3,820 research outputs found
sj-pdf-1-imr-10.1177_03000605231180540 - Supplemental material for Bezoar as a cause of portal vein pneumatosis: a case report
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-imr-10.1177_03000605231180540 for Bezoar as a cause of portal vein pneumatosis: a case report by Qing Zhang, Heyu Meng, Yanqiu Chen and Fanbo Meng: on behalf of the Hellenic Headache Society in Journal of International Medical Research</p
sj-pdf-2-imr-10.1177_03000605231180540 - Supplemental material for Bezoar as a cause of portal vein pneumatosis: a case report
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-2-imr-10.1177_03000605231180540 for Bezoar as a cause of portal vein pneumatosis: a case report by Qing Zhang, Heyu Meng, Yanqiu Chen and Fanbo Meng: on behalf of the Hellenic Headache Society in Journal of International Medical Research</p
Migrant workers, collaborative research and spatial pressures : an interview with Meng Yue
In July last year I had the opportunity to interview Meng Yue, literary scholar and author of Shanghai and the Edges of Empire (2006). Meng Yue has been collaborating with Toronto-based architect and artist Adrian Blackwell for a number of years, with their students from literature and architecture undertaking highly interesting research on the peripheral zones of Beijing. Questions of peri-urban food production, land use, resource distribution and the multiplication of labour skills have framed these investigations. The interview below is extracted from a considerably longer discussion we had in Beijing during the late summer of 2007, half of which was lost to the faulty battery of an ipod (the rest remains to be transcribed from video…)
Correction to: Visible lattice points along curves
The article “Visible lattice points along curves”, written by Kui Liu and Xianchang Meng, was originally published electronically on the publisher’s internet portal on 27 July 2020 without open access. With the author(s)’ decision to opt for Open Choice the copyright of the article changed on 9 July 2021 to © The Author(s) 2020 and the article is forthwith distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
Sequels to honglou meng : how gu taiqing continues the story in honglou meng ying
After Honglou meng (1791) was published, a number of sequels appeared that redefined its major characters, rewrote its ending, and continued the story of life within the two Jia households. One of these was Honglou meng ying (1877), by female poet, Gu Taiqing. Despite its status as the earliest extant novel written by a woman, few studies have been devoted to examining it. Building on research that Ellen Widmer has provided on Gu Taiqing and her work, including Honglou meng ying, I will explore the novel further in terms of its relationship to the parent work and to other sequels written by men, and also examine it on its own terms as a literary work. Some of the main questions that I will address include: how does it compare to other sequels to Honglou meng? How does Gu Taiqing’s continuation of Honglou meng depart from the parent novel? I have organized my discussion by providing an introduction to Gu Taiqing, whilst providing contextual information about women’s education, their relationship to fiction, and the impact of Honglou meng. Chapter One will deal with the broad issue of sequels in the Chinese context, the popularity of writing sequels during the Ming and Qing dynasties, and conclude with some observations about Honglou meng sequels in particular. The second chapter will deal exclusively with Gu Taiqing’s Honglou meng ying, evaluating it in terms of how the author continues the parent work, how she refashions its characters and themes, and how her sequel reflects her own unique concerns (which may not have been part of the original parent work). Finally, I will conclude with some remarks about Honglou meng ying in terms of its relation to sequel writing in late imperial China and its contribution to our understanding of women’s reading and writing in the final years of the Qing dynasty.Arts, Faculty ofAsian Studies, Department ofGraduat
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Prickly waterlily and rigid hornwort genomes shed light on early angiosperm evolution
All co-authors and author order:
Dr. Yongzhi Yang , Mr. Pengchuan Sun , Mr. Leke Lyu , Donglei Wang , Dafu Ru , Ying Li , Dr. Tao Ma , Lei Zhang , Xingxing Shen , Mr. Fanbo Meng , BeiBei Jiao , Lanxing Shan , Man Liu , Dr. Qing-Feng Wang , Zhiji Qin , Prof. Charles Davis , Prof. Xiyin Wang , Dr. Zhenxiang Xi, Prof. Jianquan LiuAngiosperms represent one of the most spectacular terrestrial radiations on the planet, but their early diversification and phylogenetic relationships remain uncertain. A key reason for this impasse is due to the paucity of complete genomes representing early-diverging angiosperms. Here, we present high-quality, chromosomal-level genome assemblies of two species, prickly waterlily (Euryale ferox; Nymphaeales) and the rigid hornwort (Ceratophyllum demersum; Ceratophyllales), thus expanding genomic representation for key sectors of the angiosperm tree of life. We identify multiple independent polyploidization events in each of the five major clades (i.e., Nymphaeales, magnoliids, monocots, Ceratophyllales, and eudicots). In addition, our phylogenomic analyses spanning multiple data sets and diverse methods confirm that Amborella and Nymphaeales are successively sister to all other angiosperms. Furthermore, these genomes help elucidate the relationships among the major subclades within Mesangiospermae, which contain about 350,000 species. In particular, the species-poor lineage Ceratophyllales is supported as sister to eudicots, and monocots and magnoliids are placed as successively sister to Ceratophyllales + eudicots. Finally, our analyses indicate that incomplete lineage sorting may well account for the incongruent placement of magnoliids between nuclear and plastid genomes.Version of Recor
