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Journal articles on the topic "FIS/01"

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Carlsson, Magnus, Tomas Carlsson, Daniel Hammarström, Christer Malm, and Michail Tonkonogi. "Time Trials Predict the Competitive Performance Capacity of Junior Cross-Country Skiers." International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance 9, no. 1 (January 2014): 12–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2012-0172.

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Purpose:This study investigated whether there is a correlation between time-trial performance and competitive performance capacity of male and female junior cross-country skiers and sought to explain sex-specific competitive performance capacity through multiple-regression modeling.Methods:The International Ski Federation’s (FIS) junior ranking points for distance (FISdist) and sprint (FISsprint) competitions were used as performance parameters. A total of 38 elite junior (age 18.5 ± 1.0 y) cross-country skiers (24 men and 14 women) completed 3 time-trial tests: a 3-km level-running time trial (TTRun), a 2-km moderate uphill (1.2° slope) roller-skiing time trial using the double-poling technique (TTDP), and a 2-km uphill (2.8° slope) roller-skiing time trial using the diagonal-stride technique (TTDiag). The correlations were investigated using Pearson correlation analysis, and regression models were created using multiple-linear-regression analysis.Results:For men, FISsprint and FISdist were correlated with the times for TTRun, TTDP, and TTDiag (all P < .001). For women, FISsprint was correlated with the times for TTRun (P < .05), TTDP (P < .01), and TTDiag (P < .01), whereas FISdist was correlated only with the times for TTDP (P < .01) and TTDiag (P < .05). The models developed for FISdist and FISsprint explained 73.9–82.3% of the variance in the performance capacity of male junior cross-country skiers. No statistically valid regression model was found for the women.Conclusions:Running and roller-skiing time trials are useful tests for accurately predicting the performance capacity of junior cross-country skiers.
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Hershman, D. E., R. D. Heinz, and B. S. Kennedy. "Soybean Cyst Nematode, Heterodera glycines, Populations Adapting to Resistant Soybean Cultivars in Kentucky." Plant Disease 92, no. 10 (October 2008): 1475. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis-92-10-1475b.

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Soybean cyst nematode (SCN), Heterodera glycines, is the most limiting biotic factor of soybean (Glycine max) production in Kentucky (KY). Unpublished results of a survey of commercial soybean fields in KY in the late 1980s indicated that H. glycines (HG) type 0 (race 3) was the most common HG type in the state. HG type 0 populations cannot reproduce (female index [FI] <10% compared with reproduction on a standard susceptible cultivar) on PI88788, which is the basis of H. glycines resistance in >90% of the soybean cultivars grown in the United States. Recent reports from Illinois (4), Missouri (3), and North Carolina (2) indicate that most populations of H. glycines in those states are now able to reproduce on resistant soybean cultivars derived from PI88788. Because cultivars derived from PI88788 are grown almost exclusively in KY to manage H. glycines, a limited survey was needed to update information on H. glycines populations. Most soybean fields in KY are grown in a 1-year rotation with corn (Zea mays), a nonhost crop for H. glycines. Therefore, the survey targeted fields that had most recently been in corn. Otherwise, fields were arbitrarily selected for sampling. Composite samples were collected in the fall of 2006 or the spring of 2007 and consisted of 20 soil cores (10 to 15 cm deep × 2.5 cm in diameter) collected following a zigzag pattern. Samples were mixed and stored at 4°C until processing. H. glycines cysts were extracted from soil by a sucrose centrifugation and flotation technique (1). Eggs were liberated by crushing cysts caught on a sieve (250-μm-diameter pores) with a rubber stopper. Liberated eggs were then collected, stained with acid fuchsin, and counted. Up to three samples from each county surveyed were sent to the University of Missouri Nematology Laboratory, Columbia, MO for HG type testing (3). A total of 139 samples, representing 19 major soybean-production counties in KY, were analyzed for H. glycines levels. H. glycines eggs were recovered from 106 (76%) samples and 16 (84%) counties. SCN population densities ranged from 38 to 4,275 eggs per 250 cm3 of soil. HG type tests were conducted on 20 populations from eight counties. HG types 1.2.5.7 (race 2) and 2.5.7 (race 1 or 5) were identified, with HG type 2.5.7 (race 1) being the most common (60% of populations screened). No HG type 0 populations were detected. All populations tested had a FI ≥10% on three of nine indicator lines (PI88788, PI209322, and PI548316). FIs on these indicators ranged from 15 to 80, 11 to 81, and 23 to 88%, respectively. Sixty percent of populations tested had FIs ≥30% on PI88788. Of the populations screened, 25 and 35% had FIs ≥10% on PI548402 (Peking) and Pickett, respectively. All populations tested had FIs = 0 on PI437654. Survey results indicate that cultivars deriving their H. glycines resistance from PI88788 may have reduced effectiveness in suppressing current H. glycines populations in KY. Consequently, producers may need to grow soybean cultivars derived from non-PI88788 resistance sources to successfully manage H. glycines in the future. References: (1) D. E. Hershman et al. Plant Dis. 74:761, 1990. (2) S. R. Koenning. Plant Dis. 88:942, 2004. (3) M. G. Mitchum et al. Plant Dis. 91:1473, 2007. (4) T. L. Niblack et al. Online publication. doi:10.1094/PHP-2008-0118-01-RS. Plant Health Progress, 2008.
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Haugnes, Pål, Jan Kocbach, Rune Kjøsen Talsnes, Dionne Noordhof, Gertjan Ettema, and Øyvind Sandbakk. "The influence of race tactics for performance in the heats of an international sprint cross-country skiing competition." PLOS ONE 17, no. 12 (December 9, 2022): e0278552. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278552.

