6,735 research outputs found
Franny Choi, 41st Annual ODU Literary Festival
Franny Choi is a queer, Korean-American poet, playwright, teacher, organizer, pottymouth, GryffinClaw, and general overachiever. She is the author of Floating, Brilliant, Gone (2014), and a chapbook, Death by Sex Machine (2017). She has received awards from the Poetry Foundation and the Helen Zell Writers Program, as well as fellowships from the Vermont Studio Center and the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts. Her poems have appeared in journals including Poetry magazine, American Poetry Review, New England Review, and her work has been featured by the Huffington Post, PBS NewsHour, and Angry Asian Man
Jinwoo Choi, saxophone, Monday, March 11, 2013
In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Musi
Acquisition of high-resolution topographic information in forest environments using integrated UAV-LiDAR system: System development and field demonstration
High-resolution topographic information of landslide-prone areas plays an important role in accurate prediction and characterization of potential landslides and mitigation of landslidesassociated hazards. This study presents an advanced geomorphological surveying system that integrates the light detection and ranging (LiDAR) with an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), a multi-rotor aerial vehicle in specific, for prediction, monitoring and forensic analysis of landslides, and for maintenance of debris-flow barriers. The test-flight over a vegetated area demonstrates that the integrated UAV-LiDAR system can provide high-resolution, three-dimensional (3D) LiDAR point clouds below canopy and vegetation in forest environments, overcoming the limitation of aerial photogrammetry and terrestrial LiDAR platforms. An algorithm is suggested to delineate the topographic information from the acquired 3D LiDAR point clouds, and the accuracy and performance of the developed UAV-LiDAR system are examined through field demonstration. Finally, two field demonstrations are presented: the forensic analysis of the recent Gokseong landslide event, and the sediment deposition monitoring for debris-flow barrier maintenance in South Korea. The developed surveying system is expected to contribute to geomorphological field surveys in vegetated, forest environments, particularly in a site that is not easily accessible.
Reply to: Occupational risk factors for low grade and high grade glioma by B. Hocking
Copyright © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Brigitte Schlehofer, Iris Hettinger, Maria Blettner, Susan Preston-Martin, Annie Arslan, Anders Ahlbom, Won N. Choi, Graham G. Giles, Geoffrey R. Howe, Julian Little, Francoise Ménégoz, Ylva Rodvall, Philip Ryan and Jürgen Wahrendor
QJE-STD-18-253.R2-Supplementary_Material – Supplemental material for Development and assessment of the Korean Author Recognition Test
Supplemental material, QJE-STD-18-253.R2-Supplementary_Material for Development and assessment of the Korean Author Recognition Test by Hyosun Lee, Eunjin Seong, Wonil Choi and Matthew W Lowder in Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology</p
Experiencing work as decent, meaningful, neither, or both: a latent profile analysis
In the current study we gathered data from a large group of employed adults (N = 710) to examine the degree to which participants experienced their work as unique combinations of decent and meaningful. We applied latent profile analysis (LPA) to construct specific profiles according to how strongly participants endorsed five components of decent work and meaningful work. Seven different profiles emerged from our analyses which were labeled as a) Only healthcare, b) Unfulfilling, c) Highly meaningless, d) Adequate safety and rest, e) Adequate, f) Fulfilling, and g) Absent healthcare. We examined group differences amongst the profiles in terms of hypothesized predictor (economic constraints, marginalization experiences) and outcome (work-family conflict, intentions to quit) variables. Mixed support was found for the hypotheses, and profiles where participants did or did not have healthcare access at work were particularly unique in comparison to other profiles
From the Margins to the Forefront: Tillie Olsen's Mediation as Figure and Author
45 pg.Tillie Olsen's life experiences and self-identification as a working class woman provide a strong basis for analyzing her fiction as partly autobiographical. As she wrote, she developed her position as a recognized and award winning author into that of a literary mediator for socially marginalized subjects, actively working to represent certain conditions of exclusion due to social, racial, economic, and sexual factors during the 1970's and 1980's. Through analysis of her fiction and non-fiction texts, her use of modernist writing techniques, her purpose as a writer, and her impact on the literary canon, it becomes possible to see how she has altered the literary landscape and has made those who suffer exclusion visible and legible.Advisor(s): Choi, Helen . Committee Member(s): Marshik, Celia.Stony Brook University Libraries. SBU Graduate School in Department of English. Charles Taber (Dean of Graduate School)
sj-docx-1-jag-10.1177_07334648221092399 – Supplemental material for A Matched Cohort Analysis for Examining the Association Between Slow Gait Speed and Shortened Longevity in Older Americans
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jag-10.1177_07334648221092399 for A Matched Cohort Analysis for Examining the Association Between Slow Gait Speed and Shortened Longevity in Older Americans by Brenda M. McGrath, Pamela Jo Johnson, Ryan McGrath, Peggy M. Cawthon, Lukus Klawitter and Bong-Jin Choi in Journal of Applied Gerontology</p
sj-docx-2-jag-10.1177_07334648221092399 – Supplemental material for A Matched Cohort Analysis for Examining the Association Between Slow Gait Speed and Shortened Longevity in Older Americans
Supplemental material, sj-docx-2-jag-10.1177_07334648221092399 for A Matched Cohort Analysis for Examining the Association Between Slow Gait Speed and Shortened Longevity in Older Americans by Brenda M. McGrath, Pamela Jo Johnson, Ryan McGrath, Peggy M. Cawthon, Lukus Klawitter and Bong-Jin Choi in Journal of Applied Gerontology</p
Replicating “Predicting the present with Google trends” by Hyunyoung Choi and Hal Varian (The Economic Record, 2012)
In this note, the author describes different ways one could try to replicate Choi and Varian (Predicting the present with Google trends, The Economic Record, 2012)
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