57,647 research outputs found
sublexical processing in visual recognition of chinese characters
sublexical processing in visual recognition of chinese. characters: evidence from repetition blindness for. subcharacter components. su-ling yeh. *. & jing-ling li. department of psychology. national taiwan university. no. 1. sec
FIGURES 23–27 in Descriptions of two new species of the genus Planaeschna from China (Odonata: Anisoptera: Aeshnidae)
FIGURES 23–27. Planaeschan nankunshanensis sp.nov., final stadium larva, female: (23) labium, ventral view; (24) head and pronotum, dorsal view; (25) left antenna; (26) apical abdominal segments, ventral view; (27) ditto, dorsal view.Published as part of Zhang, Hao-Miao, Yeh, Wen-Chi & Tong, Xiao-Li, 2010, Descriptions of two new species of the genus Planaeschna from China (Odonata: Anisoptera: Aeshnidae), pp. 51-60 in Zootaxa 2674 on page 57, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19917
Effect of softness of polydimethylsiloxane on the hydrophobicity of pillar-like patterned surfaces
Supporting Information: Equivalence of Discrete Fracture Network and Porous Media Models by Hydraulic Tomography
Supporting Information README
2018-Jan-17
"Equivalence of Discrete Fracture Network and Porous Media Models by Hydraulic Tomography"
Yanhui Dong, Yunmei Fu, Tian-Chyi Jim Yeh, Yu-Li Wang, Yuanyuan Zha, Liheng Wang, Yonghong Hao
This file contains the supplementary data for this manuscript, including the locations and properties of fracture networks, the locations of observation wells and validation wells, the water head used in inverse model and validation tests, as well as the executive file used in the inverse model.</p
Impact damage of composite laminates with high-speed waterjet
Rain erosion may cause substantial damage to aircrafts during supersonic flight. Such event is investigated here via high-speed waterjet impact on composite laminates. An experimental setup is developed to produce waterjets with the speed up to 700m/s and a finite element model of the waterjet-composite impact event is established. The consistency of experiment and simulation results validates the adopted numerical methods. The distribution of the water-hammer pressure is non-uniform and the maximum pressure occurs near the contact periphery when the water is about to eject laterally. After a high-speed (300∼560m/s) waterjet impacts a composite laminate, the impacted surface depression is observed, and the typical surface damage presents a central region with no visible surface damage surrounded by a faded “failure ring” with resin removal, matrix cracking and minor fiber fracture. Delamination occurs at the interfaces of adjacent layers with unequal dimensions and longitudinal matrix cracking appears on the back surface. Both the velocity and the diameter of waterjets are crucial factors on CFRP damage extents. Water-hammer pressure, the stagnation pressure and propagation of stress waves are failure mechanisms for most matrix damage in CFRP impacted by waterjets.Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository 'You share, we take care!' - Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Structural Integrity & Composite
Planaeschna laoshanensis Zhang, Yeh & Tong, 2010, sp. nov.
Planaeschna laoshanensis sp. nov. (Figs. 1 –8, 28) Material examined. Holotype: male, Mt. Laoshan (36 º09'N, 120 º 37 'E), Shandong Province, China. Wang Yang leg., 25.IX. 2008. Paratype: male, same data as holotype. Types are deposited in the Collection of Aquatic Insects and Soil Animal, Department of Entomology, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou, China. Species Recorded localities and sources Planaeschna taiwana Asahina, 1951 Taiwan (Asahina, 1951) Planaeschna risi risi Asahina, 1964 Taiwan (Asahina, 1964) and Fujian (Lieftinck et al., 1984) Planaeschna suichangensis Zhou & Wei, 1980 Fujian (Karube, 2002), Zhejiang (Zhou & Wei, 1980), Guangdong (Wilson & Xu, 2008), and Guangxi (Wilson, 2005) Planaeschna ishigakiana flavostria Yeh, 1996 Taiwan (Yeh, 1996) Planaeschna celia Wilson & Reels, 2001 Hainan (Wilson & Reels, 2001) Planaeschna shanxiensis Zhu & Zhang, 2001 Shanxi (Zhu & Zhang, 2001) Planaeschna gressitti Karube, 2002 Guangdong (Karube, 2002) Planaeschna maolanensis Zhao & Bao, 2002 Guizhou (Zhao & Bao, 2002) Planaeschna haui Wilson & Xu, 2008 Guangdong and Guangxi (Wilson & Xu, 2008) Planaeschna nanlingensis Wilson & Xu, 2008 Guangdong (Wilson & Xu, 2008) Planaeschna skiaperipola Wilson & Xu, 2008 Guangdong and Hong Kong (Wilson & Xu, 2008) Planaeschna liui Xu, Chen et Qui, 2009 Fujian (Xu, Chen et Qui, 2009) Etymology. The species name refers to the type locality, Mt. Laoshan, Shandong Province, China. Diagnosis. The following combination of characters which identify this species include: black abdominal S 1 with no pale markings; male superior appendages laterally retain the same thickness along its length, with an obtuse angulation at basal 1 / 5, and become only slightly thickened at apical 1 / 3; apical segment of male penis with low lateral flange smoothly curving towards apex and lacking protruding ear-shaped lobes. Holotype —Male: Head mainly black with yellow markings (Fig. 1). Labium yellow, dark brown at margin and lateral lobes, labrum brown with a transverse median yellow band, base of mandible with a rounded yellow spot. Anteclypeus entirely black, postclypeus yellow with a large and triangular black central spot connecting with black anterior margin. Frons yellow laterally and black in front with a black " T " mark