4,976 research outputs found

    Hooper, R C, 400144

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/393145Surname: HOOPER. Given Name(s) or Initials: R C. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 400144. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 35138.212794 Item: [2016.0049.25438] "Hooper, R C, 400144

    Hooper Building p.1

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    Hooper Building. From the Kletting Collection. C. R. Savage Photo, 1890

    The Friends of C.S. Lewis

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    A series of talks was given at Grandpont House, Oxford in 2013 to mark the half-century anniversary of C. S. Lewis’s death and the fortieth anniversary of J. R. R. Tolkien’s passing. The address by Walter Hooper focused on memories of C. S. Lewis and his friends and took that story up to Lewis’s death on 22 November 1963.1 The essay below, given on a different occasion,2 is a complementary address covering the period from 1963 to the death of Owen Barfield in 1997. Hooper himself passed away in 2020

    Pervasive Technologies and Support for Independent Living

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    A broad range of pervasive technologies are used in many domains, including healthcare: however, there appears to be little work examining the role of such technologies in the home, or the different wants and needs of elderly users. Additionally, there exist ethical issues surrounding the use of highly personal healthcare-related data, and interface issues centred on the novelty of the technologies and the disabilities experienced by the users. This report examines these areas, before considering the ways in which they might come together to help support independent-living users with disabilities which may be age-related

    Using TAPT as an Analytical Method for Understanding Online Experiences

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    There are various methods for understanding user experiences, but many of these focus on explicit and not implicit aspects. Teasing Apart, Piecing Together (TAPT) is a method that was developed to understand and redesign experiences, crossing web / non-web boundaries [9]. This paper presents a case study of its repurposing towards understanding online experiences more deeply, in this case considering playful location-based uses of the mobile web. The approach is to use TAPT to elicit key words from expert users, before conducting a meta-analysis of the results. This process is referred to as TAMA, Teasing Apart with Meta- Analysis. This paper describes and reflects on the TAMA process, and on the use of focus groups to conduct Teasing Apart

    Pyrolysis of trifluoroacetaldehyde, initiated by di-tertiary-butyl peroxide decomposition

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    PT: J; CR: ARTHUR NL, 1965, AUST J CHEM, V18, P1561 AYSCOUGH PB, 1956, J CHEM PHYS, V24, P994 BATT L, 1977, INT J CHEM KINET, V9, P141 COME GM, 1968, REV I R PETROLE, V23, P1365 COX DL, 1966, J CHEM SOC B, P245 DODD RE, 1957, J CHEM SOC, P1465 FERGUSON JM, 1965, J CHEM SOC, P4416 GRAY P, 1971, CHEM REV, V71, P247 HIATT R, 1972, INT J CHEM KINET, V4, P479 HIATT R, 1978, INT J CHEM KINET, V10, P185 HOOPER DG, 1975, J CHEM EDUC, V52, P131 LIU MH, 1973, CAN J CHEM, V51, P2292 LIU MTH, 1968, CAN J CHEM, V46, P479 LIU MTH, 1977, INT J CHEM KINET, V9, P589 MORRIS ER, 1967, T FARADAY SOC, V63, P2470 MORRIS ER, 1968, T FARADAY SOC, V64, P3027 PEARCE C, 1971, J CHEM SOC CHEM COMM, P1464 SHAW DH, 1968, CAN J CHEM, V46, P2721 SHEPP A, 1956, J CHEM PHYS, V24, P939 WIJNEN MHJ, 1960, J AM CHEM SOC, V82, P1847 YEEQUEE MJ, 1968, J PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY, V72, P2824 YEEQUEE MJ, 1968, T FARADAY SOC, V64, P1296; NR: 22; TC: 10; J9: CAN J CHEM; PG: 10; GA: HN360Source type: Electronic(1

