Academic literature on the topic 'Somatics'

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Journal articles on the topic "Somatics"

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Drury, Lindsey. "What's in a Name? Somatics and the Historical Revisionism of Thomas Hanna." Dance Research Journal 54, no. 1 (April 2022): 6–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0149767722000043.

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This article questions how the historically revisionist history of “the West,” as initiated by Thomas Hanna, informs systems of inclusion, exclusion, and power within the field of “somatics.” Hanna, who coined the term somatics, sought in so doing to root the burgeoning field in a “Western” tradition of philosophy and science that he fundamentally misconstrued. Meanwhile, Hanna's work to formulate a historically and philosophically Western basis of a somatic field continues to provide cover for white somatic practitioners whose institutionally minted somatic forms extract philosophical and practical knowledge from non-white body-mind practices internationally. Subsequent accounts of somatics consequently articulate both the Western history of somatics and its “non-Western influences” on false grounds. This article theorizes the colonial and Western supremacist holdovers within a somatic field that nonetheless gives lip service to postcolonial discourse. Finally, by rebuilding an approach to the “deep time” history relating sōma and somatics, this article proposes how the field of somatics could reground its understanding of the “first-person experience of the body,” informed by Afropessimism, Black Accelerationism, and Afrofuturist thought.
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Barr, Sherrie, and Hannah Andersen. "Illuminating somatics." Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices 14, no. 1 (July 1, 2022): 9–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jdsp_00065_1.

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That somatics is now part of the dance lexicon should neither be startling nor unexpected. Subjective first-person experiences and bodily knowledges, integral to somatics and dance education, became accepted ways of knowing in the 1980s. As the presence of somatics in today’s tertiary education dance curricula continues to be manifested through the discourse’s practices and beliefs, three overarching perspectives are revealed: movement re-education, teaching and learning paradigms and sociocultural constructs. In mining these distinct yet interrelated perspectives, the authors illuminate key attributes as stepping stones to consider what is essential to a somatics course offering. The authors suggest that with such understanding, it is then that a fuller engagement with the somatic discourse in dance academia can be actualized.
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Nuding, Elise. "Approaching eco-somatics: A consideration of potential pitfalls and their implications." Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices 13, no. 1 (December 1, 2021): 29–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jdsp_00034_1.

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This article revisits the ‘doxa’ of somatics discourse identified by Isabelle Ginot, situating them in relation to embodied eco-consciousness and ecological and environmental orientations in somatics. The intention is to begin to unpack how they manifest in this particular strand of somatic enquiry and how (or if) they potentially risk undermining the contributions being made in this area. To do so, the term ‘eco-somatics’ is examined along with the wider prevalence of ecology and the ecological in somatics discourse, and both somatics and ecological/environmental discourse are situated within the condition of modernity‐coloniality. The aim is to think through some of the potential pitfalls relating to eco-somatics, and this article is an attempt to wrangle with the complexity of these issues as well as an opportunity to pose some questions to the wider field.
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Kim, Jae Lee. "The Alternative in Somatic within the South Korean Context." Maska 38, no. 215 (September 1, 2023): 8–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/maska_00157_1.

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The article discusses how the phenomenon of somatics in South Korea produces practices, knowledge, and criticism within the institutional and cultural context. Over the past decade, somatic methodologies have been applied in the fields of the contemporary dance scene, with choreographers using somatics for developing dance techniques, and as a tool for choreography. However, there is no precise Korean translation for the term ‘somatics’. As a result, various dance forms that incorporate principles and concepts from Western countries, such as Body-Mind Centering® and Feldenkrais, as well as holistic styles of movement, are often loosely referred to as ‘somatics’. On the other hand, interest in somatics is influenced by the trend of new materialism, which approaches movement and subjectivity in a more microscopic way through the conceptual infusion of materiality/immateriality. Rather than just adopting global trends in dance methodologies and seeking formal alternatives, this discussion aims to explore the phenomenon of somatics within South Korea’s dance institutions and cultural context, as well as its potential in choreography.
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Davidson, James. "Somatics." Classical Review 49, no. 2 (October 1999): 514–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cr/49.2.514.

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Lobel, Elin, and Julie Brodie. "Somatics in Dance–Dance in Somatics." Journal of Dance Education 6, no. 3 (July 2006): 69–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15290824.2006.10387317.

