Results 261 to 270 of about 206,732 (307)
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The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology, 1992
The death of a relative or anyone in a small, tightly knit community with closely shared cultural and religious values has great social impact. As part of the grieving process, people wish to preserve the memory of a loved one or a community leader.
D, Meschutt, M L, Taff, L R, Boglioli
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The death of a relative or anyone in a small, tightly knit community with closely shared cultural and religious values has great social impact. As part of the grieving process, people wish to preserve the memory of a loved one or a community leader.
D, Meschutt, M L, Taff, L R, Boglioli
openaire +2 more sources
Do not mask the mask: use it as a premedicant
Pediatric Anesthesia, 2007SummaryBackground: Preoperative anxiety frequently causes resistance to mask application and prolongs induction. Anesthesia masks resembling popular heroes or toys was used to deal with this problem. An anesthesia mask given on a preoperative visit to play with at home, may aid to establish a familiarity with the mask and alleviate mask fear, possibly
Tayfun, Aydin +7 more
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Masking of Tinnitus and Central Masking
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1987In the first experiment reported here, for subjects with sensorineural hearing loss and tinnitus, the masking of tinnitus is primarily dependent on the masker intensity; masking is nearly independent of masker frequency. In the second experiment reported here, for subjects with normal hearing, the central masking of a continuous tone (used to stimulate
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The Masked Mapper: Masked Metric Mapping
2020 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS), 2020In this paper, we propose a flexible mapping scheme that uses a masking function (mask) to focus the attention of a pose graph SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping) system. The masking function takes the robot’s observations and returns true if the robot is in an important location.
Acshi Haggenmiller +3 more
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Mask in the Mirror: The Living Mask Illusion
Perception, 2011Self-perception in a mirror is a dynamic process involving self-motion and autonomous self-exploratory control of facial poses and expressions.In a previous work, apparitions of strange faces in the mirror were experienced, often as other beings appearing in place of one's own face.
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What's in a Mask? Information Masking with Forward and Backward Visual Masks
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 2011Three experiments tested how the physical format and information content of forward and backward masks affected the extent of visual pattern masking. This involved using different types of forward and backward masks with target discrimination measured by percentage correct in the first experiment (with a fixed target duration) and by an adaptive ...
Davis, Chris, Kim, Jeesun
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“The mask who wasn’t there”: Visual masking effect with the perceptual absence of the mask.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2015Does a visual mask need to be perceptually present to disrupt processing? In the present research, we proposed to explore the link between perceptual and memory mechanisms by demonstrating that a typical sensory phenomenon (visual masking) can be replicated at a memory level.
Rey, Amandine Eve +4 more
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“To mask, or not to mask, that is the question”: COVID (Anti)Masking and Comics
Interdisciplinary Literary StudiesABSTRACT While masks have functioned as important cultural artifacts, religious symbols, costume pieces, and components of social identity throughout history, in the current biopsychosocial context (of the COVID-19 pandemic), they predominantly refer to medical masks. This article, after reviewing the comprehensive and complex history
Ishani Anwesha Joshi +1 more
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Seeing (through) masks: An exploration of masks and mask making
Visual Anthropology, 2000In the form of a collage I juxtapose my experience of mask‐making with various interpretations of the nature and meaning of masks in order to explore the questions of whether masks can have meaning for those outside the culture of origin and whether encountering cultural artifacts like masks can enhance our own self‐understanding. I conclude, with some
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“Masking Is Life”: Experiences of Masking in Autistic and Nonautistic Adults
Autism in Adulthood, 2021Jon Rees, Amy Pearson
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