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The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of race tactics for performance in the heats of an international sprint cross-country (XC) skiing competition in the classical style. Thirty elite male XC skiers (age: 24±3 years, sprint International Ski Federation [FIS] points: 61±27) performed a sprint time-trial (STT) followed by one to three ‘knock-out’ heats on a 1.7 km racecourse. An integrated GNSS/IMU system was used to determine position, sub-technique distribution and kinematics. Positioning was analysed using the television broadcast of the race. STT rank correlated positively with the final rank [(rs (28) = .72, P = .001)]. The top-two finishers in each heat were on average ~3.8% slower in the heats compared to the STT (237.1±3.9 vs. 228.3±4.0 seconds, P = .001). On average, the skiers performed ~10 overtakings per 100 meters from the start to the last uphill segment but only ~3 overtakings per 100 meters in the last two segments in each heat. 93.8% of the top-two finishing skiers positioned themselves at top 2 before approaching the final uphill, in which the top-two finishers and the skiers ranked 3–4 were generally faster than those ranked 5–6 in the heats (both, P = .01). Here, top-four skiers employed 5.3% longer cycle lengths and 3.4% higher cycle rates in the diagonal sub-technique than skiers ranked 5–6 (all, P = .01). The present study demonstrates the importance of race tactics for performance in the heats of sprint XC skiing, in which the main performance-determining factors in the present racecourse were a front position when approaching the final uphill segment combined with the ability to ski fast in that segment. In general, this illustrates how accurate racecourse analyses may help skiers to optimize their race-individual race-strategies in the heats of sprint XC skiing competitions.
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Egmond, E., G. Oriolo, M. Cavero, K. Langohr, R. Solà, R. Navines, and R. Martin-Santos. "Substance abuse and quality of life in chronic hepatitis C patients receiving antiviral treatment." European Psychiatry 33, S1 (March 2016): S142. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.240.

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IntroductionChronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) is one of world's most important chronic infections. HCV can be treated using interferon-alpha (IFNα) and ribavirin (RBV). HCV, IFNα and RBV are known to impair mental and physical life quality. Many HCV-infected individuals have life-prevalence of substance use disorder (SUD).ObjectivesTo study life quality (SF-36) in HCV patients with SUD history during antiviral treatment.MethodsSF-36 questionnaire was assessed in 384 HCV patients at baseline, and at 4, 12, 24, and 48 weeks of treatment. ANCOVA models were used to study the association of SF-36 scores and potential risk factors at baseline. Risk factors from baseline scores over time were studied through linear mixed models, adjusting for baseline scores.ResultsAt baseline, SUD men had worse mental (P = 0.03) and physical health (P = 0.022), and younger patients had worse social functioning (P = 0.011), and mental (P = 0.001) but better physical health (P < 0.001). Figs. 1 and 2 show the results of mental and physical life quality during treatment from baseline.ConclusionsThis study emphasizes the decrease in life quality in HCV patients with SUD before and during antiviral treatment.GrantInstituto de Carlos III-FIS: PSICOCIT-PI110/01827,EU “One way to make Europe”, Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MTM2012-38067-C02-01), and support of SGR/2014/1135.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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Dewhurst, R. J., K. Aston, W. J. Fisher, R. T. Evans, M. S. Dhanoa, and A. B. McAllan. "Comparison of energy and protein sources offered at low levels in grass-silage-based diets for dairy cows." Animal Science 68, no. 4 (June 1999): 789–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1357729800050815.

