other" (anomalous pulmonary venous return, Ebstein's anomaly). Screening modalities included genetic testing (karyotype and fluorescent in situ hybridization for 22q11.2 deletion), renal ultrasound (RUS), and head ultrasound (HUS). Results. One hundred forty-one patients were identified. The incidence of cardiac anomalies was: CTD (36%), SD (18%), SV (18%), LSO (14%), RSO (3%), and "other" (8%). Overall 14% had an abnormal karyotype, 5% had a deletion for 22q11.2, 28% had an abnormal RUS and 22% had abnormal HUS. Patients in SD and SV had the highest incidence of abnormal karyotype (36% and 17%); 22q11.2 deletion was present only in CTD and LSO groups (9% and 7%, respectively); abnormal RUS and HUS were seen relatively uniformly in all categories. Premature infants had significantly higher incidence of renal 43% vs. 24%, and intracranial abnormalities 46% vs. 16%. Conclusion. Infants with critical CHD and particularly premature infants have high incidence of genetic and other extracardiac anomalies. Universal screening for these abnormalities with ultrasonographic and genetic testing maybe warranted because early detection could impact short and long-term outcomes. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 1747-0803 Accession Number: MEDLINE:22070653 ________________________________________ Record 5 of 133 Author(s): Liwoch, Radoslaw; Mueller-Wille, Michael Title: "DRUZHINA" GRAVES DATING TO THE TIME AROUND AD 1000 IN PIDGIRCI (WESTERN UKRAINE) Source: ARCHAOLOGISCHES KORRESPONDENZBLATT Volume: 42 Issue: 3 Pages: 421-438 Published: 2012 Abstract: Druzhina graves dating to the time around AD 1000 from Pidgirci (western Ukraine) In 1881-1882, the Cracow archaeologist T. Ziemiecki excavated two double graves covered by burial mounds in the cemetery of the extensive hillfort and settlement complex at Pidgirci (Polish Podhorce) in western Ukraine. Each double grave contained the burial of a man and a woman, with abundant grave-goods that are now being reanalysed. Two swords, Petersen's Type S and Type V, are discussed here and compared with similar finds. The burials seem to be those of members of the princely retinue (druzhina) around 1000, at the time when the south-western border area of Kievan Rus' was being converted to the Christian religion. The Polish-Old Russian frontier between the Bug and Vistula rivers presumably took shape at this time and not only formed the boundary between the territories of the Piasts and Rurikids and their successors but also between Latin and Byzantine (Orthodox) Christianity. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0342-734X Accession Number: WOS:000310820100009 ________________________________________ Record 6 of 133 Author(s): Naidoo, Nandha Title: The 'Indian Chap': Recollections of a South African Underground Trainee in Mao's China Source: SOUTH AFRICAN HISTORICAL JOURNAL Volume: 64 Issue: 3 Special Issue: SI Pages: 707-736 DOI: 10.1080/02582473.2012.670509 Published: 2012 Abstract: Little is known about the first South African underground group sent for training in China in 1961 before the Sino-Soviet breakdown. As a member of that group, for over 50 years I have not spoken publicly about the experience but, at 79, feel obliged to overcome previous reticence in the interest of adding to our country's knowledge of its complex past. I outline here the personal and political environment that shaped my views on justice and freedom and the journey that took me, as a student from Natal to London, where I participated in early campaigning against apartheid, and from there to the Peoples' Republic of China. I describe joining Wilton Mkwayi in Prague and Raymond Mhlaba, Joe Gqabi and Patrick Mthembu in Beijing where Mao Zedong spoke with us. I give a detailed account of the training in radio communication and technology that I received with Andrew Mlangeni in Mukden/Shenyang. While disappearing from my family's radar, my mother died and I was unable to honour a commitment to my father. I describe how, on my return to South Africa, although not formally recruited to any organization, I took instructions conveyed through Mac Maharaj, mainly after the reconstitution of the High Command following the Rivonia Trial. My subsequent arrest, interrogation ('Rooi Rus' Swanepoel), and trial, ending in acquittal, were followed by escape to Botswana where I remained among South African refugees for a year before managing to reach exile in England. My narrative indicates a need to explore the tension between developing critical-thinking cadres and the demands of organizational discipline; and that between personal and political commitment. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0258-2473 Accession Number: WOS:000307846900016 ________________________________________ Record 7 of 133 Author(s): Tanner, Bertrand C W; Daniel, Thomas L; Regnier, Michael Title: Filament compliance influences cooperative activation of thin filaments and the dynamics of force production in skeletal muscle. Source: PLoS computational biology Volume: 8 Issue: 5 Pages: e1002506 Published: 2012 Abstract: Striated muscle contraction is a highly cooperative process initiated by Ca⁺ binding to the troponin complex, which leads to tropomyosin movement and myosin cross-bridge (XB) formation along thin filaments. Experimental and computational studies suggest skeletal muscle fiber activation is greatly augmented by cooperative interactions between neighboring thin filament regulatory units (RU-RU cooperativity; 1 RU = 7 actin monomers+1 troponin complex+1 tropomyosin molecule). XB binding can also amplify thin filament activation through interactions with RUs (XB-RU cooperativity). Because these interactions occur with a temporal order, they can be considered kinetic forms of cooperativity. Our previous spatially-explicit models illustrated that mechanical forms of cooperativity also exist, arising from XB-induced XB binding (XB-XB cooperativity). These mechanical and kinetic forms of cooperativity are likely coordinated during muscle contraction, but the relative contribution from each of these mechanisms is difficult to separate experimentally. To investigate these contributions we built a multi-filament model of the half sarcomere, allowing RU activation kinetics to vary with the state of neighboring RUs or