5,055 research outputs found
Larry Murphy, Father C. C. Ryan, Terry Martin, Brother Edward O'Connor and Don Reardon, 1983
color photographExcellent conditionLarry Murphy (former football player, Engineering class of 1946), Father Ryan, Terry "Pepper" Martin (former football player, Commerce class of 1942), Brother O'Connor and Don "Duckie" Reardon (Commerce class of 1957, here President of the Alumni Association) pose in front of the bleachers in Huskies Stadium.Written in ink on reverse: '29,' 'Reunion 83,' 'Kick Off' and 'Larry Murphy, Dr. C[E]C Ryan, Terry Martin, Bro. Ed O'Connor, Don Reardon'. Came in file folder marked 'Alumni'. From Art Gallery
Designing Data Services for the Institutional Repository
The capacity to archive research datasets and make them accessible is a role that an increasing number of institutional repositories in universities are taking on. At Rutgers University, the capacity to handle data is being added to RUCore, the Rutgers University Community Repository. RUCore already supports scholarly papers, dissertations, images, sound, and video. This presentation discusses the work of the RUCore Data Working Group in setting format and metadata standards for datasets, designing an architecture appropriate to data in our Fedora repository, and creating a web interface that makes the datasets and related RUCore collections discoverable. Relevant comparisons to peer institutions and digital curation practices are discussed. The data service is being prototyped through our work with faculty in the School of Engineering and the School of Communication and Information. This faculty research data, along with examples of datasets acquired by the Libraries that need preservation, provide the initial testbed for the RUCore Data Service. Development will continue on a complete curation lifecycle for datasets, from initial deposit to versioning and revision
Letter from P. Murphy to Hagan
Holograph letter from P. Murphy, House of Missions, Enniscorthy (County Wexford), to (Hagan). They have decided in favour of St. Brigid for the painting [for their bazaar]. Then commenting on the lack of enthusiasm for the Emancipation celebrations, whether local or the one in Dublin in June. Deploring particularly the young priests' lack of high ideals; even the People manifested a jarring tone on the matter. Enclosing another piece from the People on 'the lad that the C.(atholic) B.(ulletin) holds up this month'. The new bishop of Meath is unknown to him; for Down and Connor it is joked that they are waiting for Arthur Ryan to grow up. It is telling that the Archbishop of Armagh will go to Rome in May-'he is the best of the bunch'. The Holy Father will surely remember Murphy's old rector, formerly of Sydney. Then observing that The Standard is not doing well; people hear enough religion on Sundays and prefer reading British weeklies and dailies; wondering how long poor Ireland will stand. He is off on the missions where people are responding very well as a rule, good Catholics to a man
Editing as a Performative and Collaborative Practice. Ryan Trecartin's Hectic Video Collages
This contribution examines editing as an art practice focusing on Ryan Trecartin’s work. Trecartin is definitely one of those artists among the younger generations who is experimenting in a more radical and crosswise manner with the new media and the opportunities of using, sharing and mobilizing images offered by the Internet, beyond copyright and the proper citation of “poached” materials. In Trecartin’s videos, images, sounds and words are assembled in a digital hypertext − schizophrenic and hypnotic − of which the artist is the main but not exclusive author. The analysis focuses on central aspects of Trecartin’s practice, such as the supposed re-materialisation of the art object related to the idea of “an Internet of things”; the visual re-codification that generates new aesthetic standards, such as the so-called “post-Internet style”; and co-working as a contemporary art practice and remedy to the “death of the author” that was pessimistically theorised throughout the 20th and 21st century
Corrigendum to “Effects of therapeutic hypothermia on the gut microbiota and metabolome of infants suffering hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy at birth” [Int. J. Biochem. Cell Biol. 93 (December) (2017), 110-118]
peer-reviewedCorrigendum Refers to:
Watkins, C., Murphy, K., Yen, S., Carafa, I., Dempsey, E., O’Shea, C., Vercoe, E., Ross, R., Stanton, C. and Ryan, C. (2017). Effects of therapeutic hypothermia on the gut microbiota and metabolome of infants suffering hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy at birth. The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, [online] 93, pp.110-118. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocel.2017.08.01
