178,106 research outputs found
[Stammbuch Christoph Friedrich Imhoff von Helmstadt] / Christophorus Fridericus Imhoff de Helmstaett
[STAMMBUCH CHRISTOPH FRIEDRICH IMHOFF VON HELMSTADT] / CHRISTOPHORUS FRIDERICUS IMHOFF DE HELMSTAETT
[Stammbuch Christoph Friedrich Imhoff von Helmstadt] / Christophorus Fridericus Imhoff de Helmstaett ( - )
Cover ( - )
Notiz d. 18. Jh. / Notiz von Bibliothekar Kräuter ([II]v [III]r)
Besitzvermerk mit Widmung ([III]v [IV]r)
Werthern, Adolph George von; Blatt 11 (10v 11r)
Scheffer, Johann Theodor von; Blatt 13v (13v 14r)
Göllnitz, Christian Heinrich von; Blatt 19 (18v 19r)
Michels, Franz Goswin von; Blatt 19v (19v 20r)
Guttenberg, Jacob Willibald Hermann von und zu; Blatt 27v (27v 28r)
Imhoff von Helmstadt, Christoph Andreas; Blatt 28v (28v 29r)
Grass, Michael Friedrich; Blatt 29 (28v 29r)
Klefeker, Johann; Blatt 29v (29v 30r)
Finckler, Friedrich Gustav; Blatt 30 (29v 30r)
Heiland, Enoch; Blatt 30v (30v 31r)
Strodt, Johannes Andreas; Blatt 31 (30v 31r)
Sinold von Schütz, Helwig Christoph; Blatt 31v (31v 32r)
Gahr, Franz Carl Leopold von; Blatt 32 (31v 32r)
Lauterbach, Christian Ludwig von; Blatt 32v (32v 33r)
Caspart, P. F; Blatt 34 (33v 34r)
Kramer, F.; Blatt 39 (38v 39r)
Andersen, Friedrich Christian; Blatt 40v (40v 41r)
Andersen, Andreas Gabriel; Blatt 41 (40v 41r)
Evers, Joachim Dietrich; Blatt 41v (41v 42r)
Schellhorn, Heinrich; Blatt 42v (42v 43r)
Gremp von Freudenstein, Christoph Jacob; Blatt 43 (42v 43r)
Buttex, Sebastian; Blatt 57v (57v 58r)
Reußner von Reußenfels, Johann Georg; Blatt 63 (62v 63r)
Stutz, Gottfried; Blatt 65 (64v 65r)
Schöndörffer, Peter Wilhelm; Blatt 72v (72v 73r)
Hummer, Erhard; Blatt 73v (73v 74r)
Wolff, Peter Wilhelm; Blatt 79 (78v 79r)
Hennemann, Johann Philipp; Blatt 82 (81v 82r)
Behaim, Johann Carl; Blatt 90 (89v 90r)
Sachs, Veit; Blatt 97 (96v 97r)
Haller von Hallerstein, C.J.W.C.J.; Blatt 101 (100v 101r
Xyloperthella crinitarsis Imhoff
* <i>Xyloperthella crinitarsis</i> (Imhoff) <p>Taichung Port, 2, imported in logs of 'wenge', Congo, 16­26­XII­2004, Y.J. Huang (TARI). This African species is not known to be established in Taiwan, but was intercepted in imported timber.</p>Published as part of <i>Liu, L. Y., Beaver, R. A. & Yang, J. T., 2006, The Bostrichidae (Coleoptera) of Taiwan: a key to species, new records, and a lectotype designation for Sinoxylon mangiferae Chujo, pp. 1-33 in Zootaxa 1307</i> on page 8, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/173755">10.5281/zenodo.173755</a>
On the impossibility of inferring cohort fertility measures from period fertility measures
A particularly important struggle faced by demographic analysts is, how to arrive at statements about family formation processes from a cohort perspective from data that are essentially collected on an annual basis. The present paper is concerned with this struggle, mostly restricted to the case of fertility. The central question investigated here is: given observed period data, what can we conclude about the completed family size of real women? I review several existing methods to infer cohort fertility from period fertility measures. The conclusion is that, for each method, its justifiability can be verified only empirically: by looking at cohort fertility directly. To illustrate how this can be done, the paper analyses fertility data from a cohort perspective for two countries, Italy and the Netherlands.cohort fertility, demographic transition, fertility, Italy, Netherlands, period adjustment, tempo and quantum, total fertility rate
Baby Priming
Materials and Data for:
Marhenke, T., & Imhoff, R. (2019). Increased accessibility of semantic concepts after (more or less) subtle activation of related concepts:
Support for the basic tenet of priming research
Baby Priming
Materials and Data for:
Marhenke, T., & Imhoff, R. (2019). Increased accessibility of semantic concepts after (more or less) subtle activation of related concepts:
Support for the basic tenet of priming research
Morion guineensis Imhoff 1843
Morion guineensis Imhoff, 1843 Distribution in Angola (Provinces): 1) Cunene; 2) Luanda, Bié. Material examined. Barra do Cuanza (09° 18´55.42´´ S, 13° 09´58.57´´ E, 11 m alt., 107) (LUANDA), 28. IV.2014, 1 ♀, LT, A. Serrano & R. Capela leg., ASC; Satchijamba-Somakwanza (13° 44´46.50´´ S, 17° 11´2.26´´ E, 1611 m alt., 283) (BIÉ), 2. XI.2014, 1 ♀, LT, A. Serrano & R. Capela leg., ASC. Remarks. A species widespread throughout almost all Africa south of Sahara, including S. Tomé Island (e.g. Straneo 1959, Ferreira 1965, Serrano 1995). Adults were collected by light trapping within a riparian forest (Barra do Cuanza) and an open secondary forest (Satchijamba-Somakwanza). In the later locality the adults were collected together with ant nest beetles [Paussus (Shuckardipaussus) vanrooni Wasmann, 1922, Paussus (Katapaussus) chappuisi Reichensperger, 1938] (see Serrano 2015a). It is a new record for the Luanda and Bié Provinces.Published as part of Serrano, Artur R. M., Capela, Rúben A. & Santos, Carmen Van-Dúnem Neto, 2017, Biodiversity and notes on carabid beetles from Angola with description of new taxa (Coleoptera: Carabidae), pp. 201-256 in Zootaxa 4353 (2) on page 208, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4353.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/106512