XBs. Simulations suggest Ca⁺ binding to troponin activates a thin filament distance spanning 9 to 11 actins and coupled RU-RU interactions dominate the cooperative force response in skeletal muscle, consistent with measurements from rabbit psoas fibers. XB binding was critical for stabilizing thin filament activation, particularly at submaximal Ca⁺ levels, even though XB-RU cooperativity amplified force less than RU-RU cooperativity. Similar to previous studies, XB-XB cooperativity scaled inversely with lattice stiffness, leading to slower rates of force development as stiffness decreased. Including RU-RU and XB-RU cooperativity in this model resulted in the novel prediction that the force-[Ca⁺] relationship can vary due to filament and XB compliance. Simulations also suggest kinetic forms of cooperativity occur rapidly and dominate early to get activation, while mechanical forms of cooperativity act more slowly, augmenting XB binding as force continues to develop. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 1553-7358 Accession Number: MEDLINE:22589710 ________________________________________ Record 8 of 133 Author(s): Garipzanov, Ildar H. Title: Wandering Clerics and Mixed Rituals in the Early Christian North, c. 1000-c. 1150 Source: JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY Volume: 63 Issue: 1 Pages: 1-17 DOI: 10.1017/S0022046911002545 Published: JAN 2012 Abstract: This article questions the traditional perception of early Christianisation in Scandinavia and Northern Rus' as processes separated by established confessional and institutional boundaries. Surviving narrative sources mention a number of clerical peregrinators crossing confessional borders in northern Europe in the post-conversion period, and some contemporaneous baptismal rites from Scandinavia and northern Rus' testify to their ability to influence the basic Christian rituals in both regions. These phenomena suggest that differences between the Catholic and Orthodox Churches were in no way preventing contacts across the early Christian north in the eleventh and the first half of the twelfth century. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0022-0469 Accession Number: WOS:000299880900001 |
11.01.2013, 14:38 | #158 |
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Author(s): Hawley, Nicola L; Rousham, Emily K; Johnson, William; Norris, Shane A; Pettifor, John M; Cameron, Noel ResearcherID Numbers: Pettifor, John D-5943-2012 Title: Determinants of relative skeletal maturity in South African children. Source: Bone Volume: 50 Issue: 1 Pages: 259-64 Published: 2012-Jan Abstract: The variation of skeletal maturity about chronological age is a sensitive indicator of population health. Age appropriate or advanced skeletal maturity is a reflection of adequate environmental and social conditions, whereas delayed maturation suggests inadequate conditions for optimal development. There remains a paucity of data, however, to indicate which specific biological and environmental factors are associated with advancement or delay in skeletal maturity. The present study utilises longitudinal data from the South African Birth to Twenty (Bt20) study to indentify predictors of relative skeletal maturity (RSM) in early adolescence. A total of 244 black South African children (n=131 male) were included in this analysis. Skeletal maturity at age 9/10 years was assessed using the Tanner and Whitehouse III RUS technique. Longitudinal data on growth, socio-economic position and pubertal development were entered into sex-specific multivariable general linear regression models with relative skeletal maturity (skeletal age-chronological age) as the outcome. At 9/10 years of age males showed an average of 0.66 years delay in skeletal maturation relative to chronological age. Females showed an average of 1.00 year delay relative to chronological age. In males, being taller at 2 years (p<0.01) and heavier at 2 years (p<0.01) predicted less delay in RSM at age 9/10 years, independent of current size and body composition. In females, both height at 2 years and conditional weight at 2 years predicted less delay in RSM at 9/10 years (p<0.05) but this effect was mediated by current body composition. Having greater lean mass at 9/10 years was associated with less delayed RSM in females (p<0.01) as was pubertal status at the time of skeletal maturity assessment (p<0.01). This study identifies several predictors of skeletal maturation at 9/10 years, indicating a role for early life exposures in determining the rate of skeletal maturation during childhood independently of current stature. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 1873-2763 Accession Number: MEDLINE:22075209 ________________________________________ Record 10 of 133 Author(s): Fehl, Gerhard Title: Berlin and London: two cultures and two kinds of urban squares Source: URBAN MORPHOLOGY Volume: 15 Issue: 2 Pages: 121-132 Published: OCT 2011 Abstract: The contrasting planning cultures that gave rise to urban squares in London and Berlin in the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries are explored. The differences reflect the different roles played by king or state, the different types of interaction between landowners, builders and their clientele, the different origins of financial resources invested in urban development, the different forms of land tenure and ways of disposing of land for urbanization, and the significance of different 'conceptual paradigms' concerning urban open space. In London the concept of rus in urbe entailed primarily the upgrading of a marketable urban product (plots and dwellings), whereas in Berlin the conventional notion of public space related to a 'representative public stage' provided by a monarch and serving primarily his own glorification. