Images relating to a 4th century C.E. sarcophagus found at Çan, in northestern Turkey.
These images were created in 1999 by holding a flatbed scanner directly against the sarcophagus under the supervision of the conservators.
The sarcophagus was published as Sevinç, Körpe, et. al., "A New Painted Graedo-Persian Sarcophagus from Çan", Studia Troica 11 (2001), pp 383-420.
The School of Information Technology (SoIT) at the University of Cincinnati hosts the Information Technology Research Symposium on an annual basis as a forum for the exchange and dissemination of research ideas through the IT EXPO. The 2018 symposium was held on April 10, 2018 and this collection features the digital proceedings of presentations. The primary purpose of the symposium is to exchange research ideas among graduate students, faculty, industry, and practitioners involved in IT research in our field. IT research topics may range from state-of-the-art system development to recent progresses in scientific endeavors that are theoretical or applied areas of Information Technology, such as advanced storage technologies, computer-mediated communication, cloud computing, cyber security, data analytics, Internet of Things (IoT), IT infrastructure, mobile security, interactive gaming, technologies for smart and connected cities, and user-centered design.
Half a century ago, thoracic surgeon Paul W. Schafer, MD., believed that the centriole, which was barely visible in light microscopy, was different from all other organelles. He advanced electron micrographic studies that suggested the centrioles had inter-cellular order, i.e., that they might have communication or “force at a distance” interaction.
The proceedings of the 6th annual 3T: Teaching, Techniques & Technology Conference, March 3, 2018.
The 3T: Teaching, Techniques & Technology Conference is a leading scholarship of teaching and learning conference held at University of Cincinnati Clermont College offering educators across disciplines the opportunity to share a broad range of innovative teaching practices, cutting-edge pedagogical developments, and practical applications of technology in the classroom.
This collection contains data and analysis associated with the International Digital Curation Conference research paper (2018) - Giving datasets context: a comparison study of institutional repositories that apply varying degrees of curation -authored by Amy Koshoffer (University of Cincinnati), Amy Neeser (University of California Berkeley), Linda Newman (University of Cincinnati), Lisa Johnston (University of Minnesota), United States of America