Worth 24000 pounds, a quarter of a ton [picture].
- Authors: Lee, William Harrison
- Date: 1907
- Type: Still Image
- Full Text: false
- Description: Six thousand ounces of gold is sitting on a pair of scales. This shipment was sent from Walhalla in 1907.
- Description: Item held by Gippsland and Regional Studies Collection, Federation University Australia.
- Description: Record generated from title list.
- Description: The Walhalla story - POT 29
- Description: 29-Jan-92
Woven mantra : a visual expression of meditation
- Authors: Wilson, Carole
- Date: 2001
- Type: Text , Thesis , Masters
- Full Text:
- Description: "This research project examines the links between spiritual practice and visual art. More specifically, the research examines the relationship between the repetition of a mantra, the repetition of an image and the repetition of a stich.
- Description: Master of Arts Visual Arts
Wreck of homestead at Lett's Beach [picture].
- Date: 1962
- Type: Still Image
- Full Text: false
- Description: The homestead at Lett's Beach was destroyed in preparation for the development of the area as a subdivision called Golden Beach. Parts of the water tanks, originally from the wreck of the Trincula, can be seen.
- Description: Item held by Gippsland and Regional Studies Collection, Federation University Australia.
- Description: Record generated from title list.
- Description: The changing face of Gippsland - POT 38
Wreck of the Trincula [picture].
- Date: 1918
- Type: Still Image
- Full Text: false
- Description: A boy has climbed onto the wreck fo the Trincula, which ran aground on the Ninety Mile Beach in 1878.
- Description: Item held by Gippsland and Regional Studies Collection, Federation University Australia.
- Description: Record generated from title list.
- Description: The changing face of Gippsland - POT 38
Wright home, Bessant Street, Heyfield [picture].
- Authors: Gleeson, Cornelius.
- Type: Still Image
- Full Text: false
- Description: Mrs Wright and her daughter, Jessica, are standing in the garden of their home.
- Description: Item held by Gippsland and Regional Studies Collection, Federation University Australia.
- Description: Record generated from title list.
- Description: 18-Jun-91
Writers and biographical cinema - Hysteria and the domestic everyday
- Authors: Sim, Lorraine
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Australian Feminist Studies Vol. 21, no. 51 (Nov 2006), p. 355-368
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003002825
Writing difference differently
- Authors: Fisher, Karen , Williams, Miriam , Fitzherbert, Stephen , Instone, Lesley , Duffy, Michelle , Wright, Sarah , Suchet-Pearson, Sandie , Lloyd, Kate , Burarrwanga, Laklak , Ganambarr, Ritjilili , Ganambarr-Stubbs, Merrkiyawuy , Ganambarr, Banbapuy , Maymuru, Djawundil , Country, Bawaka
- Date: 2015
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: New Zealand Geographer Vol. 71, no. 1 (2015), p. 18-33
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: This paper investigates the writing of situated knowledge and explores the possibilities of enacting difference by writing differently. We present a selection of research stories in which carrier bags, sounds, baskets, gardens and potatoes are interpreted less as objects of research or metaphors to aid in analysing phenomena, than as mediators of the stories. Our stories emphasise the ontological politics of engaging with and representing the relational, the messy, the spontaneous, the unpredictable, the non-human and bodily experiences. These stories demonstrate how writing is performative and how it is integral to the production of knowledge. © 2015 New Zealand Geographical Society.
Writing groups in the digital age : A case study analysis of shut up & write Tuesdays
- Authors: O'Dwyer, Siobhan , McDonough, Sharon , Jefferson, Rebecca , Goff, Jennifer , Redman-MacLaren, Michelle
- Date: 2016
- Type: Text , Book chapter
- Relation: Research 2.0 and the Impact of Digital Technologies on Scholarly Inquiry Chapter 13 p. 249-269
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: Social media writing groups are an emerging phenomenon in the academic world. Combining the discipline, mentorship, and peer support of face-to-face writing groups, with the convenience, global reach, and interdisciplinary networks of social media, they offer a way for scholars to apply new digital technologies to the old problem of developing, maintaining, and protecting an academic writing practice. Despite their growing popularity, however, there has been little critical or empirical analysis of these groups. Using Shut Up & Write Tuesdays (SUWT) as a case study, this chapter examines the purpose, use, outcomes, and challenges of a social media writing group for academics. Usage data from the three SUWT Twitter accounts, a survey of SUWT participants, and the narrative reflections of the SUWT hosts, are drawn together to highlight the value, strengths, and limitations of social media writing groups as a scholarly activity in the digital age. © 2017 by IGI Global. All rights reserved.
