23,051 research outputs found
Vowel identification test stimuli for Marc Jones
<p>The sound files were used as stimuli for a vowel identification test. These tests were used in Jones & Blume (2022) and Jones (Forthcoming, a, b).</p>
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<div>Jones, M., & Blume, C. (2022). Accent difference makes no difference to phoneme acquisition. <em>TESL-EJ</em>, <em>26</em>(3), 1–22. <a href="https://doi.org/10.55593/ej.26103a3">https://doi.org/10.55593/ej.26103a3</a></div>
<div>Jones, M. (Forthcoming, a). Does visual modality improve perceptual acquisition of L2+ English vowels?</div>
<div>Jones, M. (Forthcoming, b). Feedback timing in CALL and L2+ English vowel acquisition.</div>
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Eurydice arabica Jones 1974
<i>Eurydice arabica</i> Jones, 1974 <p>(Fig. 5 a, b)</p> <p> <i>Eurydice arabica</i> Jones 1974: 202, fig. 2a–g.— Bruce 1986: 221.</p> <p> <b>Material examined</b>. 3 females (SMF 40852) low tide, subtidal sand, Bahrain sta. 850805A5, Mashtan Island, coll. D.A. Jones 1985; 1 juv (SMF 40853) subtidal sand, Kuwait, Al-Ahmad Sea City waterways, sta. NS06 coll. B.R. Sontakke 2009.</p> <p> <b>Remarks.</b> This species has been extensively collected in the Red Sea (Jones 1974; Dexter 1986 /7; Dexter 1989) from intertidal sand, but present records from Bahrain and Kuwait are the first for the Arabian Gulf.</p> <p> The appendix masculina and pleotelson posterior margin are figured (Fig. 5 a, b), together with those of <i>E. paxilli</i> (Fig. 5 d, e) and <i>E. inermis</i> (Fig. 5 f) to assist with the identification key.</p>Published as part of <i>Jones, David Alan & Nithyanandan, Manickam, 2012, Taxonomy and distribution of the genus Eurydice Leach, 1815 (Crustacea, Isopoda, Cirolanidae) from the Arabian region, including three new species, pp. 45-57 in Zootaxa 3314</i> on page 55, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/210845">10.5281/zenodo.210845</a>
Staging Henry Fielding: The Author-Narrator in <i>Tom Jones</i> On Screen
As recent adaptation theory has shown, classic-novel adaptation typically sets issues connected to authorship and literal and figurative ownership into play. This key feature of such adaptations is also central to the screen versions of Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones (1749). In much of Fielding’s fiction, the narrator, typically understood as an embodiment of Fielding himself, is a particularly prominent presence. The author-narrator in Tom Jones is no exception: not only is his presence strongly felt throughout the novel, but through a variety of means, ‘The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling’ is also distinctly marked as being under his control and ownership. The two adaptations of Fielding’s novel, a 1963 film and a 1997 television series, both retain the figure of the author-narrator, but differ greatly in their handling of this device and its consequent thematic ramifications. Although the 1963 film de-emphasises Henry Fielding’s status as proprietor of the story, the author-narrator as represented in the film’s voiceover commentary is a figure of authority and authorial control. In contrast, the 1997 adaptation emphasises Fielding’s ownership of the narrative and even includes the author-narrator as a character in the series, but this ownership is undermined by the irreverent treatment to which he is consistently subjected. The representations of Henry Fielding in the form of the author-narrator in both adaptations are not only indicative of shifting conceptions of authorship, but also of the important interplay between authorship, ownership and adaptation more generally.</jats:p
matty-jones/rhaco: Rhaco v1.2.0
<p>Version 1.2.0 contains several bug fixes, as well as additional functionality that permits the simulation of metallic nanoparticles on a surface.</p>
NASA Astronaut Chat: Dr. Tom Jones
Presented on January 16, 2020 from 4:30 p.m.-6:00 p.m. at the Georgia Tech Student Center Theatre.Hosted by the Office of Undergraduate Education.After graduating from the USAF Academy, Thomas David Jones served on active duty as an Air Force officer for 6 years. After pilot training in Oklahoma, he flew strategic bombers at Carswell Air Force Base, Texas. As pilot and aircraft commander of a B-52 D Stratofortress, he led a combat crew of six, accumulating over 2,000 hours of jet experience before resigning as a captain in 1983. After becoming a NASA astronaut in 1991, he flew as a mission specialist on successive flights of space shuttle Endeavour. First, in April 1994, he ran science operations on the "night shift" during STS-59, the first flight of the Space Radar Laboratory (SRL-1). Then, in October 1994, he was the payload commander on the SRL-2 mission, STS-68. Jones next flew in late 1996 on Columbia. Mission STS-80 successfully deployed and retrieved 2 science satellites.Runtime: 64:19 minutesFour-time space traveler Tom Jones shares the personal and spiritual experience of space exploration. You’ll rocket through a rumbling blast-off, soar into orbit, spacewalk at the Space Station, endure a fiery reentry, and return, exhilarated, to Earth
Lee-V-Jones/statistical-quality: Protocol
<p>Study materials, including the protocol, recruiting information, formatted questions, and questionnaire used to assess linear regression in papers.</p>
Pseudobranchiomma minima Nogueira & Knight-Jones 2002, sp. n.
<i>Pseudobranchiomma minima</i> sp. n. <p>(gures 2, 3)</p> <p> <i>Material examined</i>. Nineteen specimens, all from Ilha dos Alcatrazes. HOLOTYPE MHN-BPO 66/0, mounted; PARATYPES: MHN-BPO 66/1-5, two mounted and three preserved in 70% alcohol; NMW.Z.2000.105.1, two preserved in alcohol and 105.2–4, three mounted. Three specimens observed by SEM not available. Data in parentheses refer to the holotype.</p> <p> <i>Description.</i> Small species with 42–73 segments; thorax and abdomen 5–12.8 (9.1) mm long, 0.75–0.9 (0.84) mm wide, radiolar crown a further 3.2 (3) mm long, crown base in two semicircles each with about ve radioles; external radiolar surfaces with reduced anges and without serrations (gure 3E) or compound eyes; radiolar 1666 J. M. M. Nogueira and P. Knight-Jones</p>Published as part of <i>Nogueira, J. M. M. & Knight-Jones, Phyllis, 2002, A new species of Pseudobranchiomma Jones (Polychaeta: Sabellidae) found amongst Brazilian coral, with a redescription of P. punctata (Treadwell, 1906) from Hawaii, pp. 1661-1670 in Journal of Natural History 36 (14)</i> on page 1665, DOI: 10.1080/00222930110071705, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5298736">http://zenodo.org/record/5298736</a>
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