141,387 research outputs found

    Brad-E-Pfeiffer/RippleSpindleAnalysisCode: v1.0.0

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    Data Analysis Code For Quigley et al., 2022 This zip file includes all of the Matlab code used to analyze the data for the paper entitled "Experience alters hippocampal and cortical network communication via a KIBRA-dependent mechanism", authored by Lilyana D. Quigley, Robert Pendry, Matthew L. Mendoza, Brad. E. Pfeiffer, Lenora J. Volk, submitted on bioRxiv in 2022

    Maine Voices piece by state representative Sophia Douglass Pfeiffer, D-Brunswi

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    Maine Voices piece by state representative Sophia Douglass Pfeiffer, D-Brunswick, who maintains that term limits for state legislators will limit voter choices

    Gulella : Pfeiffer 1856

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    Genus Gulella Pfeiffer, 1856 Gulella: Pfeiffer 1856 a: 173. Type species Pupa menkeana Pfeiffer, 1853 [S.D. Martens 1860: 298].Published as part of Herbert, D. G. & Rowson, B., 2011, Pupa menkeana Pfeiffer, 1853, type species of the speciose land snail genus Gulella Pfeiffer, 1856: correction of longstanding PLVLGHQWL ¿ FDWLRQ DQG GHVLJQDWLRQ RI QHRW \ SH (Mollusca: Eupulmonata: Streptaxidae), pp. 233 in African Invertebrates 52 (2) on page 234, DOI: 10.5733/afin.052.0201, http://zenodo.org/record/791721

    Interview of retired U.S. Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Alice Pfeiffer on her career as an Air Force nurse and administrator

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    Retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Alice Pfeiffer talks about her youth in Illinois, her education and her career as an Air Force nurse and administrator. Pfeiffer says that she enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1941, talks about her first duty stations and says that after additional training at Fort Bragg, was sent to England aboard the Queen Mary. Pfeiffer says that she was assigned to the 68th General Hospital which was set up in a cow pasture, worked 12 hour shifts, and lived in very, very basic conditions. After D-Day, Pfeiffer says that she worked in a hospital in France, was finally sent back to the U.S. after the war and was discharged in 1946. She says that she enlisted in the Air Force in 1949, served at various bases and hospitals around the world and retired in 1964 while stationed at Wright-Patterson AFB. Ends abruptly. Pfeiffer is interviewed by Ruth F. Stewart

    MINT.tools: Tools and Adaptors Supporting Acquisition, Annotation and Analysis of Multimodal Corpora

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    Kousidis S, Pfeiffer T, Schlangen D. MINT.tools: Tools and Adaptors Supporting Acquisition, Annotation and Analysis of Multimodal Corpora. In: Proceedings of Interspeech 2013. ISCA; 2013

    An operational model of joint attention - timing of gaze patterns in interactions between humans and a virtual human

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    Pfeiffer-Leßmann N, Pfeiffer T, Wachsmuth I. An operational model of joint attention - timing of gaze patterns in interactions between humans and a virtual human. In: Miyake N, Peebles D, Cooper RP, eds. Proceedings of the 34th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society; 2012: 851-856

    Joachim Pfeiffer

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    Photograph of Joachim Pfeiffer (Pädagogische Hochschule Freiburg) with the Sigmund Freud statue on Clark University\u27s campus green. Pfeiffer was there as part of the Henry J. Leir Chair\u27s programming for the 2009-2010 season with a talk called “Jacob the Liar”. Robert Tobin was the inaugural Henry J. Leir Chair in Language, Literature, and Culture from 2008 until his passing in 2022.https://commons.clarku.edu/funwithfreud/1032/thumbnail.jp

