9,110,643 research outputs found
Genco, Antonia
Centro Asturiano membership record of Antonia Genco; Socio Number: 630.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/asturiano_membership/3203/thumbnail.jp
Genco, Teresa
Centro Asturiano membership record of Teresa Genco; Socio Number: 700.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/asturiano_membership/3205/thumbnail.jp
Toxoplasmosis in pregnancy: evaluations of diagnostic methods
Toxoplasmosis in pregnancy is usually subclinic or associates with non specific symptoms. Diagnosis and timing of infection are usually based on serological tests. In this short review we tried to summarize the serological patterns we can encounter and to discuss the interpretation of test results
Contributo alla conoscenza della domanda di informazioni delle piccole-medie imprese in Italia. Introduzione
Per una migliore comprensione dei problemi della creazione e dell'avvio di imprese: introduzione
Defining Formal Explanation in Classical Logic by Substructural Derivability
Precisely framing a formal notion of explanation is a hard problem of great relevance for several areas of scientific investigation such as computer science, philosophy and mathematics. We study a notion of formal explanation according to which an explanation of a formula F must contain all and only the true formulae that concur in determining the truth of F. Even though this notion of formal explanation is defined by reference to derivability in classical logic, the relation that holds between the explained formula and the formulae explaining it has a distinct substructural flavour, due to the fact that no redundancy is admitted among the explaining formulae. We formalise this intuition and prove that this notion of formal explanation is essentially connected, in a very specific sense, to derivability in a substructural calculu
Joseph M. Genco
Joseph M. Genco was born April 13, 1939. He earned his B.S. in Chemical Engineering at Case Institute of Technology in 1960, and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Chemical Engineering at Ohio State University in 1962 and 1965 respectively.
Genco began his career at Battelle Memorial Institute in 1965. He joined the University of Maine Department of Chemical Engineering as an Associate Professor in 1974. In 1976 he was named Calder Professor of Pulp and Paper Engineering. He was promoted to full-Professor in 1980.
Starting in 1976, Genco taught the University\u27s pulp and paper courses as well as developing an active industrial consulting practice. In 1992, he was named Director of the University of Maine Pulp and Paper Pilot Plant and began a three-year term as Interim Chemical Engineering Department Chair.
With his own research interests in oxygen delignification, refining, pulping, and pulp bleaching, Genco directed more than 30 Ph.D. and M.S. theses students through the program. He has published in excess of 100 technical papers.
According to Genco, “Oxygen delignification has emerged as an important processing technology for bleach plants in the 21st century. Understanding the effect of process conditions in an oxygen stage on fiber properties, especially inter-fiber bonding has great industrial significance, because inter-fiber bonding influences virtually all paper properties. The objective of this work is to investigate fundamentally how oxygen bleaching effects inter-fiber bond strength.”
Genco’s association with the Pulp and Paper Foundation began in 1976 when he joined the faculty of the Pulp and Paper Summer Institute. He participated on the Open House committee for 20 years. He was a member of the Research Committee since 1977.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/ppf_images/1031/thumbnail.jp
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