793 research outputs found
FIGURE 3 in A short biography of Hubert Ludwig and a note on the publication dates of his monograph Die Seewalzen (1889 – 1892)
FIGURE 3. Selection of title pages of individual parts (fascicle 1, fascicle 2/3, fascicle 13/14) of Hubert Ludwig's Die Seewalzen. Single parts were distributed by the author or on behalf of the author through the publisher C. F. Winter (Leipzig and Heidelberg, Germany). Copies formerly in the private library of the German zoologist Karl August Möbius (1825–1908) [MRM].Published as part of Reich, Mike, 2015, Zootaxa 4052 (2) on pages 332-344, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4052.3.3, http://zenodo.org/record/23782
Video active learning : preparing science students for real future professional communication needs
A revised version of the talk given at the TESOL Convention, Caen, April 1986, and at the APLIUT Congress, CIEP, Sèvres, in May 1986.The author of this article teaches in a scientific and technical university environment. In these pages he explains how an English teacher, not necessarily competent in science and technology, can help an average student become an effective communicator in such fields. His method is based on : a) a very methodological presentation technique (use of specific visual aids for specific oral purposes), the presentation itself video-taped. b) the criticism of the presentation video.tape for improvement (linguistic tools and savoir faire provided by the teacher). c) An evaluation that considers the students improvement during the repetition of the presentation the following week.Hollett Mike. Video active learning : preparing science students for real future professional communication needs. In: Cahiers de l'APLIUT, volume 6, numéro 2, 1986. La Grammaire, comment l'enseigner vraiment ? pp. 103-111
What Next in a Post-C-51 Canada?
Bill C-51anti-terrorismaccess to informationfreedom of informationprivacyCanadian Institute for Information and Privacy StudiesPre-publication text of an address delivered at the 2015 Annual General Meeting of the Canadian Institute for Information and Privacy Studies. The author reflects on the implications of the passage of the C-51 omnibus anti-terrorism bill, with reference to information and privacy issues. The address is framed as a proposal for a research agenda based on four questions: (1) How are police and security personnel being briefed and trained regarding their post-C-51 mandates?; (2) What policies, procedures, and interpretations will govern the securitization and sharing of information within and between federal government institutions?; (3) How will the C-51 changes impact intergovernmental collaboration and information sharing, especially with respect to personal information?; (4) How will the C-51 changes impact information and privacy rights under the Access to Information Act (ATIA) and Privacy Act?.Larsen, M. (2015). What Next in a Post-C-51 Canada? (CIIPS Research Report). Vancouver, B.C.: Canadian Institute for Information and Privacy Studies. Retrieved from https://infoandprivacy.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/Larsen-Research-Post-C-51-Canada.pdfplease include a link to the published work: https://infoandprivacy.ca/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/Larsen-Research-Post-C-51-Canada.pd
A review of animal welfare implications of the Canadian commercial seal hunt
Abstract not availablePierre-Yves Daoust, Mike Hammill, Garry Stenson, Charles Carague
J Club, 1976-1977 Members 2
