- May 2019
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shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in
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Isolation of total cellular RNA
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For high fidelity PCR, Herculase II fusion DNA polymerase (AgilentTechnologies)was used. Approximately 0.5μg of chromosomal DNAwas used as a template in a 50μl reaction volume
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The PCRs were normally performed using Taqpolymerasefrom Roche or Fermentas. Approximately 1-5ng of plasmid or 5-100ng of chromosomal DNA was used as a template in a50μlreaction volume containing 200μM of each dNTP, 20pM each of the forward and reverse primers and 1 unit of Taq DNA polymerase. For colony PCR E. coli cells from a freshly grown plate were resuspended in 10μl of sterile Milli-Q water to get a cell suspension and this was used as a template in a PCR reaction at a final volume of 50μl. The samples were typically subjected to 30 cycles of amplification with the following general conditions: Initial denaturation 95ºC5minutes Denaturation 95ºC 1 minute Annealing 55ºC 1 minute Extension 72ºC 1 minute/kb of DNA template to be amplified Final extension 72ºC 10 minutes
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Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
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Molecular techniques
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Recombineering was performed as described in(Yuet al., 2000)for engineering the linear DNA on the chromosome. The oligonucleotide primers were designed to amplify the DNA cassette to be engineered. Oligonucleotidesused for recombination contained30–50nt homology at the 5ʹ endtothesequences at the target siteand 20nt homology tothe DNA cassette at the 3ʹ end. The DNA cassettefor recombinationwas generated by PCR and would contain30-50 bp homologiesto the target site. A strain with the target DNA and carrying a defective λ-prophage with gam,betaand exo genes (thatfacilitate homologous recombination)under the control of a temperature-sensitive λ cI-repressorwas grown at 30oC. At an A600of 0.4, the culture was shifted to 42oC for 15 minutes to express gam,betaand exo genes. Cells becomecapable ofrecombining linear DNA introduced into the cell by electroporation. 50-100ng ofamplified DNA cassettewas used for electroporation whichwas performed using theBio-Rad Gene Pulser set at 1.8 kV, 25 μF with Pulse controller of 200 ohms
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Recombineering
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Typically 400-500ng of DNA was used in each ligation reaction. The ratio of vectorto insert was maintained between 1:3 and 1:5 for cohesive end ligation. The reaction was generally performed in 15μl volume containing ligation buffer (provided by the manufacturer) and 0.075 Weiss unit of T4 DNA ligase at 16ºC overnight (14-16 hours)
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Ligation of DNA
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DNA fragments to be used for specific purposes like ligation or radioactive labellingwere eluted from the agarose gel after electrophoresis. The gel piece containing the desired band was sliced out from the gel and the DNA was purified using commercially available purification kit (Qiagen)for this purpose. The efficiency of elution was determined by checking a small aliquot of DNA sample on the gel
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Purification of DNA by gel elution
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Around 0.5-1μg DNA was regularly used for each restriction digestion. 2 to 5 units of restriction enzyme were used in the total reaction volume of 20μl containing 2μl of the corresponding buffer supplied at 10X concentration by the manufacturer. The reaction was incubated for 3hours at the temperaturerecommended by the manufacturer. The DNA fragments were visualized after electrophoresis on 0.8 to 1.5% agarose gels. Commercially available DNA size markers were run along with the digestion samples to compare with and to estimate the sizes of the restriction fragments
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Restriction enzyme digestion and analysis
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The DNA samples were mixed with appropriate volumes of 6X loading dye (0.25%bromophenol blue and 0.25% xylene cyanol and 30% glycerol in water) and subjected to electrophoresis through 0.8 to 1.5 % agarose gel in TAE buffer. The Goodview nucleic acid stain(supplied as 20000X; Beijing SBS Genetech Co. Ltd.) was added to the gel at the time of casting or 6X EZ-Vision One DNA dye(Amresco) was used as loading buffer, both being commercially available non-carcinogenic dyes to aid visualization of bands. The visualization was doneby fluorescence under UV light in a UV transilluminator
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Agarose gel electrophoresis
