6,620 research outputs found

    Author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012 /

    No full text
    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author Peter FitzSimons speaking at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 13 November 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia

    Dr. Craig Kinsley – Faculty Author Interview

    No full text
    Dr. Craig Kinsley, Professor of Psychology and co-author of Clinical Neuroscience, discusses this unique textbook that integrates neurobiological mechanisms of general health into the coverage of mental disorders. By using this resource, instructors can easily integrate principles of neuroscience into clinical, developmental, behavioral, cognitive, and social psychology. The second edition of Clinical Neuroscience will be published in early 2010

    Professor Peter Singer speaking at the National Press Club Canberra, 11 February 2009 [picture] /

    No full text
    Title devised by cataloguer based on information from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Humanitarian author Professor Peter Singer at the National Press Club, Canberra, 11 February 2009.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia, 2009

    Book review: Contemporary Scottish plays, edited by Trish Reid

    No full text
    Book review: Contemporary Scottish plays, edited by Trish Reid. London: Bloomsbury, 2014; ISBN: 9781472574435 (£17.99)Publisher PD

    Dynamic of leadership/ Edit. : Craig M. Watson

    No full text
    xi, 368 hal.: ill.; 24 cm cm

    The power output of spine and fan magnetic reconnection solutions

    No full text
    The ability of three-dimensional magnetic “spine” and “fan” reconnection solutions to provide flarelike energy release is discussed. It is pointed out, on the basis of exact analytic solutions, that fast dissipation is possible only if the hydromagnetic pressure in the reconnection region becomes unbounded in the limit of small plasma resistivities. The implication is that some “saturation” of the power output is inevitable for realistic coronal plasmas. Estimates of the saturated power, based on limiting the flux pileup in the field, suggest that the geometry of the spine reconnection mechanism precludes significant flare energy release. However, the current sheet structures involved in fan reconnection seem able to release sufficient magnetic energy fast enough to account for modest flares, even under the conservative assumption of classical plasma resistivities

    The cultivation of (difficult) surfaces or “I know that’s a tree”

    No full text
    To coincide with the exhibition Real Painting at the Castlefield Gallery in Manchester Craig Staff, author of After Modernist Painting: The History of a Contemporary Practice (2013), offered his response to the exhibition, considering it in relation to painting’s histories, theories and philosophies. From connections with the Renaissance and modernism, he will venture towards the means by which we might begin to think about, if not understand the works that make up Real Painting

    Bringing Hidden Organizations Out of the Shadows: Introduction to the Special Issue

    No full text
    This introduction to the special issue describes hidden organizations, offers several reasons for the lack of research on these collectives, and explains how this collection of articles helps move us forward in efforts to empirically study hidden organizations. After providing background information on the history of this special issue, the five articles published here are described in terms of the type of collective examined, the theories and methods used, and the key research questions addressed. Three observations about the published pieces are made: being hidden requires communicative effort; hiddenness is usefully understood in terms of identity management; and any discussion of hidden organizations raises ethical considerations. The piece closes with acknowledgements and a call for continued conceptual/theoretical and empirical research into hidden organizations.This is an introduction to a special issue on Hidden Organizations edited by the author. Published online before print: July 19, 2015

    R. W. Thames, Omar Craig, J. E. Ruffin, Bill Watson, Tommy Everett, Jack Cook, John Correro, Howard Hammill, Charles Weatherly

    No full text
    Officers of the 1969 MSU Alumni Association are pictured: R. W. Thames, Omar Craig, J. E. Ruffin, Bill Watson, Tommy Everett, Jack Cook, John Correro, Howard Hammill, and Charles Weatherly.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/3975/thumbnail.jp
    corecore