103,985 research outputs found
Raymond T. Entenmann and Miss Maria Naylor
Raymond T. Entenmann (left) checking over the inaugural catalog of the museum with Miss Maria Naylor (right), curator of the Carter collection. Fort Worth Star-Telegram Morning January 23, 1961.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1960s/1329/thumbnail.jp
Megatrygon Last, Naylor & Manjaji-Matsumoto 2016
Genus Megatrygon Last, Naylor & Manjaji-Matsumoto, 2016b Smalleye Stingray Megatrygon Last, Naylor & Manjaji-Matsumoto, 2016b: 356. Type species Trygon microps Annandale, 1908, by original designation (also monotypic).Published as part of White, William T. & Ko'Ou, Alfred, 2018, An annotated checklist of the chondrichthyans of Papua New Guinea, pp. 1-82 in Zootaxa 4411 (1) on page 56, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4411.1, http://zenodo.org/record/122187
Glaucostegidae Last, Seret & Naylor 2016
Family Glaucostegidae Last, Séret & Naylor 2016c Giant GuitarfishesPublished as part of White, William T. & Ko'Ou, Alfred, 2018, An annotated checklist of the chondrichthyans of Papua New Guinea, pp. 1-82 in Zootaxa 4411 (1) on page 49, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4411.1, http://zenodo.org/record/122187
Centrophorus longipinnis White, Ebert & Naylor 2017
Centrophorus longipinnis White, Ebert & Naylor, 2017 Longfin Gulper Shark Centrophorus longipinnis White, Ebert & Naylor, 2017: 86, figs 11–15. Holotype: NMMB-P 15756. Type locality: Chenggong, Taiwan. Local synonymy: White et al., 2018: 46, figs (PNG). PNG voucher material: CSIRO H 8103-01 (paratype), pregnant female 890 mm TL, Huon Gulf, off Lae, 6°45.147’ S, 147°2.783’ E, 460 m depth, 4 May 2017; CSIRO H 8103-02 (paratype), late-term embryo 350 mm TL, taken from CSIRO H 8103-01. Remarks: Two specimens recently caught in the Huon Gulf off Lae which became types in the recent species description. Also known from Taiwan and Indonesia.Published as part of White, William T. & Ko'Ou, Alfred, 2018, An annotated checklist of the chondrichthyans of Papua New Guinea, pp. 1-82 in Zootaxa 4411 (1) on page 13, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4411.1, http://zenodo.org/record/122187
Perspectives on Critical Design: a Conversation with Ralph Ball and Maxine Naylor
This paper features an edited conversation with designers Ralph Ball and Maxine Naylor. It explores their thinking in relation to critical design.
In the preface to 'Form Follows Idea' (Ball & Naylor, 2005) Jeremy Myerson describes Ball and Naylor as being regarded among Britain’s most thoughtful furniture designers.
In 1985 Ball formed a design partnership with Maxine Naylor a reputable experimental designer maker. Together they began to challenge the boarders between art, craft and design. They have exhibited work internationally and held teaching positions in colleges in the UK and USA. Over the course of a decade from 1985 Ball taught on Furniture, Jewellery and Industrial design at the Royal College of Art where Naylor taught on Furniture Design, directing the course between 1995 and 1998. Today Ralph Ball is Professor of Design at Central Saint Martins University of the Arts London and Maxine Naylor is Professor of Design and Director of the Design Research Institute University of Brighton.
Through practice and academic tenure they have developed a distinctive approach to practice based research and refined their critical perspectives. They describe themselves as critical designers and use design as a critical, visual discourse to communicate ideas about design culture and society today. Taking experimentation as a research method they subject their ideas to a critical process of refutation. They question the work through a scholarly approach that challenges protocols of design to enhance the design profession.
In this conversation the designer’s concepts of ‘open-process’ and ‘design poetics’ are discussed. They describe their role acting as critics of design from within design practice. They outline their thoughts on the increasingly un-ideological culture of industrial design. They describe how through playful experiment they question the value of repetition in design and mass production of products. They do this by taking modernist axioms to extremes and ‘embedding narrative’ into objects as commentary on the state of contemporary design.
Supplementing the conversation the author offers his reflections. Primarily this exposes a form of critical design that differs significantly from popular and often technologically orientated notions of critical design
Pupillometry as a window to listening effort: interactions between hearing status, hearing aid technologies and task difficulty during speech recognition
Kramer, S.E. [Promotor]Lunner, T. [Promotor]Zekveld, A.A. [Copromotor]Naylor, G. [Copromotor
Pupil dynamics in response to light and effortful listening: Unraveling the role of the parasympathetic nervous system
Kramer, S.E. [Promotor]Lunner, T. [Promotor]Zekveld, A.A. [Copromotor]Naylor, G. [Copromotor
Taeniura lessoni Last, White & Naylor 2016
Taeniura lessoni Last, White & Naylor, 2016f Oceania Fantail Ray Taeniura lessoni Last, White & Naylor, 2016f: 387, Figs 8–12. Holotype: CSIRO H 7724-01. Type locality: Landoro Passage off Uepi Island, Marovo Lagoon, Solomon Islands. Local synonymy: Trygon halgani Lesson, 1829: 100 (Port Praslin [=Lambom], New Ireland). Taeniura lymma — Müller & Henle, 1841: 171 (New Ireland); Günther, 1910 (in part): 495 (New Ireland); Munro, 1958: 114 (New Ireland). Taeniura lessoni —Last et al., 2016f: 392 (Kokopo, East New Britain; Kavieng, New Ireland); Last et al., 2016a: 605 (PNG); White et al., 2018: 258, figs (PNG). PNG voucher material: (2 spec.) MNHN A 7994 (2 spec.), female 147 mm DW, male 148 mm DW, Port Praslin, New Ireland, 1822-1825. Remarks: First recorded from PNG by Lesson (1829) who described it as a new species, Trygon halgani, based on material from Waigeo, Indonesia and Port Praslin [=Lambom], New Ireland. Since the illustration and description in Lesson (1829) highlights the blue stripes on the tail, which T. lessoni lacks, T. halgani is considered a junior synonym of T. lymma. Underwater photographs from Kavieng district (New Ireland) and off Kokopo (East New Britain) confirm this species from PNG.Published as part of White, William T. & Ko'Ou, Alfred, 2018, An annotated checklist of the chondrichthyans of Papua New Guinea, pp. 1-82 in Zootaxa 4411 (1) on page 61, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4411.1, http://zenodo.org/record/122187
Resurrection of the family Aetobatidae (Myliobatiformes) for the pelagic eagle rays, genus Aetobatus
White, William T., Naylor, Gavin J. P. (2016): Resurrection of the family Aetobatidae (Myliobatiformes) for the pelagic eagle rays, genus Aetobatus. Zootaxa 4139 (3): 435-438, DOI: http://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4139.3.1
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