16,631 research outputs found
Revue de presse et bibliographie du projet Bulliot, Bibracte et moi
Le billet de blog sur le projet BBM à la une d'Hypothèses. « Bulliot, Bibracte et moi », La Gazette de Bibracte, 5 septembre 2019 [lire en ligne]. « Bulliot, Bibracte et moi… L’aventure est lancée », La Gazette de Bibracte, 27 septembre 2019 [lire en ligne]. Jean-François Perret, « Bulliot va passer à l’ère numérique », Le Journal du Centre, 6 octobre 2019, p. 2-3. Jean-François Perret, "L'informatique et l'intelligence artificielle pour "démocratiser" les carnets de fouilles de Bulliot, déco..
<i>F<sub>WS</sub></i> against MSP1 MOI, MSP2 MOI, and maximum MOI.
<p><i>F<sub>WS</sub></i> against MSP1 MOI, MSP2 MOI, and maximum MOI.</p
Cross-Section Measurement for the Energy-Transfer Collisions Na(3P) + Na(3P) ? Na (5S,4D) + Na(3S)
Land-tenure policy reforms: Decollectivization and the Doi Moi system in Vietnam
millions fed, food security, rice, Land tenure, Land reform, Doi Moi, Decollectivization,
Jules Renard : Le testament ? Et moi ? Et moi ? Et moi ?
Renard Jules. Jules Renard : Le testament ? Et moi ? Et moi ? Et moi ?. In: Cahiers Edmond et Jules de Goncourt n°4, 1995. Hommage à Edmond de Goncourt pour le centième anniversaire de sa mort. p. 8
Jules Renard : Le testament ? Et moi ? Et moi ? Et moi ?
Renard Jules. Jules Renard : Le testament ? Et moi ? Et moi ? Et moi ?. In: Cahiers Edmond et Jules de Goncourt n°4, 1995. Hommage à Edmond de Goncourt pour le centième anniversaire de sa mort. p. 8
Baltic Sea Cod Reproductive Volume from Reanalysis
<p><strong>Generated using E.U. Copernicus Marine Service Information;</strong><br>https://doi.org/10.48670/moi-00013</p>
Cellular <i>MOI</i>.
<p>The results of <i>MOI</i> model fitting and <i>MOI</i> estimates are given. In panel A, we provide estimates of <i>ψ</i>, the leaf-dependent infection aggregation parameter, for the best-supported model. In panel B, estimates of cellular <i>MOI</i>, for different times post-inoculation and in different leaves are given. Error bars represent the 95% confidence interval. Note that the reported <i>MOI</i> value is <i>m<sub>I</sub></i>, the <i>MOI</i> in infected cells only, which has a minimum value of 1. <i>MOI</i> is initially very low and gradually increases, never reaching 1.5. <i>MOI</i> values for the final time point (10 dpi) are similar for Leaves 3, 6 and 7, whilst it remains very low for Leaf 5, which hardly becomes infected. Panels C–E show model predictions for the frequency at which cells are infected by a certain number of virions. The blue section of the bar indicates the frequency of infection by only one virus variant, whereas striped area indicates coinfection by both virus variants, assuming a 1∶1 ratio of virus variants. Panel C gives this prediction for the lowest <i>MOI</i> (<i>m<sub>I</sub></i> = 1.001), panel D for the mean <i>MOI</i> (<i>m<sub>I</sub></i> = 1.137), and panel E for the highest <i>MOI</i> (<i>m<sub>I</sub></i> = 1.432). Estimated <i>MOI</i> values are low, but the number of infecting virions is assumed to follow a Poisson distribution. Hence even at the low mean <i>MOI</i> some cells will be infected by 2 or more virions, allowing for cellular coinfection.</p
Africa, the Global Minority: Ayaana as Africa in Yvonne Owuor’s "The Dragonfly Sea"
Most postmodern authors narrate societal ills by conferring foregrounded traits to selected characters. Often, the traits ascribed to these individual characters reflect events that affect the bigger or larger society outside the text. Published in 2019, Yvonne A. Owuor’s The Dragonfly Sea, to a great degree, encompasses this aspect of postmodern fiction. The novel revolves around the life of the Pate island-born Ayaana. From her relationship with her mother, Munira; to her obsession with Muhiddin; to her experience with rape; to her expedition at sea en route to China then to Turkey; and her eventual experiences in foreign lands and back to Pate, Ayaana’s experiences provide the image of a character whose tribulations depict the challenges faced by the poor, girls/women and black minority people in the postmodern world. This paper analyzes the extent to which the author uses Ayaana’s experiences as a microcosm of Africa as a minority in the global socio-political and economic interactions. Guided by Spivak’s “Can the Subaltern Speak”, the paper explores incidences where this character [and others] is treated as “the other” and establish how this treatment accurately serves as a representation of the treatment of Africa as a minority in global affairs
- …
