2,738 research outputs found

    Can Cook/Riverside qualitative study video

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    We created a lay-friendly video describing our qualitative study exploring recipients' experiences of accessing food projects from social enterprise Can Cook. The project was in collaboration with Can Cook and Riverside housing, and featured the lead researcher Natalie Taylor, as well as representatives from Can Cook and Riverside

    Ep. #184 - Natalie Loveless

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    This recording and transcript form part of a collection of podcasts conducted by the Cultures of Energy at Rice University. Cultures of Energy brings writers, artists and scholars together to talk, think and feel their way into the Anthropocene. We cover serious issues like climate change, species extinction and energy transition. But we also try to confront seemingly huge and insurmountable problems with insight, creativity and laughter.Dominic and Cymene celebrate the one thing the USA ever did right—Mr. Rogers. And we wonder whether there is such a thing as Canadian BBQ.  Then (13:02) the delightful Natalie Loveless (http://loveless.ca/about) joins the pod. She is the author of a forthcoming book with Duke University Press, How to Make Art at the End of the World: A Manifesto for Research-Creation, and that’s where we begin the conversation with a discussion of the relatively new domain of “research-creation” in Canadian higher education and its potential to help expand who belongs in universities and their modes of legitimate practice. We turn from there to the dilemmas of teaching climate catastrophe to students and her new book project, Sensing the Anthropocene: Aesthetic Attunement in an age of Urgency, which connects research-creation to climate justice. We talk about relation as artistic form and why she thinks it is so crucial that Anthropocene art pursue ecological forms that rupture the systems that brought us to our present circumstances. Finally, we discuss why it’s important not to be captured by the tools and temporalities of university audit culture, her thoughts on the Anthropocene concept as lure and barnacle, and how we might build a feminist university of creativity, experiment and with an eros that is cathected, committed and sustaining

    My First Days in Australia

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    Postcard from Natalie Stout, during the Linfield College Semester Abroad Program at James Cook University in Cairns, Australi

    Natalie Gibson’s Story of Mary

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    Natalie Daise reads De Nyew Testament, Luke 2:1-4

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    Visual and performing artist Natalie Daise reads a passage from the Gullah Sea Island Creole Translation of the New Testament. She then reads the parallel passage in the King James Version. Natalie and her husband, Ron, worked on the translation of the Bible into Gullah. Keywords: Gullah Language, Bible, GUL

    First person – Natalie Farrawell

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    ABSTRACT First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Journal of Cell Science, helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Natalie Farrawell is the first author on ‘SOD1A4V aggregation alters ubiquitin homeostasis in a cell model of ALS’, published in Journal of Cell Science. Natalie is a Senior Research Assistant in the lab of Justin Yerbury at the Illawarra Health and Medical Research Institute, University of Wollongong, Australia, investigating the molecular processes underpinning amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), with a particular emphasis on protein misfolding, protein aggregation and inclusion formation.</jats:p

    The Modern History of Global Food

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    Can we trace the long history of globalization through the movement of foods around the world? History students Leland Cook, Margaret Dickinson, Natalie Fulk, and Noah Switalski will share their insights from collaborative research with Dr. Lauren Janes during the summer of 2016. Each global food--potatoes, sugar, curry, and rice--tells a story of connectivity across continents and cultures, showing how our lives, diets, and economies were shaped by centuries of meaningful interactions around food

    Volumetric assessment of material loss from retrieved cemented metal hip replacement stems

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    The aim of this study was to investigate the scale of metallic wear debris generation at the cement-stem interface of polished cobalt-chrome implants. Thirty-one Zimmer CPT cemented femoral stems were retrieved; mean time in vivo was 77.8 months (range 38-97 months), with 70% (n=21) of the stems considered to be well-fixed at the time of revision surgery. Volumetric loss was measured using optical microscopy, with focus variation technology capable of 3D reproduction of the surfaces. The scale of loss was found to be pronounced (mean: 3.1mm3, 0.02-11.4mm3), with a mean rate of 0.5mm3/year (0.003-1.9mm3/year). These results demonstrate that material loss from the cement-stem interface of is comparable to that of a taper interface, even in apparently well-fixed stems

    Michael Cook: el islam en perspectiva comparada

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    El Holberg Prize 2014, un distinguido y suculento galardón que se concede anualmente en Noruega, ha recaído este año en la persona de Michael Cook. Con ello asocia su nombre a una selecta lista que, en los últimos años, ha tenido entre sus integrantes a Bruno Latour, Manuel Castells, Jürgen Kocka y Natalie Zemon Davis. Como ha señalado el comité encargado del fallo, Cook es uno de los principales expertos actuales en la historia y el pensamiento religioso del islam. Asimismo, ha dejado su imp..
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