1,401,265 research outputs found

    Cacopsylla sorbicoccinea Inoue 2004

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    Cacopsylla sorbicoccinea Inoue Cacopsylla sorbicoccinea Inoue 2004b, p 409. Type locality: Japan (Kyushu). Distribution. Japan (Hokkaido, Honshu, Kyushu). Host plant. Sorbus japonica (Decne.) Hedlund (Rosaceae) (Inoue 2004b).Published as part of Inoue, Hiromitsu, 2010, The generic affiliation of Japanese species of the subfamily Psyllinae (Hemiptera: Psyllidae) with a revised checklist, pp. 333-360 in Journal of Natural History 44 (5 - 6) on page 353, DOI: 10.1080/00222930903437325, http://zenodo.org/record/520722

    Satoshi Inoue and Bruce Woodward

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    The performance consisted of a 120-minute concert at a live performance venue ‘AG22’ (Tokyo, Japan) on December 29, 2023. Satoshi Inoue Renowned guitarist Jim Hall calls his former protege Satoshi Inoue, "an excellent jazz guitarist with a keen musical imagination." The two performed together on a guitar duet that was featured on Hall's widely used instructional video collection called Jazz Guitar Master Class Volumes 1&2. In 2005, Hall and Inoue appeared in Village Vanguard 70th anniversary together. Born in Kobe Japan, Inoue studied at Kyoto's Fuji School of Music from 1979-81. Between 1981-1988, he led his own groups in Japan. He moved to New York in 1989 to study at The New School University where he met Hall. He has been on the faculty of the University since his senior year. Over the years, Inoue has toured with jazz greats such as James Moody; James Williams; Cecil Bridgewater; Frank Foster; Slide Hampton; Barry Harris; Jimmy Heath; Arnie Lawrence; Jack McDuff; Junior Mance; Jon Faddis; Akira Tana and Toshiko Akiyoshi. Inoue has recorded five albums as leader;Plays Satoshi(1996 Paddle Wheel Records), Songs (1999 Paddle Wheel Records) and Live At Smoke(2002 What's New Records), Guitars Alone(duet with Peter Bernstein,2003 What's New Records)and Melodic Compositions(2006 What's New Records). His own band has gigged at New York's top jazz venues - past and present - including The Blue Note, Sweet Basil, Birdland, Smoke, the Village Gate and Zinc Bar. For eleven years, Inoue has brought American musicians to Japan to conduct fall tours for concerts and workshops, including the "Big Apple in Nonoichi" festival. Jazz critics and musicians have known about Satoshi Inoue for quite some time. A jazz historian Ira Gitler describes hearing Satoshi live in the early 90s at Sazerac House, a restaurant on New York's Hudson Street: "I was taken with the unforced flow of his ideas and the mellow sound with which he transmitted them" he says. His lectures on jazz standards appear monthly in a Japanese jazz magazine called Jazz Life

    Cacopsylla swidae Inoue 2004

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    <i>Cacopsylla swidae</i> Inoue <p> <i>Cacopsylla swidae</i> Inoue 2004a, p 144. Type locality: Japan (Honshu).</p> <p> <i>Psylla melanoneura</i> Foerster: Miyatake 1963, p 354; Konovalova 1988, p 532; Inoue and Yamauchi 2001, p 56; Matsumoto 2004, p 276.</p> <p> This species corresponds to the Japanese population that has been identified as a European species <i>Psylla melanoneura</i> Foerster, 1848, formerly (Inoue 2004a).</p> <p> <i>Distribution.</i> Japan (Hokkaido, Honshu, Shikoku, Kyushu).</p> <p> <i>Host plant. Swida controversa</i> (Hemsl.) Soják (Cornaceae) (Inoue 2004a).</p>Published as part of <i>Inoue, Hiromitsu, 2010, The generic affiliation of Japanese species of the subfamily Psyllinae (Hemiptera: Psyllidae) with a revised checklist, pp. 333-360 in Journal of Natural History 44 (5 - 6)</i> on page 353, DOI: 10.1080/00222930903437325, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5207220">http://zenodo.org/record/5207220</a&gt

    Cacopsylla insularis Inoue and Miyatake

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    Cacopsylla insularis Inoue and Miyatake Cacopsylla insularis Inoue and Miyatake 2001, p 467; Karube et al. 2004, p 70. Type locality: Japan (Ogasawara Islands). Distribution. Japan [Ogasawara Islands (Chichi-jima Island, Ani-jima Island, Hahajima Island, Mukô-jima Island)]. Host plant. Rhaphiolepis indica var. integerrima (Hook. et Arn.) Kitamura (Rosaceae) (Inoue and Miyatake 2001).Published as part of Inoue, Hiromitsu, 2010, The generic affiliation of Japanese species of the subfamily Psyllinae (Hemiptera: Psyllidae) with a revised checklist, pp. 333-360 in Journal of Natural History 44 (5 - 6) on page 347, DOI: 10.1080/00222930903437325, http://zenodo.org/record/520722