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 1027-4278 Accession Number: WOS:000295100700003 ________________________________________ Record 11 of 133 Author(s): Markman, Kristina Title: TACTICS OF MANIPULATION: A REVISIONIST STUDY OF GEDIMINAS AND THE THREAT OF TEUTONIC INVASION, 1315-1342 Source: COMITATUS-A JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE STUDIES Volume: 42 Pages: 115-133 Published: 2011 Abstract: In the early fourteenth century, the pagan Grand Duchy of Lithuania became a prominent player in the political, economic, military, and religious affairs of Europe and Rus'. As demonstrated by his correspondence with Western Europe, Grand Duke Gediminas (1315-1342) exaggerated Lithuania's position as a confessional and military frontier. Much like his neighboring kingdoms, the duke presented Lithuania as a victim of Teutonic incursion. The threat of Teutonic invasion, while real, was far from existential; Lithuania was quite capable of defending itself. When examined within the broader context of fourteenth-century European diplomacy, Gediminas's attacks on the Knights appear to be part of a larger political movement aimed at strengthening Lithuanian economy and shoring up commercial and military alliances. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0069-6412 Accession Number: WOS:000293993900005 ________________________________________ Record 12 of 133 Author(s): Kangin, Murat; Aksu, Nejat; Yavascan, Onder; Anil, Murat; Kara, Orhan Deniz; Bal, Alkan; Kamit, Fulya Title: Significance of Postnatal Follow-up of Infants with Vesicoureteral Reflux Having Antenatal Hydronephrosis. Source: Iranian journal of pediatrics Volume: 20 Issue: 4 Pages: 427-34 Published: 2010-Dec Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the frequency of urinary tract infections (UTIs) and degree of renal parenchymal damage as well as the parameters of growth, development and nutritional status in antenatal hydronephrosis cases with vesicoureteral reflux (VUR). METHODS: Infants, whose antenatal ultrasonography (US) showed a fetal renal pelvic diameter of 5 mm or greater were investigated. Of the 277 infants with antenatal HN, 36 [56 renal units (RUs)] were diagnosed with VUR. All cases with VUR were evaluated in terms of the frequency of UTIs, scars appearing on (99m)Technetium-dimercaptosuccinic acid scan (DMSA), growth and development [height and weight standard deviation scores (HSDS and WSDS)], and nutritional status [relative weight (RW)]. Statistical evaluation was performed using the Chi-squared test. FINDINGS: Of these 36 patients with VUR, 25 (69.4%) were males and 11 (30.6%) females. Of the 56 RUs, 48 (85.7%) had severe VUR (≥ Grade III). The mean duration of postnatal follow-up was 37.824.50 months. The annual UTI frequency was found to be 1.250.83 episodes/year. Of these 36 infants, 32 (88.8%) recovered from VUR following either medical (17 patients, 47.2%) or surgical (15 patients, 41.6%) treatment. The initial DMSA showed parenchymal defects in 16 (44.4%) RUs, and 4 RUs showed recovery in the final DMSA. Although statistically insignificant (P>0.05), initial growth and development (HSDS: -0.170.86; WSDS: 0.000.14) and nutritional status (RW: 98.198.81) values gradually improved (0.051.06, 0.061.071 and 101.9714.85, respectively). CONCLUSION: Postnatal early diagnosis and appropriate management of VUR in infants with antenatal hydronephrosis can prevent the occurrence of frequent UTIs, renal scarring and malnutrition, enabling normal growth and development. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 2008-2150 Accession Number: MEDLINE:23056742 ________________________________________ Record 13 of 133 Author(s): Sun, Xiao-Tang; Easwar, T R; Cielo, Balce; Song, Sang-Heon; Kim, Seung-Ju; Song, Hae-Ryong Title: Comparison of bone age delay and recovery in Meyer dysplasia and Legg-Calve-Perthes disease: a pilot study. Source: Journal of orthopaedic science : official journal of the Japanese Orthopaedic Association Volume: 15 Issue: 6 Pages: 746-52 DOI: 10.1007/s00776-010-1537-2 Published: 2010-Nov Abstract: BACKGROUND: Meyer dysplasia (MD) is a rare disease but readily mistaken for Legg-Calve-Perthes disease (LCPD). Although most published studies on MD have characterized and differentiated it from LCPD radiologically and clinically, differences with regard to bone age delay and recovery have not been sought. We deemed it necessary to distinguish bone age delay and recovery patterns between the two entities for better differentiation, prognostication, and parental advice. METHODS: Bone age delay and recovery of eight patients who were initially diagnosed with LCPD but were found to have MD were retrospectively reviewed and compared with those of age-matched patients with LCPD. Based on hand radiographs, the radius-ulna-short bones (RUSs) and carpal bone ages were determined using the Tanner and Whitehouse 3 (TW3) method. Minimum follow-up was 2 years (range 2-5 years). Differences in RUS and carpal bone ages and recovery patterns between the two entities were analyzed using trend lines in scatter plots. RESULTS: The mean delay of RUS bone age was significantly less in MD (0.52 0.87 years) than in LCPD (1.11 0.99 years). However, the difference between the mean carpal bone age delay in MD (1.13 1.28 years) and LCPD (1.47 1.19 years) was not significant. Trend lines showed faster bone age recovery patterns in MD than in LCPD. CONCLUSIONS: Bone age was delayed in both MD and LCPD but was less delayed in the former. RUS bone age showed more significant differences than carpal bone age when comparing the two entities and hence might be more useful for differentiating the two. Earlier bone age recovery patterns may be anticipated in patients with MD. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 1436-2023 Accession Number: MEDLINE:21116891 ________________________________________ Record 14 of 133 Author(s): Karatay, Osman Title: The First Rus' in the Black Sea and the Construction of Sarkel Source: BELLETEN Volume: 74 Issue: 269 Pages: 71-+ Published: APR 2010 Abstract: The Slays, who were living peacefully under the Khazars and constantly expanding eastward, appear on the Don basin at the beginning of the 8(th) century. This place is situated on the fur trade route for between Northern Europe and Black Sea coast. Simultaneously, the Rus', a Nordic tribe from Sweden, entered among the Slav masses as warrior-traders, and came to the Khazar ethnic borders probably in the second half of the 8(th) century, but definitely at the beginning of the 9th century. Thus means they began to become acquainted with the Black Sea world. Apart from their commercial activities the Rus' sometimes tested their military might in the areas they reached. In one such occasion in 830's, they inflicted great harm on the Khazars, whom they had caught unprepared along the Don river. The latter in turn defeated them with the help of the Magyars, and subdued vast regions toward the Baltic during their counterattack. That the Khazars constructed the castle Sarkel on the Don, that Russian embassy in Istanbul could not return home due to 'fierce' peoples and had to go via the Frank domain, and that the Magyars rose in Black Sea affairs as an active force were all inter-related developments in the same period. Consequently, even though they had to strive for more than 8,5 centuries to reach the coasts, the Rus'/Russians became one of the determinative forces in the Black Sea basin. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0041-4255 Accession Number: WOS:000283533800002 ________________________________________ Record 15 of 133 Author(s): Neumann, Iver B. Title: Early polities: Extant literature and a nutshell case study (Rus', ca. 800-1100) Source: INTERNASJONAL POLITIKK Volume: 68 Issue: 4 Pages: 571-+ Published: 2010 Abstract: The article offers an overview of the literature on early polities (often known as early or archaic states). The rationale for its publication has to do with the dearth of interest in and work on the issue in Norwegian scholarly debates generally, and within the social sciences specifically. By way of a nutshell case study of early Rus', I argue that we need to address what happened in the Eurasian steppe if we are to understand early polities in what we now call Europe. Understanding early polities will help our understanding of state formation as a general phenomenon. The article is a also plug for undertaking these studies by focusing on the relations between the coterminous polities in question rather than by using the traditional inside-out focus. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0020-577X Accession Number: WOS:000285955300003 ________________________________________ Record 16 of 133 Author(s): Okenfuss, Max J. Title: The Cambridge History of Russia, vol 1, From Early Rus' to 1689 Source: JAHRBUCHER FUR GESCHICHTE OSTEUROPAS Volume: 58 Issue: 4 Pages: 569-572 Published: 2010 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0021-4019 Accession Number: WOS:000287468300006 ________________________________________ Record 17 of 133 Author(s): Rakhimzyanov, Bulat R. Title: The Debatable Questions of the Early Kasimov Khanate (1437-1462) Source: RUSSIAN HISTORY-HISTOIRE RUSSE Volume: 37 Issue: 2 Pages: 83-101 DOI: 10.1163/187633110X494643 Published: 2010 Abstract: In this paper I will try to show that the Kasimov khanate was founded in 1445 as a result of an oral agreement between the exiled khan of the Golden Horde Ulug-Muhammad and Muscovite Grand Prince Vasilii II. Its foundation wasn't a voluntary measure of Muscovite rulers. It was founded in close connection with the relations between Rus' and the Golden Horde in general. It could arise only in the atmosphere of hostility and implacability typical for the Muscovite Grand Prince's house under the conditions of the rather frequent change of the Grand Princes. To provide you some historical basis, I will first speak briefly about the historiography of the problem and present my own view based mainly on the data of the "dogovornye gramory" (treaties between Russian Princes) and "letopisi" (chronicles) afterwards. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0094-288X Accession Number: WOS:000278503000001 |
11.01.2013, 14:39 | #159 |
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Record 18 of 133
Author(s): Halperin, Charles J. Title: "National Identity in Premodern Rus"' Source: RUSSIAN HISTORY-HISTOIRE RUSSE Volume: 37 Issue: 3 Pages: 275-294 DOI: 10.1163/187633110X510446 Published: 2010 Abstract: This article is a commentary on some of the conclusions of Serhii Plokhy's The Origin of the Slavic Nations. Premodern Identities in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. Plokhy addressed ethnocultural (national) identities and national identity projects from the tenth to the early eighteenth century This essay is concerned with Kievan Rus', the Mongol impact on the East Slays, and Muscovite history from the fourteenth to the sixteenth century. It offers alternative interpretations both of the historical background which Plokhy outlines for the evolution of East Slavic peoples and of Plokhy's interpretations of various historical, political, religious and literary texts. The chronology of the translatio of the myth of the Rus' Land from Kievan Rus' to Moscow is still a matter of contention. In synthesizing the views of such historians as Edward Keenan and Donald Ostrowski, Plokhy has attributed too much influence to the Mongols on Russian institutional and cultural history. Plokhy has failed to be consistent in his application of Keenan's criticism of sources and Keenan's concept of sixteenth-century Muscovite society and culture. Finally, Plokhy somewhat oversimplifies the cultural heterogeneity of Ivan the Terrible and Ivan the Terrible's Muscovy. These criticisms are a tribute to Plokhy's challenging but inspiring monograph. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0094-288X Accession Number: WOS:000283960200005 ________________________________________ Record 19 of 133 Author(s): Garipzanov, Ildar H. Title: The Cult of St Nicholas in the Early Christian North (c. 1000-1150) Source: SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF HISTORY Volume: 35 Issue: 3 Pages: 229-246 Article Number: PII 926361809 DOI: 10.1080/03468755.2010.481990 Published: 2010 Abstract: The cult of St Nicholas spread in Scandinavia and northern Rus' in approximately the same period, namely in the last decades of the 11th and the first decades of the 12th centuries. In spite of such a correspondence, the dissemination of the cult in the two adjacent regions has been treated as two separate phenomena. Consequently, the growing popularity of the cult in Scandinavia has traditionally been dealt with as an immanent part of the transmission of the Catholic tradition, and a similar phenomenon in northern Rus' has been discussed with reference to the establishment of Orthodox Christianity. By contrast, the evidence analysed in this article shows that the establishment of the cult of St Nicholas in the two regions was an intertwined process, in which the