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Colin, Noyale. "Politics of Togetherness in Dance: The Affective Persistence of somatic Collectivity under post-Fordism." Central Asian Journal of Art Studies 6, no. 4 (December 20, 2021): 10–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.47940/cajas.v6i4.495.

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The last decade of scholarship in dance has produced a number of literary contributions which account for the need to theorize the radical potential of dance as a site for political activism in the context of global social and economic crises. As a practitioner, teacher and theorist in dance and performance, working in a UK university, I am interested in exploring the potential of somatics to resist a seemingly utilitarian incorporation of somatic principles into the agenda of neo-liberalism under post-Fordist conditions. In this article, I refer to somatics as an umbrella term to discuss practices related to the dance field including protests, walks, flashmobs and choreographic explorations of performative participation. While these practices might not be widely recognized as somatic practices, I argue that all operate at a somatic level and point to an ever-shifting relationship between the individual, the collective and the social environment. I reflect on a number of theoretical ideas pertaining to the relations between the development of somatics and the intensification of cultural capitalism in contemporary western society. In doing so, I aim to theorize somatics as critical and political practices of collective forms of being and working together. Drawing on instances of collective embodiment, I argue for the politicization of somatic practices as it relates to ideas of affect, ethics and time. I suggest that embodied expressions of collectivity as politicized somatics can develop valid tactics to counter what I observe to be a mimetic phenomenon between dance practices and capitalism. A situation that has been only exacerbated by the Covid 19 pandemic. I propose the concept of somatic collectivity as a way to describe the critical potential of collective embodiment found in dance and its expanded field of practices.
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Bennett, Bradford C. "The Somatic Work of Thomas Hanna, Tai Chi, and Kinesiology." Kinesiology Review 9, no. 3 (August 1, 2020): 236–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/kr.2020-0042.

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Thomas Hanna’s somatic work has been essential to the development of the field of somatic education. From redefining the word “somatic” and developing the concept of somatics as a field of study, to starting the magazine/journal Somatics, to developing theories and practices of somatic education, Hanna greatly influenced this fledgling area of work. This article presents the somatic philosophy, theories, and education techniques of Hanna, focusing on the aspects that are unique to this somatic explorer. Hanna’s techniques are contrasted to the traditional somatic movement training of Tai Chi. The difficulties of researching a learning such as somatic education are discussed. Ideas are presented on how kinesiology and somatic education can inform each other.
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Barry, Olivia. "Tracing the felt image to thought: A somatic turn towards the nature of the creative process in country dance choreography." Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices 14, no. 2 (December 1, 2022): 249–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/jdsp_00083_1.

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Creative processes used to choreograph country dance are distinguishable from those utilized in other dance movement systems. Described here is my experience of a novel approach within somatic education – one reflecting on the nature of the creative process in country dance choreography. My primary aim was to trace a distinctive moment when feeling translates into a later communicable thought. In country dance choreography, this is known as the hook. Over the course of two months, I developed my own experiential somatic practice under the guidance of leading dance, science and somatics practitioner-researcher, Dr Glenna Batson. I engaged in this form of embodied practice in order to explore somatics as a method for conducting research as well as aiding in my own creative process as a country dance choreographer. Through the process of anarchiving, harvesting and tracing moments from my somatic experience, I found key correlations and contrasts between somatics and country dance.
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Lee, Mi-Sun, Sun Je Kim, Jeong-Ho Chae, E.-Jin Park, Wang Yeon Won, Yang-Whan Jeon, and Hyu Jung Huh. "A Mixed-Methods Study Protocol for Soma Experiencing Motion Program (Soma e-motion Program): The Effectiveness of Contemplative Movement for Emotion Regulation." Psychiatry Investigation 18, no. 6 (June 25, 2021): 500–504. http://dx.doi.org/10.30773/pi.2021.0076.

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Somatics refers to body work and movement study that emphasize internal perception and experience. Recently, a new perspective has emerged that views somatics-based techniques as a kind of mindful movement. Somatic techniques as contemplative movement can improve emotional regulation ability through improvement of body awareness or interoception. Based on this background, the present study attempts to develop a somatics based program suitable for a group of clinical patients suffering from emotional dysregulation. This study plans to collect quantitative and qualitative data in order to clarify how interoception and the related emotional regulation ability change after the program. These findings will help to explore whether the somatics technique has potential as an emotion regulation program in the future. In addition, the results are expected to contribute to finding an alternative treatment modality for patients who have not achieved a sufficient effect with conventional psychotherapy.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Somatics"

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Andersen, Hannah. "Dance Science and Somatics in Training and Performance." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/22666.

