TW Violences verbales - psychophobies 3e témoignages.
Tout mon soutien.
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Janaina Medeiros

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Kiana Khansmith
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trying on a metaphor

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TW Violences verbales - psychophobies 3e témoignages.
Tout mon soutien.
Le marché de la déprofessionnalisation se structure autour de plateformes qui revendiquent le statut d’économie collaborative. (…)
Dans ce paysage en trois dimensions que dessinent la lucrativité économique (bénéfices nets en monnaie internationale), la lucrativité sociale (amélioration de la sécurité, de la justice, de l’éducation, de la qualité de vie, éradication de la misère) et lucrativité environnementale (augmentation des ENR, diminution des émissions, des polluants et des déchets, augmentation des circuits courts et fermés), l’essentiel des acteurs numériques, tout en comblant un déficit social ou environnemental réel (Kisskissbankbank, LaRucheQuiDitOui..), se trouveront en réalité polarisés à plus ou moins long terme vers une lucrativité économique du fait même de leur forme juridique.
Thousands of years of human breeding transformed wild species into the domesticated varieties we enjoy every year. Most of these foods were originally found in the Americas. Some of my favorite details:
The original domesticated carrots were purple. Carrots were bred to be orange by Dutch farmers in the 17th century, and then used as a political symbol of the ruling family - the House of Orange.
The ancestors of pumpkins were mainly eaten by mastodons and giant sloths - they were too bitter for smaller animals to stomach.
Turkeys were bred to have white plumage so their skin would be more uniform in color.
Happy Thanksgiving!!
100th Anniversary of Einstein’s Theory of Relativity
One hundred years ago this month, Albert Einstein published his theory of general relativity (GR), one of the most important scientific achievements in the last century.
A key result of Einstein’s theory is that matter warps space-time, and thus a massive object can cause an observable bending of light from a background object. The first success of the theory was the observation, during a solar eclipse, that light from a distant background star was deflected by the predicted amount as it passed near the sun.
When Einstein developed the general theory of relativity, he was trying to improve our understanding of how the universe works. At the time, Newtonian gravity was more than sufficient for any practical gravity calculations. However, as often happens in physics, general relativity has applications that would not have been foreseen by Einstein or his contemporaries.
How many of us have used a smartphone to get directions? Or to tag our location on social media? Or to find a recommendation for a nearby restaurant? These activities depend on GPS. GPS uses radio signals from a network of satellites orbiting Earth at an altitude of 20,000 km to pinpoint the location of a GPS receiver. The accuracy of GPS positioning depends on precision in time measurements of billionths of a second. To achieve such timing precision, however, relativity must be taken into account.
Our Gravity Probe B (GP-B) mission has confirmed two key predictions derived from Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity, which the spacecraft was designed to test. The experiment, launched in 2004, and measured the warping of space and time around a gravitational body, and frame-dragging, the amount a spinning object pulls space and time with it as it rotates.
Scientists continue to look for cracks in the theory, testing general relativity predictions using laboratory experiments and astronomical observations. For the past century, Einstein’s theory of gravity has passed every hurdle.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com
Les contrepets sont parmi nous : Emballés par un Cuba cool !
WHO KNEW IT WAS THAT EASY
Cellulose from wood can be printed in 3D
Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology have managed to print and dry three-dimensional objects made entirely by cellulose for the first time with the help of a 3D-bioprinter. They also added carbon nanotubes to create electrically conductive material.
The effect is that cellulose and other raw material based on wood will be able to compete with fossil-based plastics and metals in the on-going additive manufacturing revolution, which started with the introduction of the 3D-printer.
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10 trayant
WHY AM I LAUGHING SO HARD WHY IS MY SENSE OF HUMOR THIS TERRIBLE
Slide rule Consider the medium on to which type is placed, especially if there is a chance of misinterpretation. From West Briton.
(photo by bandit25)
The hard science of oxytocin
Oxytocin has been of keen interest to neuroscientists since the 1970s, when studies started to show that it could drive maternal behaviour and social attachment in various species. Its involvement in a range of social behaviours2, including monogamy in voles, mother–infant bonding in sheep, and even trust between humans, has earned it a reputation as the ‘hug hormone’. “People just concluded it was a bonding molecule, a cuddling hormone, and that’s the pervasive view in the popular press,” says Larry Young, a neuroscientist at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, who has been studying the molecule since the 1990s.
That view has led some clinicians to try oxytocin as a treatment for psychiatric conditions such as autism spectrum disorder. But the early trials have had mixed results, and scientists are now seeking a deeper understanding of oxytocin and how it works in the brain. Researchers such as Froemke are showing that the hormone boosts neuronal signals in a way that could accentuate socially relevant input such as distress calls or possibly facial expressions. And clinical researchers are starting a wave of more ambitious trials to test whether oxytocin can help some types of autism. The work is leading to a more sophisticated view of the hormone and its complex effects on behaviour — one that will take many types of expertise to refine.
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fMRI studies have found that the brains of those with dyslexia rely more on the right hemisphere and frontal lobe than the brains of those without it. This means, when they read a word, it takes a longer trip through their brain and can get delayed in the frontal lobe. Because of this neurobiological glitch, they read with more difficulty.
But those with dyslexia can physically change their brain and improve their reading with an intensive, multi-sensory intervention that breaks the language down and teaches the reader to decode based on syllable types and spelling rules. The brains of those with dyslexia begin using the left hemisphere more efficiently while reading, and their reading improves.
Learn more about dyslexia by watching the TED-Ed Lesson What is dyslexia? - Kelli Sandman-Hurley
Animation by Marc Cristoforidis
Protéger ses travaux avec des licences libres
Supreme court ruling makes same-sex marriage a right nationwide! MAZEL TOV, AMERICA!