These students were members of J Club and football lettermen at Jacksonville State University in 1976-1977. Shown from left are, first row, Donald Young, DeWayne Parker, Rick Shrewsbury, Bill Vining, Mike Baxter, Jess Wright, Roland Weaver, Rocky Riddle, Dale Adams, Amos McCreary, Ronald Young, second row, Gary White, Tim Nichols, Greg Roberson, Thomas Davis, Cotton Campbell, Bo Emerson, Jerome Coleman, Butch Barker, Sherwin Sledge, Ray Brock, Gurley, Swanigan, Ricky Grammer, Art Lockridge, third row, Marty Hanson, Herbert Canada, J. C. Coleman, Jim Davis, Loring White, Tommy Macon, Mitchell Knox, Mark Colley, Keith Martin, Randy Ragsdale, Jesse Baker, Greg Watts, Gary Wagner.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1970/5283/thumbnail.jp
J Club, 1976-1977 Members 3
These students were members of J Club and football lettermen at Jacksonville State University in 1976-1977. Shown from left are, first row, Donald Young, DeWayne Parker, Rick Shrewsbury, Bill Vining, Mike Baxter, Jess Wright, Roland Weaver, Rocky Riddle, Dale Adams, Amos McCreary, Ronald Young, second row, Gary White, Tim Nichols, Greg Roberson, Thomas Davis, Cotton Campbell, Bo Emerson, Jerome Coleman, Butch Barker, Sherwin Sledge, Ray Brock, Gurley, Swanigan, Ricky Grammer, Art Lockridge, third row, Marty Hanson, Herbert Canada, J. C. Coleman, Jim Davis, Loring White, Tommy Macon, Mitchell Knox, Mark Colley, Keith Martin, Randy Ragsdale, Jesse Baker, Greg Watts, Gary Wagner.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1970/5284/thumbnail.jp
J Club, 1976-1977 Members 1
These students were members of J Club and football lettermen at Jacksonville State University in 1976-1977. Shown from left are, first row, Donald Young, DeWayne Parker, Rick Shrewsbury, Bill Vining, Mike Baxter, Jess Wright, Roland Weaver, Rocky Riddle, Dale Adams, Amos McCreary, Ronald Young, second row, Gary White, Tim Nichols, Greg Roberson, Thomas Davis, Cotton Campbell, Bo Emerson, Jerome Coleman, Butch Barker, Sherwin Sledge, Ray Brock, Gurley, Swanigan, Ricky Grammer, Art Lockridge, third row, Marty Hanson, Herbert Canada, J. C. Coleman, Jim Davis, Loring White, Tommy Macon, Mitchell Knox, Mark Colley, Keith Martin, Randy Ragsdale, Jesse Baker, Greg Watts, Gary Wagner.https://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib_ac_histimg_1970/5282/thumbnail.jp
Scientometric Portrait of Homi Jehangir Bhabha: The Father of Indian Nuclear Research Programme
Quantitative and qualitative analysis with graphic representation of the publication productivity of a scientist facilitates easy and clear perception about the work of a scientist. Bhabha’s scientific work spanned over more than three decades (1933-1967) during which he published 104 publications, which could be classified into nine fields: Interaction of Radiation with Matter (4), Quantum Electrodynamics (5), Mathematical Physics (2), Cosmic Ray Physics (18), Elementary Particle Physics (14), Field Theory (15), General Physics (2), Nuclear Physics (4) and General (40). The highest number of publications (6) were published in 1941, 1945 and 1964 respectively. The average number of publications published per year was 3.05. His productivity coefficient was 0.05 which is a clear indicates that his publication productivity was quite consistent throughout his scientific career. He was single author in 79 of his publications and the main author in 24 publications indicates that he always preferred to work himself and lead the team as ‘mentor’. Bhabha had 22 collaborators during the period. Team of research collaborators working with a successful scientist documents the sociological aspect of history of science while generating knowledge by a leader in a domain.