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This mixed methods investigation analyzes the effect of a novel somatics training program on dance skills. Fourteen dancers were divided into treatment and control groups. The treatment group participated in an eight-week workshop on the use of the spine utilizing sensory experiences, mini-lectures, and dance exercises. During entry and exit, all dancers learned two phrases by video containing the same motor-patterns with contrasting choreographic intents; Phrase A fluid, sustained and slow, Phrase B, dynamically enhanced. Participants performed each phrase for the camera, to be scored by a judging panel. Descriptive statistical analysis of judging data suggests the workshop positively affected their execution of skills in Phrase A, over B. Data reduction and interpretation of the participants’ interviews, questionnaires, and journals yielded several themes. This study has vast implications, suggesting combination of dance science and somatics in dance as efficacious for dancers’ experiences and execution of technical dance skills.
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Green, Jill. "Fostering creativity through movement and body awareness practices : a postpositivist investigation into the relationship between somatics and the creative process." Connect to resource, 1993. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1226597858.

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Spilis, Angelica Abby. "Dancing With Arthritis." Master's thesis, Temple University Libraries, 2015. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/327134.

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Dance
M.A.
This Master of Arts thesis is based on research that I conducted on dancers who have the auto-immune disease of Rheumatoid Arthritis. Rheumatoid Arthritis is a long-term autoimmune disease that causes inflammation in the joints and the surrounding tissues. Dancers with arthritis feel pain the joints that can be minor or severe, depending on how they are moving their bodies. This research investigates how dancers with an arthritic body can dance without the experiencing pain in their joints. Arthritis impairs movement because it is a disease that affects the joints. In this thesis, I created movements that could enable arthritic dancers the opportunity to continue dancing. I have identified a movement vocabulary, movement methods, and strategies for arthritic dancers who want and need to move with minimal pain. Movements have been created specifically for the arthritic body. I use my own experiences and challenges as an arthritic dancer to inform this study. My experiences helped me to create movements specifically for arthritic dancers because I am an advocate for those who suffer from arthritis.
Temple University--Theses
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Armington, Sophia E. "Why Yoga Feels Good: The Integration of Somatics, Anatomy, Yoga." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2015. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/611.

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Scientific research is just beginning to empirically prove what people who practice somatic disciplines have known for years. In this thesis, I theorize that it is possible to combine yoga and somatics with modern research into the mind and body in a manner that could facilitate healing in a holistic, beneficial manner. There is an indisputable relationship between a person's overall physical and mental health. The practice of yoga strives to facilitate both physical and mental health, in addition to inner peace and well-being. By identifying similarities between the teachings of yoga and modern kinesthetic research, it is possible to gain a better understanding of why and how yoga makes practitioners feel better.
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Hawksley, Sue. "Dancing to an understanding of embodiment." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/7918.

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This practice-led research employs choreographic and somatic practices, and their mediation through performance and/or technologies, to facilitate critical engagement and apprehension of notions of embodiment. The core concerns are movement, dance and the body, as sites of knowledge and as modes of inquiry, with particular focus on lived experience approached from a nondualist perspective. Central themes are action, attention, bodyscape, tensegrity, improvisation, interactivity, memory, language and gesture. Taking as a starting point the position that knowledge and mind may be embodied, and that the movement habits and stress markers which pattern bodyscape may in turn inform cognition, the choreographic practice seeks to illuminate, rather than explicate or demonstrate, aspects of embodiment. The methodological approaches are (en)active, heuristic and reflective. Dance, as a exemplar of movement, and choreography, as a mode of creative and critical engagement with dance, are the primary research tools. Somatic approaches to practice, performance and philosophy are investigated for their potential to develop or reveal embodied knowing and awareness. Technological mediation is employed to inform and augment perception and apprehension of the embodied experience of dance, from the perspectives of choreographer, performer and audience. The thesis comprises five dance-based performance works and a written text critically engaging the concepts behind and emergent from this praxis.
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Giotaki, G. "Emergent movements : the role of embodiment and somatics in British contemporary dance." Thesis, Coventry University, 2015. http://curve.coventry.ac.uk/open/items/dddf2f58-70b8-4c9b-a3b8-8b4308208f50/1.

