1,631 research outputs found

    First person – Guillaume Hatte

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    International audienceFirst 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. Guillaume Hatte is the first author on 'Tight junctions negatively regulate mechanical forces applied to adherens junctions in vertebrate epithelial tissue', published in Journal of Cell Science. Guillaume completed his PhD in the lab of Claude Prigent at CNRS UMR 6290 and Universite' de Rennes 1, Rennes, France, where he investigated the involvement of tight junctions during epithelial cell cytokinesis in a vertebrate model

    A Brief History of Human Time - Cross-verified Dataset

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    This cross-verified dataset contains 2.2 million individuals, it can be used for research purposes. This dataset is linked to the following paper that should be cited directly instead of the data itself: Morgane Laouenan, Palaash Bhargava, Jean-Benoît Eyméoud, Olivier Gergaud, Guillaume Plique, Etienne Wasmer (2022) A cross-verified database of notable people, 3500BC-2018AD, Scientific Data, June 2022. Bibtex: @article{bhht3, author = {Laouenan, Morgane and Bhargava, Palaash and Eyméoud, Jean-Benoît and Gergaud, Olivier and Plique, Guillaume and Wasmer, Etienne}, title = {A cross-verified database of notable people, 3500BC-2018AD}, journal = {Scientific Data}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, year = {2022}, month = {Jun}, day = {09}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {290}, issn = {2052-4463}, doi = {10.1038/s41597-022-01369-4}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-022-01369-4} } This dataset is subject to CC-BY-SA licensing. </p

    Fortune and desire in Guillaume de Machaut

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    There is a pervasive tendency, in Machaut scholarship, to read his poetry as having value only insofar as it speaks to our postmodern age: either it is fragmented and riven with ambiguities, or it celebrates eroticism and the things of this world for their own sake; in any case, it resists religious and moral orthodoxy. Such readings, while often valuable in themselves, fail to take sufficient account of the influence which Boethian and Neoplatonic ideas had upon Machaut, and thus misunderstand his work on a fundamental level. By paying attention to the Boethian content in the narrative dits, and by analysing Machaut's verse more thoroughly than has been done before, my thesis demonstrates not only this author's moral orthodoxy, but also his extremely sophisticated didactic methods. I begin with the Confort d'ami, Machaut's most overtly moral work. The Confort engages with the supposed 'worldly' perspective of its imprisoned addressee, adapting biblical and classical exempla in order to coax Charles of Navarre towards a deeper understanding of worldly fortune. In Chapter 2 I show how, in the Prologue and the Dit du vergier, the ambiguity so beloved of critics can serve as a moral commentary on the carnality and self-absorption of the erotic and artistic points of view. Having established, in the preceding chapters, that this author's approach to his subject is ambiguous and critical, in Chapter 3 I explore the extremes of his pessimism, and show how his love poetry can incorporate sophisticated philosophical ideas, through my analysis of the Jugement du roy de Behaigne. The thesis culminates in a detailed reading of the Remede de Fortune. Through his deliberately idealised statements about education, through his application of these views to the art of courtly love, through his composition (and setting to music) of a sequence of virtuoso lyrics, and through his explicit invocations of and borrowings from Boethius, Machaut develops an empathic but ultimately, as I argue, deeply sceptical vision of earthly love

    A Brief History of Human Time - Codes & Datasets

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    This compressed folder includes the code used for scraping and building the dataset, the intermediate datasets and the (not cross-verified) exhaustive dataset. This dataset is linked to the following paper that should be cited directly instead of the data itself: Morgane Laouenan, Palaash Bhargava, Jean-Benoît Eyméoud, Olivier Gergaud, Guillaume Plique, Etienne Wasmer (2022) A cross-verified database of notable people, 3500BC-2018AD, Scientific Data, June 2022. Bibtex: @article{bhht3, author = {Laouenan, Morgane and Bhargava, Palaash and Eyméoud, Jean-Benoît and Gergaud, Olivier and Plique, Guillaume and Wasmer, Etienne}, title = {A cross-verified database of notable people, 3500BC-2018AD}, journal = {Scientific Data}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, year = {2022}, month = {Jun}, day = {09}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {290}, issn = {2052-4463}, doi = {10.1038/s41597-022-01369-4}, url = {https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-022-01369-4} } The intermediate files as well as the exhaustive database are not cross-verified and should not be used directly or under the full responsibility of users. All datasets included in this folder are subject to CC-BY-SA licensing. </p

