Results for 'membrane contact sites'

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  1.  13
    ER contact sites direct late endosome transport.Ruud H. Wijdeven, Marlieke L. M. Jongsma, Jacques Neefjes & Ilana Berlin - 2015 - Bioessays 37 (12):1298-1302.
    Endosomes shuttle select cargoes between cellular compartments and, in doing so, maintain intracellular homeostasis and enable interactions with the extracellular space. Directionality of endosomal transport critically impinges on cargo fate, as retrograde (microtubule minus‐end directed) traffic delivers vesicle contents to the lysosome for proteolysis, while the opposing anterograde (plus‐end directed) movement promotes recycling and secretion. Intriguingly, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is emerging as a key player in spatiotemporal control of late endosome and lysosome transport, through the establishment of physical contacts (...)
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  2.  6
    Controlling contacts—Molecular mechanisms to regulate organelle membrane tethering.Suzan Kors, Smija M. Kurian, Joseph L. Costello & Michael Schrader - 2022 - Bioessays 44 (11):2200151.
    In recent years, membrane contact sites (MCS), which mediate interactions between virtually all subcellular organelles, have been extensively characterized and shown to be essential for intracellular communication. In this review essay, we focus on an emerging topic: the regulation of MCS. Focusing on the tether proteins themselves, we discuss some of the known mechanisms which can control organelle tethering events and identify apparent common regulatory hubs, such as the VAP interface at the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). We also (...)
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  3.  16
    Does cholesterol use the mitochondrial contact site as a conduit to the steroidogenic pathway?Murray Thomson - 2003 - Bioessays 25 (3):252-258.
    The first and rate‐limiting step of steroidogenesis is the transfer of cholesterol from the outer mitochondrial membrane to the inner membrane where it is converted to pregnenolone by cytochrome P450 side‐chain cleavage (P450scc). This reaction is modulated in the gonads and adrenals by the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR), however, the mechanism used by StAR is not understood. The outer and inner mitochondrial membranes are joined at contact sites that are thought to be held in place (...)
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  4.  32
    Membrane contacts and lens transparency.Joerg Kistler & Stanley Bullivant - 1986 - Bioessays 5 (2):79-83.
    Two kinds of membrane contacts in the vertebrate lens are described. Fiber gap junctions are domains where small molecules can pass between lens cells. Membrane structures of ball‐and‐socket type interlock adjacent lens fibers and thus contribute to the structural integrity of the lens. Both of these membrane contacts appear crucial for the maintenance of lens transparency.
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  5.  23
    Sidewalks and Frames: Sites of Contact, Sites of Hope.Megan Craig - 2019 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 33 (2):145-161.
    ABSTRACT This article brings together Toni Morrison, Jane Jacobs, and Howard Hodgkin to consider the stress they each place on “contact,” albeit through their distinctive media of literature, urban planning, and oil paint, respectively. The article begins with Morrison's account of the stranger as not foreign or unusual but “random.” Morrison views literature as a means of bringing readers into controlled contact with others and especially with those others one might fear, avoid, or overlook. Morrison sets the stage (...)
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  6.  8
    Are endoplasmic reticulum subdomains shaped by asymmetric distribution of phospholipids? Evidence from a C. elegans model system.Zhe Cao, Xiaowei Wang, Xuhui Huang & Ho Yi Mak - 2021 - Bioessays 43 (1):2000199.
    Physical contact between organelles are widespread, in part to facilitate the shuttling of protein and lipid cargoes for cellular homeostasis. How do protein‐protein and protein‐lipid interactions shape organelle subdomains that constitute contact sites? The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) forms extensive contacts with multiple organelles, including lipid droplets (LDs) that are central to cellular fat storage and mobilization. Here, we focus on ER‐LD contacts that are highlighted by the conserved protein seipin, which promotes LD biogenesis and expansion. Seipin is (...)