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This thesis explores somatic practices as a social movement by focusing on the relationship between embodiment, somatics and contemporary dance practices. It looks specifically to Body-Mind Centering® (BMC®) and traces an ethnographic history of the practice examining it as a post-modern western somatic method forming part of an international social movement. The research is grounded on post-structuralist dance anthropology and analyses BMC® as a “socially constructed movement system” (Grau 1993). Through experimentation, the somatic movement cultivates bodily awareness and an embodied sense of self. The thesis points to the ways in which the emphasis on embodiment may form a key component in this social movement and its relation to British somatic-informed dance. While providing the conceptual and historic context for experimentation in contemporary dance in Britain since the 70s, the thesis illustrates that New, and later, Independent Dance artists drew from BMC® as well as other somatic practices. It argues that the exploration of embodiment as a human attribute and lived phenomenon from a somatic perspective gave rise to a culturally distinct discourse of practice, known today as somatic-informed dance. It works to illustrate the nature of the new pedagogical approach that emerged and, specifically, the way this aspect of contemporary dance evolved as a result of the emphasis on embodiment and the somatic influence. To do so, the thesis identifies and analyses distinct principles and pedagogic tools employed through an anthropological perspective and ethnographic, historical and practice-led research methods. Further illustrating the way the concept of embodiment is understood in somatic informed dance pedagogy, it critically examines the claim that embodiment processes may re-educate dualist perceptions. It, thereby, argues that it is only in the experience of integration in the lived moment that the problem of dualism might be challenged. Through an investigation of lineage, the thesis situates BMC® and somaticinformed contemporary dance practice within the socio-cultural, artistic, conceptual and philosophical context in which they developed. Pointing to the parallel expansion of scholarly and artistic interest in embodiment over the past five decades, it demonstrates a permeability of bodies, places, ideas and culturally constructed movement systems. Overall, the thesis is underpinned by a critical engagement with the position that embodiment and experience form the existential ground for culture and self (distilled in Csordas’ 1994a), offering an analysis of BMC® informed dance practice as another source of data shedding new light to this insight. Capturing a moment in dance history with a synchronic investigation (Sahlins 1998), this research works to further contribute towards an understanding of a diachronic property of the formation of cultures. In line with Csordas’ position, it suggests that given their distinct approach to experientially gained corporeal knowledge and awareness, the emergence of ‘culturally constructed movement systems’ such as BMC® and somatic informed contemporary dance form a potential illustration of the way culture is existentially grounded on embodiment and experience.
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Weiser, Wolfgang. "Embodied : En begreppsanalys och kontextuell utforskning." Thesis, Linköpings universitet, Institutionen för beteendevetenskap och lärande, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-154356.

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Vad menar vi egentligen när vi säger att vi har det i oss eller att vi ska lära oss med alla våra sinnen och att elever ska utveckla hela sin förmåga? Denna studie är en begreppsanalys av det som man på engelska benämner embodied. Den undersöker detta i en svensk utbildningskontext och försöker finna motsvarande begrepp på svenska. Den belyser hur kroppsligt kunnande/lärande beskrivs inom tre olika utbildningsvetenskapliga områden. Studien består dels av en semantisk undersökning och dels av en kontextuell exploration. Den semantiska undersökningen innehåller en hermeneutisk begreppsanalys enligt Koort (1975) och en etymologisk granskning. Den hermeneutiska explorationen undersöker begreppet embodied först inom praktisk kunskap, sedan inom kognitiva lärandeteorier och slutligen relateras embodied till ett somatiskt kunskapsfält med kroppsliga/body-mind praktiker, på engelska kallat somatics.
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Mangione, Michele Ann. "The origins and evolution of somatics: Interviews with five significant contributors to the field /." The Ohio State University, 1993. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1487848078451933.

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Gray, Victoria Kent. "A somatics of affect : articulating affective-kinaesthetic experience through BMC approaches to performance and writing." Thesis, University of the Arts London, 2017. http://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/13454/.

