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1000 results for “gianf”

  1. "Sta nel sogno realizzato
    sta nel mitra lucidato
    nella gioia nella rabbia
    nel distruggere la gabbia
    [...]
    sta nel prendersi la mano
    nel tirare i sampietrini
    nell'incendio di Milano
    nelle spranghe sui fascisti
    nelle pietre sui gipponi
    Sta nei sogni dei teppisti
    e nei giochi dei bambini
    [...]
    ma chi ha detto che non c'è
    ma chi ha detto che non c'è"

    ["Ma chi ha detto che non c'è", Manfredi Gianfranco, LP Ma non è una malattia, Ultima spiaggia, 1976]

    #Manfredi #GianfrancoManfredi #Machihadettochenonce #LosAngeles #Paramount #Riot #protest #protests #skate #skateboarding #news #guerrillanews #guerrilla

  2. "Sta nel sogno realizzato
    sta nel mitra lucidato
    nella gioia nella rabbia
    nel distruggere la gabbia
    [...]
    sta nel prendersi la mano
    nel tirare i sampietrini
    nell'incendio di Milano
    nelle spranghe sui fascisti
    nelle pietre sui gipponi
    Sta nei sogni dei teppisti
    e nei giochi dei bambini
    [...]
    ma chi ha detto che non c'è
    ma chi ha detto che non c'è"

    ["Ma chi ha detto che non c'è", Manfredi Gianfranco, LP Ma non è una malattia, Ultima spiaggia, 1976]

    #Manfredi #GianfrancoManfredi #Machihadettochenonce #LosAngeles #Paramount #Riot #protest #protests #skate #skateboarding #news #guerrillanews #guerrilla

  3. "Sta nel sogno realizzato
    sta nel mitra lucidato
    nella gioia nella rabbia
    nel distruggere la gabbia
    [...]
    sta nel prendersi la mano
    nel tirare i sampietrini
    nell'incendio di Milano
    nelle spranghe sui fascisti
    nelle pietre sui gipponi
    Sta nei sogni dei teppisti
    e nei giochi dei bambini
    [...]
    ma chi ha detto che non c'è
    ma chi ha detto che non c'è"

    ["Ma chi ha detto che non c'è", Manfredi Gianfranco, LP Ma non è una malattia, Ultima spiaggia, 1976]

    #Manfredi #GianfrancoManfredi #Machihadettochenonce #LosAngeles #Paramount #Riot #protest #protests #skate #skateboarding #news #guerrillanews #guerrilla

  4. Montanans:
    Send Gov. Gianforte a veto request to protect transgender and nonbinary Montanans
    #MTPol #MTLeg #MTSession

    HB 121, having passed both the House and the Senate, is now on its way to Gov. Gianforte’s desk. This harmful bill mandates that multi-occupancy restrooms, changing rooms, and sleeping quarters in public facilities be segregated by biological sex, denying transgender and nonbinary individuals the ability to use spaces that align with their gender identity.

  5. A #LineaRadioSavona oggi, con GianFunk abbiamo celebrato i 60 anni dell'Italia nello #spazio , ripercorrendo il lancio del satellite #SanMarco 1 e ricordando l'evento dell'#ASI di #lunedi 16 dicembre!

    Grazie a tutti gli ascoltatori, buon sabato a tutti! 🙏👋🚀

    Crediti foto: #NASA Goddard Library

  6. ✊12 DICEMBRE 1969 - 12 DICEMBRE 2024✊ 🔴⚫️ pre concentramento Mi Sud con Gianfranco Bianchi nel cuore🔴⚫️

    Giovedì 12 dicembre, dalle 17:00 alle 18:00, presso Giardino Gianfranco Bianchi, Via Montegani Via Palmieri, 20141, MI

    ✊12 DICEMBRE 1969 - 12 DICEMBRE 2024✊

    🔴⚫️55 anni dalla strage di piazza Fontana🔴⚫️

    A 55 anni dalla strage di Stato per mano fascista, Milano Sud si muove insieme verso il corteo in occasione dell'anniversario di Piazza Fontana.