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  7.  17
    Education, Contact and the Vitality of Touch: Membranes, Morphologies, Movements.Sharon Todd - 2021 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 40 (3):249-260.
    This paper explores how touch is key to understanding education—not as an achievement or an instrument of acquisition, but as a process through which one becomes a subject capable of both living and leading a life that matters for ourselves and others. As a process, it is concerned with how we encounter things and others in the world and not solely with what we encounter. In particular, it argues that the dynamics of touch-as both a touching and being touched by-are (...)
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  8. Using Social Networking Sites for Communicable Disease Control: Innovative Contact Tracing or Breach of Confidentiality?K. L. Mandeville, M. Harris, H. L. Thomas, Y. Chow & C. Seng - 2014 - Public Health Ethics 7 (1):47-50.
    Social media applications such as Twitter, YouTube and Facebook have attained huge popularity, with more than three billion people and organizations predicted to have a social networking account by 2015. Social media offers a rapid avenue of communication with the public and has potential benefits for communicable disease control and surveillance. However, its application in everyday public health practice raises a number of important issues around confidentiality and autonomy. We report here a case from local level health protection where the (...)
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  9.  31
    Social Networking Sites as a Tool for Contact Tracing: Urge for Ethical Framework for Normative Guidance.M. L. Stein, B. O. Rump, M. E. E. Kretzschmar & J. E. van Steenbergen - 2014 - Public Health Ethics 7 (1):57-60.
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  10.  10
    PDZ Domains: Targeting signalling molecules to sub‐membranous sites.Christopher P. Ponting, Christopher Phillips, Kay E. Davies & Derek J. Blake - 1997 - Bioessays 19 (6):469-479.
    PDZ (also called DHR or GLGF) domains are found in diverse membraneassociated proteins including members of the MAGUK family of guanylate kinase homologues, several protein phosphatases and kinases, neuronal nitric oxide synthase, and several dystrophin‐associated proteins, collectively known as syntrophins. Many PDZ domain‐containing proteins appear to be localised to highly specialised submembranous sites, suggesting their participation in cellular junction formation, receptor or channel clustering, and intracellular signalling events. PDZ domains of several MAGUKs interact with the C‐terminal polypeptides of a (...)
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  11.  3
    Animal cell shape changes and gene expression.Avri Ben-Ze've - 1991 - Bioessays 13 (5):207-212.
    Cell shape and cell contacts are determined by transmembrane receptor‐mediated associations of the cytoskeleton with specific extracellular matrix proteins and with ligands on the surface of adjacent cells. The cytoplasmic domains of these microfilament‐membrane associations at the adherens junction sites, also Iocalize a variety of regulatory molecules involved in signal transduction and gene regulation. The stimulation of cells with soluble polypeptide factors leads to rapid changes in cell shape and microfilament component organization. In addition, this stimulation also activates (...)
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  12.  16
    Plasma membrane‐microfilament interaction in animal cells.Kermit L. Carraway & Coralie A. Carothers Carraway - 1984 - Bioessays 1 (2):55-58.
    Microfilament interactions with the plasma membranes of animal cells appear to vary with cell type and localization. In the erythrocyte, actin oligomers are associated with the membrane via spectrin and ankyrin. The ends of stress fibers in cultured cells, such as fibroblasts, are attached to the plasma membrane at focal adhesion sites and may involve the protein vinculin as a linking protein. In intestinal brush border microvilli a 110,000 dalton protein links the microfilament bundles to sites (...)
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  13.  6
    Membrane protein insertion into the endoplasmic reticulum ‐ another channel tunnel?Stephen High - 1992 - Bioessays 14 (8):535-540.
    The synthesis of biological membranes requires the insertion of proteins into a lipid bilayer. The rough endoplasmic reticulum of eukaryotic cells is a principal site of membrane biogenesis. The insertion of proteins into the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum is mediated by a resident proteinaceous machinery. Over the last five years several different experimental approaches have provided information about the components of the machinery and how it may function.
