129,941 research outputs found
Peter Bela Neubauer Collection 1993-1999
Correspondence between Neubauer, Robert Striebel, and Erich Grabner regarding memorial work for the former Jewish community of Krems, particularly in regards to
restoration and preservation of the Jewish cemetery. Accompanying the correspondence is a questionnaire completed by Neubauer for the Austrian Heritage Collection.Peter B. NeubauerPeter B. Neubauer was born in the small Jewish community of Krems a. Donau, Austria on July 5, 1913 as son of the liberal rabbi and teacher Samuel Neubauer and his wife
Rosa Neubauer. As a youth he was affiliated with Jewish Zionist movements such as Hashomer Hatzair before emigrating to the United States in 1941. he established his professional
career and became one of the founders of modern pediatric psychiatry. As professor at New York City University, Columbia University and Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel and
through his numerous publications and lectures he has received international recognition and honor.Austrian Heritage CollectionWasservogel, Marion ; Sachs, Katharina ; Sachs, Jakob ; Nemschitz, Fritz ; Kuppelwieser, hans ; Karpfen, Jacob ; Freud, Sigmund ; Freud, Anna ; Neubauer, Siegfried ;
Adler, Herta ; Enigl, Marianne ; Gunzberg, Ruth.Processed for digitizationSent for digitizationReturned from digitizationLinked to online manifestationdigitize
AHC interview with Peter Bela Neubauer.
Peter B. Neubauer was born in the small Jewish community of Krems an der Donau, Austria on July 5, 1913 as son of the liberal rabbi and teacher Samuel Neubauer and his wife Rosa Neubauer. As outsiders he and his siblings soon recognized their affiliation with the Socialist Youth Movement in a region of Austria which was then considered the stronghold of Catholic conservatism and (at that time illegal) National Socialism. Later they joined the Zionist youth organization of Hashomer Hatzair, which prepared them for emigration to Palestine. Because of their Jewish background and their political activities they left Austria even before the 'Anschluss' in 1938. His sister Ruth Gunzberg became a founding member of a kibbutz in Palestine, while his brother Siegfried Neubauer was killed in the line of duty while serving in a contigent of the British Army in North Africa. As the leader of the Jewish community his father stayed in Krems until he was arrested after the Germans invaded and the National Socialists took over. He managed to escape illegally to Palestine - Rosa Neubauer deceased after a short illness in 1936. Reading Siegmund Freud, Karl Marx and other theorists of the time Peter B. Neubauer never felt comfortable with the petty bourgeoisie of his place of birth. After the rise of antisemitism in the Austrian public and the political situation he left Vienna for Bern, Switzerland in 1933, where he continued studing psychiatry at the medical school and was influenced by the theories of Anna Freud and other psychiatrists. Finally, he immigrated to the United States in 1941, where he established his professional career and became one of the founders of modern pediatric psychiatry. He has received international recognition and honors as professor at the City University of New York, Columbia University and Hebrew University in Jerusalem, as well as through his numerous publications and lectures.Austrian Heritage CollectionDigital recordin
Partitas - Don Mus.Ms. 1424 : ob (2), cl (2), fag (2), cor (2); B|b
cl 2 missingFrantišek Kryštof NeubauerQuelle: manuscript. - Provenienz: Fürstlich Fürstenbergische Hofbibliothek, DonaueschingenBarthia in B | a | Due Oboe | Due Clarinetti | Due Fagotti | Due Corni | Del Sig Joanne Neubauer | [Incipit
Partitas - Don Mus.Ms. 1426 : ob (2), cl (2), fag (2), cor (2); B|b
František Kryštof NeubauerQuelle: manuscript. - Provenienz: Fürstlich Fürstenbergische Hofbibliothek, DonaueschingenParthia in B. | à | Due Oboe. | Due Clarinetto. | Due Corni | Due Fagotti | Del Sig|r|e Neubauer. | [Incipit
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
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
Dispelling the Myths Behind First-author Citation Counts
We conducted a full-scale evaluative citation analysis study of scholars in the XML research field to explore just how different from each other author rankings resulting from different citation counting methods actually are, and to demonstrate the capability of emerging data and tools on the Web in supporting more realistic citation counting methods. Our results contest some common arguments for the continued
use of first-author citation counts in the evaluation of scholars, such as high correlations between author rankings by first-author citation counts and other citation
counting methods, and high costs of using more realistic citation counting methods that are not well-supported by the ISI databases. It is argued that increasingly available digital full text research papers make it possible for citation analysis studies to go beyond what the ISI databases have directly supported and to employ more
sophisticated methods
Declaratio Regis Sueciae In Comitiis Facta Per Suum Ministrum Dominum De Greiffenheim : Dictatum Ratisbonae die 30. Martii 1757. per Moguntinum
Nicht identisch mit VD18 90101626: dort abw. Druck Tbl., Zierstück auf B. 2, Text nur lateinischAutopsie nach Ex. der ULB Sachsen-AnhaltVorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Ratisbonæ, Typis Henrici Georgii Neubaueri. - Erscheinungsjahr nach der Datierung im Titel bestimm
sj-DOCX-1-asm-10.1177_10731911211067538 – Supplemental material for Ecological Momentary Assessment: A Meta-Analysis on Designs, Samples, and Compliance Across Research Fields
Supplemental material, sj-DOCX-1-asm-10.1177_10731911211067538 for Ecological Momentary Assessment: A Meta-Analysis on Designs, Samples, and Compliance Across Research Fields by Cornelia Wrzus and Andreas B. Neubauer in Assessment</p
Melanopsis anistratenkoi Neubauer, Harzhauser, Georgopoulou, Mandic & Kroh, 2014, nom. nov.
