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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Diferenciación objetos físicos versus objetos sociales y características temperamentales: Un estudio longitudinal en niños de tres a doce meses de edad

Díaz Herrero, Ángela 17 July 2000 (has links)
El propósito del presente trabajo ha sido investigar si los niños reaccionan de modo diferencial ante objetos físicos y sociales en función de dimensiones del temperamento y estudiar la evolución de estas reacciones a lo largo del primer año de vida. Participaron 51 niños, nacidos a término, sin complicaciones pre ni postnatales y con peso y talla normal al nacer. La expresión de las características temperamentales ante objetos físicos y sociales fue evaluada en el laboratorio trimestralmente desde los tres hasta los doce meses de edad, a partir de una selección de la batería de situaciones denominada “Tareas evolutivas y escalas de puntuación para la evaluación del temperamento infantil en el laboratorio”. Los resultados indicaron que los niños parecen reaccionar de modo diferente ante los objetos sociales y los objetos físicos en las dimensiones temperamentales. Respecto a la evolución de esta sensibilidad diferencial, los niños mostraron mayor estabilidad cuando estaban interactuando con objetos físicos que cuando lo hacían con objetos sociales. / The aim of this research was to investigate whether infants react differentially to social and physical objects as a function of temperament dimensions and to study the evolution of these reactions during the first year of life. 51 infants took part in this study. All infants were healthy, full-term and without any pre and post-natal complications. Newborns had a normal weight and normal length at birth. The expression of infants’ temperamental traits when faced to social and physical objects was assessed in the laboratory quarterly from 3 to 12 months, using a selection of the Matheny and Wilson Developmental Tasks and Rating Scales for the Laboratory Assessment of Infant Temperament. The results indicated that the infants seem to react differentially when facing to social and physical objects. With respect to course of this differential responsiveness, the infants showed a higher stability when interacting with physical objects than that with social objects.
2

Mynt er hva mynt gjør : En analyse av norske mynter fra 1100-tallet: produksjon, sirkulasjon og bruk / Coin is what coin does : An analysis of Norwegian coins from the 12th century: production, circulation and use

Eikje Ramberg, Linn January 2017 (has links)
The kings of Norway issued coins on a regular basis starting in the mid-11th century, and probably conducted renovatio monetae whenever a new king came to power. As a privilege of bona regalia, the king could use coin production to serve his own interests. Economic factors are usually the main focus of discussions on coinage, but there were also political, religious and cultural dimensions that must have been important both for the production of coins and in the choice of motives, form and style. From the outset, manipulation of the coinage is visible in the debasement of silver content, followed by a reduction in weight to re-establish the silver level.  In the 12th century, the weights continued to drop and single-faced coins and bracteates became the standard; only a few biface coins are known. These small coins and bracteates from the 12th century carry little or no information concerning issuer, date or place of production. This lack of information has resulted in a gap in our knowledge about the role of these coins in medieval society in Norway. This role was dependent both on the intentions of the producer and on how the coins were perceived by the people, and their will to use them in certain ways. What were the reasons behind issuing the smallest coins ever produced in coin history, and what impact did this dramatic reduction in weight have on the understanding and use of the coin? To advance the discussion it has been vital to establish new knowledge about chronology, coin-issuing authority and mints. These areas have been addressed through two analyses using numismatic and archaeological methods. The results of the initial analyses are combined with an investigation of the size of the coin production and a study of archaeological contexts, in order to reveal how, where and when the bracteates were used.  The theoretical approach to understanding the role of coins is inspired by theories in anthropology and sociology about the many ways in which money can be incorporated in a society, emphasising the complex social component of coins in contrast to the traditional economic emphasis on their neutral qualities as a means of exchange. Central to this are the concepts behind formalism and substantivist and post-substantivist theory. The study concludes with a discussion that explores what can be said about economy and economic systems based on the 12th-century Norwegian coins.

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