161 research outputs found
Reva Scott Correspondence
Entries include brief and possibly correct, typed biographical information and handwritten correspondence concerning Scott\u27s book about Samuel Brannan
Artistic Phenomenon of the Danube Poet Vladimir Reva
The article deals with the artistic phenomenon of the famous poet Bessarabia Vladimir Reva.
The material of the study was the poetry of seven collections of the author, published in different years.
A peculiar analysis of artistic and literary features and creative ideas that the author embodied in his
poetic works is offered
Examining Backlash and Attacks on Landmark Decisions form Brown to Roe to Goodridge
Panel Discussion at 2007 ACS National Convention Featuring
Edward Lazarus, Scott Lemieux, Robert Post, Jeffrey Rosen,
Reva Siegel and Roger Wilkins
Homenaje a Reva. El Financiero, sección Cultura "Clicks a la distancia"
Referencias bibliográficas:Reva Brooks, Photographs Reva Brooks: Mexico in Black and WhiteLeonard and Reva Brooks. Artist in Exile in San Miguel de AllendeNota sobre exposición Homenaje a Reva Brooks, que pudo verse todo agosto de 2003 en la Sala de Arte Público Siqueiros y el libro Reva Brooks, Photographs (M + M Art Press, 2003, publicado en México en inglés) una compilación de Marilyn Westlake y Margot Smallwood
The Danube Region Poetry: Personalities and Creativity
The article presents the material on the Danube region contemporary poets, whose work is
well known not only to the cultural circle of Izmail intelligentsia, but also outside the Danube region.
From the many authors, regularly published in the anthology «Literary Izmail», the author singles out
the creativite, works of Mikhail Vasilyuk, Leonid Andreyev, Vladimir Reva, Vladimir Vorobyov,
Sergei Levin, Nadezhda Parshihina, Isabella Voronova. In addition to subjective associations on
various topics, the works of these authors pay a particular interest to their native land, located in a
picturesque region near the Danube River. Each of the poets offers his own version of the lyrics,
which is the product of a talented individual inspiration coming from the subtle perception of the
landscape beauties of the Danube
A briefing for mental health professionals : why asking about abuse matters to service users (REVA project, briefing 3)
There are high prevalence rates of violent and abusive experience in both the childhoods and adult lives of mental health service users. Histories of childhood sexual and physical abuse amongst women service users are particularly well documented. Although many of the samples in studies are small, figures of over 50% are not unusual (Palmer et al, 1992; Bryer et al, 1987; Walker and James, 1992; Wurr and Partridge, 1996). In secure settings this figure is even higher (Bland et al, 1999). Studies of severe domestic violence among psychiatric in-patients report lifetime prevalence ranging from 30% to 60% (Golding, 1999; Howard et al. 2010). The REVA study, on which this briefing is based, has also found that people who suffer violence and abuse are much more likely to have a mental disorder, self-harm or attempt suicide than those with little or no experience of this kind (Scott et al, 2013). Given the prevalence of experiences of abuse among users of adult mental health services it is vitally important that these experiences are identified to ensure appropriate diagnosis, support and referral. Since 2003 it has been Department of Health policy that all adult service users should be asked about experiences of violence and abuse in mental health assessments.
Yet actually disclosing experiences of violence and abuse can be very difficult. Survivors can feel a deep sense of shame and responsibility for the abuse they have experienced – feelings that are often strategically encouraged by their abusers (Clark and Quadara, 2010). These feelings can be compounded by unhelpful responses from professionals when they try to disclose (Imkaanetal, 2014). And survivors consistently say that disclosure has to be ‘at the right time for them’, which may be immediately or many years after the abuse (McNaughton Nicholls, 2012).
