2,056 research outputs found

    sj-pdf-1-std-10.1177_09564624211042444 – Supplemental Material for Countering the rise of syphilis: A role for doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis?

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    Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-std-10.1177_09564624211042444 for Countering the rise of syphilis: A role for doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis? by Nguyen K Tran, Neal D Goldstein and Seth L Welles in International Journal of STD & AIDS</p

    sj-pdf-1-uar-10.1177_10780874231191703 - Supplemental material for Political Underrepresentation Among Public Benefits Recipients: Evidence from Linked Administrative Data

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-uar-10.1177_10780874231191703 for Political Underrepresentation Among Public Benefits Recipients: Evidence from Linked Administrative Data by Seth Chizeck, Kelley Fong, Rebecca Goldstein and Ariel R. White in Urban Affairs Review</p

    Resume of the life, business and social activities of Mr Samuel Goldstein

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    The Burnett Archive of Working Class Autobiographies was gathered together by John Burnett, David Vincent and David Mayall whilst compiling their three volumes annotated bibliography, "The Autobiography of the Working Class" (Harvester Press, 1984-1989). This book includes descriptions of unpublished autobiographies and indicates their locations. Excerpts from some of the autobiographies have been published in "Destiny obscure: autobiographies of childhood, education, and family from the1820s to the 1920s", edited by John Burnett (Routledge 1994 and A. Lane, 1982). The authors "sought to identify not only the large numbers of printed works scattered in various local history libraries and record offices, but also extant private memoirs, many of which remain hidden in family attics, known only to the author and a handful of relatives" (Introduction to vol.1, p. xxix). The criteria for inclusion were: the writers were working class for at least part of their lives; they wrote in English; and they lived for some time in England, Scotland or Wales between 1790 and 1945. John Burnett was professor of social history at Brunel University from 1972 to 1990.Brief memoirs of Samuel Goldstein (born Warsaw, Poland 1889). Goldstein outlines his early life and experience working in textiles in London and the United States. Describes periods of unemployment and ill health before setting up a successful business with his brother

    Waste is &quot;wicked&quot; when we try to solve it. Author&apos;s response to Joshua Goldstein&apos;s comments

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    This is the author&apos;s response to Dr. Goldstein&apos;s response to our recent article The rise and fall of a Waste cityin the construction of an urban circular economic systenif The changing landscape of waste in Beijingin the February 2016 issue of this publication. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.SCI(E)REVIEW175-17611

    Orthogonal Vectors Indexing

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    In the recent years, intensive research work has been dedicated to prove conditional lower bounds in order to reveal the inner structure of the class P. These conditional lower bounds are based on many popular conjectures on well-studied problems. One of the most heavily used conjectures is the celebrated Strong Exponential Time Hypothesis (SETH). It turns out that conditional hardness proved based on SETH goes, in many cases, through an intermediate problem - the Orthogonal Vectors (OV) problem. Almost all research work regarding conditional lower bound was concentrated on time complexity. Very little attention was directed toward space complexity. In a recent work, Goldstein et al.[WADS '17] set the stage for proving conditional lower bounds regarding space and its interplay with time. In this spirit, it is tempting to investigate the space complexity of a data structure variant of OV which is called OV indexing. In this problem n boolean vectors of size clogn are given for preprocessing. As a query, a vector v is given and we are required to verify if there is an input vector that is orthogonal to it or not. This OV indexing problem is interesting in its own, but it also likely to have strong implications on problems known to be conditionally hard, in terms of time complexity, based on OV. Having this in mind, we study OV indexing in this paper from many aspects. We give some space-efficient algorithms for the problem, show a tradeoff between space and query time, describe how to solve its reporting variant, shed light on an interesting connection between this problem and the well-studied SetDisjointness problem and demonstrate how it can be solved more efficiently on random input

    Tribute to Joseph Goldstein

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    Joseph Goldstein was a person of truly great public stature in our profession. When he died in March of this year, he left behind a legacy of extraordinary accomplishment. Joe was a superb and devoted teacher, as a professor of law on the Yale Law School faculty for more than forty years. He was also a creative and brilliant scholar and a prolific author

    Tribute to Joseph Goldstein

    No full text
    Joseph Goldstein was a person of truly great public stature in our profession. When he died in March of this year, he left behind a legacy of extraordinary accomplishment. Joe was a superb and devoted teacher, as a professor of law on the Yale Law School faculty for more than forty years. He was also a creative and brilliant scholar and a prolific author

