Results 171 to 180 of about 1,003,051 (216)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Physiology of cultured animal cells
Journal of Biotechnology, 1997The physiology of cultured animal cells, in particular hybridoma, myeloma and insect cells, with respect to growth and proliferation, amino acid metabolism, energy metabolism and cellular responses to environmental stress is discussed in this paper. The rate of proliferation of hybridoma cells in serum-containing media is limited by growth factors at a
Lars Öhman +3 more
openaire +3 more sources
Introduction: The End of the Animal – Literary and Cultural Animalities
2017The introduction to this volume calls for the end of “animal studies” broadly conceived as an umbrella term encompassing such diverse fields as animality studies, posthumanism, human-animal studies, critical animal studies, and species critique. While these fields attempt to move beyond the human in various ways, they often have rather different ends ...
openaire +2 more sources
2013
Greek and Roman societies developed, in their separate ways and at different times, a very refined sense of their own identity and could articulate a clear sense of where the borders of their geographical and conceptual worlds were positioned (although in practice there was a large and diverse set of cultures and communities within these boundaries). A
openaire +2 more sources
Greek and Roman societies developed, in their separate ways and at different times, a very refined sense of their own identity and could articulate a clear sense of where the borders of their geographical and conceptual worlds were positioned (although in practice there was a large and diverse set of cultures and communities within these boundaries). A
openaire +2 more sources
2012
On the BBC Radio 4 programme A Point of View (first broadcast on Friday 8 July 2011) Alain de Botton claimed that ‘animals, as we know, don’t loom very large in culture’ (de Botton, 2011); he could not have been more wrong. If only, as a schoolchild, Alain had read Bryant’s (1979) newly published paper about the zoological connection he would not have ...
openaire +2 more sources
On the BBC Radio 4 programme A Point of View (first broadcast on Friday 8 July 2011) Alain de Botton claimed that ‘animals, as we know, don’t loom very large in culture’ (de Botton, 2011); he could not have been more wrong. If only, as a schoolchild, Alain had read Bryant’s (1979) newly published paper about the zoological connection he would not have ...
openaire +2 more sources
Animal cells in culture are microorganisms
Cytotechnology, 1992Pick up any textbook with 'Microbiology' in the title and observe the scant to nonexistent treatment of animal cells in culture. Viruses do not suffer from such an exclusion. Chapters abound regaling the molecular niceties of the complex dances their components undergo while infecting bacteria or animal cells in culture.
openaire +3 more sources
The International Journal of the History of Sport, 2015
The critical study of sport has displayed increasing sophistication in its treatment of representation and media.
openaire +2 more sources
The critical study of sport has displayed increasing sophistication in its treatment of representation and media.
openaire +2 more sources
2017
Culture in humans connotes tradition, norms, ritual, technology, and social learning, but also cultural events like operas or gallery openings. Culture is in part about what we do, but also sometimes about what we ought to do. Human culture is inextricably intertwined with language and much of what we learn and transmit to others comes through written ...
openaire +2 more sources
Culture in humans connotes tradition, norms, ritual, technology, and social learning, but also cultural events like operas or gallery openings. Culture is in part about what we do, but also sometimes about what we ought to do. Human culture is inextricably intertwined with language and much of what we learn and transmit to others comes through written ...
openaire +2 more sources
2018
Multinaturalism shouldn’t be viewed solely as the paradigmatic existence of multiple natures in different cultures – or “ontologies” as Descola refers to them – but also and most importantly as the syntagmatic presence, and the resulting contrast, of various ontologies within the same culture.
openaire +2 more sources
Multinaturalism shouldn’t be viewed solely as the paradigmatic existence of multiple natures in different cultures – or “ontologies” as Descola refers to them – but also and most importantly as the syntagmatic presence, and the resulting contrast, of various ontologies within the same culture.
openaire +2 more sources
Synchrony in cultured animal cells
In Vitro, 1970Investigation of the events of the cell cycle can be conducted in a number of ways. One method, that of using cell populations which are in synchrony, is currently being exploited because it overcomes the insensitivity of our biochemical methods of analysis in comparison to the minuteness of the individual cell.
openaire +3 more sources
Metabolomics in Animal Cell Culture
2014Metabolomics is defined as a global quantitative assessment of metabolites within a biological system. Metabolic profiling of cell cultures has many potential applications as well as advantages to currently utilized methods for cell-line testing. Metabolite concentrations represent sensitive markers of genomic changes and responses of cells to external
openaire +2 more sources

