3,908 research outputs found
Dr. Jennifer Erkulwater and Dr. Catherine Bagwell – Faculty Author Interview
Featured authors are Dr. Catherine Bagwell, Associate Professor of Psychology and Dr. Jennifer Erkulwater, Associate Professor of Political Science. Dr. Rick Mayes is another co-author, but he is unable to join us today due to a research leave project in Peru. Their new book, Medicating Children: ADHD and Pediatric Mental Health, integrates analyses of the clinical, political, historical, educational, social, economic and legal aspects of ADHD and the medications and treatment surrounding the mental disorder
Book review: Hamish MacCunn (1868-1916): a musical life, by Jennifer L. Oates
Book review of: Hamish MacCunn (1868-1916): a musical life (Music in 19th-Century Britain) by Jennifer L. Oates. Farnham: Ashgate, 2013; ISBN 9780754661832 (£60.00)Publisher PD
Genomic signatures of environmental selection despite near-panmixia in summer flounder
Rapid environmental change is altering the selective pressures experienced by marine species. While adaptation to local environmental conditions depends on a balance between dispersal and natural selection across the seascape, the spatial scale of adaptation and the relative importance of mechanisms maintaining adaptation in the ocean are not well understood. Here, using population assignment tests, Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC), and genome scans with double-digest restriction-site associated DNA sequencing data, we evaluated population structure and locus--environment associations in a commercially important species, summer flounder (Paralichthys dentatus), along the U.S. east coast. Based on 1,137 single nucleotide polymorphisms across 232 individuals spanning nearly 1,900 km, we found no indication of population structure across Cape Hatteras, North Carolina (FST = 0.0014) or of isolation by distance along the coast using individual relatedness. ABC estimated the probability of dispersal across the biogeographic break at Cape Hatteras to be high (95% credible interval: 7%--50% migration). However, we found 15 loci whose allele frequencies were associated with at least one of four environmental variables. Of those, 11 were correlated with bottom temperature. For summer flounder, our results suggest continued fisheries management as a single population and identify likely response mechanisms to climate change. Broadly speaking, our findings suggest that spatial balancing selection can manifest in adaptive divergence on regional scales in marine fish despite high dispersal, and that these conditions likely result in the widespread distribution of adaptive alleles and a high potential for future genetic adaptation in response to changing environmental conditions. In the context of a rapidly changing world, a landscape genomics perspective offers a useful approach for understanding the causes and consequences of genetic differentiation.Peer reviewe
Cult: A Composite Novel
Cult (redacted)
The first component of the thesis is a composite novel called Cult which falls into two parts with seven narratives in each. Part 1 tracks the protagonist, Ellen, from her first involvement with the cult through to her eventually leaving it. Although fiction, the first half of the book answers the kinds of questions the author is asked when people discover that she was once a sannyasin (a follower of the guru Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh). While the experiences of meditation, group therapy and communal living are all faithfully rendered within the stories, the need for strong characters, narrative drive and a lightness of touch takes precedence.
Part 2 picks up Ellen’s story some twenty or so years later and explores what becomes of her in middle age. It also looks at other groups in society, such as academia, the law and the internet dating community which each have their own jargon, hierarchies, rituals and rules but are not considered to be cults.
The book examines the question raised in the Epigraph, ‘how do we be together when we feel so alone’ with a focus on relationships other than the familial and the romantic.
Collisions, Chasms and Connections: a Performative Exploration of the Composite Novel Form
The second part of the thesis is both a critical and creative response to three contemporary American books: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout; A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan; and Legend of a Suicide by David Vann. The critical element comprises a close reading of the three books; a chronological reconstruction of their overarching storylines; and a consideration of what their authors have said about writing the books. It concludes that, in the composite novel, the simultaneous presentation of multiple views and storylines operate much like a 3D image to give the impression of depth to the characters and situations rendered. The creative element of the essay is a playful and personal response to the texts
A digital humanities experiment
[Extract:] What if the revelatory potential of the digital humanities rested less on computational power and more on the breadth of perspectives that a website might be designed to hold and gently jostle together?
Feral Atlas is an experiment in opening a transdisciplinary space for the study of the Anthropocene. In an orchestrated dance of form and content, the project takes advantage of the aesthetic and connective affordances of the digital to bring a plurality of epistemic registers into relationship. In this way Feral Atlas performs its argument, delivering an iterative, multisensuous, and multiperspectival account of the ways imperial and industrial infrastructures make Anthropocene worlds
You are here
[Extract:] Sydney, December 2019. Amidst the thick smoke haze that chokes Australia’s east coast, as the everyday proceeds under eerie orange light, ash falling on washing lines and backyard barbeques far removed from containment lines, I open my window, look up to the yellow-brown skies, and inhale a world saturated with loss. Immense, immeasurable, and incommensurable loss.
