4,402 research outputs found
Genus two mutant knots with the same dimension in knot Floer and Khovanov homologies
We exhibit an infinite family of knots with isomorphic knot Heegaard Floer
homology. Each knot in this infinite family admits a nontrivial genus two
mutant which shares the same total dimension in both knot Floer homology and
Khovanov homology. Each knot is distinguished from its genus two mutant by both
knot Floer homology and Khovanov homology as bigraded groups. Additionally, for
both knot Heegaard Floer homology and Khovanov homology, the genus two mutation
interchanges the groups in -gradings and .Comment: Information about -graded homology has been changed along
with statement of Theorem 1 and Table 1. Significant changes to Section
Neighborhood Support and Children's Connectedness
Summarizes research on the links between levels of neighborhood support, such as neighbors helping one another, and other types of "connectedness" that contribute to children's healthy development -- with family, peers, community, and activities
Student Preferences for College and Career Information
This study examined the preferences of high school seniors (N = 2901) for receiving college and career information, an area not well-studied previously. Key findings are: Parents and peers are rated to be very helpful sources of college and career information; school counselors are a helpful source of information for first-generation and low-income students; and the internet is a helpful source of information, but email and one-on-one are more preferred sources of information. The findings of this study are useful for K-12 education, college access, and higher education professionals to consider when developing policies and programs to provide college and career information to students
Porch and Playhouse, Parlor and Performance Hall: Traversing Boundaries in Gottschalk\u27s \u3ci\u3eThe Banjo\u3c/i\u3e
This article reconsiders the cultural significance and historical impact of the well-known virtuosic piano composition The Banjo by Louis Moreau Gottschalk. Throughout the early nineteenth century, the banjo and the piano inhabited very specific and highly contrasting performance circumstances: black folk entertainment and minstrel shows for the former, white middle- and upper-class parlors and concert halls for the latter. In The Banjo, Louis Moreau Gottschalk lifted the banjo out of its familiar contexts and placed it in the spaces usually privileged for the piano. Taking its inspiration from both African American and minstrel banjo playing techniques, Gottschalk\u27s composition relaxed and muddled the boundaries among performance spaces, racial and class divisions, and two conspicuously different musical instruments in an egalitarian effort to demonstrate that, contrary to the opinions of some mid-nineteenth-century musical critics and tastemakers, both the piano and the banjo have a place in the shaping of American music culture
“Mon triste voyage”: Sentimentality and Autobiography in Gottschalk\u27s The Dying Poet
The terms sentimentalism and sensibility play a central role in contemporary scholarly discourse on literature and intellectual theory in the long nineteenth century. Often used interchangeably, these words identify developments in popular culture and philosophy in which emotions and feelings, as opposed to reason and logic, were seen as the routes to moral and social improvement. In visual, literary, and musical artworks of the era, the emphasis on feeling was frequently connected to a male archetype of the sentimental protagonist, a dying poet, marked by several common elements: great creativity, high levels of sensitivity, physical and emotional fragility, significant moments of disappointment, and early (and often self-inflicted) death. The subject of the dead or dying young man assumed critical significance during the 1860s, when so many soldiers were lost during the Civil War. For his immensely popular work The Dying Poet (1864), composer-pianist Louis Moreau Gottschalk likely drew inspiration from two French poems of the same title that employed both the dying poet trope and complex imagery of reminiscence. Although The Dying Poet was one of Gottschalk\u27s most popular and lucrative pieces, it was composed during a time of relative discontent and melancholy. In the mid-1860s, he was traveling across the Civil War-torn United States on a gruelingly unrelenting schedule. Gottschalk\u27s composition The Dying Poet can be viewed as a poignant paradox-a simultaneous example of his great sensitivity to the desires of his audience and a tantalizingly autobiographical glimpse of the profound loneliness he felt while performing for them
Teaching Speech Delivery Skills to Reduce Speech Anxiety
v, 37 leaves. Advisor: Margaret E. Lloyd.The problem. Speech anxiety is a common problem among college students. This can hurt the student academically, and could also continue to affect him or her in professional situations once out of school. Therefore, an economical program designed to teach speech skills and reduce their anxiety would be beneficial. Previous studies have focused
on reducing speech anxiety without teaching speech skills, or have taught speech skills without recording their occurrence.
Procedure. Instructions and behavioral rehearsal were used to teach speech anxious subjects speech delivery skills. Prior to and following each skill taught, a probe speech was conducted. Both objective measures of anxiety five (i.e. Timed
Behavioral Checklist, duration of speech, and number of notes) and subjective measures of anxiety (i.e. Personal Report of Confidence as a Speaker) were recorded. In addition, the occurrence of the specific speech skills taught was recorded.
Findinqs. Subjects increased their level of speech
skills, and reported a decrease in anxiety. Only one of the subjects observable indicators of anxiety decreased.
Conclusions. This program increased speech skills
and decreased self-reported anxiety. In addition, the program took very little time for the subjects to complete.
Recomendations. This program could be implemented
economically at universities in order to provide help to speech anxious students
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