1,069 research outputs found

    Saskia Becker: capstone

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    2019 Spring.Colorado State University Art and Art History Department capstone project.Capstone contains the artist's statement, a list of works, and images of works.The artist's statement: Through the medium of painting, I am exploring the subconscious and the phenomenon of dreaming. As an artist, I am intrigued by the endless labyrinths in the universe and my mind. My dreams will often inform and inspire my work; I like to think of them as divine gifts from the Universe. In a sense, creating art has become an act of gratitude. As I dig deep into these spaces that seem to hold no logic, I have discovered dreams are inextricably paired with the subconscious. According to the late Swiss psychologist, Carl Jung, dreams are thought to be the vehicle of communication from the subconscious to the conscious mind. Archetypal symbols are used by the subconscious as a way of expressing universally understood ideas or feelings in all human dreams. In my practice I am continually questioning the symbols and narratives that enter my dreams to better understand what my subconscious and spiritual mind is expressing. I start many mornings reaching over to grab my journal and scribble down what I remember from the night before they slip away into the abyss. Some aspects of my dreams stand out vividly, whether that be a person, object, or a place . . . they make an impression. I make note of these symbols and then construct my paintings around them. In this way, my paintings are a method of deeply understanding, honoring, and appreciating the remarkable presence of my dreams. My dream paintings are catered to my life, yet their messages often transcend individuality, speaking to the human collective consciousness. By tapping into these possibilities, I have discovered that when I visually manifest my dreams, I am participating and replying in a universal dialogue that is overwhelmingly mystifying and magical

    sj-docx-1-tps-10.1177_13634615241227337 - Supplemental material for Barriers to use of interpreters in outpatient mental health care: Exploring the attitudes of psychotherapists

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-tps-10.1177_13634615241227337 for Barriers to use of interpreters in outpatient mental health care: Exploring the attitudes of psychotherapists by Kim Gartner, Mike Mösko, Julia C. Becker, and Saskia Hanft-Robert in Transcultural Psychiatry</p

    Characterization of interfaces in polymer bilayers and FDM 3D printed parts using atomic force microscopy

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    Author Saskia Dollberger, BSc.Masterarbeit Universität Linz 2022Arbeit auf den öffentlichen PCs in den Bibliotheken der JKU+Medizin abrufba

    Characterization of interfaces in polymer bilayers and FDM 3D printed parts using atomic force microscopy

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    Author Saskia Dollberger, BSc.Masterarbeit Universität Linz 2022Arbeit auf den öffentlichen PCs in den Bibliotheken der JKU+Medizin abrufba

    Blockchain-based business models in the financial industry in German-speaking countries

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    Author Saskia KohlerMasterarbeit Universität Linz 2023Arbeit auf den öffentlichen PCs in den Bibliotheken der JKU+Medizin abrufba

    Saskia Sassen: Dressed in Wall Street suits & algorithmic math: assemblages of complex predatory formations

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    ROBERT S. LYND PROFESSOR OF SOCIOLOGY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY AND COMMITTEE ON GLOBAL THOUGHT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Saskia Sassen is the Robert S. Lynd Professor of Sociology at Columbia University and a Member of its Committee on Global Thought, which she chaired until 2015. She is a student of cities, immigration, and states in the world economy, with inequality, gendering, and digitization as three key variables running through her work. Born in the Netherlands, she grew up in Argentina and Italy, studied in France, was raised in five languages, and began her professional life in the United States. She is the author of eight books and the editor or co-editor of three books. Together, her authored books are translated into over twenty languages. She has received many awards and honors, among them multiple doctor honoris causa, the 2013 Principe de Asturias Prize in the Social Sciences, election to the Royal Academy of the Sciences of the Netherlands, and was made a Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et Lettres by the French government

    International Social Survey Programme NL - ISSP-NL 2005-2006: Work Orientations / Role of Government

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    The modules 2005 (“Work Orientations”) and 2006 (“Role of Government”) of the International Social Survey Programme in the Netherlands [ISSP-NL] were conducted in 2006 as a stand-alone postal survey at the Free University Amsterdam [VUA] (Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Social Research Methodology) by Harry B.G. Ganzeboom [principal investigator] and Saskia Opdam [fieldwork manager]. As of 2005, VUA has taken over the national ISSP membership for the Netherlands, formerly held by the Social and Cultural Planning Office [SCP] in The Hague, with Jos Becker as principal investigator. Funding for the 2005-2006 data collection was supplied by the SCP and the VUA.Note that this dataset is more elaborate than the Dutch part of the international ISSP file, archived atGESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Cologne, Germany.</p

    International Social Survey Programme NL - ISSP-NL 2005-2006: Work Orientations / Role of Government

    No full text
    The modules 2005 (“Work Orientations”) and 2006 (“Role of Government”) of the International Social Survey Programme in the Netherlands [ISSP-NL] were conducted in 2006 as a stand-alone postal survey at the Free University Amsterdam [VUA] (Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Social Research Methodology) by Harry B.G. Ganzeboom [principal investigator] and Saskia Opdam [fieldwork manager]. As of 2005, VUA has taken over the national ISSP membership for the Netherlands, formerly held by the Social and Cultural Planning Office [SCP] in The Hague, with Jos Becker as principal investigator. Funding for the 2005-2006 data collection was supplied by the SCP and the VUA. Note that this dataset is more elaborate than the Dutch part of the international ISSP file, archived at GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Cologne, Germany

    International Social Survey Programme NL - ISSP-NL 2005-2006: Work Orientations / Role of Government

    No full text
    The modules 2005 (“Work Orientations”) and 2006 (“Role of Government”) of the International Social Survey Programme in the Netherlands [ISSP-NL] were conducted in 2006 as a stand-alone postal survey at the Free University Amsterdam [VUA] (Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Social Research Methodology) by Harry B.G. Ganzeboom [principal investigator] and Saskia Opdam [fieldwork manager]. As of 2005, VUA has taken over the national ISSP membership for the Netherlands, formerly held by the Social and Cultural Planning Office [SCP] in The Hague, with Jos Becker as principal investigator. Funding for the 2005-2006 data collection was supplied by the SCP and the VUA. Note that this dataset is more elaborate than the Dutch part of the international ISSP file, archived at GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Cologne, Germany

    High‐Resolution NMR Determination of the Dynamic Structure of Membrane Proteins

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    N-15 spin-relaxation rates are demonstrated to provide critical information about the long-range structure and internal motions of membrane proteins. Combined with an improved calculation method, the relaxation-rate-derived structure of the 283-residue human voltage-dependent anion channel revealed an anisotropically shaped barrel with a rigidly attached N-terminal helix. Our study thus establishes an NMR spectroscopic approach to determine the structure and dynamics of mammalian membrane proteins at high accuracy and resolution
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