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Blind items : anonymity, notoriety, and the making of eighteenth-century celebrityBourque, Kevin Jordan 12 October 2012 (has links)
Blind Items examines the multimedia production of celebrity through the eighteenth century, especially the way in which the same texts, images, anecdotes and poses were recycled and updated to evoke a series of public notables. In the multimedia explosion accompanying the Enlightenment, cultural productions typically read as static and self-contained – from mezzotint prints, shilling pamphlets and novels to popular songs, fashions, jokes and gestures – were instead constantly repurposed to suit successions of public figures, each passing luminary determined by the present cultural moment. Surveying three arenas in which eighteenth-century celebrity was manufactured – fashion, sex, and sport – my archive demonstrates that even canonical authors and artists of the period built their careers on the passing celebrity of others, and indeed maintained the relevance of their productions by perpetually remaking and updating their celebrity referents. Blind Items contests critical assumptions regarding the singularity of celebrity, instead focusing on interchangeability, commutability and disposability. In so doing, the project troubles ongoing assumptions regarding the rise of the individual, as it explains why modern-day celebrity still retains aspects of the Enlightenment mold that first gave it shape. / text
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Développement de méthodes de référence pour les biomarqueurs du bilan lipidique : application au contrôle qualité en biologie clinique / Development of reference methods for lipid profile biomarqueurs : application to quality controle in clinical chemistryHeuillet, Maud 13 December 2013 (has links)
En biologie clinique, il est indispensable de disposer de mesures fiables et comparables dans le temps et entre les laboratoires afin de permettre un dépistage et un suivi appropriés des patients. Pour cela, il est indispensable d’établir leur traçabilité métrologique aux unités du système international notamment par des méthodes de référence primaires ou des matériaux de référence certifiés (MRC) d’ordre supérieur. Ces travaux de thèse ont consisté à développer et valider des méthodes de référence pour le cholestérol total, les triglycérides, le HDL-cholestérol et le LDL-cholestérol. Leur valeur ajoutée par rapport à une valeur consensuelle a été démontrée lors d’évaluations externes de la qualité. Elles ont également permis de certifier un MRC qui pourra être utilisé pour le contrôle qualité et/ou l’étalonnage des méthodes de routine. Nous avons montré que le MRC était commutable pour la plupart des méthodes de routine pour les différents biomarqueurs, ce qui a permis de l’utiliser pour évaluer leur justesse. Les méthodes de routine avaient généralement tendance à sous-estimer la concentration en triglycérides (en particulier aux valeurs basses) et à surestimer nettement la concentration de cholestérol total et de LDL-cholestérol (en particulier aux concentrations proches du seuil de décision clinique), ce qui se traduit par une augmentation du nombre de faux-positifs (patients traités à tort). Une approche de correction de non commutabilité a également été proposée afin de permettre l’utilisation de matériaux non commutables pour évaluer la justesse. Pour conclure, ces travaux ont démontré l’importance de disposer de méthodes de référence ainsi que de MRC commutables / Reliable measurements in medical biology are essential for early screening and appropriate follow-up of patients. Ensuring metrological traceability of clinical measurements to higher order reference methods or certified reference materials enables to obtain comparable results over time and between different laboratories that could use different methods to quantify the same biomarker.In this study, reference methods were developed and validated for lipid profile biomarkers (total cholesterol, triglycerides, HDL-C, and LDL-C). Their value added in proficiency testing schemes was demonstrated against consensus mean. They were also used to characterize a certified reference material (CRM) that may be used both as quality control and/or calibrator of field methods. The CRM was shown to be commutable for most field methods and lipid profile biomarkers, which proved it was suitable to assess trueness. Results of our multicenter study showed that field methods tend to underestimate triglycerides (particularly at low concentrations) and overestimate total cholesterol and LDL-C (especially around the clinical threshold), resulting in false positives and significant patient misclassifications. An approach of non-commutanility correction was also presented to allow trueness assessment with non-commutable samples. In conclusion, this work highlights the importance of using reference methods and also commutable CRM to rigorously assess accuracy of field methods used in clinical laboratories
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