4,295 research outputs found
Using imagery to solve spatial problems
This report focuses on the use of imagery to solve a range of spatial problems. The research projects reviewed in this report offer some insight into the range of strategies used by solvers of spatial problems and point to relationships between spatial and verbal skills
Terry Donahoe, Heather Harris and Al Keith, ca. 1974
digital photograph (jpeg)Fair condition.L-R: Terry Donahoe (Commerce class of 1964, former MLA and Attorney General for Nova Scotia), Heather Harris, and Al Keith (Arts class of 1965, known as "Smilin' Al," and former football coach) pose together for a picture
Heather Clarke, 1991
Photograph originally appeared in the 'Staff News', 4th April 1991. Left to right Max Brown, Lecturer, Business Faculty; Heather Clarke, Business / Arts student; Keith Ross, Lecturer, Business Faculty. Heather Clarke was awarded a BHP Asian studies scholarship, one of 2 in Australia, which includes $8000 p.a. for each of final years, work experience with BHP and work experience in Tokyo
Mothering While Homeless: A Qualitative Analysis of Access to Child Services by Young Mothers in Hennepin County, MN
Abraham, Heather; Maida, Chris; Miller, Keith; Pardy, Megan. (2012). Mothering While Homeless: A Qualitative Analysis of Access to Child Services by Young Mothers in Hennepin County, MN. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/123489
Toxicological profile for DEET ((N,N-diethyl-meta-toluamide))
A Toxicological Profile for DEET, Draft for Public Comment was released in September 2015. This edition supersedes any previously released draft or final profile.Chemical manager(s)/author(s): Sam Keith, Carolyn Harper, Annette Ashizawa, Robert Williams, ATSDR, Division of Toxicology and Human Health Sciences, Atlanta, GA;Fernando Llados, Christina Coley, Heather Carlson-Lynch, North Syracuse, NY.tp185.pd
The Times, They Are Changing
In 2015, Rutgers became only the second accredited law school in the United States to select the open-source ILS, Koha. The merger of two unique catalogs at Rutgers Law School has presented unique challenges with respect to migration mapping, data recall for large records, and relevancy ranking, all of which affect search results and usability of the OPAC. System migrations always result in some data being lost or incorrectly transferred. The hope is to minimize just how much data is compromised while fixing errors that might not have come to light but for the migration.Peer reviewe
Heather McHugh, 4th Annual ODU Literary Festival
The author of Dangers, published in 1978 in Houghton Mifflin\u27s New Poetry Series, and A World of Difference, also a Houghton Mifflin publication (1981), Heather McHugh is a rare poet, known for her formal elegance, her piercing wit, and her supple use of rhyme and rhythm. The Denver Quarterly remarked on her interest in seeing doubly and double-talking and praised her passionate intelligence and affection for the tongue\u27s intimate intricacies. McHugh\u27s Thursday evening reading will conclude the 1981 Literary Festival. McHugh grew up in Williamsburg and now teaches at the State University of New York at Binghamton. She is a member of the board of directors of the Associated Writing Programs
Ep. #121 - Heather Paxson
This recording and transcript form part of a collection of podcasts conducted by the Cultures of Energy at Rice University. Cultures of Energy brings writers, artists and scholars together to talk, think and feel their way into the Anthropocene. We cover serious issues like climate change, species extinction and energy transition. But we also try to confront seemingly huge and insurmountable problems with insight, creativity and laughter.Dominic and Cymene plug Cultures of Energy 7—this year’s energy humanities symposium at Rice which begins today, details at culturesofenergy.org—and then they turn to cheese, why it’s funny, how it can be applied to cats, “cheddaring,” and much more. Is there an anthropologist who knows more about cheese than anyone? Yes of course there is, it’s MIT’s Heather Paxson, author of the award-winning The Life of Cheese: Crafting Food and Value in America (U California Press, 2012). She joins us (14:59) to talk about her research on the microbiopolitics of food and naturally we begin with what’s in her fridge. Heather tells us about her investigation of artisanal cheesemaking and what it tells us about the shift from Pasteurian to Post-Pasteurian regimes of microbiopower. We hear about goat ladies as revolutionaries, the truth about vegan cheese, and debate whether artisanal foodmaking is an elite project. Heather discusses the search for moral meaning in everyday life as a throughline in her work and we turn to her latest research on food safety inspections, the porosity of food borders and the synecdochic reasoning of the state when it comes to managing food flows. We close by discussing the impact of feminist analytics of labor in her research. What is “beef candy China”? Listen on and you might just find out
HERStory Makers 2023: Heather Mcclelland
Heather Mcclelland is a chartered psychologist and researcher at the University of Glasgow studying mental health. She took part in HERStory Makers 2023.What is HERStory Makers?HERStory Makers is a social media competition for female-identifying early career researchers to share their research, their career journeys, and to inspire the next generation. Winners are selected by public vote. HERStory Makers is also part of EXPLORATHON, Scotland's contribution to European Researchers' Night.In 2022-23, EXPLORATHON was supported by the Engineering & Physical Sciences Research Council [grant number EP/X020762/1].Author contributions to contentHeather Mcclelland conceived, planned, and recorded the video content. Kirsty Ross edited the video content to insert HERStory Maker credits, add subtitles, and ensured the video length was below Twitter/X limit of 2 mins and 20 secs.</p
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