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following the manufacturer’s instructions. For genomic DNA, 1ml culture was used for DNA isolationusing Qiagen or Invitrogen kits. The quality of plasmid/genomic DNApreparations was assessed following electrophoresis on 0.8% agarose gels
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3ml (for high copy number)or 10 ml (for low-copy number) of cells from an overnight culture were pelleted by centrifuging for 5 minutes at 6000rpm forthe plasmid isolation which was carried out with the commercially available kits (Qiagen or Invitrogen)
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Isolation of plasmid and chromosomal DNA
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Recombinant DNA techniques
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Growth curves were generated to compare the growth rates of E. coli test strains with control strains manually. The appropriate dilutions of the overnight cultures in desired media were made and allowed to grow at required temperature till faint turbidity was visible. At this point samples were collected every 30 minutes until stationary phase was attained. The growth curves weregenerated using Microsoft Excel or SigmaPlot software and growth rates were calculated from the slope of the graph which, in turn, was used to calculate generation time
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Estimation of growth rates
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β-Galactosidase assay was performed according to(Miller, 1992).Cultures were grown to A600 of 0.4-0.6 from a 1:100 dilution of overnight cultures. Around 0.1-0.5 ml of culture was made up to 1 ml with Z-buffer and lysed with the addition of 100μl of chloroform and 50μl of 0.01% SDS solution. 0.2ml of freshly prepared 4mg/ml ONPG was added to start the reaction and incubated at 28oCtill the colour of the reaction mixture turned yellow. 0.5ml of 1M Na2CO3 was added to stop the reaction and the time duration from initial addition of ONPG to the stopping of the reaction was noted. The absorbance of reaction mix was taken at 420 nm (A420) afterspinning down the mix at 12000rpm for 3 minutes. The A600of the culturesused was also noted. The enzyme’sspecific activity (in Miller units) was calculated using the following equation: β-Galactosidase specific activity (Miller units) = (1000 ×A420) / t × v ×A600Where,‘t’ is the time period in minutes and ‘v’, the volume of culture used in ml
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white colonies were recovered and purified to give growth. If the mutation caused synthetic lethality then white colonies (that lack the shelter plasmid) would not be observed since plasmid loss would result in growth arrest. Therefore, lethality was inferred when either white colonies were not recoveredor were recovered but failed to purify further
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To determine whether a particular mutation conferred lethality in the ppGpp0or ΔdksAbackground, an assay was devised based on the use of an unstable, easy to cure shelter plasmidpRC7, similar to that described previously(Bernhardt & de Boer, 2004). In the wild-type strain carrying pRC7, this plasmid can be lost at a frequency of 20-30% in the absence of the selection. However, this will not be seen if the plasmid loss leads to cell death. Since the plasmid pRC7 confers a lac+phenotype, in the absence of the selection plasmid loss can be visualized on X-gal IPTG containing plates as white colonies in a Δlac strain whereas the colonies that retain the plasmid will appear blue.In order to carry outsynthetic lethal screen in the ppGpp0or ΔdksAstrains, the spoT or dksAgenes cloned in pRC7 under the control of lacpromoter were used. Theseshelter plasmids,namely,pRCspoT or pRCdksA, respectivelywere transformed into the ppGpp0or ΔdksAstrain. To test the synthetic growth phenotypes, the mutations of the genes to be tested were introduced by phageP1 transductions. The resultingstrains were grown overnight in LBcontaining the antibiotic selection for the shelter plasmid and IPTG for expression of spoTor dksA, subsequently washedin minimal A medium and dilutions(usually 10−5or 10−6) of these cultureswere spreadon X-gal and IPTG containing plates without antibiotic selection for the shelter plasmid. The phenotypes of the white colonies in comparison with the blue colonies were noted. Viability of the strains was inferred when
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Blue-white screening for viability or lethality phenotype
