1,266 research outputs found
Data and Code for Goddard et al 2023 – SAI and Antarctica (2)
These repositories (1-5) contain the HIST (199001-200912), SSP245 (205001-206912), and Global+1.0 (205001-206912) data and code (Jupyter notebooks .ipynb) needed to run the analysis in Goddard et al. 2023 - The impacts of Stratospheric Aerosol Injection on Antarctic ice loss depend on injection location. For questions and other SAI experimental data please contact the corresponding author
Data and Code for Goddard et al 2023 – SAI and Antarctica (1)
These repositories (1-5) contain the HIST (199001-200912), SSP245 (205001-206912), and Global+1.0 (205001-206912) data and code (Jupyter notebooks .ipynb) needed to run the analysis in Goddard et al. 2023 - The impacts of Stratospheric Aerosol Injection on Antarctic ice loss depend on injection location. For questions and other SAI experimental data please contact the corresponding author
Liquid Penetrant Testing at Goddard Space Flight Center
An overview of liquid penetrant testing at Goddard Space Flight Center and an introduction of the author to the NASA Engineering and Safety Center Nondestructive Evaluation Technical Discipline Team is provided, including author biography, an overview of NASA spaceflight customers and their applications, a high-level description of research and development initiatives, two case-studies of flight project applications, and an introduction to the rest of the Goddard Space Flight Center Nondestructive Evaluation team and their respective roles in the organization
Dr. Henry Goddard Leach Visits Spanish Class
Dr. Henry Goddard Leach, author and speaker, stands looking over students in the Spanish Class at Jacksonville State College. Shown from left are Helen Smith, Dora Miranda, Dr. Leach, and Jacques Corman. (circa March 14, 1954)https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/2974/thumbnail.jp
Encounters with Frank Siebert
Ives Goddard, Curator of the Department of Anthropology of the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, is the author of “Eastern Algonquian Languages, in The Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15. He co-authored, with Kathleen f. Bragdon, Native Writings n Massachusetts and more recently edited The Handbook Of North American Indians, Vol. 17, Languages
Speaking for Bakhtin : Two Interpretations of Reported Speech. A Response to Goddard and Wierzbicka (2018)
Vološinov ([1929]1973) is one of the most frequently cited works in studies on reported speech, but its interpretation varies considerably between authors. Within the linguistic anthropological tradition, its central message is often conflated with Erving Goffman’s ‘speaker roles’, and in a recent publication, Goddard and Wierzbicka (2018) marry ideas they attribute to Vološinov (1973) and Mikhail M. Bakhtin to those by the formal semanticist Donald Davidson. Responding to Goddard and Wierzbicka (2018) (and a shorter version of a similar argument in (Goddard and Wierzbicka 2019)), this paper seeks to explore the philosophical foundations of reported speech research, particularly in relation to Vološinov/Bakhtin. It suggests that reported speech research is motivated by two fundamentally distinct goals, one here labelled ‘Fregean’ and the other ‘Bakhtinian’. Questions and methods used in both of these research traditions lead to two radically different understandings of reported speech. This affects the applicability of the definition of direct/indirect speech Goddard and Wierzbicka (2018) propose. It also motivates an alternative approach to reported speech advocated by the current author and others that is criticised by Goddard and Wierzbicka (2018). The article further seeks to rehabilitate the analysis of Wierzbicka (1974), which Goddard and Wierzbicka (2018) partially reject. Whereas Wierzbicka (1974) treats direct and indirect speech as constructions of English, Goddard and Wierzbicka (2018) elevate the opposition to a universal, which belies the cultural sensitivity to semantic variation the authors display in other work. The paper concludes with a brief note about the semantic status of ‘say’ in Australian languages and states that the relevance of Vološinov ([1929]1973) is undiminished, also in the light of recent developments in language description. It remains a highly original study whose implications are yet to fully impact research on reported speech.Peer reviewe
Thermoelectricity: Thomson vs Onsager, with advice from Maxwell
This paper deals with the long-standing conflict between interpretations of thermoelectricity based on the original reversible thermodynamics of Thomson and the later irreversible thermodynamics of Onsager. It is shown that, by a slight modification of the Maxwellian relaxation treated in a previous paper [J. Goddard and K. Kamrin, “Dissipation potentials from elastic collapse,” Proc. R. Soc. A 475, 20190144 (2019)], Onsager's symmetry is simply a reflection of the underlying symmetry of equilibrium thermodynamics. It is also shown that a modern interpretation of Thomson's thermodynamics, as given recently by the present author, reveals thermoelectricity to be the analog of a fluid-mechanical transport process with the limit of thermodynamic equilibrium corresponding to the convection-dominated regime of large Péclet number
Impacts of Conservation Tillage on Soil Water and Crop Production - A case Study in the Northwest Footslopes of Mount Kenya
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