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In the past two decades, there has been a ubiquitous turn to affect theory in discourses within the humanities and social sciences. Whilst it is the overarching intention of affect theory to bring the body back into focus in critical and cultural debate, this thesis identifies a paradoxical lack of theorisation regarding kinaesthetic experience in ‘the affective turn’ (Clough, 2007). Specifically, I identify a kinaesthetic gap in affect studies literatures, whose genealogy can be traced to a process philosophy lineage, thereby theorising affect as nonconscious, autonomic, and non-phenomenological (Clough, 2007; 2010a; 2010b; Gregg and Siegworth, 2010; Grosz, 2008; Hansen, 2006; Manning, 2009a; 2013; 2014; 2016; Massumi, 1995; 2002; 2011; 2015; Thrift, 2004a; 2008). I contend that this non-phenomenological movement has had significant consequences for practice-led researchers, such that, embodied articulation of affective experiences remains outside the frame of critical affect studies. In response, I coin the original term affective-kinaesthetic, to close the gap between affect and kinaesthesia, arguing that, the experience of affect is kinaesthetic in nature. These critiques are informed by my affective-kinaesthetic experience of conservatoire dance training, spinal injury, and my ongoing somatic performance practice. Thus, my research imperative is defined as affect-led, and my research approach is defined as somatic. By putting somatic practice, specifically, Body-Mind Centering (BMC), in conversation with affect studies, I develop a somatic approach to analysing and articulating affect, coined, a somatics of affect. Through the creation of two bodies of research-led performance works titled Prone (2011-2012) and Ballast (2014-2015), and attendant processes of what I term, somatic writing, I contribute a kinaesthetic epistemology of affective experiences to the field of affect studies. I conclude that somatic, and specifically practice-led voices are critical to the development of affect studies, despite being inaudible amongst more dominant affect theorists and philosophers; in short, that somatic voices are the critical, kinaesthetic future of affect theory.
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Oskarsson, Felicia. "När somatik möter psykiatri : Sjuksköterskors erfarenheter av att vårda vuxna patienter med en psykiatrisk diagnos inom somatisk vård." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Institutionen för hälso- och vårdvetenskap (HV), 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-98421.

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Bakgrund: Inom vården är psykiatri och somatik något som helst skiljs åt. Trots försök att separera de två, går det inte att undvika att patienter med psykiatriska diagnoser även blir somatiskt sjuka. För sjuksköterskor som arbetar inom somatisk vård, kan vårdandet av patienter med psykiatrisk diagnos bli problematiskt. Orsaken till detta är att det ofta uppstår diskriminering och stigmatisering kring psykiskt sjuka människor. Denna studie kommer att belysa problematiken ur ett sjuksköterskeperspektiv. Syfte: Syftet var att belysa sjuksköterskors erfarenheter av att vårda vuxna patienter med en psykiatrisk diagnos inom somatisk vård. Metod: Studien genomfördes som en litteraturstudie med en induktiv ansats. Med hjälp av en integrerad analys har ett resultat formats för att kunna svara på studiens syfte. Resultat: Resultatet visade sig mynna ut i tre kategorier; Svårighet att kommunicera, Rädsla och Brist på kunskap. Slutsats: Ökad tillgång till utbildning inom psykiatri kan minska rädsla och stigmatisering gällande patienter med en psykiatrisk diagnos och därmed öka vårdkvaliteten.
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Books on the topic "Somatics"

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Mom sallim: Ch'iyu, suryŏn, kkaech'im = Somatics. Kyŏnggi-do P'aju-si: Han'guk Haksul Chŏngbo, 2012.

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Biofeedback and somatics: Toward personal evolution. Novato, Calif: Freeperson Press, 1995.

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Nicely, Megan V. Experimental Dance and the Somatics of Language. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-30296-1.

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Estrangement and the somatics of literature: Tolstoy, Shklovsky, Brecht. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008.

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E, Lobel Elin, ed. Dance and somatics: Mind-body principles of teaching and performance. Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Co., 2012.

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Somatics: Reawakening the mind's control of movement, flexibility, and health. Reading, Mass: Addison-Wesley, 1988.

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Somatics: Reawakening the mind's control of movement, flexibility, and health. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Life Long, 1988.

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1938-, Macnaughton Ian, ed. Body, breath & consciousness: A somatics anthology : a collection of articles on family systems, self-psychology, the bodynamics model of somatic developmental psychology, shock trauma, and breathwork. Berkeley, Calif: North Atlantic Books, 2004.