Loss thickened, as it would turn out, with a cocktail of toxins with effects also likely to never be fully quantified
Methods of increasing toughness of immiscible polymer blends, U.S. Patent 8,497,324
An immiscible polymer blend that includes an amount of poly(trimethylene terephthalate) (PTT) and an amount of poly(methylmethacrylate) (PMMA). A method for preparing an immiscible polymer blend by (a) identifying a first polymeric component and a second polymeric component as immiscible when blended; (b) combining the first polymeric component and the second polymeric component; and (c) mixing the first polymeric component and the second polymeric component to produce an immiscible polymer blend that includes structures in the blend having a maximum size of less than about 1,000 μm is also presented. An article that includes an immiscible polymer blend of poly(trimethylene terephthalate) (PTT) and poly(methylmethacrylate) (PMMA) and an article formed from an immiscible polymer blend prepared by the method of the present invention are also presented
sj-pdf-1-vmj-10.1177_1358863X231155305 – Supplemental material for Management of spontaneous coronary artery dissection: Trends over time
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-vmj-10.1177_1358863X231155305 for Management of spontaneous coronary artery dissection: Trends over time by Elliot Feldbaum, Elizabeth W Thompson, Tessa S Cook, Monika Sanghavi, Robert L Wilensky, Paul N Fiorilli and Jennifer Lewey in Vascular Medicine</p
Ecological baselines
Historical baselines for Oregon's coastal resources: what was the Oregon coast like in the past? / Roberta L. Hall -- Prehistoric baselines / Roberta L. Hall -- Shifting salmon baselines / Courtland L. Smith, Jennifer S. Gilden, Karina Lorenz Mrakovcich -- The sea otter in Oregon's past and present / David R. Hatch -- Purple sea urchins, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, along the Oregon coast / Thomas A. Ebert -- Reflections on baselines and restoration / Roberta L. Hall.editor: Roberta L. Hall (Emeritus Professor, Department of Anthropology, Oregon State University) ; contributing authors: Thomas A. Ebert (Emeritus Professor, Department of Biology, San Diego State University), Jennifer S. Gilden (Associate Staff Officer, Communications and Information, Pacific Fishery Management Council), Roberta L. Hall (Emeritus Professor, Department of Anthropology, Oregon State University), David R. Hatch (Founding member, the Elakha Alliance; member, the Confederated Tribes of the Siletz Indians), Karina Lorenz Mrakovcich (Professor, Science Department, U.S. Coast Guard Academy), Courtland L. Smith (Emeritus Professor, School of Language, Culture, and Society, Oregon State University).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Understanding graphs with two independent variables
Adults are not necessarily competent users of graphs with two independent variables, despite the frequency of this representational format. The three tasks in this thesis address the impact of interpretation statements and graph patterns. Interpretation statements were based on the statistical effects – simple effects, main effects, and interactions. Graph patterns were systematically varied based on a novel classification scheme of graphs with two IVs. I suggest that the complexity of a graph’s data pattern depends on the consistency of the simple effects’ directions and magnitudes. In the first study, undergraduates constructed graphs based on statements about data patterns. Errors reflected a misunderstanding of how two IVs could be combined and represented graphically. When the experimental group had graph-relevant information added (variable labels spatially located on axes), the ability to represent the relationships among the IVs significantly increased. The ability to satisfy the constraints imposed by the statements was not affected. Adding labels specifically targeted skills relevant to graphical literacy. Transfer to a third trial was stronger for those of higher math abilities. The second study focused on the effect of an introductory statistics course. Overall, undergraduates performed well on statements describing the simple effects of the IVs. However, even though they improved from Time 1 to Time 2 for interaction statements, performance on statements about main effects and interactions still showed considerable room for improvement. In the third study, repeated trials of the 20 patterns proposed by the simple effects consistency model established that the proposed classification scheme addresses additional sources of variability in reasoning with graphs (i.e., sources not captured by traditional classification schemes). As the complexity level of the data pattern increased, performance (based on accuracy and RT) decreased, with parallel impacts on performance for each IV’s complexity. This suggests that participants responded to conceptual differences among the levels, as the graph’s perceptual characteristics vary based on the IV. Further development of a model organizing graph patterns will allow investigation of the interplay between the statement and graph pattern. In turn, this can lead to greater understanding of the graphical reasoning processes and improvements in graphical literacy.Ph.D.Includes bibliographical referencesIncludes vitaby Jennifer L. Coope
- …
