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Janos Haits

Home - APIs for Scholarly Resources - Research Guides at MIT Libraries - 0 views

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    "Below is a list of commonly used scholarly resources at MIT that make their APIs available for use.  If you have programming skills and would like to use APIs in your research, use the table below to get an overview of some available APIs. "
Janos Haits

Google Custom Search - DSpace Community Resource Search Engine - 0 views

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    "DSpace Community Resource Search Engine"
Janos Haits

DSpace@MIT: Home - 0 views

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    "DSpace@MIT is a growing collection of MIT's research that includes peer-reviewed articles, technical reports, working papers, theses and more. End-user downloads of the 60,000+ items regularly exceed one million per month."
Erich Feldmeier

Foto-Scout-Zuse - 0 views

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    Fotografieren ist mit der Digitaltechnik zu einem Volkssport geworden: Tausende von Bildern und GBytes sammeln sich in kürzester Zeit auf den Festplatten. Die riesigen Bildmengen müssen gesichtet, verwaltet und wiedergefunden werden. Dies gilt sowohl für professionelle als auch für Amateurfotografen. Zu diesem Zweck sind bereits viele Softwaresysteme wie Bildbetrachter, Betrachtungs- und Verwaltungssoftware entstanden. Um Bilder wiederzufinden, erlauben manche Systeme verschiedene Arten der Verschlagwortung von Bildern, die der Nutzer in mehr oder weniger aufwendiger Weise vornehmen muß. Andere zeichnen sich durch einen hohen Komfort bei der Bildbearbeitung, DiaShows und Namensgebungen der Bilder aus. Den genannten Systemen fehlt etwas ganz Entscheidendes, nämlich qualitativ hochwertige Suchstrategien.
Erich Feldmeier

@biogarage Jamil Bhanji, Mauricio Delgado: The social brain and reward: social informat... - 0 views

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    "This research provides an understanding of the neural basis for social behavior from the perspective of how we evaluate social experiences and how our social interactions and decisions are motivated. We review research addressing the common neural systems underlying evaluation of social and nonsocial rewards. The human striatum, known to play a key role in reward processing, displays signals related to a broad spectrum of social functioning, including evaluating social rewards, making decisions influenced by social factors, learning about social others, cooperating, competing, and following social norms. WIREs Cogn Sci 2014, 5:61-73. doi: 10.1002/wcs.1266"
Janos Haits

All Acronyms - The Largest and Most Comprehensive Acronyms and Abbreviations Dictionary - 0 views

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    "Acronyms, Initialisms, Alphabetisms and other Abbreviations"
meenatanwar

Getting Started with Chrome extension - Diigo help - 0 views

  • Use the “Save” option to bookmark a page. Bookmarking saves a link to the page in your online Diigo library, allowing you to easily access it later.
  • Highlighting can also be accomplished from the context pop-up. After the Chrome extension is installed, whenever you select text on a webpage, the context pop-up will appear, allowing you to accomplish text-related annotation. Highlight Pop-up Menu – After you highlight some text, position your mouse cursor over it and the highlight pop-up menu will appear. The highlight pop-up menu allows you to add notes to, share, or delete the highlight.
  • Sticky Note Click the middle icon on the annotation toolbar to add a sticky note to the page. With a sticky note, you can write your thoughts anywhere on a web page.
Skeptical Debunker

Human cells exhibit foraging behavior like amoebae and bacteria - 0 views

  • "As far as we can tell, this is the first time this type of behavior has been reported in cells that are part of a larger organism," says Peter T. Cummings, John R. Hall Professor of Chemical Engineering, who directed the study that is described in the March 10 issue of the Public Library of Science journal PLoS ONE. The discovery was the unanticipated result of a study the Cummings group conducted to test the hypothesis that the freedom with which different cancer cells move - a concept called motility - could be correlated with their aggressiveness: That is, the faster a given type of cancer cell can move through the body the more aggressive it is. "Our results refute that hypothesis—the correlation between motility and aggressiveness that we found among three different types of cancer cells was very weak," Cummings says. "In the process, however, we began noticing that the cell movements were unexpectedly complicated." Then the researchers' interest was piqued by a paper that appeared in the February 2008 issue of the journal Nature titled, "Scaling laws of marine predator search behaviour." The paper contained an analysis of the movements of a variety of radio-tagged marine predators, including sharks, sea turtles and penguins. The authors found that the predators used a foraging strategy very close to a specialized random walk pattern, called a Lévy walk, an optimal method for searching complex landscapes. At the end of the paper's abstract they wrote, "...Lévy-like behaviour seems to be widespread among diverse organisms, from microbes to humans, as a 'rule' that evolved in response to patchy resource distributions." This gave Cummings and his colleagues a new perspective on the cell movements that they were observing in the microscope. They adopted the basic assumption that when mammalian cells migrate they face problems, such as efficiently finding randomly distributed targets like nutrients and growth factors, that are analogous to those faced by single-celled organisms foraging for food. With this perspective in mind, Alka Potdar, now a post-doctoral fellow at Case Western Reserve University and the Cleveland Clinic, cultured cells from three human mammary epithelial cell lines on two-dimensional plastic plates and tracked the cell motions for two-hour periods in a "random migration" environment free of any directional chemical signals. Epithelial cells are found throughout the body lining organs and covering external surfaces. They move relatively slowly, at about a micron per minute which corresponds to two thousandths of an inch per hour. When Potdar carefully analyzed these cell movements, she found that they all followed the same pattern. However, it was not the Lévy walk that they expected, but a closely related search pattern called a bimodal correlated random walk (BCRW). This is a two-phase movement: a run phase in which the cell travels primarily in one direction and a re-orientation phase in which it stays in place and reorganizes itself internally to move in a new direction. In subsequent studies, currently in press, the researchers have found that several other cell types (social amoeba, neutrophils, fibrosarcoma) also follow the same pattern in random migration conditions. They have also found that the cells continue to follow this same basic pattern when a directional chemical signal is added, but the length of their runs are varied and the range of directions they follow are narrowed giving them a net movement in the direction indicated by the signal.
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    When cells move about in the body, they follow a complex pattern similar to that which amoebae and bacteria use when searching for food, a team of Vanderbilt researchers have found. The discovery has a practical value for drug development: Incorporating this basic behavior into computer simulations of biological processes that involve cell migration, such as embryo development, bone remodeling, wound healing, infection and tumor growth, should improve the accuracy with which these models can predict the effectiveness of untested therapies for related disorders, the researchers say.
Janos Haits

Welcome to bnb.data.bl.uk | The British National Bibliography - 0 views

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    "The British National Bibliography (BNB) records the publishing activity of the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland and has been doing so since the 1950s. This has traditionally included printed works and has recently been extended to electronic publications. The dataset includes metadata about published books, already published and forthcoming, and serials i.e. journals, periodicals, magazines, newspapers, etc."
aleksdgrift98

"Hotstar APK: Your Ultimate Portal to Entertainment On the Go" - 1 views

Hotstar APK stands as a gateway to an unparalleled world of entertainment, offering a diverse range of content for users. As a leading streaming platform, it delivers a seamless viewing experience ...

science research

started by aleksdgrift98 on 26 Dec 23 no follow-up yet
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