The soundtrack of RR Lyrae in Omega Cen at high-frequency; ; et al in Memorie della Società Astronomica Italiana : Journal of the Italian Astronomical Society (in press) Detailed reference viewed: 13 (0 ULg) Soup 'n Old Clothes : Frank Zappa’s Peristaltic PoeticsDelville, Michel ![]() in Oficina de poesia: Revista de palavra e da imagem (2004) Detailed reference viewed: 12 (1 ULg) Soup 'n Old Clothes : The Arts of Frank Zappa and Captain BeefheartDelville, Michel ![]() in Oficina de poesia : Revista de palavra e da imagem (2001, May 29) Detailed reference viewed: 17 (2 ULg) Une source byzantine d'EginhardKurth, Godefroid ![]() in Bulletin de la Classe des Lettres et des Sciences Morales et Politiques (1895), XXX, 11 Detailed reference viewed: 14 (4 ULg) Source monitoring for actions in hallucination pronenessLaroi, Frank ; ; Van der Linden, Martial ![]() in Cognitive Neuropsychiatry (2005), 10 INTRODUCTION: In the present study we explored the role of cognitive factors in hallucinatory proneness by utilising an incidental source monitoring task consisting of actions. METHOD: A total of 65 ... [more ▼] INTRODUCTION: In the present study we explored the role of cognitive factors in hallucinatory proneness by utilising an incidental source monitoring task consisting of actions. METHOD: A total of 65 normal subjects were administered a source monitoring task and were asked either to: (1) perform the action; (2) watch the experimenter perform the action; (3) imagine him/herself performing the action; (4) imagine the experimenter performing the action; (5) or listen to the experimenter say the action verbally. Following a delay, actions were presented consisting of those already presented in one of the 5 conditions (old), and those never before presented (new). For each action, subjects were required to identify if the action was old or new. If the action was identified as old, subjects were required to identify the source of the word (i.e., one of the 5 conditions). Subjects also completed a questionnaire assessing metacognitive beliefs. Subjects were grouped according to their scores on a revised and elaborated version of the Launay-Slade Hallucinations Scale (LSHS). Those with scores within the top 25% were included in the hallucination-prone group (HP) (n = 16), whereas scores within the lower 25% were included in the nonhallucination-prone group (NHP) (n = 16). RESULTS: Within the internal conditions, hallucination-prone subjects confused two internal sources (a specific internal-internal source discrimination error). That is, for imagined actions where the subjects performed the action, HP subjects erroneously attributed these towards an imagined action performed by the experimenter. Results also revealed that hallucination-proneness was associated with metacognitive beliefs. Finally, there was a significant relation between certain metacognitive beliefs and the internal-internal source discrimination error on the source monitoring task. CONCLUSIONS: Findings from the present study suggest that an important cognitive deficit in the genesis of hallucinations may be a perturbation in the control of interna [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 10 (0 ULg) Source monitoring, False memories and agingDehon, Hedwige ; Brédart, Serge ![]() Poster (2002, March) Detailed reference viewed: 6 (2 ULg) The Source Of Fermentable Carbohydrates Influences The In Vitro Protein Synthesis By Colonic Bacteria Isolated From PigsBindelle, Jérôme ; ; et alin Animal (2007), 1(8), Detailed reference viewed: 13 (5 ULg) The source of fermentable carbohydrates influences the in vitro protein synthesis of colonic bacteria in pigs.Bindelle, Jérôme ; ; et alin Animal (2007), 1 Two in vitro experiments were carried out to quantify the incorporation of nitrogen (N) by pig colonic bacteria during the fermentation of dietary fibre, including non-starch polysaccharides and resistant ... [more ▼] Two in vitro experiments were carried out to quantify the incorporation of nitrogen (N) by pig colonic bacteria during the fermentation of dietary fibre, including non-starch polysaccharides and resistant starch. In the first experiment, five purified carbohydrates were