482 research outputs found
[EB 2011, Keith & Marion Moore Young Anatomist�s Publication Award]
[Title supplied by cataloger]Keith & Marion Moore Young Anatomist's Publication Award Recipient Jason Organ, AAA Awards Banquet at the 2011 Experimental Biology conference
Devi, Vimala. Monsoon. Tradução Paul Melo e Castro. Introdução Jason Keith Fernandes. London, New York, Calcutta: Seagull, 2019.
Monsoon (2019) is an English translation of the short story book Monção (1963/2003) by the Goan Portuguese-speaking author, Vimala Devi, by the professor of Portuguese language literature Paul Melo e Castro (University of Glasgow). The book features an introduction written by Dr. Jason Keith Fernandes, a note on the translation by Melo e Castro and a glossary of terms in Concani, the official language of Goa, and in Portuguese, translated into English. For the literary value of the work and the quality of the translation, Monsoon appeared on The New York Times\u27 2019 Globetrotter List
UA12/2/1 Unknown Soldiers
Special football edition of the College Heights Herald: Farner, Keith. Unknown Soldiers – Football Moore, Michael. Air Raid to Play Major Role in Tops’ Season Schoenbaechler, Danny. Coach: Running Backs Look Great Hightower, Kyle. Longtime Understudy, Jason Michael Getting His Turn to Shine on Field Moore, Michael. Linebackers Will Lead Casagrande, Michael. Coaches Hold Great Expectation for Kickers Schoenbaechler, Danny. Team’s Opener Should Prepare Hilltoppers for the Long Haul Hightower, Kyle. It’s No Laughing Matter, Jason Michael is the Hilltopper Quarterback No
The Effect of Thermocycling on the Failure Load of a Standard Orthodontic Resin in Shear-Peel, Tension, and Torsion
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)New products are frequently developed for bonding brackets. This continuum brings about incessant studies attempting to prove or disprove their value. The need to compare the results of bond failure studies is made difficult if not impossible by the variation of published testing methods. The purpose of this study is to compare the differential effects of thermocycling, as a lab protocol, on three debonding techniques, shear-peel, tension, and torsion when using a traditional orthodontic resin adhesive. A standard orthodontic resin, Transbond™ XT (3M Unitek, Monrovia, CA) was used to bond 102 flattened 0.018-inch stainless steel brackets (3M Unitek) to flattened bovine incisors. Two step acid etching and priming (37 % phosphoric acid gel and Transbond MIP Primer, 3M Unitek) was used to prepare the enamel for bonding. During bonding, the resin thickness was held consistent. The bonding was accomplished under controlled temperature and humidity. Half of the samples were thermocycled prior to debonding. The samples were debonded in shear-peel, tension, and torsion. The data showed no significant differences between thermocycling and nonthermocycling in shear-peel or torsion, but in tension the thermocycling group had a statistically significant higher failure load. Overall, was a trend toward increased bond strength in the thermocycled group. The increase is likely the result of continued polymerization during thermocycling. The statistical difference that is noted in tension is thought to be due to the location of the highest stress being in the center of the resin pad. This would be the location of the least initial polymerization. The use of thermocycling as a lab protocol during bracket failure studies in shear-peel and torsion is not necessary when using traditional orthodontic resin
The Christ-Centered Homiletics of Edmund Clowney and Sidney Greidanus in Contrast With the Human Author-Centered Hermeneutics of Walter Kaiser
This dissertation examines the Christ-centered homiletics of Edmund Clowney and Sidney Greidanus in contrast with the human author-centered hermeneutics of Walter Kaiser. Chapter 1 frames the dissertation by presenting the consequence of preaching and the marks of redemptive-historical preaching.
Chapter 2 presents Walter Kaiser's author-centered hermeneutic. Kaiser's hermeneutic is presented because it is used as a plumb line to assess if and how redemptive-historical preaching drifts from an author-centered hermeneutic.
Chapter 3 introduces Edmund Clowney as one of the seminal thinkers in redemptive-historical preaching. It considers Clowney's Christ-centered biblical theology and how that informs his use of symbolism and typology to preach Christ.
Chapter 4 juxtaposes Greidanus' seven ways of preaching Christ from the Old Testament alongside Kaiser's author-centered hermeneutic. Attention is also given to Greidanus' sermons from the Old Testament.