    Créer des Heatmaps à partir de grosses matrices en R

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    Article pour le blog bioinfo-fr.netAstuce : Créer des Heatmaps à partir de grosses matrices en R jeu 11 Juin 2020 Guillaume DevaillyAstuce 0 En génomique, et sans doute dans tout un tas d'autres domaines omiques ou big data, nous essayons souvent de tracer des grosses matrices sous forme d'heatmap. Par grosse matrice, j'entends une matrice dont le nombre de lignes et/ou de colonnes est plus grand que le nombre de pixels sur l'écran que vous utilisez. Par exemples, si vous avez une matrice de 50 colonnes et de 20 000 lignes (cas assez fréquent quand il y a une ligne par gène), il y a de forte chances que cette matrice aura plus de lignes qu'il n'y a de pixels sur votre écran-1080 pixels verticaux sur un écran HD (à moins bien sûr que vous lisiez ceci dans un futur lointain d'hyper haute définition). Le problème lorsqu'on affiche des matrices qui ont plus de lignes que de pixel à l'écran, c'est justement que chaque pixel va devoir représenter plusieurs cellules de la matrice, et que le comportement par défaut de R sur ce point-là n'est pas forcément optimal

    Créer des Heatmaps à partir de grosses matrices en R

    No full text
    Article pour le blog bioinfo-fr.netAstuce : Créer des Heatmaps à partir de grosses matrices en R jeu 11 Juin 2020 Guillaume DevaillyAstuce 0 En génomique, et sans doute dans tout un tas d'autres domaines omiques ou big data, nous essayons souvent de tracer des grosses matrices sous forme d'heatmap. Par grosse matrice, j'entends une matrice dont le nombre de lignes et/ou de colonnes est plus grand que le nombre de pixels sur l'écran que vous utilisez. Par exemples, si vous avez une matrice de 50 colonnes et de 20 000 lignes (cas assez fréquent quand il y a une ligne par gène), il y a de forte chances que cette matrice aura plus de lignes qu'il n'y a de pixels sur votre écran-1080 pixels verticaux sur un écran HD (à moins bien sûr que vous lisiez ceci dans un futur lointain d'hyper haute définition). Le problème lorsqu'on affiche des matrices qui ont plus de lignes que de pixel à l'écran, c'est justement que chaque pixel va devoir représenter plusieurs cellules de la matrice, et que le comportement par défaut de R sur ce point-là n'est pas forcément optimal

    Rossini: son opéra de Guillaume Tell (1829)

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    Transcript of ROSSINI: SON OPERA DE GUILLAUME TELL by anonymous author, appearing in REVUE MUSICALE, 1829, pp. 103-104

    First person – Guillaume Hatte

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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. Guillaume Hatte is the first author on ‘Tight junctions negatively regulate mechanical forces applied to adherens junctions in vertebrate epithelial tissue’, published in Journal of Cell Science. Guillaume completed his PhD in the lab of Claude Prigent at CNRS UMR 6290 and Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France, where he investigated the involvement of tight junctions during epithelial cell cytokinesis in a vertebrate model.</jats:p

    Guillaume Lamy et l'âme matérielle

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    Guillaume Lamy and the material soul. Guillaume Lamy, author of several medico-philosophical works, defended an epicurean and anti-finalistic philosophy, which led him to reject new medical ideas. His definition of the fiery material soul in his 6th Discours anatomique was reproduced in several 18th-century works, but his works do not seem to have played a vital role in the development of materialistic thought. Only La Mettrie, who preferred a different explanation of intellectual functions, refers to him. Unlike Willis and Duncan, with whom his ideas show some similarity, Lamy's explanations of the functioning of the brain are theoretical, not based on experimental evidence and thus were ignored by the vitalists. The relationship between medicine and materialism can be seen to be more complex than is often thought.Thomson Ann. Guillaume Lamy et l'âme matérielle. In: Dix-huitième Siècle, n°24, 1992. Le matérialisme des Lumières. pp. 63-71

    Guillaume Tell, opéra en quatre actes. (juillet-septembre 1829)

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    Transcript of GUILLAUME TELL, OPÉRA EN QUATRE ACTES by anonymous author, appearing in LE MERCURE DE FRANCE AU DIX-NEUVIEME SIECLE, juillet-septembre 1829, pp. 187-188
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