Examples of cultural lag in the following topics:
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- Cultural lag can occur when technological innovation outpaces cultural adaptation.
- The term cultural lag refers to the notion that culture takes time to catch up with technological innovations, and that social problems and conflicts are caused by this lag.
- This delay is the cultural lag.
- Cultural lag creates problems for a society in different ways.
- As example of cultural lag is human embryonic stem cells.
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- Ogburn, in fact, proposed a slightly different variant of soft determinism, in which society must adjust to the consequences of major inventions, but often does so only after a period of cultural lag.
- Cultural lag, a term coined by Ogburn, refers to a period of maladjustment, which occurs when the non-material culture is struggling to adapt to new material conditions.
- Diffusion is the spread of an idea from one cultural group to another, or from one field of activity to another.
- Adjustment is the process by which the non-technical aspects of a culture respond to invention.
- Any retardation of this adjustment process causes cultural lag.
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- The measurement of an exponential bacterial growth curve in batch culture was traditionally a part of the training of all microbiologists.
- In autecological studies, bacterial growth in batch culture can be modeled with four different phases: lag phase, exponential or log phase, stationary phase, and death phase .
- During lag phase, bacteria adapt themselves to growth conditions.
- This basic batch culture growth model draws out and emphasizes aspects of bacterial growth which may differ from the growth of macrofauna.
- In reality, even in batch culture, the four phases are not well defined.
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- The measurement of an exponential bacterial growth curve in batch culture was traditionally a part of the training of all microbiologists.
- When Escherichia coli is exposed to a temperature drop from 37 to 10 degrees Celsius, a four to five hour lag phase occurs and then growth is resumed at a reduced rate.
- During the lag phase, the expression of around 13 proteins, which contain cold shock domains is increased two- to ten-fold.
- Bacterial growth in batch culture can be modeled with four different phases: (A) the lag phase, when the population stays roughly the same; (B) the exponential, or log, phase, when the population grows at an increasing rate; (C) the stationary phase, when population growth stagnates; and (D) the death phase, when bacteria begin to die off and the population decreases in size.
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- Growth in closed culture systems, such as a batch culture in LB broth, where no additional nutrients are added and waste products are not removed, the bacterial growth will follow a predicted growth curve and can be modeled .
- During lag phase, bacteria adapt themselves to growth conditions.
- During the lag phase of the bacterial growth cycle, synthesis of RNA, enzymes and other molecules occurs.
- The bacterial culture is incubated in a closed vessel with a single batch of medium.
- Bacterial growth in batch culture can be modeled with four different phases: lag phase (A), exponential or log phase (B), stationary phase (C), and death phase (D).
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- In practice, the term "cell culture" now refers to the culturing of cells derived from multi-cellular eukaryotes, especially animal cells.
- The historical development and methods of cell culture are closely interrelated to those of tissue culture and organ culture.
- Cultured cells, eggs, and laboratory animals may be used for virus isolation.
- After a variable lag, the cells will attach and spread on the bottom of the container and then start dividing, giving rise to a primary culture.
- Cell cultures vary greatly in their susceptibility to different viruses.
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- Bacterial growth follows three phases: the lag phase, the log phase, and the stationary phase.
- Cell cultures are turbid: they absorb some of the light and let the rest of it pass through.
- Using spectrophotometry for measuring the turbidity of cultures is known as turbidometry.
- Additionally, there are spectrophotometers that require extremely small volumes of culture, as little as 1 microliter .
- This, combined with the stochastic nature of liquid cultures, enables only an estimation of cell numbers.
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- Jet lag is a chronobiological-related problem, similar to issues often induced by shift work.
- To the degree that the body cannot immediately realign these rhythms, it is jet lagged.
- Crossing one or two time zones does not typically cause jet lag.
- A five-hour flight from the east to the west coast of the United States may well result in jet lag.
- Jet lag has been measured with simple analogue scales but a study has shown that these are relatively blunt for assessing all the problems associated with jet lag.
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- Unfortunately, three time lags hinder monetary policy.
- It takes time when the Fed implements a policy until it shows up on the economy, the impact lag.
- Time lags can amplify the business cycle.
- If the administrative lag is one month while the impact lag equals six months, then the Fed's policy takes hold after one year and four months to influence the economy, or 9 + 1 +6.
- Second, the Fed must have control over the intermediate target to overcome the impact lag.
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- In order to modernize socially and economically lagging Russia, Peter the Great introduced sweeping social, administrative, and economic reforms that Westernized Russia to a certain extent yet did not alter deeply feudal divisions in the increasingly authoritarian state.
- While only a small percentage lived in towns, Russian agriculture, with its short growing season, was ineffective and lagged behind that of Western Europe.
- Peter also taxed many Russian cultural customs (such as bathing, fishing, beekeeping, or wearing beards) and issued tax stamps for paper goods.