1,783 research outputs found

    MARC 21 para recursos contínuos

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    Translation and adaptation of the MARC 21 Format for Bibliographic Data, and MARC 21 Format for Holdings Data, Network Development and MARC Standards Office, Library of Congress, USA, by Angela Salles. Rio de Janeiro, 2010. 2 v. V.1 MARC 21 format for bibliographic data (updated until October 2010). V.2 MARC 21 format for data collection (Holdings) (updated until October 2008)

    MARC 21 para recursos contínuos.

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    Tradução e adaptação de MARC 21 Format for Bibliographic Data e MARC 21 Format for Holdings Data, da Network Development and MARC Standards Office, da Library of Congress, USA, por Angela Salles

    NJBankers 2015 Economic Survey: Final Analysis and Report of Survey Findings

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    This is the fifth annual Economic Survey. The survey inquires about national and state current economic assessments, as well as six-month projections; expectations about long-term and short-term interest rates; commercial real estate submarket and loan demand; and residential loan and refinance demand. The survey also explores real estate values, currently and expected, as well as a set of negative indicators and common obstacles to lending. The survey series probes metrics about the national, state, and banking market economies in order to better understand, and, in turn, better facilitate the growth, development, and common interests of the banking sector in the state of New Jersey. Conducted by the Bloustein Center for Survey Research (BCSR) under the direction of James Hughes, Marc Weiner and BCSR senior research specialist Orin Puniello,Conducted for New Jersey Bankers Association"January 2015

    J.C. Bach's London keyboard sonatas : style and context

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    J. C. Bach's keyboard works include several sets of accompanied sonatas, a genre that enjoyed a wide popularity during the Classical era, but never found its way into the concert repertoire. The accompanied sonata was a genre meant for domestic performance; the solo keyboard sonata, on the other hand, was adopted in due course by concert audiences. J. C. Bach composed works within both genres during most of his productive years, and his output constitutes a corpus of remarkable consistency. J. C. Bach's removal to London in 1762 coincided with his clear adoption of a galant style, marked by the Italianate influence, and the abandonment of most Baroque traits. The British milieu provided additional factors: the rise of the pianoforte, a thriving music-publishing market, and a great interest in domestic music making among the affluent classes. These factors marked J. C. Bach's output at various levels. Keyboard works had to conform to the proficiency of the amateur performer, a fact reflected in the accompanied output mostly. The number of movements, their length, and the inclusion of particular technical devices are readily observable differences between the two genres. The most remarkable distinction lies perhaps in the preference for binary sonata format in the accompanied. sonatas from the mid 1760s to the 1770s, in spite of a later tendency for tripartite designs in both genres. J. C. Bach's lifelong preference for motivic phrase structure conditioned his keyboard production and partly explains the gap in quality between some of his works and sonatas composed around the same time by Haydn and Mozart, who developed more effective means to connect the melodic material to higher structural units. J. C. Bach's influence, however, endured in Mozart's handling of melody, and his keyboard production constitutes, in spite of some flaws, a noteworthy example of elegance and craftsmanship

    NJBankers 2017-18 Economic Survey: Final Anaylsis and Report of Survey Results

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    Under the direction of James Hughes, the Bloustein School surveyed all 92 member institutions of the New Jersey Bankers Association and received a 73 percent response rate. This year’s survey results indicate a soaring confidence in the US economy. Nearly 85 percent of respondents indicated the national economy’s health as “good,” and a record 10 percent rated it as “excellent.” For the first time in the survey’s history, no one rated it as “poor.” While somewhat more muted than sentiments toward the national economy, confidence in the NJ economy is nonetheless surging. 42 percent of respondents rated New Jersey’s economic health as “good” in 2018, compared to 15 percent in 2016. Still, 2018 marks the eighth consecutive year in which no respondent has rated New Jersey’s economy as “excellent.”Survey conducted for New Jersey Bankers Association by Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy. Field period: February 26-April 20, 2018. Published May, 2018

    Erratum: An algorithm-based topographical biomaterials library to instruct cell fate (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2011) 108, 40 (16565-16570) DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1109861108)

