5,296 research outputs found

    Comic explorations: visual transcription and developing theory - Dr Chris Bailey

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    Comic explorations: visual transcription and developing theory - Dr Chris Bailey Dr Chris Bailey was presenting at the 8th ESRC Research Methods Festival, 3rd - 5th July 2018 at the University of Bath. The Festival is organised every two years by the National Centre for Research Methods: www.ncrm.ac.uk

    Dr. Randall Bailey, ITC, July 2011

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    This video is a conversation with Dr. Randall Bailey. Dr. Bailey talks about his book, "They Were Altogether in One Place?: Toward Minority Biblical Criticism". Brad Ost, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer

    Vol. 103: SGA President, Chris Bailey

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    President Bill Hardgrave chats with SGA President Chris Bailey about his top initiatives, highlighting students and driving positive change on campus

    Light D'Albergo Bailey

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    Photograph shows profile bust portrait of Light D'Albergo (Mrs. Clay) Bailey, teacher and author

    1977 Fort Hays State University Baseball Player Chris Bailey

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    The 1977 Fort Hays State University Baseball Player Chris Bailey. A black and white photograph shows Chris Bailey reaching up to catch a baseball. He wears a white shirt with T\u27s written on the left side and a baseball hat. His left arm is raised up and he wears a baseball glove on his left hand. The photograph is taken outdoors.https://scholars.fhsu.edu/tiger_baseball/1084/thumbnail.jp

    D'Army Bailey, circuit court judge, 1979

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    Interview with D'Army Bailey, an attorney, retired circuit court judge, civil rights activist, author, and film actor from Memphis, Tennessee. In this interview Bailey talks about his activism as a college student, his relationship with CORE (Congress of Racial Equality) and NSM (Northern Student Movement), at a PWI and an HBCU. Bailey also discusses his time practicing law in a racially divided society. The interview was conducted in 1979 at his home on Monticello.

    Shaanxi (China), view of Hua Shan mountain

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    View of Hua-shan, one of five sacred mountains of China.Image is included in the research conducted by Bailey Willis for the article: Among the Mountains of Shen-Si Author(s): Bailey Willis Source: Bulletin of the American Geographical Society, Vol. 38, No. 7 (1906), pp. 412-424 Published by: American Geographical Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/198944http://www.jstor.org/stable/198944Grayscal

    Shaanxi (China), view of Qin Ling mountain range as the natural boundary

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    View of summits of the Ts'in-ling-shan barrier range of China. In A.G.S. Bulletin vol.38, 1906Image is included in the research condcuted by Bailey Willis for the article: Among the Mountains of Shen-Si Author(s): Bailey Willis Source: Bulletin of the American Geographical Society, Vol. 38, No. 7 (1906), pp. 412-424 Published by: American Geographical Society Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/198944http://www.jstor.org/stable/198944Grayscal

    Using Hierarchical Classification to Exploit Context in Pattern Classification for Information Fusion

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    In data fusion applications it is important that only the minimum set of relevant features are combined at any one stage in the fusion process. A hierarchical classification methodology is described which handles features at different levels of abstraction to produce a more robust and interpretable classifier. This is achieved by dividing the classes into contextual subgroups, which are further divided to produce a tree structure defining relationships between classes. A novel approach is proposed for the class structure design which is formulated as a constrained search in the structure space. This can be performed via a forward search algorithm driven by a cost function dependent on the performance of the class structure and constraints on the required solution

    Care and the older person with cancer

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    Care of older people with cancer has received relatively little attention in the literature and this area of caring practice has yet to be firmly established in professional discourse. References to the increasing proportion of older people in the population are common, as are references to the problems associated with old age, whether these are seen as medical, or as inevitable consequences of natural processes. Health care for older people has sometimes been reported to be routinized or basic, and as taking little account of individual perspectives, and the 'discourse of senescence' represents a tendency to understand old age and the aged body in terms of degeneration and deterioration. Here, it is argued that older people are often portrayed as separate and diminished, and have little control over the definition of themselves as users of health services. This represents a constraint upon the possibilities of caring practice. Divesting ourselves of the 'discourse of senescence' may be a fundamental part of developing caring practice for older people with cancer in the future
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