1,721,036 research outputs found

    WashU Genome Browser processing and uploading

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    Test processing and uploading to WashU Genome Browse

    test dataset creation

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    test dataset creatio

    VSim: Pantheon test model

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    VSim test mode

    Euclaptus Grove potree test2

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    data accessible by potre

    direct upload test DEM

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    test upload of dem fil

    Los Angeles Metropolitan Area Surveys [LAMAS] 1, 1970

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    The Los Angeles Metropolitan Areas Studies (LAMAS) were conducted ten times between 1970 and 1976. The goal of the LAMAS studies is the development of a set of standard community profile measures appropriate for use in the planning and evaluation of public policy. In addition, individual study participants have the option of submitting questions to be asked in addition to the core items. Questions in this survey cover respondents' attitudes toward the following topics: air pollution, health care services in the community, local government politics, police relations, recreation and leisure time. Study participants' question topics include: clean air, mobility, political attitudes, education, integration/segregation, and health and psychological factors. This study is provided 'as is' and questions can be directed to the Data Archive staff. (1977

    test dataset creation

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    test dataset creatio

    Archive of Traditional Medicine

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    This Archive of Traditional Medicine constitutes over 375,000 entries, collected from both private and public folklore archives, some of which date back centuries. In 2012, the UCLA Library passed the data to Dr. David Delgado Shorter who worked for thirteen years on the data curation and management, under the public name of The Archive of Healing (TM). With students, programmers, and data management specialists, they developed levels of access and coded the data according to either modality type or user type. This Dataverse, collection reflects the database as of Winter 2025, including those access setting that were in place on the Archive of Healing (TM). For purposes of distinction, the data returned to UCLA in this Dataverse form will henceforth be renamed the Archive of Traditional Medicine, since the Archive of Healing (TM) will continue moving forward in a slightly altered trajectory. Please note that The AH team made some progress without fully vetting the archive’s content for quality, and so reminds its users that the content in most cases reflects the age cultural context of its origin. The archive is, in part, a historical roadmap of healing modalities and may not reflect today’s knowledge on particular subjects. The archive invites critical discussion on how healing knowledge differs across communities and cultures. You may find some of the data on the site to be objectionable, misleading, or erroneous. This archive draws from an array of content gathered from a wide variety of source materials, with language reflecting the unique—and often time-specific—cultural contexts from which the data was collected. Conserving the verbatim language of this historic data helps us observe the relationship between linguistics and medical literature which, like all institutional knowledge, is rife with flaws. In light of the fact that the Archive of Traditional Medicine serves as a scholarly database and not a medical platform, no aspect of this site offers clinically verified professional advice for immediate health concerns or chronic ailments. Should you seek peer-reviewed advice for a health concern, please seek professional counseling from a licensed healer rather than rely on the information within this database

    trusted remote storage test

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    test the trusted remote storage optio

    News on the Web (NOW)

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    The NOW corpus (News on the Web) contains 17.2 billion words of data from web-based newspapers and magazines from 2010 to the present time (the most recent day is 2023-04-23). More importantly, the corpus grows by about 180-200 million words of data each month (from about 300,000 new articles), or about two billion words each year. While other resources like Google Trends show you what people are searching for, the NOW Corpus is the only structured corpus that shows you what is actually happening in the language -- virtually right up to the present time. For example, see the frequency of words since 2010, as well as new words and phrases from the last few years. In this sense, NOW is the most robust monitor corpus of English. Access to material is limited to UCLA graduate students and faculty. Undergraduates please use the standard web interface for the corpora: https://www.english-corpora.org/now/</b
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