Results 151 to 160 of about 15,514 (184)
Deceptive Sex: Rethinking Consent from the Gender Margins
This article argues that trans people who choose not to disclose, or who lie about, their gender history prior to sexual intimacy should not be prosecuted for sexual offences, at least not in the absence of a clear and express condition pertaining to cis status or biological sex.
Alex Sharpe
wiley +1 more source
Patterns of morphological evolution in the raptorial appendages of praying mantises
This study traces changes in the morphology of the forelegs across fossil and extant dictyopterans to understand their evolution from cursorial limbs to the raptorial morphologies of mantodeans. Two new mantodean specimens preserved in amber are described herein.
Alejandro Izquierdo‐López+5 more
wiley +1 more source
Humanimals: A Socio‐Ecological Reading of the Marseille Plague of 1720
Abstract The aim of this article is to return to a small number of historically significant first‐person testimonies of the Marseille epidemic of 1720 in order to analyse in detail their construction and depiction of human exceptionality as a form of life in a time of plague.
David McCallam
wiley +1 more source
Tax audits and the policing of corporate taxes: Insights from tax executives
Abstract We interview public company tax executives to provide new evidence on how corporate taxpayers experience and navigate the income tax audit process. Interviewees describe being “targeted” by “tax police” and having to “defend” their positions. Thus, we adopt a structural metaphor of tax audits as police investigations and use a framework from ...
Jeri K. Seidman+2 more
wiley +1 more source
Validation of the Sudbury Vertigo Risk Score to risk stratify for a serious cause of vertigo
Abstract Introduction In 2022, nearly 0.5 million Canadians visited an emergency department (ED) for dizziness, accounting for over 3.5% of all ED visits. Of these patients, only 2%–5% received a serious diagnosis. The cost of ED and inpatient care for dizziness in Canada exceeds $200 million per year, of which neuroimaging accounts for a large ...
Elliot Tissot van Patot+12 more
wiley +1 more source
Insula under the influence: Alcohol‐induced changes in resting state functional connectivity
This study explored how acute alcohol consumption alters the resting‐state functional connectivity (rsFC) of the insular cortex (IC) in healthy social drinkers. Alcohol intake disrupted rsFC of the IC with numerous brain regions, including the anterior cingulate cortex, superior temporal gyrus, middle frontal gyrus, precuneus, and basal ganglia ...
Adriana K. Cushnie+7 more
wiley +1 more source
A strike for democracy? Migration, the bigot's veto, and the electoral use of force
Abstract Politicians and philosophers alike have warned that the spread of anti‐migrant bigotry in the Western world requires a tragic trade‐off regarding immigration policy: Although millions of asylum‐seekers might be owed admission to Western democracies, there are many cases where they nonetheless ought to be denied entry, because their admission ...
Shmuel Nili
wiley +1 more source
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2020
Phantom limb pain is a phenomenon known for centuries. It affects more than 70% of all amputees, and it is thought to be the consequence of central or peripheral neuron damage. The phenomenon of brain functional reorganization, called representational plasticity, has been shown to be involved in the development and propagation of phantom pain.
Ljuba Stojiljkovic, Luminita Tureanu
openaire +2 more sources
Phantom limb pain is a phenomenon known for centuries. It affects more than 70% of all amputees, and it is thought to be the consequence of central or peripheral neuron damage. The phenomenon of brain functional reorganization, called representational plasticity, has been shown to be involved in the development and propagation of phantom pain.
Ljuba Stojiljkovic, Luminita Tureanu
openaire +2 more sources
Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1981
The role of psychological factors in 10 patients with painful phantom limbs was investigated by means of a questionnaire and interviews. The hypotheses were that the severity of pain would be positively correlated with their present personal problems and attitudes and with experience of pain in the limb before amputation.
Paul Arnold, Linda Dawson
openaire +2 more sources
The role of psychological factors in 10 patients with painful phantom limbs was investigated by means of a questionnaire and interviews. The hypotheses were that the severity of pain would be positively correlated with their present personal problems and attitudes and with experience of pain in the limb before amputation.
Paul Arnold, Linda Dawson
openaire +2 more sources