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jobrxiv · 4 months
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Postdoctoral Research Fellow in paediatric brain imaging UCL Division of Biosciences Project with @LFabriziUCL and @EmilyDevNeuro. Study sensory development in preterm-born infants and children to identify neurodevelopmental risks See the full job description on jobRxiv: https://jobrxiv.org/job/ucl-division-of-biosciences-27778-postdoctoral-research-fellow-in-paediatric-brain-imaging/?feed_id=68982 #brain_mapping #Computational_Neuroscience #EEG #neurodevelopmental_disorders #neuroimaging #ScienceJobs #hiring #research
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Body Powder Market Key Companies and Analysis, Top Trends by 2030
The global body powder market is projected to witness a CAGR of 5.5% over the assessment timeline of 2022-2030.
Body powder is a cosmetic item intended to remove extra oil and moisture from the skin. Additionally, it can be applied to lessen rubbing between clothing and skin. Body powders come in a variety of compositions, including talc, cornstarch, pine pollen, and pearl powder. Women typically use body powder to keep their skin smooth and dry. Men utilise them to absorb sweat and lessen body odour. Body powders are often used by kids to avoid diaper rash. Body powders come in a variety of scents, including lavender, rose, jasmine, and vanilla.
Investigations were done into how roughness, mean diameter, and specific surface area affected ejection pressure, residual die pressure, lubrication index, and tablet hardness. Grades of talc that were microcrystalline, macrocrystalline, and slightly macrocrystalline were examined. The reduction of friction and wear by the use of colloidal suspensions of ceramic particles in lubricating fluids is a technique that might help to create lubricants that are both eco-friendly and energy-efficient. Commercial talc powder was evaluated as an extreme pressure lubricating oil additive at various temperatures and amounts. The highest lubricity was reached at a temperature of 100°C and a concentration of 0.15 wt percent, when dynamic and static friction coefficients were over 30% lower than with reference lubricating oil alone.
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Global Body Powder Market- Segmental assessment
By Type
Talcum Powder
Corn Flour
Pine Pollen
Pearl Powder
By Application
Men
Women
Children
The women segment is poised to amass notable gains over the estimated timeframe owing to the high appearance and hygiene consciousness among the female population.
Top players profiled:-
Burt’s Bees, Baby Bjorn, BabyLabs, Eva Longoria, AVON, Lady Primrose, Prince Matchabelli, and Johnson & Johnson.
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notanotherinfjblog · 2 years
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Have you ever had an infj teacher? What sorts of role models do you use, if you have them, in order to succeed?
Hello! :)
I do believe that I've had an INFJ teacher once. I can only type her in retrospect since I graduated quite a while ago, but I do think so. She was my German teacher and her teaching style was very unusual compared to every other class I've ever had because she hardly spoke. You see, she'd present us with a specific question about the book/poem/etc. we were currently reading and then have us students figure it out in the plenum. We'd openly discuss the issue from every possible angle and zero in on the answer together while she sat at the front and listened and only gave a tiny tip or food for thought when we strayed too far away from the point. I'm not sure if everyone was such a fan of this teaching style, but I certainly was.