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  14.  19
    Do Cell Membranes Flow Like Honey or Jiggle Like Jello?Adam E. Cohen & Zheng Shi - 2020 - Bioessays 42 (1):1900142.
    Cell membranes experience frequent stretching and poking: from cytoskeletal elements, from osmotic imbalances, from fusion and budding of vesicles, and from forces from the outside. Are the ensuing changes in membrane tension localized near the site of perturbation, or do these changes propagate rapidly through the membrane to distant parts of the cell, perhaps as a mechanical mechanism of long‐range signaling? Literature statements on the timescale for membrane tension to equilibrate across a cell vary by a factor (...)
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  15.  8
    Focal contacts: Transmembrane links between the extracellular matrix and the cytoskeleton.Keith Burridge & Karl Fath - 1989 - Bioessays 10 (4):104-108.
    The sites of tightest adhesion that form between cells and substrate surfaces in tissue culture are termed focal contacts. The external faces of focal contacts include specific receptors, belonging to the integrin family of proteins, for fibronectin and vitronectin, two common components of extracellular matrices. On the internal (cytoplasmic) side of focal contacts, several proteins, including talin and vinculin, mediate interactions with the actin filament bundles of the cytoskeleton. The changes that occur in focal contacts as a result of (...)
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  16.  21
    Supramolecular assembly of basement membranes.Rupert Timpl & Judith C. Brown - 1996 - Bioessays 18 (2):123-132.
    Basement membranes are thin sheets of extracellular proteins situated in close contact with cells at various locations in the body. They have a great influence on tissue compartmentalization and cellular phenotypes from early embryonic development onwards. The major constituents of all basement membranes are collagen IV and laminin, which both exist as multiple isoforms and each form a huge irregular network by self assembly. These networks are connected by nidogen, which also binds to several other components (proteoglycans, fibulins). Basement (...)
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  17.  22
    Intracellular trafficking of lysosomal membrane proteins.Walter Hunziker & Hans J. Geuze - 1996 - Bioessays 18 (5):379-389.
    Lysosomes are the site of degradation of obsolete intracellular material during autophagy and of extracellular macromolecules following endocytosis and phagocytosis. The membrane of lysosomes and late endosomes is enriched in highly glycosylated transmembrane proteins of largely unknown function. Significant progress has been made in recent years towards elucidating the pathways by which these lysosomal membrane proteins are delivered to late endosomes and lysosomes. While some lysosomal membrane proteins follow the constitutive secretory pathway and reach lysosomes indirectly via (...)
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  18. The Artificial Cell, the Semipermeable Membrane, and the Life that Never Was, 1864–1901.Daniel Liu - 2019 - Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 49 (5):504-555.
    Since the early nineteenth century a membrane or wall has been central to the cell’s identity as the elementary unit of life. Yet the literally and metaphorically marginal status of the cell membrane made it the site of clashes over the definition of life and the proper way to study it. In this article I show how the modern cell membrane was conceived of by analogy to the first “artificial cell,” invented in 1864 by the chemist Moritz (...)
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  19.  9
    Contact Heat Evoked Potentials in China: Normal Values and Reproducibility.Bo Sun, Hongfen Wang, Zhaohui Chen, Fang Cui, Fei Yang & Xusheng Huang - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15.
    Background: Contact heat evoked potentials is used to diagnose small fiber neuropathy. We established the normal values of CHEPs parameters in Chinese adults, optimized the test technique, and determined its reproducibility.Methods: We recruited 151 healthy adults. CHEPs was performed on the right forearm to determine the optimal number of stimuli, and then conducted at different sites to establish normal values, determine the effects of demographic characteristics and baseline temperature, and assess the short- and long-term reproducibility. N2 latency/height varied (...)
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  20.  16
    Surface Contact: Film Design as an Exchange of Meaning.Lucy Fife Donaldson - 2018 - Film-Philosophy 22 (2):203-221.
