1,778,304 research outputs found

    Kota Takeuchi, Memory Bug

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    Kota Takeuchi was artist in residency at Arts Catalyst's Centre during July 2016. His residency, at the invitation of Ele Carpenter, was organised by S-AIR in Japan in partnership with Arts Catalyst, supported by the Sasakawa Foundation and Agency for Cultural Affairs, the Government of Japan. The exhibition at Arts Catalyst was titled Memory Bug. During his time in the UK, Takeuchi researched the deep time concerns of monuments, site markers and memory around the UK and Belgium. He undertook field research at the Belgian underground research laboratory for the geologic storage of radioactive waste in partnership with Z33 and the Belgian nuclear waste agency NIRAS / NIROND. On Saturday 16 July curator and writer Eiko Honda will be in discussion with Kota Takeuchi, chaired by artist Kaori Homma from Art Action UK. He also participated in the Material Nuclear Culture exhibtiion at KARST Gallery, Plymouth, Curated by Ele Carpenter

    Conférence de M. Tsuguhito Takeuchi

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    Takeuchi Tsuguhito. Conférence de M. Tsuguhito Takeuchi. In: École pratique des hautes études, Section des sciences religieuses. Annuaire. Tome 111, 2002-2003. 2002. pp. 139-140

    John M. Takeuchi oral history

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    not peer reviewedSubmitted by Sandra Longen ([email protected]) on 2014-03-17T15:40:19Z No. of bitstreams: 2 Takeuchi Transcript.pdf: 417526 bytes, checksum: 40d4c67306aca0e0d84951a818fc4f77 (MD5) takeuchi.mp3: 58681469 bytes, checksum: cab477dabcec0ed8b6e582faca0e64ad (MD5)Made available in DSpace on 2014-03-17T15:40:19Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 Takeuchi Transcript.pdf: 417526 bytes, checksum: 40d4c67306aca0e0d84951a818fc4f77 (MD5) takeuchi.mp3: 58681469 bytes, checksum: cab477dabcec0ed8b6e582faca0e64ad (MD5) Previous issue date: 2010unpublishedJohn Takeuchi, Sangamon State University’s first architect, reminisces about overseeing the physical development of the University from 1970-1976. Takeuchi remembers individuals including SSU President Robert C. Spencer, Dean Collins (engineer), Wally Henderson (Architect), and Dick Williams. Takeuchi discusses his prior professional experience at the University of California Berkley, where he worked as an architect for twenty-two years. Takeuchi also relates his involvement in the architectural planning of the University of Louisville and Virginia Commonwealth University, after his departure from SSU. Takeuchi, along with his companion Gloria Morita since 2001, speak in detail about their experiences as Japanese-Americans during World War II, including their forced evacuation to internment camps by government policy. Interviewer by Cheryl Peck, former Director of Public Relations for SSU/UIS, 2010. 137 min., 39 pp

    【Dataset moved】Algorithm for obtaining the radiative intensity Iw

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    Hashimoto, Kento; Fukada, Toshiaki; Takeuchi, Shintaro. Algorithm for obtaining the radiative intensity Iw. The data used in Kento Hashimoto, Toshiaki Fukada, Shintaro Takeuchi, Sedimentation of conductive particles in a two-dimensional enclosure with conjugate heat transfer including surface-to-surface radiation, International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, Volume 251, 2025, 127194, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2025.127194

    Letter from Henry Takeuchi, Rohwer Incarceration Camp to Mr. [John Victor] Carson, Dominguez Estate Company, February 16, 1943

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    Acknowledges letter from Carson, see Item csudh_rsp_701. Takeuchi confirms selling flumes and pipes and states that buildings were not sold to Farm Product Company. Letter refers to personal property, buildings on land to rent and an assumed current tenant, Julian Rodriguez who he believes still occupies a building. Letter also asks for Carson to check a garage to survey it's contents; a foreman will not let a Mr. Wright check the items. Takeuchi sketches buildings on the leased land for Mr. Carson's use

