3,121 research outputs found
Sermones disertissimi contra omnem mundi perversum statum ... : quem Deus gloriosus et equitas naturalis damnat
egregii et famosissimi domini Georgii Morgenstern ...Kolophon auf Bl. LXXV recto: "Impressum Auguste per Iohannem Froschauer anno domini 1505."Bogensignaturen: a⁸, a-c⁶, d⁴, e-h⁶, i⁴, k-m⁶, n
Lina Morgenstern Collection.
The collection holds Irene Newhouse’s translations of four articles by Lina Morgenstern, first published 1898-1905 in Deutsche Hausfrauenzeitung, the ‘German housewives’ newspaper’ that was founded and edited by Lina Morgenstern.“Caecilie Adler“ by Lina Morgenstern, first published in Deutsche Hausfrauenzeitung, Nr. 34, vol. 25 (Aug. 21, 1898).“Where I come from : In honor of my 70th birthday. The first chapter of my autobiography” by Lina Morgenstern, first published in Unterhaltungsblatt der deutschen Hausfrauen-Zeitung, Nr. 48, vol. 27 (Nov. 25, 1900).“Frau Dr. Anna Honigmann” by Lina Morgenstern, first published in Deutsche Hausfrauenzeitung, Nr. 25, June 18, 1905.Jubilee edition of Deutsche Hausfrauenzeitung, published in celebration of Lina and Theodor Morgenstern’s golden wedding anniversary in 1904.Irene NewhouseA brochure in honor of the 80th anniversary of “Pfennig-Verein”, a charitable organization for poor students, may be found in DM 137.The social worker Lina Morgenstern, née Bauer was born 1830 in Breslau; she died 1909 in Berlin. She was the founder of numerous welfare organizations.Processed for digitizationdigitize
AGenDA: gene prediction by cross-species sequence comparison
Taher L, Rinner O, Garg S, Sczyrba A, Morgenstern B. AGenDA: gene prediction by cross-species sequence comparison. Nucleic Acids Research. 2004;32(Web Server):W305-W308.Automatic gene prediction is one of the major challenges in computational sequence analysis. Traditional approaches to gene finding rely on statistical models derived from previously known genes. By contrast, a new class of comparative methods relies on comparing genomic sequences from evolutionary related organisms to each other. These methods are based on the concept of phylogenetic footprinting: they exploit the fact that functionally important regions in genomic sequences are usually more conserved than non-functional regions. We created a WWW-based software program for homology-based gene prediction at BiBiServ (Bielefeld Bioinformatics Server). Our tool takes pairs of evolutionary related genomic sequences as input data, e.g. from human and mouse. The server runs CHAOS and DIALIGN to create an alignment of the input sequences and subsequently searches for conserved splicing signals and start/stop codons near regions of local sequence conservation. Genes are predicted based on local homology information and splice signals. The server returns predicted genes together with a graphical representation of the underlying alignment. The program is available at http://bibiserv.TechFak.Uni-Bielefeld.DE/agenda/
Soma Morgenstern Collection.
Five notebooks containing the handwritten drafts of Morgenstern’s book ‘Die Blutsaeule : Zeichen und Wunder am Sereth’. Some chapters appear in various versions, with the final one being identical or nearly identical with the printed book.Also included is a handwritten, detailed list of contents by Gabriele Glueckselig of all chapters in the notebooks and how they compare with the final version.digitizedContainer List1/1:Detailed list of contents, handwritten, 1+12 pagesNotebook 1: Chapters 1 to 151/2:Notebook 2: Chapters 15 to 20Notebook 3: Chapters 20 to 24Notebook 4 Chapters 22 to 24Notebook 5: Chapters 21 to 24Soma Morgenstern was born in East Galicia in 1890. He studied law at the University of Vienna and served in World War I. In 1921, he moved to Berlin to become a theater critic, but he mainly wrote book reviews. In 1928, he returned to Vienna as a reporter for the Frankfurter Zeitung. His first novel was published in Berlin in 1935, which was supposed to be the first part of a triology. He left Vienna in 1938 and fled to Paris, where he shared an appartment with Joseph Roth. In 1941, Morgenstern arrived in New York via Marseille, Casablanca and Lisbon. He re-wrote the whole triology, which was published as "Sparks in the Abyss" in the US between 1946 and 1950. He died in New York in 1976.Synopsis in fileFinding aid available online.The notebooks had been part of the estate of the actress Lotte Palfi Andor, who had worked with Soma Morgenstern.Several of Soma Morgenstern's books , including "Die Blutsaeule", are available in the LBI library.A photograph portrait of Soma Morgenstern has been removed to the LBI Photograph Archiv
Joseph Roth, Soma Morgenstern i glazba
Obwohl Roth behauptet hat, nichts von Musik zu verstehen, hat er sich in seinen journalistischen wie erzählerischen Texten intensiver mit Musik auseinandergesetzt, als man das zunächst vermuten möchte. Am Beginn und am Ende seiner bewussten musikalischen Erfahrung steht die jüdisch-ukrainische Folklore, die ihm sein Freund Soma Morgenstern ebenso vermittelt hat wie den Kontakt zur musikalischen Moderne.Despite his claim he knew nothing about music, Joseph Roth surprisingly wrote about it quite extensively in his journalistic and literary texts. The beginning and ending of his conscious musical experience is marked by
