126,609 research outputs found
Zai guo leng ba, nie, lin ya wen ye tai hu rong jian xi wai duan cheng you xu jie gou de zhuan bian
Lo, Yin Fung = 在過冷鈀, 鎳, 磷亞穩液態互溶間隙外短程有序結構的轉變 / 盧彥鋒.Thesis M.Phil. Chinese University of Hong Kong 2015.Includes bibliographical references.Abstracts also in Chinese.Title from PDF title page (viewed on 03, January, 2017).Lo, Yin Fung = Zai guo leng ba, nie, lin ya wen ye tai hu rong jian xi wai duan cheng you xu jie gou de zhuan bian / Lu Yanfeng
non-destructive growth measurement of selected vegetable seedlings
non-destructive growth measurement of selected vegetable seedlings using machine vision. ta-te lin. sheng-fu cheng. tzu-hsiu lin. meng-ru tsai. department of agricultural machinery engineering.. national taiwan university
sj-docx-1-wso-10.1177_17474930221130892 – Supplemental material for Comparison of endoscopic and open surgery in life-threatening large spontaneous supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage: A propensity-matched analysis
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-wso-10.1177_17474930221130892 for Comparison of endoscopic and open surgery in life-threatening large spontaneous supratentorial intracerebral hemorrhage: A propensity-matched analysis by Kun Lin, Zhi cheng Lin, Yin hai Tang, De Wei, Chuang Gao and Rongcai Jiang in International Journal of Stroke</p
Enhancement of chemiluminescence of the KIO4–luminol system by gallic acid, acetaldehyde and Mn2+: application for the determination of catecholamines
The Study on Kuan-yin Tzu-lin Chi
Abstract
This paper aims to analyze Kuan-yin Tzu-lin Chi (Compassionate Grove of Kuan-yin) compiled by Hung-tsan in Ching Dynasty. One part of Kuan-yin Tzu-lin Chi includes eleven pieces of classics related to Kuan-yin, and the other part contains kan-ying (stimulus and response) tales, composed of two subsections. The latter part of Kuan-yin Tzu-lin Chi involves 154 kan-ying tales about Kuan-yin (including nine tales from India), which were collected from Ch`in Ch\ue2\ub2in to Ching Dynasty and recorded on 26 pieces of Chinese literature. In these tales, people chanted the name of Kuan-yin or recited The Heart Sutra, Kuan-yin Ching (Chapter of Universal Gateway), or The Great Compassionate Dharani to meet their practical needs in life.
This paper includes six chapters, and the method adopted is literature analysis. First of all, the derivation of the worship in Kuan-yin and the popularity of such belief among the Asian world are discussed. Subsequently, accounts are given that from possessing the conferral by the Buddha of the prediction of the attainment of Buddhahood in the future, Kuan-yin has been kind and compassionate to the end of all time. In addition, Kuan-yin has vowed to benefit the sentient beings, be profoundly compassionate, and build the relationship in the secular world. In order to save all sentient beings and manifest physically, Kuan-yin can give practical benefits to them, including invoking the name, satisfying two kinds of seeking, deleting three basic evil afflictions, solving eight difficulties, and creating fourteen fearlessness. To prove Kuan-yin\ue2s benevolent power, the kan-ying tales from Kuan-yin Tzu-lin Chi, Kuan-yin Chi-yen Chi, and other literature are cited. Apart from that, with the progress of the Buddha\ue2s teaching, and the extension of kan-ying tales about Kuan-yin, research on Kuna-yin\ue2s impact on literature and Buddhism is conducted to verify the Universal Gateway belief in \ue2Great kindness is to build absolute trust for all the sentient beings, and great compassion is to save them.\ue
sj-docx-1-cll-10.1177_09636897221133821 – Supplemental material for Synergic Effect of Combined Therapy of Hyperbaric Oxygen and Adipose-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells on Improving Locomotor Recovery After Acute Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury in Rat Mainly Through Downregulating Inflammatory and Cell-Stress Signalings
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-cll-10.1177_09636897221133821 for Synergic Effect of Combined Therapy of Hyperbaric Oxygen and Adipose-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells on Improving Locomotor Recovery After Acute Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury in Rat Mainly Through Downregulating Inflammatory and Cell-Stress Signalings by Tsung-Cheng Yin, Pei-Lin Shao, Kuan-Hung Chen, Kun-Chen Lin, John Y. Chiang, Pei-Hsun Sung, Shun-Cheng Wu, Yi-Chen Li, Hon-Kan Yip and Mel S. Lee in Cell Transplantation</p
Enhancement of chemiluminescence of the KIO4-luminol system by gallic acid, acetaldehyde and Mn2+: application for the determination of catecholamines
Tibetyrus formicarius Yin & Lin 2020, sp. nov.
