20,584 research outputs found
JIENA GU, Composer MASTER'S RECITAL Saturday, October 28, 2006 8:00 p.m. Lillian H. Duncan Recital Hall
Program: String Quartet, movement 1 / Jiena Gu -- To the Tune of Tian Jing Sha (Homesick in Late Autumn) / Jiena Gu -- String Quartet, movement 2 / Jiena Gu -- The Imagination of Suo Na / Jiena Gu -- String Quartet, movement 3 / Jiena Gu -- Water Spawning / Jiena Gu.This recital is given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Master of Music degree
Gu Xiong : The River
Gu Xiong’s installation “The River” is described by O’Brian as a meditation on migrancy and displacement. The author situates the work within the life of the artist, who left China because of political oppression, and the history of the Canadian West, which has marginalized its Chinese inhabitants. Short poetic texts by Gu Xiong in which he identifies with spawning salmon are included. Biographical notes. 19 bibl. ref
Ussuriana fani subsp. wangi Gu & Bi & Lin & Hsu 2019, subsp. nov.
Ussuriana fani wangi Gu, Bi & Hsu, subsp. nov. Type materials. Holotype. ♂: CHINA: BEIJING, Mentougou, Baihuashan, reared from Fraxinus bungeana, emgd. 10. VI. 2011, Coll. Y. Gu (IOZ). Paratypes. 1♂ 2♀♀, same locality as for holotype, reared from F. bungeana, emgd. 5–9. VI. 2011, Coll. Y. Gu; 1♂ 1♀, same locality as for holotype, 11. VII. 2011; 2♀♀, same locality as for holotype, 30. VI. 2013, reared from F. bungeana, emgd. 14. VI. –3. VII. 2013, Coll. Y. Gu (IOZ, NTNU, and Gu collection). Description. Male (Figs. 2–3): FL 15.8–19.1 mm (n = 3). Head: vertex hairy, dark brown mixed with white, frons covered by dark brown scalings, edged by white bands laterally; a white, narrow rim surrounding eye; eye semi-oval, naked; labial palpus porrect, with 3rd segment pointed downwards, dark brown with 3rd segment white; antenna smoothly scaled, naked at terminal end of nudum, darked brown banded with white. Thorax: dark brown dorsad, white ventrad; legs white, banded with brown. Forewing: Termen, costa slightly concave, dorsum straight. Ground color of upperside dark brown, a faint, orange discal patch present. Fringe mostly brown. Ground color of underside yellow. Submarginal band and parafocal element as defined by Nijhout (1991) fused into prominent, orange band edged with dark brown scalings and white crescents along inner margin, and faint, white spots along outer margin. Hindwing: Cu 2 bearing long, “tail”-like projection, dark brown with white tip. Ground color of underside dark brown. A prominent orange band present around tornus. Ground color of underside yellow. Submarginal band and parafocal element as defined by Nijhout (1991) similar to those of forewing, but a prominent dark brown spot in Cu 1. Additional dark brown spot present at tornus. Fringe white, prominent. Abdomen: dark brown dorsad, white ventrad. Female (Figs. 4–5): FL 15.4–19.3 mm (n = 5). Body, wing patterns of underside as described for male. Ground color of wing upperside dark brown with orange markings more prominent than those of male. On forewing, orange patch covering over half of area; on hindwing, a prominent orange band along termen. Phenology and immatures. Univoltine. Adult is on the wing in summer (July). Ovum (Figs. 6–7) is laid singly on twig of the hostplant, overwintering in this form. Larva devours soft buds and leaves of the hostplant in spring. Mature larva (Figs. 8) is green with a red dorsal line, with spiracles dark brown. Pupa (Figs. 9) is of regular lycaenid form, brown in color, with abdomen enlarged. Diagnosis. U. fani wangi ssp. nov. can be distinguished from the other subspecies of U. fani by the following features: 1) the orange patch on the forewing upperside in male is greatly reduced in wangi ssp. nov., whereas it is prominent in the other subspecies; 2) in wangi ssp. nov., hindwing upperside is dark brown with prominent orange band along termen, whereas in other subspecies, orange band is faint and reduced when ground color is dark brown. Hostplant. To date, only Fraxinus bungeana (Oleaceae) is known to serve as the larval hostplant. Distribution. So far only known from the type locality at elevations from 1300 to 1500 m. The type locality is located at the northern end of Taihangshan, a mountain range running north-south, approximately 400 kilometers in length. The type locality is approximately 800km from the closest other known populations of U. fani. Etymology. The subspecific name is given in honor of Mr. Chun-hao Wang, a prominent butterfly investigator who has made significant contributions to the knowledge on the butterfly fauna of northern China.Published as part of Gu, Yu, Bi, Ming-Lei, Lin, Rung-Juen & Hsu, Yu-Feng, 2019, On a New Subspecies of Ussuriana fani Koiwaya (Lepidoptera, Lycaenidae Theclini) Discovered from northern China, pp. 481-488 in Zootaxa 4701 (5) on pages 484-486, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4701.5.8, http://zenodo.org/record/355943
