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Using Documents presents an interdisciplinary discussion of human
communication by means of documents, e.g., letters. Cultural
scientists, together with researchers from media science and media
engineering, analyze questions of document modeling, including a
document's contexts of use, on the basis of cultural theory. The
research also concerns the debate on the material turn in the
fields of cultural studies and media studies. Looking back on
existing work, texts on written communication by the philosopher
and sociologist Georg Simmel and by an interdisciplinary French
group of authors under the pseudonym Roger T. Pedauque are taken as
a starting point and presented afresh. A look ahead to the future
is also attempted. Whereas the modeling (including technical
modeling) of documents has to date largely been limited to the
description of output forms and specific content, the foundations
are laid here for including documents' contexts of use in models
that are grounded in cultural theory.
This book presents a new basis for the empirical analysis of
film. Starting from an established body of work in film theory, the
authors show how a close incorporation of the current state of the
art in multimodal theory, including accounts of the syntagmatic and
paradigmatic axes of organisation, discourse semantics and advanced
layout structure, provides a methodology by which concrete details
of film sequences drive mechanisms for constructing filmic
discourse structures. The book introduces the necessary background,
the open questions raised, and the method by which analysis can
proceed step-by-step with extensive examples drawn from a broad
range of films. The book aims to provide an analytic tool set that
will enable the reader to approach the study of film organisation
with new levels of detail, probing deeply into the fundamental
question of film as to just how it is that films reliably
communicate meaning.
This book presents a new basis for the empirical analysis of film.
Starting from an established body of work in film theory, the
authors show how a close incorporation of the current state of the
art in multimodal theory-including accounts of the syntagmatic and
paradigmatic axes of organisation, discourse semantics and advanced
'layout structure'-builds a methodology by which concrete details
of film sequences drive mechanisms for constructing filmic
discourse structures. The book introduces the necessary background,
the open questions raised, and the method by which analysis can
proceed step-by-step. Extensive examples are given from a broad
range of films. With this new analytic tool set, the reader will
approach the study of film organisation with new levels of detail
and probe more deeply into the fundamental question of the
discipline: just how is it that films reliably communicate meaning?
Calcium metabolism is regulated by three specific hormones:
parathor- mone, calciferol metabolites, and calcitonin. Cyclic AMP
also plays an important part in calcium regulation, and its
concentration in urine can be taken as a measure of parathyroid
function. Methods for quantitative measurement of, e.g.
calcium-regulating hormones and vitamin D metabolites as well as of
cAMP are absolutely necessary for safe differential diagnosis of
diseases of the parathyroid like hypo- and hyperparathyroidism. In
this monograph all presently available methods are summarized as to
whether they can already be obtained as test kits or are still
being tested. Radioimmunoassays for the various peptide fragments
such as 53-84, 44-68, 28-48, and 1-34 are described, as are
immunochemiluminescence methods and adenylate cyclase bioassays.
The same is true for the vitamin D metabolites, where the various
assays for calcidiol and calcitriol such as HPLC, protein-binding
assay with second antibody separation, and double antibody RIA are
dex scribed. Finally, determination of calcitonin and cAMP is
discussed in detail. This is a practically and clinically oriented
monograph for working in the fields of internal medicine,
endocrinology, and laboratory medicine.
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