    Surface has become an important consideration of sensory film theory, conceived of in various forms: the screen itself as less a barrier than a permeable skin, the site of a meaningful interaction between film and audience; the image as a surface to be experienced haptically, the eye functioning as a hand that brushes across and engages with the field of vision; surfaces within the film, be they organic or fabricated, presenting a tactile appeal. Surface evokes contact and touch, the (...)
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  21.  15
    Actin filaments and photoreceptor membrane turnover.David S. Williams - 1991 - Bioessays 13 (4):171-178.
    The shape and turnover of photoreceptor membranes appears to depend on associated actin filaments. In dipterans, the photoreceptor membrane is microvillar. It is turned over by the addition of new membrane at the bases of the microvilli and by subsequent shedding, mostly from the distal ends. Each microvillus contains actin filaments as a component of its cytoskeletal core. Two myosin I‐like proteins co‐localize with the actin filaments. It is suggested that one of the myosin I‐like proteins might be (...)
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  22.  28
    Sites of relation and “tout-monde”: Reflections on glissant’s late work.John E. Drabinski - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (3):157-172.
    This essay tracks the movement in Édouard Glissant’s work from thinking relationality as creolisation to Relation as such, to a globalised sense of cultural contact and transformation he ca...
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  23.  20
    Receptor‐Free Signaling at Curved Cellular Membranes.Mirsana P. Ebrahimkutty & Milos Galic - 2019 - Bioessays 41 (10):1900068.
    Plasma membranes are subject to continuous deformations. Strikingly, some of these transient membrane undulations yield membrane‐associated signaling hubs that differ in composition and function, depending on membrane geometry and the availability of co‐factors. Here, recent advancements on this ubiquitous type of receptor‐independent signaling are reviewed, with a special focus on emerging concepts and technical challenges associated with studying these elusive signaling sites.
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  24.  15
    Retroviral integration: Site matters.Jonas Demeulemeester, Jan De Rijck, Rik Gijsbers & Zeger Debyser - 2015 - Bioessays 37 (11):1202-1214.
    Here, we review genomic target site selection during retroviral integration as a multistep process in which specific biases are introduced at each level. The first asymmetries are introduced when the virus takes a specific route into the nucleus. Next, by co‐opting distinct host cofactors, the integration machinery is guided to particular chromatin contexts. As the viral integrase captures a local target nucleosome, specific contacts introduce fine‐grained biases in the integration site distribution. In vivo, the established population of proviruses is subject (...)
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  25.  8
    Nuclear lamin proteins and the structure of the nuclear envelope: Where is the function?Frank D. McKeon - 1987 - Bioessays 7 (4):169-173.
    The nuclear envelope has recently become the object of intense scrutiny because it is the site of nuclear transport and is possibly involved in the organization of the interphase genome, thereby affecting gene expression. The major structural support for the nuclear envelope is the nuclear lamina, composed of the nuclear lamin proteins. They lie on the surface of the inner nuclear membrane and are in direct contact with the chromatin at the edge of the nucleus. The structure of (...)
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  26.  49
    Local anatomy, stimulation site, and time alter directional deep brain stimulation impedances.Joseph W. Olson, Christopher L. Gonzalez, Sarah Brinkerhoff, Maria Boolos, Melissa H. Wade, Christopher P. Hurt, Arie Nakhmani, Bart L. Guthrie & Harrison C. Walker - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    Directional deep brain stimulation contacts provide greater spatial flexibility for therapy than traditional ring-shaped electrodes, but little is known about longitudinal changes of impedance and orientation. We measured monopolar and bipolar impedance of DBS contacts in 31 patients who underwent unilateral subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation as part of a randomized study. At different follow-up visits, patients were assigned new stimulation configurations and impedance was measured. Additionally, we measured the orientation of the directional lead during surgery, immediately after surgery, and (...)