Writing reflexively to illuminate the meanings in cultural safety
- Authors: Cash, Penelope , Moffitt, Pertice , Fraser, Joanna , Grewal, Sukhdev , Holmes, Vicki , Mahara, Star , Ross, Charlotte , Nagel, Dan
- Date: 2013
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Reflective Practice Vol. 14, no. 6 (2013), p. 825-839
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: With the introduction of cultural safety into nursing curricula, educators are grappling with ways to take their own understanding of the concept to create culturally safe places in their educational environments. The purpose of this paper is to share a process of writing as inquiry to surface new meanings in what might ontologically be understood as culturally safe environments. The writing illuminates individual and collective meanings of cultural safety from the perspectives of eight Canadian nurse educators. Using aesthetic texts and hermeneutic approaches, the meaning of cultural safety is exposed. Fluid depictions of the self as other, along with politicized taken for granted practices and multiple fields of meaning, bring clarity to a view that knowledge is always partial. Since knowledge is co-constructed, situated and socially produced, the representations of our evolving stories and cycles of reflection hold to an element of partiality in epistemological privilege The various texts shared offer insight into thinking about culturally safe spaces as horizons of new meaning. The implications for nursing education are in recognizing locations for both the educators and the learners. These writing and interpretive processes can be integrated into curricula to strengthen reflexive and relational practice. © 2013 Taylor & Francis.
Wuthering heights and the politics of space
- Authors: Sim, Lorraine
- Date: 2004
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Limina: A Journal of Historical and Cultural Studies Vol. 10, no. (2004), p. 32-51
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: This article argues that representations of space in Wuthering Heights provide a framework for Brontë’s interrogation of several aspects of Romantic and Victorian ideology. I explore this thesis in relation to three spaces within the novel: the domestic, the natural and the liminal. The first part of the paper explores how Brontë critiques the Victorian ideal of domesticity by presenting the home as an ideologically hybrid space that is repeatedly disrupted by economic and political struggles emanating from the public sphere. The second part of the paper considers how Brontë’s representations of nature in Wuthering Heights engage with eighteenth-century aesthetic theories of the sublime and the picturesque and provides a commentary on their social and ethical implications. I argue that Brontë rejects aesthetic theories that are grounded in universal models of subjectivity, such as those purported by Edmund Burke and Immanuel Kant, by exploring a range of different subjective relations and responses to nature in the novel. The final part of the paper argues that Brontë claims liminal spaces in the novel as sites of transcendence thereby resisting traditional philosophical and Christian dichotomies such as matter and spirit, self and other, immanence and transcendence.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003002831
Xenopus LAP2β protein knockdown affects location of lamin B and nucleoporins and has effect on assembly of cell nucleus and cell viability
- Authors: Dubińska-Magiera, M. , Chmielewska, M. , Kozioł, K. , Machowska, M. , Hutchison, C. J. , Goldberg, M. W. , Rzepecki, R.
- Date: 2016
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Protoplasma Vol. 253, no. 3 (2016), p. 943-956
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Xenopus LAP2β protein is the single isoform expressed in XTC cells. The protein localizes on heterochromatin clusters both at the nuclear envelope and inside a cell nucleus. The majority of XLAP2β fraction neither colocalizes with TPX2 protein during interphase nor can be immunoprecipitated with XLAP2β antibody. Knockdown of the XLAP2β protein expression in XTC cells by synthetic siRNA and plasmid encoded siRNA resulted in nuclear abnormalities including changes in shape of nuclei, abnormal chromatin structure, loss of nuclear envelope, mislocalization of integral membrane proteins of INM such as lamin B2, mislocalization of nucleoporins, and cell death. Based on timing of cell death, we suggest mechanism associated with nucleus reassembly or with entry into mitosis. This confirms that Xenopus LAP2 protein is essential for the maintenance of cell nucleus integrity and the process of its reassembly after mitosis. © 2015, The Author(s).
XML Document
- Type: Conference paper
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: Mining of narrow vein mineralisation, invariably depending on the mining method selected, involves the extraction of both ore and waste rock. The level to which mining of waste rock can be minimised depends on numerous factors, but patticularly the thickness and dip of the deposit. Resue mining is a method of mining that allows spl it face firing within stopes to allow waste and ore to be mined separately, allowing dilution to be minimised. This paper examines the technique of resue firing and its applicabil ity to the mi ning of narrow vein deposits. Panicular emphasis is placed on the conditions in which resue mi ning presents a suitable option for mining of narrow veins.
XML Document
- Type: Journal article
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
XPloreRank: exploring XML data via you may also like queries
- Authors: Naseriparsa, Mehdi , Liu, Chengfei , Islam, Md Saiful , Zhou, Rui
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: World Wide Web Vol. 22, no. 4 (2019), p. 1727-1750
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: In many cases, users are not familiar with their exact information needs while searching complicated data sources. This lack of understanding may cause the users to feel dissatisfaction when the system retrieves insufficient results after they issue queries. However, using their original query results, we may recommend additional queries which are highly relevant to the original query. This paper presents XPloreRank to recommend top-l highly relevant keyword queries called “You May Also Like” (YMAL) queries to the users in XML keyword search. To generate such queries, we firstly analyze the original keyword query results content and construct a weighted co-occurring keyword graph. Then, we generate the YMAL queries by traversing the co-occurring keyword graph and rank them based on the following correlation aspects: (a) external correlation, which measures the similarity of the YMAL query to the original query and (b) internal correlation, which measures the capability of the YMAL query keywords in producing meaningful results with respect to the data source. Due to the complexity of generating YMAL queries, we propose a novel A* search-based technique to generate top-l YMAL queries efficiently. We also present a greedy-based approximation for it to improve the performance further. Extensive experiments verify the effectiveness and efficiency of our approach. © 2018, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
XR programmers give their perspective on how XR technology can be effectively utilised in high-performance sport
- Authors: Le Noury, Peter , Polman, Remco , Maloney, Michael , Gorman, Adam
- Date: 2023
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Sports Medicine - Open Vol. 9, no. 1 (2023), p.
