123,641 research outputs found
Lodderena bunnelli Redfern et Rolán, 2005
Catálogo do Museo de Historia Natural USC. n. inventario 10027
Lodderena janetmayae Rolán, Rubio et Redfern, 1998
Catálogo do Museo de Historia Natural USC. n. inventario 10028
Triphora abacoensis Rolan & Redfern 2008
Triphora abacoensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 Triphora abacoensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 — Rolán & Fernández-Garces 2008: 158, fig. 31A-G. Type locality. Bahamas, Abaco, East of Chub Rocks, 26°44’00”N, 77°09’00”W, 52 m deep. Type material. BMSM 15499, holotype. ANSP 369222 BMSM 55373, BMSM 55375, paratypes. Distribution. Bahamas (Rolán & Fernández-Garcés 2008; Redfern 2013).Published as part of Bakker, Piet A. J. & Albano, Paolo G., 2022, Nomenclator, geographic and stratigraphic distribution of the family Triphoridae (Mollusca: Gastropoda), pp. 1-216 in Zootaxa 5088 (1) on page 14, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5088.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/583653
Triphora abacoensis Rolan & Redfern 2008
Triphora abacoensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 Triphora abacoensis Rolán & Redfern, 2008 — Rolán & Fernández-Garces 2008: 158, fig. 31A-G. Type locality. Bahamas, Abaco, East of Chub Rocks, 26°44’00”N, 77°09’00”W, 52 m deep. Type material. BMSM 15499, holotype. ANSP 369222 BMSM 55373, BMSM 55375, paratypes. Distribution. Bahamas (Rolán & Fernández-Garcés 2008; Redfern 2013).Published as part of Bakker, Piet A. J. & Albano, Paolo G., 2022, Nomenclator, geographic and stratigraphic distribution of the family Triphoridae (Mollusca: Gastropoda), pp. 1-216 in Zootaxa 5088 (1) on page 14, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5088.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/583653
Luke Bouvier, Writing, Voice and the Proper : Jules Vallès and the Politics of Orality
Redfern Walter. Luke Bouvier, Writing, Voice and the Proper : Jules Vallès and the Politics of Orality. In: Romantisme, 2002, n°116. Blague et supercheries littéraires. pp. 109-110
Performance Anxiety: An exploration of spectacle, spectatorship and moral panic in the twenty-first century
In the last decade there has been an explosion of new technologies that enable discourse, power and truth formations to be produced, contested and dispersed. As communication and information technologies continue to evolve, so too do the ways in which individuals construct identities and form communities. The notion of a moral panic is utilised to describe those critical moments in time and space when social norms are perceived to be under threat. I suggest that the complex interplay of spectacle, spectatorship and moral panic involved in such instances can be both conceptualised and interrogated as performance. This dissertation draws upon two distinct performance paradigms – one theoretical and the other practical – to inform a critical reading of three significant ‘social events’ of the last decade: the drug-trafficking trial of Australian woman Schapelle Corby in Indonesia in 2005, the end-of-life legal case focused on American woman Terri Schiavo, which culminated in 2005, and the race relations associated with the ‘Redfern riots’ which occurred in Sydney in 2004. Informed by a range of theoretical positions from Michel Foucault, Zygmunt Bauman, Giorgio Agamben, Judith Butler, Baz Kershaw, and Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, this dissertation fleshes out contemporary understandings of mediatised spectacle and spectatorship, with the aim of revealing the ways in which they contribute to creating and sustaining moral panic. A critical finding of the dissertation is that through both subjectification and objectification processes the central players and the spectators become indivisible from the spectacle itself, thus maintaining the interweaving cycle of spectator, spectacle and moral panic. By exploring the ways in which people interpret and respond to social phenomena, the possibilities for performance and social theory can be extended
A randomised controlled trial of a consumer-focused e-health strategy for cardiovascular risk management in primary care
A study has found that three quarters of Australians and New Zealanders admitted to hospital with severe heart conditions are not receiving the basic preventive care needed to reduce their chance of future heart attacks.
“It’s not good enough that the majority of patients leaving hospital miss out on the most basic care they need to avoid repeat heart attacks down the line,” said study leader Associate Professor Julie Redfern, of The George Institute and The University of Sydney.
About 75,000 Australians are hospitalised due to Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS, commonly heart attacks) annually, with half of the cases reported in 2010 due to repeat events. Repeat events are more likely to be fatal.
International and Australian guidelines universally recommend preventive care for people who have an acute event, in order to avoid a repeat heart attack. Ideally, this preventive package should commence during the initial hospital admission and should comprise a combination of medications, lifestyle advice and referral to a preventive service such as cardiac rehabilitation.
Authors: Redfern, J, Usherwood, T, Harris, MF, Rodgers, A, Hayman, N, Panaretto, K, Chow, C, Lau, AY, Neubeck, L, Coorey, G, Hersch, F, Heeley, E, Patel, A, Jan, S, Zwar, N, Peiris,
A Multi-Language Comparison of Influences on Author Verification using Character N-Grams
We create a new multi-language corpus for author verification based on Wikipedia talkpages, and evaluate the influence that differences in topic and time have on character n-gram author profiles. Topic alignment between two texts is found to increase author verification precision, and an authors writing style is found to change over time, but not more significantly after 3 years than after 1 year.Information ArchitectureWISElectrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Scienc
Appropriate Similarity Measures for Author Cocitation Analysis
We provide a number of new insights into the methodological discussion about author cocitation analysis. We first argue that the use of the Pearson correlation for measuring the similarity between authors’ cocitation profiles is not very satisfactory. We then discuss what kind of similarity measures may be used as an alternative to the Pearson correlation. We consider three similarity measures in particular. One is the well-known cosine. The other two similarity measures have not been used before in the bibliometric literature. Finally, we show by means of an example that our findings have a high practical relevance.information science;Pearson correlation;cosine;similarity measure;author cocitation analysis
The vanishing author in computer-generated works: a critical analysis of recent Australian case law
Abstract
The use of software is ubiquitous in the creation of many copyright works, yet the requirement in copyright law that every work have a human author who engages in independent intellectual effort means that its use may prevent copyright subsistence. Several recent Australian cases have refocused attention on authorship as an essential criterion of copyright subsistence, and these cases suggest that much computer-produced output may be authorless and thus lack copyright protection. This article, the first in a two-part series, analyses how each case deals with the question of authorship of computer-produced works and why the use of software diminishes copyright protection for a significant number of computer-generated works. The article critiques the application of conventional notions of human authorship developed in the pre-computer age to modern productions and suggests alternative approaches to authorship that satisfy both the major objectives of copyright policy and the need to adapt to the computer age. The article argues that, without a broader judicial approach to authorship of computer-generated works, Parliament must remedy the lacuna in protection for these ‘authorless’ works. Possible solutions for reform are suggested. In a forthcoming article, the author comprehensively examines those reform proposals
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