Gu wen jing dian /
Ben shu shou li dai gu wen 200 yu pian, you " shang shu. tang shi ", " meng zi. qi huan jin wen zhi shi ", tao yuan ming de " tao hua yuan ji ", fan zhong yan de " yue yang lou ji " he zhang bing lin de " xu xi lin chuan " deng.Ben shu shou li dai gu wen 200 yu pian, you " shang shu. tang shi ", " meng zi. qi huan jin wen zhi shi ", tao yuan ming de " tao hua yuan ji ", fan zhong yan de " yue yang lou ji " he zhang bing lin de " xu xi lin chuan " deng
A Population-Based Study on the Association between Gastric Ulcers and Erectile Dysfunction in Taiwan
Introduction. While erectile dysfunction (ED) and cardiovascular disease have long been known to share endothelial dysfunction as a common contributory underlying mechanism, little research has been conducted taking endothelial dysfunction as common ground to investigate the potential association between ED and gastric ulcers (GUs). ;Aim. This population-based case-control study aimed to investigate the association of ED with GU. ;Methods. This study used data from the Longitudinal Health Insurance Database 2000 in Taiwan. The study group comprised 6,906 patients who visited ambulatory care centers or were hospitalized with a diagnosis of ED. The comparison group was 20,718 randomly selected enrollees. Conditional logistic regression was used to examine associations between ED and prior GU. ;Main Outcome Measure. The prevalence and risk between cases and controls were calculated of having been previously diagnosed with GU. ;Results. Of the sampled subjects, 3,861 (14%) were diagnosed before the index date, 1,358 (19.7%) were cases, and 2,503 (12.1%) were controls (P < 0.001). After adjusting for hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, renal disease, coronary heart disease, obesity, alcohol abuse/alcohol dependence syndrome, and socioeconomic status (SES), conditional logistic regression analysis revealed that cases were more likely to have been diagnosed with GU than controls (odds ratio [OR] = 1.65, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.53-1.77). Stratification by age revealed that the youngest group (18-29) of ED patients had the most increased likelihood of having been previously diagnosed with GU when compared with matched controls (OR = 4.12, 95% CI = 2.41-7.03). The likelihood decreased with age, with the oldest group of ED patients having the least increased likelihood of prior GU when compared with matched controls (OR = 1.44, 95% CI = 1.23-1.68). ;Conclusion. Our findings suggest a positive association between prior GU and a subsequent diagnosis with ED. Keller JJ, Lin H-Yu, Chung S-D, and Lin H-C. A population-based study on the association between gastric ulcers and erectile dysfunction in Taiwan. J Sex Med 2012; 9: 686-693
Shu lin qing hua
Block print.Bound with the author's Shu lin yü hua [Shanghai 1928]Mode of access: Internet
Lasioseius spatulus Gu & Wang 1990
Lasioseius spatulus Gu & Wang , 1990 Lasioseius spatulus Gu & Wang, in Gu et al., 1990: 174. Lasioseius spatulus.— Gu & Guo, 1996: 42; Ma & Lin, 2007: 8; Zhang & Fan, 2010: 284; Bai, 2013: 97. Lasioseius (Cuspiacus) spatulus.— Christian & Karg, 2006: 212. TYPE DEPOSITORY: Department of Parasitology, Guiyang Medical College, Guizhou, China. TYPE LOCALITY AND HABITAT: Loudian, Guizhou, China, on Rattus norvegicus [Animalia: Muridae].Published as part of De Moraes, Gilberto J., Britto, Erika P. J., Mineiro, Jefferson L. De C. & Halliday, Bruce, 2016, Catalogue of the mite families Ascidae Voigts & Oudemans, Blattisociidae Garman and Melicharidae Hirschmann (Acari: Mesostigmata), pp. 1-299 in Zootaxa 4112 (1) on page 187, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4112.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/39947
FIGURE 3 in Ramaricium yunnanense sp. nov. (Gomphaceae, Gomphales) from China
FIGURE 3. Microscopic structures of Ramaricium yunnanense (drawn from the holotype). A. Basidiospores; B. Basidia and basidioles; C. Encrusted generative hyphae; D. A section of hymenium. Bars: A = 5 µm; B–D = 10 µm. Drawings by: Jin-Ying GuPublished as part of Gu, Jin-Ying & Zhao, Chang-Lin, 2022, Ramaricium yunnanense sp. nov. (Gomphaceae, Gomphales) from China, pp. 123-130 in Phytotaxa 573 (1) on page 128, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.573.1.8, http://zenodo.org/record/732957
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