University of New Mexico Digital Repository
Not a member yet
148775 research outputs found
Sort by
Access Research Materials HSLIC Doesnt Own: Document Delivery & Interlibrary Loan
This informational flyer, Access Research Materials HSLIC Doesn’t Own: Document Delivery & Interlibrary Loan, outlines the services available at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Library and Informatics Center (HSLIC) for obtaining research materials not held by the library. It explains the difference between Interlibrary Loan (ILL)—borrowing materials from other libraries—and Document Delivery—electronic delivery of HSLIC-owned materials. The flyer details eligibility, costs, request procedures, delivery timelines, and support contacts for both services, aiming to help users efficiently access needed articles, book chapters, and more.https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/hslic-posters-presentations/1191/thumbnail.jp
Enhancing MIS Risk Management Using Neutrosophic Logic: Applications in Investment, Credit Scoring, and Supply Chain Disruption
A Novel Pythagorean Neutrosophic Decision-Making Model for Cultural Creative Product Development in Digital Intelligent Manufacturing Environments
Q-Neutrosophic Set for Green Technology Innovation Assessment in New Energy Vehicle Enterprises: A Performance-Based Approach
A Neutrosophic Communication Influence Model for International Dissemination Effectiveness Analysis of Traditional Chinese Ethnic Music Culture in the New Media Era
Parameterized Neutrosophic Hesitant Fuzzy Soft Sets for Modeling Cross-Cultural Communication from the Perspective of International Big Data Dissemination
Characterized trigonometric quadripartitioned neutrosophic sets based on weighted operators
Co-Parenting with the Land in Amazonian Ecuador: Speech, Breath, and Personhood Among the Napo, Runa
This paper explores the processes of personhood in lowland Amazonia and specifically, Kichwa-speaking communities in Ecuador. In lowland Amazonia, personhood is developed through a multitude of social processes in contrast to the Western perception of birth as the defining moment of personhood. As noted in the current literature, an infants\u27 personhood emerges through their relationships with family and community This thesis investigates whether a similar process exists among Kichwa speakers. While Kichwa infants undergo processes akin to their lowland Amazonian neighbors, such as body manipulation and food taboos, shared breath, often through speech, is vital to the ebbs and flows of personhood. This shared breath connects generations and fosters relationships between humans and the nonhuman environment, which is integral to the survival and thriving of the human ayllu and the processual attainment of personhood for infants and children
A Long, Static Prelude to the Ceramic Producing Southwestern Cultures of the Christian Era: The Archaic Occupation of New Mexico and Southern Arizona
Despite over 100 years of inquiry into the Archaic Southwest, the period remains poorly understood in comparison to the preceding Paleoindian and succeeding Ceramic periods. This dissertation provides the results of three studies concerning the Archaic history of the Southwest. The first presents a review and reanalysis of the Grants San Jose Sites, a group of Archaic occupations in the shadow of Mount Taylor in West-Central New Mexico. The second two papers are dedicated to the arrival of agriculture in the southern Southwest. The first is focused on Cortaro projectile points and the possibility that groups manufacturing these objects are responsible for the arrival of cultigens sometime before 4100 cal BP. The second is focused on the dating of the Early Agricultural Period occupation of McEuen Cave, a rock shelter near Safford, Arizona, with evidence for both maize and squash cultivation extending from 4100 cal BP to 750 cal BP
Plant Reproductive Strategies Shift in Response to Restoration Using Beaver Dam Analogs
As riparian communities become increasingly degraded, restoration treatments are being implemented in streams to recover ecosystem functions. In the Jemez Mountains, beaver dam analogs (BDAs) are used to restore degraded streams by connecting the floodplain and increasing the extent of anoxic soil conditions. These environmental disturbances are expected to alter how riparian plants recruit, particularly their allocation to seed-based and vegetative regeneration strategies. We investigated whether BDAs and associated changes in soil water filled pore space (WFPS) affected riparian plant recruitment. We investigated the number of flowering stems as a proxy for seed-based regeneration and rhizome length and mass as a measure of vegetative regeneration. At 40-50% WFPS, plants increased investments in rhizomes and decreased investments in flowering stems. Results suggest that disturbances following restoration treatments are likely to impact plant recruitment by both altering mean recruitment and shifting plants’ relative investment in seed-based versus vegetative reproduction