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Ramírez-Mosqueda, Marco A., ed. Somatic Embryogenesis. New York, NY: Springer US, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-2485-2.

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Mujib, A., and Jozef Šamaj, eds. Somatic Embryogenesis. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b136454.

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Book chapters on the topic "Somatics"

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Behnke, Elizabeth A. "Somatics." In Contributions to Phenomenology, 663–67. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-5344-9_149.

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Kuppers, Petra. "Social Somatics." In Performance Studies, 185–92. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-46315-9_22.

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Echols, Margaret, and Sandy Mobley. "Using Somatics to Coach Leaders." In On Becoming a Leadership Coach, 81–89. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230614314_11.

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Echols, Margaret, and Sandy Mobley. "Using Somatics to Coach Leaders." In On Becoming a Leadership Coach, 145–55. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137344137_14.

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Welch, Shay. "Somatics: Improvisation and Feeling-Practices." In Choreography as Embodied Critical Inquiry, 75–93. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-93495-8_4.

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Nicely, Megan V. "Introduction." In Experimental Dance and the Somatics of Language, 1–18. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-30296-1_1.

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Nicely, Megan V. "Interval: Trisha Brown and the Space Between Words." In Experimental Dance and the Somatics of Language, 39–81. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-30296-1_3.

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Nicely, Megan V. "Language as Agent: Doing and Allowing." In Experimental Dance and the Somatics of Language, 169–203. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-30296-1_6.

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Nicely, Megan V. "The Micropolitics of Micromovement." In Experimental Dance and the Somatics of Language, 19–37. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-30296-1_2.

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Nicely, Megan V. "Movement’s Return: Sensations in Context." In Experimental Dance and the Somatics of Language, 205–37. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-30296-1_7.

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Conference papers on the topic "Somatics"

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Bahri, Samsul, Husaini, and Nurul Akmal. "Students’ Ability to Generate Mathematical Concept Ideas Through Somatics, Auditory, Visual, and Intellectual Approach of Students (Madrasah Ibtidaiyah Negeri 6 North Aceh)." In International Conference on Engineering, Technology and Social Science (ICONETOS 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210421.107.

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Plavina, Liana, and Natalija Mihailova. "Somatic Health Level Assessment Importance in Military Personnel Group." In 14th International Scientific Conference "Rural Environment. Education. Personality. (REEP)". Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies. Faculty of Engineering. Institute of Education and Home Economics, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.22616/reep.2021.14.050.

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Topicality of research is indicated by importance of somatic health level assessment of military personnel that is a basement for fulfilling military tactical tasks and developing future military career. Physical endurance capacities develop during military training and have impact to the body composition parameters, health capacity level. Medical specialists carried out the assessment of health capacity of military personnel annually. The aim of the study is to evaluate the somatic health and its components in military personnel group that includes cadets from 1st till 5th study year in National Defence Academy of Latvia. The evaluation of somatic health level carried out according H.L. Apanasenko methodology that is a complex approach taking in count anthropometric parameters, physiological measurements, and tests` results in standard physical exercises. The statistical methods were used for analysis of data in SPSS version 20. There are fixed statistically significant correlation between somatic health level and anthropometric parameters (body mass, body mass index value) as well physiological parameters (systolic blood pressure value, hand muscle force, pulmonary vital capacity). The significance of the results is that the level of somatic health level connects to the parameters of body composition and functional parameters. Physical endurance capacities are based on somatic health level assessment, individuals with higher body mass index level, with higher blood pressure parameters, with lower vital index value as well with, longer restoring interval after standard physical exercise had lower somatic health level value. The changes of somatic health level in study group showed the impact of military training duration that important for future military career.
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Obukhova, T. Yu, L. N. Budkar, and V. B. Gurvich. "HEALTH MAINTENANCE OF WORKERS EXPOSED TO HAZARDOUS INDUSTRIES AS A POSSIBLE FACTOR IN THE PREVENTION OF OCCUPATIONAL PATHOLOGY." In The 16th «OCCUPATION and HEALTH» Russian National Congress with International Participation (OHRNC-2021). FSBSI “IRIOH”, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31089/978-5-6042929-2-1-2021-1-372-375.

