17,528 research outputs found
XIAO-LONG LIN, HAI-JUN YU, RUI-LEI ZHANG & XIN-HUA WANG (2019) Polypedilum (Cerobregma) heberti sp. n. (Diptera: Chironomidae) from Gaoligong Mountains, Yunnan, China Zootaxa, 4571: 255-262.
Lin, Xiao-Long, Yu, Hai-Jun, Zhang, Rui-Lei, Wang, Xin-Hua (2020): XIAO-LONG LIN, HAI-JUN YU, RUI-LEI ZHANG & XIN-HUA WANG (2019) Polypedilum (Cerobregma) heberti sp. n. (Diptera: Chironomidae) from Gaoligong Mountains, Yunnan, China Zootaxa, 4571: 255-262. Zootaxa 4852 (4): 500-500, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4852.4.
Supplemental Material - Revitalizing cultural consciousness in Taiwan’s higher education: Ambitions and Tensions
Supplemental Material for Revitalizing cultural consciousness in Taiwan’s higher education: Ambitions and Tensions by Warangkana Lin and Rui Yang in International Journal of Chinese Education</p
VCC-LF dataset
This is readme for VCC-LF dataset.
This dataset provides light field mat files that capture by Lytro I.
The light field resolusion is [h,w,u,v,d].
If you use these data or our toolkit code, please cite our paper properly
@inproceedings{ lirsiggraphasia2019,
title={Hierarchical and View-invariant Light Field Segmentation by Maximizing Entropy Rate on 4D Ray Graphs},
author={Li, Rui and Heidrich, Wolfgang},
booktitle={ACM Transactions on Graphics (Proc. SIGGRAPH Asia)},
year={2019},
publisher={ACM}
Aspidistra stenophylla (Asparagaceae), a new species from Guangxi, China
Hu, Ren-Chuan, Shen, Xiao-Lin, Liu, Jing, Lin, Chun-Rui (2014): Aspidistra stenophylla (Asparagaceae), a new species from Guangxi, China. Phytotaxa 170 (1): 53-56, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.170.1.8, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.170.1.
Aspidistra shiwandashanensis C. R. Lin & W. B. Xu 2023, sp. nov.
Aspidistra shiwandashanensis C.R. Lin & W.B. Xu, sp. nov. (Fig. 1, 2) TYPE:— CHINA. Guangxi: Fangchenggang City, Fangcheng District, Fu-long Town, Shiwandashan National Nature Reserve, on rocks and along grassy streamside in forests, 21°50’ N, 107°56’ E, 400–450 m, not common, 18 November 2011, Chun-Rui Lin & Wei-Bin Xu 1030 (holotype: IBK!, isotype: IBK!, GXMG!). Diagnosis:— Aspidistra shiwandashanensis is similar to A. arnautovii Tillich (2005: 314) subsp. catbaensis Tillich (2005: 316) with leaves and flowers, but differs by perianth lobes ovate-lanceolate to narrow oblong, internally purplish red to blackish purple, stigma upper surface glabrous, not radial grooves. Herbs perennial, evergreen, rhizomatous. Rhizome creeping, subterete, 4–6 mm thick, covered with scales, nodes dense. Vagina leaves 4–5, purple-red, 1–8 cm long, enveloping base of petiole, becoming black-brown when dry, fibrous when withered. Leaves solitary, ca. 5–10 mm apart; petiole stiff upright, 10–24 cm long, 2–3 mm thick, adaxially sulcate; leaf blade usually narrow elliptic to oblong-lanceolate, 20–30 cm long, 5–8 cm wide, green, sometimes with small yellow-white spots on both surfaces, base cuneate to broadly cuneate, inequilateral, apex acuminate, margin entire. Peduncle arising from the nodes of apical part of rhizome, erect or declining, 1–3 cm long, with 4–5 bracts, bracts gradually wider from base to top of peduncle, the two most basal bracts ones of perianth broadly ovate-cucullate, pale green with purplish red spots, 5–6 mm long, 8–10 mm wide, apex subobtuse. Flowers solitary; perianth campanulate, fleshy, externally pale green-white with purplish red or dark purplish red spots, internally purplish red to blackish purple, deeply 8-lobed apically; lobes explanate, bent outwards, subequal, ovate-lanceolate to narrow oblong, 5–7 mm long, 2–4 mm wide at base, apex obtuse, each lobe basally with 2 longitudinal keels, each keel basally fusing with a keel of the adjoining lobe and forming a protruding lip at the fusion point; tube 6–8 mm high, distal opening 9–12 mm in diameter; Stamens 8, opposite to lobes, inserted in the middle of perianth tube, positioned lower than stigma, filaments ca. 0.5 mm long, anthers oblong, 2–3 mm long and 1–1.5 mm wide, pollen yellow; Pistil obconic, fleshy, purplish red, 6–8.5 mm long, ovary inconspicuous, style quadrangle, ca. 4 mm long and 2 mm in diameter at base, gradually widened to stigma level, stigma enlarge, glabrous, 6–10 mm in diameter, upper surface slightly convex, densely purplish red mottled, and with 4 radial, white, bifurcate lines from center to margin, 4-lobed at margin, lobes emarginate at apex, lower surface with longitudinal 8-ridged. Flowering from October to December. Etymology: — The specific epithet refers to the type locality. The Chinese name is “ +ξψƦṚDZDz ”(pinyin: shí wàn shân zhî zhű bào dàn). Distribution and ecology: — Aspidistra shiwandashanensis is currently only known from the type locality in Shiwandashan Natural Nature Reserve, Fangchenggang City and Dongxing county, in southern