988 resultados para Clark University
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A revision of one of the divisions of the editor's "The foundations of experimental psychology" edited by C. A.Murchison and published in 1929. cf. Pref.
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1st conference held at Clark university in connection with the celebration of its twentieth anniversary July 6-10, 1909; 2d. held at Clark university, June 28-July 2, 1910.
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Cover title.
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Bibliographies prepared by members of the seminar in education at Clark University during the year 1915-16.
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"Reprinted from the Pedagogical Seminary, September, 1912, vol. XIX, p. 297-349."
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"Appendix and bibliography": p. 52-56.
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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Clark university, 1893.
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Protected area downgrading, downsizing, and degazettement (PADDD) has been documented worldwide, but its impacts on biodiversity are poorly understood. To fill this knowledge gap, we reviewed historical documents to identify legal changes that altered the boundaries of Yosemite National Park. We identified two downsizes and five additions between 1905 and 1937 that reduced the size of Yosemite National Park by 30%. To examine the effects of these downsizing events on habitat fragmentation by roads, we compared protected, never-protected, and downsized lands at three spatial scales using four habitat fragmentation metrics: road density, fragment (land surrounded by roads) area-to-perimeter ratio, fragment area, and fragment density. In general, lands that were removed from protection, e.g., downsized, were more highly fragmented than protected lands and indistinguishable from never-protected lands. Lands where downsizes were reversed were less fragmented than lands where downsizes were not reversed. These results suggest that protected area downsizing may exacerbate habitat fragmentation, a key contributor to biodiversity loss globally. Furthermore, the case study in Yosemite National Park demonstrates that iconic protected areas in developed countries are not immune to downsizing. These findings underscore the need to account for PADDD and governance histories in ecological research, monitoring, and evaluation. As we move toward more evidence-based conservation policy, a rigorous understanding of PADDD is essential to ensure that protected areas fulfill their promise as a strategy for conserving global biodiversity.
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Os problemas ambientais urbanos se agravaram nas últimas décadas devido ao crescimento das cidades sem ou com inadequado planejamento urbano. Assim, a preocupação com a qualidade ambiental urbana ganha foco e suas técnicas de análise também. Desta forma, entre os diferentes problemas relacionados a essa questão destaca-se o clima urbano, gerado a partir de mudanças realizadas na cobertura da superfície urbana, resultando em mudanças na atmosfera local, percebidas principalmente na temperatura do ar. Esta pesquisa teve como objetivo analisar as diferenças nas temperaturas da superfície intraurbana na cidade de Cândido Mota/SP e compará-las com a temperatura da superfície do ambiente rural próximo. Para a realização deste estudo, foi utilizada imagem de satélite – canal termal do satélite LandSat 7, banda 6, com resolução espacial de 60 metros – tratada no software IDRISI (marca registrada da Clark University) transformando os valores digitais para temperatura em graus Celsius (ºC). Este procedimento possibilitou uma análise das temperaturas das diferentes coberturas das estruturas da cidade e também da densidade de cobertura vegetal. A área de estudo selecionada foi a cidade de Cândido Mota/SP, e verificou-se que mesmo sendo de pequeno porte, apresenta diferenças significativas na temperatura da superfície quando se compara com o ambiente rural.
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This thesis investigates whether receiving an important award in academia raises recipients’ subsequent research productivity and status compared to a synthetic control group of non-recipient scholars with similar previous research performance. It examines the case of being awarded the John Bates Clark Medal and becoming a Fellow of the Econometric Society finding evidence of positive incentive and status effects that raise both productivity and citation levels.
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This study addresses two interrelated questions: Can postmodern ‘theory’ illuminate an understanding of Michael Clark’s work? and, a sub-question, In which ways, if at all, does Clark’s work demonstrate a postmodern sensibility? Chapter one, the introduction to this study, provides a ‘portrait’ of postmodernism, that is, it addresses the question What is postmodernism? Chapter two is a biography of Michael Clark. The seminal sections to this study, however, are chapters three and four. Here the author blends a discussion of a) subject matter, treatment and meanings in Clark’s choreography, b) journalistic criticisms of those features of his work, and c) postmodern theory. The outcome of these chapters is to demonstrate that Clark’s works do indeed require re-interpretation and re-evaluation, and to illustrate how these factors might be achieved.
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Background Sedentary behaviour is associated with several deleterious health consequences. Although device-based measures of sedentary time are available, they are costly and do not provide a measure of domain specific sedentary time. High quality self-report measures are necessary to accurately capture domain specific sedentary time, and to provide an alternative to devices when cost is an issue. In this study, the Past-day Adults’ Sedentary Time (PAST) questionnaire, previously shown to have acceptable validity and reliability in a sample of breast cancer survivors, was modified for a university sample and validity of the modified questionnaire was examined compared with activPAL. Methods Participants (n = 58, age = 18–55 years, 48% female, 66% students) were recruited from the University of Queensland (students and staff). They answered the PAST questionnaire, which asked about time spent sitting or lying down for work, study, travel, television viewing, leisure-time computer use, reading, eating, socialising and other purposes, during the previous day. Time reported for these questions was summed to provide a measure of total sedentary time. Participants also wore an activPAL device for the full day prior to completing the questionnaire and recorded their wake and sleep times in an activity log. Total waking sedentary time derived from the activPAL was used as the criterion measure. Correlation (Pearson's r) and agreement (Bland–Altman plots) between PAST and activPAL sedentary time were examined. Results Participants were sedentary (activPAL-determined) for approximately 66% of waking hours. The correlation between PAST and activPAL sedentary time for the whole sample was r = 0.50 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.28–0.67]; and higher for non-students (r = 0.63, 95% CI = 0.26–0.84) than students (r = 0.46, 95% CI = 0.16–0.68). Bland–Altman plots revealed that the mean difference between the two measures was 19 min although limits of agreement were wide (95% limits of agreement −4.1 to 4.7 h). Discussion The PAST questionnaire provides an acceptable measure of sedentary time in this population, which included students and adults with high workplace sitting. These findings support earlier research that questionnaires employing past-day recall of sedentary time provide a viable alternative to existing sedentary behaviour questionnaires.