103,833 research outputs found

    Livigno / Geripp: C. Lorenz ; Terrain: Offic. E. Ritt. v. Mor

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    LIVIGNO / GERIPP: C. LORENZ ; TERRAIN: OFFIC. E. RITT. V. MOR Specialkarte der K. u. K. Österreichisch-Ungarischen Monarchie (-) Livigno / Geripp: C. Lorenz ; Terrain: Offic. E. Ritt. v. Mor ([5344] = Zone 19 Col. II) ( -

    Joshua Davis: Author of Spare Parts

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    Citation: K-State First (2016). Joshua Davis: Author of Spare Parts [Flier]. Manhattan, Kansas: K-State First.Flyer advertising Joshua Davis's author talk at Kansas State University

    MoR-21L plays a functional role in VSMC.

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    (a) Location of moRs and miRs sequences on the predicted secondary structure surrounding the pre-miR-21 hairpin. The RNA structure prediction software mFold was used to predict pre-miR-21 secondary structure. (b) Increased expression of moR-21 and miR-21 in injured mouse carotid artery. Data are shown as mean ± SEM and are from 3 independent experiments. (c) Abundance of moR-21 and miR-21 in VSMC cultured under different conditions. VSMC were cultured in serum free medium (SFM) and medium containing 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) or PDGF. BSA is the control for PDGF. Data are shown as mean ± SEM and are from 4 independent experiments. (d) Effects of over-expression of moR-21, miR-21, and scrambled mimetics on VSMC proliferation. VSMC were transfected with 20nM scrambled control, moR-21, and or miR-21 mimetics. Cell proliferation was measured at 0, 1, 2, and 3 days using Cell TiterGlo. Data are presented as relative proliferation, compared with scrambled mimetic-transfected cells on day 0. Data are shown as mean ± SEM and are from 5 independent experiments. P values were determined by one way repeated measure ANOVA. NS: nonsignificant, *: PP<0.001.</p

    Steven Johnson Author Talk Poster

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    K-State Book NetworkA poster advertising an author talk by Steven Johnson at Kansas State University on September 3, 2014. Steven Johnson's book "The Ghost Map" was the 2014-2015 common book

    moR-21 plays a role in gene regulation and has a different target gene set from miR-21.

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    (a) Differentially expressed transcripts in moR-21 over-expressed VSMC compared with scrambled control-treated cells. In moR-21-treated cells, 460 and 378 transcripts were down- or up-regulated, respectively. Fold change cutoff is 1.3 and adjusted PP-value cutoff t-test. NS: non-significant, **: PP<0.001.</p

    An investigation into the recent vegetation history of Great Wood, near Eggleston Co. Durham using fine resolution pollen analysis of Mor humus and relevant historical evidence.

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    This study investigated the recent vegetation history of an ancient woodland, Great Wood, near Eggleston Co. Durham which has been part of the lands of Eggleston Hall since at least 1614. Mor humus was extracted from two sites within the woodland canopy and consecutive 1cm samples were analysed from each sediment. The reasons for this fine resolution sampling was firstly, because the soil profiles were only between 14-20cms and only represented a time scale of a few hundred years, and secondly to provide fine temporal resolution to correspond with the fine spatial resolution obtainable under a closed canopy. Sediment analysis was undertaken to investigate the stratification of the soil in order to identify signs of disturbance. Mor # 1 proved to be highly stratified, whereas as mor # 2 was less stratified, possibly disturbed and had signs of charcoal at the lowest levels. It was therefore concluded that mor # 2 only represented part of the time scale that mor # 1 illustrated, as it was a more recently formed humus, the earlier part having been burnt away. An absolute time scale was not used but a relative time scale was assigned using documentary and anecdotal historical evidence. This took into account the development of the nearby village and the social and economic changes of the region, and also the association of the woodland with Eggleston Hall and the consequent utilisation of the woodland for timber and recreational purposes. The pollen record of mor # 1 was thought to represent the vegetation history from approximately 1750 to the present time, whereas the pollen record of mor # 2 shows the vegetation history from the late nineteenth century onwards. This time scale was deduced from the following:1. There were signs of a more open canopy, due to a greater proportion of herb pollen to tree pollen, and evidence of pollen representing a more regional source area such as Triticum and possibly Calluna. This was thought to represent 1750- 1820 when tillage increased in importance and there were reports of arable activity in the adjoining townfield probably causing a reduction in grazing pressure in the wood and allowing regeneration. This was promoted by the Enclosure Act in 1785, an attempt to establish mineral rights and to make the dales more commercially viable for agriculture and was a result of marginal land being used for tillage during the Napoleonic wars. However, signs of succession and canopy closure began to develop and there were also some signs of management deduced from Fagus pollen appearing and documentary evidence of the path construction through the woods.2. The herb pollen to tree pollen ratio began to fall and canopy closure continued but was not thought to be complete, due to selective management and extraction of timber. The disappearance of Triticum was believed to be due to a change in agricultural trends. Fagus pollen which was quite significant, disappeared abruptly due to the trees in the vicinity of the site being removed.3. Complete canopy closure shown by a consistently high tree pollen to herb pollen ratio with Quercus dominating, arose when management of the wood was abandoned in the 1920's.The fine resolution obtained, both temporally and spatially, demonstrated that mor humus was a useful medium for pollen analysis and with consideration of the underlying principles and mechanisms, meaningful interpretation of the pollen record was possible. Problems encountered with extraction of samples and during processing were discussed

