607 research outputs found
Selection of work by Anna Gerber
Various journals and magazines Anna Gerber has contributed to. Anna Gerber is a graphic designer and writer based in London.
She is the author and designer of All Messed Up: Unpredictable Graphics (Laurence King, 2004) and co-editor and co-designer
of Influences: A Lexicon of Contemporary Graphic Design (Die Gestalten Verlag, 2006) with Anja Lutz. She writes regularily for magazines such as Print, Eye, Creative Review, Varoom and Idea Magazine and her work has also been published in shift!, dot dot dot and +rosebud.
She teaches at the London College of Communication on the BA Graphic Design and MA Design Writing Criticism programmes. She has also held workshops and lectures across the U.K. (including Tate Modern and the V&A Museum), as well as in India, the U.S., Australia and Malaysia.
Anna Gerber is currently engaged in research and developing projects relating to sustainability and how it applies to graphic
design as well as exploring contemporary graphic design in India
Rick Strelan, Luke the Priest. The Autority of the Author of the Third Gospel, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2008
Gerber Daniel. Rick Strelan, Luke the Priest. The Autority of the Author of the Third Gospel, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2008. In: Revue d'histoire et de philosophie religieuses, 89e année n°3, Juillet-Septembre 2009. pp. 405-406
On the Buckling of Gerber-Beam
Gerber beam which is often used as a bridge has discontinuity conceming the slope and shearing force at hinge point and middle support. On the occasion of analyzing the stress, deformation, vibration or buckling of such structure as Gerber beam, solution becomes complex uselessly because of the discontilluity, and its numerical calculation becomes unstable. In this paper, the author shows the general method to analyze skillfully the structure with discontinuous elements and analyzes the buckling problem of Gerber beam. The buckling behaviour of Gerber beam groups into two classes by the difference of buckling parts of beam. It is showed that the positions of hinge and middle support act upon the buckling behaviour, and the domain of I and II-type buckling, the eigenvalue and buckling mode are calculated in addition
Fashion Culture: Charles James: Portrait of an Unreasonable Man
Author Michèle Gerber Klein and MFIT Director Valerie Steele discussed Klein’s new biography of revolutionary fashion designer Charles James. Klein tells the story of James’s life and career as seen through his own and other people’s eyes
Henri Temianka Correspondence; (gerber)
This collection contains material pertaining to the life, career, and activities of Henri Temianka, violin virtuoso, conductor, music teacher, and author. Materials include correspondence, concert programs and flyers, music scores, photographs, and books.https://digitalcommons.chapman.edu/temianka_correspondence/3732/thumbnail.jp
Stimulation of Toll-like receptor 9 by chronic intraventricular unmethylated cytosine-guanine DNA infusion causes neuroinflammation and impaired spatial memory
Bacterial DNA contains a high frequency of unmethylated cytosine-guanine (CpG) motifs that have strong immunostimulatory properties; they are recognized by mammalian Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9). Because accumulating data suggest that chronic inflammatory processes are involved in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases, we hypothesized that inflammatory responses stimulated by CpG DNA might contribute to neurodegeneration and brain dysfunction. To assess the effects of continuous CpG DNA exposure in the brain. C57BL/6 (n = 21) and TLR9-deficient mice (n = 15) were given intracerebroventricular infusions of CpG DNA or saline for 28 days. Spatial memory assessed weekly by Morris water maze demonstrated impairment in CpG-treated wild-type trice but not in TLR9-deficient or control-treated mice. Motor function was not affected. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed marked microglial activation and acute axonal damage surrounding the ventricles, ependymal disruption, and reactive astrogliosis within the hippocampal formation in the CpG-treated wild-type but not TLR9-deficient mice or saline-infused controls. These results suggest that the unfavorable effects of CpG DNA are dependent on TLR9 signaling and that exposure to bacterial DNA may contribute to impaired neural function, neuroinflammation, and subsequent neurodegeneration.Else Kroner-Fresenius-Stiftung [P61/06//A70/06
Véronica Gerber Bicecci et l'intermédialité : Leroman visuel en fragment
International audienceThis article highlights the fragmentary writing in two visual novels by Verónica Gerber Bicecci, Conjunto vacío (2017) and La compañía (2019). By making notable use of literary intermediality as a narrative strategy, the author addresses complex issues such as the memory of the Argentine military dictatorship and the environmental consequences of mining extraction in Mexico.Cet article souligne l'écriture fragmentaire dans deux romans visuels de Verónica Gerber Bicecci, "Conjunto vacío" (2017) et "La compañía" (2019). L'autrice en faisant un usage remarqué de l'intermédialité littéraire comme stratégie narrative, elle articule des problématiques complexes telles que la mémoire de la dictature militaire argentine et les conséquences environnementales de l'extraction minière au Mexique
The Gerber-Shiu expected discounted penalty-reward function under an affine jump-diffusion model.
We provide a unified analytical treatment of first passage problems under an affine state-dependent jump-diffusion model (with drift and volatility depending linearly on the state). Our proposed model, that generalizes several previously studied cases, may be used for example for obtaining probabilities of ruin in the presence of interest rates under the rational investement strategies proposed by Berk & Green (2004)First passage problems; Risk process; Stochastic rates of interest; Ruin with interest; Affine jump-diffusion models; Penalty/reward functions at ruin;
Stimulation of Toll-Like Receptor 9 by Chronic Intraventricular Unmethylated Cytosine-Guanine DNA Infusion Causes Neuroinflammation and Impaired Spatial Memory
Bacterial DNA contains a high frequency of unmethylated cytosine-guanine (CpG) motifs that have strong immunostimulatory properties; they are recognized by mammalian Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9). Because accumulating data suggest that chronic inflammatory processes are involved in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases, we hypothesized that inflammatory responses stimulated by CpG DNA might contribute to neurodegeneration and brain dysfunction. To assess the effects of continuous CpG DNA exposure in the brain. C57BL/6 (n = 21) and TLR9-deficient mice (n = 15) were given intracerebroventricular infusions of CpG DNA or saline for 28 days. Spatial memory assessed weekly by Morris water maze demonstrated impairment in CpG-treated wild-type trice but not in TLR9-deficient or control-treated mice. Motor function was not affected. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed marked microglial activation and acute axonal damage surrounding the ventricles, ependymal disruption, and reactive astrogliosis within the hippocampal formation in the CpG-treated wild-type but not TLR9-deficient mice or saline-infused controls. These results suggest that the unfavorable effects of CpG DNA are dependent on TLR9 signaling and that exposure to bacterial DNA may contribute to impaired neural function, neuroinflammation, and subsequent neurodegeneration.Else Kroner-Fresenius-Stiftung [P61/06//A70/06
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