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    APPLIED BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES Correction for “An algorithm-based topographical biomaterials library to instruct cell fate,” by Hemant V. Unadkat, Marc Hulsman, Kamiel Cornelissen, Bernke J. Papenburg, Roman K. Truckenmüller, Gerhard F. Post, Marc Uetz, Marcel J. T. Reinders, Dimitrios Stamatialis, Clemens A. van Blitterswijk, and Jan de Boer, which appeared in issue 40, October 4, 2011, of Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (108:16565–16570; first published September 26, 2011; 10.1073/pnas.1109861108). The authors note that Anne E. Carpenter and Matthias Wessling should be added to the author list between Roman K. Truckenmüller and Gerhard F. Post. Anne E. Carpenter should be credited with analyzing data. Matthias Wessling should be credited with designing research. The corrected author and affiliation lines, and author contributions appear below. The online version has been corrected

    Author Disambiguation in PubMed: Evidence on the Precision and Recall of Author-ity among NIH-Funded Scientists.

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    We examined the usefulness (precision) and completeness (recall) of the Author-ity author disambiguation for PubMed articles by associating articles with scientists funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). In doing so, we exploited established unique identifiers-Principal Investigator (PI) IDs-that the NIH assigns to funded scientists. Analyzing a set of 36,987 NIH scientists who received their first R01 grant between 1985 and 2009, we identified 355,921 articles appearing in PubMed that would allow us to evaluate the precision and recall of the Author-ity disambiguation. We found that Author-ity identified the NIH scientists with 99.51% precision across the articles. It had a corresponding recall of 99.64%. Precision and recall, moreover, appeared stable across common and uncommon last names, across ethnic backgrounds, and across levels of scientist productivity

    Pseudovariety joins involving J-trivial semigroups

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    J. Rhodes asked during the Chico conference in 1986 for the calculation of joins of semigroup pseudovarieties. This paper proves that the join J v H of the pseudovariety J of J-trivial semigroups and of any 2-strongly decidable pseudovariety V of completely regular semigroups is decidable. This problem was proposed by the first author for V=G, the pseudovariety of finite groups.Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT) - Praxis/2/2.1/MAT/63/9

    Confirmation de la présence en France de Viola arvensis J. A. Murray subsp. megalantha Nauenb

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    Confirmation of the presence of Viola arvensis J.A. Murray subsp. megalantha Nauenb. in France. The author confirms the presence of Viola arvensis J. A. Murray subsp. megalantha Nauenb. in France (Bourgogne). This taxon is closely connected with Viola arvensis subsp. arvensis by general color of petals, pale yellow, and ecology (annual and ruderal). It is distinguishable from the type by the magnitude of corolla wich is adapted to an allogamic reproduction. The XIXth century french botanists (principally Jordan and Boreau) had soon described taxons that could be designed as Viola arvensis subsp. megalantha., but their real affinities must still be proved.La découverte dans l'Auxois (Bourgogne, département de la Côte-d'Or) d'une population de Viola arvensis J. A. Murray à grandes fleurs, nous a fait suspecter l'existence d'une sous-espèce assez récemment décrite de ce taxon : Viola arvensis subsp. megalantha Nauenb., Unters, Variab. ûkol. Syst. Viola tricolor-Gruppe : 81 (1986). L'analyse de sa diagnose et une étude morphologique fine de spécimens frais nous ont permis de confirmer la présence de ce taxon sur le territoire français. Ce Viola est très proche du Viola arvensis subsp. arvensis par la couleur de ses fleurs de teinte générale blanc-jaunâtre et par son écologie : espèce annuelle rudérale. Elle s'en distingue principalement par la grandeur de ses corolles qui l'oriente, à l'inverse du type, vers une reproduction de type allogame. Les botanistes français du XIXe siècle (Jordan et Boreau principalement) avaient déjà décrit des taxons qui pourraient s'apparenter à Viola arvensis subsp. megalantha. Une étude plus précise des spécimens d'herbier et des populations de ces anciens taxons permettrait de précier leurs affinités taxonomiques.Espeut Marc. Confirmation de la présence en France de Viola arvensis J. A. Murray subsp. megalantha Nauenb. In: Bulletin mensuel de la Société linnéenne de Lyon, 65ᵉ année, n°9, novembre 1996. pp. 296-304
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