5,070 research outputs found

    La note comme greffe typographique : étude linguistique et discursive

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    Lefebvre Julie. La note comme greffe typographique : étude linguistique et discursive. In: L'Information Grammaticale, N. 119, 2008. pp. 54-55

    Letting in the Trojan mouse: Using an eportfolio system to re-think pedagogy.

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    Copyright statement: Copyright 2008 Julie Hughes. The author assigns to ascilite and educational non-profit institutions a non-exclusive licence to use this document for personal use and in courses of instruction provided that the article is used in full and this copyright statement is reproduced. The author also grants a non-exclusive licence to ascilite to publish this document on the ascilite web site and in other formats for Proceedings ascilite Melbourne 2008. Any other use is prohibited without the express permission of the author.E-learning research, as an emergent field in the UK, is highly political in nature (Conole & Oliver, 2007, p.6) occupying a complex landscape which houses policy-makers, researchers and practitioners. Increasingly and more interestingly, the landscape is being shaped by the narratives and experiences of the learners themselves (Creanor et al., 2006, Conole et al., 2006) and the use of Web 2.0 technologies. However, as Laurillard (2007, p.xv) reminds us we still, ‘tend to use technology to support traditional modes of teaching’ and ‘we scarcely have the infrastructure, the training, the habits or the access to the new technology, to be optimising its use just yet’ (p.48). Web 2.0 spaces, literacies and practices offer the possibility for new models of education (Mayes & de Freitas, 2007, p.13) which support iterative and integrative learning but as educators and higher educational establishments are we prepared and ready to re-think our pedagogies and re-do (Beetham & Sharpe 2007, p.3) our practices? This concise paper will reflect upon how the use of new learning landscapes such as eportfolios might offer us the opportunity to reflect upon the implications of letting in the e-learning eportfolio Trojan mouse (Sharpe & Oliver, 2007, p.49)

    Barer, Julie & Wilson, Kevin : Publishing Panel; November 26th, 2018

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    Contents: All tracks   Panel [complete] Track 01   Introduction Track 02   Q&A Digital Projects SAN: folder location for wav and mp3 files: /J:\Elliston Working\11-27-2018 (Julie Barer and Kevin Wilson

    Dr. Julie Pollock - Faculty Author Interview

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    Dr. Julie Pollock, Assistant Professor of Chemistry in the School of Artsand Sciences, discusses “Synthesis and characterization of hydrogen peroxide activated estrogen receptor beta ligands,” an article that she and her students recently published in Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry. Dr. Pollock’s lab utilizes chemical biology techniques, biochemical methods, and organic synthesis to understand breast cancer and lung cancer development and progression. In particular, they are interested in nuclear receptor function, phosphorylation signaling pathways, and the link between cancer and inflammation

    Analyse dynamique de six productions picturales d'une suicidée

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    Léveillée Suzanne, Labelle Réal, Daigle Marc, Coté Gilles, Lefebvre Julie. Analyse dynamique de six productions picturales d'une suicidée. In: Bulletin de psychologie, tome 54 n°455, 2001. Rorschach et T.A.T. pp. 543-551

    Georges Levesque et Henri Gost, pharmaciens photographes à Caen : Clavel (Julie), Le Fonds Gost-Levesque. Valorisation d’un fonds photographique amateur dans la collection de l’ARDI-Photographies. Photographies de 1880 à 1907. Mémoire de Master 2 professionnel «Histoire, spécialité Métiers du Patrimoine historique et culturel» , année 2015-2016

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    Lefebvre Thierry. Georges Levesque et Henri Gost, pharmaciens photographes à Caen : Clavel (Julie), Le Fonds Gost-Levesque. Valorisation d’un fonds photographique amateur dans la collection de l’ARDI-Photographies. Photographies de 1880 à 1907. Mémoire de Master 2 professionnel «Histoire, spécialité Métiers du Patrimoine historique et culturel» , année 2015-2016. In: Revue d'histoire de la pharmacie, 104e année, N. 393, 2017. pp. 123-125

    Georges Levesque et Henri Gost, pharmaciens photographes à Caen : Clavel (Julie), Le Fonds Gost-Levesque. Valorisation d’un fonds photographique amateur dans la collection de l’ARDI-Photographies. Photographies de 1880 à 1907. Mémoire de Master 2 professionnel «Histoire, spécialité Métiers du Patrimoine historique et culturel» , année 2015-2016