    GNOM v1.0: an optimized steady-state model of the modern marine neodymium cycle

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    © The Author(s), 2022. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Pasquier, B., Hines, S. K., Liang, H., Wu, Y., Goldstein, S. L., & John, S. G. GNOM v1.0: an optimized steady-state model of the modern marine neodymium cycle. Geoscientific Model Development, 15(11), (2022): 4625–4656. https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-15-4625-2022.Spatially distant sources of neodymium (Nd) to the ocean that carry different isotopic signatures (εNd) have been shown to trace out major water masses and have thus been extensively used to study large-scale features of the ocean circulation both past and current. While the global marine Nd cycle is qualitatively well understood, a complete quantitative determination of all its components and mechanisms, such as the magnitude of its sources and the paradoxical conservative behavior of εNd, remains elusive. To make sense of the increasing collection of observational Nd and εNd data, in this model description paper we present and describe the Global Neodymium Ocean Model (GNOM) v1.0, the first inverse model of the global marine biogeochemical cycle of Nd. The GNOM is embedded in a data-constrained steady-state circulation that affords spectacular computational efficiency, which we leverage to perform systematic objective optimization, allowing us to make preliminary estimates of biogeochemical parameters. Owing to its matrix representation, the GNOM model is additionally amenable to novel diagnostics that allow us to investigate open questions about the Nd cycle with unprecedented accuracy. This model is open-source and freely accessible, is written in Julia, and its code is easily understandable and modifiable for further community developments, refinements, and experiments.This work has been supported by the Simons Foundation (grant no. 426570SP to Seth G. John), the National Science Foundation (grant no. OCE-1736896 to Seth G. John and grant no. OCE-1831415 to Steven L. Goldstein and Sophia K. V. Hines), the Investment in Science Fund at WHOI and the John E. and Anne W. Sawyer Endowed Fund in Support of Scientific Staff (Sophia K. V. Hines), and the Storke Endowment of the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Columbia University (Steven L. Goldstein)

    The Disordered Spirit: A Portrait of Francisco Amighetti as Seen by Laura Goldstein

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    “The Disordered Spirit: Francisco Amighetti as seen by Laura Goldstein” addresses the paradox of the fragment and the whole inherent in the ideas of “essence” or “truth” through the work of Costa Rican artist and poet Francisco Amighetti, and offers some alternative perspectives to the anxiety of loss in literary translation. This investigation emphasizes the overuse of discussions on loss in translation and argues for the value of the fragment, particularly in Amighetti’s work, which falls in the Modernist period when poets and artists turned to the fragment through style, technique, and a confrontation with the past, but also more broadly to argue that the fragment has value through the choices of creative processes, language, and expression, the multiplicity of subjective experiences, order and disorder, and through the nature of memory and our universe. The dissertation also analyzes the creative work of Romanian-Brazilian writer Ștefan Baciu, who wrote poems responding to fragments of Amighetti’s poems, letters, and prose, and finally includes creative work by the author of the dissertation in the form of original poetry, poetry in translation, visual art (prints) and memoir, proposing that a translator can reveal the multiplicity of subjective experiences through the inclusion of their original creative work, especially when the translated poet is excluded from the canon as Francisco Amighetti and other Costa Rican poets have been

    The Disordered Spirit: A Portrait of Francisco Amighetti as Seen by Laura Goldstein

    No full text
    “The Disordered Spirit: Francisco Amighetti as seen by Laura Goldstein” addresses the paradox of the fragment and the whole inherent in the ideas of “essence” or “truth” through the work of Costa Rican artist and poet Francisco Amighetti, and offers some alternative perspectives to the anxiety of loss in literary translation. This investigation emphasizes the overuse of discussions on loss in translation and argues for the value of the fragment, particularly in Amighetti’s work, which falls in the Modernist period when poets and artists turned to the fragment through style, technique, and a confrontation with the past, but also more broadly to argue that the fragment has value through the choices of creative processes, language, and expression, the multiplicity of subjective experiences, order and disorder, and through the nature of memory and our universe. The dissertation also analyzes the creative work of Romanian-Brazilian writer Ștefan Baciu, who wrote poems responding to fragments of Amighetti’s poems, letters, and prose, and finally includes creative work by the author of the dissertation in the form of original poetry, poetry in translation, visual art (prints) and memoir, proposing that a translator can reveal the multiplicity of subjective experiences through the inclusion of their original creative work, especially when the translated poet is excluded from the canon as Francisco Amighetti and other Costa Rican poets have been
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