<i>Melanopsis anistratenkoi</i> nom. nov. <p> <i>Melanopsis</i> (<i>Duabiana</i>) <i>cylindrica</i> Anistratenko 1993: 69 [non <i>Lyrcea cylindrica</i> Stoliczka, 1862].</p> <p> <b>Etymology.</b> In honor of Vitaliy V. Anistratenko (Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology of the Ukrainian National Academy, Kiev), who greatly contributed to our knowledge about the fossil and recent mollusk fauna from eastern Europe.</p> <p> <b>Type locality.</b> Mok'vi monastery by the Duab River, Abkhazia, Georgia.</p> <p> <b>Age.</b> Duab beds, Kimmerian (= middle-late Zanclean).</p> <p> <b>Holotype.</b> Schmalhausen Institute of Zoology of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Kiev, coll. no. 22/VI 1989.</p> <p> <b>Discussion.</b> The species by Anistratenko constitutes a secondary homonym of <i>Melanopsis cylindrica</i> (Stoliczka, 1862). The latter species was introduced within <i>Lyrcaea</i> (misspelt " <i>Lyrcea</i> " by Stoliczka), which is considered a junior synonym of <i>Melanopsis</i> (Wenz 1929, p. 2647). Today it is undoubtedly referred to <i>Melanopsis</i>.</p>Published as part of <i>Neubauer, Thomas A., Harzhauser, Mathias, Georgopoulou, Elisavet, Mandic, Oleg & Kroh, Andreas, 2014, Replacement names and nomenclatural comments for problematic species-group names in Europe's Neogene freshwater Gastropoda, pp. 453-468 in Zootaxa 3785 (3)</i> on page 456, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3785.3.7, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/4913363">http://zenodo.org/record/4913363</a>
Viviparus lubenescuae Neubauer, Harzhauser, Georgopoulou, Mandic & Kroh, 2014, nom. nov.
<i>Viviparus lubenescuae</i> nom. nov. <p> <i>Viviparus conicus</i> Lubenescu & Zazuleac 1985: 100, pl. 23, figs 5–19 [non <i>Vivipara conica</i> Pavlović, 1903].</p> <p> <b>Etymology.</b> In honor of Victoria Lubenescu (Bucharest), who studied the viviparids of the Dacian Basin and first described this species.</p> <p> <b>Type locality.</b> Mănăstirea Dintr-un Lemn along Runcu brook, near Dezrobiţi village, Vâlcea, Romania.</p> <p> <b>Age.</b> Lower Dacian (= Getian, middle Zanclean).</p> <p> <b>Holotype.</b> Institut de Géologie et Géophysique, Bucharest, coll. no. 17056.</p> <p> <b>Discussion.</b> Here the same rules apply as for the case of <i>Viviparus muscelensis</i> above: <i>Viviparus conicus</i> Lubenescu & Zazuleac, 1985 is a primary homonym of <i>Viviparus conicus</i> Pavlović, 1903 from the Pliocene of Orahovac in the Metohia Basin, Kosovo (see also Wenz 1928, p. 2307).</p>Published as part of <i>Neubauer, Thomas A., Harzhauser, Mathias, Georgopoulou, Elisavet, Mandic, Oleg & Kroh, Andreas, 2014, Replacement names and nomenclatural comments for problematic species-group names in Europe's Neogene freshwater Gastropoda, pp. 453-468 in Zootaxa 3785 (3)</i> on page 455, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3785.3.7, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/4913363">http://zenodo.org/record/4913363</a>
- …
