3,718 research outputs found
Open Access for Collaboration - Benefits for Partners
Kate Bishop-Williams is a PhD student at the University of Guelph in the Department of Population Medicine. Kate talks about Open Access from the perspective of a young career researcher. The presentation focuses on Open Access as a space for collaboration among research partners and what the benefits are
New Entrepreneurs piece on Kate Bishop, co-owner of Custom Creations by Beth (
New Entrepreneurs piece on Kate Bishop, co-owner of Custom Creations by Beth (Becker) and Kate in Portland, founded in January 2002. In an interview, Bishop describes their business of creating custom gift baskets, specializing in Maine products, for all occasions
Guidelines for Data Annotation
Included here are a coding manual and supplementary examples of gesture forms (in still images and video recordings) that informed the coding of the first author (Kate Mesh) and four project reliability coders
A preliminary study into the effect of biofeedback on end tidal carbon dioxide levels during slow breathing in healthy volunteers
Objectives:
To investigate the effect of visual biofeedback on end tidal carbon dioxide levels during slow breathing in healthy volunteers.
Design: Preliminary study with experimental design in which each participant experienced both conditions i.e. slow breathing with and without visual biofeedback
Setting:
Human Performance Laboratory, university campus
Participants:
Fifteen university students.
Baseline data and outcome measures:
Primary outcome measure was end tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2); Secondary outcomes were respiratory rate; pulserate; non-invasive oxygen saturations; lung function
Results:
There was a mean rise in ETCO2 of 0.35 k Pa (CI0.09–0.6) during slow breathing with visual biofeedback, and 0.36 k Pa (CI0.13–0.6) without biofeedback. The use of visual feedback had no observable effect on ETCO2 despite participants successfully reducing their respiratory rate further under this condition
(mean 5 breaths per minute with feedback, versus 7 without feedback). ETCO2 and respiratory rate were negatively correlated under both conditions (Pearson’sr = 0.42).
Conclusions:
In this study of healthy volunteers manipulating respiratory rate was
found to result in a significant rise in ETCO2 levels under both conditions, but the use of visual biofeedback had no significant additional effect on ETCO2. Visual biofeedback did have a statistically significant effect on respiratory rate, enabling subjects to achieve lower rates than in the absence of biofeedback. This suggests
visual biofeedback may have a role in enabling people to reduce breathing rates, but this needs to be confirmed by larger trials
Declining Unionization, Rising Inequality: an Interview with Kate Bronfenbrenner
Kate Bronfenbrenner is director of labor education research at the New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University. She worked for many years as an organizer with the United Woodcutters Association in Mississippi and the Service Employees International Union in Boston. She is the author, co-author and editor of numerous books and articles on union strategies
Reviewed Work: Designing Cities with Children and Young People: Beyond Playgrounds and Skate Parks by Kate Bishop and Linda Corkery
Reviewed Work: Designing Cities with Children and Young People: Beyond Playgrounds and Skate Parks by Kate Bishop and Linda Corker
Kate Richards: madness
Kate Richards’ bleakly beautiful, confronting and important book, Madness: A Memoir, describes her 15 years coping with psychosis and depression, and her long, hard-won journey back to sanity, with the help of a wise and compassionate psychologist.
In this video, she speaks with Ranjana Srivastava, an oncologist and fellow author, about her experience – and about being able to write from deep within it, with expertise as both a medical researcher and writer.
 
Kate Bishop: Reflections on Chicory Market
Oxford native, Kate Bishop opened Chicory Market with her husband, John Martin in 2017, purchasing the Farmer’s Market Store from Liz Stagg and Frank Coppola. Mission driven, Chicory has become an Oxford-Lafayette County staple connecting consumers to locally produced, fresh food. In January of 2024, Chicory moved to its current location on North Lamar. It has grown considerably alongside the population and local food movement, now offering meat and produce from nearly fifty local farmers and foodmakers.
In this oral history, Kate and I discussed the challenges expanding into a full service grocery, attitudes towards seasonality, reflections on the Oxford food economy, and her future goals for the store.
Turner Wolffe grew up in Memphis, Tennessee. He completed his B.A. in History at Loyola University New Orleans where he studied foodways and environmental history while also working in restaurant kitchens, bakeries and butcher shops. He is currently an M.A. candidate in Southern Studies and Documentary Expression, planning to further explore the future of sustainable, equitable food production
Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer
Photograph of Book signing by SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palme
SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer signing book
Photograph of SC author and illustrator Kate Salley Palmer signing boo
- …
