10,436 research outputs found
Author Interview with Brian D. Anderson
Brian D. Anderson was our feature artist of the week, October 19th - 23rd, 2020.https://jagworks.southalabama.edu/vid_presentations/1010/thumbnail.jp
Beyond “Mimetic Reductionism”. Exploring Unnatural Narratology [Jan Alber / Henrik Skov Nielsen / Brian Richardson (Eds.): A Poetics of Unnatural Narrative. Columbus 2013]
Rezension zu / Review of:Jan Alber / Henrik Skov Nielsen / Brian Richardson (Eds.): A Poetics of Unnatural Narrative. Columbus 2013.</p
Competition policy. by Brian Ellis
tag=1 data=Competition policy. by Brian Ellis
tag=2 data=Ellis, Brian
tag=3 data=Australian Rationalist,
tag=5 data=46
tag=6 data=Autumn/Winter 1998
tag=7 data=51-56.
tag=8 data=ECONOMIC CONDITIONS
tag=9 data=COMPETITION%CORPORATISATION%NATIONAL COMPETITION POLICY%PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR EFFECTIVENESS%SERVICE DELIVERY%SOCIAL POLICY%INNOVATION
tag=10 data=Examines the Government's National Competition Policy in relation to encouraging R&D, and the corporisation of public services and utilites. The author is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at La Trobe UNiversity and Vice-President of the Rationalist Society of Australia. Article Taken from What's New.
tag=13 data=CABExamines the Government's National Competition Policy in relation to encouraging R&D, and the corporisation of public services and utilites. The author is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at La Trobe UNiversity and Vice-President of the Rationalist Society of Australia. Article Taken from What's New
Art Behind Gaming: Brian D. Anderson
A discussion with author Brian D. Anderson about worldbuilding in fantasy. Part of the Art Behind Gaming Online Con.https://jagworks.southalabama.edu/vid_presentations/1046/thumbnail.jp
Unnatural Narratology. Basic Concepts and Recent Work [Jan Alber / Rüdiger Heinze: Unnatural Narratives – Unnatural Narratology. Berlin 2011. Per Krogh Hansen / Stefan Iversen / Henrik Skov Nielsen / Rolf Reitan (Eds.): Strange Voices in Narrative Fiction. Berlin 2011. David Herman / James Phelan / Peter Rabinowitz / Brian Richardson / Robyn Warhol: Narrative Theory: Core Concepts and Critical Debates. Columbus 2012]
Rezension zu / Review of:Jan Alber / Rüdiger Heinze: Unnatural Narratives – Unnatural Narratology. Berlin 2011. Per Krogh Hansen / Stefan Iversen / Henrik Skov Nielsen / Rolf Reitan (Eds.): Strange Voices in Narrative Fiction. Berlin 2011. David Herman / James Phelan / Peter Rabinowitz / Brian Richardson / Robyn Warhol: Narrative Theory: Core Concepts and Critical Debates. Columbus 2012.</p
Mitochondrial Stability in Cardiomyocytes Under Extreme Stress: Mitophagy–Biogenesis Coupling Across Special Reconnaissance and Triathlon Endurance, with Translational Links to Longevity, Cancer Biology, and Modern High-Tempo Conflict Resilience Working Paper / Preprint | Version 1.2
Appendix A to NMRI Paper v1.2
20 research directions (hypotheses and recommendations) on mitochondrial stability
in cardiomyocytes: mitophagy–biogenesis–balance
Triathlon • Longevity • Oncology • Operational & cognitive resilience (including
drone-era environments)
Date: 2026-01-13 | NMRI | ORCID (Brian Nielsen): 0009-0002-4914-354X
Scope: A hypothesis-generating document based on synthesis of the scientific literature, analyses,
and the authors’ NMRI observations. It is not medical advice and it is not operational instruction;
battlefield specifics are intentionally generalized. The intent is to propose testable research directions
for academic and defense research centers (USA/Poland)
In Honour of Brian MacWhinney: A Personal Account
While this volume and the writings have made it amply clear what significant contributions Professor Brian MacWhinney has made to the field at large, in this afterword, we begin with a senior member of our author team (Ping Li, PL) followed by a mid-career member (Helen Zhao, HZ) and an early career member (Zhe Gao, ZG), to provide our personal accounts of Brian not only as a leading scholar but also as a role model who touches and changes people’s lives
Interview with Brian Alleyne, Sociologist Studying KDE
A few months ago, the British journal Sociology published an article titled "Challenging Code: A Sociological Reading of the KDE Free Software Project". Eager to find out what a 'sociological reading' of KDE entails, Dot editor Oriol Mirosa rushed to contact the article's author, sociologist Brian Alleyne, who graciously and patiently agreed to be the subject of an interview
Understanding Author Rights
Author Rights is the term used to describe a researcher\u27s rights related to their published work. In this session, Brian Young will: 1) provide an overview of author rights, 2) explain language often used in the publication agreement, and 3) demonstrate a tool (Sherpa Romeo) that can be used to quickly understand what default rights you have (and lose) when you publish with a specific journal
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