Books on the topic 'Crossed squares'

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1

Cammilleri, Rino. Il quadrato magico. Milano: Rizzoli, 1999.

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2

Wu, Jie. A least-squares finite element method for electromagnetic scattering problems. [Cleveland, Ohio]: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Lewis Research Center, Institute for Computational Mechanics in Propulsion, 1996.

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3

Jie, Wu. A least-squares finite element method for electromagnetic scattering problems. [Cleveland, Ohio]: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Lewis Research Center, Institute for Computational Mechanics in Propulsion, 1996.

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4

1940-, Jiang Bo-Nan, and Lewis Research Center. Institute for Computational Mechanics in Propulsion., eds. A least-squares finite element method for electromagnetic scattering problems. [Cleveland, Ohio]: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Lewis Research Center, Institute for Computational Mechanics in Propulsion, 1996.

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5

Catholic Church. Pontificium Consilium pro Familia. The way of the cross during the jubilee of families: October 12, 2000 in St. Peter's Square. Citta del Vaticano: Pontifical Council for the Family, 1996.

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6

Understanding Tahrir Square: What transitions elsewhere can teach us about the prospects for Arab democracy. Washington, D.C: Brookings Institution Press, 2014.

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7

Books, China Exercise Books. 练习本 Chinese Empty Exercise Book for Calligraphy, Crossed Squares. Independently Published, 2019.

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8

Walsh, Bruce, and Michael Lynch. Analysis of Short-term Selection Experiments: 1. Least-squares Approaches. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198830870.003.0018.

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This chapter examines short-term (a few generations) selection response in the mean of a trait. Traditionally, such experiments are analyzed using least-squares (LS) approaches. While ordinary LS (OLS) is often used, genetic drift causes the residual to be both correlated and heteroscedastic, resulting in the sampling variances given by OLS being too small. This chapter details the appropriate general LS (GLS) approaches to properly account for this residual error structure. It also reviews some of the common features observed in short-term selection experiments and examines experimental designs, such as the use of a control population versus a divergence-selection approach. It concludes by discussing another linear model used mainly by plant breeders, generation-means analysis (GMA), wherein remnant seed for several generations of response are crossed and then grown in a common garden. Such an analysis can provide insight into the genetic nature of any response.
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9

Cigarette Sellers of Three Crosses Square. Runestone Pr, 2000.

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10

Spirit of Life Crosses & Doves in Square Bracelet. Monarch Creations, 2000.

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11

Books, Plazuks. X's and Crosses: 30 Complex Square Colouring Patterns. Independently Published, 2020.

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12

Undercover with Mandela's Spies: The Story of the Boy Who Crossed the Square. Jacana Education, 2019.

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13

(Translator), Janina David, ed. The Cigarette Sellers of Three Crosses Square (The Library of Holocaust Testimonies). Mitchell Vallentine & Company, 2005.

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14

White, William. How to Play Crossnet Four Square Volleyball: Everything You Need to Know about Crossnet Four Square Volleyball, the Rules and Basic Gameplay Instructions. Independently Published, 2022.

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15

Halperin, Sandra, and Oliver Heath. 16. Patterns of Association. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hepl/9780198702740.003.0016.

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This chapter discusses the principles of bivariate analysis as a tool for helping researchers get to know their data and identify patterns of association between two variables. Bivariate analysis offers a way of establishing whether or not there is a relationship between two variables, a dependent variable and an independent variable. With bivariate analysis, theoretical expectations can be compared against evidence from the real world to see if the theory is supported by what is observed. The chapter examines the pattern of association between dependent and independent variables, with particular emphasis on hypothesis testing and significance tests. It discusses ordinary least squares (OLS) regression and cross-tabulation, two of the most widely used statistical analysis techniques in political research. Finally, it explains how to state the null hypothesis, calculate the chi square, and establishing the correlation between the dependent and independent variables.
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16

Goehr, Lydia. Red Sea-Red Square-Red Thread. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197572443.001.0001.

