1,787 research outputs found
Sonnet on an Air-Balloon
Page from "The Universal Magazine" including a "Sonnet on an Air-Balloon" by Mrs. Piozzi [Hester Lynch].For more information about this item, visit https://archivesspace.mit.edu/repositories/2/digital_objects/70
Thomas Lynch and Charles Bracelen Flood Interview (part 1)
An interview with Thomas Lynch and Charles Bracelen Flood in Richmond, Kentucky discussing their experiences during the Vietnam War on April 29, 1997. General Lynch was an officer in the 3rd Battalion of the 8th Army Infantry Division and Flood was a correspondent with the Associated Press and freelance author
Thomas Lynch and Charles Bracelen Flood Interview (part 2)
An interview with Thomas Lynch and Charles Bracelen Flood in Richmond, Kentucky discussing their experiences during the Vietnam War on April 29, 1997. General Lynch was an officer in the 3rd Battalion of the 8th Army Infantry Division and Flood was a correspondent with the Associated Press and freelance author
Licklider Correspondence
Correspondence between Kevin Lynch and J.C.R. Licklider regarding the proposed topic of study. The study discussed became the Perceptual Form of the City, a research project investigating the individual’s perception of the urban landscape
Frontmatter (Titlepage, Table of Contents, Author List, PC List, Reviewer List)
Front matter including table of contents, author list, PC list, and reviewer list
The origins of bioethics: remembering when medicine went wrong/ John A. Lynch.
Includes bibliographical references and index."In this book, author John Lynch shows how three controversial experiments--the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, the Willowbrook Hepatitis Study, and the Cincinnati Total Body Irradiation Study--have been remembered and forgotten, and why their memorialization or their erasure matters today"--Bioethical memory and minimal remembrance -- Experiment or treatment? : histories of medical care, research, and regulation -- Lawsuits and legacies : competing memorializations of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study -- Minimal remembrance and the obligation to remember : official and vernacular memories of the Willowbrook State School -- Attempting to forget : the University of Cincinnati radiation studies.1 online resource
A Clinical Audit of a Lynch Syndrome referral protocol
Approximately 14% of patients with colorectal cancer have tumours that exhibit a deficiency in mismatch repair (MMR) genes, of which 3% have Lynch syndrome where the mutations have germline origin. Lynch syndrome is associated with significant lifetime cancer risks, so early diagnosis is required to optimise outcomes (Vasen et al 2015). Previously family history assessment was used to identify individuals with Lynch syndrome, but a significant proportion were not identified due to familial heterogeneity.; therefore routine MMR immunohistochemistry testing of resected tumours (from patients with primary colorectal cancer aged 18 to 70 years old) has been practiced at a local NHS Trust since 2012. The primary aim of this testing was to inform treatment decision making, since the use of adjuvant chemotherapy is not beneficial in treating MMR deficient tumours. As a result of this testing, individuals with Lynch syndrome have been identified. Previous data suggests that only a small propo
The Blues of David Lynch
International audienceThis article is an attempt to elaborate a typology of the color blue in the color films of David Lynch up to and including Mulholland Drive (2001). The color blue is considered alternately as light, matter or verbal language. The author studies the use, function, value and meaning of blue lighting, divided into static and flashing light, and of the blue objects in Blue Velvet (1986) and Mulholland Drive. The author shows how Lynch appropriates connotations Western culture, under the influence of Christian and romantic imagery, traditionally associates with the color blue in his cinematographic compositions. The author argues that this typology has bearing not only on the films' narratives and narrative structures, but also on the way the films represent the individual spectator's response to aesthetic effect as a form of nostalgia or blues
(WIP) PBL: Building the connection between theory and practice using integrated projects
Author Contributions:
Adam Carlton Lynch – Integrated Projects concept, Original Draft, Editing
Gary Brooking – Editing and Reviewing
Having read the manuscript, the authors agree to this published version.View the PDF here: https://peer.asee.org/46358Background: Working to enable a heightened sense of Connections between the theories of engineering principles to the practical product value delivered to customers, we dramatically modified our current class project in an undergraduate engineering statics course. We threaded interactive exercises adopted from The Kern Engineering Entrepreneurial Network (KEEN)'s Entrepreneurial Mindset (EM) which focuses on three Cs of Curiosity, Connections, and Creating Value.
Purpose/Hypothesis: Students reverse engineered a common handheld power tool in an Integrated Project approach to strengthen their Connections to other students in their course, connections between disparate subjects, their project Squads, and between their coursework and industry practice.
Design/Method: Using our Integrated Projects concept, we linked separate engineering courses in customer-supplier relationships. Students applied the tools and techniques from their specific courses to a common commercial product. Thus, different disciplines worked together but not in the same manner as traditional interdisciplinary projects. Additionally, while courses previously had projects, our novel Integrated Projects approach greatly enhance the connections between students in the same class and between students in different courses.
Results: Based on both formal and informally gathered student comments, their connections to the field of engineering has been remarkedly increasing because of the Integrated Projects.
Conclusions: Our Integrated Projects enabled students' teams from separate courses to work together yet with separate tools. Students examined different components of the same product, with each class analyzing their specific component with their course specific engineering principles
ADA President 1954-1955: Daniel Francis Lynch
Doctor Lynch, of Washington, D.C., became the ninety-first president of the Association at the 1954 Francis meeting in Miami. Doctor Lynch, an oral surgeon, was a member of the Board of Trustees for six years. He also served the Association as chairman of the International Relations Committee and secretary of the Research Commission. He served as president of the District of Columbia Dental Society, president of the Pan American Odontological Society, president of the American Dental Society of Anesthesiology and vice president of the Federation Dentaire Internationale. Doctor Lynch was a professor of oral surgery and anesthesia from 1928 to 1936. He was the author of numerous articles and lectured in many countries of Latin America and Europe. He served as a consultant to several federal health agencies. He was born in Connecticut in 1902
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