    Distribusi Fonem Bahasa Mor

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    This study discussed about the phonemes distribution of Mor language. Mor language is one of the regional languages in Province of Papua that spoken by the community in the Moora Islands District, Nabire Regency. This research used descriptive method with three stages, namely data supply, data analysis, and presentation of data analysis result. Data analysis is performed after the data is classified. The analysis applied using the distribution method. The result of study showed that Mor language has 23 segmental phonemes consisting of sixteen consonants and seven vowel phonemes. The phonemes, namely/p/, /B/, /t/, /d/, /k/, /g/, /j/, /m/, /n/, /s/, /r/, /h/, /G/, /?/, /y/, /w/, /a/, /i/, /u/, /e/, /|/, /O/, and /E/. The phonemes of Mor language in the word are partially distributed complete and some are incompletely distributed. Phoneme/p/, /t/, /m/, /n/, /i/, /u/, /e/, /O/, /E/, and /a/ are complete distributed consonant. It means, those phonemes occupy all position in the word. The phonemes /B/, /k/, /g/, /j/, /s/, /r/, /h/, and /w/ are phonemes distributed only at the beginning and middle of words. The phonemes /?/, /G/, and /y/ are phonemes which distributed in the middle and the end of the words, while the phonemes /d/ and /|/ are phonemes distributed only at the middle of the words

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Horizontal Large Eddy Simulation using Delft2D-MOR: The influence of large horizontal eddies on the shape, depth and extent of scour holes

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    With the morphological models that are in use today, such as Delft2D-MOR, the scour that is calculated near the tip of hard coastal structures like breakwaters and groynes is often underestimated. This is most likely due to the fact that large horizontal turbulent eddies, which are formed when flow goes round these structures, locally enhance the stirring and horizontal dispersion of sediment. In the present models these turbulent eddies are not resolved, because the time and length scales used are usually too large. Their integrated effect is also not accounted for via 2D-turbulence models. In this study therefore a new version of the morphological model Delft2D-MOR is used in which a recently developed sub-grid scale eddy viscosity model (SGS model) is applied. With this sub-grid scale turbulence closure model and with appropriate small grid cell sizes and time steps large horizontal eddies can be calculated. The modelling of turbulence in this way is called Horizontal Large Eddy Simulation (HLES). The aim of this study is to investigate whether the large turbulent eddies that form when flow passes a coastal structure, are indeed resolved in this new version of the morphological model Delft2D-MOR and what their influence is on the shape, depth and extent of a scour hole. The influence of the large horizontal eddies on the morphology is studied for two test cases: 1. A hypothetical test-case of current induced scour near a groyne. 2. A realistic test-case of tidal induced scour near the moles of IJmuiden harbour. The results from these test-cases show that with the new version of the model large horizontal eddies are indeed resolved, both for the hypothetical test-case and the realistic test-case. From the morphological results from the hypothetical groyne test-case it can be seen that the predicted scour is greater in the case where the large horizontal eddies are resolved compared to the cases where they are not resolved. For the realistic IJmuiden test-case the location and extent of the scour hole are predicted much more according to reality with the new eddy resolving model compared to the "standard" non eddy resolving model. The results of this study shows that is feasible to apply HLES using Delft2D-MOR, even for a realistic case, including tidal currents, and that the accuracy of predicting long-term morphological changes with this new version of the morphological model Delft2DMOR has increased compared to that of the standard version.Civil Engineering and Geoscience

    Appropriate Similarity Measures for Author Cocitation Analysis

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    We provide a number of new insights into the methodological discussion about author cocitation analysis. We first argue that the use of the Pearson correlation for measuring the similarity between authors’ cocitation profiles is not very satisfactory. We then discuss what kind of similarity measures may be used as an alternative to the Pearson correlation. We consider three similarity measures in particular. One is the well-known cosine. The other two similarity measures have not been used before in the bibliometric literature. Finally, we show by means of an example that our findings have a high practical relevance.information science;Pearson correlation;cosine;similarity measure;author cocitation analysis
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