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Red Sea—Red Square—Red Thread is a work of passages. It offers a genealogy of liberty through a micrology of wit. It follows a long history of a very short anecdote: commissioned to depict the biblical passage through the Red Sea, a painter covered a surface with red paint, explaining that the Israelites had already crossed over and that the Egyptians were drowned. Who was the painter and who the first teller of the tale? Designed as a philosophical detective story, the book follows the extraordinarily many thinkers and artists who have used the Red Sea anecdote to make much more than a merely anecdotal point, foremost the philosophers Arthur Danto and Søren Kierkegaard, the writer Henri Murger, the opera composer Giacomo Puccini, and the painter William Hogarth. Strange companions perhaps, until their shared use of the anecdote proves its extraordinary passage through so many cosmopolitan cities. What brings Danto’s philosophy of art into conversation with Kierkegaard’s stages on life’s way, with Murger and Puccini’s la vie de bohème, and with Hogarth’s modern moral pictures? The book explores narratives of emancipation in philosophy, theology, politics, and the arts. What has the passage of the Israelites to do with the Egyptians who came to be branded as bohemians when arriving in France from the German lands of Bohemia? What have Moses and monotheism to do with the history of monism and the monochrome? And what sort of thread connects a sea to a square when each so purposefully is named red?
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17

A least-squares finite element method for electromagnetic scattering problems. [Cleveland, Ohio]: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Lewis Research Center, Institute for Computational Mechanics in Propulsion, 1996.

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18

Sun, Huatong. Global Social Media Design. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190845582.001.0001.

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Social media users fracture into tribes, but social media ecosystems are globally interconnected technically, socially, culturally, and economically. At the crossroads, Huatong Sun, author of Cross-Cultural Technology Design, presents theory, method, and case studies to uncover the global interconnectedness of social media design and reorient universal design standards. Centering on the dynamics between structure and agency, Sun draws on practices theories and transnational fieldwork and articulates a critical design approach. The culturally localized user engagement and empowerment (CLUE2, or CLUE-squared) framework extends from situated activity to social practice and connects macro institutions with micro interactions to redress asymmetrical relations in everyday life. Why were Japanese users not crazed about Facebook? Would Twitter have been more successful than its copycat Weibo in China if not banned? How did mobilities and value propositions play out in the competition of WhatsApp, WeChat, LINE, and KakaoTalk for global growth? Illustrating the cultural entanglement with a relational view of design, Sun provides three provocative accounts of cross-cultural social media design and use. Concepts such as affordance, genre, and uptake are demonstrated as design tools to bind the material with the discursive and leap from the critical to the generative for culturally sustaining design. Sun calls to reshape the crossroads into a design square where differences are nourished as design resources, where diverse discourses interact for innovation, and where alternative design epistemes thrive from the local. This timely book will appeal to researchers, students, and practitioners who design across disciplines, paradigms, and boundaries to bridge differences in this increasingly globalized world.
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19

Grand, Stephen R. Understanding Tahrir Square: What Transitions Elsewhere Can Teach Us about the Propects for Arab Democracy. Brookings Institution Press, 2014.

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20

Grand, Stephen R. Understanding Tahrir Square: What Transitions Elsewhere Can Teach Us about the Prospects for Arab Democracy. Brookings Institution Press, 2014.

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21

Rondinone, Troy. The Friday Night Fighters. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037375.003.0004.

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This chapter discusses the rise of the Friday Night Fighters. The new age of television meant grand opportunity for Friday Night Fighters. As broadcasts expanded in the postwar years, fighters discovered that a main event fight in Madison Square Garden equaled instant national celebrity and a big pile of cash. To make it on TV, a boxer first needed to be in New York. Some migrated internally, arriving from the red dirt roads of the Deep South or the rangy farmlands of the Midwest. For others, home was the cane fields and ghettos of the Caribbean or the desert metropolises of Mexamerica. Still others crossed the Atlantic, originating in Europe, Asia, even Africa. In a way, the Friday Night Fighters symbolized New York immigration. The remainder of the chapter explains the effect of television on the sport, how both science and theater played into the persona of the Friday Night Fighter, by letting two boxers stand in for the whole. The first— Kid Gavilan—is an exemplar of that group of rugged, quality fighters who made many appearances but whom the history books have let pass unnoticed into the mists of boxing lore. The second— Chuck Davey—was a man almost too perfect for television and wholly unprepared for it.
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22

Li, Quan. Using R for Data Analysis in Social Sciences. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190656218.001.0001.