used: starch (S), cellulose (C), inulin (I), pectin (P) and xylan (X). In the second experiment, three pepsin–pancreatin hydrolysed ingredients were investigated: potato, sugar-beet pulp and wheat bran. The substrates were incubated in an inoculum, prepared from fresh faeces of sows and a buffer solution providing 15N-labelled NH4Cl. Gas production was monitored. Bacterial N incorporation (BNI) was estimated by measuring the incorporation of 15N in the solid residue at halftime to asymptotic gas production (T/2). The remaining substrate was analysed for sugar content. Short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) were determined in the liquid phase. In the first experiment, the fermentation kinetics differed between the substrates. P, S and I showed higher rates of degradation (P,0.001), while X and C showed a longer lag time and T/2. The sugar disappearance reached 0.91, 0.90, 0.81, 0.56 and 0.46, respectively, for P, I, S, C and X. Among them, S and I fixed more N per gram substrate (P,0.05) than C, X and P (22.9 and 23.2mg fixed N per gram fermented substrate v. 11.3, 12.3 and 9.8, respectively). Production of SCFA was the highest for the substrates with low N fixation: 562 and 565 mg/g fermented substrate for X and C v. 290 to 451 for P, I and S (P,0.01). In the second experiment, potato and sugar-beet pulp fermented more rapidly than wheat bran (P,0.001). Substrate disappearance at T/2 varied from 0.17 to 0.50. BNI were 18.3, 17.0 and 10.2 fixed N per gram fermented substrate, for sugar-beet pulp, potato and wheat bran, respectively, but were not statistically different. SCFA productions were the highest with wheat bran (913mg/g fermented substrate) followed by sugar-beet pulp (641) and potato (556) (P,0.05). The differences in N uptake by intestinal bacteria are linked to the partitioning of the substrate energy content between bacterial growth and SCFA production. This partitioning varies according to the rate of fermentation and the chemical composition of the substrate, as shown by the regression equation linking BNI to T/2 and SCFA (r250.91, P,0.01) and the correlation between BNI and insoluble dietary fibre (r520.77, P,0.05) when pectin was discarded from the database. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 33 (4 ULg) Source parameters of the 2008 Bukavu-Cyangugu earthquake estimated from InSAR and teleseismic data; ; et al in Geophysical Journal International (2011) Detailed reference viewed: 18 (7 ULg) SOURCE STRATEGIES AND THE MEDIATIZATION OF CLIMATE-CHANGEMormont, Marc ; Dasnoy, Christine ![]() in Media, Culture & Society (1995), 17(1), 49-64 A wide approach to the problem of science-media relations is taken in this study of the visibility of science in three >European countries. Differences of national cultures within France, Germany and ... [more ▼] A wide approach to the problem of science-media relations is taken in this study of the visibility of science in three >European countries. Differences of national cultures within France, Germany and Belgium hod the key to the analysis. This paper explores the impact on the media's representation of climate change that derives from the variations in the balance of power between the press, its scientific sources and other actors, especially pressure groups whoa have interest in how science is represented. France and Germany are shown to have very different approaches scignificantly in distinctive models of the role of media held by scinetists. These models look to be based in what is termed a "spontaneous media sociology" that frame the webs of relations between media and their sources and have a feedback effect oin them. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 192 (2 ULg) SOURCES AND DISTRIBUTION OF ODD NITROGEN IN THE VENUS DAYTIME THERMOSPHEREGérard, Jean-Claude ; ; in Icarus: International Journal of Solar System Studies (1988), 75(1), 171-184 Detailed reference viewed: 13 (3 ULg) Sources artificielles de lumière.Pierard, Claudine ; Paquet, Philippe ; Henry, Frédérique et alin Revue Médicale de Liège (2005), 60 Suppl 1 The artificial light sources are numerous. They emit a more or less delimited spectrum of wavelengths. Ultraviolet light dosimetry allows to control the amount of delivered energy. Detailed reference viewed: 18 (1 ULg) Les sources d’erreurs affectant le GPSWarnant, René ![]() Conference given outside the academic context (1995) Detailed reference viewed: 8 (1 ULg) Sources d’information médicale et recherche et gestion des référencesPasleau, Françoise ![]() Conference (2012, March 02) Detailed reference viewed: 12 (5 ULg) Sources d’information médicale, recherche et gestion des référencesPasleau, Françoise ![]() Conference (2010, March 05) Detailed reference viewed: 4 (3 ULg) Sources d’information médicale, recherche et gestion des référencesPasleau, Françoise ![]() Conference (2011, March 04) Detailed reference viewed: 3 (0 ULg) Les sources de l'histoire de Clovis dans Grégoire de ToursKurth, Godefroid ![]() in Revue des Questions Historiques (1888), XLIV Detailed reference viewed: 9 (0 ULg) Les sources de la biographie de Caton l'Ancien par PlutarqueKurth, Godefroid ![]() in Revue de l'Instruction Publique en Belgique (1871) Detailed reference viewed: 20 (0 ULg) Sources de responsabilité pénale de l'employeurKefer, Fabienne ![]() in Responsabilité pénale de l'employeur (2000, January) Detailed reference viewed: 17 (0 ULg) SOURCES DE VARIATION PHÉNOTYPIQUE DES TRAITS D’HISTOIRE DE VIE D’UNE ESPÈCE INVASIVE, SENECIO INAEQUIDENS DC. (ASTERACEAE).Monty, Arnaud ![]() Doctoral thesis (2009) L’importance des différentes sources de variation phénotypique que sont l’adaptation, la plasticité phénotypique, les effets maternels environnementaux, le niveau de ploïdie et la dérive génétique, a été ... [more ▼] L’importance des différentes sources de variation phénotypique que sont l’adaptation, la plasticité phénotypique, les effets maternels environnementaux, le niveau de ploïdie et la dérive génétique, a été analysée pour différents traits d’histoire de vie, au sein de l’aire colonisée par une espèce végétale invasive. A cette fin, plusieurs expériences en jardins communs ont été installées, dont deux en transplantations réciproques. Les populations considérées étaient localisées en Belgique, en France, ainsi que dans l’aire d’indigénat de l’espèce. Senecio inaequidens DC. (Asteraceae), l’espèce étudiée dans ce travail, est une plante d’origine africaine accidentellement introduite en Europe par le commerce lainier, vers la fin du 19ème siècle. Dans son aire d’indigénat, elle présente deux niveaux de ploïdie, diploïde et tétraploïde. Seuls des plants tétraploïdes sont recensés en Europe. L’espèce présente un historique de colonisation particulier, bien documenté, qui en fait un modèle idéal pour les études évolutives. Les traits d’histoire de vie considérés ont été scindés en deux groupes. Les premiers concernaient la germination, la croissance et la reproduction sexuée. Les sources de variation phénotypique dans ces traits ont été principalement analysées en relation avec les variations climatiques dans l’aire d’invasion, le long de gradients d’altitude, ainsi qu’en relation avec le niveau de ploïdie et l’aire d’origine (aire d’indigénat vs aire d’invasion). Le deuxième groupe de traits considérés concernaient les capacités de dispersion de l’espèce. Celles-ci ont été modélisées. La variabilité phénotypique dans ces traits a ensuite été analysée, parmi les populations françaises, en relation avec l’éloignement depuis le site de première introduction. Les résultats ont montré des différences entre les cytotypes de l’espèce, principalement dans les capacités de survie hivernale. Le long des gradients d’altitude, les populations de S. inaequidens présentaient des différenciations phénotypiques de type clinal, dans les traits de croissance. Ces différenciations étaient d’origine génétique, même si les effets maternels environnementaux sont apparus comme des sources non-négligeables de variation phénotypique dans les zones à climat rigoureux. Parmi les traits liés à la dispersion, le plume loading était le mieux corrélé aux capacités de dispersion par le vent. Des différenciations clinales ont été détectées dans les traits de dispersion, en jardin commun, mais n’ont pas été vérifiées en populations naturelles. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 128 (17 ULg) |
||