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Monitoring of social necessity in the region of Tabor from the point of view of help with management of hard social situation
NOVÁKOVÁ, Alena
Work is dedicated to the faithful people and their attitudes towards difficult life situations. The theoretical part is divided into three chapters. They are focused on the characteristics of the concept of crisis, its causes, typology, types, process and solutions, as well as the characteristics of the concepts difficult living situation, frustration, conflict, stress, deprivation and the mechanisms of psychological adaptation to stress. The practical part includes the processing, evaluation and subsequent comparison of data collected through questionnaires that were distributed evenly among the members of three churches.
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High mathematics teaching text creation with using of the e-learning
NOVÁKOVÁ, Alena
Teaching text containing the following chapters of higher mathematics: complex numbers, matrices, determinants, numerical solution of equations, differential calculus of functions of several variables, vector analysis, differential equations. The text is supported by illustrated examples with the main aim of using the given mathematical concepts and theorems in physics. Part of this teaching text is its electronic form {\clqq}Electronic textbook of mathematics for physics``.
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Interactions between the soil micro-flora and invertebrates in Slovak and Moravian caves
Lukešová, Alena ; Nováková, Alena
The role of microflora as food for soil invertebrates is well documented. However, data on interactions between communities of organisms living in caves are very limited. Three caves of the Slovak Karst NP (Domica Cave, Dlhá Chodba Cave, Ardovská Cave) and the Amatérská Cave (Moravian Karst) were selected for this study because from visual observations, it was clear that there was some invertebrate activity. The aim of the study was to compare the communities of algae, cyanobacteria and microscopic fungi developing in excrements of cave invertebrates and in the surrounding cave sediment. The richest communities of both algae and microfungi were found in earthworm casts, containing up to two fold more species than in the surrounding sediment (73 species of microscopic fungi in the casts compared to 37 in surrounding cave sediment in the Domica Cave, and 45 vs. 27 species of algae in the Dlhá Chodba Cave).
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