497 research outputs found
Graduate Recital: Erin E. Click, Bassoon; November 1, 2003
Kemp Recital HallSaturday AfternoonNovember 1, 20031:30 p.m
Graduate Recital: Erin E. Click, Bassoon and Friends, March 30, 2003
Kemp Recital HallSunday AfternoonMarch 30, 20033:00 p.m
Transforming the Culture of Biology Teaching with Erin Shortlidge
In this episode of PDXPLORES, Associate Professor of Biology and Biology Education, Erin Shortlidge, discusses her NSF-funded research project, Evolving the Culture of Biology-Promoting Graduate Teaching Assistant Professional Development to Foster Inclusion, Efficacy, and Evidence-based Practices. Shortlidge and her team seek to transform the culture of biology education through a series of workshops for administrators, faculty, and staff who develop training programs for graduate teaching assistants. The ultimate aim is to improve the undergraduate STEM experience through intentional training of future STEM faculty.
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Erin Duran, LGBTQA Advisor and Residential Life Coordinator
In this new Next Page column, Erin Duran, LGBTQA Advisor and Residential Life Coordinator, shares with us the name of the author he appreciates even more now that he knows said author is from his home state of Texas, which title caught his attention as a sixth grader (and the hit song played on repeat while reading!), and which authors he frequently recommends to students for their challenging (in a good way) discussion of LGBTQA topics
Erin Gruwell - 10/22/2003 - (Riall Lecture Series)
Begun in 1988, the E. Pauline Riall Lecture Series brings to the University and community outstanding national lecturers in the field of education. The series was established by the late Miss Riall, long-time principal and teacher of the former Salisbury University's Campus School. A generous bequest was provided by Miss Riall's will to fund this special program.
Erin Gruwell, Teacher, Author, Founder of
Tolerance Education Foundation – 10/21/2003 (pm) and 10/22/2003 (am)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3XFTfohfeW
Erin Gruwell - 10/21/2003 - (Riall Lecture Series)
Begun in 1988, the E. Pauline Riall Lecture Series brings to the University and community outstanding national lecturers in the field of education. The series was established by the late Miss Riall, long-time principal and teacher of the former Salisbury University's Campus School. A generous bequest was provided by Miss Riall's will to fund this special program.
Erin Gruwell, Teacher, Author, Founder of
Tolerance Education Foundation – 10/21/2003 (pm) and 10/22/2003 (am)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-8vr0_j50
ERIN: A Portal to Resources for Higher Education in Neuroscience
ERIN, Educational Resources in Neuroscience, is the Society for Neuroscience\u27s web portal to selected, high- quality materials for higher education. A Board of Editors approves resources after describing them and classifying them by topic, subtopic, media type, author, and appropriate educational level. Some resources are also accompanied by reviews and ratings from faculty who have used the resource. These features make a search of ERIN far more useful than a typical Google search.
ERIN\u27s development was funded by the National Science Foundation with a three-year grant to SfN. Along the way, various unexpected problems arose and solutions were found, many of which are described in this overview of ERIN\u27s history and the various decisions that were made in its design and development
Echolocation click types.
Plots A-H depicting data from representative clicks from each of 10 final click types: (A) False killer whale, (B) Low-frequency type 1 (LF1), (C1) Short-finned pilot whale 1, (C2) Short-finned pilot whale 2, (D) Bottlenose dolphin/ melon-headed whale, (E) Blainville’s beaked whale, (F) Cuvier’s beaked whale, (G1) Stenellid 1, (G2) Stenellid 2, and (H) Kogia spp. Panels 1–4 (left to right) depict the following: (1) mean spectra, shown along with 10th and 90th percentile values, (2) modal inter-click interval distribution, (3) concatenated click spectra of all clicks included, and (4) click waveform envelope for all clicks. Click waveform envelope has been sorted by peak amplitude (highest to the left), and concatenated clicks have been sorted correspondingly. Types are ordered by peak frequency.</p
A comment on Granberg et al. (2025)
Forms part of the public project: Brodeur, Abel. 2026. “Reproduction of "publishing While Female: Are Women Held to Higher Standards? Evidence from Peer Review".” OSF. January 27. doi:10.17605/OSF.IO/ZB73Y. The full reproduction report is available under "Files". The author [Erin Hengel] responded in December 2024. The replicators' response and author's first response are also available under "Files" at https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/ZB73Y .Hengel's response to Granberg et al. (2025)
Clicking in a killer whale habitat : narrow-band, high-frequency biosonar clicks of harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) and Dall's porpoise (Phocoenoides dalli)
This study was funded by the Aarhus University Research Foundation, the Danish Ministry of Environment (Jagttegnsmidlerne) and by frame grants to PTM from the National Danish Science Research Council. RW was supported by a Marie Curie International Incoming Fellowship within the 7th European Community Framework Programme, and FHJ by a postdoctoral fellowship from the Danish Council for Independent Research | Natural Sciences.Odontocetes produce a range of different echolocation clicks but four groups in different families have converged on producing the same stereotyped narrow band high frequency (NBHF) click. In microchiropteran bats, sympatric species have evolved the use of different acoustic niches and subtly different echolocation signals to avoid competition among species. In this study, we examined whether similar adaptations are at play among sympatric porpoise species that use NBHF echolocation clicks. We used a six-element hydrophone array to record harbour and Dall's porpoises in British Columbia (BC), Canada, and harbour porpoises in Denmark. The click source properties of all porpoise groups were remarkably similar and had an average directivity index of 25 dB. Yet there was a small, but consistent and significant 4 kHz difference in centroid frequency between sympatric Dall's (137 +/- 3 kHz) and Canadian harbour porpoises (141 +/- 2 kHz). Danish harbour porpoise clicks (136 +/- 3 kHz) were more similar to Dall's porpoise than to their conspecifics in Canada. We suggest that the spectral differences in echolocation clicks between the sympatric porpoises are consistent with evolution of a prezygotic isolating barrier (i.e., character displacement) to avoid hybridization of sympatric species. In practical terms, these spectral differences have immediate application to passive acoustic monitoring.Peer reviewe
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