difference between Latin Christendom and Greek Orthodoxy played a minor role. The early spread of this particular cult thus suggests that, as far as some aspects of the cult of saints are concerned, the division between Catholicism and Orthodox Christianity in Northern Europe was less abrupt in the 11th and 12th centuries than has been traditionally assumed. This was due to the fact that the medieval cult of saints was not limited to the liturgy of saints, but was a wider social phenomenon in which political and dynastic links and cultural and trading contacts across Northern Europe often mattered more than confessional differences. When we leave the liturgy aside and turn to kings, princes, traders and other folk interacting across the early Christian North, then the confessional borders are less useful for our understanding of how some aspects of Christian culture were communicated across Northern Europe in the first two centuries after conversion. Times Cited in Web of Science: 1 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 1 ISSN: 0346-8755 Accession Number: WOS:000282025800001 ________________________________________ Record 20 of 133 Author(s): Thatcher, Ian D. Title: The Cambridge History of Russia, vol 1, From Early Rus' to 1689 Source: SLAVONIC AND EAST EUROPEAN REVIEW Volume: 87 Issue: 4 Pages: 755-756 Published: OCT 2009 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0037-6795 Accession Number: WOS:000271771900020 ________________________________________ Record 21 of 133 Author(s): Leasure, Colin D; Tong, Hongyun; Yuen, Gigi; Hou, Xuewen; Sun, Xuefeng; He, Zheng-Hui Title: ROOT UV-B SENSITIVE2 acts with ROOT UV-B SENSITIVE1 in a root ultraviolet B-sensing pathway. Source: Plant physiology Volume: 150 Issue: 4 Pages: 1902-15 Published: 2009-Aug Abstract: Ultraviolet B light (UV-B; 280-320 nm) perception and signaling are well-known phenomena in plants, although no specific UV-B photoreceptors have yet been identified. We previously reported on the root UV-B sensitive1 (rus1) mutants in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), which display a block to development under very-low-fluence-rate UV-B (<0.1 mumol m(-2) s(-1)) after the seedling emerges from the seed. Here, we report the analysis and cloning of the rus2-1 mutation in Arabidopsis. The phenotype of rus2-1 mutant seedlings is virtually indistinguishable from the phenotype of rus1 seedlings. A map-based approach was used to clone RUS2. RUS2 encodes a domain of unknown function (DUF647)-containing protein that is homologous to the RUS1 protein. rus1-2 rus2-1 double mutant seedlings have the same phenotype as both rus1 and rus2 single mutants, suggesting that the two genes work in the same pathway. RUS2-Green Fluorescent Protein shows a similar expression pattern as that of RUS1-Green Fluorescent Protein, and RUS1 and RUS2 proteins interact physically in yeast. This protein-protein interaction depends on the DUF647 domain, and site-directed mutagenesis identified specific residues in DUF647 that are required for both protein-protein interaction and physiological function. Six RUS genes are found in Arabidopsis, rice (Oryza sativa), and moss (Physcomitrella patens), and one RUS member, RUS3, is conserved in plants and animals. Our results demonstrate that RUS2 works with RUS1 in a root UV-B-sensing pathway that plays a vital role in Arabidopsis early seedling morphogenesis and development. Times Cited in Web of Science: 7 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 8 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 7 Total Times Cited: 14 ISSN: 0032-0889 Accession Number: MEDLINE:19515790 ________________________________________ Record 22 of 133 Author(s): Ryan, W. F. Title: 'Let There Be Lights in the Firmament of the Heaven': Cosmological Depictions in Early Rus. Source: JOURNAL FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY Volume: 40 Pages: 222-224 Published: MAY 2009 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0021-8286 Accession Number: WOS:000266065500010 ________________________________________ Record 23 of 133 Author(s): Rudall, Paula J; Remizowa, Margarita V; Prenner, Gerhard; Prychid, Christina J; Tuckett, Renee E; Sokoloff, Dmitry D Title: Nonflowers near the base of extant angiosperms? Spatiotemporal arrangement of organs in reproductive units of Hydatellaceae and its bearing on the origin of the flower. Source: American journal of botany Volume: 96 Issue: 1 Pages: 67-82 DOI: 10.3732/ajb.0800027 Published: 2009-Jan Abstract: Reproductive units (RUs) of Trithuria, the sole genus of the early-divergent angiosperm family Hydatellaceae, are compared with flowers of their close relatives in Cabombaceae (Nymphaeales). Trithuria RUs combine features of flowers and inflorescences. They differ from typical flowers in possessing an "inside-out" morphology, with carpels surrounding stamens; furthermore, carpels develop centrifugally, in contrast to centripetal or simultaneous development in typical flowers. Trithuria RUs could be interpreted as pseudanthia of two or more cymose partial inflorescences enclosed within an involucre, but the bractlike involucral phyllomes do not subtend partial inflorescences and hence collectively resemble a typical perianth. Teratological forms of T. submersa indicate a tendency to fasciation and demonstrate that the inside-out structure-the primary feature that separates RUs of Hydatellaceae from more orthodox angiosperm flowers-can be at least partially modified, thus producing a morphology that is closer to an orthodox flower. The Trithuria RU could be described as a "nonflower", i.e., a structure that contains typical angiosperm carpels and stamens but does not allow recognition of a typical angiosperm flower. The term nonflower could combine cases of secondary loss of flower identity and cases of a prefloral condition, similar to those that gave rise to the angiosperm flower. Nonhomology among some angiosperm flowers could be due to iterative shifts between nonfloral construction and flower/inflorescence organization of reproductive organs. Potential testing of these hypotheses using evolutionary-developmental genetics is explored using preliminary data from immunolocalization of the floral meristem identity gene LEAFY in T. submersa, which indicated protein expression at