999 resultados para Moorish Science Temple
Resumo:
Les basíliques paleocristianes del suburbi occidental de Tarraco. El temple septentrional i el complex martirial de Sant Fructuós és el resultat de 10 anys d’investigació desenvolupada al voltant del sector septentrional del Conjunt Paleocristià del Francolí, originada arran de les excavacions efectuades entre els anys 1994 i 1997 a la zona on actualment s’ubica el Parc Central. L’extraordinària importància del jaciment va despertar de seguida l’interès de l’autor, Jordi López, i de la comunitat científica, tant pel valor mateix de les restes com per la seva relació amb l’extensa necròpolis paleocristiana que al llarg de diverses campanyes havia excavat el Dr. Mn. Joan Serra i Vilaró. Es tracta d’una presentació de les últimes investigacions desenvolupades a l’ampli conjunt funerari i cristià del Francolí, al suburbium occidental de Tarraco. Consta de dos volums. El primer està estructurat en tres grans parts. Primerament, la presentació dels resultats dels treballs d’excavació duts a terme entre els anys 1994 i 1997 al sector septentrional del centre de culte cristià del Francolí, que inclou un estudi arquitectònic exhaustiu de la nova basílica excavada. En segon lloc, una revisió de les diferents intervencions desenvolupades en el sector meridional a principi de segle XX per Mn. Serra Vilaró i dels treballs dels anys 70 de M. D. del Amo, amb la proposta d’una nova interpretació arquitectònica de l’antiga basílica i de l’edifici situat al sud d’aquesta. I, finalment, una exposició general de l’evolució d’aquest sector occidental del suburbium de la ciutat, que reflecteix un especial dinamisme entre els segles IV i V dC, moment de màxima expansió de les grans àrees funeràries del segle III dC i de la monumentalització d’un gran centre de culte martirial al Francolí. El text està il·lustrat amb una àmplia documentació gràfica (plantes, seccions, fotografia, reconstruccions tridimensionals). A més, inclou 22 pàgines de conclusions amb la corresponent traducció a l’anglès. El segon volum conté set annexos específics: la relació d’unitats estratigràfiques, un inventari de materials, la descripció dels sepulcres, l’estudi osteoarqueològic i paleopatològic de les restes humanes, una anàlisi epigràfica, una de numismàtica i una última d’escultòrica.
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This paper analyses the adoption of new information and communication technologies (ICTs) by Spanish journalists specialising in science. Applying an ethnographic research model, this study was based on a wide sample of professionals, aiming to evaluate the extent by which science journalists have adopted the new media and changed the way they use information sources. In addition, interviewees were asked whether in their opinion the Web 2.0 has had an impact on the quality of the news. The integration of formats certainly implies a few issues for today’s newsrooms. Finally, with the purpose of improving the practice of science information dissemination, the authors put forward a few proposals, namely: Increasing the training of Spanish science journalists in the field of new technologies; Emphasising the accuracy of the information and the validation of sources; Rethinking the mandates and the tasks of information professionals.
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The research reported in this series of article aimed at (1) automating the search of questioned ink specimens in ink reference collections and (2) at evaluating the strength of ink evidence in a transparent and balanced manner. These aims require that ink samples are analysed in an accurate and reproducible way and that they are compared in an objective and automated way. This latter requirement is due to the large number of comparisons that are necessary in both scenarios. A research programme was designed to (a) develop a standard methodology for analysing ink samples in a reproducible way, (b) comparing automatically and objectively ink samples and (c) evaluate the proposed methodology in forensic contexts. This report focuses on the last of the three stages of the research programme. The calibration and acquisition process and the mathematical comparison algorithms were described in previous papers [C. Neumann, P. Margot, New perspectives in the use of ink evidence in forensic science-Part I: Development of a quality assurance process for forensic ink analysis by HPTLC, Forensic Sci. Int. 185 (2009) 29-37; C. Neumann, P. Margot, New perspectives in the use of ink evidence in forensic science-Part II: Development and testing of mathematical algorithms for the automatic comparison of ink samples analysed by HPTLC, Forensic Sci. Int. 185 (2009) 38-50]. In this paper, the benefits and challenges of the proposed concepts are tested in two forensic contexts: (1) ink identification and (2) ink evidential value assessment. The results show that different algorithms are better suited for different tasks. This research shows that it is possible to build digital ink libraries using the most commonly used ink analytical technique, i.e. high-performance thin layer chromatography, despite its reputation of lacking reproducibility. More importantly, it is possible to assign evidential value to ink evidence in a transparent way using a probabilistic model. It is therefore possible to move away from the traditional subjective approach, which is entirely based on experts' opinion, and which is usually not very informative. While there is room for the improvement, this report demonstrates the significant gains obtained over the traditional subjective approach for the search of ink specimens in ink databases, and the interpretation of their evidential value.
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Report on Iowa State University of Science and Technology, Ames, Iowa for the year ended June 30, 2014
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Report on a review of selected general and application controls over the Iowa State University of Science and Technology Kuali Financial System for the period April 30, 2014 through May 28, 2014
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At a time when disciplined inference and decision making under uncertainty represent common aims to participants in legal proceedings, the scientific community is remarkably heterogenous in its attitudes as to how these goals ought to be achieved. Probability and decision theory exert a considerable influence, and we think by all reason rightly do so, but they go against a mainstream of thinking that does not embrace-or is not aware of-the 'normative' character of this body of theory. It is normative, in the sense understood in this article, in that it prescribes particular properties, typically (logical) coherence, to which reasoning and decision making ought to conform. Disregarding these properties can result in diverging views which are occasionally used as an argument against the theory, or as a pretext for not following it. Typical examples are objections according to which people, both in everyday life but also individuals involved at various levels in the judicial process, find the theory difficult to understand and to apply. A further objection is that the theory does not reflect how people actually behave. This article aims to point out in what sense these examples misinterpret the analytical framework in its normative perspective. Through examples borrowed mostly from forensic science contexts, it is argued that so-called intuitive scientific attitudes are particularly liable to such misconceptions. These attitudes are contrasted with a statement of the actual liberties and constraints of probability and decision theory and the view according to which this theory is normative.