Results 41 to 50 of about 1,440,066 (305)

What is “Fashion” and How to Research it? Polybius for Punk Fashion Sociology

open access: yesZoneModa Journal, 2020
Fashion changes societies, and is also itself shaped by multiple socio-cultural processes, including processes of globalization. At the same time, fashion scholarship is not only speaking about and seeking to understand fashion, but is also actively ...
Anna-Mari Almila, David Inglis
doaj   +1 more source

Reversibility in Massive Concurrent Systems [PDF]

open access: yes, 2011
Reversing a (forward) computation history means undoing the history. In concurrent systems, undoing the history is not performed in a deterministic way but in a causally consistent fashion, where states that are reached during a backward computation are ...
Cardelli, Luca, Laneve, Cosimo
core   +1 more source

Inference of historical population-size changes with allele-frequency data

open access: yes, 2020
With up to millions of nearly neutral polymorphisms now being routinely sampled in population-genomic surveys, it is possible to estimate the site-frequency spectrum of such sites with high precision.
Haubold, B.   +3 more
core   +1 more source

The Feminine Awkward: Graceless Bodies and the Performance of Femininity in Fashion Photographs [PDF]

open access: yes, 2017
Recent fashion photography has been preoccupied with awkward and uncomfortable poses. In fact, awkwardness – a negative affect comprising emotional and bodily discomfort – is part of the history of fashion photography.
Shinkle, E., Shinkle, E.
core   +1 more source

Reciprocal control of viral infection and phosphoinositide dynamics

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Phosphoinositides, although scarce, regulate key cellular processes, including membrane dynamics and signaling. Viruses exploit these lipids to support their entry, replication, assembly, and egress. The central role of phosphoinositides in infection highlights phosphoinositide metabolism as a promising antiviral target.
Marie Déborah Bancilhon, Bruno Mesmin
wiley   +1 more source

1874-1875 : la naissance d’une conscience patrimoniale de la mode en France

open access: yesIn Situ
The first exhibition about the history of costume, the “Musée historique du costume” was inaugurated in France in 1874. One year later, the historian and archaeologist Jules Quicherat (1814-1882) published the first popular book about French dress ...
Maude Bass-Krueger
doaj   +1 more source

Per una storia della moda

open access: yesVenezia Arti, 2016
This paper considers the role of artefacts in the historical study of dress and fashion and suggests the existence of three different approaches. The field of history of dress and costume has a long tradition going back to the nineteenth century.
Riello, Giorgio
doaj   +1 more source

Redrawing the Timeline: Teaching the History of Fashion in the Networked Conditions of the Twenty-First Century

open access: yesArts, 2019
It is important for the history of fashion curriculum, to acknowledge the post-digital environment within which fashion and education now operate. One way to address this, is to move concepts of change in fashion beyond the singular narrative of fashion&#
Rachel Matthews
doaj   +1 more source

By dawn or dusk—how circadian timing rewrites bacterial infection outcomes

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
The circadian clock shapes immune function, yet its influence on infection outcomes is only beginning to be understood. This review highlights how circadian timing alters host responses to the bacterial pathogens Salmonella enterica, Listeria monocytogenes, and Streptococcus pneumoniae revealing that the effectiveness of immune defense depends not only
Devons Mo   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Structural insights into lacto‐N‐biose I recognition by a family 32 carbohydrate‐binding module from Bifidobacterium bifidum

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Bifidobacterium bifidum establishes symbiosis with infants by metabolizing lacto‐N‐biose I (LNB) from human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs). The extracellular multidomain enzyme LnbB drives this process, releasing LNB via its catalytic glycoside hydrolase family 20 (GH20) lacto‐N‐biosidase domain.
Xinzhe Zhang   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

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