Jewish-Ukrainian folklore, introduced to him by his friend Soma Morgenstern, who also facilitated his encounter with modernism in music.Joseph Roth je tvrdio da se nimalo ne razumije u glazbu, no u svojim se publicističkim i pripovjednim tekstovima glazbom bavio intenzivnije no što bi se očekivalo. Na početku i na kraju Rothova glazbenog iskustva stoji židovsko-ukrajinski folklor. S njime ga je, ali i s glazbenom modernom, povezao njegov prijatelj Soma Morgenstern
[Student Organizations; Open Arms W-I]
Student Organizations; Open Arms W-IStudent organization, Open Arms. Students in club meeting.From verso: Photography- Jeff Morgenstern, MD. Scan of verso available
The Collapse of Interwar Vienna: Oskar Morgenstern’s Community, 1925 - 1950
From the perspective of science, art and intellectual life in general, Interwar Vienna was one of the most vibrant communities in modern European history. Within the field of economics, it was home to, amongst others, Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich von Hayek, Hans Mayer, Gottfried Haberler, Fritz Machlup, Oskar Morgenstern, Karl Menger and Abraham Wald. The community flourished after the end of World War I, and then began to suffer in the early 1930’s as a result of growing political instability and rising anti-semitism. With the Anschluss of Austria by the Third Reich in March 1938, it collapsed completely, never to recover. Drawing on the personal papers of two key participants, Oskar Morgenstern and Karl Menger, and also on the archives of the Rockefeller Foundation, this paper provides a portrait of that community, chronicling its evolution and dramatic collapse. Particular attention is paid to the milieu surrounding Morgenstern, both as director of the Rockefeller-funded Austrian Institute for Business Cycle Research and as philosophical “dissident”. In collaborating with mathematicians Menger, Wald and, later, John von Neumann, he gradually forsook his Austrian theoretical legacy. The account detailed here shows conflict and tension to have been central to both the life and death of this fabled community.
Von Neumann-Morgenstern farsightedly stable sets in two-sided matching
We adopt the notion of von Neumann-Morgenstern (vNM) farsightedly stable sets to determine which matchings are possibly stable when agents are farsighted in one-to-one matching problems. We provide the characterization of vNM farsightedly stable sets: a set of matchings is a vNM farsightedly stable set if and only if it is a singleton subset of the core. Thus, contrary to the vNM (myopically) stable sets [Ehlers, J. of Econ. Theory 134 (2007), 537-547], vNM farsightedly stable sets cannot include matchings that are not in the core. Moreover, we show that our main result is robust to many-to-one matching problems with substitutable preferences: a set of matchings is a vNM farsightedly stable set if and only if it is a singleton set and its element is in the strong core.Matching problem, von Neumann-Morgenstern stable sets, farsighted stability
Fast and sensitive multiple alignment of large genomic sequences
Brudno M, Chapman M, Göttgens B, Batzoglou S, Morgenstern B. Fast and sensitive multiple alignment of large genomic sequences. BMC Bioinformatics. 2003;4(1): 66.Background: Genomic sequence alignment is a powerful method for genome analysis and annotation, as alignments are routinely used to identify functional sites such as genes or regulatory elements. With a growing number of partially or completely sequenced genomes, multiple alignment is playing an increasingly important role in these studies. In recent years, various tools for pair-wise and multiple genomic alignment have been proposed. Some of them are extremely fast, but often efficiency is achieved at the expense of sensitivity. One way of combining speed and sensitivity is to use an anchored-alignment approach. In a first step, a fast search program identifies a chain of strong local sequence similarities. In a second step, regions between these anchor points are aligned using a slower but more accurate method. Results: Herein, we present CHAOS, a novel algorithm for rapid identification of chains of local pair-wise sequence similarities. Local alignments calculated by CHAOS are used as anchor points to improve the running time of DIALIGN, a slow but sensitive multiple-alignment tool. We show that this way, the running time of DIALIGN can be reduced by more than 95% for BAC-sized and longer sequences, without affecting the quality of the resulting alignments. We apply our approach to a set of five genomic sequences around the stem-cell-leukemia (SCL) gene and demonstrate that exons and small regulatory elements can be identified by our multiple-alignment procedure. Conclusion: We conclude that the novel CHAOS local alignment tool is an effective way to significantly speed up global alignment tools such as DIALIGN without reducing the alignment quality. We likewise demonstrate that the DIALIGN/CHAOS combination is able to accurately align short regulatory sequences in distant orthologues
Decision under risk : The classical Expected Utility model
This chapter of a collective book aims at presenting the basics of decision making under risk. We first define notions of risk and increasing risk and recall definitions and classifications (that are valid independently of any representation) of behavior under risk. We then review the classical model of expected utility due to von Neumann and Morgenstern andd its main properties. Issues raised by this model are then discussed and two models generalizing the expected utility model are briefly discussed.Risk, risk aversion, expected utility, von Neumann and Morgenstern, Allais paradox.
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