1,794,102 research outputs found

    FILOSOFÍA APLICADA EN JAPÓN. ENTREVISTA A SHINJI KAJITANI

    No full text
    Interview to Shinji Kajitani about Philosophical Practice in JapanEntrevista a Shinji Kajitani sobre Filosofía Aplicada en Japó

    To Harness the unlimited potential of the oceans

    No full text
    Overview of a project for wave energy conversion combined with the construction of a breakwater around the port of Sakata, Japan

    Serrolecanium Shinji

    No full text
    Serrolecanium Shinji Serrolecanium Shinji, 1935: 106 Type species: Serrolecanium bambusae Shinji (1935). There are five species of Serrolecanium worldwide, of which three species are known from China.Published as part of Wu, San-An & Lu, Yuan, 2012, Notes on the genera and species in the mealybug tribe Serrolecaniini Shinji (Hemiptera: Coccoidea: Pseudococcidae) from China with description of a new species, pp. 30-46 in Zootaxa 3251 on page 38, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21448

    Shoichi Sakata: His life, the Sakata model and his achievements

    No full text
    The Sakata model was but one aspect of Shoichi Sakata's life and achievements. To better understand the context in which the model was developed, this paper outlines various aspects of his career, from family background and education, scientific work, friendship with Mituo Taketani, involvement in policymaking, and role of the Elementary Particle Theory Group. It is only then that we can truly appreciate the Sakata model and Sakata's importance to Japan

    Nippolachnus micromeli Shinji 1924

    No full text
    29. Nippolachnus micromeli Shinji, 1924 Type material: • Nippolachnus / micromeli Shinji, 1924 / Neotype / Rhaphiolepis / mbellate / leg. Miyazaki // Jap16/10/2, UŚ / Amakubo / Tsukuba-shi / Ibaraki-ken / 10.10.2016 / det. Kanturski.Published as part of Wieczorek, Karina, Junkiert, Łukasz, Trela, Joanna, Depa, Łukasz, Kanturski, Mariusz & Bugaj-Nawrocka, Agnieszka, 2022, Aphidomorpha (Insecta: Hemiptera) in the entomological collection of the Zoology Research Group, University of Silesia in Katowice (DZUS), Poland, pp. 113-161 in Zootaxa 5183 (1) on page 159, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5183.1.13, http://zenodo.org/record/707001

    Shinji Tanamura (1919-1991)

    No full text
    Sicard Claude. Shinji Tanamura (1919-1991). In: Littératures 25, automne 1991. p. 250

    Trioza quercicola Shinji 1944

    No full text
    Trioza quercicola Shinji, 1944 (Figs. 95−96) Trioza quercicola SHINjI, 1944: 455. Material examined. South Korea (JN) (SNU). Host plant. Quercus myrsinifolia Blume (Fagaceae). Comments. New record for Korea.Published as part of Cho, Geonho, Burckhardt, Daniel & Lee, Seunghwan, 2017, On the taxonomy of Korean jumping plant-lice (Hemiptera: Psylloidea), pp. 531-561 in Zootaxa 4238 (4) on page 557, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4238.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/103907

    Trioza quercicola Shinji 1944

    No full text
    Trioza quercicola Shinji, 1944, comb. rev. (Figs. 183–184) Trioza quercicola Shinji, 1944: 455. Dyspersa quercicola; Kwon & Kwon (2020: 233). Dyspersa hambaeksana Kwon & Kwon, 2020: 230, syn. nov. Distribution in Korea. JN, GW (Cho et al. 2017a; Kwon & Kwon 2020) (SNU). Host plant. Quercus myrsinifolia Blume (Fagaceae) (Cho et al. 2017a). Comments. Trioza quercicola Shinji, 1944 and Dyspersa hambaeksana Kwon & Kwon, 2020 appear morphologically identical, suggesting they are conspecific. Therefore, we synonymise the latter with the former.Published as part of Cho, Geonho, Burckhardt, Daniel & Lee, Seunghwan, 2022, Check list of jumping plant-lice (Hemiptera: Psylloidea) of the Korean Peninsula, pp. 1-91 in Zootaxa 5177 (1) on page 76, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5177.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/702193

    Eurydice from Shinji-ko (Isopoda: Cirolanidae)

    No full text
    The cirolanid isopod, Eurydice sp. was collected from the mouth of Hii-kawa, Shinji-ko, Shimane Prefecture, Japan. This is the first record of the genus from Shinji-ko

    Aerodynamics of Sakata labial-velar oral stops

    No full text
    The present contribution represents the first in-detail exploratory account of the aerodynamics of labial-velar oral stops in Sakata, a Bantu dialect cluster of southwestern Congo. Data collection took place at the phonetics laboratory facilities of Université de Mons with three speakers of central Sakata. Comparative data of labial-velar and plain bilabial oral stops are presented and analysed. Descriptive statistics of the relevant variables are discussed. Given each group of variables, MANOVA results are presented for specially tailored subsets of the whole dataset to investigate variance in the corpus. Sakata labial-velar stops are shown to differ from plain bilabials for duration, airflow, and pressure patterns. Voiceless labial-velar stops exhibit pressure and airflow values consistent with a more prominent lowering of the tongue root / larynx than their voiced counter- parts. Matches and mismatches with the available typological literature are also delineated and discussed.The present contribution represents the first in-detail exploratory account of the aerodynamics of labial-velar oral stops in Sakata, a Bantu dialect cluster of southwestern Congo. Data collection took place at the phonetics laboratory facilities of Université de Mons with three speakers of central Sakata. Comparative data of labial-velar and plain bilabial oral stops are presented and analysed. Descriptive statistics of the relevant variables are discussed. Given each group of variables, MANOVA results are presented for specially tailored subsets of the whole dataset to investigate variance in the corpus. Sakata labial-velar stops are shown to differ from plain bilabials for duration, airflow, and pressure patterns. Voiceless labial-velar stops exhibit pressure and airflow values consistent with a more prominent lowering of the tongue root / larynx than their voiced counter- parts. Matches and mismatches with the available typological literature are also delineated and discussed.P
    corecore