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AbstractFour dietary treatments were based on a flat-rate (5 kg/day) of concentrates with ad libitum grass silage. The concentrates were iso-energetic and iso-nitrogenous, based on either barley or unmolassed sugar-beet pulp and either extracted rapeseed meal (RSM) or a 1: 3 mixture of fish and soya-bean meals (F/S). These diets were offered to 61 multiparous Holstein-Friesian cows in a continuous design experiment from lactation weeks 4 to 22. Milk yields tended to he higher with RSM (25·1 v. 23·9 kg/day; s.e.d. = 0·64; P < 0·1), whilst milk fat (38·1 v. 40·0 g/kg; s.e.d. = 0·81) and milk protein (30·4 v. 31·3 g/kg; s.e.d. = 0·41) concentrations were significantly (P < 0·05) lower. There were no significant effects of treatments on the efficiency of conversion of food-nitrogen (N) to milk-N or on N-retention. A lower organic matter apparent digestibility (g/g) was found for RSM-based diets (0·738 v. 0·763; s.e.d. = 0·0096; P < 0·05). The diets were also offered to four fistulated dairy cows in a Latin-square-design experiment. Concentrate energy source had significant effects on rumen pH (P < 0·05) and ammonia-N concentration (P < 0·01), whilst protein sources had no effect; values were always in the optimal range (pH > 6 and ammonia-N > 50 mg/l). There was a significant interaction effect (P < 0·05) such that the N-degradability of the whole diet, estimated in vivo, was unaffected by energy source for RSM-based diets but highly dependent on energy source for FIS diets. Microbial protein yield was reduced on the RSM-based diets (179 v. 220 g/day; s.e.d. = 9·6; P < 0·001).
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Justo Sanz, Raul, Elena Monzón Manzano, Ihosvany Fernandez-Bello, Teresa Álvarez-Roman, Mónica Martín, María Isabel Rivas Pollmar, Miguel A. Canales, Victor Jimenez-Yuste, and Nora Butta. "Platelet Apoptosis and PAI-1 Content Are Involved in the Procoagulant Profile of Immune Thrombocytopenia Patients Responders to Agonists of Thrombopoietin Receptor." Blood 132, Supplement 1 (November 29, 2018): 3738. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2018-99-115898.

