In accordance with the present invention, compounds that inhibit viral replication, preferably Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) replication, have been identified, and methods for their use provided. In one aspect of the invention, compounds useful in the treatment or prevention of a viral infection are provided. In another aspect of the invention, compounds useful in the treatment or prevention of HCV infection are provided.
The present invention provides compounds, pharmaceutical compositions, and methods of using such compounds or compositions for treating infection by a virus, or for affecting viral IBES activity.
Olah et al., Acta Chimica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 1956, vol. 7, p. 443,447
作者:Olah et al.
DOI:——
日期:——
Cross-Cultural Perspectives: Implications for Attachment Theory and Family Therapy
作者:Patricia Minuchin
DOI:10.1111/j.1545-5300.2002.41316.x
日期:2002.9
Cross‐cultural perspectives have always been useful for understanding behavior. They clarify the distinction between aspects that are essentially part of the human condition and those that are the most responsive to variation. The interesting article by Rothbaum and his colleagues is in that tradition, contrasting the cultural values and family patterns in Japanese society with those of Western cultures, including our own, and suggesting that these differences shape the nature and course of attachment. It stimulates questions about what we have taken for granted in our theories and in our evaluations of dysfunctional behavior.