929 resultados para See khai’ ton
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Tables include: 1. Tonnage (tonnegehalt)--2. Valuta (waarenwerthe)--3. Handels-artikel.--4. Zoll-einnahme.--5. Bevölkerung.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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[v.19] 1657. Koning Davids Harpzangen.--[v.20] 1657-1660. Koning Davids Harpzangen. Jeptha.--[v.21] 1660. Koning Edipus. Koning David in ballingschap. Koning David herstelt.--[v.22-23] 1660. Publius Virgilius Maroos Wercken in Nederduitsch dicht vertaelt.--[v.24] 1660-1662. Samson. Adonias. Bespiegelingen.--[v.25] 1662. Bespiegelingen. Joannes de Boetgezant.--[v.26] 1663. Batavische Gebroeders. De Heerlyckheit der Kercke. Faëton.--[v.27] 1664-1667. Adam in Ballingschap. Ifigenie in Tauren. Zungchin.--[v.28] 1667-1671. Noah. Feniciaensche. Herkules in Trachin. Ovidius Herscheppinge.--[v.29-30] 1671-1679. Ovidius herscheppinge.
Auf weiter Fahrt : Selbsterlebnisse zur See und zu Lande : Deutsche Marine- und Kolonialbibliothek /
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Sequel and conclusion to the author's Coke of Norfolk and his friends, 1906; and Annals of a Yorkshire house, 1911.
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The present study examined the role that group norms, group identification, and imagined audience (in-group vs. out-group) play in attitude-behavior processes. University students (N = 187) participated in a study concerned with the prediction of consumer behavior. Attitudes toward drinking their preferred beer, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control, group norm, and group identification were assessed. Intentions and perceived audience reactions to consumption were assessed. As expected, group norms, identification, and imagined audience interacted to influence likelihood of drinking one's preferred beer and perceived audience reactions. High identifiers were more responsive to group norms in the presence of an in-group audience than an out-group audience. The present results indicate that audience concerns impact upon the relationship between attitude., and behavior.
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360-degree feedback from a variety of rater sources yields important information about leaders' styles, strengths and weaknesses for development. Results where observer ratings are discrepant (i.e., different) from self-ratings are often seen as indicators of problematic leadership relationships, skills, or lack of self-awareness. Yet research into the antecedents of such self-observer rating discrepancy suggests the presence of systematic influences, such as cultural values. The present study investigates the variation of rating discrepancies on three leadership skills (decision making, leading employees, and composure) in dependence of one exemplary culture dimension (power distance) on data from 31 countries using multilevel structural equation modelling. Results show that cultural values indeed predict self-observer rating discrepancies. Thus, systemic and contextual influences such as culture need to be taken into consideration when interpreting the importance and meaning of self-observer rating discrepancies in 360-degree instruments.
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There have been two main approaches to feature detection in human and computer vision - based either on the luminance distribution and its spatial derivatives, or on the spatial distribution of local contrast energy. Thus, bars and edges might arise from peaks of luminance and luminance gradient respectively, or bars and edges might be found at peaks of local energy, where local phases are aligned across spatial frequency. This basic issue of definition is important because it guides more detailed models and interpretations of early vision. Which approach better describes the perceived positions of features in images? We used the class of 1-D images defined by Morrone and Burr in which the amplitude spectrum is that of a (partially blurred) square-wave and all Fourier components have a common phase. Observers used a cursor to mark where bars and edges were seen for different test phases (Experiment 1) or judged the spatial alignment of contours that had different phases (e.g. 0 degrees and 45 degrees ; Experiment 2). The feature positions defined by both tasks shifted systematically to the left or right according to the sign of the phase offset, increasing with the degree of blur. These shifts were well predicted by the location of luminance peaks (bars) and gradient peaks (edges), but not by energy peaks which (by design) predicted no shift at all. These results encourage models based on a Gaussian-derivative framework, but do not support the idea that human vision uses points of phase alignment to find local, first-order features. Nevertheless, we argue that both approaches are presently incomplete and a better understanding of early vision may combine insights from both. (C)2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.