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Abstract Background: The treatment goal for patients with immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) is to raise platelet counts to levels that minimize or stop bleeding. Thrombopoietin receptor agonists (TPO-RAs) have been successfully and extensively employed as second-line therapy for ITP. TPO-RAs, however, have a small but significant increase in the risk of thrombosis. Aim: The aim of this study was to elucidate the mechanisms involved in the procoagulant effect of TPO-RAs. Methods: This is a prospective, observational and transversal study. Eighty-two patients with chronic primary ITP, 40 without treatment for at least six months (UT-ITP) and 42 responders to TPO-RA therapy (64.3% with eltrombopag and 35.7 % with romiplostim) were recruited. One hundred and twelve healthy participants were also included. ROTEM® (naTEM test: only recalcification) was performed on platelet rich plasma adjusted to a platelet count of 25 x 109/L. Clotting time (CT, time from start of measurement until 2 mm of amplitude [in seconds], alpha angle, which reflects the rate of fibrin polymerisation (tangent to the curve at 2 mm amplitude [in degrees]), maximum clot firmness, which reflects the maximum tensile strength of the thrombus (MCF, [in mm]) and LI60, which describes the percentage of maximum clot strength present at 60 min (in %), were recorded. Surface exposure of phosphatidylserine (PS), active caspase-3, -8 or -9 and prothrombinase complex binding to platelets were assessed by flow cytometry. Plasma and platelet levels of PAI-1 were determined by ELISA (eBioscience Ltd., Hatfield, United Kingdom). The effect of TPO and romiplostim on PAI-1 content of MEG-01 cells was evaluated by Western blot. Three MEG-01 cell cultures were initiated simultaneously: control without drugs and treated with either TPO (100 ng/mL) or romiplostim (53 μg/mL). Samples were collected at the start and after 24, 48 and 72 hours to determine the PAI-1 content. The statistical analysis was performed using SPSS 9.0 software (SPSS Inc., Chicago, Illinois, USA). Results: The ROTEM® studies showed significant differences in the dynamics of clot formation when comparing the control with ITP samples. There was a delay in clot formation in the UT-ITP group, as observed by a prolonged CT [expressed as median (p25-p75): control: 516 (490- 633) s; UT-ITP: 938 (914-1348) s, p<0.001], and a diminished alpha angle (mean±SD; control: 61.7±5.6 degrees; UT-ITP: 49.2±7.3 degrees, p<0.05). Nevertheless, samples from patients with UT-ITP reached the same MCF as those from healthy controls (control: 45.3±2.4 mm; UT-ITP: 46.9±3.7 mm). On the other hand, patients with ITP undergoing TPO-RA therapy presented an initial clot formation similar to that of the control group [expressed as median (p25-p75): CT, 672 (598-928) s; alpha angle, 55.8±5.8 degrees] but achieved a higher MCF (53.1±4.5 mm, p<0.05) and a reduced clot lysis after 60 min (control: 91.8±4.0%; UT-ITP: 93.7±4.0%, TPO-RA ITP: 97.6±1.7, p<0.05). Higher values of MCF observed with platelets from ITP patients treated with TPO-RAs might be a consequence of their augmented apoptosis signs: platelets from this group exposed more PS than controls and this situation was accompanied by an increased activity of caspases-3,7, -8 and -9 (Figure 1 A and B). Moreover, platelets from ITP patients on treatment with TPO-RAs bound more prothrombinase complex than platelets from UT-ITP patients and healthy controls (Figure 1 C). Reduced clot lysis observed in ITP patients treated with TPO-RA was due, at least in part, to increased plasma and platelet levels of PAI-1 (Table 1). Increase in platelet content of PAI-1 might be the result of the effect of TPO-RAs during megakaryopoiesis since treatments of MEG-01 cells with TPO or romiplostim induced a 3-fold increase in their endogenous PAI-1 content after an incubation period of 48 hs. Conclusion: The patients with ITP undergoing TPO-RAs therapy presented a procoagulant profile due to the formation of a more fibrinolysis-resistant clot because of increased platelet and plasma PAI-1 levels. Moreover, platelets from this group of patients showed more signs of apoptosis that causes a higher exposure of PS and, consequently, a larger surface for the binding of the prothrombinase complex. Work supported by grant from FIS-FEDER PI15/01457. NB holds a Miguel Servet II (FIS-FEDER CP14/00024). Disclosures Álvarez-Roman: SOBI: Consultancy; NovoNordisk: Consultancy; Shire: Consultancy. Jimenez-Yuste:Grifols: Consultancy, Research Funding; Octapharma: Consultancy, Research Funding; CSL Behring: Consultancy; Bayer: Consultancy, Research Funding; Roche: Consultancy, Research Funding; Shire: Consultancy, Research Funding; Sobi: Consultancy, Research Funding; Pfizer: Consultancy, Research Funding; NovoNordisk: Consultancy, Research Funding. Butta:FIS-Fondos FEDER: Research Funding.
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Ulvang, Vegard. "Idrettens Idrett - fra langrennsløper til FIS-pamp." Samtiden 120, no. 01 (July 7, 2011): 40–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.18261/issn1890-0690-2011-01-05.

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Simic, Milan. "Cascaded Fuzzy Logic for Adaptive Cruise Control." MIST INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY 10 (June 26, 2022): 33–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.47981/j.mijst.10(01)2022.320(33-40).

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Application of fuzzy logic is a powerful approach that could be applied in a large number of disciplines, starting with engineering control systems, as shown here, but also in other business areas. After a short introduction to fuzzy logic, its application for adaptive cruise control (ACC) is presented. ACC is a driver assistance feature that deals with the problem of speed control, while keeping the safe distance from the vehicle ahead. In the hierarchy of autonomous vehicles autonomy levels, as defined by Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) International, adaptive cruise control appears in the vehicles at the level 1 and above. We developed a fuzzy logic controller where controlled variables are speed and distance. Input variables include weather conditions, style or mode of driving, vehicle speed and steering angle. A large number of input variables improve control but lead to a large fuzzy rules table. Because of that, in the design presented here, a tree of connected fuzzy inference systems (FIS) is applied. Fuzzy inference systems with a smaller number of variables are developed, algorithms explained, rule base defined, and obtained control surfaces presented. This approach requires less processing time enabling real time applications. Since the rules are defined based on drivers’ experiences, fuzzy logic control systems make decisions in the same way as humans do, i.e., as experience drivers. This paper gives a comprehensive presentation of a novel cascaded fuzzy system development. This novel design also involves algebraic subtraction performed through a FIS subsystem.
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Kostomakhin, N., A. Mohammad, and A. Bakai. "Comparative characteristics of population and genetic parameters of Syrian cattle breed Shami with Holstein and Aberdeen-Angus." Glavnyj zootehnik (Head of Animal Breeding), no. 1 (January 1, 2020): 3–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.33920/sel-03-2001-01.