Bhabha became a citable author in 1937. Bhabha received 1211 citations to his 30 publications out of 104 publications. Out of 104, 74 publications did not receive any citations. Out of 74 publications, 40 publications dealt subjects mainly of general interest. Bhabha’s 86.66 percent of cited publications received their first citations within four years of their publication indicates that his publications were noticed immediately and had direct impact among the fellow researchers working all over the world. His overall citation rate was 11.64 per cited publication. The highest citations 389 were received to the domain ‘Cosmic ray physics’. The highest number of citations received were 45 in 1938. His self-citations were only 24 (1.98%) and citations by others were 1187 (98.02%). The highest self citations were six in 1946. Bhabha’s mean diachronous self-citation rate was 1.98. The highest citation rate 28.4 was to the domain ‘Quantum electrodynamics. His single authored publications have received the highest number 863 (71.26%) of citations. Bhabha’s five publications have been cited more than 100 times each. His publications have been cited by the authors working in various diverse fields like nuclear physics, mathematical physics, instrumentation, optics, geophysics and geochemistry, condensed matter physics, applied physics, electrical and electronic engineering, mechanical engineering etc., indicating a very diverse influence and impact of Bhabha’s publications. Bhabha’s publications have also been cited by the Nobel laureates like V. L. Ginzberg, Wolfgang Pauli, H. A. Bethe, M. Born, W. Bothe, E. P. Wigner, H. Yukawa, P. M. S. Blackett and C. N. Yang which is an indication of his originality of ideas and high quality of publications
Toxicological profile for dinitrotoluenes
A Toxicological Profile for Dinitrotoluenes, Draft for Public Comment was released in April 2013. This edition supersedes any previously released draft or final profile.Chemical manager(s)/author(s): Carolyn Harper, Nickolette Roney, Mike Fay, Selene Chou, Division of Toxicology and Human Health Sciences, Atlanta, GA;Heather Carlson-Lynch, Julie M. Klotzbach, Kelly Salinas, H. Danielle Johnson, Mario Citra, SRC, Inc., North Syracuse, NY
CrowdEEG Platform: A Collaborative Annotation Tool for Medical Time Series Data
This repository contains the code for the CrowdEEG web application, a collaborative annotation tool for medical time series data. Check out our Getting Started guide to learn how to run and deploy this web app.
This tool has been referenced in the following papers:
Mike Schaekermann, Graeme Beaton, Elaheh Sanoubari, Andrew Lim, Kate Larson, and Edith Law: Ambiguity-aware AI Assistants for Medical Data Analysis. CHI 2020.
Mike Schaekermann, Graeme Beaton, Minahz Habib, Andrew Lim, Kate Larson, and Edith Law: Understanding Expert Disagreement in Medical Data Analysis through Structured Adjudication. CSCW 2019.
Sokolov, E. and Abdoul Bachir, D. H. and Sakadi, F. and Williams, J. and Vogel, A. C. and Schaekermann, Mike and Tassiou, N. and Bah, A. K. and Khatri, V. and Hotan, G. C. and Ayub, N. and Leung, E. and Fantaneanu, T. A. and Patel, A. and Vyas, M. and Milligan, T. and Villamar, M. F. and Hoch, D. and Purves, S. and Esmaeili, B. and Stanley, M. and Lehn‐Schioler, T. and Tellez‐Zenteno, J. and Gonzalez‐Giraldo, E. and Tolokh, I. and Heidarian, L. and Worden, L. and Jadeja, N. and Fridinger, S. and Lee, L. and Law, E. and Fodé Abass, C. and Mateen, F. J.: Tablet‐based electroencephalography diagnostics for patients with epilepsy in the West African Republic of Guinea. European Journal of Neurology 2020.
Williams, Jennifer A and Cisse, Fodé Abass and Schaekermann, Mike and Sakadi, Foksouna and Tassiou, Nana Rahamatou and Hotan, Gladia C. and Bah, Aissatou Kenda and Hamani, Abdoul Bachir Djibo and Lim, Andrew and Leung, Edward C.W. and Fantaneanu, Tadeu A. and Milligan, Tracey A. and Khatri, Vidita and Hoch, Daniel B. and Vyas, Manav V. and Lam, Alice D. and Cohen, Joseph M. and Vogel, Andre C. and Law, Edith and Mateen, Farrah J: Smartphone EEG and remote online interpretation for children with epilepsy in the Republic of Guinea: Quality, characteristics, and practice implications. Seizure 2020.
You may also be interested in the CrowdEEG Dataset.
If you find this web application useful in your research, please consider citing:
@inproceedings{Schaekermann2020AmbiguityAwareAI,
Author = {Schaekermann, Mike and Beaton, Graeme and Sanoubari, Elaheh and Lim, Andrew and Larson, Kate and Law, Edith},
Title = {Ambiguity-Aware AI Assistants for Medical Data Analysis},
Year = {2020},
ISBN = {9781450367080},
Publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
Address = {New York, NY, USA},
DOI = {10.1145/3313831.3376506},
Pages = {1–14},
Numpages = {14},
Location = {Honolulu, HI, USA},
Series = {CHI '20}
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