Examples of incomplete dominance in the following topics:
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- With the inclusion of incomplete dominance, codominance, multiple alleles, and mutant alleles, the inheritance of traits is complex process.
- The allele for red flowers is incompletely dominant over the allele for white flowers.
- In this case, the wild-type allele is dominant over all the others, chinchilla is incompletely dominant over Himalayan and albino, and Himalayan is dominant over albino.
- These pink flowers of a heterozygote snapdragon result from incomplete dominance.
- Discuss incomplete dominance, codominance, and multiple alleles as alternatives to dominance and recessiveness
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- A passing chord that prolongs the above T1–T3progression would then be a dominant chord (D precedes T) with scale-degree 2 in the bass (the passing tone between scale degrees 1 and 3): D2.
- In harmonic writing, the same effect is obtained by an incomplete neighbor chord.
- The function of a neighbor chord follows the same principle as the passing or incomplete neighbor chord.
- Divider chords almost always prolong tonic function, and can do so using either subdominant or dominant dividers.
- One other common pattern is to use IV (S) as a complete or incomplete neighbor to I6 (T).
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- In other words, tonic can be triggered by T1, subdominant by S2 or S4, and dominant by D5.
- In harmonic writing, the same effect is obtained by an incomplete neighbor chord.
- Thus instead of a passing motion of T(1 D2p 3), a substitution pattern in the bass would produce T(1 D4i 3), with the i denoting an incomplete neighbor chord.
- The function of a neighbor chord follows the same principle as the passing or incomplete neighbor chord.
- Divider chords almost always prolong tonic function, and can do so using either subdominant or dominant dividers.
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- Esping-Andersen constructed the welfare regime typology acknowledging the ideational importance and power of the three dominant political movements of the long 20th century in Western Europe and North America: Social Democracy, Christian Democracy and Liberalism.
- Christian-democratic welfare states are based on the principle of subsidiarity and the dominance of social insurance schemes, offering a medium level of decommodification and a high degree of social stratification.
- On the other hand, the liberal regime is based on the notion of market dominance and private provision; ideally, the state only interferes to ameliorate poverty and provide for basic needs, largely on a means-tested basis.
- Income redistribution, through programs such as the Earned income tax credit (EITC), has been defended on the grounds that the market cannot provide goods and services universally, while interventions going beyond transfers are justified by the presence of imperfect information, imperfect competition, incomplete markets, externalities, and the presence of public goods.
- Between 1932 and 1981, modern American liberalism dominated U.S. economic policy and the entitlements grew along with American middle class wealth.
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- Heuristics are simple guidelines that people use to make decisions, come to judgements, and solve problems, typically when facing incomplete information.
- When in competition for scarce resources, such as housing or employment, dominant groups create prejudiced "legitimizing myths" to provide moral and intellectual justification for their dominant position over other groups.
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- B indicates an "incomplete" spinal cord injury where sensory but not motor function is preserved below the neurological level and includes the sacral segments S4-S5.
- This is typically a transient phase and if the person recovers any motor function below the neurological level, that person essentially becomes a motor incomplete, i.e.
- In an "incomplete" injury, some or all of the functions below the injured area may be unaffected.
- An incomplete spinal cord injury involves preservation of motor or sensory function below the level of injury in the spinal cord.
- Most patients with incomplete injuries recover at least some function.
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- On the other hand, these investments can be seen as a relationship of domination.
- Contemporary societies have become so porous and interconnected (a process that scholars have termed globalization) that to ignore the global patterns would be to present an incomplete picture of any social situation .
- This constantly reinforces the dominance of the core countries.
- Domination (not just economic, but also cultural and linguistic) still continues to occur even though poor countries are no longer colonies.
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- Instead, income redistribution has been defended on the grounds that the market cannot provide goods and services universally, while interventions going beyond transfers are justified by the presence of imperfect information, imperfect competition, incomplete markets, externalities, and the presence of public goods.
- Between 1932 and 1981, modern liberalism dominated U.S. economic policy, and the entitlements grew along with American middle class wealth.
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- These categories are traditionally called tonic (T), subdominant (S—also predominant, P or PD), and dominant (D).
- Each of the three harmonic functions—tonic (T), subdominant (S), and dominant (D) —have characteristic scale degrees.
- A dominant chord with ti in the bass is D7.
- If context tells us it is likely a dominant chord, rather than subdominant, we can label it D2.
- This rules out II (a subdominant chord) but keeps open multiple dominant options like V6/4 or VII6 until we are able to make a final determination.
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- Though individually we may consider each of the two non-chord tones to be incomplete neighbors (below), working together in the double-neighbor figure they balance each other out and create a contiguous whole with the overall stability of a complete neighbor.
- The incomplete neighbor tone is an unaccented non-chord tone that is approached by leap and proceeds by step to an accented chord tone.
- Broadly speaking an incomplete neighbor tone is any non-chord tone a step away from a chord tone that proceeds or follows it (and is connected on the other side by leap), but other kinds of incomplete neighbor tones have special names and roles that follow below.
- An appoggiatura is a kind of incomplete neighbor tone that is accented, approached by leap (usually up), and followed by step (usually down, but always in the opposite direction of the preceding leap) to a chord tone.
- An escape tone, or echappée, is a kind of incomplete neighbor tone that is unaccented, preceded by step (usually up) from a chord tone, and followed by leap (usually down, but always in the opposite direction of the preceding step).