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Abstract: Recent researches in the occupational medicine demonstrate a significant occurrence of cardiovascular and metabolic pathology. They are often associated with occupational activity in workers exposed to hazardous industries. The aim of the paper is to study the condition of somatic health in workers exposed to hazardous industries to identify the trends of preventive measures. Research methods. We studied the influence of somatic diseases in workers of aluminum, refractory and asbestos-processing industries for the development of occupational pathology. Results. The study has identified the relationship of some somatic diseases with work, as well as their influence on the development of occupational pathology: fluorosis, asbestos and silicosis. A predictive mathematical model of the development of arterial hypertension in workers exposed to hazardous industries is created. Conclusion. Therefore, an early diagnosis and prevention of the development of somatic diseases in workers is one of the key areas of current measures to reduce occupational risks.
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Einspahr, D. W., and M. Johnson. "Tissue Culture and the Pulp and Paper Industry." In Papermaking Raw Materials, edited by V. Punton. Fundamental Research Committee (FRC), Manchester, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.15376/frc.1985.1.1.

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Emphasis on the tissue culture propagation of forest tress has increased dramatically. Tissue culture methods available to forestry and the pulp and paper industry are micropropagation, organogenesis, and somatic embryogenesis. Somatic embryogenesis, although more difficult to accomplish, seems to have the most promise for use with forest trees because (1) when appropriately employed it can be a true mass production procedure and (2) the approach can be used efficiently with several genetic engineering techniques. Major genetic gains in growth rate, wood quality, insect and disease resistance, and improved climatic adaptability are anticipated when tissue culture techniques are used in conjunction with genetic engineering. Emphasis in The Institute of Paper Chemistry’s tissue culture research is on the development of a somatic embryogenesis procedure for conifers.
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Bittencourt, Yuri Cardoso Rodrigues Beckedorff, Lucas Soares Almada, Tatiana Strava Corrêa, Daniele Xavier Assad, Marina Sahade Gonçalves, Andrea Kazumi Shimada, Artur Katz, and Romualdo Barroso-Sousa. "SOMATIC MUTATIONAL LANDSCAPE CHARACTERIZATION OF METASTATIC BREAST CANCER IN BRAZIL." In Brazilian Breast Cancer Symposium 2022. Mastology, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.29289/259453942022v32s2025.

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Objective: Breast cancer (BC) is the most common malignancy among Brazilian women after non-melanoma skin cancer. The mutational landscape of BC in Brazil is unknown. This study describes the mutational profile of a cohort of patients with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) who had undergone next-generation sequencing (NGS) using a comprehensive somatic tumor panel. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed medical records from MBC patients. The mutational profile, clinical, and demographic characteristics were abstracted. Furthermore, the patterns of ordering the panel and its usefulness for a clinical decision were evaluated. Results: We found 54 female patients who fulfilled the above criteria. The median age was 58 years (32–86). Most tumors tested were hormone receptor-positive (74%), followed by triple-negative (20.3%), hormone receptor-positive/HER2-positive (3.7%), and HER-2 positive (1.85%). The median time between the diagnosis of metastatic disease and the NGS execution was 40 months (0–112), and only three patients (5.5%) had not received systemic treatment prior to the test recommendation. Somatic mutations were identified in 94.4% (n=51) of the patients, mainly in PIK3CA (48.1%), TP53 (42.5%), and ESR1 (18.5%) genes. Tumor burden mutation (TMB) was informed in 61.1% (n=33) somatic panels, and 15.1% (n=5) had tumors with TMB ≥10 mutations/megabase. Approved genome-driven cancer therapy was found in 54.9% (n=28), and eight patients (28.5%) received it. Conclusion: This study showed a high proportion of actionable somatic genomic alterations, and it reinforces the growing usefulness of a comprehensive NGS tumor somatic panel in managing patients with MBC.
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Wang, Qiao, Pavan Turaga, Grisha Coleman, and Todd Ingalls. "SomaTech." In CHI '14: CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2559206.2581339.

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Paine, Garth. "Designing the techno-somatic." In MOCO '15: Intersecting Art, Meaning, Cognition, Technology. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2790994.2791011.

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Nowak, Martin. "Somatic evolution of cancer." In the eighth annual international conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/974614.974640.

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Makarevskaya, Irina, and Lyudmila Kravchenko. "Personal determinants of emotional states of somatic patients." In Safety psychology and psychological safety: problems of interaction between theorists and practitioners. «Publishing company «World of science», LLC, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15862/53mnnpk20-23.

