19 research outputs found
Author Correction: Combined inhibition of BET family proteins and histone deacetylases as a potential epigenetics-based therapy for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma
Correction to: Neuromodulation for Gait Disorders
Multiple corrections provided by the author were not updated in this chapter, which are mentioned hereby. The below errors have been corrected in this chapter
Report from the Chronicle by Stefan Ranatowicz CRL (1617-1694) on biographies of provosts of the Corpus Christi monastery of Canons Regular of Lateran - Krakow Congregation (from Konrad Aleman to Wiktoryn Wereszczynski)
The presented article is a discussion of biographies of 13 subsequent provosts of the monastery of Canons Regular of Lateran of Krakow Congregation, at the Corpus Christi church in Kazimierz district. The author of the chronicle, father Stefan Ranatowicz, lived in the years 1617-1694, in Kazimierz near Krakow, where he learned at the parish school at the Corpus Christi church and studied at the Krakow Academy (in the years 1635-1636). In the autumn of 1636, he joined the congregation of Canons Regular of Lateran. He was one of the leading historiographers of his order. His most important work is the Chronicle with the Latin title: Casimiriae civitatis, urbi Cracoviensi confrontatae, origo. In eaque ecclesiarum erectiones et religiosorum fundationes, nec non series, vitae, res gestae praepositorum Conventus Canonicorum Regularium Lateranensium S[ancti] Augustini ad Ecclesiam S[acratis]S[imi] Corporis Christi descriptae a Stephano Ranothowicz eiusdem conventus et Ecclesiae Canonico Regul[ari] professo. Its main section contains biographies of provosts of the Krakow monastery, from Konrad Aleman to Wiktoryn Wereszczyński. Apart from topics related directly with monastic matters, the author also discussed many issues relating to daily, religious, as well as cultural life of Kazimierz and Krakow, and also often mentioned social and economic matters concerning also the entire Polish State
Relacja kroniki Stefana Ranatowicza CRL (1617-1694) na temat biogramów prepozytów klasztoru Bożego Ciała Kanoników Regularnych Laterańskich Kongregacji Krakowskiej (od Konrada Alemana do Wiktoryna Wereszczyńskiego)
The presented article is a discussion of biographies of 13 subsequent provosts of the monastery of Canons Regular of Lateran of Krakow Congregation, at the Corpus Christi church in Kazimierz district. The author of the chronicle, father Stefan Ranatowicz, lived in the years 1617-1694, in Kazimierz near Krakow, where he learned at the parish school at the Corpus Christi church and studied at the Krakow Academy (in the years 1635-1636). In the autumn of 1636, he joined the congregation of Canons Regular of Lateran. He was one of the leading historiographers of his order. His most important work is the Chronicle with the Latin title: Casimiriae civitatis, urbi Cracoviensi confrontatae, origo. in eaque ecclesiarum erectiones et religiosorum fundationes, nec non series, vitae, res gestae praepositorum Conventus Canonicorum Regularium Lateranensium S[ancti] Augustini ad Ecclesiam S[acratis]S[imi] Corporis Christi descriptae a Stephano Ranothowicz eiusdem conventus et Ecclesiae Canonico Regul[ari] professo. Its main section contains biographies of provosts of the Krakow monastery, from Konrad Aleman to Wiktoryn Wereszczyński. Apart from topics related directly with monastic matters, the author also discussed many issues relating to daily, religious, as well as cultural life of Kazimierz and Krakow, and also often mentioned social and economic matters concerning also the entire Polish State
The report from the chronicle by Stefan Ranatowicz CRL (1617-1694) on the biographies of the provosts of the Corpus Christi monastery of Canons Regular of the Lateran of the Cracow congregation (from Konrad Aleman to Wiktoryn Wereszczyński)
The presented article is a discussion of biographies of 13 subsequent provosts of the monastery of Canons Regular of Lateran of Krakow Congregation, at the Corpus Christi church in Kazimierz district. The author of the chronicle, father Stefan Ranatowicz, lived in the years 1617-1694, in Kazimierz near Krakow, where he learned at the parish school at the Corpus Christi church and studied at the Krakow Academy (in the years 1635-1636). In the autumn of 1636, he joined the congregation of Canons Regular of Lateran. He was one of the leading historiographers of his order. His most important work is the Chronicle with the Latin title: Casimiriae civitatis, urbi Cracoviensi confrontatae, origo. in eaque ecclesiarum erectiones et religiosorum fundationes, nec non series, vitae, res gestae praepositorum Conventus Canonicorum Regularium Lateranensium S[ancti] Augustini ad Ecclesiam S[acratis]S[imi] Corporis Christi descriptae a Stephano Ranothowicz eiusdem conventus et Ecclesiae Canonico Regul[ari] professo. Its main section contains biographies of provosts of the Krakow monastery, from Konrad Aleman to Wiktoryn Wereszczyński. Apart from topics related directly with monastic matters, the author also discussed many issues relating to daily, religious, as well as cultural life of Kazimierz and Krakow, and also often mentioned social and economic matters concerning also the entire Polish State
Automated Driving Systems Advancement for Higher Energy Efficiency and Carbon Emissions Reduction
abstract: Research studies on improving Automated Driving Systems (ADS) have focused mainly on enhancing safety, through the development of more sophisticated sensors that have the ability to detect objects promptly. Safety is indeed a priority especially when the public has raised concerns regarding unmanned vehicles failing to make informed decisions in unforeseen situations, for example, the Uber Automated Vehicle (AV) crash that happened in Arizona, in 2018 (Griggs & Wakabayashi, 2018). However, one question still remains suppositious: How will the continuous development of AVs impact carbon emissions and energy consumption? Since many automakers claim that automated driving is part of the future of mobility, there is a possibility that automated driving could promote the use of alternative clean fuels like electric batteries and support further travels with the least amount of energy. Therefore, this paper discusses how new ADS technologies with energy-saving benefits, will enable multiple levels of vehicle autonomy to perform efficiently and cause less environmental impacts. In addition, this paper discusses prospective developments in other industries, that could emerge to compliment the next generation ADS technologies and also help decrease the global energy demand that is projected to increase by some 28 percent between now and the year 2040 (“EIA projects 28% increase in world energy use by 2040 - Today in Energy - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA),” n.d.