Facing Europe: Visualizing spontaneous in-group projection
Individuals perceive their own group to be more typical of a shared superordinate identity than other groups are. This in-group projection process has been demonstrated with both self-report and indirect measures. The two studies reported here extend this research to the visual level, specifically, within the domain of faces. Using an innovative reverse-correlation approach, we found that German and Portuguese participants' visual representations of European faces resembled the appearance typical for their own national identity. This effect was found even among participants who explicitly denied that one nation was more typical of Europe than the other (Study 1). Moreover, Study 2 provides experimental evidence that in-group projection is restricted to inclusive superordinate groups, as the effect was not observed for visual representations of a category ("Australian") that did not include participants' in-group. Implications for the in-group projection model, as well as for the applicability of reverse-correlation paradigms, are discussed. © The Author(s) 2011
Polish version of COVID-19 Conspiracy Beliefs (Imhoff & Lamberty, 2020)
Polska wersja skali Imhoff, R., & Lamberty, P. (2020). A Bioweapon or a Hoax? The Link Between Distinct Conspiracy Beliefs About the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) Outbreak and Pandemic Behavior. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 11(8), 1110–1118. https://doi.org/10.1177/1948550620934692Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika w Toruni
Appropriate Similarity Measures for Author Cocitation Analysis
We provide a number of new insights into the methodological discussion about author cocitation analysis. We first argue that the use of the Pearson correlation for measuring the similarity between authors’ cocitation profiles is not very satisfactory. We then discuss what kind of similarity measures may be used as an alternative to the Pearson correlation. We consider three similarity measures in particular. One is the well-known cosine. The other two similarity measures have not been used before in the bibliometric literature. Finally, we show by means of an example that our findings have a high practical relevance.information science;Pearson correlation;cosine;similarity measure;author cocitation analysis
TURBIDITY MEASUREMENTS AND MODIFIED IMHOFF CONE METHOD FOR ESTIMATION OF SUSPENDED SEDIMENT CONCENTRATION
The requirement for monitoring of suspended sediment concentrations (SSCs) with good temporal and spatial resolution has led to the development of methods for sediment measurements. In this study, two practical and relatively cheap alternative methods (namely turbidity sensor and Imhoff cone method) were used to estimate SSC. Imhoff cone is a practical and indirect free settleable solid analysis method. Although this method is easy to use and cheap, moving the water samples to the laboratory and allowing them to settle can be time consuming. Therefore polyacrylamide (PAM), which is a soil conditioner and a flocculant, was tested as an accelerant of sediment settling in Imhoff cone method. PAM concentrations of 0.05 and 0.1 ppm were used in water samples. The results showed that it causes turbidity sensor measurement method had high reliability and advantage including continuous monitoring and ability to read and store more data at high expected sediment concentrations (<10.0 g/L). Finalizing the flocculation and settling material stabilization processes in a short time, like 10 min, increased the use of Imhoff cone method in the field conditions without having to move samples to the laboratory. However, this method had disadvantages of causing errors at low sediment concentrations and requiring sensitive measurements due to the graduation of the cone. These problems can be solved by using better graduated cones or digital sensors in the cones. Finally, this study showed that these methods have potential with high reliability and are good alternatives for practical and economical sediment measurements
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