Denis Rigal : Poésies d'Irlande (Poèmes de Patrick Kavanagh, Thomas Kinsella, John Montague, Richard Murphy, Seamus Heaney, Derek Mahon, Paul Muldoon et Eithne Strong ; Traductions de Danielle Jacquin, Godeleine Carpentier, Michel Bariou, Erie Denez Deirdre Me Keown-Laigle, Denis Rigal, Jean C. Noël et Angela Ryan ; Préface de Denis Rigal)
Lemoigne Guy. Denis Rigal : Poésies d'Irlande (Poèmes de Patrick Kavanagh, Thomas Kinsella, John Montague, Richard Murphy, Seamus Heaney, Derek Mahon, Paul Muldoon et Eithne Strong ; Traductions de Danielle Jacquin, Godeleine Carpentier, Michel Bariou, Erie Denez Deirdre Me Keown-Laigle, Denis Rigal, Jean C. Noël et Angela Ryan ; Préface de Denis Rigal). In: Études irlandaises, n°12-2, 1987. pp. 261-263
Denis Rigal : Poésies d'Irlande (Poèmes de Patrick Kavanagh, Thomas Kinsella, John Montague, Richard Murphy, Seamus Heaney, Derek Mahon, Paul Muldoon et Eithne Strong ; Traductions de Danielle Jacquin, Godeleine Carpentier, Michel Bariou, Erie Denez Deirdre Me Keown-Laigle, Denis Rigal, Jean C. Noël et Angela Ryan ; Préface de Denis Rigal)
Lemoigne Guy. Denis Rigal : Poésies d'Irlande (Poèmes de Patrick Kavanagh, Thomas Kinsella, John Montague, Richard Murphy, Seamus Heaney, Derek Mahon, Paul Muldoon et Eithne Strong ; Traductions de Danielle Jacquin, Godeleine Carpentier, Michel Bariou, Erie Denez Deirdre Me Keown-Laigle, Denis Rigal, Jean C. Noël et Angela Ryan ; Préface de Denis Rigal). In: Études irlandaises, n°12-2, 1987. pp. 261-263
Effects of therapeutic hypothermia on the gut microbiota and metabolome of infants suffering hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy at birth
Neonatal hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) in the perinatal period can lead to significant neurological deficits in later life. Total body cooling (TBC) is a neuroprotective strategy used in the treatment of HIE and has been shown to reduce seizures and improve neurodevelopmental outcomes in treated infants. Little is known, however, about the effects of HIE/TBC on the developing gut microbiota composition and subsequent metabolic profile. Ten term infants with HIE who received TBC at 33.5 °C for 72 h were recruited. A control group consisted of nine healthy full term infants. Faecal samples were collected from both groups at 2 years of age and stored at −20 °C. 16S rRNA amplicon Illumina sequencing was carried out to determine gut microbiota composition and 1H NMR analysis was performed to determine the metabolic profile of faecal water. The gut microbiota composition of the HIE/TBC infants were found to have significantly lower proportions of Bacteroides compared to the non-cooled healthy control group. Alpha diversity measures detected significantly lower diversity in microbial richness in the HIE/TBC infant group compared to the control infants (Shannon index, <0.05). High inter-individual variation was found in gut microbiota composition and metabolic profile of both groups. Initial principal coordinate analysis and hierarchal clustering of compounds on MetaboAnalyst 3.0 indicated no clear separation in the metabolic profile of these two infant groups. These results suggest that there is no significant impact on the gut microbial development of HIE/TBC infants compared to healthy infants at 2 years of life. To our knowledge this is the first study to report the gut microbiota composition and metabolic profile of infants who have experienced HIE/TBC at birth
sj-docx-2-asu-10.1177_0003134820982557 – Supplemental Material for Pure and Hybrid Deep Learning Models can Predict Pathologic Tumor Response to Neoadjuvant Therapy in Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma: A Pilot Study
Supplemental Material, sj-docx-2-asu-10.1177_0003134820982557 for Pure and Hybrid Deep Learning Models can Predict Pathologic Tumor Response to Neoadjuvant Therapy in Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma: A Pilot Study by Michael D. Watson, Maria R. Baimas-George, Keith J. Murphy, Ryan C. Pickens, David A. Iannitti, John B. Martinie, Erin H. Baker, Dionisios Vrochides and Lee M. Ocuin in The American Surgeon</p
sj-jpg-1-asu-10.1177_0003134820982557 – Supplemental Material for Pure and Hybrid Deep Learning Models can Predict Pathologic Tumor Response to Neoadjuvant Therapy in Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma: A Pilot Study
Supplemental Material, sj-jpg-1-asu-10.1177_0003134820982557 for Pure and Hybrid Deep Learning Models can Predict Pathologic Tumor Response to Neoadjuvant Therapy in Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma: A Pilot Study by Michael D. Watson, Maria R. Baimas-George, Keith J. Murphy, Ryan C. Pickens, David A. Iannitti, John B. Martinie, Erin H. Baker, Dionisios Vrochides and Lee M. Ocuin in The American Surgeon</p
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