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The article contains the results of a study of personality predictors of emotional states of persons with chronic somatic diseases. The aim of the study was to identify the personality determinants of the emotional states of the physically ill. The study involved persons who are on dispensary observation with a general practitioner with various chronic somatic diseases (N = 50 people). It is shown that personality traits, resilience, level of self-esteem, prevailing protective mechanisms and the temporal perspective of the personality can be considered as personal determinants of the emotional states of patients.
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Pestrikova, A. A. "EDITING OF THE HUMAN GENOME – LEGAL ASPECTS OF CLINICAL APPLICATION." In I International Congress “The Latest Achievements of Medicine, Healthcare, and Health-Saving Technologies”. Kemerovo State University, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21603/-i-ic-104.

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The relevance of the study is determined by the need to take into account the risks of editing the human genome (somatic, embryonic and inherited editing of the human genome), the possibilities of introducing human genome editing into clinical practice. Editing of the human genome (somatic, germinal and inherited editing of the human genome) has significant potential for humanity and health systems, medicine and science. At the same time, editing of the human genome requires studying the risks and advantages of such editing for the formation of legal regulation.
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Reports on the topic "Somatics"

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Nathanson, Katherine L. Identifying Somatic Genetic Changes in Prostate Cancer. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, February 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada435018.

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Weier, Jingly F., Christy Ferlatte, and Heinz-Ulli G. Weier. Somatic genomic variations in extra-embryonic tissues. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), May 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1001041.

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Stephens, Karen. Pathogenesis of Germline and Somatic NF1 Gene Rearrangements. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, October 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada392585.

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Zelcer, Aaron, Ken C. Sink, and Shamay Izhar. Induction of Alloplasmic Cytosterility in Tomato by Somatic Hybridization. United States Department of Agriculture, November 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/1985.7566566.bard.

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Sink, Ken, Shamay Izhar, and Abraham Nachmias. Asymmetric Somatic Hybridization: Developing a Gene Transfer System for Solanaceous Vegetable Crops. United States Department of Agriculture, February 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/1996.7613010.bard.

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Highly asymmetric somatic hybrid plants were obtained by PEG/DMSO fusion of gamma irradiated (100, 250, 7500 and 1000 Gy) protoplasts of a (KmR-) interspecific hybrid Lycopersicon esculentum x L. pennellii (EP) with protoplasts of eggplant (E). Somatic hybrid calli were selected based on kanamycin resistance and verified by PCR of the NptII gene, RAPD's and Southern's using potato rDNA pTHG2 probes. Flow cytometry indicated all hybrid calli that did not regenerate shoots were 5-9n. Three asymmetric plants regenerated only from callus close to 4n and such calli oly occurred when EP received 100 Gy. The asymmetric plants had eggplant morphology and regenerated from one hybrid callus with 6.29 average size tomato chromosomes. Limited amounts of EP DNA were found in the three somatic hybrid plants H18-1 to -3 by dot-blot hybridization with probe pTHG2, to be equivalent to 6.23, 5.41, and 5.95 % EP, respectively. RFLP analysis of Lycopersicon esculentum and L. pennellii specific chromosomes revealed that only fragments of 8 to 10 out of the 24 EP chromosomes are present in the asymmetric plants. Transgenic plants 2-3, 2-4 and 10-3 were found resistant to verticillium; suggesting successful transfer of the Ve complex from S. torvum to eggplant.
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Gupta, Shweta. The Revolution of Human Organoids in Cell Biology. Natur Library, October 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47496/nl.blog.12.

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Organoids are a new research tool derived from human pluripotent or adult stem cells or somatic cells in vitro to form small, self-organizing 3-dimensional structures that simulate many of the functions of native organs
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Marlowe, David H., and Ann E. Norwood. Somatic Consequences and Symptomatic Responses to Stress: Directions for Future Research. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, July 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada374071.

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Brenner, David J. Is Increased Low-dose somatic Radiosensitivity Associated with Increased Transgenerational Germline Mutation. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), October 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/938982.

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Van`t Hof, J., and S. S. Lamm. Cell synchrony and chromosomal protocols for somatic cells of cotton gossypium hirsutum. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), October 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/10121336.

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Khazaie, Khashayarsha. Initiating Events in Prostate Cancer: The Role of Somatic Activation of Beta-Catening. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, April 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada441729.

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