891 research outputs found
The Development of an Actor
This thesis is an exploration and reflection of my growth and development as an actor after three years of studies at the University of Arkansas. It includes a statement of artistry, a copy of the program from my thesis performance, a link to my actor website, and a current headshot and resume
Phenomenologies of Mars: Exploring Methods for Reading the Scientific Planetext Of Kim Stanley Robinsonâs Mars Trilogy
In 2013, The New Yorker Magazine called Kim Stanley Robinson âone of the greatest living science-fiction writersâ. And in 2008, Time Magazine named him a âhero of the environment.â[1] Yet, no lengthy study has yet been attempted on any of his fiction. This thesis aims to redress this absence with a long-form reading of one of the high peaks of his achievement: the Mars Trilogy. It considers that what I am calling the âplanetextâ (or planet-text) is a vital narrative space. It assumes the perspectival form in which the Trilogy is told is crucial to understanding how its planetexts are read. The several viewpoints in the Trilogy comprise the several attempts of this thesis toward understanding not only how the planet is used in the novels, but also how it arranges and functions according to textual principles of readability. My several readings adopt the scientific bases of each of these viewpoints, and develops a sense of the way different characters experience the planet around them as either enabled by science, or confounded by it. âPlanetextâ is therefore a useful neologism for interpreting how such a vast and multidimensional site as Mars is, or is not, encountered through these sciences. Understanding the planetext of Mars is therefore a phenomenological task, with the requirement of reading how each character is able, or unable, to experience and comprehend their experiences. A sense of the phenomenologies of Mars means this thesis must take the approach of seeing how different sciences yield different phenomenologies, and different experiences of the planet. By calling Mars a planetext, this thesis investigates the ways in which language, writing, and textuality participate in building the planet of the Trilogy, treating writing as a coefficient of terraforming. Understood as a kind of planetography, or planetary writing, the planetext (or host of planetexts) foregrounds the written-ness of the Martian space in Robinsonâs Trilogy. The planetextual space of the novels shapes a variety of readerly paths through the narrative, which are in turn adopted. As a long study, this thesis understands the planet as a sizeable arena, which challenges the view any one reading can give of it. Acknowledging this as a limitation, its four chapters focus only on four characters, aiming to supplement an overview style of reading the Trilogy with a series of close readings. Understanding the textual status of the planet means paying specific attention to how characters either find meaningful access to the planet, or fail to find any. For Ann Clayborne, a geologist who wants to keep Mars uncontaminated and un-colonized, the planetext forms itself as a zone of diffĂ©rance, in which the task of interpreting the non-living planet must coincide with her resistance to the terraforming project. With Michel Duval, the Martian psychiatrist, readability is itself questioned as he attempts to overcome his depression and homesickness. For Saxifrage Russell, one of the chief terraformers, a discussion over scientific method takes the path of this thesis away from the troubling and compromised planetexts of Ann and Michel, toward how textual meaning is enabled and opened. With Hiroko Ai, a final theorization of what I call viridical force is proposed as a planetextual function, based around the Trilogyâs mention of viriditas and Jacques Derridaâs idea of force, to come to terms with how the planet makes itself available to the reader as expansive, rich in possible meaning, and always arranging itself around the reader. Between the opening of the planetext and its equivocations, this thesis charts its course. [1] Tim Kreider, âOur Greatest Living Novelist?â December 12, 2013. The New Yorker Magazine. http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/our-greatest-political-novelist; Oliver Morton, âKim Stanley Robinson: Heroes of the Environment 2008,â Wednesday September 24, 2008. Time Magazine. http://content.time.com/ time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1841778_1841779_1841803,00.htm
Faculty Recital: Robert Cronin, flute
KSU faculty recital featuring Robert Cronin, Artist-in-Residence in Flute and Associate Principal Flute for the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, along with John Warren, clarinet and Peter Marshall, piano.https://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/musicprograms/1972/thumbnail.jp
The literature of chemoinformatics : 1978â2018
This article presents a study of the literature of chemoinformatics, updating and building upon an analogous bibliometric investigation that was published in 2008. Data on outputs in the field, and citations to those outputs, were obtained by means of topic searches of the Web of Science Core Collection. The searches demonstrate that chemoinformatics is by now a well-defined sub-discipline of chemistry, and one that forms an essential part of the chemical educational curriculum. There are three core journals for the subject: The Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, the Journal of Cheminformatics, and Molecular Informatics, and, having established itself, chemoinformatics is now starting to export knowledge to disciplines outside of chemistry
Faculty Artist Recital
Kennesaw State University School of Music presents: Faculty Artist Recitalhttps://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/musicprograms/1590/thumbnail.jp
Dietary fibre modulates the gut microbiota
peer-reviewedDietary fibre has long been established as a nutritionally important, health-promoting food
ingredient. Modern dietary practices have seen a significant reduction in fibre consumption compared with ancestral habits. This is related to the emergence of low-fibre âWestern dietsâ associated with industrialised nations, and is linked to an increased prevalence of gut diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease, obesity, type II diabetes mellitus and metabolic syndrome. The characteristic metabolic parameters of these individuals include insulin resistance, high fasting and postprandial glucose, as well as high plasma cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL).