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or absence of a metabolite or a particular temperature. An EOP of ≤0.01 suggests lethality of the strain on the test medium. For strains carrying IPTG-dependent plasmids, EOP was determined by growing the strains overnight in medium containing IPTG and appropriate antibiotic,and spottingserial dilutions (100or 10–1to 10–6) on +IPTG (permissive) and –IPTG (test) plates to observe growth. Theviability is scored by takingratio of the colony forming units per ml (cfu/ml = No. of colonies × dilution factor × 1000/volume of culture spotted (in μl) obtained on the –IPTG plate to that on the +IPTG plate and determinesthe EOP. Likewise, strains carrying Ts plasmids were cultured overnight at 30°C with the appropriate antibioticand the serial dilutions of this culture were spottedat two temperatures 30°C (permissive) and 42°C (non-permissive or test). The ratio of cfu/mlobtained on the test temperature to that on the permissive temperature determined the efficiency of plating at the test temperature
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Efficiency of plating (EOP) is a measure of the ratio of number of colonies (obtained from a given volume of a suitable culture dilution) on a test medium to those on a control or permissive medium, and is a measure of cell viability on the former. It is a very sensitive test and is often used for determining the viability of a strain in the presence
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Efficiency of plating (EOP)
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C. LBON temperature-sensitivityStrains were streaked on LBON agar plates and after an overnight incubation at42°C, growth was monitored (compared to that on LBON at 30°C as control). Absence of single colony growth was taken to reflect temperature sensitivity. D. In vivotranscription termination phenotypes The rationale for each phenotype is described in the relevant section. SMG-sensitivityThe E. coli relA mutants exhibit SMG-sensitive (SMGs) phenotype,that is,growth-inhibition in the presence of serine, methionine and glycine at 1mM concentration each(Uzan & Danchin, 1978)and is proposed to be a consequence of transcriptional polarity exerted by a frameshift mutation in the ilvG gene on the expression of downstream genes of the ilvGMEDA operon(Lopes & Lawther, 1989).This test was therefore used to distinguish relA+from relA−strains. Growth in the presence of amino acids serine, methionine, and glycine (SMG) was scored on glucose-minimal A plates supplemented with each of the amino acids at 40μg/ml and compared with the growth on non-supplemented glucose-minimal A plates to score for SMG phenotype. galEp3assayThis assay was used to test for relief of transcriptional polarity in the rho and nusG mutants. The galEp3 (galE490*) mutation represents a 1.3kb IS2 insertion in the gal leader region (between the promoter and structural genes of the galETKM operon). The mutation causes transcriptional polarity on the structural genes due to Rho-dependent transcription termination within IS2. In this assay, the gal operon expression in a galEp3 mutant or its derivatives was monitored by usingMacConkey galactose indicator plates (with 1% galactose), where Gal+colonies are red, and Gal−colonies are white. Therefore, the depth of color serves as an indicator of relative levels of gal expression, i.e., the extent of transcriptional polarity relief
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A.lacZphenotype lacZ+colonies were distinguished from lacZ–colonies on X-gal containing plate or MacConkey lactose plate. X-gal is non-inducing colourless substrate of β-galactosidase enzyme which upon hydrolysis yields dark blue indolyl group and hence the lacZ+colonies on X-gal plate appear as dark blue colonies. Similarly, on the MacConkey agar plateslacZ+colonies appear dark pink whereas lacZ–colonies remain colourless. B. UV-sensitivityTo check the UV-sensitivity of the strains qualitatively, the strains were streaked on duplicate LB-agar plates and one of the plates was UV-irradiatedwith a 15-W UV-germicidal lamp at a distance of 70cm for 30 seconds. The UV-exposed and unexposed plates were incubated overnight in the dark after wrapping with aluminium foil and then growth was scored. This test could differentiate a recA–strain (UVs) from a recA+strain (UVr)
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Scoring for Phenotypes
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desired temperaturefor 45 minutes and plated on an appropriate selective medium at various dilutions. An aliquot of cell suspension to which plasmid DNA was not added served as a negative control. B. Inoue method i. Preparation of high efficiency competent cells Competent cells for high efficiency transformation were prepared by the method of (Inoueet al., 1990)with few modifications. An overnight culture of the strain (routinely DH5α) was subculturedinto fresh sterile LB broth in 1:100 dilutions and grown at 18ºC to anA600of 0.55. The cells were harvested by centrifugation at 2500rpm for 10 minutes at4ºC. Thesecells wereresuspended in0.4 volumes of INOUE buffer andincubated in ice for 10 minutes. The cells were recovered by centrifugation at 2500rpm at 4ºC for 10 minutes and finally resuspended in 0.01 volume of the same buffer. Sterile DMSO was added to a final concentration of 7%. After incubating for 10 minutes in ice, the cells were aliquoted in 100μl volumes, snap frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at –80ºC. ii. Transformation protocolFor transformation, the required number of vials wasthawed on ice and the transformation protocol as described for CaCl2method was employed