different hierarchical levels. Times Cited in Web of Science: 21 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 20 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 22 ISSN: 0002-9122 Accession Number: MEDLINE:21628176 ________________________________________ Record 24 of 133 Author(s): Kirkevold, Oyvind; Engedal, Knut Title: Is covert medication in Norwegian nursing homes still a problem? A cross-sectional study. Source: Drugs & aging Volume: 26 Issue: 4 Pages: 333-44 DOI: 10.2165/00002512-200926040-00004 Published: 2009 Abstract: BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: The practice of hiding medicines in nursing home patients' food or beverages is described in only a few scientific papers. An earlier study conducted in 1999/2000 showed that covert medication was common in Norwegian nursing homes, with 11% of patients in regular nursing home units (RUs) and 17% of those in special care units for patients with dementia (SCUs) receiving at least one covert medication during the last 7 days. However, that study included few details about the medications involved. Therefore, we designed a study to obtain more detailed information about the practice of covert medication. The objectives of the study were to describe how widespread the practice is, identify the reasons for giving the medicine in disguise, determine what kinds of medicine are given in disguise, and establish who makes the decision about covert medication. METHODS: We collected data on 1,943 patients (623 in SCUs and 1,320 in RUs) in southeast Norway between October 2006 and February 2007. The information collected included what kind of drugs the patients received, what form the drugs were administered in and how the drugs were given. Patient characteristics such as age, sex, the patient's level of function in terms of activities of daily living (ADL), mental capacity and behavioural and psychological symptoms were also recorded. Ward characteristics such as the type of ward, the number of beds in the ward and the number of carers working on each shift were also documented. Descriptive statistics of the distribution of covert medication were obtained and the findings from SCUs and RUs were compared. The same approach was taken regarding information relating to who took the decision and how the practice was documented. A multilevel logistic regression analysis was performed to examine which patient and ward characteristics were associated with covert medication. RESULTS: Each patient was given on average 6.5 different medications on a regular basis every day. Nearly a quarter (23.5%) of patients who received medications had drugs mixed in food or beverages. Fourteen percent of the patients in SCUs and nearly 10% of the patients in RUs received medicine blended in food or beverages without their knowledge (covert medication). Compared with patients who were treated openly, a significantly higher proportion of patients who were treated covertly received antipsychotics (20% vs 30%, respectively; p < 0.001). In most cases, the decision to administer covert medication was made by the staff together with the physician or by the physician alone (61.4% of occasions in SCUs and 52.8% in RUs). About two-thirds of cases of covert medication had been documented to some extent in the patients' records. Low mental capacity, low ADL function and the presence of agitation and learning disability were associated with covert medication. Of the ward characteristics, only staying in SCUs was associated with covert medication. CONCLUSION: Our study presents evidence suggesting that the practice of covert medication may still be a problem in Norwegian nursing homes. The frequency of this practice has been only slightly reduced in the period 2000-7, but the practice is more frequently recorded in the patient's records and the physician is today more often involved in the decision to give medicine covertly compared with 7 years ago. Times Cited in Web of Science: 5 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 5 ISSN: 1170-229X Accession Number: MEDLINE:19476400 ________________________________________ Record 25 of 133 Author(s): Karnaukhov, D., V Title: The conception of the early ethnic history of Rus' and Muscovy in the Chronicle by Martin Kromer Source: OTECHESTVENNAYA ISTORIYA Issue: 1 Pages: 180-188 Published: JAN-FEB 2009 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0869-5687 Accession Number: WOS:000263372600017 ________________________________________ Record 26 of 133 Author(s): Ostrowski, Donald Title: A Textology of Rus' Chronicles from the 11th to the Early 14th Centuries, vol 1, Chronicle-Writing at the Kievan Caves Monastery before 1112 Source: KRITIKA-EXPLORATIONS IN RUSSIAN AND EURASIAN HISTORY Volume: 9 Issue: 4 Pages: 939-949 Published: FAL 2008 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 1531-023X Accession Number: WOS:000261877300011 |
11.01.2013, 14:41 | #160 |
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Record 27 of 133
Author(s): Woodworth, Cherie K. Title: The Cambridge history of Russia, vol 1, From early Rus' to 1689 Source: TLS-THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT Issue: 5476 Pages: 28-28 Published: MAR 14 2008 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0307-661X Accession Number: WOS:000254076900042 ________________________________________ Record 28 of 133 Author(s): Zaffanello, M; Cecchetto, M; Brugnara, M; Martone, E; Zuffante, M; Fedrizzi, M; Fanos, V Title: Pelvi-ureteric junction obstruction and renal function after pyeloplasty: a retrospective study in 29 children. Source: Minerva urologica e nefrologica = The Italian journal of urology and nephrology Volume: 60 Issue: 1 Pages: 1-6 Published: 2008-Mar Abstract: AIM: Actually, unilateral obstruction is not indicated for surgery, especially if renal function is unaffected. This retrospective study focused on the renal function after pyeloplasty for unilateral obstruction in children. METHODS: Twenty-nine children were retrospectively reviewed. To compare the ultrasound readings in patients with different ages, the comparative-length-index (index) of each renal unit (RU) was calculated. MAG3 dynamic scintigraphy was applied to diagnose any obstructions. RESULTS: Children with left obstruction were younger than children with