This dataset shows the quantities and findspots of coins minted by the ancient mint(s) at Antioch on the Orontes in northern Syria. The kml files are usable in Google Earth. Coin finds are sorted by material (bronze, silver, antoniniani), type (provincial SC, provincial silver and misc. bronze, civic coins with imperial portrait, civic coins without imperial portrait), and chronology (223 BCE-91 BCE, 90 BCE-31 BCE, 30 BCE-235 CE, 236 CE-283 CE, 284 CE-423 CE).
For the original publication of this data, see the attached appendix.
This is the raw data detailing the type of cleistogamy reported within 228 plant genera in 50 families in the scientific literature, as of October 2005. This data underlies the following study:
Culley, Theresa M and Matthew R Klooster (2007) The cleistogamous breeding system: A review of its frequency, evolution, and ecology in angiosperms. The Botanical Review 73(1): 1-30.
This is the raw data detailing the type of cleistogamy reported within 628 individual species in the scientific literature, as of October 2005. This data underlies the following study:
Culley, Theresa M and Matthew R Klooster (2007) The cleistogamous breeding system: A review of its frequency, evolution, and ecology in angiosperms. The Botanical Review 73(1): 1-30.
Plain text files created by extracting OCR'ed text (no cleanup) from PDFs comprising the Lucy Schultz Archive of historic textbooks on English, composition, and rhetoric.
This webinar aired on January 12, 2016 for members of the DataCure listserv. The webinar covered issues around sensitive data and how to establish a educational program to help researchers protect sensitive data while sharing results of their research.
The presenters were Brett Harnett, Director of the UC Center for Health Informatics ( http://www.med.uc.edu/chi) and Jonathan Petters Ph.D. Data Management Consultant at Johns Hopkins University ( http://dmp.data.jhu.edu/).
Presentation 1
- Brett Harnett- the process of de-identifying data especially data resulting from medical records, issues around de-identifying especially unstructured data, working with an IRB and future issues concerning data containing PHI.
Presentation 2
- Jonathan Petters - training for de-identifying human subjects data for sharing and developing a viable library service.
This project aimed at effectively implementing eye tracking MATLAB. The team created an eye tracking program that uses a webcam to locate where a person is looking on a computer screen. The program was tested with a simple experiment that presented the user with a set of colors and found which colors the user looked at most.
This program is meant to batch process ELISA standard curve data to generate Levey-Jennings control charts and report values that fall outisde of 2 and 3 standard deviations of the mean. The Instruction Manual contains a detailed guide on usage.
This past year I have been a student research associate at Cincinnati Children’s OT/PT department for Dr. Karen Harpster, PhD, OTR/L. I have reviewed various literature on upcoming therapeutic topics for many common diagnoses from infants to adolescents, which one of them in particular is cerebral palsy. CP is the most common physical disability in childhood. The purpose of my presentation is to underline the importance of early detection for cerebral palsy. Through extensive review, studies have shown that the most effective way to predict cerebral palsy is by conducting two neurological assessments (General Movements Assessment and the Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination), along with electrophysiological and neuroimaging tests. This presentation outlines how and why clinicians should use these neurological assessments. In detecting cerebral palsy early on in infancy, early intervention can be integrated which can lead to an overall improvement in the quality of life in children with CP.