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A. Calcium chloride(CaCl2)method For routine plasmid transformation, following method which is a modification of that described by(Cohenet al.,1972)was used. An overnight culture of recipient strain was subcultured 1:100 in fresh LB medium and grown till mid-exponential phase. The culture was chilled on ice for 20 minutes, and the steps thereafter performed at 4ºC. 10 ml of culture was centrifuged and pelletwas resuspended in 5 ml of 0.1M CaCl2. After 5 minutes of incubation on ice, the cells were again centrifuged and resuspended in 1ml of 0.1M CaCl2. The suspension was incubated onice for 45 minutes. To the 100μl aliquot of the cellsuspension plasmid DNA (20-200ng in less than 10μl volumes) was added, incubated for 30-40 minutes on ice and given a heat shock for 90 seconds at 42ºC. The cultures were rapidly chilled for 1 minute, mixed with 0.9ml of LB broth and incubated at
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Transformation
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To 2 ml of fresh overnight culture of recipient strain, 108 pfu equivalent of phage lysate was added and incubated at 37ºC without shaking for 30 minutes to facilitate phage adsorption. The unadsorbed phage particles were removed by centrifugation at 6000 rpm for 5 minutes and the pellet ofbacterial cells was resuspended in 5 ml of LB broth containing 20 mM sodium citrate to prevent further phage adsorption. This was incubated for 25-60 minutes at desired temperaturewithout shaking to allow the phenotypic expression of the antibiotic resistance gene. The mixture was then centrifuged and the pellet was resuspended in 300 μl of 0.1M citrate buffer. 100 μl aliquots were spreadon appropriate antibiotic containing plates supplemented with 2.5 mM sodium citrate. A control tube without addition of P1 lysate was also processed in the same way. In the case of selection of nutritional requirement, the infection mixture was centrifuged, resuspended in 300 μl of 0.1M citrate buffer and plated without phenotypic expression
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10–6)were mixed with 0.1 ml of fresh culture grown in Z-broth. After 30 min of adsorption at 37ºC without shaking, each mixture was added on a soft agar overlay of Z-agar plates and incubated overnight at 37ºC. The phage titrewas calculated from the number of plaques obtained on the plates as follows: Phage titre(pfu) per ml = No. of plaques ×dilution factor ×1000/vol.of lysate added (in μl)
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Phage P1 lysate preparation by broth method
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Phage P1 transduction
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0.3 ml of overnight culture of the donor strain in Z-broth was mixed with 107plaque forming units (pfu) of a stock P1 phage lysate prepared on strain MG1655. Adsorption was allowed to occur at 37ºC for 30 minutes and the lysate was prepared by broth method. To 0.3 ml of infection mixture, 8-10 ml of Z-broth was added and incubated at 37ºC with slow shakinguntil the visible lysis of the culture occurred (in 4-6 hours). The lysate was treated with 0.2ml of chloroform, centrifuged and the clear lysate wasstored at 4ºC with chloroform.Quantitation of Plaque forming units (pfu)To quantitate the titreof P1 lysate preparation, titration was done using P1 phage sensitive indicator strain such as MG1655. 100 μleach of dilution of phage (typically 10–5,
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Genetic Techniques
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Annotators
URL
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- Mar 2019
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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We performed some manipulation checks to examine the internal validity of the perceptual-cognitive skill tests and any learning effects as a result of watching the same video clips multiple times
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www2.gsu.edu www2.gsu.edu
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Mager's tips on instructional objectives This is a very simple page that consists of black and white text without any graphics. As is, the text on the page is rather small and difficult (for me, anyway) to read, so one may wish to enlarge it. The process of creating instructional objectives in this format is explained in a clear and straightforward way. Rating 5/5
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- Oct 2018
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link.springer.com link.springer.com
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Four groups of subjects were compared in the study.