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The material on the widespread use of Holstein cattle breed in the Syrian Arab Republic to improve local breeds has been presented in the article. The analysis of the genetic equilibrium of individual loci in Syrian cattle breed Shami has been revealed a deviation from the equilibrium of four loci: TGLA227, SPS115, TGLA122 and ETH225, in Holstein breed one locus SPS115, in Aberdeen-Angus breed two loci TGLA122 and ETH225. When assessing the level of genetic consolidation, a defi ciency of heterozygotes has been noted in two of the three breeds studied: 4,8 % in Shami and 8,0 % in AberdeenAngus. In Holstein breed a slight excess of heterozygotes at the level of 0,2 % has been revealed. The calculation of the value of the fixation index (Fis) has shown an excess of heterozygotes only in the loci TGLA227, INRA23, TGLA126 and as a consequence a positive average value collectively for the studied samples of cattle at the level of 5,8 %. The average Fst at 11 loci for all breeds was 0,069, indicating that 93,1 % of all variability is due to intra-breed diversity and only 6,9 % to inter-breed differences. The analysis of animals belonging to their own breed has shown 100 % genetic consolidation and compliance of the studied individuals with their breeds. The analysis of genetic distances adjusted for small samples has revealed the smallest genetic distance between Shami and Holstein breeds 0,107. Aberdeen-Angus breed, which has a separate origin and has not been imported into the Syrian Arab Republic, is adjacent to this cluster an independent branch.
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Verma, Nipun, Shreya Singh, Akash Roy, Arun Valsan, Pratibha Garg, Pranita Pradhan, Arunaloke Chakrabarti, and Meenu Singh. "P305 Cirrhosis and fungal infections-a cocktail for catastrophe: a systematic review and meta-analysis with machine learning." Medical Mycology 60, Supplement_1 (September 2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mmy/myac072.p305.

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Abstract Poster session 2, September 22, 2022, 12:30 PM - 1:30 PM Objectives We evaluated the magnitude and factors contributing to poor outcomes among cirrhosis patients with fungal infections (FIs). Methods We searched PubMed, Embase, Ovid, and WOS and included articles reporting mortality in cirrhosis with FIs. We pooled the point and relative-risk (RR) estimates of mortality on random-effects meta-analysis and explored their heterogeneity (I2) on subgroups, meta-regression, and machine learning (ML). We assessed the study quality through New-Castle-Ottawa-Scale and estimate-asymmetry through Eggers regression (CRD42019142782). Results Of 4345, 34 studies (2134 patients) were included (good/fair/poor quality: 12/21/1). Pooled mortality of FIs was 64.1% (95%CI: 55.4-72.0, 12: 87%, P &lt;.01), which was 2.1 times higher than controls (95%CI: 1.8-2.5, 12:89%, P &lt;.01). Higher CTP (MD: +0.52, 95%CI: 0.27-0.77), MELD (MD: +2.75, 95% CI: 1.21-4.28), organ failures, and increased hospital stay (30 vs. 19 days) was reported among cases with FIs. Patients with ACLF (76.6%, RR: 2.3), and ICU-admission (70.4%, RR: 1.6) had the highest mortality. The risk was maximum for pulmonary-FIs (79.4%, RR: 1.8), followed by peritoneal-FIs (68.3%, RR: 1.7) and fungemia (55%, RR: 1.7). The mortality was higher in FIs than bacterial (RR: 1.7) or no-infections (RR: 2.9). Estimate-asymmetry was evident (P &lt;.05). Up to 8 clusters and 5 outlier studies were identified on ML, and the estimate-heterogeneity was eliminated on excluding such studies. Conclusions: A substantially worse prognosis, poorer than bacterial infections in cirrhosis patients with FIs indicates an unmet need for improving fungal diagnostics and therapeutics in this population. ACLF and ICU admission should be included in host criteria for defining IFIs.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "FIS/01"

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Consiglio, Lucia <1974&gt. "Algorithms for the analysis of neutrino interactions in the opera-like emulsion cloud chambers." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/331/1/PhDthesis.pdf.