Chapter 5 presents summary conclusions, documenting some of the frequent cleavages between Kaiser and redemptive-historical preaching. It concludes with ways to implement the dissertation findings for preaching the Old Testament
EVOLUTIONARY GENETICS: CONCEPTS AND CASE STUDIES
Contributors -- Pt. I. Principles of evolutionary genetics -- 1. From Mendel to molecules: a brief history of evolutionary genetics / Michael R. Dietrich -- 2. Genetic variation / Marta L. Wayne and Michael M. Miyamoto -- Box 2.1. Maternal effects / Timothy A. Mousseau -- 3. Maturation / David Houle and Alexey Kondrashov -- 4. Natural selection / Michael J. Wade -- Box 4.1. Defining and measuring fitness / Daphne J. Fairbairn -- 5. Stochastic processes in evolution / John H. Gillespie -- Box 5.1. The probability of extinction of an allele -- Box 5.2. Mutational landscape model -- 6. Genetics and evolution in structured populations / Charles J. Goodnight -- Box 6.1. Epistasis and the conversion of genetic variance / Jason B. Wolf -- 7. Detecting selection at the molecular level / Michael W. Nachman -- 8. Rates of molecular evolution / Francisco Rodríguez-Trelles, Rosa Tarrío and Francisco J. Ayala -- Box 8.1. Timing evolutionary events with a molecular clock -- Box 8.2. Testing the hypothesis of the molecular clock -- 9. Weak selection on noncoding gene features / Ying Chen and Wolfgang Stephan -- 10. Evolution of eukaryotic genome structure / Dmitri A. Petrov and Jonathan F. Wendel -- 11. New genes, new functions: gene family evolution and phylogenetics / Joe Thornton -- 12. Gene genealogies / Noah A. Rosenberg -- Box 12.1. Horizontal inheritance -- Pt. III. From genotype to phenotype -- 13. Gene function and molecular evolution / Simon C. Lovell -- Box 13.1. The role of gene interaction networks in evolution / Stephen R. Proulx -- 14. Evolution of multidomain proteins / László Patthy -- 15. Evolutionary developmental bioethics / David L. Stern -- Box 15.1. Hox genes -- Box 15.2. Functional assays in nonmodel organisms -- 16. Canalization / Mark L. Siegal and Aviv Bergman -- Box 16.1. Computational modeling of the evolution of gene regulatory networks -- 17. Evolutionary epigenetics / Eva Jablonka and Marion J. Lamb -- Pt. IV. Quantitative genetics and selection -- 18. Evolutionary quantitative genetics / Derek A. Roff -- Box 18.1. Individual fitness surfaces and multivariate selection / Jason B. Wolf -- 19. Genetic architecture of quantitative variation / James M. Cheverud -- Box 19.1. Genotypic values: additivity, dominance, and epistasis -- Box 19.2. Genic values and genetic variances -- Box 19.3. How to perform a QTL analysis -- Box 19.4. Evolutionary morphometrics / Christian Peter Klingenberg -- Box 19.5. Modularity / Jason G. Mezey -- 20. Evolution of genetic variance-covariance structure / Patrick C. Phillips and Katrina L. McGuigan -- Box 20.1. What is a covariance? -- Box 20.2. Pleiotropic effects -- Box 20.3. Evolution of the G matrix -- 21. Genotype-environment interactions and evolution / Samuel M. Scheiner -- 22. Genetics of sexual selection / Allen J. Moore and Patricia J. Moore -- 23. Social selection / Steven A. Frank -- Box 23.1. Coefficients of relatedness -- Pt. V. Genetics of speciation -- Box. Species concepts / James Mallet -- 24. The evolution of reproductive isolating barriers / Norman A. Johnson -- 25. Genetics of reproductive isolation and species differences in model organisms / Pawel Michalak and Mohamed A.F. Noor -- Box 25.1. The Dobzhansky-Muller model -- 26. Natural hyrbridization / Michael L. Arnold and John M. Burke -- Box 26.1. Potential outcomes of natural hybridization -- 27. Population bottlenecks and founder effects / Lisa Marie Meffert -- Box 27.1. Models of the shifts in selection pressures experienced by bottlenecked populations -- 28. Theory of phylogenetic estimation / Ashley N. Egan and Keith A. Crandall -- Box 28.1. Philosophical and methodological differences in phylogenetics -- 29. Evolutionary genetics of host-parasite interactions / Paula X. Kover -- Box 29.1. The coevolutionary consequences of tolerance versus resistance -- Box 29.2. Arabidopis as a model organism in evolutionary genetics / Kentara K. Shimizu and Michael D. Puruggaman -- Box 29.3. Evolution of virulence -- 30. The evolutionary genetics of senescence / Daniel E.L. Promislow and Anne M. Bronikowski -- Box 30.1. Demography of an age-structured population -- Box 30.2. Drosophila as a model organism in evolutionary biology / Jeffrey R. Powell -- 31. Experimental evolution / Adam K. Chippindale -- Box 31.1. E. coli as a model organism in evolutionary genetics / Richard E. Lenski -- 32. Evolutionary conservation genetics / Richard Frankham -- Glossary -- References -- Inde