offenders of violent criminal activity: impulsive, non-deliberate, affectively motivated, affectively aggressive
control group: no criminal activity and no mental disorder
violently deliberating behaving delinquents: non-impulsive
delinquents performing property criminal activities, non-violent, non-impulsive
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jnnp.bmj.com jnnp.bmj.com
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(1)studies relating clinical focal frontal lobe disor-ders to violent behaviour; (2) studies reportingneuropsychological measures of frontal lobefunction in aggressive and antisocial subjects;(3) studies of clinical neurological findings inviolent and criminal populations; and (4) neu-roimaging studies of aggressive and violentsubjects
(2) and (4) are empirical research
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Methods
critical review; compiled information from research articles and studies is used to provide evidence for the connection between frontal lobe dysfunction and violent/aggressive behavior
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Annotators
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journals.sagepub.com journals.sagepub.com
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Second, we recruited a group of college students majoring in chemistry tocompletetheprocedure
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Weemployed two control groups as a performance standard. First, as in our pre-vious study, we asked a group of people to fill out the questionnaire withoutproviding them any information whatsoever about the specific case except itstype (i.e., murder).
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First, a group of senior police detectives who possessedsubstantial experience in criminal investigations participated. Second, werecruited a group of detectives who specialized in the investigation of homi-cide. Third, to contrast investigative experience to general experience as apolice officer, a sample of trainee detectives who possessed significant expe-rience in police general duties but only a marginal amount of experience incriminal investigations was obtained. Finally, a sample of police recruits wasalso used.
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- Sep 2018
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www-jstor-org.proxy.library.georgetown.edu www-jstor-org.proxy.library.georgetown.edu
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Our research took place at Florida State University (FSU), a large, flag-ship, Research–1 institution in the Southeast US, had IRB approval and spanned two semesters totaling thirty-five weeks, over the fall of 2009 and the spring of 2010.
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genome.cshlp.org genome.cshlp.org
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Motif search, calculation of motif activities, and target prediction
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- Jul 2018
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www.charleskochfoundation.org www.charleskochfoundation.org
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I buy into Newton’s philosophy that we see further by standing on the shoulders of giants.
I take his general point here, and Newton said something along these lines, but I wouldn't call it "Newton's philosophy". If anything this philosophy is really the scientific method and Newton didn't invent it.
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- May 2018
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Instead of being simply the recipient of negative comments, the reader, in this situation, sees an alternative possibility. It's not the only one. It's another option on the way to success.
love it
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- Mar 2018
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www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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Improved Protocols for Illumina Sequencing
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- Nov 2017
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riojournal.com riojournal.com
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machine learning
method
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journals.plos.org journals.plos.org
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A practice is included in our list if large numbers of researchers use it and large numbers of people are still using it months after first trying it out. We include the second criterion because there is no point in recommending something that people won't actually adopt.
I like the criteria for inclusion (and the whole article), but one could wonder if they really makes something a "good enough" practice. How many is "large numbers of researchers"?
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URL
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- Oct 2017
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rampages.us rampages.us
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applying networkand content analyses
I came across this article while doing research for last week’s blog. I know this is not a straight forward SNA article, but I found it very interesting since it is a combination of SNA and content analysis. Considering this week’s readings on different data collection method, I found their approach of collecting data from Twitter very unique. In this context, content analysis refers to analyzing tweets and their content. Recently, content analysis is being used in various fields. Even social researchers are taking this opportunity of exploring already existing data. Do you think you can use the combination of both SNA and content analysis in your own research field?
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- Jul 2017
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actualfreedom.com.au actualfreedom.com.au
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I have written elsewhere: ‘The way of becoming actually free is both simple and practical. One starts by dismantling the sense of identity that has been overlaid, from birth onward, over the innate self until one is virtually free from all the social mores and psittacisms. Virtually free from all the beliefs, ideas, values, theories, truths, customs, traditions, ideals, superstitions ... and all the other schemes and dreams. One can become aware of all the socialisation, of all the conditioning, of all the programming, of all the methods and techniques that were used to produce what one thinks and feels oneself to be – a wayward identity careering around in confusion and illusion. A ‘mature adult’ is actually a lost, lonely, frightened and very cunning entity. However, it is never too late to start in on uncovering and discovering what one actually is. One can become virtually free from all the insidious feelings – the emotions and passions – that fuel the mind and give credence to all the illusions and delusions and fantasies and hallucinations that masquerade as visions of The Truth. One can become virtually free of all that which has encumbered humans with misery and despair and live in a state of virtual freedom ... which is beyond normal human expectations anyway. Then, and only then, can the day of destiny dawn wherein one becomes actually free. One will have obtained release from one’s fate and achieved one’s birthright ... and the world will be all the better for it’.