Tibetyrus formicarius Yin & Lin, sp. nov. (Figs 1–3) Type material. HOLOTYPE: CHINA: ♂, ‘China: Xizang, Nyingchi, Gongbo'gyamda Co., Bahe Town, Jiare Vill., Jiarelongba, 30.0075º N, 93.7818º E, 3,485 m, 18.x.2019, Lin Y-J, TŨỮḔDZOiDZAEÙDZAEȐDZ’ (SNUC). PARATYTYPES: CHINA: 2 ♀♀, same collection data as holotype (SNUC). Description. Male (Fig. 1A). Body generally elongate, length (combined length of head, pronotum, elytra and abdomen) 3.71 mm, color uniformly reddish-brown; dorsal surface of whole body finely punctate, with short decumbent setae of elytra and abdomen slightly denser than those on head and pronotum. Head (Figs 1A, 2A) lengthily and bluntly triangular, length from anterior margin of clypeus to head base 0.71 mm, width across eyes 0.57 mm; vertexal foveae at level of midline of eyes; frons dilated apically, longitudinally and smoothly impressed between antennal tubercles; postocular margins rounded, with tufts of dense setae on each side; eyes moderately prominent, each composed of about 15 facets. Maxillary palpi (Fig. 1B) with short, evenly distributed sensillar setae. Antennae elongate (Fig. 1A), length 2.30 mm; antennomeres 1 (scapes) distinctly longer than 2 (pedicels) and 3 combined, but shorter than combined length of antennomeres 2 to 4, approximately 1.8× as long as wide, antennomeres 2 and 3 of similar size, antennomeres 4–6 longer than 2, successively wider, antennomeres 7 slightly wider than 6, transverse, antennomeres 8 slightly narrower and much shorter than 7, antennomeres 9–11 (Fig. 1C) strongly enlarged to form distinct clubs, 9 about three times as long as and twice as wide as 8, 10 much larger than 9, broadly and deeply excavated on ventral surface, 11 much smaller than 10 and slightly larger than 9, their bases strongly elongate and constricted to form long projections, which extend downwards to exceed over half of antennomeres 10, with disk-like protuberance near bases of projections, basal portions of antennomeres 11 also circularly impressed, within impressions one fovea-like setose pit, apices much broader than bases and rounded. Pronotum (Figs 1A, 2A) elongate, mid-length 0.76 mm, maximum width 0.66 mm, with slightly arcuate anterior and sinuate posterior margin, sides rounded at middle, then narrowing toward apex and subparallel in basal two-fifths. Elytra (Fig. 1A) much wider than long, length along suture 0.89 mm, maximum width 1.15 mm, posterior margin with row of dense setae that are longer than those on disc. Mesoventrite (Fig. 2B) strongly transverse, with thin ridges lateral to middle; metaventrite also transverse, with large, lamina-like postero-submedial projections, posterior margin of each projection strongly curved ventrally to form large spine; setae of meso- and metaventrite much denser and longer in lateral areas than at middle. Legs elongate, lacking modifications. Abdomen about as long as wide, widest at posterior margin of tergite 1 (IV), mid-length 1.35 mm, maximum width 1.28 mm. Sternite 7 (IX) (Fig. 2C) semi-membranous, elongate, with round apex and dense apical setae. Aedeagus (Fig. 2 D–F) elongate, length 0.62 mm, median lobe with large, nearly symmetric basal capsule, apical half strongly twisted, narrowing apicad, forming pointed apex; endophallus complex in structure, composed of one elongate, broad, curved and weakly sclerotized plate-like sclerite abruptly narrowed and acute at apex, one relatively broad and bi-sinuate sclerite narrowing from basal two-thirds to apex, and one much shorter and thinner elongate sclerite near middle; parameres reduced and symmetric, lacking apical setae. Female. General appearance similar to male; antennae shorter, clubs (Fig. 1D) unmodified; metaventrite lacking projections. Measurements (as for male): body length 3.50–3.71 mm, length/width of head 0.65–0.66/ 0.56 mm, pronotum 0.72–0.76/ 0.64–0.65 mm, elytra 0.85–0.91/ 1.15–1.19 mm, abdomen 1.27–1.39/ 1.33–1.36 mm, length of antennae 1.85 mm, antennomeres 1 approximately as long as 2–3 combined and 1.3× as long as wide; each eye composed of about 18 facets. Distribution. Southwestern China: Xizang. Biological and collection notes. The collection site is located near the entrance of a deep, north-south oriented valley named Jiarelongba, approximately 2 km north of Jiare Village, and 11 km west of Basongcuo Lake. The valley has abundant vegetation, with a broad pass and a creek on the west side (Fig. 3C, D). The field work was conducted at around 9:00 a.m. Two individuals of the pselaphid were first discovered in tunnels of an ant nest found under an approximately 30 cm 2 stone on the ground just beside the pass. Later a third individual was collected from another nest in the same area less than 50 m away. The host ant was later identified as a member of the genus Formica (Fig. 3A, B; S.-Y. Zhou & H. Ran, pers. comm.). The new species is apparently myrmecophilous because of the repeated circumstances of its collection, and it may possibly be a synoekete or a symphile due to the presence of what may be paired trichomes on the postocular margin. Similar trichomes of the head are commonly found in many myrmecophilous pselaphine genera, especially in the tribe Batrisini. The markedly constricted elytral base and loss of hind wings are typical for various myrmecophilous/termitophilous beetle groups. However, additional field observations are necessary to further reveal the biology of the new species. Etymology. The specific epithet recognizes the association between the new species and Formica ants.Published as part of Yin, Zi-Wei & Lin, Ye-Jie, 2020, Tibetyrus gen. nov., a new myrmecophilous Tyrini from Xizang, China (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Pselaphinae), pp. 131-137 in Zootaxa 4786 (1) on pages 133-136, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4786.1.10, http://zenodo.org/record/386494
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