2,275 research outputs found

    Synthesis, characterization and electrical behavior of nasicon-type ceramics as electrolytes for all-solid-state batteries

    No full text
    Consulta en la Biblioteca ETSI Industriales (Riunet)[ES] The research work described in this report was supervised by professor Dr. Teresa Grzybek and carried out under the guidance of professor Dr. Wojciech Zajac, at the Department of Hydrogen Energy, Faculty of Fuels and Energy of Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicza. The object of this research is the preparation of high Li-ion conductive electrolytes for all-solid state batteries, concretely NASICON-type ceramics, and the further study of their conductivity mechanisms.Gómez Izquierdo, J. (2014). Synthesis, characterization and electrical behavior of nasicon-type ceramics as electrolytes for all-solid-state batteries. https://riunet.upv.es/handle/10251/39390.Archivo delegad

    Como preparar apresentações eficazes para eventos científicos: parte 1

    No full text
    Fonte: Making AoM sessions exciting: a workshop. Participantes: Sally Blount-Lyon, Michael H. Lubatkin, Karl Weick, Edward J. Zajac, Russ Coff e Jing Zhou

    Como preparar apresentações eficazes para eventos científicos: parte 2

    No full text
    Fonte: Making AoM sessions exciting: a workshop. Participantes: Sally Blount-Lyon, Michael H. Lubatkin, Karl Weick, Edward J. Zajac, Russ Coff e Jing Zho

    Wang_Supplemental_Material_rev – Supplemental material for A Case of Evolutionary Mismatch?: Why Facial Width-to-Height Ratio May Not Predict Behavioral Tendencies

    No full text
    Supplemental material, Wang_Supplemental_Material_rev for A Case of Evolutionary Mismatch?: Why Facial Width-to-Height Ratio May Not Predict Behavioral Tendencies by Dawei Wang, Krishnan Nair, Maryam Kouchaki, Edward J. Zajac and Xiuxi Zhao in Psychological Science</p

    Le Tailleur d’Inversness

    No full text
    Le parcours de Mateusz Zajac, né en Galicie (Pologne) en 1919, où il a vécu jusqu’à sa mobilisation, pendant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, a des allures d’épopée homérique. En raison du contexte historique géopolitique complexe, comme nombre de ses congénères, le jeune homme est déraciné et jeté sur les routes pour se battre sous des drapeaux différents, dans des armées de nations diverses, au gré des victoires et des défaites qui remodèlent cette partie de l’Europe de l’est. Survivre est héroïque. Dans Le Tailleur d’Inverness, la fierté et l’amour de son fils Matthew, auteur pudique, affleurent à chaque tournant d’un récit dramatique et théâtral où l’inimaginable est vécu.The journey of Mateusz Zajac, born in Galicia (Poland) in 1919, where he lived until his mobilization during the Second World War, has the appearance of a Homeric epic. Due to the complex geopolitical historical context, like many of his fellow human beings, the young man is uprooted and thrown on the roads to fight under different flags, in armies of different nations, according to the victories and defeats that are remodelling this part of Eastern Europe. Survival is heroic. In The Tailor of Inverness, the pride and love of his son Matthew, a modest author, emerge at every turn of a dramatic and theatrical story where the unimaginable is experienced

    Theory-based modifications of an advanced notification letter improves screening for bowel cancer in men: a randomised controlled trial

    No full text
    Abstract not availableIan T. Zajac, Amy C. Duncan, Ingrid Flight, Gary A. Wittert, Stephen R. Cole, Graeme P. Young, Carlene J. Wilson, Deborah A. Turnbul