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This book seeks to teach undergraduate and graduate students in social sciences how to use R to manage, visualize, and analyze data in order to answer substantive questions and replicate published findings. This book distinguishes itself from other introductory R or statistics books in three ways. First, targeting an audience rarely exposed to statistical programming, it adopts a minimalist approach and covers only the most important functions and skills in R that one will need for conducting reproducible research projects. Second, it emphasizes meeting the practical needs of students using R in research projects. Specifically, it teaches students how to import, inspect, and manage data; understand the logic of statistical inference; visualize data and findings via histograms, boxplots, scatterplots, and diagnostic plots; and analyze data using one-sample t-test, difference-of-means test, covariance, correlation, ordinary least squares (OLS) regression, and model assumption diagnostics. Third, it teaches students how to replicate the findings in published journal articles and diagnose model assumption violations. The principle behind this book is to teach students to learn as little R as possible but to do as much reproducible, substance-driven data analysis at the beginner or intermediate level as possible. The minimalist approach dramatically reduces the learning cost but still proves adequate information for meeting the practical research needs of senior undergraduate and beginning graduate students. Having completed this book, students can use R and statistical analysis to answer questions regarding some substantively interesting continuous outcome variable in a cross-sectional design.
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23

Bekker, Simon, and Anne Leilde, eds. Reflections on Identity in Four African Cities. African Minds, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.47622/9781920051402.

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Identity has become the watchword of our times. In sub-Saharan Africa, this certainly appears to be true and for particular reasons. Africa is urbanising rapidly, cross-border migration streams are swelling and globalising influences sweep across the continent. Africa is also facing up to the challenge of nurturing emergent democracies in which citizens often feel torn between older traditional and newer national loyalties. Accordingly, collective identities are deeply coloured by recent urban as well as international experience and are squarely located within identity politics where reconciliation is required between state nation-building strategies and sub-national affiliations. They are also fundamentally shaped by the growing inequality and the poverty found on this continent. These themes are explored by an international set of scholars in two South African and two Francophone cities. The relative importance to urban residents of race, class and ethnicity but also of work, space and language are compared in these cities. This volume also includes a chapter investigating the emergence of a continental African identity. A recent report of the Office of the South African President claims that a strong national identity is emerging among its citizens, and that race and ethnicity are waning whilst a class identity is in the ascendance. The evidence and analyses within this volume serve to gauge the extent to which such claims ring true, in what everyone knows is a much more complex and shifting terrain of shared meanings than can ever be captured by such generalisations.
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24

Wilson, Bart J. The Property Species. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190936785.001.0001.

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What is property, and why does our species happen to have it? The Property Species explores how Homo sapiens acquires, perceives, and knows the custom of property, and why it might be relevant for understanding how property works in the twenty-first century. Arguing from some hard-to-dispute facts that neither the natural sciences nor the humanities—nor the social sciences squarely in the middle—are synthesizing a full account of property, this book offers a cross-disciplinary compromise that is sure to be controversial: All human beings and only human beings have property in things, and at its core, property rests on custom, not rights. Such an alternative to conventional thinking contends that the origins of property lie not in food, mates, territory, or land, but in the very human act of creating, with symbolic thought, something new that did not previously exist. Integrating cognitive linguistics with the philosophy of property and a fresh look at property disputes in the common law, this book makes the case that symbolic-thinking humans locate the meaning of property within a thing. The provocative implications are that property—not property rights—is an inherent fundamental principle of economics, and that legal realists and the bundle-of-sticks metaphor are wrong about the facts regarding property. Written by an economist who marvels at the natural history of humankind, the book is essential reading for experts and any reader who has wondered why people claim things as “Mine!,” and what that means for our humanity.
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