2,327 research outputs found

    Phillip G. Back papers

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    This collection contains documents and correspondence from the collection of Phillip Goldstein Back (1902-1979), a long-time resident of Little Rock and prominent Jewish businessman

    Phillip Panek Biar

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    abstract: Phillip was nine years old when his village was attacked. “Lost Boys Found” is an ongoing, interdisciplinary project that is collecting, recording and archiving the oral histories of the Lost Boys/Girls of Sudan. The collection is a work-in-progress, seeking to record the oral history of as many Lost Boys/Girls as are willing, and will be used in a future book.Age: 24Region: Bahr al GhazalThis picture and bio was donated to the "Lost Boys Found" oral history project from The Arizona Lost Boys Cente

    A Sand Fly, Lutzomyia shannoni Dyar (Insecta: Diptera: Psychodidae: Phlebotomine)

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    EENY-421, a 5-page illustrated fact sheet by Rajinder S. Mann, Phillip E. Kaufman, and Jerry F. Butler, is part of the Featured Creatures collection. It describes this subfamily of sand flies that can transmit several disease-causing organisms of humans and other animals — its distribution, description, life cycle, hosts, medical importance, and management. Includes selected references. Published by the UF Department of Entomology and Nematology, February 2009. EENY 421/IN797: A Sand Fly, Lutzomyia shannoni Dyar (Insecta: Diptera: Psychodidae: Phlebotomine) (ufl.edu

    The Use of Formal Methods in the Analysis of Trust (Position Paper)

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    Security and trust are two properties of modern computing systems that are the focus of much recent interest. They play an increasingly significant role in the requirements for modern computing systems. Security has been studied thoroughly for many years, particularly the sub-domain of cryptography. The use of computing science formal methods has facilitated cryptanalysis of security protocols. At the moment, trust is intensively studied, but not well understood. Here we present our approach based on formal methods for modelling and validating the notion of trust in computing science

    Phillip Herring

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    Phillip Herring (1936- ) is a scholar and biographer, who taught English at the University of Wisconsin at Madison for over twenty five years. He attended the University of Texas at Austin, where he was awarded a Ph.D. in 1966, and later worked at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center. Herring is the author of Joyce's Uncertainty Principle (1987), Djuna: the Life and Work of Djuna Barnes (1995), and is the co-editor of Djuna Barnes's Collected Poems: With Notes Towards the Memoirs (2005). His papers consist of correspondence, photographs, and other materials accumulated during the writing of his Barnes biography. Subjects include Djuna Barnes, her family and friends, and locations relating to Barnes's life

    John W. Fleming Collection; no.11481

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    Sepia cabinet card. Studio portrait of an unidentified man dressed in a three piece dark suit, light colored shirt with tie. He has dark hair and a mustache. Printed in green in lower part of cabinet card; Criley & Wagner, Butler, Pa. Verso: Printed in green ink; Criley & Wagner, Photographic Artists, Main St., Butler, Pa.Master file: image/tiff; 103,876 KB; Computer Hardware: Intel Pentium (R) 4 3.20 GHz/ 1.99 GB RAM manufactured by Dell; Operating system: Windows XP 2002; Creation software: Adobe Photoshop CS2 version 9.0.2; Scanner: flatbed reflective scanner Microtek 1000XL; Scanner software: Microtek SilverFast Ai 6.4.2r2b; Scanned by Jackie Becker on 2010-04-12

    Comparing negative patterning and biconditional discrimination in a simulated foraging task

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    How humans solve patterning and biconditional discrimination is a topic of continued theoretical debate. Some theories assume that solving negative patterning of A+, B+, AB0 is contingent upon learning to associate outcomes with individual stimuli, whereas others assume the addition of a unique configuration of the compound is needed to solve it. Research in humans has found evidence to support both theories. However, a problem with human associative learning experiments is the use of arbitrary reinforcement stimuli, which may cause humans to use rule-based learning rather than associative learning. This paper reports a study of patterning and biconditional discrimination that uses a novel simulated foraging task in which all trials involve stimulus compounds to provide a clearer test of the competing theories.M.A.Includes bibliographical referencesby Phillip A. Loatma

    Phillip Skinner off the bull #F of the Kinney Bros.

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    Phillip Skinner off the bull #F of the Kinney Bros. stock at a rodeo in Lufkin, Texas

    A Most Charitable Man

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    Phillip\u27 Kingsley was a banker and looked the part. He was a typical example of the sort of man people expect to be president of a bank. His carefully shined shoes, conservative clothes and distinguished manner were complemented by his slightly greying temples and pale blue eyes. When he spoke, he did so in carefully selected sentences, making use of his wide vocabulary. A popular man, he was noted for his friendliness to the local townspeople and for the fact that he could be seen at any time to discuss a loan for a new silo or an additional building on a farm. If rumor could be believed, Phillip Kingsley would be the next United States senator from Indiana. In short, he was a man of whom the community could be justly proud-a solid citizen

    34181_Appendix – Supplemental material for Identification of Risk Factors Prospectively Associated With Musculoskeletal Injury in a Warrior Athlete Population

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    Supplemental material, 34181_Appendix for Identification of Risk Factors Prospectively Associated With Musculoskeletal Injury in a Warrior Athlete Population by Deydre S. Teyhen, Scott W. Shaffer, Stephen L. Goffar, Kyle Kiesel, Robert J. Butler, Daniel I. Rhon and Phillip J. Plisky in Sports Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach</p
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