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  27.  14
    Is sperm capacitation analogous to early phases of Ca 2+ ‐triggered membrane fusion in somatic cells and viruses?Daulat R. P. Tulsiani & Aïda Abou-Haila - 2004 - Bioessays 26 (3):281-290.
    An important feature of male fertility is the physiological priming of spermatozoa by a multifaceted process collectively referred to as capacitation. The end point of this evasive process is the hyperactivated spermatozoa capable of binding to terminal sugar residues on the egg's extracellular coat, the zona pellucida (ZP), and undergoing acrosomal exocytosis (i.e., induction of the acrosome reaction). The hydrolytic action of acrosomal enzymes released at the site of zona binding, along with the enhanced thrust generated by the hyperactivated beat (...)
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  28.  10
    Is calpain activity regulated by membranes and autolysis or by calcium and calpastatin?Darrel E. Goll, Valery F. Thompson, Richard G. Taylor & Teresa Zalewska - 1992 - Bioessays 14 (8):549-556.
    Although the Ca2+‐dependent proteinase (calpain) system has been found in every vertebrate cell that has been examined for its presence and has been detected in Drosophila and parasites, the physiological function(s) of this system remains unclear. Calpain activity has been associated with cleavages that alter regulation of various enzyme activities, with remodeling or disassembly of the cell cytoskeleton, and with cleavages of hormone receptors. The mechanism regulating activity of the calpain system in vivo also is unknown. It has been proposed (...)
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  29. Where the Action Is: On the Site of Distributive Justice.G. A. Cohen - 1997 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 26 (1):3-30.
    The JSTOR Archive is a trusted digital repository providing for long-term preservation and access to leading academic journals and scholarly literature from around the world. The Archive is supported by libraries, scholarly societies, publishers, and foundations. It is an initiative of JSTOR, a not-for-profit organization with a mission to help the scholarly community take advantage of advances in technology. For more information regarding JSTOR, please contact [email protected].
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  30.  9
    The impact of sharing brand messages: How message, sender and receiver characteristics influence brand attitudes and information diffusion on Social Networking Sites.Theo Araujo - 2019 - Communications 44 (2):162-184.
    Social Networking Sites (SNSs) not only enable users to read or create content about brands, but also to easily pass along this content using information diffusion mechanisms such as retweeting or sharing. While these capabilities can be optimal for viral marketing, little is known, however, about how reading brand messages passed along by SNS contacts influences online brand communication outcomes. Results of a survey with active SNS users indicate that (1) message evaluation, (2) the relationship with the sender, and (...)
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  31.  13
    Getting tough on mothers: regulating contact and residence.Julie Wallbank - 2007 - Feminist Legal Studies 15 (2):189-222.
    This article critically examines the relationship between shared residence and contact after the breakdown of the parents’ relationship. It examines the background to the government’s main emphasis on methods of monitoring, facilitating and enforcing contact as the most efficacious method of proceeding in respect of the law reform agenda, focussing particularly on the potential impact of punitive enforcement measures on primary carers, usually mothers. The article sets the discussion within its wider cultural context in respect of fathers’ rights (...)
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  32.  35
    The Ras‐ERK pathway: Understanding site‐specific signaling provides hope of new anti‐tumor therapies.Fernando Calvo, Lorena Agudo-Ibáñez & Piero Crespo - 2010 - Bioessays 32 (5):412-421.
    Recent discoveries have suggested the concept that intracellular signals are the sum of multiple, site‐specified subsignals, rather than single, homogeneous entities. In the context of cancer, searching for compounds that selectively block subsignals essential for tumor progression, but not those regulating “house‐keeping” functions, could help in producing drugs with reduced side effects compared to compounds that block signaling completely. The Ras‐ERK pathway has become a paradigm of how space can differentially shape signaling. Today, we know that Ras proteins are found (...)