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Background: The successful use of extended reality (XR) in sport is highly dependent on the extent to which it can represent the perception–action couplings that exist in the performance setting. However, there are many unknowns regarding the effectiveness of XR technology which is limiting its adoption in sport. Therefore, providing high-performance sporting organisations with more information about the efficacy and utility of XR, specifically its strengths and limitations, is warranted. Results: The results provide insight into the limitations of XR and how those limitations are likely to reduce the effectiveness of XR for training motor skills. The participants described opportunities provided by XR for measuring athlete performance and highlighted several practical applications for enhancing athlete and coaching performance. Using artificial intelligence (AI) for training tactical decision-making and creating new movement solutions was also a key finding. Conclusions: The use of XR in sport is in its infancy, and more research is required to establish a deeper understanding of its utility and efficacy. This research provides sporting organisations, coaches, athletes, and XR technology companies with insights into where XR technology can have the greatest positive impact on performance in sport. © 2023, The Author(s).
XSnippets : exploring semi-structured data via snippets
- Authors: Naseriparsa, Mehdi , Islam, Md Saiful , Liu, Chengfei , Chen, Lu
- Date: 2019
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Data and Knowledge Engineering Vol. 124, no. (2019), p.
- Full Text:
- Reviewed:
- Description: Users are usually not familiar with the content and structure of the data when they explore the data source. However, to improve the exploration usability, they need some primary hints about the data source. These hints should represent the overall picture of the data source and include the trending issues that can be extracted from the query log. In this paper, we propose a two-phase interactive exploratory search framework for the clueless users that exploits the snippets for conducting the search on the XML data. In the first phase, we present the primary snippets that are generated from the keywords of the query log to start the exploration. To retrieve the primary snippets, we develop an A* search-based technique on the keyword space of the query log. To improve the performance of computations, we store the primary snippet computations in an index data structure to reuse it for the next steps. In the second phase, we exploit the co-occurring content of the snippets to generate more specific snippets with the user interaction. To expedite the performance, we design two pruning techniques called inter-snippet and intra-snippet pruning to stop unnecessary computations. Finally, we discuss a termination condition that checks the cardinality of the snippets to stop the interactive phase and present the final Top-l snippets to the user. Our experiments on real datasets verify the effectiveness and efficiency of the proposed framework. © 2019 Elsevier B.V.
Y chromosome haplogroup as a novel biological risk factor for coronary artery disease - The results of tracking paternal lineages in the west of Scotland primary prevention study (WOSCOPS)
- Authors: Charchar, Fadi , Tomaszewski, Maciej , Barnes, Timothy , Wang, Y. , Brouilette, S. W. , Codd, Veryan , Bani-Mustafa, Ahmed , Padmanabhan, Sandosh , Dominiczak, Anna , Ford, I. , Samani, Nilesh
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: , p. S448-S448
- Full Text: false
Yallourn A Power Station
- Type: Still Image
- Full Text: false
- Description: An original photograph of the Yallourn A Power Station with Control House on the right and Telpher on the left. See photos in Colin Harvey, Yallourn Power Station: A History 1919 to 1989 (SECV, Morwell, 1993), p. 97
Yallourn A Power Station
- Date: 1928
- Type: Still Image
- Full Text: false
- Description: An original photograph of the Yallourn A Power Station that commenced electrity generation in 1928. This photo is before Yallourn B Power Station which was under construction in 1929. See photos in Cecil Edwards, Brown Power: A Jubilee History of the State Electricity Commission of Victoria (SECV, 1969), images between pp. 76 and 77, and Colin Harvey, Yallourn Power Station: A History 1919 to 1989 (SECV, Morwell, 1993), p. 97
Yallourn A Power Station
- Date: 1928
- Type: Still Image
- Full Text: false
- Description: An original photograph of the Yallourn A Power Station that commenced electrity generation in 1928. This photo is before Yallourn B Power Station which was under construction in 1929. See photos in Cecil Edwards, Brown Power: A Jubilee History of the State Electricity Commission of Victoria (SECV, 1969), images between pp. 76 and 77, and Colin Harvey, Yallourn Power Station: A History 1919 to 1989 (SECV, Morwell, 1993), p. 97