3,638 research outputs found
Collaboration and interconnectivity: Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue Services and higher education institutions in Nottingham
This paper will describe the developing relationship between Nottinghamshire Fire and Rescue Services and the two Higher Education Institutions in Nottingham. It will chronicle how a very traditional relationship has been transformed, initially by a simple consultancy project, into a much closer working relationship characterised by a much richer variety of collaborative projects. It demonstrates the potential mutual benefits that greater trust and reciprocity between the institutions can bring to both academia and to practice and the impact it has already had on curriculum development, teaching and learning in Nottingham
Canning_OnlineAppendix – Supplemental material for Cultures of Genius at Work: Organizational Mindsets Predict Cultural Norms, Trust, and Commitment
Supplemental material, Canning_OnlineAppendix for Cultures of Genius at Work: Organizational Mindsets Predict Cultural Norms, Trust, and Commitment by Elizabeth A. Canning, Mary C. Murphy, Katherine T. U. Emerson, Jennifer A. Chatman, Carol S. Dweck and Laura J. Kray in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin</p
The road to progressive taxation
Richard Murphy examines the recent increase in the rate of tax for high income earners in the UK and argues that this should be the beginning of a journey whose destination is a wholly progressive taxation system. Copyright (c) 2009 The Author. Journal compilation (c) 2009 ippr.
sj-doc-1-tai-10.1177_20499361221108005 – Supplemental material for Design and protocol of the Buprenorphine plus Outpatient Parenteral Antimicrobial Therapy (B-OPAT) study: a randomized clinical trial of integrated outpatient treatment of opioid use disorder and severe, injection-related infections
Supplemental material, sj-doc-1-tai-10.1177_20499361221108005 for Design and protocol of the Buprenorphine plus Outpatient Parenteral Antimicrobial Therapy (B-OPAT) study: a randomized clinical trial of integrated outpatient treatment of opioid use disorder and severe, injection-related infections by Laura C. Fanucchi, Sean M. Murphy, Hilary Surratt, Shashi N. Kapadia, Sharon L. Walsh, James A. Grubbs, Alice C. Thornton, Paul Nuzzo and Michelle R. Lofwall in Therapeutic Advances in Infectious Disease</p
Spectral characterization of accelerator-based epithermal neutron beams for Boron Neutron Capture Therapy and Boron Neutron Capture Synovectomy using neutron activation foils
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Nuclear Engineering, 1999.Includes bibliographical references (p. 215-220).by Laura Grace Murphy.S.M
Mass spectrometry of lipids
Mass spectrometry plays a unique and important role in lipid biochemistry, serving as a tool to elucidate lipid structure while offering a method of analysis that relies on ion chemistry, an intrinsic property of lipid substances, rather than physical propertiesIn this comprehensive reference, Robert C. Murphy provides readers with an understanding of the general physical concepts of mass spectrometry and its use in the analysis of specific lipid substances. Opening the text with a description of the fundamentals of mass spectrometry, Dr. Murphy discusses currently used mass analyzers and ancillary techniques, including high-resolution mass spectrometry, selected ion recording, tandem mass spectrometry, and database generation, and details specific examples of their use. He then examines state-of-the-art desorption ionization techniques - including electron ionization, chemical ionization, fast atom bombardment, and electron capture ionization techniques - which can supply vital structural information when coupled with tandem mass spectrometry. Subsequent chapters focus on the ion chemistry of specific lipids, with coverage ranging from fatty acids and their derivatives to glycosphingolipids. DrMurphy presents over 80 complete mass spectra of these lipid substances and more than 120 detailed mechanistic schemes describing the fragmentation pathways observed in these mass spectra. The author also demonstrates the use of mass spectrometry for quantitative assays of the lipids discussed and the application of specific ion measurement as a strategy to enhance sensitivity and specificit
Human dimensions monitoring report 2010-2011
contributing authors: Thomas C. Swearingen, Ph.D. (Marine Reserves Human Dimensions Project Leader, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife), Cristen Don (Marine Reserves Program Leader, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife), Melissa Murphy (Former Socioeconomic Analyst, Marine Reserves Program, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife), Shannon Davis (The Research Group, Corvallis, Oregon), Hilary Polis (The Research Group, Corvallis, Oregon).This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references (pages 129-135).Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
MSJ845116_Supplemental_table_1 – Supplemental material for Alterations in the retinal vasculature occur in multiple sclerosis and exhibit novel correlations with disability and visual function measures
Supplemental material, MSJ845116_Supplemental_table_1 for Alterations in the retinal vasculature occur in multiple sclerosis and exhibit novel correlations with disability and visual function measures by Olwen C Murphy, Ohemaa Kwakyi, Mustafa Iftikhar, Sidra Zafar, Jeffrey Lambe, Nicole Pellegrini, Elias S Sotirchos, Natalia Gonzalez-Caldito, Esther Ogbuokiri, Angeliki Filippatou, Hunter Risher, Norah Cowley, Sydney Feldman, Nicholas Fioravante, Elliot M Frohman, Teresa C Frohman, Laura J Balcer, Jerry L Prince, Roomasa Channa, Peter A Calabresi and Shiv Saidha in Multiple Sclerosis Journal</p
Requirements for a software maintenance support environment
This thesis surveys the field of software maintenance, and addresses the maintenance requirements of the Aerospace Industry, which is developing inige projects, running over many years, and sometimes safety critical in nature (e.g. ARIANE 5, HERMES, COLUMBUS). Some projects are collaborative between distributed European partners. The industry will have to cope in the near and far future with the maintenance of these products and it will be essential to improve the software maintenance process and the environments for maintenance. Cost effective software maintenance needs an efficient, high quality and homogeneous environment or Integrated Project Support Environment (IPSE). Most IPSE work has addressed software development, and lias not fully considered the requirements of software maintenance. The aim of this project is to draw up a set of priorities and requirements for a Maintenance IPSE. An IPSE, however can only support a software maintenance method. The first stage of this project is to deline 'software maintenance best practice' addressing the organisational, managerial and technical aspects, along with an evaluation of software maintenance tools for Aerospace systems. From this and an evaluation of current IPSEs, the requirements for a Software Maintenance Support Environment are presented for maintenance of Aerospace software
Translation Criticism Revisited from a Pedagogical Perspective
As suggested by Holmes (1988), who situates translation criticism in the applied branch of translation studies, the evaluative analysis of translations can have a number of practical applications in the training of translators as well as in the practice and revision of translations. It is no coincidence that the move away from prescriptive and intuitive approaches primarily based on the identification of translation errors to more structured descriptive models that has characterised the history of translation criticism has been prompted by the need of translators and translation revisors themselves to have more systematic criteria at their disposal to evaluate the quality or effectiveness of translations (Baker and Saldanha 2009). This paper intends to briefly retrace the evolution of translation criticism by examining the critical thought on translation in the pre-scientific period (e.g. Jerome, king Alfred the Great, Dryden, Tytler) and the models developed in the scientific period of translation studies (e.g. Reiss, House, Berman, Meschonnic, Levý, Hewson) with the aim of showing their enormous potentials for the teaching of translation and the improvement of the translation competence of future translators and revisor
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