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  33.  9
    Application of Referencing Techniques in EEG-Based Recordings of Contact Heat Evoked Potentials.Malte Anders, Björn Anders, Matthias Kreuzer, Sebastian Zinn & Carmen Walter - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
    Evoked potentials in the amplitude-time spectrum of the electroencephalogram are commonly used to assess the extent of brain responses to stimulation with noxious contact heat. The magnitude of the N- and P-waves are used as a semi-objective measure of the response to the painful stimulus: the higher the magnitude, the more painful the stimulus has been perceived. The strength of the N-P-wave response is also largely dependent on the chosen reference electrode site. The goal of this study was to (...)
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  34.  14
    Selectivity in solute transport: Binding sites and channel structure in maltoporin and other bacterial sugar transport proteins.Thomas Ferenci - 1989 - Bioessays 10 (1):1-7.
    A stereospecific binding site is not the only determinant governing the selectivity of transport proteins. An understanding of transport across cellular membranes requires a description of the different compartments within a transmembrane channel; evidence for the existence of these compartments comes from the selectivity properties of genetically modified maltoporin. Such compartments may also be of significance in determining the specificity of other transport proteins.
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  35. Section A. membranes.Protein Synthesis as A. Membrane-Oriented & Richard W. Hendler - 1968 - In Peter Koestenbaum (ed.), Proceedings. [San Jose? Calif.,: [San Jose? Calif.. pp. 37.
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  36.  6
    Native Women's Double Cross: Christology from the Contact Zone.Laura E. Donaldson - 2002 - Feminist Theology 10 (29):96-117.
    One of the hallmarks of American Indian colonial experience was the arrival of Christian missionaries. The response of Native cultures to missionization has been complex, with some resisting the white man's religion and others embracing it. Throughout their contact with Christianity, however, many American Indians appropriated its stories on their own terms and for their own purposes. Stories about Jesus comprise one of the most important sites for this appropriation. This essay examines the ways in which the cultural (...)
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  37.  57
    Accounting for the Costs of Contact Tracing through Social Networks.J. Littmann & A. Kessel - 2014 - Public Health Ethics 7 (1):51-53.
    This article critically engages with Mandeville et al.'s case discussion of using social networking services for the purposes of contact tracing in infectious disease outbreaks. It will be argued that their discussion may be overstating the utility of such approaches, while simultaneously underestimating the ethical concerns that arise from this method of contact tracing. The article separates between ethical and technological concerns and suggests that due to the particular design of networking sites such as Facebook and the (...)
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  38.  10
    Merging mobilities: querying knowledges, actions, and chronotopes in discourses of transcultural relationships from a North/South queer contact zone.Benedict J. L. Rowlett & Brian W. King - 2023 - Critical Discourse Studies 20 (2):111-127.
    In this article, we query binaries of mobility and immobility in language studies via an empirical focus on language/social practices in a site that bridges the global North and global South. To do so, we work from a Southern praxis perspective to analyze discourses/knowledges informing the performance of accounts from Cambodian men, interviewed about transactional same-sex relationship practices between (ostensibly immobile) local men and (ostensibly mobile) male tourists to Cambodia from the global North. The analysis focuses on a process in (...)
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  39.  16
    Molecular insights gained from covalently tethering cGMP to the ligand-binding sites of retinal rod cGMP-gated channels.R. Lane Brown & Jeffrey W. Karpen - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (3):471-472.
    A photoaffinity analog of cGMP has been used to biochemically identify a new ligand-binding subunit of the retinal rod cGMP-activated ion channel, as well as amino acids in contact with cGMP in the original subunit. Covalent tethering of this probe to channels in excised menbrane patches has revealed a functional heteogeneity in the ligand-binding sites that may arise from the two biochemically identified subunits.
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  40.  24
    Safe space in the college classroom: contact, dignity, and a kind of publicness.Jessica Harless - 2018 - Ethics and Education 13 (3):1-17.
