193,591 research outputs found

    PAUL BUSSELBERG Baritone DOCTORAL RECITAL Monday, April 4, 2005 8:00 p.m. Lillian H. Duncan Recital Hall

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    Playlist: Song / Philip Miller (b.1961) -- The Triple Foole / Philip Miller (b.1961) -- Buffalo Bill / Seth Ward (b.1974) -- the moon is rising in her hair / Seth Ward (b.1974) -- r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r / Seth Ward (b.1974) -- i thank you God / Seth Ward (b.1974) -- Jimmie's got a goil / Seth Ward (b.1974) -- Tagore Love songs for mezzo-soprano, baritone, and piano / Karim Al-Zand (b.1970) .This recital is given in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Doctor of Musical Arts degree

    Travelling theory: Western knowledge and its Indian object

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    From the1830s the colonial government in India became the agency for the promotion of ‘Western education’, that is, education that sought to disseminate modern, Western, rational knowledge through modern institutions and pedagogic processes. This paper examines a historical episode in which certain key categories of modern Western thought were pressed into service to explain a consequence of the dissemination of Western knowledge in colonial India. The episode in question was that of the alleged ‘moral crisis’ of the educated Indian, who, many argued, had been plunged into confusion and moral disarray following his exposure to Western knowledge in the schools and universities established by his British ruler. In the discourse of moral crisis, the knowledge being disseminated through Western education was simultaneously put to use in explaining an unanticipated effect of this education. How adequate was Western knowledge to explaining its own effects? More generally –for this paper is drawn from a larger study of how modern Western knowledge ‘travelled’ when transplanted to colonial India – what is the status of the knowledge we produce when we ‘apply’ the categories of modern Western thought in order to understand or explain India

    Marder, Seth R.

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    R code and data files for reproducing analyses and figures in Finnegan, Droser and Gehling "Unusually variable paleocommunity composition in the oldest metazoan fossil assemblages"

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    This dataset includes data files and R code (as an R Notebook) for reproducing all analyses and figures in the publication

    R code and data files for reproducing analyses and figures in Finnegan, Droser and Gehling "Unusually variable paleocommunity composition in the oldest metazoan fossil assemblages"

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    This dataset includes data files and R code (as an R Notebook) for reproducing all analyses and figures in the publication

    Appropriate Similarity Measures for Author Cocitation Analysis

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    We provide a number of new insights into the methodological discussion about author cocitation analysis. We first argue that the use of the Pearson correlation for measuring the similarity between authors’ cocitation profiles is not very satisfactory. We then discuss what kind of similarity measures may be used as an alternative to the Pearson correlation. We consider three similarity measures in particular. One is the well-known cosine. The other two similarity measures have not been used before in the bibliometric literature. Finally, we show by means of an example that our findings have a high practical relevance.information science;Pearson correlation;cosine;similarity measure;author cocitation analysis

    D-2502c: 185 West 500 North, Logan, Utah, Seth and Mary R. Budge residence

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    D-2502c: 185 West 500 North, Logan, Utah, Seth and Mary R. Budge residenc

    Spatially embedded dynamics and complexity

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    To gain a deeper understanding of the impact of spatial embedding on the dynamics of complex systems we employ a measure of interaction complexity developed within neuroscience using the tools of statistical information theory. We apply this measure to a set of simple network models embedded within Euclidean spaces of varying dimensionality in order to characterise the way in which the constraints imposed by low-dimensional spatial embedding contribute to the dynamics (rather than the structure) of complex systems. We demonstrate that strong spatial constraints encourage high intrinsic complexity, and discuss the implications for complex systems in general

    Seth Henry Benson, approximately 1866-1867

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    Carte-de-visite portrait of Seth Henry Benson (Norwich University Class of 1867), approximately 1866-1867, from a disassembled Alpha Sigma Pi photograph album; signed "In Α. Σ. Π., Benson, Adjt. - N. U.
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