121,429 research outputs found

    Mcculloch, L A, NX40737

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/402908Surname: MCCULLOCH. Given Name(s) or Initials: L A. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX40737. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 12780.223563 Item: [2016.0049.35201] "Mcculloch, L A, NX40737

    0279: Francis L. McCulloch Typescript

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    This collection consists of a copy of “The Family of Thomas Kincade of Mason County, West Virginia” manuscript by Francis L. McCulloch in 1979. It is an annotated lineage of Thomas Kincade’s descendants

    R. P. Ray and General L. N. Baugh

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    A photograph of R. P. Ray and Gneral L. N. Baugh at Camp Ben McCulloch reunion

    English Language Reporting of Environmental Protests in China [supplementary data]

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    Supplemental data for thesis of Megan L. McCulloch, Environmental protest and civil society in China, available here: http://calhoun.nps.edu/handle/10945/47303http://archive.org/details/englishlanguager109454930

    Parahauerinoides McCulloch 1977

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    Parahauerinoides McCulloch 1977 Parahauerinoides fragilissima (Brady 1884) (Fig. 12:5, 6) Description. See Brady (1884, p. 149, pl. 9, figs 12–14). Distribution within study area. Specimens of Parahauerinoides fragilissima (Brady 1884) were rare (one to two specimens per site) and always poorly preserved. This species was only collected from One Tree Lagoons and nowhere else from the CG.Published as part of Mamo, Briony L., 2016, Benthic Foraminifera from the Capricorn Group, Great Barrier Reef, Australia, pp. 1-123 in Zootaxa 4215 (1) on page 55, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4215.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/27292

    Temporal changes to intestinal microbiome induced by stroke

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    These data contain 16s rRNS sequencing data from faecal material taken from naive animals and animals recovered 5 days, 2 weeks and 3 months after sham or stroke surgery. There are two independent experiments included with the acronyms SCM and RSM. Abstract Stroke survivors experience a plethora of complications during recovery, including gastrointestinal symptoms. Intestinal dysfunction is reported to occur rapidly following stroke in both humans and animal models and alterations such as reduced barrier integrity, lymphocyte loss, and an altered microbiota have been suggested to contribute to poor neurological outcomes. Despite the persistence of gastrointestinal symptoms in many stroke survivors, how the intestinal environment changes over the course of stroke recovery remains poorly understood. Here, we use an experimental model of ischemic stroke to profile the gastrointestinal tract over a three month period of recovery.We have shown that experimental stroke leads to structural alterations to the colon, impaired transit times and an altered bacterial community composition. No impairments to barrier function were detected at any time point and transit times recover within 2 weeks post stroke. In contrast, structural and bacterial community alterations remain up to 3 months post stroke and are accompanied by abnormalities that develop only during chronic recovery, such as altered antibody coating of bacteria. These results suggest that the gastrointestinal system is dynamically altered over the course of experimental stroke recovery and that certain defects persist chronically after stroke.Data are Fastq files of samples taken from individual animals in the experiment. File name contains experiment acronym, time point and treatment. Positive and negative control Fastq files are also include

    George L. Washington Collection

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    Transcription of a letter from George L. Washington to his mother regarding his time at Fort McCulloch

    George L. Washington Collection

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    Letter from George L. Washington to his mother regarding his time at Fort McCulloch

    Discount curve estimation by monotonizing McCulloch Splines

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    In this paper a new and very simple method for monotone estimation of discount curves is proposed. The main idea of this approach is a simple modification of the commonly used (unconstrained) Mc-Culloch Spline. We construct an integrated density estimate from the predicted values of the discount curve. It can be shown that this statistic is an estimate of the inverse of the discount function and the final estimate can easily be obtained by a numerical inversion. The resulting procedure is extremely simple and we have implemented it in Excel and VBA, respectively. The performance is illustrated by three examples, in which the curve was previously estimated with an unconstrained McCulloch Spline. --

    Interview with James L. McGaugh

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    Executive Vice Chancellor, Dean of Biological Sciences, Founding Director of the Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, Professor of Psychobiology and PharmacologyDigitized 2012 by Avant Productions, Inc
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