1,374,039 research outputs found

    Advanced Degree Recital: Susan Soderstrom, organ

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    Ms. Soderstrom is a student of Clyde Holloway.Toccata Quinta, Girolamo Frescobaldi (1583-1643) -- Prelude and Fugue in A Minor, BWV 543, Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) -- Do Not Go Gentle (For pedals alone), Vincent Persichetti (b. 1915) -- Symphony No. 1, Op. 14, Louis Vierne (1870-1937

    Edwin D. Soderstrom

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    The Oklahoma A&M College World War I Veterans collection captures the memories and experiences of the men and women of Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College who served in World War I. In 1919, a project headed by Maude Cass, the editor of the 1919 Redskin; Professor Maroney of the Department of History; Margaret Walters, Librarian; and J.W. Cantwell, the College President, was undertaken to survey these veterans. The surveys were returned along with photographs, letters, and newspaper clippings documenting these veterans’ experiences during World War I

    Data for: Cannabidiol improves vocal learning-dependent recovery from, and reduces magnitude of deficits following, damage to a cortical-like brain region in a songbird pre-clinical animal model

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    KL distance measures of phonology, typical syllable transition measures of syntax and production data and analyses

    DS_10.1177_0001839219836670 – Supplemental material for Organizational Structure from Interaction: Evidence from Corporate Sustainability Efforts

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    Supplemental material, DS_10.1177_0001839219836670 for Organizational Structure from Interaction: Evidence from Corporate Sustainability Efforts by Sara B. Soderstrom and Klaus Weber in Administrative Science Quarterly</p

    Emerging Threats to Human Rights: Resources, Violence, and Deprivation of Citizenship, edited by Heather Smith-Cannoy

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    Emerging Threats to Human Rights: Resources, Violence, and Deprivation of Citizenship, edited by Heather Smith-Cannoy. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2019. 288 pages. ISBN-10: 1439917191; ISBN-13: 978-1439917190. RRP: A$93.00, paperback. Reviewed by Kelly Soderstrom, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia

    20190918_Supplemental_Material – Supplemental material for From Paradoxical Thinking to Practicing Sustainable Business: The Role of a Business Collective Organization in Supporting Entrepreneurs

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    Supplemental material, 20190918_Supplemental_Material for From Paradoxical Thinking to Practicing Sustainable Business: The Role of a Business Collective Organization in Supporting Entrepreneurs by Sara B. Soderstrom and Kathryn L. Heinze in Organization & Environment</p

    Eremocaulon Soderstrom & Londono 1987

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    Eremocaulon Soderstrom & Londoño (1987: 37). TYPE:— Eremocaulon aureofimbriatum Soderstrom & Londoño (1987: 37). Plants cespitose. Culms homomorphic, erect below, arching and clambering above, often supported by trees, 2.5–20 m tall, infra- and supranodal bands of trichomes usually absent [present in E. capitatum (Trinius 1835: 626) Londoño in Londoño & Clark (2002: 714)]. Branch complement with one dominant and smaller secondary branches, without thorns. Culm leaves and foliage leaves clearly distinct. Culm leaves not clearly differentiated along the culm, with reflexed blades, narrower than the sheath summit, sheath fimbriae present. Foliage leaf sheaths with fimbriae at the apex or not, translucent swelling absent, outer ligule present, blades narrowly triangular, ovate-lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, midnerve prominent. Synflorescences terminal to leafy, indeterminate, 1–15 pseudospikelets per coflorescence, coflorescences either with one to few pseudospikelets and open or with several to many pseudospikelets and congested to capitate, each coflorescence and paraclade or pseudospikelet with one subtending bract; pseudospikelets sessile, bisexual, glumes absent, comprising 1 prophyll, 0–4 gemmiparous bracts, with 1–17 fertile anthecium, smooth, and with 1–4 terminal rudimentary anthecium. Fruit a basic caryopsis, hilum linear, as long as the caryopsis. Eremocaulon is a woody bamboo genus endemic to Brazil (Londoño & Clark 2002, Kellogg 2015, Jesus-Costa et al. 2018). It is characterized by its branch complement with one dominant and smaller secondary branches, without thorns, infra- and supranodal bands of trichomes absent (present in E. capitatum), culm leaves with reflexed blades, narrower than the sheath, foliage leaves with midnerve prominent and synflorescences composed of pseudospikelets (Londoño & Clark 2002). The genus has five species in the Amazon, Cerrado and Mata Atlântica domains (Lopes-Neto et al. 2020). In the Serra do Cachimbo, the genus is represented by one species.Published as part of Lopes-Neto, Raimundo Balieiro & Viana, Pedro Lage, 2022, Flora of the Serra do Cachimbo (Eastern Amazon, Brazil): Bambusoideae (Poaceae), including the description of two new species, pp. 99-129 in Phytotaxa 550 (2) on page 107, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.550.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/664108

    Frequency domain identification of autoregressive models in the presence of additive noise

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    This paper describes a new approach for identifying autoregressive models from a finite number of measurements, in presence of additive and uncorrelated white noise. As a major novelty, the proposed approach deals with frequency domain data. In particular, two different frequency domain algorithms are proposed. The first algorithm is based on some theoretical results concerning the so-called dynamic Frisch Scheme. The second algorithm maps the AR identification problem into a quadratic eigenvalue problem. Both methods resemble in many aspects some other identification algorithms, originally developed in the time domain. The features of the proposed methods are compared each other and with those of other time domain algorithms by means of Monte Carlo simulations

    Direct measurement of the 19F(p,α)16O reaction using the LHASA detector array

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    The low-energy 19F(p,α)16O reaction has significant implications for nuclear astrophysics. The 19F(p, α)16O reaction occurs via three channels: (p,α0), (p,απ), and (p,αγ). At lower temperatures, below 0.15 GK, the (p,α0) channel is the dominant contributor of the reaction. The 19F(p,α0)16O reaction cross section in the energy range of 400–900 keV was studied in this work. Recent data in the literature reveals a roughly 1.4 increase compared to prior findings reported in the NACRE (Nuclear Astrophysics Compilation of REactions) compilation. Therefore, we present new additional result of the study published in EPJA [22] employing a silicon strip detector array (LHASA - Large High-resolution Array of Silicon for Astrophysics). The anguar distributions, the reaction cross sections and the astrophysical S-factors of the (p,α0) channel were obtained through this experiment. Our findings resolve the discrepancies that exist between the two previously available data sets in the literature
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