    Yu Takeuchi

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    Yu Takeuchi is serving for JAXA since 2007 and currently working as Associate Senior Administrator at Management and Integration Department of Human Spaceflight Technology Directorate. He is also working as Researcher at the Institute of Space Law of Keio University. He received LL.M. degree from the Institute of Air and Space Law of McGill University in 2015. His main interest is in international space law inter alia the legal aspects of space traffic management and sustainable space development. He is a member of the Air Law Institute of Japan, Japanese Society of International Law, and the International Institute of Space Law (IISL). Main Works Published in English - “Toward the International Regime for Space Traffic Management -What to Fix the Current International Regulations-”, (November 5, 2014). Space Traffic Management Conference, Paper 23 (http://commons.erau.edu/stm/2014/wednesday/23). - “Regulatory Regime for Tomorrow’s Suborbital Space Flights: Point-to-point International Flights”, 56th Colloquium on the Law of Outer Space, 2013. - “Space Traffic Management as a Guiding Principle of the International Regime of Sustainable Space Activities,” 4 Journal of East Asia and International Law, 2011 - “Japanese Perspective on Legal Issues of Commercial Human Spaceflight” (co-author), 53rd Colloquium on the Law of Outer Space, 2011 - “Legal Points at Issue about NEO Threat Response and International Cooperation” (co-author), 28th International Symposium on Space Technology and Science, 2011 - “From Guideline to International Treaty for Rule of Law concerning Mitigation of Space Debris?” (co-author), 52nd Colloquium on the Law of Outer Space, 2010 Main Works Published in Japanese (title translated into English) - “What is Space Traffic Management”, Vol. 46, No.9, Journal of the Japanese Institute of International Business Law, 2018. - Soichiro Kozuka & Masahiko Sato eds., Introduction of Space Law for Entrepreneur (2nd. Ed.), Yuhikaku, 2018. (co-authored) -“Challenges to International Space Law for Managing Space Traffic”, 55 Kuho (Air Law), 2014. -“Legal Points as Issues of NEO Threat Response and International Cooperation” (co-author), 3 Spaceguard Research, Japan Spaceguard Association, 2011https://commons.erau.edu/stm-images/1121/thumbnail.jp

    Psychotria defretesiana Takeuchi, comb. et stat. nov.

