Results 1 to 10 of about 29,672 (199)

Adaptation to Aymara language and analysis of the psychometric properties of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) in Peruvian and Bolivian populations [PDF]

open access: yesBMC Psychology
Objective To culturally adapt the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) for Aymara-speaking populations in Peru and Bolivia and to evaluate its psychometric properties.
Julio Cjuno   +9 more
doaj   +2 more sources

Decolonizing mental health: how native languages reshape depression network architecture in 31,276 Peruvians [PDF]

open access: yesScientific Reports
To date, no studies have investigated the effect of native language on depressive symptom networks. To address this gap, we examined depression symptom network structure across four major cultural-linguistic groups in Peru (Castellano, Quechua, Aymara ...
Javier A. Flores-Cohaila   +7 more
doaj   +2 more sources

Alternatively spliced NFKB1 transcripts enriched in Andean Aymara modulate inflammation, HIF and hemoglobin [PDF]

open access: yesNature Communications
The molecular basis of increased hemoglobin in Andean Aymara highlanders is unknown. We conducted an integrative analysis of whole-genome-sequencing and granulocytes transcriptomics from Aymara and Europeans in Bolivia to explore genetic basis of the ...
Jihyun Song   +9 more
doaj   +2 more sources

Aymara

open access: yes
Abstract This chapter offers a grammatical description of Aymara [ISO 639-3: ayc, Glottocode: sout2996]. Aymara is an is agglutinative, suffix-only Aymaran language, spoken mainly in Peru and Bolivia. After providing an overview of the Aymaran family, I describe the complex phonology and phonotactics, with a special focus on ...
exaly   +3 more sources

Susti, Alejandro (ed.). Abelardo Oquendo: la crítica literaria como creación.

open access: yesMetáfora, 2021
Uno de los ejercicios literarios menos atendidos por la esfera pública es el de la crítica a través de las reseñas. A menudo, esta se confina en las arcas —casi siempre cerradas— de la universidad. Y en estas, se ubica en las revistas académicas con una
Alex Hurtado Lazo
doaj   +1 more source

Aymara [PDF]

open access: yesInternational Journal of American Linguistics, 2018
Aymara (ISO aym) is spoken by about two million people, more than half of whom are Bolivian. The other half are mainly Peruvian, with small communities in Chile and Argentina. The Aymaran family (Aymara and Kawki/Jaqaru) is a language isolate, although the Quechuan family is erroneously believed to be related.
Banegas-Flores, Edwin, Coler, Matt
openaire   +1 more source

Los dilemas comunitarios étnicos y religiosos. Las investigaciones antropológicas del pentecostalismo aymara y mapuche en Chile (1967- 2012)

open access: yesEstudios Atacameños, 2014
Este artículo analiza las investigaciones antropológicas del pentecostalismo aymara y mapuche en Chile. En concreto, se analizan los presupuestos teóricos presentes en los conceptos de comunidad, sujetos, y su imbricación, presentes en estas ...
Miguel Ángel Mansilla   +2 more
doaj   +8 more sources

Aymara Gender and Kinship. Bolivian Female Mobilities, and Political Horizons

open access: yesMana, 2023
This article has two central objectives. First, to present a review of anthropological studies on gender and kinship in Aymara communities, focusing on the literature produced in Bolivia, Chile, and Peru.
Menara Guizardi   +2 more
doaj   +2 more sources

El contrapunto en la cumanana y en el carnaval andahuaylino (pukllay taki)

open access: yesEscritura y Pensamiento, 2021
En el Perú, por su diversidad cultural y geográfica se puede encontrar una riqueza de manifestaciones a lo largo de su territorio, así encontramos expresiones artísticas vinculadas a cada pueblo, a cada cultura.
Dionicia León Soncco
doaj   +1 more source

Use of Aymara in the Chile, Peru, and Bolivia Frontiers: A Micro-Sociolinguistic Analysis

open access: yesIkala: Revista de Lenguaje y Cultura, 2023
The Aymara language (AL) is one of the most important languages in the central Andean region. However, there are few studies on its use from a microsociolinguistic approach.
Juan Carlos Mamani Morales
doaj   +1 more source

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