763 research outputs found

    Ferdinand freiligraths verbannungsjahre in London

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    PART ONE - FREILIGRATHS YOUTH AND FIRST CONFUSION.PAGE • • • 1. English influences of the youth years 1 • • 2. English and American acquaintances on the Rhine. , 8th • • 3. Freiligrath in exile 18 • • 4. Freiligrath in London 22 • • 5. The 'Mite-Afire 29 • • 6. Acquaintances in England 33 • • 7. Freiligrath's return to Germany 48 • • • • PART TWO THE SECOND CONVENTATION. • • • 1. Second trip to England 42 • • 2. Johanna Kinkel's death and the Schillerfest 51 • • 3. The Last Years of Exile 54 • • 4. Freiligrath's English traffic after the return. , , , 60 • • 5. A Look into the Family Life of Freiligraths 62 • • 6. Freiligrath's relations with the Germans in London. a) Kinkel. 69 • b) Marx - Engels. 74 • c) Blind, Ruge, German n.a. 81 • • 7. English and Irish acquaintances. , 86 • • • • THIRD PART - FREILIR, RATHS LITERARY SERVICES DURING THE SECOND EXILE AND AFTER. • • • 1. Freiligrath as publisher and critic. , 88 • • 2. Translation activities. 93 • • 3. Freiligrath as a researcher and scholar. 99 • 4. The British Press and Freiligrath (1838-1876) 106ERSTER TEIL - FREILIGRATHS JUGEND UND ERSTE VERBANNUNG.SEITE • • • 1. Englische Einflüsse der Jugendjahre 1 • • 2. Englische und amerikanische Bekanntschaften am. Rhein 8 • • 3. Freiligrath in der Verbannung 18 • • 4. Freiligrath in London 22 • • 5. Die 'Mite-Afire 29 • • 6. Bekanntschaften in England 33 • • 7. Freiligraths Rückkehr nach Deutschland 48 • • • • ZWEITER TEIL DIE ZWEITE VERBANNUNG. • • • 1. Zweite Reise nach England 42 • • 2. Johanna Kinkels Tod und das Schillerfest 51 • • 3. Die letzten Verbannungsjahre 54 • • 4. Freiligraths englischer Verkehr nach der Rückkehr . . . . 60 • • 5. Ein Blick ins Familienleben der Freiligraths 62 • • 6. Freiligraths Beziehungen zu den Deutschen in London. a) Kinkel 69 • b) Marx - Engels 74 • c) Blind, Ruge, Deutsch n.a. 81 • • 7. Englische und irische Bekanntschaften 86 • • • • DRITTER TEIL - FREILIR,RATHS LITERARISCHE LEISTUNGEN WÄHREND DES ZWEITEN EXILS UND NACHHER. • • • 1. Freiligrath als Herausgeber und Kritiker . . 88 • • 2. Uebersetziin.gstätigkeiten . . 93 • • 3. Freiligrath als Forscher und Gelehrter . . 99 • 4. Die britische Presse und Freiligrath (1838 - 1876 ) 10

    Volume segmentation and analysis of biological materials using SuRVoS (Super-region Volume Segmentation) workbench

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    Segmentation is the process of isolating specific regions or objects within an imaged volume, so that further study can be undertaken on these areas of interest. When considering the analysis of complex biological systems, the segmentation of three-dimensional image data is a time consuming and labor intensive step. With the increased availability of many imaging modalities and with automated data collection schemes, this poses an increased challenge for the modern experimental biologist to move from data to knowledge. This publication describes the use of SuRVoS Workbench, a program designed to address these issues by providing methods to semi-automatically segment complex biological volumetric data. Three datasets of differing magnification and imaging modalities are presented here, each highlighting different strategies of segmenting with SuRVoS. Phase contrast X-ray tomography (microCT) of the fruiting body of a plant is used to demonstrate segmentation using model training, cryo electron tomography (cryoET) of human platelets is used to demonstrate segmentation using super- and megavoxels, and cryo soft X-ray tomography (cryoSXT) of a mammalian cell line is used to demonstrate the label splitting tools. Strategies and parameters for each datatype are also presented. By blending a selection of semi-automatic processes into a single interactive tool, SuRVoS provides several benefits. Overall time to segment volumetric data is reduced by a factor of five when compared to manual segmentation, a mainstay in many image processing fields. This is a significant savings when full manual segmentation can take weeks of effort. Additionally, subjectivity is addressed through the use of computationally identified boundaries, and splitting complex collections of objects by their calculated properties rather than on a case-by-case basis

    Language complexity in on-line health information retrieval

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    The number of people searching for on-line health information has been steadily growing over the years so it is crucial to understand their specific requirements in order to help them finding easily and quickly the specific in-formation they are looking for. Although generic search engines are typically used by health information seekers as the starting point for searching information, they have been shown to be limited and unsatisfactory because they make generic searches, often overloading the user with the provided amount of results. Moreover, they are not able to provide specific information to different types of users. At the same time, specific search engines mostly work on medical literature and provide extracts from medical journals that are mainly useful for medical researchers and experts but not for non-experts. A question then arises: Is it possible to facilitate the search of on-line health/medical information based on specific user requirements? In this pa-per, after analysing the main characteristics and requirements of on-line health seeking, we provide a first answer to this question by exploiting the Web structured data for the health domain and presenting a system that allows different types of users, i.e., non-medical experts and medical experts, to retrieve Web pages with language complexity levels suitable to their expertise. Furthermore, we apply our methodology to the results of a generic search engine, such as Google, in order to re-rank them and provide different users with the proper health/medical Web pages in terms of language complexity
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