    Anche quest'anno all'anniversario della strage si aggiunge quello della scomparsa di Gianfranco Bianchi, che 5 anni fa ci ha lasciato ma che continua ad accompagnarci nelle lotte. L'appuntamento è per questo alle 17 ai giardini a lui dedicati (ex giardini di via Montegani) per un momento di ricordo e per partire insieme verso il corteo cittadino serale

    #Corteo #GianfrancoBianchi #memoria #milanosud #PiazzaFontana #preconcentramento #antifa

  7. Oggi, a #LineaRadioSavona con GianFunk abbiamo investigato su #acs3 un innovativo tipo di #satellite che sfrutta una #vela solare per muoversi nello spazio!

    Grazie a tutti gli ascoltatori, buon sabato a tutti! 🙏👋🚀

    Crediti immagini: #NASA

  8. Partisanship causes Republicans to justify anti-democratic behavior

    The chart in this post is a little hard to parse, but it illustrates a crucial finding from one of the best recent papers on anti-democratic sentiment in America:
    ⭐️how decades of rising partisanship made an anti-democratic GOP possible.

    The paper, from Yale’s Matthew Graham and Milan Svolik, uses a number of methods to examine the effect of partisanship on views of democracy.

    This chart shows a particularly interesting one:
    a “natural experiment” in Montana’s 2017 at-large House campaign, during which Republican candidate #Greg #Gianforte assaulted reporter Ben Jacobs during an attempted interview just before Election Day.

    Because many voters cast their ballots by mail before the assault happened, Graham and Svolik could compare these to the in-person votes after the assault in order to measure how the news of Gianforte’s attack shifted voters’ behavior.

    The blue lines represent precincts where Gianforte did worse on Election Day than in mail-in ballots;
    the red lines represent the reverse.

    What you see is a clear trend:
    In Democratic-leaning and centrist precincts, Gianforte suffered a penalty.
    But in general, the more right-leaning a precinct was, the less likely he was to suffer
    — and the more likely he was to improve on his mail-in numbers.

    For Svolik and Graham, this illustrates a broader point:

    Extreme partisanship creates the conditions for democratic decline.

    If you really care about your side wielding power, you’re more willing to overlook misbehavior in their attempts to win it.

    They find evidence that this could apply to partisans of either major party
    — but only one party nominates candidates like Trump and Gianforte
    (who won not only the 2017 contest but also his reelection bid in 2018 and Montana’s gubernatorial election in 2020).

  9. The head of law enforcement for the department, Dave Loewen, called Mr. Hawkaluk to ask him a favor:

    Could he come into headquarters and write up the wolf?
    And, oh, yeah, Mr. Loewen added,
    the shooter was Governor Gianforte, a famously temperamental man
    who in 2017 was sentenced to 40 hours of community service and 20 hours of anger-management classes
    for assaulting a reporter the night before he won a seat in the House of Representatives.

    Minutes later, Mr. Loewen was told by the leaders of the department that
    Mr. Gianforte’s friend, an outspoken trapper named Matt Lumley, should be credited with the kill.
    Mr. Loewen called Mr. Hawkaluk to relay that instruction.
    The problem: Mr. Gianforte’s name was already in the database as the trapper of record.

    “I could read between the lines,” Mr. Hawkaluk recalled.
    “I said, ‘Whoever you’re talking to over there better get their story straight, because Gianforte called that in as the trapper of record.”

    #BodySlamGuy
    #Gianforte #Montana

    nytimes.com/2024/06/02/us/poli

  10. The game warden in Helena, Mont., received a phone call one morning in March 2021 with a request that he knew might not end well for him.

    His boss and friend at the Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Department asked him to record officially the killing of a wolf, a fairly routine request save for one detail.

    The hunter was the state’s governor, Greg Gianforte.

