4,876 research outputs found
Claudia Rankine: An Evening with Claudia Rankine
An initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts in partnership with Arts Midwest, the NEA Big Read broadens our understanding of our world, our communities, and ourselves through the joy of sharing a good book. For NEA Big Read: Hampton Roads, that book is Citizen: An American Lyric.
NEA Big Read: Hampton Roads, the President\u27s Lecture Series, and the President\u27s Task Force on Inclusive Excellence invite you to a powerful evening with Claudia Rankine, the book\u27s author, hosted by Tim Seibles, Poet Laureate for the Commonwealth of Virginia, and opening with readings by local youth poets.
Claudia Rankine has written five collections of poetry, including Citizen: An American Lyric, which was selected for the National Endowment for the Arts\u27 Big Read, and two plays. She also has participated in several video collaborations and edited anthologies including The Racial Imaginary: Writers on Race in the Life of the Mind.
Rankine has received fellowships from the MacArthur and Guggenheim foundations. Citizen won several honors, including the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry, the PEN Open Book Award and the NAACP Image Award. Citizen also was the only poetry book to be a New York Times nonfiction bestseller. She is the Frederick Iseman Professor of Poetry at Yale University and chancellor of the Academy of American Poets
Portrait of Claudia Lynn Pittman.
Handwritten inscription: Claudia Lynn Pittman, 20 yrs old, Hattiesburg.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/joephoto_c/1129/thumbnail.jp
Reproducible Research in the era of Next Generation Sequencing: current ap- proaches, examples and future perspectives
Computational Intelligence Methods for Bioinformatics and Biostatistics: 12th International Meeting, CIBB 2015, Naples, Italy, September 10-12, 2015, Revised Selected Papers
Reproducible Research in the era of Next Generation Sequencing: current approaches, examples and future perspectives
Homonoia - Concorda - Sammanasya
Analysis of the divine figures of Homónoia in the Greek pantheon, Concordia in the Roman pantheon, and Sammanasya in the Vedic pantheon. Claudia Santi is the author of Homónoia; Andrzej Gillmeister is the author of Concordia; Antonio Salvati is the author of Sammanasya. As regards Homónoia, the origin of this personified abstraction seems to be traced back to the political debate of Athens in the last 5th century. Maybe it was created by Antiphon as opposed to stásis, both in the meaning of ‘psychic conflict’ and ‘internal political dissensions, civil war’
Claudia Emerson, 31st Annual ODU Literary Festival
Claudia Emerson was awarded the 2006 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry for her book Late Wife: Poems (LSU Press, 2005). She is also the author of the poetry collections Pharaoh, Pharaoh, and Pinion: An Elegy; all volumes are published in Dave Smith’s Southern Messenger Poets series. Her poems have appeared in Poetry, Southern Review, Shenandoah, TriQuarterly, New England Review and other journals. Emerson is the recipient of a Witter Bynner Fellowship from the Library of Congress and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Virginia Commission for the Arts. She is an associate professor of English at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Va
Advantages and limits in the adoption of reproducible research and R-tools for the analysis of omic data
Reproducible (computational) Research is crucial to produce transparent and high quality scientific papers. First, we illustrate the benefits that scientific community can receive from the adoption of Reproducible Research standards in the analysis of high-throughput omic data. Then, we describe several tools useful to researchers to increase the reproducibility of their works. Moreover, we face the advantages and limits of reproducible research and how they could be addressed and solved. Overall, this paper should be considered as a proof of concept on how and what characteristic - in our opinion - should be considered to conduct a study in the spirit of Reproducible Research. Therefore, the scope of this paper is two-fold. The first goal consists in presenting and discussing some easy-to-use instruments for data analysts to promote reproducible research in their analyses. The second aim is to encourage developers to incorporate automatic reproducibility features in their tools
INet for network integration
When collecting several data sets and heterogeneous data types on a given phenomenon of interest, the individual analysis of each data set will provide only a particular view of such phenomenon. Instead, integrating all the data may widen and deepen the results, offering a better view of the entire system. In the context of network integration, we propose the INet algorithm. INet assumes a similar network structure, representing latent variables in different network layers of the same system. Therefore, by combining individual edge weights and topological network structures, INet first constructs a Consensus Network that represents the shared information underneath the different layers to provide a global view of the entities that play a fundamental role in the phenomenon of interest. Then, it derives a Case Specific Network for each layer containing peculiar information of the single data type not present in all the others. We demonstrated good performance with our method through simulated data and detected new insights by analyzing biological and sociological datasets
Interview with Claudia Verhoeven, May 13, 2010
Interview Themes: What Verhoeven hoped to achieve with The Odd Man Karakazov (00:58)
Greatest challenge of writing the book (10:02)
How historians learn to recognize the new in history (16:29)
Primary influences on Verhoeven's research and writing thus far (24:44)
Implications of Verhoeven's work for the field of Russian history (31:38)
Recent works published that suggest what is interesting now (38:00)
Verhoeven's plans for future research (40:05)Interview with Claudia Verhoeven, Assistant Professor of History at Cornell University, conducted in Ithaca, NY on May 13, 2010. Professor Verhoeven is author of "The Odd Man Karakazov: Imperial Russia, Modernity and the Birth of Modern Terrorism," published by Cornell University Press in 2009.1_yanxzrv61_iabh8g0
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