On Meng Sen's teaching and lecture notes of Ming and Qing history at Peking University during the 1930s
While teaching the histories of the Ming and Qing dynasties, Meng Sen (1869-1937), developed three textbooks in the 1930s: Lecture Notes on the Ming History (.... Mingshi jiangyi), Lecture Notes on the Qing History (.... Qingshi jiangyi), and Lecture Notes on the History of the Founding of the Manchu State (....... Manzhou kaiguo shi jiangyi). In these book titles, the term " history" refers specifically to "standard history."In tracing Meng Sen's original intention in producing these textbooks, all three works suggest the author's desire to write history. He wrote Lecture Notes on the Ming History to prepare a future revision of the History of the Ming (.. Mingshi); similarly he wrote Lecture Notes on the Qing History and Lecture Notes on the History of the Founding of the Manchu State with the intention to revise the Draft History of the Qing (... Qingshi gao). Meng Sen summarized Sima Guang's (..., 1019-86) view of history as " imitating the good and avoiding the bad," which he believed represented the "essential meaning of history." Meng followed Sima Guang's model in compiling the Lecture Notes on the Ming History and Lecture Notes on the Qing History, as shown in their style and format. By comparison, his writing of the Lecture Notes on the History of the Founding of the Manchu State attempted to merge the traditional annals-biographic style with narrative history from the West, or to pour old wine into a new bottle. Meng Sen presented his innovative efforts at Peking University, introducing young scholars to standards for history writing, and doing his utmost to guide and encourage his students; some of whom became noted scholars in the study of Ming and Qing histories.A&HCIARTICLE2119-1545
Regarding the Dates of Birth and Death of Li Meng-Yang : Ming Period Poet
In this paper, the author has confirmed the dates of birth and death of Li
Meng-Yang, a poet of middle period of the Ming dynasty in China.
The author has referred his poems and literature as well as letters written
between him and his friends, and critically reviewed various views and arguments
about his lifetime compiled over the past four hundred years.
In conclusion, the author has determined the date of his birth and death as
follows according to lunar calendar. Li Meng-Yang was born on the 7th of
December, Cheng-Hua 8 (1472), and died 30th of December, Jia-Jing 8 (1529).departmental bulletin pape
Characteristics of the Cervical Microbiome in Women with Cervical Insufficiency (CI) and its Role in Predicting the Successful Cerclage / Pessary Intervention
Meng, Meng.Thesis Ph.D. Chinese University of Hong Kong 2016.Includes bibliographical references (leaves ).Abstracts also in Chinese.Title from PDF title page (viewed on …)
Mckenzieana Meng & Xing, 2022, nom. n.
Genus <i>Mckenzieana</i> nom. n. <p> <i>Helaspis</i> McKenzie 1963: 34 (Mandibulata: Hexapoda: Hemiptera: Diaspididae) is preoccupied by <i>Helaspis</i> Imbrie 1959: 400 (Brachiopoda: Strophomenata: Productida: Productellidae).</p> <p> <b>Type species:</b> <i>Helaspis mexicana</i> McKenzie, 1963: 34.</p> <p> <b>Remarks on nomenclatural change.</b> McKenzie (1963) established the armoured scale genus <i>Helaspis</i> with the type species <i>Helaspis mexicana</i> McKenzie 1963. The genus is a valid name in Hemiptera: Coccomorpha: Diaspididae, subfamily Aspidiotinae, tribe Aspidiotini (Normark <i>et al.</i> 2019). The genus includes only the type species, recorded from Mexico.</p> <p> Unfortunately, the name <i>Helaspis</i> McKenzie 1963 is preoccupied by <i>Helaspis</i> Imbrie 1959, a fossil marine brachiopod genus (Brachiopoda: Strophomenata: Productida: family Productellidae) based on the type species <i>Helaspis luma</i> Imbrie 1959. Thus, <i>Helaspis</i> McKenzie 1963 is a junior homonym of <i>Helaspis</i> Imbrie 1959. According to Article 60 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, a new replacement name is proposed for <i>Helaspis</i> McKenzie 1963: <i>Mckenzieana</i> <b>nom. n.</b></p> <p> <b>Etymology.</b> The replacement name for the genus is derived from the name H.L. McKenzie, the author of the armoured scale insect genus <i>Helaspis</i>; gender feminine.</p>Published as part of <i>Meng, Shitao & Xing, Jichun, 2022, Replacement of names for two armoured scale genera (Hemiptera: Coccomorpha Diaspididae) due to homonymy, pp. 299-300 in Zootaxa 5116 (2)</i> on page 299, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5116.2.7, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/6367391">http://zenodo.org/record/6367391</a>
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