    “I said I wanted no part of it,” the warden, Justin Hawkaluk, recalled with a barely audible chuckle.

    Mr. Hawkaluk now says his sense of dread was warranted.

    By the time the wolf affair was settled, his superiors had pressured him to lie about the governor’s role, and his boss would be forced out of the department, he told The New York Times in his first interview about the episode.
    He, too, would leave a job he said he loved

    #BodySlamGuy
    #Gianforte #Montana
    nytimes.com/2024/06/02/us/poli

  11. "#Montana Gov. Greg #Gianforte has signed into law a bill that bars the state from considering #climate impacts in its analysis of large projects such as #coal mines and #PowerPlants.

    House Bill 971 [drew] more than 1,000 comments, 95% of which expressed opposition to the measure. "
    Seems ordinary Montanans know this bill doesn't make sense.Looks like they were ignored.

    #EnergyTransition #ClimateDenial #gaslighting
    montanafreepress.org/2023/05/1

  12. Rally at the Montana State Capitol to tell Gianforte to accept $10 million dollars for hungry kids and universal free lunches.

    He has until June 30th to apply.

    Next Monday June 26th, noon, Capitol Steps Flag Plaza.

    #mtpol #mtnews #NotHisForte #mtgov #mtleg #mtkids #feedthekids

    facebook.com/events/s/rally-te

  13. Oggi, a #LineaRadioSavona con GianFunk siamo andati in #Norvegia a scoprire come la missione #Fram2 di #SpaceX potrà aiutarci a capire qualcosa in più sul nostro pianeta!

    Grazie a tutti gli ascoltatori, buon sabato a tutti! 🙏👋🚀

    Crediti Foto: #SpaceX

  14. Voi che andrete a #LuccaComicsAndGames
    Credo che l'idea lanciata da Gianfranco Manfredi sia la migliore risposta verso l'inqualificabile decisione del comune sulla via intitolata a #SandroPertini😄

  15. @black_intellect 🥥 Gov. Gianforte, #DougMastriano, I'm having as hard a time keeping my American #fascists of Italian descent straight in my head as I am with White trash representatives like #Boebert and Sporkle-plenty. 🥥

  16. @black_intellect 🥥 Gov. Gianforte, #DougMastriano, I'm having as hard a time keeping my American #fascists of Italian descent straight in my head as I am with White trash representatives like #Boebert and Sporkle-plenty. 🥥

  17. @black_intellect 🥥 Gov. Gianforte, #DougMastriano, I'm having as hard a time keeping my American #fascists of Italian descent straight in my head as I am with White trash representatives like #Boebert and Sporkle-plenty. 🥥

  18. @black_intellect 🥥 Gov. Gianforte, #DougMastriano, I'm having as hard a time keeping my American #fascists of Italian descent straight in my head as I am with White trash representatives like #Boebert and Sporkle-plenty. 🥥

  19. @black_intellect 🥥 Gov. Gianforte, #DougMastriano, I'm having as hard a time keeping my American #fascists of Italian descent straight in my head as I am with White trash representatives like #Boebert and Sporkle-plenty. 🥥

  20. DATE: May 13, 2026 at 10:00AM
    SOURCE: PSYPOST.ORG

    ** Research quality varies widely from fantastic to small exploratory studies. Please check research methods when conclusions are very important to you. **
    -------------------------------------------------

    TITLE: The human brain processes the passage of time across three distinct stages

    URL: psypost.org/the-human-brain-pr

    A recent study mapping the human brain reveals that our perception of time does not happen all at once, but rather unfolds across a series of distinct physical processing stages. As visual information travels from the back of the brain to the front, different groups of neurons handle specific parts of the timing process, ultimately creating our subjective experience of how long an event lasts. These findings were published in the journal PLOS Biology.

    For decades, researchers have mapped out a broad network of brain regions that become active when people estimate how much time has passed. Studies involving both animals and humans have shown that certain groups of neurons respond to specific durations of time.