But to be honest, I don't do role models really. I've never really seen a point in idolising a single person and then striving to become more like them. I just watch people and pick and choose what I want to learn from them. But mostly, I learn from them that it's okay to be how I am already. You see, I have the issue of being very very detached in social situations. It's an Ni thing. I can't function before taking a step back and observing everyone first to figure out the social rules of the situation. I can't just walk in and exist as a person. So I stand and watch, but then I worry about how weird I must come across in doing so. I worked in a babylab at a university before and I kept beating myself up about being so awkward with the parents, with the infants, with everything and everyone. Until one day, another INFJ researcher (and much older than me) was there for her own experiment too and it was quite eye-opening because I suddenly saw my own behaviour in someone else. For the first time, I had forced myself to sit down on the floor with the little girl I had just tested in an effort to appear more active and less detached and weird, and then I saw this INFJ researcher come out of the lab into the hall with us and she did exactly what I'd been doing these past months: she stood in my exact spot in front of the wall and just watched us. Sometimes she'd smile in response to something the parents said or something the baby did, but other than that, she just stood there silently, and for the first time, I saw my own behaviour from an outside perspective and I realised that it's okay to be like this. She didn't come across as creepy or weird or awkward or shy. Just different, but it was okay. Similarly, I love watching my ESFJ friend being socially awkward because he's one of the sweetest souls to ever walk this planet, but he keeps beating himself up about not being nice enough. I always worry that my words were inappropriate or hurtful or mean when I didn't intend them to be and then I get hit by regret immediately, but I never say anything. But then there are these moments when my ESFJ friend asks someone if he hurt their feelings earlier with what he said because that wasn't his intention at all. And everyone he asks these kinds of questions is always surprised by this. My ESTJ friend once literally told him that he could throw an axe at her and she still wouldn't be angry with him because she knows him and knows that he never ever means to hurt anyone, and he got real quiet and said that maybe he should stop giving himself such a hard time. I watch him and learn through him that, one, I should be more vocal about my social insecurities, and two, there is no need to be so worried about this all the time.
But of course, there are other things I take away from other people as well. I look at my former ENTP professor joke around and almost break his neck every week by being too clumsy, but no one thinks he's an idiot, everyone just finds him endearing. I look at my former INTP supervisor and professor who taught me so so much about how to be a good researcher and even though I haven't seen her in years, I still I have this voice in my head telling me that I have to make her proud with the work that I do. I look at my ESTJ friend who is so different from me, but who never shies away from jokingly flirt with all of her friends and telling us how much she loves us and how cool we are, who openly gets annoyed with my everyday uselessness, but still is the first person to offer a helping hand, always. I look at my INTP dad who is so bad at reading social cues and anything that has to do with emotions, but who still taught me to always press my thumbs (it's like crossing your fingers in other parts of the world) when I hear a siren to send a little bit of luck their way to anyone who needs it if there's nothing else I can do to help. I look at my INTJ brother who is a hopeless case when it comes to avoiding confrontations and I hate him for it, but from watching him fearlessly create conflicts with people, I still learn that yeah, sometimes you have to fight, even when everything within you is screaming not to, and he shows me how it's done. I look at my ESFP friend who is so unafraid of wearing her feelings on her face. She's so remarkably unafraid of crying and screaming and laughing with all her heart, and I learn that it's okay not to hide everything away. And I look at my INFP friend hiding everything away to spare other people from witnessing his misery as he says, and I learn how to be the kind of friend that other people have been to me: to simply offer a shoulder and not force him to speak, but to always pepper in my love and support for anything he does so that maybe one day, he feels safe enough to come out of his shell.
We need other people to see ourselves and we need other people to grow. I am but a culmination of everyone around me and they have always been the best of me. I think my love for them derailed this post a bit, but I stand by this: so so many people have been so incredibly kind to me and to each other, even when they didn't think they were, and so they all become a role model to become the best version of myself, to make them proud, to be kind. I strive to never take anything for granted. Someone holding a door open for me or stepping aside when they see me passing through, someone smiling at me, someone wishing me a nice weekend. These are all acts of kindness and I want to be kind, too. And they show me how to be.
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simplykass · 2 years
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Happy 11th month babylabs 😘 your milestones unlock for this month 🔓 ✅gestures babye ✅ flying kiss ✅ beautiful eyes ✅ duck face (whenever we say baho) 😂 Oh my G! 1 month to go may toddler na kami ❤️ iloveyou so much #ArissaClarkElerie https://www.instagram.com/p/Cd-X7CqrRZc/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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fortuneaday · 6 years
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what is my fortune? :^)
Giving to a friend will deepen your connection.