Guangxi, China. It grows on rocks along streams in secondary broadleaf forests at elevations about 400– 550 m. Similar species:— Aspidistra shiwandashanensis is similar to A. arnautovii subsp. catbaensis with leaves and flowers, but differs by perianth lobes ovate-lanceolate to narrow oblong (vs. triangular), internally purplish red to blackish purple (vs. blackish violet with yellow tips), stigma upper surface glabrous (vs. with fine radial grooves). The new species also close to A. arnautovii Tillich var. angustifolia L. Wu & Y.F. Huang in Wu et al. (2012: 321), but can be easily distinguished by leaf blade narrow elliptic to oblong-lanceolate (vs. narrow lanceolate to nearly linear), 20–30 × 5–8 cm (vs. 20–53 × 1.2–2 cm), perianth lobes internally purplish red to blackish purple (vs. blackish violet with yellow tips), stigma upper surface glabrous (vs. with fine radial grooves), lower surface with 8-ridged (vs. 24- ridged). Moreover, A. shiwandashanensis resembles A. punctatoides Yan Liu & C. R. Lin in Lin & Liu (2011: 189) and A. punctata Lindley (1826: 977), However, the new species can be distinguished from them by its perianth lobes purplish red to blackish purple, glabrous, stigma upper surface purplish red (see Table 1). Additional specimens examined (paratype):— CHINA. Guangxi, Guilin City, Botany Garden of Guilin, taken to cultivation from the type locality, 05 January 2018, Chun-Rui Lin 1080 (cultivated plant collected from Fangchenggang City, Shiwandashan National Nature Reserve, 16 January 2016, Shui-Song Mo); 25 November 2020, Chun-Rui Lin 1366 (cultivated plant collected from Fangchenggang City, Fu-long Town, Pinglongshan Valley, 1 June 2016, Yu-Song Huang); 12 February 2022, Chun-Rui Lin 1445 (cultivated plant collected from Dongxing City, Ma-lu Town, Pingfeng village, 12 October 2018, by Chun-Rui Lin and Zhao-Cen Lu). Pollen morphology:— The pollen grains are subspherical, inaperturate, pollen size is (28.94–) 33.68 (–37.65) × (28.24–) 30.01 (–32.94) μm (Fig. 9A). Pollen with gemmate exine, the prominent spores are nearly round, relatively large, similar in size and smooth in surface (Fig. 9B).Published as part of Lin, Chun-Rui, Xu, Wei-Bin, Huang, Yu-Song, Wang, Bing-Mou & Liu, Yan, 2023, Four new species of Aspidistra (Asparagaceae) from southern China, pp. 121-135 in Phytotaxa 587 (2) on pages 122-124, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.587.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/773448
Four new synonyms in Synotis (Asteraceae, Senecioneae)
Zhang, Rui, Liu, Yu-Lin, Tang, Ming (2021): Four new synonyms in Synotis (Asteraceae, Senecioneae). Phytotaxa 483 (3): 255-266, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.483.3.5, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.483.3.
The trombone as portrayed in Portuguese iconography during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries
This article studies eleven sixteenth and seventeenth century iconographical sources depicting slide brass instruments, by both Portuguese and foreign artists active in Portugal, as well as foreign artists depicting Portuguese scenes. This study addresses questions concerning aspects of trombone technique that have not previously been considered and may have implications in the way the trombone was understood elsewhere in Europe. It focuses on aspects of technique depicted that may be representative of the trombone’s contemporary design and performance and therefore the manner in which the instrument was held and indeed played. Finally, this article suggests a transitional technical period when the way of holding the single-slide trumpet may have been used to play the trombone.Publisher PD
Three new species of Micropsalliota (Agaricaceae, Agaricales) from China
Li, Jia-Xin, He, Mao-Qiang, Zhao, Rui-Lin (2021): Three new species of Micropsalliota (Agaricaceae, Agaricales) from China. Phytotaxa 491 (2): 167-176, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.491.2.6, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.491.2.
FIGURE 1 Synotis alata. A in Four new synonyms in Synotis (Asteraceae, Senecioneae)
FIGURE 1 Synotis alata. A. Holotype of Senecio alatus var. nudicaulis (NY00259549). B. Holotype of Sen. alatus var. elatus (NY00259548).Published as part of Zhang, Rui, Liu, Yu-Lin & Tang, Ming, 2021, Four new synonyms in Synotis (Asteraceae, Senecioneae), pp. 255-266 in Phytotaxa 483 (3) on page 256, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.483.3.5, http://zenodo.org/record/542093
Hierarchical and View-invariant Light Field Segmentation by Maximizing Entropy Rate on 4D Ray Graphs (Supplement)
The supplementary material for paper "Rui Li, Wolfgang Heidrich, Hierarchical and View-invariant Light Field Segmentation by Maximizing Entropy Rate on 4D Ray Graphs. In SIGGRAPH Asia, 2019
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