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- Apr 2017
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edspace.american.edu edspace.american.edu
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This article can be utilized as an argument piece wherein I can help build on my argument.
Empty rhetoric here. Can cut it. It doesn't say anything really, right?
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- Feb 2017
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static1.squarespace.com static1.squarespace.com
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mechanistic approach
"ars est celare artem: art consists in concealing art"
I do not dig this mechanical, technical, scientific method dissection of writing. Unfortunately, this article is filled with this pre-Freudian crap. You wouldn't tear Raphael a new one because he painted The School of Athens figures in the wrong order.
Are these mechanics the result of the scientific method?
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- Dec 2016
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edspace.american.edu edspace.american.edu
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results of your research, and within the context of the study, we found ample evidence about significant cha
You can get it down even more, no? "Your research suggests we should make . . . "
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- Oct 2016
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edspace.american.edu edspace.american.edu
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essay has a goal of bringing
paramedicize.
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- Sep 2016
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The point of replication isn't to shame researchers — it's to build better science
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- Aug 2016
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www.marinetech.org www.marinetech.org
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Performance CategoryDesign Categoriesi. StructureFrame design, shape and materials –for functionii. MobilityThrusters: number, power, orientationiii. SensorsCameras, lights, sonar, touch sensors, compass, GPSiv. ToolsArms, claws, rakes, wrenches, hammersv. Ranging DistanceTether length: waterproofing required vi. Buoyancy/ BallastFixed or variable, location and materialsvii. ControlsRC via wire or signal via fibre optic cableviii. Other?Depends on the specific mission
Are you doing science projects? Maybe you can use an old mission scope to have students ask questions about. That way some of the questions we will need to face will be answered before we actually get the mission for this year.
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acrl.ala.org acrl.ala.org
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For the humanities syllabi, I also asked how many tools were being taught in each course.
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I looked at whether the courses: 1) required a collaborative project and 2) set aside time to discuss the challenges of collaboration or cross-disciplinary research (or had readings that indicated such).
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With each syllabus I looked for general focus (is it tools-, training-, or topics-focused?), the breadth of assigned readings (is the literature from librarianship, humanities fields, or both?), and the structure of project(s) (collaborative, individual).
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- Jul 2016
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books.google.ca books.google.ca
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Page 15
Rockwell and Sinclair on the importance of staying up-to-date on commercial developments in text mining and text-handling:
we are practicing thinking in the humanities while the way people read, the tools of reading, and information privacy and organization are shifting around us. These shifts matter. If we continue to treat textuality as a subject, we need to understand how text can be mined.
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Page 6
Computer-assisted research in the humanities, by contrast to the Cartesian story and traditional humanities practices, has almost always been collaborative. This is due to the variety of skills needed to implement digital humanities projects. It is also linked to the relationship between the practices of interpretation in the development of the tools of interpretation, be the tools for analyzing text or digital editions. Anyone who has used tools forged by another person is in collaboration, even if one isn't personally influencing the provider of the tools. The need to collaborate, though acknowledged in various ways, has been a professional hindrance, as anyone who submits a curriculum vitae for promotion listing nothing but co-authored papers knows.
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Pages 6-7
Collaboration is not always good. It separates the interpreter/scholar from the designer/programmer who implements the scholarly methods. Willard McCarthy notes that the introduction of software "separated the conception of the problems (domain of the scholar) from the computational means of working them out (baliwick of the programmer) and so came at a significant cost.” As computing is introduced into research, it separates consumption, implementation, and interpretation in ways that can be overcome only through dialogue and collaboration across very different fields. Typically, humanities scholars know little about programming and software engineering, and programmers know little about humanities scholarship. Going it alone is an option only for the few who have time to master both. The rest of us and up depending on others.
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books.google.ca books.google.ca
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p. 8-actually this is link to p. 7, since 8 is excluded
Another trend is the blurring of the distinction between primary sources, generally viewed as unprocessed or unanalysed data, and secondary sources that set data in context.
Good point about how this is a new thing. On the next page she discusses how we are now collpasing the traditional distinction between primary and secondary sources.