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n-stability · 6 years
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imlisabtw · 7 years
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Oh god 😩👑😍
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lekapsch62 · 4 years
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So good I had to share! Check out all the items I'm loving on @Poshmarkapp #poshmark #fashion #style #shopmycloset #babylabs #vincecamuto #bke: https://posh.mk/hFwyyn7j00
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zoofleece · 5 years
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Regardless of the parents’ color, a single litter can include black, yellow, and chocolate puppies. There are two genesthat cause the pigmentation of the coat, so the variation can be just as common as different hair colors in a human family. #zoofleece #labs #labradorretriever #funfacts #chocolatelab #animalsweater #animals #dogs #pups #repuplican #chocolatelab_squad #chocolatelabpuppy #chocolatelabradors #chocolatelaboftheday #labradorretrieversofinstagram #cute #babylabs #dog #science #genes #litter #dogs_of_instagram #puppies #puppy #puppylove #puppygram #dogsofinstaworld #dogsitting (at Brooklyn, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bykde3iJynA/?igshid=1mhom6nlrxt03
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sharingoing · 5 years
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[orochimaru voice] babylab
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jobrxiv · 5 months
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Postdoctoral Research Fellow in paediatric brain imaging UCL Division of Biosciences Project with @LFabriziUCL and @EmilyDevNeuro. Study sensory development in preterm-born infants and children to identify neurodevelopmental risks See the full job description on jobRxiv: https://jobrxiv.org/job/ucl-division-of-biosciences-27778-postdoctoral-research-fellow-in-paediatric-brain-imaging/?feed_id=66601 #ScienceJobs #hiring #research London #UnitedKingdomUK #PostdoctoralFellow #Researcher #Scientist
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margauxbonne · 6 years
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Can't believe this pic actually happened! After several dismal attempts to take a fam selfie, someone took pity on us and took our photo 😂😂😂 The boys and I checked out my alma mater @swinburne today as Darius took part in a #babylab research... 📸 by random and very kind student 🙌 by Darius, only way he would partake in the shoot #teambonne #takingitbacktotheolskool #wonderfulwednesdays xoxo (at Swinburne University of Technology)
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notanotherinfjblog · 2 years
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Hi, when our cognitive functions become what they are? Do you have any opinions about it? Was there any research done into it, that you know of? My guess would be: early childhood, but I'm not sure. Another question related to it: if it happens in early childhood, what might be influencing our preference of "choosing" the particular functions? Imitation of the parental figures or rather trauma? Maybe Both? Maybe something else? Maybe it differs for Introverts and Extraverts? Any thoughts?
Interesting questions! The only proper research that I know of was done by Dario Nardi who used EEG to analyse activation patterns of certain regions in the neocortex of the brain and he found that the eight cognitive functions basically represent a specific kind of such an activation pattern. I do recommend looking into his research.
That leads me to believe that we actually don't choose our particular functions. I think it's most likely a genetic disposition. We are born with a brain that is wired a certain way. Even though the brain is plastic, which means that it's able to change (i.e. open new pathways between two regions, strengthening a skill, losing a skill, etc.), I doubt that someone with a predisposition of becoming an Se-dom could turn out to become an Ne-dom in reality. I've worked in a babylab before where we tested infants on their cognitive abilities and when interacting with these really small children that were all exactly the same age (with a tiny range of just 2 weeks), I always found it fascinating how differently each of them reacted to everything. Sometimes we'd test 7 babies on the same day one after the other and at 9 months of age, they already displayed vast differences in their personality and their approach to processing the world. There were those that had to touch everything, look at everything and never sat still. But there was also one who just quietly sat there, hardly moving, observing us people really closely, but didn't really care much about anything else. I'm only guessing here, but I do believe that this very first style of approach is the work of the developing dominant function.