    ABSTRACTCurrent discourse about higher education focuses on issues like government funding, student debt, and admissions diversity; however, increasing attention is being paid to issues of speech and politics in the university. Alongside a series of events at several institutions, calls for ‘safe space’ on campus have grown familiar. Yet the appropriateness of such spaces on campus is debated. In this article the notion of safety implied in calls for ‘safe space’ is clarified, and three reasons are suggested for supporting such (...)
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  41.  4
    ダンスとパフォーマンスの狭間--Gontact Gonzo インタビュー (特集 日本のパフォーマンス).中西 理 Contact Gonzo - 2009 - Corpus (Misc) 6 (6):7-11.
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  42.  4
    Ethics in perspective & practice.William Kilmer Sites - 1972 - Dobbs Ferry, N.Y.,: Oceana Publications. Edited by Barbara C. Blossom.
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  43. Introduces an active learning series targeting all health professionals Topics in Geriatric Health Literacy.Teleconferencing Sites & Stephen F. Austin - 2009 - In John Hawthorne (ed.), Ethics. Wiley Periodicals.
     
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  44.  31
    Introduces an active learning series targeting all health professionals Topics in Geriatric Health Literacy: Degree to which older patients have the capacity to obtain, process, and understand.Teleconferencing Sites & Stephen F. Austin - forthcoming - Ethics.
  45. The human condition in the cosmological, metaphysical and anthropological perspective of Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka.N. Site - 1993 - Analecta Husserliana 40:55-61.
     
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  46. A pressure-reversible cellular mechanism of general anesthetics capable of altering a possible mechanism of consciousness.Kunjumon Vadakkan - 2015 - Springerplus 4:1-17.
    Different anesthetics are known to modulate different types of membrane-bound receptors. Their common mechanism of action is expected to alter the mechanism for consciousness. Consciousness is hypothesized as the integral of all the units of internal sensations induced by reactivation of inter-postsynaptic membrane functional LINKs during mechanisms that lead to oscillating potentials. The thermodynamics of the spontaneous lateral curvature of lipid membranes induced by lipophilic anesthetics can lead to the formation of non-specific inter-postsynaptic membrane functional LINKs by (...)
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  47.  5
    What Do We Really Know About Racial Inequality? Labor Markets, Politics, and the Historical Basis of Black Economic Fortunes.Virginia Parks & William Sites - 2011 - Politics and Society 39 (1):40-73.
    Racial earnings inequalities in the United States diminished significantly over the three decades following World War II, but since then have not changed very much. Meanwhile, black—white disparities in employment have become increasingly pronounced. What accounts for this historical pattern? Sociologists often understand the evolution of racial wage and employment inequality as the consequence of economic restructuring, resulting in narratives about black economic fortunes that emphasize changing skill demands related to the rise and fall of the industrial economy. Reviewing a (...)
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  48. 13. old and new tibetan sources concerning svayambhunath.Sacred Sites There - 2009 - In Gustav Roth (ed.), Stupa: cult and symbolism. New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan. pp. 198.
     
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  49. Sedimentary Rock.Mark Forums Read & View Site Leaders - 2003 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7:328-330.
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  50.  27
    A Look Into the Power of fNIRS Signals by Using the Welch Power Spectral Estimate for Deception Detection.Jiang Zhang, Jingyue Zhang, Houhua Ren, Qihong Liu, Zhengcong Du, Lan Wu, Liyang Sai, Zhen Yuan, Site Mo & Xiaohong Lin - 2021 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
    Neuroimaging technologies have improved our understanding of deception and also exhibit their potential in revealing the origins of its neural mechanism. In this study, a quantitative power analysis method that uses the Welch power spectrum estimation of functional near-infrared spectroscopy signals was proposed to examine the brain activation difference between the spontaneous deceptive behavior and controlled behavior. The power value produced by the model was applied to quantify the activity energy of brain regions, which can serve as a neuromarker for (...)
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