Results 201 to 210 of about 1,678 (256)
Genetic Basis of Cuticular Hydrocarbon Variation in the Desert Ant <i>Cataglyphis niger</i>. [PDF]
Inbar S +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
Co1/3TaS2${\rm Co}_{1/3}{\rm TaS}_{2}$ hosts a triple‐Q noncoplanar antiferromagnetic state with coexisting Z3${\rm Z}_3$ electronic nematicity. We report rotational hysteresis observed in both magnetoresistance and magnetic torque, revealing strongly pinned in‐plane weak ferromagnetic moments in the triple‐Q phase and the magnetism‐driven nature of ...
Joonyoung Choi +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Comparing traditional surveys and web-scraped data to understand the pigeon racing industry in Southern California. [PDF]
Pitesky M +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Impact of insular landscape features on the population genetics of a threatened climbing palm, <i>Korthalsia rogersii</i> Becc.<i>,</i> endemic to the Andaman Islands. [PDF]
Paremmal S, Dasgupta M, Vb S, Dev S.
europepmc +1 more source
Arctic circles: Transprofessional networking and international governance. [PDF]
Kuus M.
europepmc +1 more source
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2023
Although it is hardly a new insight that social integration as much produces crime as it prevents it, this chapter draws on the case of Pitcairn Island – Britain’s smallest colony and the last British territory in the Pacific – to more deeply explore how intensive social ‘bonding’ capital can be both crime protective as well as criminogenic.
John Scott, Zoe Staines
+4 more sources
Although it is hardly a new insight that social integration as much produces crime as it prevents it, this chapter draws on the case of Pitcairn Island – Britain’s smallest colony and the last British territory in the Pacific – to more deeply explore how intensive social ‘bonding’ capital can be both crime protective as well as criminogenic.
John Scott, Zoe Staines
+4 more sources
Biological Psychiatry, 2006
We propose a general hypothesis that integrates affective and cognitive processing with neuroanatomy to explain anxiety pronenes. The premise is that individuals who are prone to anxiety show an altered interoceptive prediction signal, i.e., manifest augmented detection of the difference between the observed and expected body state.
Martin P, Paulus, Murray B, Stein
openaire +2 more sources
We propose a general hypothesis that integrates affective and cognitive processing with neuroanatomy to explain anxiety pronenes. The premise is that individuals who are prone to anxiety show an altered interoceptive prediction signal, i.e., manifest augmented detection of the difference between the observed and expected body state.
Martin P, Paulus, Murray B, Stein
openaire +2 more sources

