搜索条件
1 - 8 共 8
每页显示结果数
搜索结果
- Type:
- Dataset
- 摘抄:
- SNU-407 cells were treated with a combination of varying concentrations of MRTX1133 with varying concentrations of either afatinib, sapitinib, or pelitinib for 72 hours. Absorbances were normalized to DMSO control for % viability. The attached files were compiled in data format from n=2 data sets (6 data points total for each combination) and uploaded to SynergyFinder+ with % viability chosen as response.
- 作者:
- Kilroy, Mary
- 提交者:
- Mary Kilroy
- 上传日期:
- 03/07/2025
- 更改日期:
- 03/07/2025
- 创建:
- 2024
- 证书:
- Attribution 4.0 International
- Type:
- Dataset
- 摘抄:
- LS513 cells were treated with a combination of varying concentrations of MRTX1133 with varying concentrations of either afatinib, sapitinib, or pelitinib for 72 hours. Absorbances were normalized to DMSO control for % viability. The attached files were compiled in data format from n=2 data sets (6 data points total for each combination) and uploaded to SynergyFinder+ with % viability chosen as response.
- 作者:
- Kilroy, Mary
- 提交者:
- Mary Kilroy
- 上传日期:
- 03/07/2025
- 更改日期:
- 03/07/2025
- 创建:
- 2024
- 证书:
- Attribution 4.0 International
- Type:
- Image
- 摘抄:
- University of Cincinnati (USA) and Chongqing University (China) established the first cooperation education based dual-degree undergraduate program in 2013 called Joint Co-op Institute. This strategic partnership involves librarians from both universities to work with students from orientation to graduation. Through collaborative efforts from multiple dimensions in academic and student affairs, librarians’ work is one of the key factors to the successful enrollment and retention rate. This poster highlights eight years of work between global services librarians from two institutions. It highlights the collaboration of two librarians conducting the first online orientation during the pandemic despite the challenges of technology, time difference and students’ anxiety.
- 作者:
- Zhang, Jie and Cheng, Hong
- 提交者:
- Hong Cheng
- 上传日期:
- 02/22/2022
- 更改日期:
- 02/22/2022
- 创建:
- 2021-06-25
- 证书:
- Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International
- Type:
- Media
- 摘抄:
- The Workshop is an online platform where members of the public offer their own responses to artworks and other content included in the exhibition Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal... Many of the voices in the Workshop belong to Greater Cincinnatians who are Black, Indigenous, or people of color. Responses will accumulate throughout the run of the exhibition, and will remain online after the exhibition closes. The explanatory texts that appear on the walls of the museum are customarily written by curators, who balance factors including the artist’s point of view, institutional expectations, their own training and perspective, and the need to communicate with members of the public. Most but not all of the curators who wrote the explanatory texts in Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal... were trained in practices of social critique similar to those used by the artist, and are White. The purpose of the Workshop is to create space for more voices, views and ways of speaking about art to be heard.
- 作者:
- Latessa, Amy
- 提交者:
- Amy Latessa
- 上传日期:
- 11/17/2020
- 更改日期:
- 11/17/2020
- 创建:
- 2020-08-20
- 证书:
- Public Domain Mark 1.0
- Type:
- Document
- 摘抄:
- Cincinnati has one of the lowest home ownership rates in the country for cities of comparable size. Several other cities with low rates of home ownership in 1970 have managed to increase their rates two to four percent over the past 25 years, but the home ownership rate in Cincinnati has been stable over that period at 38 percent. The best explanation for Cincinnati’s low home ownership rate is that the topography of the city encouraged dense development involving multiple-unit structures up until World War II. When the highway programs of the post-war period opened up the suburbs to development, the city was already built-out and could not compete for new single-unit construction that the federal government was subsidizing on a massive scale. In the last 50 years, the Hamilton County suburbs have gained 140,000 owners while the number of owners in the city has decreased by 1,000. As a result, the home ownership rate in the Cincinnati metropolitan area is greater than the national rate for areas of comparable size (63 percent versus 61 percent) while the rate in the city is far less than the national rate. The City of Cincinnati faces a number of challenges in any effort to increase its home ownership rate. Government programs in other cities typically produce dozens of units a year, not the hundreds of units that Cincinnati needs to produce. In order to achieve even a modest increase in home ownership, the city will have to alter market forces in the direction of increased supply of housing suitable for owner-occupancy and increased demand for home ownership. In order to increase its rate of home ownership to 41 percent by the