1,083 research outputs found

    Austin Papers: Series IV, 1831-1834

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    Copy of transcript for a letter from Stephen R. Wiggins to Stephen F. Austin, in which Wiggins provides a reference for James Taylor. Wiggins also informs Austin that he receives frequent inquiries about settlement in Austin's colony and requests further information about Texas (Ex. the economy, growth, population and land features)

    Global dynamics, phase space transport, orbits homoclinic to resonances, and applications

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    This monograph, which grew out of a series of lectures delivered by Stephen Wiggins at the Fields Institute in early 1993, is concerned with the geometrical viewpoint of the global dynamics of nonlinear dynamical systems. With appropriate examples and concise explanations, Wiggins unites many different topics into one volume and makes a unique contribution to the field. Engineers, physicists, chemists, and mathematicians who work on issues related to the global dynamics of nonlinear dynamical systems will find these lectures very useful

    Marriage record of Washington, Stephen and Wiggins, Minie L.

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    Marriage license for Stephen Washington and Minnie L. Wiggins. H. Holman was the officiant

    The dynamics associated with the chaotic tangles of two dimensional quasiperiodic vector fields: theory and applications

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    Beigie, Darin; Leonard, Anthony; Wiggins, Stephen. (1991). The dynamics associated with the chaotic tangles of two dimensional quasiperiodic vector fields: theory and applications. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/1708

    The Good Drawing

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    A series of essays by artists, designers and historians that take as their subject "what is a good drawing". The book is an edited and augmented version of a day long conference held at the National Gallery In London as a part of a collaboration between, UAL, RMIT, Melbourne and the National Gallery, London

    Take Steps to Avoid Costly Litigation

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    Author\u27s biography: Mike Wiggins is an assistant professor in the Georgia Southern University School of Accountancy. He can be reached at [email protected]

    A Geometric Method for Detecting Semantic Coercion

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    In this paper we present state-of-the-art results on the computational classification of semantic type coercion, accomplished using a novel geometric method which is both context-sensitive and generalisable. We show that this method improves accuracy on a SemEval dataset over previous work, and gives promising results on a new more challenging experimental setup involving the same data. In addition to a description of our distributional semantic methodology and the results obtained on an established dataset, we offer an overview of the linguistic phenomenon of coercion and an analysis of the geometric features by which our results are achieved

    Ireland and its rulers; since 1829.

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    "Appendix. A plan of tenure reform for Ireland. By Stephen Barry": v. 1, p. [319]-353.Also attributed to John Wiggins. cf. Halkett & Laing, Anon. and pseud. lit. of Great Britain.Mode of access: Internet

    Ireland and its rulers; since 1829.

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    Halkett & Laing, Anon. and Pseud. lit. of Great Britain.Also attributed to John Wiggins. cf.Mode of access: Internet

    TQRMUL Dataset: Deborah's interview part 2 (audio only)

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    The TQRMUL dataset is a resource for use in the teaching of qualitative methods. It was developed between 2006 and 2008 by the Teaching Qualitative Research Methods at Undergraduate Level (TQRMUL) group, a working group of the Higher Education Academy Psychology Network (HEAPN). The resources were developed with a HEAPN ‘miniproject’ grant awarded to Stephen Gibson, Mike Forrester, Alasdair Gordon-Finlayson, Sarah Riley Rachel Shaw and Sally Wiggins. Other TQRMUL group members involved in one way or another include Colm Crowley, Siobhan Hugh-Jones, Nigel King and Cath Sullivan. The creation of the resources also benefitted from the support of Annie Trapp and Marina Crowe, and the assistance of Leah Beestin, Tanya Corker, Richard Ribeiro and Silvia Sbaraini, as well as the technical staff in the psychology departments at Liverpool John Moores University and the University of Kent
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