36,622 research outputs found

    Ernst Weiss

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    Digital ImageThe Austrian author Ernst Weiss was born in 1882 in Brno. He died 1940 in Paris

    Kurt R. Weiss

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    Dr. Kurt R. Weiss is an associate professor in the University of Pittsburgh Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Division of Musculoskeletal Oncology. He has joint appointments in Surgical Oncology and Pathology. He serves as an Advisory Dean for the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and as Vice Chair of Translational Research for his Department. His research career began as an undergraduate student at Notre Dame when he worked in the Ferguson Laboratory with Dr. Christopher Evans. During medical school at Jefferson Medical College, he performed a summer research internship with Dr. Eugenie Kleinerman at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. Between his second and third years of medical school he participated in the Howard Hughes Medical Institute/National Institutes of Health Research Scholars Program where he worked in Dr. Lee Helman’s Laboratory in the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Pediatric Oncology Branch. During residency he performed original osteosarcoma research during his lab year with Dr. Johnny Huard. After his fellowship in Musculoskeletal Oncology at the University of Toronto with Drs. Jay Wunder and Peter Ferguson, Dr. Weiss was recruited back to Pittsburgh by his Chairman, Dr. Freddie Fu, as faculty and started his own Lab. The Musculoskeletal Oncology Laboratory (MOL) is focused on sarcoma metastatic potential. Dr. Weiss’s team of PhD collaborators, residents, medical students, undergraduate students, and technicians perform basic and translational sarcoma research experiments. Much of this work is accomplished with samples from the Musculoskeletal Oncology Tumor Registry and Tissue Bank (MOTOR) that Dr. Weiss and his clinical partners established in 2012. The MOTOR now holds over 16,000 unique samples from over 600 sarcoma patients with clinical annotation, making it one of the largest sarcoma tissue repositories in the country. This resource provides vital biological reagents for both intramural and extramural sarcoma investigators who collaborate with the MOL. Dr. Weiss is an author on over 80 peer-reviewed publications. He recently finished his term as Research Committee Chair for the Musculoskeletal Tumor Society, the largest professional society for musculoskeletal oncology surgeons on the continent of North America. He is on the Mentorship Committee for the Connective Tissue Oncology Society, for which he has also served on the Board of Directors. He was recently named to the Scientific Steering Committee of the Sarcoma Alliance for Research through Collaboration (SARC), the largest private supporter of sarcoma clinical trials in the world. He has taught at the Orthopedic Research Society grant writing course for many years. Dr. Weiss is a regular reviewer for NCI grant applications and was on the inaugural Programmatic Panel for the Department of Defense Rare Cancers Research Program. His funding sources have included K08 and R21 awards from the NCI as well as the support of numerous foundations including the Orthopedic Research and Education Foundation and the Connective Tissue Oncology Society. Dr. Weiss is a founding member of the Pittsburgh Cure Sarcoma (PCS) patient advocacy group, as well as the Pittsburgh Sarcoma Research Collaborative (PSaRC).https://openworks.mdanderson.org/kleinermanbios/1004/thumbnail.jp

    Harvey Weiss Correspondence

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    Entries include a typed letter from the Maine State Library to New York children\u27s book author Harvey Weiss introducing the Maine Author Collection and notice that a description of his book would appear in Maine Library Association Bulletin, a typed letter from Weiss on personal stationery presenting a copy of Twenty-Four And Stanley, and a typed letter from the Maine State Library concerning the irrepressible Stanley and on receipt of the book for the Maine Author collection

    Malcolm E. and Ann E. Weiss Correspondence

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    Entry is a typed letter of reply from math and science children\u27s book author Malcolm E. Weiss on his personal stationery concerning a request for a copy of his book 666 Jellybeans! All That? for the Maine Author Collection and additionally the attempt of Weiss to send a copy of a Young Math Series book Solomon Grundy, Born on Oneday from the publisher, a defense for an overdue book, and a list of books written by his wife, history and social studies children\u27s author Ann E. Weiss as well as a list of his own titles at this time

    The belated collection: poems of light and darkness

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    Sadržaj ove knjige poezije najbolje opisuje autorova posveta: „Posvećujem: Jadranki, dobroj vili, bez koje 'Zakašnjele zbirke' ne bi bilo, Silvi Kalwil, princezi i rabinerici, Hani tajanstvenoj, žrtvama Holokausta, porodicama Weiss, Stem i Scheiber, žrtvama svih logora, izbjeglicama u cijelom svijetu, zaljubljenima i onima koji će se tek zaljubiti.The content of this book of poetry is best described by the author's dedication: "I dedicate it to: Jadranka, the good fairy, without whom the 'Belated Collection' would not exist, to Silva Kalwil, the princess and rabbi, to the mysterious Hana, to the victims of the Holocaust, to the Weiss, Stern and Scheiber families, to the victims of all the camps, to the refugees all over the world, to lovers and those who are about to fall in love.Autor se pojavljuje i pod imenom Ljubomir Ruben Weiss

    Replication Data for: Diversity in Healthcare Institutions Reduces Israeli Patients' Prejudice towards Arabs

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    The enclosed data and r code can be used to replicate findings from the article "Diversity in Healthcare Institutions Reduces Israeli Patients' Prejudice towards Arabs," authored by Chagai M. Weiss

    Hiram Weiss, MD

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    This oral history may be streamed from the Winkler Center websiteHiram Weiss, MD, Interviewed by: Benjamin Felson, MD, Samuel Rockwern, MD. This video was a part of the Oral History of Medicine in Cincinnati series

    On the Optimality of Subband Adaptive Filtering

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    In this paper, we derive a polyphase analysis to determine the optimum filters in a subband adaptive filter (SAF) system. The structure of this optimum solution deviates from the standard SAF approach and presents its best possible solution only as an approximation. Besides this new insight into SAF error sources, the discussed analysis allows to calculate the optimum subband responses and the standard SAF approximation. Examples demonstrating the validity of our analysis and its use for determining SAF errors are presented

    Weiss, R.

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    An Automatic Sequential Recognition Method for Cortical Auditory Evoked Potentials

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    The detection of cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEP), which are part of the electroencephalogram (EEG) in reaction to acoustic stimuli, has important applications such as determining objective audiograms. The detection is usually performed by a human operator, with support from often basic signal processing methods. This paper presents a novel mechanism for the detection of CAEPs, which is fully automatic and stops the measurement when a given confidence is reached. This proposed detector comprises of three stages. First, a feature extraction by a wavelet transform parameterizes the time domain EEG signal by only few transform coefficients. This feature vector is then classified by a neural network which yields a binary vote on every EEG segment. Finally, a sequential statistical test is performed on successive classifications; this stops the measurement if a specified decision confidence has been reached. The adjustment of the detector according to a clinical database is discussed. Thus adjusted, the proposed CAEP detection scheme is applied to a study, and compared with a human operator. The results demonstrate that this method can attain similar results, but outperforms the human expert for stimulation levels close to the hearing threshold
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