11,386 research outputs found
The Social Science of Living Alone w/ Dr. Jun Chu
On today's episode I speak with Dr. Jun Chu, Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Public Health at UMBC. Dr. Chu shares information about his ongoing research agenda into aging alone.Check out the following links for more information on UMBC, CS3, and our host:The UMBC Center for the Social Sciences ScholarshipThe University of Maryland, Baltimore CountyIan G. Anson, Ph.D.Retrieving the Social Sciences is a production of the UMBC Center for Social Science Scholarship. Our podcast host is Dr. Ian Anson, and our Acting director is Dr. Eric Stokan. Our production intern is Jean Kim. Our theme music was composed and recorded by D’Juan Moreland (UMBC '24). Special thanks to Amy Barnes and Myriam Ralston for production assistance. Make sure to follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube, where you can find full video recordings of recent UMBC events.https://socialscience.umbc.edu/podcast/episode-60
Xia lu.
楚軍著.書名據封面."長篇文藝創作小說"--封面.Chu Jun zhu.Shu ming ju feng mian."Chang pian wen yi chuang zuo xiao shuo"--Feng mian
Sembrando el Jardín para colibríes Xanat Chu Jun
"Proceso de siembra del Jardín para colibríes Xanat Chu Jun"
Inauguración del Jardín para colibríes Xanat Chu Jun
"Inauguración del Jardín para colibríes Xanat Chu Jun en CU, surgimiento de la idea y como es el funcionamiento"
UMBC’s CIDER Program Supports New Hilltop Institute-led Medicaid Study, Other Cross-collaborative Projects
Photographer is Demond, Marlayna. headshots photos courtesy of Chu, Jun and The Hilltop InstituteUMBC researchers are collaborating on a study that takes a closer look at specific diagnosis coding patterns that focus on societal factors that potentially influence the health of Maryland’s Medicaid recipients. Morgan Henderson, director of analytics and research at UMBC’s The Hilltop Institute, and Jun Chu, assistant professor of public health, are among the five cross-collaborative teams selected to receive funding from UMBC’s Center and Institute Departmentally-Engaged Research (CIDER) program. Henderson and Chu’s CIDER-supported project will investigate potential “z code” patterns of the state’s Medicaid recipients. Z codes are a set of diagnosis codes that refer to factors influencing a patient’s health status beyond diseases or injuries, called social determinants of health.https://umbc.edu/stories/cider-program-hilltop-medicaid-study
Elaboración de mural para el Jardín para colibríes Xanat Chu Jun
"Proceso de la elaboración de mural para el Jardín para colibríes Xanat Chu Jun, significado y presentación de la autora del mural
Apanteles changhingensis Chu 1937
Apanteles changhingensis Chu, 1937 (Figures 24, 99) Apanteles changhingensis Chu, 1937: 63. Holotype♀ — Zhejiang, China [ZJUH]. Thompson, 1953: 55; Chu, He, Wang et al. 1978: 56; Song & Chen, 2004: 36. Diagnosis. Body length 3.0 mm, fore wing length 3.5 mm. Body black, hind femur yellowish to reddish yellow. Ocelli not large, posterior tangent to anterior ocellus touching posterior ocelli, distance between fore and hind ocellus about as long as diameter of hind ocellus. Antenna about as long as body length, penultimate flagellomere 1.8× longer than wide. Pronotum strongly rugose at posterior end of notaulic courses, no distinct striation. Interspaces between punctures on disc of mesonotum distinctly smaller than its diameter. Areola on propodeum closed with strong costulae, a longitudinal carina present along lateral margin. Pterostigma, 3.2× as long as its widest part, vein 1-R1 1.4× longer than pterostigma, vein r 2.3× longer than vein 2-SR, weakly angled at junction. T1 nearly parallelsided, 2.5× longer than hind width, turned-over part dull, rough, with weak striation laterally, longitudinal channel deep; T2 shiny and nearly polished, 2.5× wider than long in the middle; T3 2.2× longer than T2. Ovipositor sheath 1.3× longer than hind tibia. Host. It is the cocoon parasitoid of Dendrolimus punctatus Walker. Its cocoon is white (Chu, 1937). Material examined. 1♀, Jianfengling, Hainan, 2007.VI.4–7, Zeng Jie, No. 200710957; 1♀, Yinggeling, Hainan, 2008.XI.16, Tan Jiangli, No. 200805811; 1♀, Wuyun, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 2008.X.4, Zeng Jie, Nos. 200809460, 200809461. Distribution. China (Fujian, Hainan, Zhejiang).Published as part of Liu, Zhen, He, Jun-Hua, Chen, Xue-Xin & Gupta, Ankita, 2020, The ater-group of the genus Apanteles Foerster (Hymenoptera, Braconidae, Microgastrinae) from China with the descriptions of forty-eight new species, pp. 1-205 in Zootaxa 4807 (1) on page 57, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4807.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/392763
The Localization Hypothesis and Machines
In a recent article in 'Artificial Life', Chu and Ho suggested that Rosen's central result about the simulability of living systems might be flawed. This argument was later declared ''null and void'' by Louie. In this article the validity of Louie's objections are examined
Chapter 32 Neoproterozoic glacial records in the Yangtze Region, China - Photograph supplement
Companion photographs to the book chapter Zhang, Qi-Rui, Chu, Xue-Lei, and Feng, Lian-Jun. 2011. “Neoproterozoic glacial records in the Yangtze Region, China” In: Arnaud, E., Halverson, G. P. and Shields-Zhou, G. (eds) The Geological Record of Neoproterozoic Glaciations. Geological Society, London, Memoirs, 36, 357-366
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