1,130 research outputs found

    sj-pdf-1-ajs-10.1177_03635465221120388 – Supplemental material for Comparison of Walking Biomechanics After Physical Therapist–Led Care or Hip Arthroscopy for Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome: A Secondary Analysis From a Randomized Controlled Trial

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-ajs-10.1177_03635465221120388 for Comparison of Walking Biomechanics After Physical Therapist–Led Care or Hip Arthroscopy for Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome: A Secondary Analysis From a Randomized Controlled Trial by Tamara M. Grant, Laura E. Diamond, Claudio Pizzolato, Trevor N. Savage, Kim Bennell, Edward J. Dickenson, Jillian Eyles, Nadine E. Foster, Michelle Hall, David J. Hunter, David G. Lloyd, Robert Molnar, Nicholas J. Murphy, John O’Donnell, Parminder Singh, Libby Spiers, Phong Tran and David J. Saxby in The American Journal of Sports Medicine</p

    sj-pdf-2-hpi-10.1177_11207000211038550 – Supplemental material for Which hip morphology measures and patient factors are associated with age of onset and symptom severity in femoroacetabular impingement syndrome?

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-hpi-10.1177_11207000211038550 for Which hip morphology measures and patient factors are associated with age of onset and symptom severity in femoroacetabular impingement syndrome? by Nicholas J Murphy, Laura E Diamond, Kim L Bennell, Alexander Burns, Edward Dickenson, Jillian Eyles, Camdon Fary, Stuart M Grieve, Damian R Griffin, Young Jo Kim, James M Linklater, David G Lloyd, Robert Molnar, Rachel L O’Connell, John O’Donnell, Sunny Randhawa, Parminder J Singh, Libby Spiers, Phong Tran, Tim Wrigley and David J Hunter in HIP International</p

    sj-pdf-1-hpi-10.1177_11207000211038550 – Supplemental material for Which hip morphology measures and patient factors are associated with age of onset and symptom severity in femoroacetabular impingement syndrome?

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-hpi-10.1177_11207000211038550 for Which hip morphology measures and patient factors are associated with age of onset and symptom severity in femoroacetabular impingement syndrome? by Nicholas J Murphy, Laura E Diamond, Kim L Bennell, Alexander Burns, Edward Dickenson, Jillian Eyles, Camdon Fary, Stuart M Grieve, Damian R Griffin, Young Jo Kim, James M Linklater, David G Lloyd, Robert Molnar, Rachel L O’Connell, John O’Donnell, Sunny Randhawa, Parminder J Singh, Libby Spiers, Phong Tran, Tim Wrigley and David J Hunter in HIP International</p

    Delta Sigma Pi pledge class, Memphis State University, 1959

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    Delta Sigma Pi pledge class at Memphis State University, Memphis, Tennessee, in Spring 1959. Front (l-r): Jim Wright (President), Ronald Gene Booker (Vice-President), James Mallory (Secretary), James Pope (Treasurer), Robert Colvard, Gerald Pickens; Back (l-r): James Wilhelm (Vice-President, Gamma Zeta Chapter), David Goodwin, Albert S. Hart, Billy Joe Howell, David Parker, Bob Potts, Duane Pelfrey, Charles F. Dickenson (Assistant Pledgemaster).https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/speccoll-ua-ph-gallery1/1147/thumbnail.jp

    Review of \u3ci\u3eHome on the Range: A Century on the High Plains\u3c/i\u3e By James R. Dickenson

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    After reading the introduction to this book, I expected a quaint family history joined with some attempt at relating the specifics of the author\u27s family and personal experience to the larger context of Kansas and US history. I found that and much more. The first chapters set up a good model for family history-much better than most local histories or genealogies prepared by enthusiastic amateurs. But then James Dickenson is an accomplished journalist with over thirty years of journalistic experience including staffing the Washington Post; what should I have expected? By the half-way point, I realized that this is a very well written narrative, cultural history. By the end, I was inserting the bibliographic information into the required texts section of next semester\u27s undergraduate American West syllabus. This book not only lived up to Jim Lehrer\u27s and Gary Wills\u27 glowing back cover praises, but exceeded them. As Dickenson aptly recounts, This book is about life in a rural, wheat farming community in Western Kansas, a way of life that is gradually disappearing as the country becomes industrialized and urbanized. In fact, it seemed an apt depiction of High Plains culture generally during the period between 1888 and the present. I grew up on a Texas Southern Plains cotton farm a generation or two after the author. Yet, in McDonald, Kansas, I heard Dickensen\u27s maternal grandmother recounting stories very similar to those of my own grandmother. My little town possessed counterparts to the farmers, townsmen, agricultural practices, and youthful shenanigans of Dickenson\u27s, and I suspect so do the farm towns that dot the Great Plains from Texas to Saskatchewan and, judging from my father-in-law\u27s regaling, as far east as the corn fields of southeastern Iowa. Dickenson does a wonderful job capturing those elements of rural culture in its High Plains setting, which, as he warns throughout the book, may be disappearing as increased agricultural industrialization leads to declining demand for farm labor. This in turn decreases the need for community service sectors, both exacerbating the Plains population hemorrhage into either the urban islands of the West or the humid cities east of the 98th meridian. Home on the Range has some faults. It relies too heavily on Walter Prescott Webb\u27s barbed wire, six shooter, windmill matrix to explain Anglo-American settlement. It discusses in an unsophisticated manner the role that evangelicalism played in shaping the rural Plains world view. The last several chapters adopt a tone reminiscent of Washington Post feature stories-good journalism, but lacking the luster of the earlier material. Finally, despite the apparent craftsmanship of the whole narrative, the conclusion is abrupt and disappointingly anti-climactic. Still, this is a book well worth reading

    sj-pdf-1-ajs-10.1177_03635465221136547 – Supplemental material for Moderators, Mediators, and Prognostic Indicators of Treatment With Hip Arthroscopy or Physical Therapy for Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome: Secondary Analyses From the Australian FASHIoN Trial