STUDI MORFOLOGI SERBUK SARI PADA BEBERAPA VARIETAS Coleus scutellarioides L.
Coleus scutellarioides is Labiatae. It have much varieties based on the leave shapes and colors. In the identification is not enough based on morpho-logical organ characters, but it can also based on the pollen morphology. The purpose of this study to determine the pollen morphology of seven varieties of Coleus scutellarioides. The research was conducted in the laboratory of Botany Department of Biology, State University of Padang, in April-May 2012. Seven varieties of Coleus used came from Padang Panjang and Lintau Buo. Pollen taken from bloomed flowers and it made be slides used acetolisis methods and 1% safranin staining method. Data were analyzed descriptively included pollen unit, polarity, symmetrically, size, shape, aperture, and the shape of pollen surface. The seven Coleus pollen varieties have similirity of the type of monad pollen unit, polarity isopolar type, radial symmetry, type colpate with 6 aperture located in the equatorial (Stephano), and reticulate surface-shaped pollen. Prolate spheroid shapes found in var. Eleanor, subprolate forms in var. Batique Fetish, var. Fack, var. Apricot, var. Burgundy Giant, var. Eleanor, and var. Flambe. Whereas prolate shapes found in var. Batique Fetish, var. Fack, and var. Va Va Boom. Pollen morphology of seven varieties of Coleus scutellarioides have different shape and the author have found 3 shape of pollen as the prolate spheroidal, subprolate and prolate.Key words: pollen, Coleus scutellarioides, identificatio
Studi Morfologi Serbuk Sari Pada Beberapa Varietas Coleus Scutellarioides L.
Coleus scutellarioides is Labiatae. It have much varieties based on the leave shapes and colors. In the identification is not enough based on morpho-logical organ characters, but it can also based on the pollen morphology. The purpose of this study to determine the pollen morphology of seven varieties of Coleus scutellarioides. The research was conducted in the laboratory of Botany Department of Biology, State University of Padang, in April-May 2012. Seven varieties of Coleus used came from Padang Panjang and Lintau Buo. Pollen taken from bloomed flowers and it made be slides used acetolisis methods and 1% safranin staining method. Data were analyzed descriptively included pollen unit, polarity, symmetrically, size, shape, aperture, and the shape of pollen surface. The seven Coleus pollen varieties have similirity of the type of monad pollen unit, polarity isopolar type, radial symmetry, type colpate with 6 aperture located in the equatorial (Stephano), and reticulate surface-shaped pollen. Prolate spheroid shapes found in var. Eleanor, subprolate forms in var. Batique Fetish, var. Fack, var. Apricot, var. Burgundy Giant, var. Eleanor, and var. Flambe. Whereas prolate shapes found in var. Batique Fetish, var. Fack, and var. Va Va Boom. Pollen morphology of seven varieties of Coleus scutellarioides have different shape and the author have found 3 shape of pollen as the prolate spheroidal, subprolate and prolate
Author Correction: Cancer cell responses to Hsp70 inhibitor JG-98: Comparison with Hsp90 inhibitors and finding synergistic drug combinations
A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.</jats:p
Decolonial Everywhere Study and Planning Group
Decolonial Everywhere Study & Planning Group
The Decolonial Everywhere Study & Planning Group emerged out of dialogues following meetings between members and researchers involved with the Silent University at the 2016 Impulse Theatre Festival, Mülheim an der Ruhr. It is an attempt to continue these dialogues and the critical, collective spirit we found in Mülheim.
Our Study & Planning Group is both a part of and in excess of the usual operations of the Universities with which our Group is affiliated (the Silent University, the University of New South Wales, Australia) - it is an ‘overflow' of its existing institutional operations for the purposes of speculating the extent to which such operations may be expanded, re-thought and practiced differently.
For us, this includes exploring the extent to which our intellectual and activist practices can support broader movements around decolonizing the university and knowledge.
We take the opportunity presented by PSi and its themes of ‘overflow’ to think beyond the limits of individuality and personal practice and labour in order to study and plan collectively (following Stephano Harney and Fred Moten) and help realise a decolonial option for knowledge everywhere.
With invited guests (from the Lampedusa in Hamburg group and others who share our concerns) we will lead a 4 day study and planning meeting, with the first day immediately preceding the PSi conference, and with the subsequent days taking place during the conference.
The Decolonial Everywhere Study & Planning Group is:
Abimbola Odugbesan, Lecturer at the Silent University, Hamburg, founding member of Lampedusa in Hamburg, member of the organizing committee for the 2016 International conference of Refugees & Migrants in Hamburg, and contributing author to The Silent University: Towards a Transversal Pedagogy (Sternberg Press, Berlin, 2016)
Verónica Tello - researcher based at the National Institute for Experimental Arts, UNSW Australia, and author of Counter-Memorial Aesthetics: Refugee Histories and the Politics of Contemporary Art (Bloomsbury, London/New York, 2016)
Christina Thomopoulos - member of the Silent University Athens Assembly, a organiser of Archaeological Dialogues 2016, "Limits and Borders", at the University of Aegean, Greece and contributing author to The Silent University: Towards a Transversal Pedagogy (Sternberg Press, Berlin, 2016