    These specialized cells are often arranged in topographic maps across the brain. In these maps, neurons that prefer similar lengths of time are located physically close to one another on the folded outer layer of the brain, known as the cerebral cortex.

    Despite knowing where these timing regions are located, researchers have struggled to understand exactly how they work together. It has been unclear how a physical feature like the duration of a flashing light is transformed into an abstract feeling of passing time.

    To piece together this puzzle, neuroscientist Valeria Centanino and her colleagues Gianfranco Fortunato and Domenica Bueti at the International School for Advanced Studies in Italy conducted an imaging study. They wanted to track how the properties of time-tracking neurons change as signals move through the brain.

    The researchers recruited thirteen healthy volunteers to perform a visual categorization task. First, the participants were trained to memorize a specific reference duration of half a second, which they would use as a mental benchmark.

    During the main experiment, the volunteers watched a series of blurry, flickering circles appear on a screen. Each circle stayed on the screen for a random amount of time, ranging between two-tenths of a second and eight-tenths of a second.

    After each circle disappeared, the participants pressed a button to indicate whether the shape was visible for a longer or shorter time than their internalized reference. While the volunteers performed this task, the researchers recorded their brain activity using an ultra-high-field functional magnetic resonance imaging scanner.

    Functional magnetic resonance imaging is a technology that measures brain activity by detecting changes in blood flow. When a specific area of the brain works harder, it requires more oxygen, and the scanner tracks the oxygen-rich blood rushing to that region.

    The scanner used in this study operates at a magnetic field strength of seven Tesla. This is much stronger than standard hospital scanners, allowing the team to capture highly detailed images of the brain surface.

    With these detailed images, Centanino and her team modeled the behavior of individual populations of neurons. They looked for unimodal tuning, which happens when a group of brain cells responds most strongly to one specific stimulus and less strongly to anything else.

    The researchers found that the way neurons tuned into time changed depending on their location in the brain. They identified three distinct processing stages that form a hierarchy of time perception.

    The first stage occurs in the occipital visual areas, located at the back of the head where the brain first processes sight. Here, the neurons acted like simple timers that gathered sensory information from the eyes.

    In these visual areas, the brain cells showed a strong preference for the longest durations. Their activity increased steadily the longer the shape stayed on the screen, encoding the physical length of the visual event.

    The second stage takes place in the parietal and premotor regions, which sit near the top and middle of the brain. In these areas, the researchers observed a complete topographic map of time.

    Neurons in these middle regions were tuned to the entire range of presented durations. Some groups of cells responded only to brief flashes, while others responded only to medium or long appearances.

    These specialized cells were neatly organized into clusters based on their preferred durations. This suggests that the parietal and premotor regions are responsible for reading out the specific duration of the visual event, allowing the brain to track exactly how much time just passed.

    The final stage happens in the frontal regions of the brain, including the anterior insula and the rostral supplementary motor area. These areas are heavily involved in complex thought, decision making, and self-awareness.

    In these frontal areas, the neurons did not represent the full range of time. Instead, they showed a strong preference for the middle of the time range, which was close to the half-second reference duration the participants had memorized.

    This central preference represented the boundary that participants used to decide whether a duration was short or long. By tracking the exact time at which participants switched their answers from “shorter” to “longer,” the researchers calculated each person’s unique subjective boundary.

    The activity in these frontal regions matched up perfectly with these subjective boundaries. This indicates that the frontal areas take the raw measurement of time and turn it into a personal, abstract categorization.

    “Our results show that time perception is not a unitary process, but the outcome of multiple processing stages distributed across the cerebral cortex,” the authors wrote. “Each stage contributes differently, from encoding physical duration to constructing the subjective experience of time.”

    To interpret the brain scan data, the research team used a mathematical approach called population receptive field modeling. This technique allowed them to estimate the exact time preference of neurons in tiny sections of the brain.