    Annularisca pleurophora Pfeiffer 1852

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    Annularisca pleurophora (Pfeiffer, 1852) Figure 11 D–F Type material. NHMUK unnumbered (3), specimens from Cuming collection bearing Pfeiffer’s handwriting may be syntypes;? ZMB unnumbered (1), syntype;? UMMZ 79565 (1), syntype. Type locality. “ Honduras.” Type figured. Pfeiffer, 1854 a: pl. 40, figs. 5, 6. Chresonymy. Cistula pleurophora Pfeiffer, 1851: 169 [nomen nudum]. Cistula pleurophora Pfeiffer, 1852 a: 262 –263; Pfeiffer, 1852 c: 41; Pfeiffer, 1853 a: 183 –184; Adams & Adams, 1856: 294; Pfeiffer, 1858: 131; Pfeiffer, 1859: 74; Pfeiffer, 1865: 142; Pfeiffer, 1876: 187; Fischer & Crosse, 1890: 218; Watters, 2006: 411. Cyclostomus pleurophorum (Pfeiffer, 1852). Pfeiffer, 1852 d: 66. Cyclostoma pleurophorum (Pfeiffer, 1852). Pfeiffer, 1853 b: 245; Pfeiffer, 1854 a: 299 –300, pl. 40, figs. 5, 6. Chondropoma pleurophorum (Pfeiffer, 1852). Martens, 1890: 14, 16. Ctenopoma pleurophora (Pfeiffer, 1852). Fischer & Crosse, 1890: 188. Choanopoma (Choanopomops) pleurophorum (Pfeiffer, 1852). Solem, 1961: 195 –196, 198– 199, pl. 10, fig. 8, map 1. Choanopoma pleurophora (Pfeiffer, 1852). Thompson, 1967: 227. Annularisca (Annularella) pleurophora (Pfeiffer, 1852). Watters, 2006: 56, 411. Cistula pleurophorum Pfeiffer, 1852. Thompson, 2011: 47 [possibly West Indian]. Distribution and habitat. Thompson (2011) questioned whether this species was actually part of the Central American fauna. It is regarded here as a mislabeled specimen. Description. Shell turbinate, thin, solute except just before aperture. Only specimen seen 8.2 mm in length (non-decollate). Protoconch retained, 1.75 large, rounded, smooth pale whorls, clearly demarcated from teleoconch. Teleoconch of 3 rounded whorls. Umbilicus wide, open to protoconch. Spiral sculpture absent except for 4 widely spaced cords in the umbilicus. Axial sculpture of ca. 40 widely spaced, low lamellae, between which are 5–10 microscopic threads. Suture strongly indented. Tufts absent but the axial lamellae may render the suture serrate. Aperture nearly circular. Inner lip smooth, narrow, barely exserted. Outer lip very narrow, more or less evenly expanded, widely auriculate posteriorly, solute. Base color dingy yellow-white, no evidence of banding. Lip same color as base. Operculum multispiral, remnants of a calcareous lamella evident. Radula and anatomy unknown. Variation in specimens. Only the UMMZ specimen was examined. Comparison with other species. This small, smooth, turbinate species resembles no other Central American annulariid. Remarks. There is no question that this is a species of Annularisca (Annularella) and it appears to be identical with Annularisca (Annularella) yunquensis (Pfeiffer, 1861) from the Guantánamo Province of Cuba. If this is the case, Cistula pleurophora Pfeiffer, 1852, would be the valid name for that species. But because I have not examined the type of Annularisca yunquensis (Pfeiffer, 1861), I have not placed that species into the synonymy of C. pleurophora at this time. Original description (translated here from Latin). “Shell umbilicate, globose-turbinate, thin, longitudinal crowded striations and corded ribs, prominently sculptured, diaphanous, slightly shining, whitish-brown; spire turbinate, apex acute, corneous; suture with denticulate ribs; five convex whorls, last almost smooth, forward briefly solute; umbilicus medium sized, deep, banded with carinate angulations; aperture subvertical, ovalsubcircular; peristome continuous, simple, straight, columellar margin expanded.—Operculum normal, with thin shelly lamina, interior cartilaginous with widely separated sulcus.” 12 mm diameter. Etymology. G. pleuron, ribs + G. - phoreus, bearer—bearing ribs.Published as part of Watters, G. Thomas, 2014, A revision of the Annulariidae of Central America (Gastropoda: Littorinoidea), pp. 301-350 in Zootaxa 3878 (4) on pages 344-345, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3878.4.1, http://zenodo.org/record/25270

    Diplommatina chordata Pfeiffer 1855

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    Diplommatina chordata Pfeiffer, 1855 Pfeiffer, 1855. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 23: 105. Type material: Syntype (1), NHMUK 20160223 (dry shell material); ex Museum Cuming (Acc. no. 1829). Specimen formerly attached to board now missing and presumed lost or destroyed. Label details: ‘ New Zealand, Mr. Strange’. Type locality: Unknown; incorrectly stated as ‘New Zealand’ by Pfeiffer (1855d: 105). Remarks: There are no published illustrations of the type material, which was sent to H. Cuming by the Australian-based naturalist Frederick Strange. Pfeiffer (1855d: 105) gave the dimensions of this sinistrally-coiled species as “Long. 4, diam. 2 mill.” Pfeiffer (1855d: 105) also listed, but did not describe, a variety of this species from ‘Lord Howe’s Island’, based on one or more specimens collected by John MacGillivray, presumably during a visit to that island on H.M.S. Herald in 1853. There are no subsequent records of Diplommatina chordata from New Zealand (e.g., Hedley & Suter 1893: 620; Suter 1913b: 185), and the type material was undoubtedly mis-localised. According to Iredale (1944: 303–304), Pfeiffer’s description of chordata matches Pupa strangei Benson, 1853, from eastern Australia, the types of which were also collected by Strange (Benson 1853: 286). Current Taxonomy: Possibly a junior synonym of Pupa strangei Benson, 1853. Distribution: Not determined.Published as part of Brook, Fred J. & Ablett, Jonathan D., 2019, Type material of land snails (Mollusca: Gastropoda) described from New Zealand by taxonomists in Europe and North America between 1830 and 1934, and the history of research on the New Zealand land snail fauna from 1824 to 1917, pp. 1-117 in Zootaxa 4697 (1) on page 83, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4697.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/354283
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