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    Psychotria defretesiana (Takeuchi) Takeuchi, comb. et stat. nov. (Fig. 1) Basionym: Psychotria leptothyrsa Miq. var. defretesiana Takeuchi, Harvard Pap. Bot. 14: 176. 2009. Type:— INDONESIA. Papua Province: Baitanisa (Kwaneha), margin of swampy forest, 2°13'53"S, 137°19'10"E, 20 m, 10 May 2007, Takeuchi & Mogea 21645 (holotype: BO; isotypes: A, K). Unbranched subshrubs, 10–60 cm tall, glabrous. Stems erect, terete, 1–8 mm diam.; surfaces longitudinally (to transversely) wrinkled, brownish black, prominently marked by discoid abscission scars or not, lacking lenticels, periderm usually not flaking; internodes 4–20(–60) mm long. Leaves cauline, 4–10 per stem, equal, horizontally spreading; stipules ovate-deltate, 3.5–6.5 × 2–4 mm, often attenuate, caducous; petioles 5–35(–55) × 0.5–2 mm, planoconvex; leaf-blades oblanceolate-obovate (or elliptic), 5.4–15(–22) × (2.2–) 4.2–12.5 cm, chartaceous; base cuneate; margin entire, reflexed or not; apex acuminate, obtuse or truncate; lamina surfaces brown or fuliginous, dull; raphides pusticulate; domatia absent; venation usually camptodrome, secondaries (5–)8–13 per side, arcuate, (3–) 7–31 mm apart, at the lamina center with divergence angles of (50–)60–85°; reticulum irregular, coarsely areolate; midribs prominulous on both sides; higher order nerves weakly raised (or impressed) above, more raised beneath. Inflorescence terminal, narrowly paniculate, ca. 10.5 × 6 cm, solitary (rarely 2–3 together), erect, axes compressed or angulate, nigrescent; peduncle 30–63 × 0.4–1.5 mm; primary axis 9–37(–53) × 0.2–0.7 mm; lateral branches 3–4- verticillate, 5.5–15(–22) × 0.3–0.6 mm; primary bracts early-falling, the scarious base or its abscission scar persisting; floral bracts (if present) scalelike, triangular; pedicels 1–2.5 mm long, not articulated. Flowers 4(– 5)-merous, heterostylous, black; calyx discoid-cupuliform, 0.5–1 × 1.5–2 mm, truncate or obscurely denticulate; corolla infundibular, tube length 2.5–3 mm, proximal tube diameter 0.7–1.2 mm, distal tube diameter (1.2–) 2–2.5 mm, pilose at the throat (hair-band 0.6–1.1 mm wide) otherwise glabrous, lobes triangular-ovate, ca. 1 × 1 mm, reflexed; stamens antesepalous, filaments 0.5–0.6 mm long, inserted within the hair-band, anthers oblongoid, 0.6–0.7 × 0.1–0.2 mm; disk dome-shaped, ca. 0.5 mm across, fleshy; style cylindrical, ca. 1.5 mm long, with stigma below the hair-band (short-styled form), or ca. 2.5 mm long and exserted (long-styled form); stigma 2-lobed, the lobes longer in the long-styled flower. Infructescence ca. 15.5 × 9 cm; pedicels ca. 3 × 0.3 mm. Fruits arranged in loose cymules, obovoid, (6–)8–10 × 5.5–8 mm; exocarp black, usually furnished with pale raphides; calyx residue 4–5-toothed; pyrenes 2, conspicuously (2–)3–4- ridged on the back; preformed germination slits 2, marginal, extending ca. 1/2 the pyrene length starting from the base; seed coat without ethanol soluble pigments; endosperm not ruminate. Field characters: —Monocaulous dwarfs to 60 cm tall; stems often contorted-torulose, firm, black; leafblades chartaceous to fleshy-subcoriaceous, adaxially dark dull green, abaxially pale green or yellow-green; panicles terminal, erect, axes green or brownish green, verticillately branched; corolla barrel-shaped, obtuse in bud, white, lobes 4–5, reflexed at anthesis, white-hairy at the throat; styles dimorphic; fruits obovoidsubglobose, ca. 6 x 7 mm (Muller Range only—living drupes apparently larger in Mamberamo populations), green turning red when ripe; pyrenes (2–)3–4-ridged on the back, each ridge abruptly narrowed to a linear crest extending to the exocarp. Distribution: —Originally discovered in the lower Mamberamo drainage of Papua Province (Indonesia) and more recently recorded from the Muller Range of PNG (Fig. 2). Habitat and ecology: —Alluvial swamp understories at 20–50 m (Mamberamo), and lowland hill forest from 420–535 m (Muller Range). Occurring on seasonally inundated substrates, often rooted in mud, but also distributed across well-drained slopes. Restricted to densely shaded understories. Phenology: —Fruiting in May (Mamberamo drainage); flowering and fruiting in September (Muller Range). Additional specimens examined: — PAPUA NEW GUINEA. Western Province: Muller Range, Gugusu (Expedition Camp 1), lowland hill forest, 5°43.947'S, 142°15.973'E, 450 m, 7 September 2009, Takeuchi, Ama & Gamui 24504 (A, LAE); 5°43.786'S, 142°15.669'E, 420 m, 8 September 2009, Takeuchi et al. 24525 (A, K, LAE); 5°43.575'S, 142°15.630'E, 535 m, 9 September 2009, Takeuchi et al. 24560 (A, K, LAE); 5°43.780'S, 142°15.813'E, 505 m, 10 September 2009, Takeuchi et al. 24571 (A, LAE). When P. defretesiana was first described as a variety of P. leptothyrsa, only fruiting collections were available for study. The stipules and inflorescence were unknown. With recent acquisition of complete specimens from the Muller Range, the former assignment to the leptothyrsa complex has been reassessed. In the material now in hand, the short pedicels (1–2.5 mm long) and small flowers (corolla 2.5–3 mm long) are incompatible with any presumed relationship to P. leptothyrsa. Because of the differences now accruing, the former variety should stand as a separate species (see Table 1). a. entries from Sohmer (1988: 157–168). Psychotria is currently represented in New Guinea by at least seven monocaulous species, usually growing as subshrubs less than 1 m tall. The monocaulous-dwarf habit is less common among east Malesian Psychotria —for example in the Philippines there is only one species of similar stature and aspect to P. defretesiana and its allies (P. pygmaea Merr.; in Sohmer & Davis 2007: 94). Architectural reduction and simplification are frequently seen in other Papuasian genera (e.g., Ardisia hymenandroides [Takeuchi 2009a], Cyathea lamoureuxii [Takeuchi 2007b], Dysoxylum middletonianum [Takeuchi 2009c], Harpullia mabberleyana [Takeuchi 2011 in press], Zanthoxylum novoguineensis [Hartley 1975], etc.) and are nearly always associated (though perhaps only coincidentally) with restricted geographic distributions.Published as part of Takeuchi, Wayne, 2011, Additional notes on Psychotria (Rubiaceae) from the southern karst of Papua New Guinea: P. defretesiana comb. et stat. nov., P. dieniensis var. banakii var. nov., and P. stevedarwiniana sp. nov., pp. 19-27 in Phytotaxa 24 on pages 20-22, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.24.1.3, http://zenodo.org/record/489405

    yuichi-takeuchi/NiDaqControlPanel: NiDaqControlPanel v1.0.0

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    <p>The first release on 2017/06/17.</p&gt

    yuichi-takeuchi/miniAna: miniAna v1.0.1

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    <p>Changes on defalt settings.</p&gt

    yuichi-takeuchi/tNeuroshare: tNeuroshare v1.0.0

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    <p>The first release on 2017/06/10.</p&gt
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