dorsally, upper margin of frons medially protruding upwards. Occiput black, fringed with long hairs at margin. Prothorax black. Synthorax black adorned with greenish yellow markings as follows: dorsal stripes on mesepisternum cone-shaped and attenuated toward lower end; broad stripe on mesepimeron, a small triangular spot close to upper margin of metepisternum, almost entire metepimeron; a small spot on both mesokatepisternum and posterior area of metakatepisternum (Fig. 2). Legs black, coxae pale brown. Wings hyaline. Triangle 3 -celled in both wing pairs, anal loop 6 or 7 -celled, anal triangle 3 -celled. Pterostigma black, 3.0 mm in length. Nodal index: 12: 20: 20: 13 / 16: 14: 16: 15. Abdomen black with yellow or greenish yellow markings. S 1 entirely black (Figs. 2–3). S 2 with a triangular AD, paired MD and PD spots dorsally, and lateral side with large irregular AML spot covering auricle, small PL and a tiny indistinct spot at apico-ventral corner (Figs. 2–3). S 3 with narrow and linear AD spot occupying basal 1 / 3, triangular MD spots and oval PD spots, MD spots extending downwards and connecting to large and transversely rectangular AML spots. S 4 –S 7 with triangular MD and oval PD spots, MD spots of each segment extending downwards to link with ML spots and as in S 3 forming a complete middle ring. S 4 –S 8 ventrally with paired rectangular spots. S 8 –S 10 with a pair of small and round PD and a round spots at antero-ventral corner. Dorsal side of S 10 with a triangularly projected carina at base (Figs. 3, 8). Anal appendages black. Superior appendages, when viewed laterally, gently curved upwards with extreme apex directing slightly downwards, and thickened slightly at apical 1 / 3, lower margin with an obtuse angulation at basal 1 / 5; in dorsal view, superior appendages spatulate, narrow at basal 1 / 4 and expanded at apical 3 / 4, apex pointed. Inferior appendage 1 / 2 as long as superior appendages gently curved upwards towards apex in lateral view, dorsal side with a small apical projection and a shallow longitudinal groove (Figs. 4–5). Apical penile segment apically deeply and triangularly notched in ventral view, with lateral flange, when viewed laterally, smoothly curving towards apex and lacking protruding ear-shaped lobes. A deeply colored plate embedded at base of apical penile segment extending towards and touching third penile segment (Figs. 6–7). Female: Unknown. Measurements (mm). Holotype: total length 68.0; abdomen (including anal appendages) 53.0; hind wing 42.0. Paratype: total length 71.0; abdomen (including anal appendages) 55.0; hind wing 43.5. Distribution. Shandong Province, China. Comments. The abdominal maculation of this new species is similar to P. ishigakiana (Fig. 9), P. maolanensis Zhao & Bao, 2002 (Fig. 10), P. skiaperipola (Fig. 11) and P. shanxiensis Wilson & Xu, 2008 (Fig. 12). All of these species have well developed pale markings of both MD and PD spots on abdominal S 3 – S 7 but only PD spots on S 8 and S 9, and in males the lateral sides of S 2 are usually largely black marked with three yellow spots, one anteriorly and two posteriorly. They also have in common spatulate male superior appendages with pointed apex. The male superior appendage of P. laoshanensis, when viewed laterally, looks most similar to that of P. skiaperipola (Figs. 13–14), in which a basal angulation or protuberance can be recognized. Furthermore, the facial patterns of these two species are also very similar. However, several minor, but reliable, features can be used to separate P. laoshanensis from P. skiaperipola. These include: metepisternum without a yellow stripe, black abdominal S 1 with no pale markings, MD spots connecting with ML spots and forming ring-shaped patterns on abdominal S 3 –S 7 (Figs. 3, 8). In addition, the male anal appendages of P. laoshanensis is different from P. skiaperipola, superior appendage of P. laoshanensis has narrower apical expansion, whose thickest part is located at apical 1 / 5 rather than 1 / 3 as in P. skiaperipola, and inferior appendage with peculiar characteristics for P. laoshanensis which is shorter and more robust than in P. skiaperipola, the apex is truncate rather than the attenuated apex in P. skiaperipola P. laoshanensis is close to P. nanlingensis which also possesses spatulate male superior appendages and yellow rings on abdominal S 3 –S 7 (Wilson & Xu, 2008), however the abdominal S 1 black and presence of PD spots on S 8 and S 9 in P. laoshanensis could be easily separated from P. nanlingensis.Published as part of Zhang, Hao-Miao, Yeh, Wen-Chi & Tong, Xiao-Li, 2010, Descriptions of two new species of the genus Planaeschna from China (Odonata: Anisoptera: Aeshnidae), pp. 51-60 in Zootaxa 2674 on pages 51-55, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19917
sj-docx-1-ajr-10.1177_19458924221140965 - Supplemental material for Lipopolysaccharide-Initiated Rhinosinusitis Causes Neuroinflammation and Olfactory Dysfunction in Mice
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-ajr-10.1177_19458924221140965 for Lipopolysaccharide-Initiated Rhinosinusitis Causes Neuroinflammation and Olfactory Dysfunction in Mice by Chien-Fu Yeh, Wei-Hao Huang, Ming-Ying Lan and Wei Hung in American Journal of Rhinology & Allergy</p
The financial markets in Taiwan : competitive marketing strategy in a growing market
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 1995.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 94-95).by Holly Li-chen Yeh Liu.M.S
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