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-ajs-10.1177_03635465221136547 for Moderators, Mediators, and Prognostic Indicators of Treatment With Hip Arthroscopy or Physical Therapy for Femoroacetabular Impingement Syndrome: Secondary Analyses From the Australian FASHIoN Trial by Nicholas J. Murphy, Jillian Eyles, Libby Spiers, Emily Davidson, Young Jo Kim, James M. Linklater, Onur Afacan, Kim L. Bennell, Alexander Burns, Laura E. Diamond, Edward Dickenson, Camdon Fary, Nadine E. Foster, Jurgen Fripp, Stuart M. Grieve, Damian R. Griffin, Gillian Heller, Robert Molnar, Ales Neubert, John O’Donnell, Michael O’Sullivan, Sunny Randhawa, Stephan Reichenbach, Parminder Singh, Phong Tran and David J. Hunter in The American Journal of Sports Medicine</p

    Mind to screen : the conveyance of disordered mental states in film

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    This thesis investigates the way in which film as a specific medium is capable of communicating a subjectivity that is troubled or otherwise compromised by mental illness. It is traditionally held that the written word is a far more suitable medium for communicating interiority than the medium of film, as the word is characterised as complex, abstract and conceptual, whilst the image is characterised as straightforward, obvious and concrete. This thesis will argue, however, that the medium of film is entirely capable of dealing with the abstract and conceptual, and can in fact construct extremely complex frameworks of subjectivity due to its multitrack character. Using detailed textual analysis, I will interrogate the way in which film utilises the multiple channels available to it (the visual, verbal, and aural) to create complex systems of meaning. Due to the tendency of filmmakers to appeal to literary sources for guidance when conveying mental states, the issue of adaptation is crucial to my entry into this discussion. My corpus primarily consists of films that are based on literary accounts of troubled subjectivity (either biographical or fictional). My thesis will compare and contrast filmic and literary conveyances of mental illness to establish the symbols, metaphors and analogies that communicate complex interiority. My key case studies are: A Scanner Darkly (dir. Richard Linklater, 2006), Clean, Shaven (dir. Lodge Kerrigan, 1993), A Beautiful Mind (dir. Ron Howard, 2001), Fight Club (dir. David Fincher, 1999), Secret Window (dir. David Koepp, 2004), The Hours (dir. Stephen Daldry, 2002), and A Single Man (dir. Tom Ford, 2008). This thesis makes an original contribution to knowledge by generating alternative readings of these films that take into account the multitrack character of the medium. These readings will highlight the specific techniques and vocabularies that are drawn on and developed to communicate disordered interiority

    Bulletin d'histoire de la culture matérielle #15

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    Articles: Introduction by Neil V. Rosenberg and Shane O'Dea. -- Interior forms. Interior functions: Interior motives : Rooms, objects, and meaning in Atlantic Canada homes by Gerald L. Pocius. -- The development of heating and cooking technology in the Newfoundland house by Shane O'Dea. -- A woman's touch: domestic arrangements in the rural Newfoundland home by Linda Dale. -- Aspects of socializing and partying in outport Newfoundland by Wilfred W. Wareham. -- Sacred and profane space: ritual interaction and process in the Newfoundland house wake by Gary R. Butler. -- Communities and families: family life and living conditions in Eighteenth-Century Louisbourg by Kenneth Donavan. -- Barracks life in the nineteenth century, or How and why Tommy's lot improved by Carol M. Whitfield. -- Furniture: Furniture and the Atlantic Canada condition by Donald Blake Webster. -- Folk influence in Nova Scotia interiors: the Lunenburg County example by Thomas Lackey. -- Halifax cabinet-makers, 1837-1875: apprenticeships by Marie Elwood. -- Cabinet-making in Prince Edward Island by Irene Rogers. -- Thomas Nisbet: a reappraisal of his life and work by T.G. Dilworth. -- Decorated walls and ceilings in Nova Scotia by Cora Greenaway. -- Room decorating in the first half of the Nineteenth Century by Charles H. Foss. -- Traditional furniture of Atlantic Canada: Commentary by David Orr. -- Collectors, dealers and museums: private initiative and public responsibility: a roundatable discussion. -- Closing remarks: Victoria Dickenson, George KapelosSpecial issue: Proceedings of the Atlantic Canada Institute Colloquium: Interiors: Cultural patterns in the Atlantic Canadian home.The Material History Bulletin was published 1976-Fall 1990 (nos. 1-32). The name was then changed to the Material History Review, published Spring 1991-Fall 2005 (nos. 33-62). The name changed again to Material Culture Review, Spring 2006 (no. 63)-present. Published semiannually

    Solving operational models of interdependent infrastructure systems

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    We formulate and solve a model of interdependent fuel and electric power infrastructure systems with explicit representation of the fuel required to run some electric power generators and the power required to heat and pump fuel. Our model determines a set of fuel and power flows that result in the minimum-cost of operating both systems, including penalty costs for failing to deliver each material to each of several external customers. We then formulate models of each system separate from the other, and, for each system, represent each interdependence relationship as a demand node with associated penalties. We implement an iterative algorithm for solving various instances of the problem; the algorithm alternates between solving each system separately, and passing material requirements to the other model. We then evaluate how well our algorithm performs in comparison to the monolithic formulation. We conclude with suggestions for improvements to the algorithm.Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.Lieutenant, United States Navyhttp://archive.org/details/solvingoperation109454455
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