156 research outputs found
Die Insel / von Friedrich Leopold Graf zu Stolberg
Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Leipzig, bei Georg Joachim Göschen. 1788. - Vorlageform des Kolophons: Leipzig, gedruckt bei Christian Friedrich SolbrigBibliogr. Nachweis: Wilpert/Gühring, Erstausg. dt. Dichtung, 2. Aufl., Stuttgart 1992, S. 1461, Nr. 1
Doctor Martinus Luther als Sohn, Gatte und Reformator : Ein Poesieen-Kranz zur dreihundertjährigen Feier der Augsburgischen Confession gewunden / von C. F. Solbrig
Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Leipzig, bei J. F. Fischer. - Erscheinungsjahr nach: Kayser, T. 5, S. 26
Las caprifoliaceas silvestres y cultivadas en la Argentina
The Caprifoliaceae found in Argentina are studied taxonomically with notes on distribution, horticulture and uses. Descriptions and keys for the determination of genera and species are given. All together 7 genera and 28 species are found in Argentina: 3 species (Sambucus autralis, S. peruviana and Viburnum seemenii) grow wild, one species (Lonicera japonica) is naturalized, while the rest grow only under cultivation, some being found very infrequently.La Caprifoliáceae que se encuentran en la Argentina son estudiadas taxonómicamente, con notas sobre distribución, cultivo y usos.
Se presentan claves para la determinación de los géneros y especies, como también descripciones. En total 7 géneros y 28 especies crecen en la Argentina: 3 especies (Sambucus autralis, S. peruviana and Viburnum seemenii) crecen silvestres, una especie (Lonicera japonica) se ha naturalizado; el resto de las especies se encuentran sólo bajo cultivo, muchas de ellas en forma ocasional.Fil: Solbrig, Otto T.
LexOWL: A Bridge from LexGrid to OWL
The Lexical Grid project is an on-going community driven initiative that provides a common terminology model to represent multiple vocabulary and ontology sources as well as a scalable and robust API for accessing such information. In order to add more powerful functionalities to the existing infrastructure and align LexGrid more closely with various Semantic Web technologies, we introduce the LexOWL project for representing the ontologies modeled within the LexGrid environment in OWL (Web Ontology Language). The crux of this effort is to create a “bridge” that functionally connects the LexBIG (a LexGrid API) and the OWL API (an interface that implements OWL) seamlessly. In this paper, we discuss the key aspects of designing and implementing the LexOWL bridge. We compared LexOWL with other OWL converting tools and conclude that LexOWL provides an OWL mapping and converting tool with well-defined interoperability for information in the biomedical domain
Some Everyday Applications of Casting Under Pressure.
Editors: Aug. 1859-July 1865, J. D. White, J. H. McQuillen, G. J. Ziegler.--Aug. 1865-Dec. 1871, J. H. McQuillen, G. J. Ziegler.--Jan. 1872-May 1891, J. W. White.--July 1891-Apr. 1930, E. C. Kirk (with L. P. Anthony, Dec. 1917-Apr. 1930).--May 1930-Dec. 1936, L. P. Anthony.Vols. 1-13 are called "new series."Merged in Jan. 1937 with: Journal of the American Dental Association, ISSN 1048-6364, to form: Journal of the American Dental Association and dental cosmos, ISSN 0375-8451
Review of Current Dental Literature; Prophylactic Treatment of Fissures and Pits in the Enamel
Editors: Aug. 1859-July 1865, J. D. White, J. H. McQuillen, G. J. Ziegler.--Aug. 1865-Dec. 1871, J. H. McQuillen, G. J. Ziegler.--Jan. 1872-May 1891, J. W. White.--July 1891-Apr. 1930, E. C. Kirk (with L. P. Anthony, Dec. 1917-Apr. 1930).--May 1930-Dec. 1936, L. P. Anthony.Vols. 1-13 are called "new series."Merged in Jan. 1937 with: Journal of the American Dental Association, ISSN 1048-6364, to form: Journal of the American Dental Association and dental cosmos, ISSN 0375-8451
BITES: Balanced Individual Treatment Effect for Survival data
Estimating the effects of interventions on patient outcome is one of the key aspects of personalized medicine. Their inference is often challenged by the fact that the training data comprises only the outcome for the administered treatment, and not for alternative treatments (the so-called counterfactual outcomes). Several methods were suggested for this scenario based on observational data, i.e.~data where the intervention was not applied randomly, for both continuous and binary outcome variables. However, patient outcome is often recorded in terms of time-to-event data, comprising right-censored event times if an event does not occur within the observation period. Albeit their enormous importance, time-to-event data is rarely used for treatment optimization.
We suggest an approach named BITES (Balanced Individual Treatment Effect for Survival data), which combines a treatment-specific semi-parametric Cox loss with a treatment-balanced deep neural network; i.e.~we regularize differences between treated and non-treated patients using Integral Probability Metrics (IPM). We show in simulation studies that this approach outperforms the state of the art. Further, we demonstrate in an application to a cohort of breast cancer patients that hormone treatment can be optimized based on six routine parameters. We successfully validated this finding in an independent cohort.