    By mapping these preferences, the team could see exactly which brain folds contained neurons tuned to brief moments and which contained neurons tuned to longer stretches. They also evaluated how these preferences clustered together physically.

    In the visual areas at the back of the brain, the physical clustering of time-sensitive cells was relatively weak. However, in the parietal and frontal regions, neurons with the exact same time preferences were grouped tightly together.

    This tight grouping implies that organizing time into structured maps becomes more important as the brain moves from simply seeing an event to making a decision about it. The brain physically structures its cells to handle the demands of categorizing information.

    Additionally, the researchers noticed a difference between the left and right sides of the brain in the motor areas, which control physical movement. Because the participants used their right hands to press the response buttons, the motor areas in the left hemisphere showed distinct activity patterns.

    These motor areas consistently showed a preference for the shortest possible durations. The researchers suspect this was a byproduct of the brain preparing to make a physical movement as soon as the shape appeared, rather than a true measurement of passing time.

    Another surprising detail emerged in the supplementary motor area, a part of the brain near the top of the head that helps plan movements. The researchers found a clear split in how the front and back sections of this region handled time.

    The back half of the supplementary motor area contained cells tuned to the entire range of durations, reading out the time like a stopwatch. The front half contained the boundary cells that helped categorize the time as short or long.

    This split within a single brain region had been seen previously in animal studies. Finding it in humans suggests that this specific area might act as a central hub where actual time and subjective time are integrated.

    While this imaging study provides a detailed roadmap of visual time perception, it does have a few limitations. The research focused entirely on the cerebral cortex, which is the brain’s folded outer layer.

    The team did not measure activity in deeper brain structures or the cerebellum, which are also known to play roles in processing time. Future studies will need to look at these deeper regions to see how they interact with the cortical maps.

    The experiment was also restricted to visual time perception. It remains an open question whether the brain uses this exact same pathway to process the duration of sounds or physical touches.

    To fully understand the boundary neurons in the frontal lobe, the researchers suggest conducting experiments that test multiple different reference durations. This would reveal whether the boundary cells physically shift their preferences when the rules of the task change.

    Despite these limitations, the research offers a clearer picture of how a simple flash of light turns into a conscious experience of time. It reveals that our sense of time is a collaborative effort, passed along a specialized assembly line inside the head.

    The study, “Neuronal populations across the cortex underlie discrete, categorical, and subjective representations of visual durations,” was authored by Valeria Centanino, Gianfranco Fortunato, and Domenica Bueti.

    URL: psypost.org/the-human-brain-pr

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    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #depression #psychotherapist #TimePerception #BrainTimeProcessing #CorticalTimeMaps #NeuronalTiming #VisualTimeProcessing #PopulationalFieldModeling #PLOSBiology #Neuroscience #TemporalEncoding #BrainHierarchy

  21. "IL RICORDO DI DAX IN VIA BRIOSCHI
    Il momento in cui Davide viene ricordato in via Brioschi, il luogo dove fu ucciso, con le note di "Ma chi ha detto che non c'è" di Gianfranco Manfredi e una torciata. Una corona di fiori è stata posta alla lapide che lo ricorda."
    (Video di @MilInMov)

    #DaxVive #Dax #Milano #G8 #antifa

  22. Recensioni ✍️ 👤 Elles Bailey 📈 43 👥 48.2K 🔗 Can't Take My Story Away 7️⃣ 📅 16-1-2026 🏠 2026 (Cooking Vinyl) #️⃣ Rockblues Dopo vari premi e l'ingresso nelle classifiche Uk, la blues-singer spicca il volo a cura di Gianfranco Marmoro #Ondarock #MusicianSky #MusicSky #Music

    Can't Take My Story Away ...

  23. Zola: ‘Italy must start from the ground up, we must understand importance of young players’

    Gianfranco Zola has called for a fundamental rethink of how Italian football develops its young players, insisting the…
    #Italy #Europe #Europa #EU #Chelsea #England #Italianfootball #LegaPro #Zola
    europesays.com/italy/2342/