1,357 research outputs found
More damn lies about data access
More data than we can handle is no excuse to give up our efforts to promote data access, but it may make us think about new ways to make it sustainable.
[This draft was written in the hope that participants of the Sage Congress will write an Nature Genetics Editorial in the manner of Tom Sawyer’s white fence (Twain M. 1876). All contributions received by April 10th 2011 will be attributed.]

Maximum-likelihood reconstruction of photon returns from simultaneous analog and photon-counting lidar measurements
We present a novel method for combining the analog and photon-counting
measurements of lidar transient recorders into reconstructed photon returns.
The method takes into account the statistical properties of the two measurement
modes and estimates the most likely number of arriving photons and the most
likely values of acquisition parameters describing the two measurement modes.
It extends and improves the standard combining ("gluing") methods and does not
rely on any ad hoc definitions of the overlap region nor on any ackground
subtraction methods.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Supporting Career Development and Employment: Benefits Planning, Assistance and Outreach (BPA&O) and Protection and Advocacy for Beneficiaries of Social Security (PABSS)
This training curriculum is dedicated to increasing knowledge and understanding of the Social Security Administration\u27s disability and return to work programs and work incentive provisions as prescribed in the Social Security Act and Ticket to Work and Work Incentives Improvement Act of 1999 as well as other federal benefit programs. These informational resources were compiled and edited to provide continuing education and print materials for benefits specialists and protection and advocacy personnel on the interplay of these benefit programs and impact or employment
Tobacco and Kentucky
For centuries before Europeans came to the New World, tobacco had an important role in the religious and social life of the early peoples of Kentucky. W. F. Axton describes the various forms in which tobacco has been used, its quick adoption by the Old World, and its gradual development into the forms common today, especially the blended cigarette. Little has been written about the place occupied by Burley leaf in the economic life of the Commonwealth, where tobacco is still the most important crop. Tobacco in Kentucky is accompanied by charts and maps illustrating the many aspects of tobacco production.
W.F. Axton is professor of English at the University of Louisville. His family has been associated with the tobacco industry through the Axton-Fisher Company.https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_cultural_history/1019/thumbnail.jp
Understanding the Experiences of Familiar Identity Theft Victims When a Parent is the Perpetrator: A Pilot Study
Incidents of familiar identity theft are becoming more common, yet limited research has explored the experiences of such victims, particularly those who had their identity stolen by a parent. In this qualitative pilot study, six participants shared their experiences during interviews. Data were analyzed using interpretive content analysis. The following preliminary themes emerged from the data: Not Filing a Police Report, Negative Impacts, Positive Impacts, Social and Demographic Factors, and Helpful Resources. Lessons learned regarding methods and suggestions for future research are provided
Researcher Profile: An Interview with Axton Betz-Hamilton
Dr. Axton Betz-Hamilton teaches consumer studies courses at Eastern Illinois University, including Personal and Family Finance, Housing, and Consumer Issues. She conducts research on identity theft as well as financial abuse within families
Circle of Fire: Dickens\u27 Vision and Style and the Popular Victorian Theater
This study explores the theater actually known and frequented by Dickens in order to show in terms of concrete structural analysis of his novels the nature of the predominantly “dramatic” or “theatrical” quality of his genius. Author William F. Axton finds that the three principal dramatic modes or “voices” that were characteristically Victorian were burlesquerie, grotesquerie, and the melodramatic, and that the novelist’s vision of the world around him was drawn from ways of seeing transformed from those elements in the popular playhouse of his day—as revealed in the structure and theme of Sketches by Boz, Pickwick Papers, Oliver Twist, and other novels.
The last half of the study analyzes representative passages from the novels to illustrate the way in which the principal modes of nineteenth-century theatrical style are transmuted into the three important “voices” of the novelist\u27s prose style. The first two voices—the burlesque and the grotesque—are identified by their exploitation of the stylistic features of farce, extravaganza, and harlequinade, of incongruous likeness and deliberate confusion between realms. The melodramatic voice, on the other hand, seeks to exploit in prose the musically rhythmic and poetic resources of the theater for the purpose of atmosphere, moral commentary, and structural unity.
William F. Axton is associate professor of English at the University of Kentucky.https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_english_language_and_literature_british_isles/1025/thumbnail.jp
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