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Men's Football team, 1995
Front Row- Dan Joseph, Khalid Rucker, Don Chaban, Brad Forrest, Steve Astorino, Capt. Rich Regan, Capt. Kevin Ranucci, Capt. Ernie Ansah, Dan Horgan, Chris Moore, James Dubord, Tony Minto, Todd Kelleher; Second Row- Pat Holcomb, Darren Levack, Kyle Heppenstall, Frank TOwnsend, Pat Blais, Chuck QUinn, Brian Learned, Shawn Taylor, Todd Slade, Sean Wright, Jay Antonetti, Jason Mickey; Third Row- Justin Keith, om Kramer, Scott Theriault, Dan Murphy, Kevin O'Neil, Matt Barrows, James Blum, Erik THiemke, Kevin Groth, Ryan Horgan; Fourth Row- Damon Scott, Pat MacDonald, Jason Merry, Matt Surette, David Sullivan, Nate Cote, Josh HInes, Adams Abrams, Jim Usowicz, Brian Susol, Brian Spink, Rob Rucillo; Fifth Row- Mark Balcius, Erik Newland, Justin Dyer, Charles Swanberg, Jeff Navin, Mike Godfrey, Richard Boardman, Mike Tyburksi, Dylan O'Connor, Tyson Royce, Jason Dubois; Sixth Row- Paul Ganchi, Brett Fricke, Ryan Foreman, Dave Bernard, Mike Ondrasek, Jake Philbrick, Matt Seitz, Steve Gentilucci, Tim Bosco, Dylan Peters, Matt Coppola; Seventh Row- Bill Allen, ed Fichera, Greg Putnam Joel Oritz, Dave Lafleur, Scott Kendall, Sean Duffy, Matt Davy; Back Row- Coach Bob Lord, Coach Matt Ballard, Coach John Matuszewski, Coach Clay Moose, Head Coach Kevin Morris, Coach Ross Eberhart, Heach Eric LaPlaca, Coach Dave Mosi
Frestas no Tempo e as Novas Agentividades Históricas no Antropoceno
O presente artigo tem como objetivo refletir acerca da reconfiguração epistemológica da ciência histórica suscitada pelo conceito de Antropoceno. Para tanto, foi dividido em três partes. Na primeira, a partir de autores como Ailton Krenak, Keith Thomas, Bruno Latour, Isabelle Stengers e Pierre Clastres questiona-se a neutralidade dos discursos científicos e filosóficos. A segunda parte se destina a analisar as diversas formas de se compreender historicamente e de se nomear a atual crise socioambiental tendo como base as contribuições de Jason Moore e Donna Haraway. Por fim, avalia, no campo da ciência histórica, algumas implicações teóricas da percepção de que o planeta é dotado de uma historicidade própria. Para isso, dialoga com o geocientista Jan Zalasiewicz e demais autores, como Zoltan Simon que propõe outras formas de se pensar agentividades históricas, temporalidades e a própria noção de historicidade
Dietary patterns in infancy: the importance of maternal and family influences on feeding practice
It is not known what constitutes an optimal diet in infancy. There are relatively few studies of weaning practice in the UK, and there is a need for prospective data on the effects of infant diet and nutrition on health in later life. We describe the dietary patterns, defined using principal components analysis of FFQ data, of 1434 infants aged 6 and 12 months, born between 1999 and 2003. The two most important dietary patterns identified at 6 and 12 months were very similar. The first pattern was characterised by high consumption of fruit, vegetables and home-prepared foods ('infant guidelines' pattern). The second pattern was characterised by high consumption of bread, savoury snacks, biscuits and chips ('adult foods' pattern). Dietary pattern scores were correlated at 6 and 12 months (r 0.46 'infant guidelines'; r 0.45 'adult foods'). These patterns, which reflect wide variations in weaning practice, are associated with maternal and family characteristics. A key influence on the infant diet is the quality of the maternal diet. Women who comply with dietary recommendations, and who have high intakes of fruit and vegetables, wholemeal bread and rice and pasta, are more likely to have infants who have comparable diets - with high 'infant guidelines' pattern scores. Conversely, women whose own diets are characterised by high intakes of chips, white bread, crisps and sweets are more likely to have infants who have high 'adult foods' pattern scores. The effects of these patterns on growth and development, and on long-term outcomes need to be investigated
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