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- Jan 2016
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historyonics.blogspot.com historyonics.blogspot.com
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Is he saying something about inductive vs deductive methods? Where typically historians have a model or a hypothesis but now they are allowing the data to tell the story?
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- Nov 2015
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dl.acm.org dl.acm.org
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formative study
Interesting method, based on storyboards and interviews.
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craft cultures
Very interesting workshop, cross-cultural analysis.
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URL
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- Jun 2015
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caseyboyle.net caseyboyle.net
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The models criticized earlier do not need to be trashed. They are not just plain wrong. It's just that their sphere of applicability must be recognized as limited to a particular mode of exis tence, or a particular dimension of the real (the degree to which things coincide with their own arrest).
This seems to be applicable to method discussions. Certain methods are applicable to certain audiences. Perhaps reductive...
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caseyboyle.net caseyboyle.net
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iterative-inductive research (that evolves in design through the study), drawing on a family of methods,
Hmmm....I really like this articulation of method and find it analogous to "affect theory." That is...the slipperiness that we often encounter in affect theory is often a result of the formal commitments to an ongoing process of evolving terms. Here..."iterative-induction" works well to foreground that process of change.
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- May 2015
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caseyboyle.net caseyboyle.net
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'rbe concepts appear and reappellT like II revolving cast of characters, joining forces or interfer ing with each other in a tumble of abstract intrigues-at rimes (I admit) barely controlled
I love the following few pages--on methodology?
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Annotators
URL
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www.dpmms.cam.ac.uk www.dpmms.cam.ac.uk
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x = -a +/- (a2 -b)1/2
This page looks very interesting but this kind of math formatting has forced many people to take their lives. $$x = -a \pm \sqrt{a^2 - b}$$
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Annotators
URL
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- Apr 2015
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scalar.usc.edu scalar.usc.eduRecipe2
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get information of the literature’s abstr
Do you mean that excluded literature published before the year 2000? This is also a methodological choice which effects results, thus it warrants some discussion of justification.
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vironment’,’trade’,’trad
Why 30 times and not another cutoff? This kind of methodological choice makes a difference to results and thus deserves some discussion of its justification.
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- Nov 2013
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caseyboyle.net caseyboyle.net
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In use these should be united, so that the same oration can expound purely, speak ornately, and express thought wisely. However, the precepts of pure diction, ornate delivery, and intelligent treatment must be kept separate and should not be confused.
surely, like learning to play the guitar: fingering on the keyboard, strum and pick, and annotation are studied as distinct practices, and combined together to produce the music.
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method
Method vs. purpose Grammar vs. message
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- Oct 2013
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rhetoric.eserver.org rhetoric.eserver.org
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Moreover, we must not even trust to the first learning by heart; it will be better to have syllables repeated and to impress them long upon the memory; and in reading too, not to hurry on, in order to make it continuous or quick, until the clear and certain connection of the letters become familiar, without at least any necessity to stop for recollection
Teaching to long memory, more effective than to short memory
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- Sep 2013
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caseyboyle.net caseyboyle.netGorgias4
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false knowledge
substitutes "knowledge" for "learning"
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SOCRATES: And that, Gorgias, was what I was suspecting to be your notion; yet I would not have you wonder if by-and-by I am found repeating a seemingly plain question; for I ask not in order to confute you, but as I was saying that the argument may proceed consecutively, and that we may not get the habit of anticipating and suspecting the meaning of one another's words; I would have you develope your own views in your own way, whatever may be your hypothesis. GORGIAS: I think that you are quite right, Socrates.
Socrates himself seems to be a master of persuasion via making the opinions of his opponents sound an awful lot like his own.
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Now I want to know about rhetoric in the same way;—is rhetoric the only art which brings persuasion, or do other arts have the same effect? I mean to say—Does he who teaches anything persuade men of that which he teaches or not?
If this is that, then is that also this?
Socrates method of persuasion seems to be to tease out distinguishing elements in such a manner as to expand the view and scope of the proposition. it feels like kind of a psychological exercise. I feel like he is going somewhere with this and that he has used several rhetorical tactics and tricks of persuasion that are about be revealed.
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And here let me assure you that I have your interest in view as well as my own
not arguing for the sake of argument, but clearly in pursuit of truth - the psychology of his approach - his method
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