6,322 research outputs found

    John Weidner

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    John Henry Weidner, born Johan Hendrik Weidner on October 22, 1912, in Brussels, Belgium, to a Dutch Seventh-day Adventist family, provides Holocaust liberator testimony as the leader of the Dutch-Paris escape network during WWII. Interviewer: Rabbi Samuel Kenner. Produced by the Holocaust Center, Peabody, Massachusetts, and filmed at Cablevision, Peabody, Mass

    Data for: Classification methods for point clouds in rock slope monitoring: a novel machine learning approach and comparative analysis

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    Data for the following submission: Title: Classification methods for point clouds in rock slope monitoring: a novel machine learning approach and comparative analysis Weidner, L.1*, Walton, G.1, Kromer, R.1 1Colorado School of Mines, Golden, USA *Corresponding author email: [email protected] In the event the manuscript is unavailable, please reach out to us for a copy. The main contents of this file are as follows: -Supplementary figures referenced in the manuscript -All processed point clouds used in the through-time analysis. (~9.3 GB) -Scripts used to calculate the results shown in Figures 11, 12 and 13. (~1.6 GB) -Numeric data in other tables, graphs, and figures. Due to the nature of the research, many large point clouds are created, too many to be all uploaded to this repository. If you are looking for data that is not provided in this dataset, please reach out to the authors and we would be happy to provide any additional data. Scripts labeled "RUNME" are found in the main file directory for creating the ML method results ('tests_RUNME.m'), and for hybrid and masking results. For the most part, scripts can be run without modification and should provide results (assuming the required MATLAB toolboxes are installed) Note that for hybrid and masking, multiple runs of the script are required, changing the filenames at the beginning of the script for each of the four dates calculated. The Random Forest TreeBagger object ('tb_t14_jun16dec18') is also included and all the feature sets used for training and validation ('date_struct.mat')

    Data for: A Hybrid Random Forest Algorithm for Accurate Multi-Feature Point Cloud Classification of Rock Slopes

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    Data for the following submission:Title: A Hybrid Random Forest Algorithm for Accurate Multi-Feature Point Cloud Classification of Rock SlopesWeidner, L.1*, Walton, G.1, Kromer, R.11Colorado School of Mines, Golden, USA*Corresponding author email: [email protected] the event the manuscript is unavailable, please reach out to us for a copy.The main contents of this file are as follows:-All processed point clouds used in the through-time analysis. (~9.3 GB)-Scripts used to calculate the results shown in Figures 11, 12 and 13. (~1.6 GB)-Numeric data in other tables, graphs, and figures.Due to the nature of the research, many large point clouds are created, too many to be all uploaded to this repository.If you are looking for data that is not provided in this dataset, please reach out to the authors and we would be happy to provide any additional data.Scripts labeled "RUNME" are found in the main file directory for creating the ML method results ('tests_RUNME.m'), and for hybrid and masking results. For the most part, scripts can be run without modification and should provide results (assuming the required MATLAB toolboxes are installed)Note that for hybrid and masking, multiple runs of the script are required, changing the filenames at the beginning of the script for each of the four dates calculated.The Random Forest TreeBagger object ('tb_t14_jun16dec18') is also included and all the feature sets used for training and validation ('date_struct.mat')

    Ixodes succineus Weidner 1964

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    232. Ixodes succineus Weidner, 1964. A fossil species.Published as part of Guglielmone, Alberto A., Nava, Santiago & Robbins, Richard G., 2023, Geographic distribution of the hard ticks (Acari: Ixodida: Ixodidae) of the world by countries and territories, pp. 1-274 in Zootaxa 5251 (1) on page 34, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5251.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/770419

    First person – Jacqueline Weidner

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    First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Biology Open (BiO), helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Jacqueline Weidner is first author on ‘Hormones as adaptive control systems in juvenile fish’, published in BiO. Jacqueline conducted the research described in this article while a PhD student at the University of Bergen, Norway. She is now an assistant professor at the Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway, investigating sexual selection and modelling of evolutionary patterns

    In the Age of Steel: Oral Histories from Bethlehem Pennsylvania -- Charles H. Weidner

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    Charles H. Weidner (ca. 1901-May 30, 1989), born in Trumbauersville, Pennsylvania, was married to Jessie Weidner, née Reber. He worked for Bethlehem Steel from 1922 to 1966, primarily in the Real Estate department. In this interview he discusses acquiring, managing, and selling real estate for the corporation. Several large transactions are described and he talks at length about the growth and termination of the company\u27s involvement in providing and financing company housing for workers. Weidner also describes his views on the company\u27s management and the impact of Bethlehem Steel on the development of the city of Bethlehem. This interview is part of a series of interviews conducted by Lehigh University students and faculty from 1974 through 1977 focusing on retired Bethlehem Steel workers, business people, and the heirs of industrial magnates. The project was co-sponsored by Bethlehem Steel Corporation, who provided contact information for retired steel workers. An oral history interview is an act of memory and hence both highly selective and highly subjective. While it accurately reflects what a narrator remembers (or chooses to tell) of his or her experience and viewpoints, it may not accurately represent what actually transpired or what another person may have experienced. As such users should subject interviews to the same degree of critical scrutiny they would any other historical source

    The Painter through the Fourth Wall of China : Benjamin and the Threshold of the Image

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    In the first half of the Thirties Walter Benjamin offers two radically different interpretations of the legend of the Chinese painter who disappears in his own painting after having trespassed the threshold dividing the representative space of the image from the actual space of reality: in Berlin Childhood around 1900 the anecdote is presented as a positive example of tactile identification between subject and object; in the versions of the essay The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility the vanishing painter becomes the paradigm of the optical contemplation of the cultural auratic image. In my paper I will try to clarify such interpretative switch from nearness to farness, exploring three major issues: the question of the threshold between reality and representation; the criticism of empathic identification (shared by Benjamin with Brecht); the admiration for Chinese culture, expressed by Benjamin in many passages of his work, and metabolized in a peculiar conception of “Chinese dialectics”

    I CAN’T HELP BUT LOOK AT YOU? A characterization of temporal dynamics within neural systems for the perception of emotional faces

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    Weidner E. I CAN’T HELP BUT LOOK AT YOU? A characterization of temporal dynamics within neural systems for the perception of emotional faces. Bielefeld: Universität Bielefeld; 2025

    Weidner pinx.

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    Említve: Pataky Dénes, A magyar rézmetszés története (1951), 110.o. 53. tétel
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