In this briefing paper we present findings from research funded by the Department of Health Policy Research Programme on responding effectively to the needs of survivors of violence and abuse: the REVA study. The study included specifically asking survivors of violence and abuse about their views on routine enquiry, their experiences of disclosing abuse and their recommendations for how staff should ask clients about abuse
SeqWord Geneteic Island Sniffer
<p>Program: SeqWordSniffer on Python3<br>Author: O. Reva ([email protected])<br>Last modified: March 19, 2024</p>
<p>The old version of the program was written on Python 2.5 and published in 2009: Bezuidt O, Lima-Mendez G, Reva ON. SeqWord Gene Island Sniffer: a program to study the lateral genetic exchange among bacteria. World Acad Sci Eng Technol. 2009; 22(58): 1169-1174. (https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/document?repid=rep1&type=pdf&doi=7e0a97691a4b8cad4378d5e2ec31c813ea62a869). </p>
<p>To execute the program for all GenBank and/or FASTA files stored in the folder 'input', use:<br>python run.py</p>
<p>ATTENTION: INPUT FILES MUST CONTAIN A SINGLE GENOME SEQUENCE. FILES WITH MULTIPLE SEQUENCES WILL BE IGNORED.</p>
<p>To display the command prompt menu, use:<br>python run.py -m</p>
<p>WARNING: THE PROGRAM WAS TRANSLATED FROM PYTHON 2 TO PYTHON 3. NOT ALL FUNCTIONALITIES PROVIDED BY THE MENU HAVE BEEN VERIFIED.</p>
<p>To set the arguments via the command line, use:<br>python run.py [-arguments]</p>
<p>For help, use one of the following:<br>python run.py -h / -H / --help</p>
<p>To show the version, use:<br>python run.py -v / -V / --version</p>
<p>Arguments:</p>
<p> -l: <integer> Main sliding window length.<br> -b: <integer> Main sliding window step.<br> -m: <integer> Secondary sliding window length.<br> -s: <integer> Secondary sliding window step.<br> -i: <folder name> 'input' by default. Place all input files here.<br> -o: <folder name> 'output' by default. Output files are stored here.<br> -f: <no | fasta | gbk | fasta+gbk> File types to save as outputs.<br> -v: <yes/no> Save SVG plot as output.</p>
<p>The 'input' folder contains 7 example GBK files of S. aureus. Remove them before use.</p>
<p> </p>
The Danube Region Poetry: Personalities and Creativity
The article presents the material on the Danube region contemporary poets, whose work iswell known not only to the cultural circle of Izmail intelligentsia, but also outside the Danube region. From the many authors, regularly published in the anthology «Literary Izmail», the author singles out the creativite, works of Mikhail Vasilyuk, Leonid Andreyev, Vladimir Reva, Vladimir Vorobyov, Sergei Levin, Nadezhda Parshihina, Isabella Voronova. In addition to subjective associations on various topics, the works of these authors pay a particular interest to their native land, located in a picturesque region near the Danube River. Each of the poets offers his own version of the lyrics, which is the product of a talented individual inspiration coming from the subtle perception of the landscape beauties of the Danube
A briefing for service providers and commissioners : measuring outcomes for survivors of violence and abuse (REVA project, briefing 5)
The long-term consequences of violence and abuse can only be addressed if appropriate services for survivors are available. Many such services are located within the voluntary sector, and the fact that they are oversubscribed indicates a high level of demand, but there is limited robust evidence as to whether, how and why they work.
Third sector organisations need to demonstrate their effectiveness, particularly in the context of competitive commissioning (Harlock, 2013). However, cuts to already under-resourced services in the violence against women and girls (VAWG) sector have made it difficult for many, especially smaller services, to develop meaningful measurement frameworks or to fully engage in commissioning processes (Callanan et al., 2012; Women’s Aid & Imkaan, 2014). The lack of standardised sector-specific outcome measures also means that services may be required to conduct multiple monitoring exercises for a variety of different funding streams, with none fully reflecting the reality of their work.
To address these gaps, one strand of the REVA project has involved developing an outcomes framework to reflect the work of such services more accurately. In doing this, we built upon work underway in the specialist women’s voluntary sector by Women’s Aid, Imkaan, Rape Crisis England and Wales, and consulted with a range of individuals and organisations through the REVA Reference Network. We also drew on tools developed and used within the health and mental health sectors. Our aim was for the measures to be suitable for use in a range of types of services addressing various forms of violence and abuse located in both the voluntary and statutory sectors. The resulting outcomes tool was piloted in seven voluntary sector and NHS settings in 2013-14
FoldChange Python3 script
<p>This script was designed for the project:<br>"Epigenetic background of lineage-specific genome expression landscapes <br>of four Staphylococcus aureus hospital isolates"<br>to compare gene expression in different S. aureus strains<br>Author: Oleg Reva ([email protected])<br>Last update: January 26, 2024</p>
<p>Folder 'input' contains the following input files:<br> COG.txt - table of homologous genes found in 4 S.aureus genomes:<br> column 1: S.aureus 150;<br> column 2: S.aureus 597/2;<br> column 3: S.aureus 598;<br> column 4: S.aureus ATCC BAA-39;<br> Transcriptomics data files S.aureus_##_xx.txt<br> where ## - strain number (150, 597, 598, or BAA_39), <br> and xx - experimental condition:<br> ge - treatment with gentamicin;<br> cc - treatment with CC-196;<br> gecc - combined treatment;</p>
<p>Usage: python3 /path/run.py [-argument option, ...]</p>
<p>Run the script without any arguments to display a command prompt menu<br>Then press L+ENTER to load the last used options<br>Output SVG and TXT files will be stored into the directory 'output'</p>
<p>Arguments:<br> -h Show this help text<br> -i First input transcriptomics file like 'S.aureus_150_gecc.txt'<br> -a Column (integer) in COG.txt for the strain indicated in -i, like 1<br> -j Second input transcriptomics file like 'S.aureus_597_gecc.txt'<br> -b Column (integer) in COG.txt for the strain indicated in -j, like 2<br> -f Cut-off p-values (positive floating-point number). 'No' to switch this option off.</p>
<p> </p>
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