BITES is provided as an easy-to-use python implementation
Don Carlos
Autopsie nach Ex. der ULB Sachsen-AnhaltPaginierungsfehler: nach S. 256 springt Zählung zurück zu S. 251Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Köln am Rheine, und Leipzig, in der Johann Arnold Imhofschen Buchhandlung 1788
Invertebrate diversity and the ecological role of decomposer assemblages in natural and plantation forests in Southern Benin
The aim of this thesis was to investigate the diversity of invertebrates in natural semi-deciduous forest and plantation forests of the Lama forest reserve in Benin. Litter decomposi-tion, being a key ecosystem process, was studied, and the importance of decomposer assem-blages was investigated. An inventory of termite assemblages in semi-deciduous forest and teak plantations was conducted, and the effects of different forest types and seasons on the activity of termites and soil- and litter-dwelling invertebrates investigated. Furthermore, a new diplopod species, Stemmiulus lama n. sp. (Diplopoda: Stemmiulidae), the first record of Stemmiulidae for Benin, was described. Finally the diversity of true bugs (Heteroptera) in different habitats of the Lama forest was investigated.
Leaf litter decomposition is influenced by litter quality, climatic factors and soil biota. In Chapter 2 (“Leaf litter breakdown in natural and plantation forests of the Lama forest reserve in Benin”), we used the litterbag technique to examine the breakdown of leaf litter from two indigenous (Afzelia africana and Ceiba pentandra) and two exotic tree species (Tectona grandis and Senna siamea), and investigated the relationship between litter breakdown and relative abundance of litter-dwelling invertebrates. The study focused on semi-deciduous for-est, teak plantations and firewood plantations. We showed that litter species and forest type had significant effects on litter breakdown. We found that decay rates were highest for Afzelia africana in natural forest (k = 4.7) and lowest for Tectona grandis in firewood plantations (k = 1.3). We also found a significant litter × forest interaction, indicating dissimilar changes in litter breakdown across forest types. We observed higher frequencies of occurrence of in-vertebrates in indigenous than in exotic litter, and litter bags in natural forest attracted more invertebrates than those in plantations.
Our results indicate that litter breakdown is strongly influenced by litter type, forest type and the activity of litter-dwelling invertebrates. Therefore, management practices should aim to enhance biological activity of decomposer communities to avoid soil degradation and main-tain productivity.
Conversion of natural semi-deciduous forest to teak plantations may influence termite species richness and composition. In Chapter 3 (“Termite assemblages in a West-African semi-deciduous forest and teak plantations”), we used a modified standardised transect method to establish the first termite inventory in the Lama forest reserve. Overall termite diversity turned out to be surprisingly low (19 species), irrespective of forest type. This was due to the soil conditions which were unfavourable for soil feeders, the most species-rich termite group in African forests. Nevertheless, termite species richness was significantly higher in natural forest than in teak plantations. Termite assemblages were characterised by Kalotermitidae in natural forest, whereas fungus-growers (Macrotermitinae) dominated in teak plantations. Termite relative abundance (= encounter density) was higher in teak plantations than in natu-ral forest. The difference in termite assemblages was due to differences in two environmental variables, litter biomass and soil water content.
Forest type and season can influence the activity of termites and soil invertebrates. In Chap-ter 4 (“Activity of termites and other epigeal and hypogeal invertebrates in natural semi-deciduous forest and plantation forests in Benin”), we used a cardboard baiting method to monitor the activity of termites and soil and litter-dwelling invertebrates in semi-deciduous and plantation forest. The overall frequency of occurrence of invertebrates was highest in semi-deciduous forest, followed by firewood plantations, young teak and old teak plantations. Collembola, Isopoda, Isoptera, Diplopoda, Araneae and Hymenoptera (ants) were the most common soil invertebrates. We found that the activity of the most abundant taxa varied among forest types (except for Diplopoda and Araneae), with a higher activity in natural for-est. We observed a significant effect of season on the frequency of occurrence of soil- and litter-dwelling invertebrates, the lowest value being recorded during the long dry season. The frequency of occurrence of termites was higher in old teak plantations than in the other for-ests, but only one species, Microtermes? pusillus?, showed a significant difference.
Many invertebrate species occurring in tropical ecosystems are unknown to science. In Chap-ter 5 (“Stemmiulus (Diopsiulus) lama n. sp., a new millipede from Benin (Myriapoda, Diplo-poda, Stemmiulidae)”), we describe a new species, Stemmiulus lama n. sp., from the Lama forest. This species is the first record of a stemmiulid millipede in Benin.
Forest use may influence the diversity and community structure of true bugs (Heteroptera).
In Chapter 6 (“Diversity of true bugs (Heteroptera) in various habitats of the Lama forest reserve in southern Benin”), we compare Heteroptera assemblages in relation to forest use in different habitats, including natural forests, degraded forest, plantations and isolated forest fragments. We sampled 893 Heteroptera over a 12-month period, representing 104 species in 16 families. We found no significant effect of habitat type on species richness and evenness. However significant differences in abundance, Shannon-Wiener diversity and Berger-Parker dominance were found. In isolated forest fragments, Shannon-Wiener diversity was signifi-cantly higher than in lowland forest, and the abundance of Heteroptera was higher in lowland forest than in young teak plantations. We also found that the Berger-Parker dominance index was lower in isolated forest fragments than in lowland forest. Species richness and Shannon-Wiener diversity were significantly higher, and Berger-Parker dominance lower in disturbed than in undisturbed forest patches within the Noyau central, a now fully protected part of the reserve. We identified two indicator species for two forest types, one for lowland forest (Stenocoris southwoodi Ahmad) and one for dry forest (Lygaeidae sp.11). We found that Het-eroptera community diversity was mainly a function of habitat age, while other habitat char-acteristics had no influence on the diversity of true bugs.
To sum up, the present thesis provides baseline data on the diversity of invertebrates in the Lama forest reserve in Benin and gives ample evidence of the ecological significance of de-composer assemblages in natural as well as plantation forests. It shows that management prac-tices should aim to enhance decomposer communities in order to safeguard the productivity and sustainable use of the Lama forest reserve
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