25,819 research outputs found

    Jennifer-Angoh/Pine-Marten-Rodent: v.1.0.0

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    <p>Code for article "How do microtine rodent abundance, snow and landscape parameters influence pine marten Martes martes population dynamics?". Authors: Siow Yan Jennifer Angoh Affiliation: Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, NO-2480, Koppang, Norway. Corresponding author: Siow Yan Jennifer Angoh, [email protected], ORCID: <a href="https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3791-0150">https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3791-0150</a></p> <p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a href="https://github.com/Jennifer-Angoh/Pine-Marten-Rodent/commits/Pine-Marten-Rodent">https://github.com/Jennifer-Angoh/Pine-Marten-Rodent/commits/Pine-Marten-Rodent</a></p&gt

    Jennifer-Angoh/Pine-Marten-Rodent: v.1.0.1

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    <p>Code for article "How do microtine rodent abundance, snow and landscape parameters influence pine marten Martes martes population dynamics?". Authors: Siow Yan Jennifer Angoh Affiliation: Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, NO-2480, Koppang, Norway. Corresponding author: Siow Yan Jennifer Angoh, [email protected], ORCID: <a href="https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3791-0150">https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3791-0150</a></p> <p><strong>Full Changelog</strong>: <a href="https://github.com/Jennifer-Angoh/Pine-Marten-Rodent/commits/Pine-Marten-Rodent">https://github.com/Jennifer-Angoh/Pine-Marten-Rodent/commits/Pine-Marten-Rodent</a></p&gt

    Developing young children's understanding of place-value using multiplication and quotitive division

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    This paper focuses on selected findings from a study that explored the use of multiplication and division with 34 five- and six-year-old children from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds. The focus of instructional tasks was on working with groups of ten to support the understanding of place value. Findings from relevant assessment tasks and children’s work highlighted the importance of encouraging young children to move from unitary (counting by ones) to tens-structured thinking

    Frozen in Memory?: Northern Identity in Imagination and Reality.

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    Young researcher Jennifer Laliberte, KIAC School of Visual Arts, Yukon, Canada, talks here in the NRF 6th open assembly in Hveragerði, Iceland, in September of 2011. Please click on the link above to see the video

    Jennifer Maroney and Networking

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    With over 6,000 LinkedIn connections, Jennifer Maroney, the Alumni Director for Brigham Young University School of Accountancy, believes that success comes when people help each other — tune in with Kat Harris and Andrea Cabrera to the advice she shares that could help you land your next job or internship

    Dr. Jennifer Bowie – Faculty Author Interview

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    Dr. Jennifer Bowie, Assistant Professor of Political Science, is the co-author of a new book, The View from the Bench and Chambers: Examining Judicial Process and Decision Making on the U.S. Courts of Appeals, published recently by the University of Virginia Press. This book presents a series of quantitative analyses of judicial decisions in the Courts of Appeals with the perspectives gained from in-depth interviews with the judges and their law clerks

    Ep. #136 - Jennifer Gabrys

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    This recording and transcript form part of a collection of podcasts conducted by the Cultures of Energy at Rice University. Cultures of Energy brings writers, artists and scholars together to talk, think and feel their way into the Anthropocene. We cover serious issues like climate change, species extinction and energy transition. But we also try to confront seemingly huge and insurmountable problems with insight, creativity and laughter.Your cohosts discuss what sensory technologies they might wish for their own home and the kind of multispecies encounters Cymene might have had in a Tegucigalpa red light district hotel (trigger warning: there be cockroach stories ahead!) Then (20:29) we chat with the multitalented Jennifer Gabrys from Goldsmiths (https://www.jennifergabrys.net), author most recently of Program Earth (U Minnesota Press, 2016), and her fascinating work on the spread of environmental sensing technologies and the impacts they are having on our worlds. Jennifer explains to us why she became taken with Whitehead’s concept of the “superject” as a different, more distributed and relational way of thinking about sensation and experience. That gets us to talking about nonhuman modes of sensing, what humans want from all these sensors, the problem of environmentality in smart city designs, computational urbanism, and why the figure of the idiot interests her in terms of thinking about models of digital participation. Jennifer explains how we can be for a world (and for other worlds) rather than simply of the world and why the etho-ecological is thus such an interesting domain for her.  In closing, we return to Jennifer’s pathbreaking work on digital waste and the need for electronic environmentalism and talk about the e-waste/energy nexus and the paradox of spending ever more energy to monitoring ourselves using more energy. Listen on

    Author and poet Lily Brett at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 18 October 2012 /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Portraits of author and poet Lily Brett at the National Library of Australia, Canberra, 18 October 2012.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia

    Adrian Caesar speaking at Alex Miller author: A Celebration, held at the National Library, Canberra, 30 October 2011 /

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    Title from information supplied by photographer.; Part of the collection: Alex Miller author: A Celebration, held at the National Library of Australia theatre, 30 October 2011.; Mode of access: Online.; Photographed by a staff member of the National Library of Australia

    Dr. Jennifer Erkulwater and Dr. Catherine Bagwell – Faculty Author Interview

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    Featured authors are Dr. Catherine Bagwell, Associate Professor of Psychology and Dr. Jennifer Erkulwater, Associate Professor of Political Science. Dr. Rick Mayes is another co-author, but he is unable to join us today due to a research leave project in Peru. Their new book, Medicating Children: ADHD and Pediatric Mental Health, integrates analyses of the clinical, political, historical, educational, social, economic and legal aspects of ADHD and the medications and treatment surrounding the mental disorder
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