Jean david benoliel biography
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Adolescents with borderline personality disorder show a higher response to stress but a lack of self-perception: Evidence through affective computing
Nadège Bourvis (1, 2, 3) , Aveline Aouidad (3, 2, 4) , Michel Spodenkiewicz (5) , Giuseppe Palestra (3) , Jonathan Aigrain (3) , Axel Baptista (1) , Jean-Jacques Benoliel (4) , Mohamed Chetouani (3, 2, 6) , David Cohen (3, 2)
Stress reactivity is a complex phenomenon associated with multiple and multimodal expressions and functions. Herein, we hypothesized that compared with healthy controls (HCs), adolescents with borderline personality disorder (BPD) would exhibit a stronger response to stressors and a deficit in self-perception of stress due to their lack of insight. Twenty adolescents with BPD and 20 matched HCs performed a socially evaluated mental arithmetic test to induce stress. We assessed self- and heteroperception using both human ratings and affective computing-based methods for the automatic extraction of 39 be
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Ouvrages consultés
1BLAKE, Casey Nelson, Beloved Community : The Cultural Criticism of Randolph Bourne, Van Wyck Brooks, Waldo Frank and Lewis Mumford, Chapel Hill et Londres, The University of North Carolina Press, 1990.
2BELLAH, Robert N., MADSEN, Richard, SULLIVAN, William M., SWID-LER, Ann, et TIPTON, Steven M., Habits of the Heart : Individualism and Commitment in American Life, New York, Cambridge, etc. Harper and Row, Perennial Library, 1986.
3BOORSTIN, Daniel J., The Americans : The Democratic Experience, New York, Vintage Books (A Divison of Random House), 1974.
4—————————, The Image : A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America, New York, Random House, Vintage Books, 1992 (First ed. 1961).
5BORDMAN, Gerald Martin, ed., The Oxford Companion to the American Theatre, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1984.
6BRAUDY, Leo, The Frenzy of Renown : Fame and its History, New York, Vintage Books, 1997.
7BROOKS, Van Wyck, America’s Coming-of-Age, (1st ed.1915), Ne
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In Blanche Bendahan’s 1930 award-winning novel, Mazaltob, the eponymous protagonist Mazaltob Macías is often referred to by members of the Jewish community in Tetouan, Morocco, as “the beautiful little girl” or “the beautiful Jewish girl.” Her Uncle Salomon gazes at her and thinks, “What a sweet child! Naïve and beautiful in equal measure!” (Her name might be translated as “Good Luck Messiah.”)
The belle juive (beautiful Jewess) is a stock figure in European literature with a long afterlife, often portrayed as a woman who has to be freed from her tradition and family, embodied in a despicable father or husband. Think of Jessica in The Merchant of Venice, who defies Shylock and elopes with penniless (but Christian) Lorenzo; Rebecca, who is tragically exiled in Walter Scott’s Ivanhoe; the doomed heroine of Halévy’s opera La Juive; but also Deborah Feldman’s semiautobiographical character Esty in the Netflix series Unorthodox, who escapes Satmar Williamsburg for Berlin, le