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Consiglio, Lucia <1974&gt. "Algorithms for the analysis of neutrino interactions in the opera-like emulsion cloud chambers." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/331/.

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di, Ferdinando Donato <1969&gt. "Experimental study of neutrino interactions in the opera-like emulsion cloud chambers." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/332/1/PhDthesis.pdf.

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di, Ferdinando Donato <1969&gt. "Experimental study of neutrino interactions in the opera-like emulsion cloud chambers." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/332/.

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Giachini, Lisa <1978&gt. "Structure and dynamics of metal sites in proteins: X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy investigations." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/334/1/tesi_giachini.pdf.

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Giachini, Lisa <1978&gt. "Structure and dynamics of metal sites in proteins: X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy investigations." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/334/.

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Margaroli, Fabrizio <1976&gt. "Measurement of the top quark mass in the all-hadronic channel at proton antiproton collisions at √s = 1.96TeV with CDF II." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/348/1/tesi.pdf.

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Margaroli, Fabrizio <1976&gt. "Measurement of the top quark mass in the all-hadronic channel at proton antiproton collisions at √s = 1.96TeV with CDF II." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/348/.

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Manzoor, Shahid <1959&gt. "Improvements and calibrations of nuclear track detectors for rare particle searches and fragmentation studies." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/617/1/Manzoor_tesi.pdf.

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Manzoor, Shahid <1959&gt. "Improvements and calibrations of nuclear track detectors for rare particle searches and fragmentation studies." Doctoral thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2007. http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/617/.

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Book chapters on the topic "FIS/01"

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Capparozza, Marcel. "Maßnahmen für die curriculare Verankerung mediendidaktischer Kompetenzen im Lehramtsstudium: Ein Critical Review." In Bildung im digitalen Wandel. Organisationsentwicklung in Bildungseinrichtungen, 105–29. Waxmann Verlag GmbH, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31244/9783830994558.04.

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In diesem Critical Review werden Maßnahmen für die curriculare Verankerung mediendidaktischer Kompetenzen in Lehramtsstudiengängen in den Blick genommen. Die Grundlage bildete eine Literaturrecherche in den Datenbanken FIS Bildung, Education Resources Information Center (ERIC), Education Research Complete (ERC), Web of Science und LearnTechLib mit 1816 Suchergebnissen (01/2016–05/2020). Im Auswahlprozess wurden Studien berücksichtigt, die auf der Hochschulebene durchgeführt wurden (z. B. Quer- und Längsschnittstudien). Insgesamt erfüllten 24 Studien die Aufnahmekriterien. Auf Grundlage der Analyse dieser Studien konnten fünf Maßnahmen für die curriculare Verankerung mediendidaktischer Kompetenzen in Lehramtsstudiengängen identifiziert werden: (1) Bereitstellung personeller und finanzieller Ressourcen, (2) Kontinuierliche Förderung mediendidaktischer Kompetenzen, (3) Verzahnung von Theorie und Praxis, (4) Berücksichtigung der Heterogenität unter den Lehramtsstudierenden sowie (5) Gezielte Umgestaltung des Curriculums. Abschließend werden Implikationen der Ergebnisse für weitere Forschung und die Hochschulentwicklung in Lehramtsstudiengängen diskutiert.
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Santos, Andreia da Silva, and Magno Antonio Leite. "Relato do “Projeto de Extensão Cine-FIS: a educação através da arte”." In Cinema e educação: experiências estéticas de ensino e aprendizagens com a sétima arte, 214–24. Eulim, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35417/978-65-87698-01-4_214.

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Conference papers on the topic "FIS/01"

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Zhang, Bo. "A Framework of DFSS Application in Flexible Inspection System (FIS)." In SAE World Congress & Exhibition. 400 Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA, United States: SAE International, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/2008-01-0366.

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Catania, A. E., A. Ferrari, A. Mittica, and E. Spessa. "Common Rail without Accumulator: Development, Theoretical-Experimental Analysis and Performance Enhancement at DI-HCCI Level of a New Generation FIS." In SAE World Congress & Exhibition. 400 Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA, United States: SAE International, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-1258.

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Alves Fortunato, Maira, and Laurie Starck. "Oxidation Stability of Diesel-Biodiesel Blends: Impact of Physical-Chemical Properties Over Ageing into Fuel Injection Systems (FIS) and Storage." In SAE 2016 International Powertrains, Fuels & Lubricants Meeting. 400 Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA, United States: SAE International, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/2016-01-2267.

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