right obstruction, when surgery was performed. Scintigraphic scan of right RUs with obstruction operated later was a lower at diagnosis than jet of the normal contralateral. Normal scintigraphic scan at diagnosis of left RUs with obstruction operated early revealed that RU was slightly reduced after the operation. At both diagnosis and follow-up the index between obstructed RUs and normal contralateral was comparable, even if it was significantly higher in left obstructed RUs. At follow-up, however, the scintigraphic scan revealed that RUs were more reduced in patients who were treated late. CONCLUSION: Early pyeloplasty partially safeguard kidney function in children with unilateral obstruction, whose renal function was normal at birth. The reduced kidney function observed before surgery was not proportionally improved after surgery with respect to the contralateral that was not affected. Times Cited in Web of Science: 2 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 2 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 2 ISSN: 0393-2249 Accession Number: MEDLINE:18427430 ________________________________________ Record 29 of 133 Author(s): Bushkovitch, Paul Title: The Cambridge history of Russia, vol 1, from early Rus' to 1689 Source: SLAVIC REVIEW Volume: 67 Issue: 1 Pages: 228-229 Published: SPR 2008 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0037-6779 Accession Number: WOS:000253610700047 ________________________________________ Record 30 of 133 Author(s): el-Nahas, Ahmed R; Shokeir, Ahmed A; Mohsen, Tarek; Gad, Hossam; el-Assmy, Ahmed M; el-Diasty, Tarek; el-Kappany, Hamdy A Title: Functional and morphological effects of postpercutaneous nephrolithotomy superselective renal angiographic embolization. Source: Urology Volume: 71 Issue: 3 Pages: 408-12 DOI: 10.1016/j.urology.2007.10.033 Published: 2008-Mar Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the functional and morphological effects of postpercutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) superselective renal angiographic embolization. METHODS: Between January 1995 and March 2006, superselective renal angiography was needed to control severe bleeding after 41 of 4095 PCNL procedures (1%). We evaluated the short-term effects of embolization after 3 months with renal ultrasonography (RUS), dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) renal scan, and estimation of serum creatinine. We evaluated long-term morphological and functional effects with RUS, DMSA renal scan, and excretory urography (IVU). RESULTS: Bleeding was controllable with superselective embolization in 38 patients (93%). Six of them developed early postembolization complications, in the form of perinephric hematoma in 4 and urinary leakage in 2 patients. At 3 months, serum creatinine levels increased in 3 of 9 patients with a solitary kidney, but none required renal replacement therapy. Long-term follow-up was completed for 30 patients for a mean period of 3.9 +/- 2.3 years. We performed IVU for 27 patients. Among them, 2 renal units (7%) showed no dye excretion. DMSA scans showed homogeneous distribution of radiotracer with no evidence of photopenic areas in 6 renal units (20%). The mean percentage of DMSA uptake by the corresponding kidney improved from 25 +/- 9% at the 3-month scans to 34 +/- 11% at the last follow-up scans (P <0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The short-term deleterious effects of superselective renal embolization for post-PCNL renal vascular injuries were more pronounced in patients with a solitary kidney. However, the long-term follow-up showed functional and morphological improvements. Times Cited in Web of Science: 6 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 4 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 6 Total Times Cited: 12 ISSN: 1527-9995 Accession Number: MEDLINE:18342174 ________________________________________ Record 31 of 133 Author(s): Jackson, Tatjana N. Title: Novgorod the Great in Baltic Trade before 1300 Source: ACTA BOREALIA Volume: 25 Issue: 2 Pages: 83-92 DOI: 10.1080/08003830802496562 Published: 2008 Abstract: The present paper deals with the Old Norse-Icelandic written sources' data on trade relations of Novgorod and Scandinavian countries. The sources in question, written down in the eleventh to the thirteenth centuries, narrate of the tenth and eleventh centuries, and thus the information found in them is important from the point of view of chronology: the aggregate material of runic inscriptions, skaldic poems, chronicles and sagas enables us to see Novgorod as one of the largest trade centres of Old Rus, and to study its connections with Scandinavian countries at an earlier period of time than any other written sources do. Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0800-3831 Accession Number: WOS:000263049400001 ________________________________________ Record 32 of 133 Author(s): Dunning, Chester Title: The Cambridge history of Russia, vol 1, From early Rus ' to 1689 Source: RUSSIAN REVIEW Volume: 66 Issue: 4 Pages: 708-710 Published: OCT 2007 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0036-0341 Accession Number: WOS:000249357900017 ________________________________________ Record 33 of 133 Author(s): Marker, Gary Title: The Cambridge history of Russia. volume I: From early Rus' to 1689 Source: SOCIAL HISTORY Volume: 32 Issue: 3 Pages: 336-338 Published: AUG 2007 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0307-1022 Accession Number: WOS:000248769400011 ________________________________________ Record 34 of 133 Author(s): Little, Bertis B; Malina, Robert M Title: Gene-environment interaction in skeletal maturity and body dimensions of urban Oaxaca Mestizo schoolchildren. Source: Annals of human biology Volume: 34 Issue: 2 Pages: 216-25 DOI: 10.1080/03014460601144011 Published: 2007 Mar-Apr Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The study analyzed the relationship between skeletal age (SA) and the difference between skeletal and chronological ages (SA-CA) and body size among growth-stunted and well-nourished children. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Tanner-Whitehouse 2 (TW2) 20 bone, radius-ulna-short (RUS) bone, and carpal SAs were analyzed in three cross-sectional samples of school children aged 6-13 years: Mestizo children (n = 396) from the city of Oaxaca, southern Mexico, and American Black (n = 570) and White (n = 432) from Philadelphia. The Oaxaca children were mild-to-moderately undernourished while the Philadelphia children were well nourished. The total sample included 1398 radiographs assessed with the Tanner-Whitehouse protocol by a single, experienced rater. Maturity scores were converted to TW2 20 bone, RUS and carpal SAs. RESULTS: Correlations of SA and SA-CA differences with body dimensions (height, sitting height, leg length, weight, triceps skinfold, arm and estimated midarm muscle circumferences) were consistent and approximately equal in magnitude for the well-nourished samples but were different among Oaxaca children. SAs of Philadelphia children were significantly more highly correlated with body dimensions than were SA-CA differences compared to Oaxaca Mestizo children. Patterns of RUS and carpal SA correlations with body size (height, sitting height, and leg length) in Oaxaca children were different from the Philadelphia samples. Oaxaca children tended to have advanced RUS SA and delayed carpal SA. CONCLUSION: Long bone complexes mature earlier than round bone complexes in Oaxaca children compared to Philadelphia Black and White children, resulting in short stature in Oaxaca children. Results suggest a gene-environment interaction effect on the program for skeletal growth and maturation in undernourished Oaxaca children compared to well-nourished Black and White children from Philadelphia. Times Cited in Web of Science: 1 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 1 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 1 ISSN: 0301-4460 Accession Number: MEDLINE:17558592 ________________________________________ Record 35 of 133 Author(s): Malina, Robert M; Chamorro, Manuel; Serratosa, Luis; Morate, Francisco Title: TW3 and Fels skeletal ages in elite youth soccer players. Source: Annals of human biology Volume: 34 Issue: 2 Pages: 265-72 DOI: 10.1080/03014460701207601 Published: 2007 Mar-Apr Abstract: BACKGROUND: Skeletal age (SA) tends to be advanced for chronological age (CA) in adolescent male soccer players. AIM: The study compared SA assessments with the TW3 and Fels methods in a sample of male, elite youth soccer players. METHODS: SAs were assessed with the Tanner-Whitehouse 3 (TW3) radius-ulna-short bone (RUS) and Fels methods in a sample of 40 elite youth soccer players 12.5-16.1 years of age. Players were classified as late, on time or early on the basis of relative SA, the difference between SA and CA. Players who reached skeletal maturity were labeled mature. RESULTS: SA was in advance of CA. Among 14 players >15.0 years, two are skeletally mature with the Fels method (CA 15.7 and 15.9 years), while 11 are skeletally mature with the TW3 method (CA 15.0-16.1 years). CONCLUSION: The TW3 and Fels methods yield different SAs in elite youth soccer players. Significantly more 15-year-old boys are classified as skeletally mature with the TW3 method than with the Fels method. These observations have implications for international age group competitions as well as for medico-legal circumstances that require CA verification. SA is not a valid measure of CA and should not be used as such. Times Cited in Web of Science: 15 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 7 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 15 ISSN: 0301-4460 Accession Number: MEDLINE:17558596 ________________________________________ Record 36 of 133 Author(s): Lee, Sung-Tae; Vaidya, Sandeep V; Song, Hae-Ryong; Lee, Seok-Hyun; Suh, Seung-Woo; Telang, Shailendra S Title: Bone age delay patterns in Legg-Calve-Perthes disease: an analysis using the Tanner and Whitehouse 3 method. Source: Journal of pediatric orthopedics Volume: 27 Issue: 2 Pages: 198-203 Published: 2007-Mar Abstract: To study the bone age delay patterns in different stages of Perthes disease, 140 hand and corresponding hip radiographs in 83 patients were assessed. In the hand radiographs, the radius, ulna, metacarpals and phalanges (RUS) and carpal bone ages were calculated using the Tanner and Whitehouse 3 method and the Greulich and Pyle (G and P) bone age was assessed using the G and P atlas. From corresponding hip radiographs, the modified Elizabethtown stage was assessed. The RUS and carpal bone age as well as G and P bone age were found to lag behind the chronological age. The 95% confidence interval for the difference between RUS and G and P bone ages was 0.19 to 0.43 years and between carpal and G and P bone ages was -0.516 to -0.14 years, indicating a close agreement between the Tanner and Whitehouse 3 and G and P methods. The RUS bone age delay was maximum in stage Ia (2.00 +/- 1.08 years), whereas carpal delay was maximum in stage IIa (2.15 +/- 1.28 years). Bone maturation acceleration was observed in later stages of the disease as bone age tried to catch up with chronological age. Carpal delay was significantly greater than RUS delay from stage Ib to IIIb (P<0.05), but no significant difference was observed between carpal and RUS delays in stage IV (P=0.21), implying that bone maturation acceleration occurs in the RUS in the earlier stages, and carpal bone age tends to catch up with RUS bone age in the healed stage of the disease. The RUS and carpal bone age delays in stage I were significantly greater in severe (Catterall groups 3 and 4) disease than in mild (Catterall groups 1 and 2) disease. All patients in whom RUS or carpal bone age delay in stage I was greater than 2 years subsequently developed severe disease, indicating a positive correlation between bone age delay in stage I and subsequent extent of involvement of capital femoral epiphysis. Times Cited in Web of Science: 3 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 1 Total Times Cited: 4 ISSN: 0271-6798 Accession Number: MEDLINE:17314646 ________________________________________ Record 37 of 133 Author(s): Franklin, Simon Title: On meanings, functions and paradigms of law in early Rus' Source: RUSSIAN HISTORY-HISTOIRE RUSSE Volume: 34 Issue: 1-4 Pages: 63-81 Published: SPR-WIN 2007 Times Cited in Web of Science: 0 Times Cited in BIOSIS Citation Index: 0 Times Cited in Chinese Science Citation Database: 0 Total Times Cited: 0 ISSN: 0094-288X Accession Number: WOS:000251978200005 |