949 research outputs found
Popper: Cello Concertos (CD recording)
Repertoire: David Popper: Cello Concertos Nos. 1-4. Rummel, M. (soloist) Mari Kato (piano) Czech Chamber Philharmonic (orchestra) Evans, T. (conductor)https://youtu.be/RnkTPR8Nri
Erinaceidae (Mammalia, Erinaceomorpha) from the Middle Miocene fissure filling Petersbuch 68 (southern Germany)
David Popper: Concerto for Cello and Orchestra No. 3, Op. 59 (Full Score)
This is the first modern edition of this work since its first print in the 1880s. We aligned the orchestral score with Popper's later cello/piano reduction, where he made some minor and some more substantial changes/additions so that performance material is now consistent. This edition is the basis for our forthcoming recording for the Naxos label
Action Event Discrimination
Sionti M, Schack T. Action Event Discrimination. In: Funke J, Rummel J, Voß A, eds. Abstracts of the 58th Conference of Experimental Psychologists (TeaP 2016). Lengerich: Pabst Science Publishers; 2016: 325
Movement plans for posture selection do not transfer across hands
Schütz C, Schack T. Movement plans for posture selection do not transfer across hands. In: Funke J, Rummel J, Voß A, eds. Abstracts of the 58th Conference of Experimental Psychologists (TeaP 2016). Lengerich: Pabst Science Publishers; 2016: 314
I Intend to Rewrite and Supplement All Published Genealogical Books...: A Letter of V. V. Rummel to V. V. Golubtsov
The article offers a source analysis of the only surviving letter written by the famous genealogist, author of the two-volume Genealogical collection of Russian noble families, Witold Vladislavovich Rummel to his co-author on this collection, the Perm landowner, amateur local historian and genealogist Vladimir Vladimirovich Golubtsov, dated July 29, 1884 and sent from Simansky Log, his St. Petersburg estate, to the Urals. It is stored in the personal provenance fond of the Perm landowners Golubtsovs in the State Archive of Sverdlovsk Region. Written in the early days of the two well-known genealogists acquaintance, it contains information on ways the two specialists exchanged specific genealogical information, complementing each other's data on the history of well- and little-known genealogic trees, mostly in some way related to the Golubtsov family. The letter allows to gain an impression of Rummel's literary taste and to partially reconstruct the structure of Witold's library: it lists 18 books used by the genealogist, when compiling genealogical lists, and thus demonstrates Rummel's sources. Finally, Rummel shared his plans for the publication of the collection and invited Vladimir Vladimirovich to send him any new data to complement the published materials on the noble families. It was after this letter that the Perm researcher seriously thought about the possibility of publishing his work and offered Rummel to act as his collaborator and companion and to finance the publication. Thus, this document marks a beginning of joint work on preparation and publication of the Genealogical collection of Russian noble families, the book still considered quite authoritative in studying genealogy of noble families, as it provided the scientific methodology and greatly expanded the possibilities of genealogical research
I Intend to Rewrite and Supplement All Published Genealogical Books...: A Letter of V. V. Rummel to V. V. Golubtsov
The article offers a source analysis of the only surviving letter written by the famous genealogist, author of the two-volume Genealogical collection of Russian noble families, Witold Vladislavovich Rummel to his co-author on this collection, the Perm landowner, amateur local historian and genealogist Vladimir Vladimirovich Golubtsov, dated July 29, 1884 and sent from Simansky Log, his St. Petersburg estate, to the Urals. It is stored in the personal provenance fond of the Perm landowners Golubtsovs in the State Archive of Sverdlovsk Region. Written in the early days of the two well-known genealogists acquaintance, it contains information on ways the two specialists exchanged specific genealogical information, complementing each other's data on the history of well- and little-known genealogic trees, mostly in some way related to the Golubtsov family. The letter allows to gain an impression of Rummel's literary taste and to partially reconstruct the structure of Witold's library: it lists 18 books used by the genealogist, when compiling genealogical lists, and thus demonstrates Rummel's sources. Finally, Rummel shared his plans for the publication of the collection and invited Vladimir Vladimirovich to send him any new data to complement the published materials on the noble families. It was after this letter that the Perm researcher seriously thought about the possibility of publishing his work and offered Rummel to act as his collaborator and companion and to finance the publication. Thus, this document marks a beginning of joint work on preparation and publication of the Genealogical collection of Russian noble families, the book still considered quite authoritative in studying genealogy of noble families, as it provided the scientific methodology and greatly expanded the possibilities of genealogical research
The neurophysiology of the interference of grasping movements in functionally separate working memory processes
Gündüz Can R, Schack T, Koester D. The neurophysiology of the interference of grasping movements in functionally separate working memory processes. In: Funke J, Rummel J, Voß A, eds. Abstracts of the 58th Conference of Experimental Psychologists (TeaP 2016). Lengerich: Pabst Science Publishers; 2016: 111
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