year 2010, the City of Cincinnati needs to adopt a four-part strategy: Increase the Supply of Units The market cannot produce new units on its own. The city needs to assemble and prepare sites in order to reduce the additional costs associated with building in the city as opposed to the suburbs. City Hall must continue to eliminate barriers to development and provide new services to builders. Cincinnati will not be able to increase the number of middle-class owners without creating new neighborhood areas with the appropriate mix of amenities. At the lower end of the owner-market, the city needs to move aggressively to convert abandoned structures into units people will want to buy and rehabilitate. Help Renters Become Owners While converting renters to owners is an essential component of an overall strategy, the City of Cincinnati must recognize that not everyone can be an owner and target its resources appropriately. The city does not have unlimited funds to change the cost equation of owning a home and will, therefore, have to learn from other cities how to work with lending institutions to increase the flow of dollars under Community Reinvestment Act initiatives. Other cities have had some limited success with programs to convert people renting duplex and condo units into owners. The city needs to increase the availability, extent and quality of education and counseling programs. Attract New Households to the City The city has to market its neighborhoods, and in some cases, smaller areas within neighborhoods. This will require market research, training programs for Realtors, investments in street furniture, increased services, publications extolling city neighborhoods, and programs comparable to the Living in Cleveland program. The city needs to start working cooperatively with the Cincinnati Public Schools. Specific market niches in which the city can hope to compete very successfully include the empty nesters, the gay and lesbian community, first time buyers, and people interested in downtown living. Maintain the Existing Pool of Owners About 75 percent of the time a home owner in Cincinnati sells and buys another home in the Cincinnati area, the home purchased will be in the suburbs. The city must create opportunities for the home seller to move up without moving out of the city. In addition to the above strategies, which involve the central city market, the City of Cincinnati needs to actively promote strategies that will help slow the rate of suburbanization and that will create low income housing opportunities in the suburbs. If suburbanization continues at the current rate, and if the city continues to be the governmental unit with de facto responsibility for low income housing, there is every reason to wonder if there is anything that the city can do to increase its rate of home ownership.
- 作者:
- Howe, Steven
- 提交者:
- Steven Howe
- 上传日期:
- 02/05/2019
- 更改日期:
- 05/23/2019
- 创建:
- 1996-12
- 证书:
- Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International
- Type:
- Student Work
- 摘抄:
- The purpose of this project was to develop a method to characterize polymers using size exclusion chromatography. Specifically, high performance liquid chromatography coupled with a refractive index detector (RID) was used. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) was used a standard for this method. The mobile phase used was dimethylformamide (DMF). Three different mixtures of PEG polymers with known molecular weights were analyzed to characterize the molecular weight of polyacrylic acid (PAA). After running all polymers, retention times were taken and plotted on the x-axis along with LogMp (molecular weight) on the y-axis. A calibration curve was created and plugged in the retention time of PAA to the line equation. We then, took 10 to the power of that number and calculated a molecular weight of 52292.97 g/mol. This method was shown to be an effective way to characterize polymers using PEG as a standard. Poly (methyl methacrylate), otherwise known as P(MMA), was also tested using the same method. The known weight of the polymer was 60,500 g/mol. After running the polymer, 23,000 g/mol was calculated to be the molecular weight. This molecular weight shows that certain parameters like polarity needs to be considered when running samples on the HPLC.
- 作者:
- Scowden, Mitchell; Ho, Anh, and Midinov, Beksultan
- 提交者:
- Mitchell Scowden
- 上传日期:
- 05/09/2018
- 更改日期:
- 05/09/2018
- 创建:
- 证书:
- All rights reserved
- Type:
- Dataset
- 摘抄:
- This data includes socio-economic-geographic attributes in Hamilton County by Census tracts of year 2010.
- 作者:
- Kim, Changjoo
- 提交者:
- Changjoo Kim
- 上传日期:
- 02/02/2015
- 更改日期:
- 05/23/2019
- 创建:
- 2015-02-02
- 证书:
- CC0 1.0 Universal
- Type:
- Article
- 摘抄:
- This paper uses multilevel modeling of Hamilton County individual travel activity data.
- 作者:
- Wang, Shujie and Kim, Changjoo
- 提交者:
- Changjoo Kim
- 上传日期:
- 02/02/2015
- 更改日期:
- 05/23/2019
- 创建:
- 2015-02-02
- 证书:
- Attribution-NoDerivs 4.0 International