Gut microbial signatures are also altered significantly in these cohorts, suggesting a causative link between diet, microbes and disease. Dietary fibre consumption has been hypothesised to reverse these changes through microbial fermentation and the subsequent production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA), which improves glucose and lipid parameters in individuals who harbour diseases associated with dysfunctional metabolism. This review article examines how different types of dietary fibre can differentially alter glucose and lipid metabolism through changes in gut microbiota
composition and function
A bibliometric analysis of the Journal of Molecular Graphics and Modelling
This paper reviews the articles published in Volumes 2-24 of the Journal of Molecular Graphics and Modelling (formerly the Journal of Molecular Graphics), focusing on the changes that have occurred in the subject over the years, and on the most productive and most cited authors and institutions. The most cited papers are those describing systems or algorithms, but the proportion of these types of article is decreasing as more applications of molecular graphics and molecular modelling are reported
Upper ocean momentum balances in the western equatorial Pacific on the intraseasonal time scale
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2004. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B. V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers 52 (2005): 749-765, doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2004.12.004.Surface Meteorology, upper ocean current, and hydrographic measurements, collected along a
repeated survey pattern and from a central mooring in the western equatorial Pacific during late
1992 to early 1993, were used to analyse upper ocean momentum balances on the intraseasonal
time scale. Wind stresses derived from meteorological measurements were compared with
numerical weather prediction products. Advection terms in the momentum equations were
estimated by planar fits to the current and hydrographic data. Pressure gradient terms were derived
from planar fits to the dynamic heights calculated from the hydrographic data, referenced by
balancing the momentum equation in a selected layer below the mixed layer. Under prevailing
westerly winds, westward pressure gradient forcings of 2x10-7 m s-2 were set up in the western
equatorial Pacific, countering the surface wind, while the total advection tended to accelerate the
eastward momentum in the surface layer. During both calm wind and westerly wind burst periods,
zonal turbulent momentum fluxes estimated from the ocean budgets were comparable with those
estimated from microstructure dissipation rate measurements and with zonal wind stresses, so that
the zonal momentum could be balanced within error bars. The meridional momentum balances
were noisier, which might be due to the fact that the short meridional length scale of the equatorial
inertial-gravity waves could contaminate the dynamic signals in the mixed temporal/spatial
sampling data, so that the meridional gradient estimates from the planar fits could be biased.MF acknowledges the support of Strategic Research Fund for Marine Environment. RL and PH
were supported by NSF grant OCE-9525986. RW and AP were supported by NSF Grants OCE-
9110559 and OCE-9110554, respectively
Webometric analysis of departments of librarianship and information science: a follow-up study
This paper reports an analysis of the websites of UK departments of library and information science. Inlink counts of these websites revealed no statistically significant correlation with the quality of the research carried out by these departments, as quantified using departmental grades in the 2001 Research Assessment Exercise and citations in Google Scholar to publications submitted for that Exercise. Reasons for this lack of correlation include: difficulties in disambiguating departmental websites from larger institutional structures; the relatively small amount of research-related material in departmental websites; and limitations in the ways that current Web search engines process linkages to URLs. It is concluded that departmental-level webometric analyses do not at present provide an appropriate technique for evaluating academic research quality, and, more generally, that standards are needed for the formatting of URLs if inlinks are to become firmly established as a tool for website analysis
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