I also always find it interesting to look at families here because I don't think I've ever seen two members of a nuclear family share the same MBTI type, but particularly siblings are typically, not always, but typically relatively closely related types. If we take my own family as an example, we get an INTP father and an ESFJ mother with an INTJ and an INFJ child. That's three intuitives, two of them NTs and two Ni-doms, and also two FJs. Note that neither of our parents actually has Ni in their functions stack, so I very much doubt that it's a thing of parental imitation as a factor. And thinking about all the people who are at odds with their parents (abusive relationships aside, just difficult relationships in general), the difficulties often stem from both parties not understanding each other's thought processes. Nothing either of them does makes any sense to the other and so all decisions either of them makes seem wrong to the other because they really just don't understand the thought process behind it. But this is partly where exposure comes in. Let's just call it nurture. If our own type is determined by nature, then the way we relate to other people is determined by both nature and nurture. It's easy for an ISFP to relate to an ESFP because they are similar types (nature). Yet over time, we may develop a bias for what kinds of functions we subconsciously look for in other people. For example, my ESFJ mother first married an INTP, then an ISTP, both Ti-doms while Ti is her weakest function. Subconsciously, she was looking for someone to compensate for her weakness. But lifelong experiences with people of a certain group (e.g. TJs) may make us appreciate them more and make us get along with them better than other types because we've learned to understand the workings of their stronger functions (Te in this case) even if we don't share them with them (nurture).
So we may not have any say in how our brain is built and thus can't have any preferences to determine our own functions, we can in fact develop preferences for functions in other people that we want to surround ourselves with. The same can be said about which art we like ("art" referring here to paintings, books, music, films etc.). For instance, I know that I'm heavily biased towards Fe and I do notice in myself that I almost exclusively enjoy stories created by people with Fe somewhere in their stack, particularly ENTPs, while stories created by NTJs make me greatly uncomfortable because I appreciate the Ni undertones, but the entire thing has a Te twist to it that deeply unsettles me, and stories by FPs often make little sense to me. These are some preferences that I believe to be a result of both nature and nurture. I actually have more to say about the relationship between creating art and MBTI, but I'll save that for another day.
Concerning your question of when the functions develop, it's commonly said that they properly develop one after the other. So we develop our dominant function from birth on and the auxiliary pops up a while later and develops in tandem, though lagging behind the dominant one. But the older we get, the more secure we become in our usage of our weaker functions as well. Interestingly, I remember Dario Nardi mentioning in his book ("Neuroscience of Personality") that he chose to only examine subjects between the ages of 18 and 25 in his study because people older than that might be either too specialised in certain functions or too flexible in their functions use that the EEG results could be less clear than in youth.
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simplykass · 2 years
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To my babylabs, Thank you for coming into my life, it's better to be late than never 😘❤️ I was already at the edge of loosing faith of having my own baby, and then you came. All the excitement and happiness I felt at that very moment are all unexplainable, and at the first moment I held you, you are the best one. I know I have my forever in you 😘❤️ ILoveyou so much! Thank you for being your Mom! You are the definition of Motherhood in Me 😘❤️ And Happy Mother's Day to all the Moms out there, always remember we are all loved. ❤️ https://www.instagram.com/p/CdSD5zfp3hj/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Med. Tech. ... ... pero minsan Nanny 🤣😂😍 Thank youuuu Bebeh Yan-yan sa pag-duty ulit. 😂😘💕 . . "Medical Technologist / Laboratory Scientist An unknown profession to some, A not so important to many, It's because we just remain quiet and unseen, But we see things beyond the capacity of the naked eye, And we know the condition of patients without even seeing them. We may not take care of patients but we care about what's wrong with them. We may not charm doctors, but they rely on us. WE PLAY THE ESSENTIAL PART as BACKBONE of the DIAGNOSTIC TEAM." 💉❤️ . . #LabBaby | #BabyLab | #MedTechLife | #LabLife | #LaboratoryScientist | #MedicalTechnologist | #MedTech | #ClinicalLaboratory | #Diagnostic | #Health | #Government | #Profession | #Vocation ||
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voila14-blog · 6 years
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🌷 W E L C O M E 🌷 @voila_14 #studio #voilà #tessuti #sartoriaitaliana #madeinitaly #handmade #igersnapoli #babylab #pochettepersonalizzate #stripes #picoftheday #today #todayslook #flowers #tailor #workshop (presso Voilà)
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