    Cacopsylla elegans Inoue 2004

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    <i>Cacopsylla elegans</i> Inoue <p> <i>Cacopsylla elegans</i> Inoue 2004b, p 404. Type locality: Japan (Kyushu).</p> <p> <i>Distribution.</i> Japan (Honshu, Kyushu).</p> <p> <i>Host plant.</i> <i>Sorbus japonica</i> (Decne.) Hedlund (Rosaceae) (Inoue 2004b).</p>Published as part of <i>Inoue, Hiromitsu, 2010, The generic affiliation of Japanese species of the subfamily Psyllinae (Hemiptera: Psyllidae) with a revised checklist, pp. 333-360 in Journal of Natural History 44 (5 - 6)</i> on page 344, DOI: 10.1080/00222930903437325, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5207220">http://zenodo.org/record/5207220</a&gt

    Cacopsylla midoriae Inoue 2004

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    Cacopsylla midoriae (Miyatake) Psylla midoriae Miyatake 1963, p 339; Klimaszewski 1973, p 215. Type locality: Japan (Shikoku). Cacopsylla midoriae (Miyatake) Inoue 2004b, p 400. See the notes for the next species. Distribution. Japan (Shikoku, Kyushu). Host plant. Sorbus japonica (Decne.) Hedlund (Rosaceae) (Inoue 2004b).Published as part of Inoue, Hiromitsu, 2010, The generic affiliation of Japanese species of the subfamily Psyllinae (Hemiptera: Psyllidae) with a revised checklist, pp. 333-360 in Journal of Natural History 44 (5 - 6) on page 350, DOI: 10.1080/00222930903437325, http://zenodo.org/record/520722

    Cacopsylla maculipennis Inoue and Miyatake

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    <i>Cacopsylla maculipennis</i> Inoue and Miyatake <p> <i>Cacopsylla maculipennis</i> Inoue and Miyatake 2001, p 470; Karube et al. 2004, p 70. Type locality: Japan (Ogasawara Islands).</p> <p> <i>Distribution.</i> Japan [Ogasawara Islands (Haha-jima Island), Iwo Islands (Kita-iwojima Island)].</p> <p> <i>Host plant.</i> <i>Pittosporum boninense</i> Koidzumi (Pittosporaceae) (Inoue and Miyatake 2001).</p>Published as part of <i>Inoue, Hiromitsu, 2010, The generic affiliation of Japanese species of the subfamily Psyllinae (Hemiptera: Psyllidae) with a revised checklist, pp. 333-360 in Journal of Natural History 44 (5 - 6)</i> on page 349, DOI: 10.1080/00222930903437325, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5207220">http://zenodo.org/record/5207220</a&gt

    Cacopsylla albigena Inoue 2010, comb. nov.

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    Cacopsylla albigena (Miyatake) comb. nov. Psylla albigena Miyatake 1964a, p 10; 1964b, p 25; 1969, p 78; Baba and Miyatake 1971, p 9; Klimaszewski 1973, p 199; Miyatake 1977, p 245; 1979, p 219; Inoue and Yamauchi 2001, p 55; Inoue 2002, p 496; Matsumoto 2004, p 278. Type locality: Japan (Honshu). Distribution. Japan (Honshu, Kyushu, Sado Island). Host plants. Viburnum plicatum var. tomentosum (Thunb. ex Murray) Miq. (Caprifoliaceae) (Miyatake 1979) and Viburnum sieboldii Miq. (Miyatake 1977).Published as part of Inoue, Hiromitsu, 2010, The generic affiliation of Japanese species of the subfamily Psyllinae (Hemiptera: Psyllidae) with a revised checklist, pp. 333-360 in Journal of Natural History 44 (5 - 6) on page 341, DOI: 10.1080/00222930903437325, http://zenodo.org/record/520722

    Anti-self-dual bihermitian structures on Inoue surfaces

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    In this article we show that any hyperbolic Inoue surface (also called Inoue-Hirzebruch surface of even type) admits anti-self-dual bihermitian structures. The same result holds for any of its small deformations as far as its anti-canonical system is non-empty. Similar results are obtained for parabolic Inoue surfaces. Our method also yields a family of anti-self-dual hermitian metrics on any half Inoue surface. We use the twistor method of Donaldson-Friedman [13] for the proof.

    Photochemistry in Japan: the Inoue Photochirogenesis Project -a research profile

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    The Inoue Photochirogensis Project is part of the ERATO program (Exploratory Research for Advanced Technology) of the Japan Science and Technology Corporation (JST). The project began in 1996, and is located in Toyonaka, Osaka. The project director is Dr. Yoshihisa Inoue, who is a full professor of the Graduate School of Engineering at Osaka University. The project is divided into 3 sub-groups: (1) CPL Photochemistry Group, (2) Asymmetric Photosensitization Group and (3) Supramolecular Photochemistry Group
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