    Kocúrkovo As a Slovak Anti-Myth

    No full text
    In the 70s and the 80s of the 20th century, a new view of Záborský’s literary work began to occur. A. Bagin formed the key hypothesis about Záborský as a modern author. The problem of comical in his works was opened by S. Rakús and A. Kruláková. A. Kruláková was also the first who depicted an irony line in the Slovak literature from Bajza, Chalupka to Záborský. Then J. Števček, V. Mikula a P. Darovec adopted it into their interpretations. In his interpretation of the prose by P. Vilikovského Večne je zelený ... (Ever Green Is...) P. Darovec worked it up until the present time. In the 70s and 80s O. Čepan dealt with the poetics of Záborský‘s prose most intensively. In Záborský’s prose he identified paradox and irony as its primary features. Both O. Čepan and A. Kruláková revealed the domination of low (Bachtin) carnality. In his Summary to Faustiáda (1984) and mainly in his introductory study Staromilský novátor Jonáš Záborský? in Dielo I (1989) Oskár Čepan changed his former thesis about Záborský as a late Classicist and he described his work as a part of Romanticism, its “reverse”, negative and natural negation. All main features of Záborský ’s prose texts as its intentional anti-myth character, heteronymous character, monsterlikeness, paradox, irony as a reflexive duplication of the text, metalepsis as a basic rhetoric figure, grotesque as a genre of “flying arabesques” prove that Záborský’s late proses mainly Faustiáda belong among the works that use the Romantic irony. The latest Slavic research has identified the Romantic irony as a discourse of the late Romanticism in Puškin’s Eugen Onegin (H. Meyer), in Słowacký’s Balladyne (M. Żmigrodska, G. Ritz) or in early works of Hálek (Z. Hrbata, M. Procházka). Also the study Kocúrkovo as a Slovak Anti-Myth belongs to this line of research

    Le Tailleur d’Inverness (The Tailor of Inverness) de Matthew Zajac [ trad., notes et introduction]

    No full text
    International audienceThe journey of Mateusz Zajac, born in Galicia (Poland) in 1919, where he lived until his mobilization during the Second World War, has the appearance of a Homeric epic. Due to the complex geopolitical historical context, like many of his fellow human beings, the young man is uprooted and thrown on the roads to fight under different flags, in armies of different nations, according to the victories and defeats that are remodelling this part of Eastern Europe. Survival is heroic. In The Tailor of Inverness, the pride and love of his son Matthew, a modest author, emerge at every turn of a dramatic and theatrical story where the unimaginable is experienced.Le parcours du Mateusz Zajac, né en Galicie (Pologne) en 1919, où il a vécu jusqu’à sa mobilisation, pendant la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, a des allures d’épopée homérique. En raison du contexte historique géopolitique complexe, comme nombre de ses congénères, le jeune homme est déraciné et jeté sur les routes pour se battre sous des drapeaux différents, dans des armées de nations diverses, au gré des victoires et des défaites qui remodèlent cette partie de l’Europe de l’est. Survivre est héroïque. Dans Le Tailleur d’Inverness, la fierté et l’amour de son fils Matthew, auteur pudique, affleurent à chaque tournant d’un récit dramatique et théâtral où l’inimaginable est vécu

    Age-related differences in adaptation during childhood: The influences of muscular power production and segmental energy flow caused by muscles

    No full text
    Acquisition of skillfulness is not only characterized by a task-appropriate application of muscular forces but also by the ability to adapt performance to changing task demands. Previous research suggests that there is a different developmental schedule for adaptation at the kinematic compared to the neuro-muscular level. The purpose of this study was to determine how age-related differences in neuro-muscular organization affect the mechanical construction of pedaling at different levels of the task. By quantifying the flow of segmental energy caused by muscles, we determined the muscular synergies that construct the movement outcome across movement speeds. Younger children (5-7 years; n = 11), older children (8-10 years; n = 8), and adults (22-31 years; n = 8) rode a stationary ergometer at five discrete cadences (60, 75, 90, 105, and 120 rpm) at 10% of their individually predicted peak power output. Using a forward dynamics simulation, we determined the muscular contributions to crank power, as well as muscular power delivered to the crank directly and indirectly (through energy absorption and transfer) during the downstroke and the upstroke of the crank cycle. We found significant age × cadence interactions for (1) peak muscular power at the hip joint [Wilks' Lambda = 0.441, F(8,42) = 2.65, p = 0.019] indicating that at high movement speeds children produced less peak power at the hip than adults, (2) muscular power delivered to the crank during the downstroke and the upstroke of the crank cycle [Wilks' Lambda = 0.399, F(8,42) = 3.07, p = 0.009] indicating that children delivered a greater proportion of the power to the crank during the upstroke when compared to adults, (3) hip power contribution to limb power [Wilks' Lambda = 0.454, F(8,42) = 2.54, p = 0.023] indicating a cadence-dependence of age-related differences in the muscular synergy between hip extensors and plantarflexors. The results demonstrate that in spite of a successful performance, children construct the task of pedaling differently when compared to adults, especially when they are pushed to their performance limits. The weaker synergy between hip extensors and plantarflexors suggests that a lack of inter-muscular coordination, rather than muscular power production per se, is a factor that limits children's performance ranges
    corecore