    Towards designing more effective systems by understanding user experiences

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    This thesis is about social technologies, user experiences and the problems of creative design. It is motivated by a desire to give people who are offline the access to social technologies that is currently provided via the web. There exist technologically oriented approaches to solving this problem, but their focus on technology comes at a cost of neglecting the experiential aspects which motivate the work. This focus can result in systems which are functional but unappealing to (or even unusable by) their target audiences. After describing the motivation for the work, this thesis explains the state of the art and presents an exemplar system built with a technological focus. This thesis then presents Teasing Apart, Piecing Together (TAPT), a Software Engineering design process developed to address this gap in the field of software design. TAPT enables the understanding of user experiences and scaffolds the redesign of these for new contexts. After explaining the TAPT process and how it was built, a three-phase mixed methods evaluation is described. This consists of a large-scale comparative evaluation, an expert review of the outputs of that evaluation and case studies grounded in industrial and academic practice. The results of these evaluations show that TAPT, which can be used in an agile manner, provides a strong analytical framework for understanding experiences and supports the redesign of experiences in new context

    Habromys Hooper and Musser 1964

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    Habromys Hooper and Musser, 1964. Occas. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Mich., 635:12. REVIEWED BY: S. Anderson (SA); W. Caire (WC); R. P. Canham (RPC); L. N. Carraway (LNC); D. G. Huckaby (DGH); C. W. Kilpatrick (CWK); T. E. Lawlor (TL); R. H. Pine (RHP); J. Ramirez-Pulido (JRP); G. Urbano-V. (GUV). COMMENT: Included in Peromyscus as a subgenus by Hall, 1981:718, Hooper, 1968, in King, ed., The Biology of Peromyscus (Rodentia), p. 38, and Musser, 1969, Am. Mus. Novit., 2357:1-23. Linzey and Layne, 1974, Am. Mus. Novit., 2532:1-20, studied the morphology of the spermatozoa. Reviewed by Carleton, 1980:118, 125, who considered Habromys a distinct genus. Pine et al., 1979, Mammalia, 43:357, considered Habromys Hooper and Musser, a nomen nudum; Carleton, 1980, may have been first to make Habromys available (RHP). Subfamily Hesperomyinae; see comment under Cricetidae.Published as part of James H. Honacki, Kenneth E. Kinman & James W. Koeppl, 1982, Order Rodentia (Part 3), pp. 392-476 in Mammal Species of the World (1 st Edition), Lawrence, Kansas, USA :Alien Press, Inc. & The Association of Systematics Collections on page 418, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735303

    Isthmomys Hooper and Musser 1964

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    Isthmomys Hooper and Musser, 1964. Occas. Pap. Mus. Zool. Univ. Mich., 635: 12. REVIEWED BY: S. Anderson (SA); W. Caire (WC); R. P. Canham (RPC); M. D. Carleton (MDC); L. N. Carraway (LNC); D. G. Huckaby (DGH); C. W. Kilpatrick (CWK); T. E. Lawlor (TL); R. H. Pine (RHP). COMMENT: Included as a subgenus of Peromyscus by Hall, 1981:717, and Hooper, 1968, in King, ed., The Biology of Perotnyscus (Rodentia), p. 38. Linzey and Layne, 1974, Am. Mus. Novit., 2532:1-20, studied the morphology of the spermatozoa. Reviewed by Carleton, 1980:118, 124, who considered Isthmomys a distinct genus. Pine et al., 1979, Mammalia, 43: 357, considered Isthmomys Hooper and Musser, a nomen nudum; Carleton, 1980, may have been first to make Isthmomys available (RHP). Subfamily Hesperomyinae; see comment under Cricetidae.Published as part of James H. Honacki, Kenneth E. Kinman & James W. Koeppl, 1982, Order Rodentia (Part 3), pp. 392-476 in Mammal Species of the World (1 st Edition), Lawrence, Kansas, USA :Alien Press, Inc. & The Association of Systematics Collections on page 421, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.735303

    sj-docx-1-smm-10.1177_09622802221094140 - Supplemental material for Re-randomisation trials in multi-episode settings: Estimands and independence estimators

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-smm-10.1177_09622802221094140 for Re-randomisation trials in multi-episode settings: Estimands and independence estimators by Brennan C Kahan, Ian R White, Richard Hooper and Sandra Eldridge in Statistical Methods in Medical Research</p
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