652 research outputs found
Jared Brown Discusses His Book
A Bloomington Normal author and retired theater professor has published his first work of fiction. WGLT’s Charlie Schlenker has more, on the mysteries of Jared Brown
[Letter] 1846 February 22, Cambridge (Mass.) [to] Geo. W. Greene / Jared Sparks.
Sparks confirms receipt of Greene\u27s letter and the manuscript from the Boston post office by the last steamer. Sparks requests that Greene make out a list of the contents of each chapter. Sparks recommends that Greene refrain from sending a duplicate of the manuscript until confirming the safe delivery of the original. American historian Jared Sparks wrote about the Early Republic period in American history, publishing on Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, and the American Revolution. He also wrote a _Life of Gouverneur Morris_ (1832), and was a professor at Harvard at the time this letter was written (1839-49); he would later assume the duties of President of Harvard (1849-53). The work alluded to here is _The Life of Nathanael Greene, Major-General in the Army of the Revolution_ (1867-71). George Washington Greene (1811-1883) was an author, educator and historian
Figure S7 each sample vs all samples pooled
Figure S7 each sample vs all samples pooled.Gene transcription during early embryo development in the spiny mouse (Acomys cahirinus)Jared Mamrot1,2*, David K Gardner3, Peter Temple-Smith2,4, Hayley Dickinson1,2.1 The Ritchie Centre, Hudson Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne, Australia.2 Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.3 School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.4 Education Program in Reproduction and Development, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.* Corresponding author: Jared Mamrot ([email protected])</div
Celestial Bodies
Celestial Bodies
Jared C. White
ABSTRACT
The following is a collection of original poetry written over a span of three years while attending the University of South Florida. The poetry is divided into five numbered sections, marking the major thematic divisions. Preceding the poetry is a critical introduction to the work that outlines the author\u27s developing thematic ideology
Corrigendum to “Ultrasound-Guided Cervical Cervicis Plane Block for Postoperative Pain Control in Cervical Spine Surgery: A Technical Note”
The authors regret that Dr. Jared Pisapia was omitted from the author list. Dr. Pisapia has now been added to the author list under affiliation: Department of Neurosurgery, Westchester Medical Center/New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York, USA The authors would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused
Figure S7 each sample vs all samples pooled
Figure S7 each sample vs all samples pooled.<div><br></div><div><p>Gene transcription during early embryo development in the spiny mouse (Acomys cahirinus)</p></div><div><div>Jared Mamrot1,2*, David K Gardner3, Peter Temple-Smith2,4, Hayley Dickinson1,2.</div><div><sub>1 The Ritchie Centre, Hudson Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne, Australia.</sub></div><div><sub>2 Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.</sub></div><div><sub>3 School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.</sub></div><div><sub>4 Education Program in Reproduction and Development, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.</sub></div><div><sub>* Corresponding author: Jared Mamrot ([email protected])</sub></div></div><div><br></div>
Should Pornography that Patently Objectifies Women be Banned?
The debate around banning pornography that objectifies women fractured the feminist movement. Future attempts to outlaw pornography will follow the precedent set forth in Osbourne v. Ohio and attempt to ban pornography in order to protect public health and safety.
Author information: Jared Kelly is a fourth-year political science and geography student at UC Berkeley. In his free time, he enjoys playing chess, hiking, classic films, and reading historical fiction
Aggregate Games: Computations and Applications
Existing computational game theory studies consider compact representations of games that capture agent interaction in real-world environments and examine computation aspects of computing equilibrium concepts to analyze or predict agent behavior.
One of the most well-studied representations that capture many commonly studied real-world environments is aggregate games. Aggregate games, first systematically studied by Nobel laureate Reinhard Selten, have various applications in modeling the decision-making interdependence of agents, where each agent’s utility function depends on their own actions and the aggregations or summarizations of the actions of all agents. These applications include Cournot oligopoly competition, public good contribution, and voting, where an agent’s action (e.g., goods to produce) depends only on the aggregation of all other agents’ actions (e.g., total goods produced).
For the first part of this thesis, we extend aggregate games to model two new complementary non-cooperative game-theoretic scenarios capturing certain aspects of real-world characteristics that are not known to be modeled by aggregate games previously. For the first scenario, we introduce (collaborative) public project contribution games with thresholds, where each agent determines which projects to contribute to and each project\u27s success depends on the total contribution exceeding their threshold. The thresholds model project failure from insufficient contributions not modeled by prior work. The second scenario examines (competitive) multi-dimensional congestion games, where each agent determines which resources to use and the cost of using each resource depending on its total demands in multiple dimensions. These games are a recent extension of the popular congestion games. For these two games and their variants, we examine the open computational complexity of determining and computing Nash Equilibria (NE), a fundamental solution concept in game theory, and related problems.
For the second part of this thesis, we consider aggregate games and examine open computational questions on NE and strong NE, which extends NE for agent coalitions, utilizing insights from the first part of this thesis. We also demonstrate how aggregate game computational results (e.g., algorithms for NE and strong NE) are applicable to several popular games.
Advisor: Hau Cha
Technical Direction of Shakespeare in Love
This document is a thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the Master of Fine Arts degree in theatre. It is a detailed account of author Jared Shofstall’s technical direction process for Minnesota State University, Mankato’s production of Shakespeare in Love in the fall of 2019. This thesis chronicles the author’s process from pre-production through post production in five chapters: an early production analysis and a process development analysis. Appendices and works cited are included
Walking the Labyrinth: Considering Mental Health Consumer Experience, Meaning Making, and the Illumination of the Sacred in a Forensic Mental Health Service
Abstract
Date Presented 3/30/2017
This novel qualitative research considers outcomes for 12 participants in the Walking the Labyrinth program at the Southwest Centre for Forensic Mental Health Care. Potential care applications are identified, including the link between mental health care planning and labyrinth participation.
Primary Author and Speaker: Clark Patrick Heard
Contributing Authors: Rev. Stephen Yeo, Jared Scott</jats:p
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