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    Lefebvre Thierry. Georges Levesque et Henri Gost, pharmaciens photographes à Caen : Clavel (Julie), Le Fonds Gost-Levesque. Valorisation d’un fonds photographique amateur dans la collection de l’ARDI-Photographies. Photographies de 1880 à 1907. Mémoire de Master 2 professionnel «Histoire, spécialité Métiers du Patrimoine historique et culturel» , année 2015-2016. In: Revue d'histoire de la pharmacie, 104e année, N. 393, 2017. pp. 123-125

    The Clustered Protocadherins in the Form and Function of Cerebellar Purkinje Cells

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    The cerebellum is a brain region that regulates the control of movement. It also participates in non-motor functions, such as social and repetitive behaviours. At the heart of the cerebellar circuitry are the Purkinje cells (PCs). These neurons provide the sole exit of neural information from the cerebellar cortex. PCs possess distinguishing features: 1) their exuberant dendrites are uniformly distributed with minimal self-overlap through a process called dendrite self-avoidance; 2) they fire intrinsically at regular and high-frequency intervals even without synaptic input. PCs prominently express the clustered Protocadherins (cPCDHS), a group of cell surface recognition molecules. They are encoded by 58 genes, divided into three clusters: α-Pcdh (Pcdha), β-Pcdh (Pcdhb), and γ-Pcdh (Pcdhg). Previously, we showed that PCDHGs regulate PC dendrite self-avoidance (Lefebvre et al., 2012). However, the roles of the other clusters in PC self-avoidance and overall, the cPCDHs’ roles in PC function have not been elucidated. Here, I investigated the functional interactions between the Pcdha and Pcdhg clusters in PC dendrite self-avoidance, as well as their roles in PC firing and behavioural output. My PC self-avoidance analysis demonstrated that the loss of Pcdhas leads to defects of similar severity to loss of Pcdhgs, suggesting that both clusters are equally required. Dendrite self-crossing defects were exacerbated in Pcdha; Pcdhg double mutant PCs compared to single mutants, revealing partial redundancy. Developmental PCs lacking Pcdhgs displayed increased dendrite density and malformed filopodia, suggesting deficits in filopodia retraction lead to self-avoidance defects. The cPcdhs also influenced PC functions. Mouse mutants harboring a PC-specific deletion of Pcdhgs, with or without an additional global Pcdha heterozygous deletion, displayed motor impairments on the rotarod and in their gait. Non-motor functions were spared. Motor deficits were accompanied by dysfunctional PC firing properties. Mutant PCs exhibited lower intrinsic firing rates and excitability with elevated potassium currents, possibly resulting from Kv3.3 channel disinhibition. In CHO cells, a PCDHG isoform physically interacted with Kv3.3 channels, revealing a potential mechanism for cPCDH inhibition of Kv3.3 channels. My work is the first to show that the cPCDH clusters cooperate in PC dendrite self-avoidance, and that the cPCDHs can regulate the firing properties of a neuron, as well as PC-specific behavioural output.Ph.D.2023-11-11 00:00:0

    Librarians’ Use of Images on LibGuides and Other Social Media Platforms

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    This study compared the use of librarians’ profile images across Web platforms designed for librarian-patron communication. The primary focus was LibGuides profiles at a peer group of ARL institutions. Librarians are currently using a variety of options, including professional head shots, casual head shots, other photos, alternate images, avatars, and no image. Where possible, results were also analyzed by gender. For a smaller selection of libraries, LibGuides photos were compared with Facebook photos to see if different images were used for a professional versus a personal social media setting. This research was done in December 2010 and duplicated in May 2012 to track changes over time. The later study also reviews profile images for the smaller selection of libraries in LinkedIn and ALA Connect. The findings provide a baseline for further comparative research, could also inform individual librarians’ image choices based on patterns among their peers, and gives the profession a starting point for discussions about the types of images librarians use.Peer reviewedThis is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an Article published in Journal of Web Librarianship (2013), available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/19322909.2013.812473

    Review of Julie Gottlieb's "'Guilty Women', foreign policy and appeasement in interwar Britain"

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    Review of Julie Gottlieb's "'Guilty Women', foreign policy and appeasement in interwar Britain"Review of Julie Gottlieb's "'Guilty Women', foreign policy and appeasement in interwar Britain
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