16,677 research outputs found

    Carroll, C D, 218155

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/376124Surname: CARROLL Given Name(s) or Initials: C D Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 218155 Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: SEA-3420188687 Item: [2016.0049.08432] "Carroll, C D, 218155

    O. D. Carroll, Ray Walker, C. D. Hoeflein, and Harry Kingsbury

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    O. D. Carroll, Ray Walker, C. D. Hoeflein, and Harry Kingsbury.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/26708/thumbnail.jp

    Figure 7. Caecilian skulls. A, B, C in The Palaeozoic Ancestry of Salamanders, Frogs and Caecilians

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    Figure 7. Caecilian skulls. A, B, C, dorsal, palatal, and lateral views of the caecilian Grandisonia alternanas. D, occiput of Hypogeophis rostratus. Reproduced from Carroll & Currie (1975).Published as part of Carroll, Robert L., 2007, The Palaeozoic Ancestry of Salamanders, Frogs and Caecilians, pp. 1-140 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 150 on page 14, DOI: 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2007.00246.x, http://zenodo.org/record/542865

    AdS-Carroll branes

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    Coset methods are used to determine the action of a co-dimension one brane (domain wall) embedded in (d + 1)-dimensional AdS space in the Carroll limit in which the speed of light goes to zero. The action is invariant under the non-linearly realized symmetries of the AdS-Carroll spacetime. The Nambu-Goldstone field exhibits a static spatial distribution for the brane with a time varying momentum density related to the brane's spatial shape as well as the AdS-C geometry. The AdS-C vector field dual theory is obtained. Published by AIP Publishing

    Homes for the homeless in Carroll County, Georgia, 1969

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    The following proposal, a complex unit or group of two- family unit, brick houses to be constructed on a ten-acre tract of land, purchased for this project from the county commissioner, in Carroll County in the western section of the state of Georgia. The project is designed to give adequate housing facilities to the three hundred or more who are dependent on welfare checks for survival. This proposal is submitted to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, the Office of Housing and Urban Development, Washington, D. C. The program director is Barbara Ann Dunn, Social Welfare Worker, assigned to Carroll County. The project is designed to be permanent and contain an element of perpetual financial support in that the amount of money to be funded will be in excess of the projected present needs with the remainder to be put in a saving plan, drawing interest at the rate of five percent, with returns to be used to perpetuate the project fund-wise. The housing project will be located near the new vocational- technical school, making it possible for the occupants to attend classes and thereby learn a trade. The school will be staffed with sufficient personnel to make it possible to offer a wide variety and choice of skills. Nursing classes, to be tied in to the already existing hospital facilities,auto mechanics, computer education, secretarial courses, typing, shorthand, dress designing and making, interior decorating, and alterations, upholstering, furniture finishing, and brick-laying, to name only a few

    Randomized Controlled Trial of Imago Relationship Therapy: Exploring Statistical and Clinical Significance

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    For decades, couples around the world have used Imago relationship therapy (IRT) to improve their relationships. While anecdotal success stories abound, no randomized controlled trial of IRT’s impact has been accomplished until now. The authors review the results of a randomized controlled trial of distressed, treatment-seeking couples who completed 12 sessions of IRT and the impact their involvement had on their marital satisfaction. Results showed that (a) individuals in the treatment condition experienced statistically significant increases in marital satisfaction, while couples in the control group did not; (b) levels of marital satisfaction did decrease significantly from posttreatment to follow-up but remained significantly higher than at pretreatment; (c) though statistically significant, the improvements experienced by the treatment group were not clinically significant improvements; and (d) while approximately one-third of participants achieved recovery during treatment, at the dyad level, only one couple achieved recovery. Further analysis and recommendations for future research are discussed

    Employee Error: The Development, Validation, and Use of a Perceived Error Measure for Predicting Rumination, Burnout, and Counterproductive Work Behaviors

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    Errors are ubiquitous in organizations. Nonetheless, scholarly literature regarding workplace error has largely focused on low-rate catastrophic failures such as the Challenger, Columbia, and Chernobyl accidents. However, errors are not always large in scale nor rare. A general measure of perceived error will be useful for industries that want to understand the relationship between employee error and important job-related outcomes such as rumination, burnout, and counterproductive work behaviors (CWBs). In order to better understand this area, we created and validated a perceived error scale (PES) on a general population of full-time workers. Study one consisted of 440 observations collected via MTurk. An exploratory factor analysis was conducted on 60 percent of the data, and a confirmatory factor analysis was conducted on the remaining sample. Based on psychometric analysis, we determined that perceptions of error were consistent with three established categories of error: individual, latent, and planning errors. Study two utilized a cross-sectional design consisting of 314 observations. SEM was used in this study to test a sequential mediation model. The results suggested that how an individual perceives error may impact rumination, burnout, and CWBs. Both the relationship between latent errors and CWBs were mediated by rumination and burnout. Similarly, the relationship between individual errors and CWB was mediated by rumination and burnout. Planning errors were not related to any of the downstream variables in the model. This is consistent with goal progress theory and the stressor-emotion model of CWB. Notably, the PES factor structure was replicated in the second study adding to its reliability evidence. Future research may consider taking a more longitudinal approach to measuring perceptions of error, burnout, rumination, and CWBs

    Dr. Carroll Green (l), Ruth Waddy (c) and Claude Booker (r)

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    Dr. Carroll Green, art historian, Ruth Waddy, artist/author, and Claude Booker, President of the Black Arts Council at a conference at the Arena: 109 East Magnolia Stree

    Determination of P(c -> D*(+)) and BR(c -> l(+)) at LEP 1

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    The probability P(c --> D*(+)) that a charm quark fragments into a D*+ meson and the c --> l(+) semileptonic branching fraction were measured in Z(0) decay into c (c) over bar events. From the analysis of 3.5 Million Z(0) events collected from 1992 to 1995, a sample of charm meson decays with 81% c (c) over bar purity was selected. The product of the c --> D*(+) fragmentation probability times the D*(+) --> D(0)pi(+) branching fraction was measured to be: P(c --> D*(+)).BR(D*(+) --> D(0)pi(+)) = 0.174 +/- 0.010(stat) +/- 0.004(syst). Using the world averaged value for BR(D*+ --> D(0)pi(+)), the fragmentation probability is inferred: P(c --> D*(+)) = 0.255 +/- 0.015(stat) +/- 0.006(syst) +/- 0.005(syst.BR). From the same sample, 1828 +/- 51 identified leptons in the opposite hemisphere were selected. From this sample, the charm semileptonic branching fraction was measured to be: BR(c --> l(+)) = 0.0958 +/- 0.0042(stat) +/- 0.0028(syst)

    Phase transition from quark-meson coupling hyperonic matter to deconfined quark matter

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    We investigate the possibility and consequences of phase transitions from an equation of state (EOS) describing nucleons and hyperons interacting via mean fields of σ, ω, and ρ mesons in the recently improved quark-meson coupling (QMC) model to an EOS describing a Fermi gas of quarks in an MIT bag. The transition to a mixed phase of baryons and deconfined quarks, and subsequently to a pure deconfined quark phase, is described using the method of Glendenning. The overall EOS for the three phases is calculated for various scenarios and used to calculate stellar solutions using the Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff equations. The results are compared with recent experimental data, and the validity of each case is discussed with consequences for determining the species content of the interior of neutron stars.J. D. Carroll, D. B. Leinweber, and A. G. Williams, A. W. Thoma
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