Academic literature on the topic 'Imagery thought'

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Journal articles on the topic "Imagery thought"

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Tsao, Makepeace, and Arthur I. Miller. "Imagery inscientific Thought." Leonardo 21, no. 2 (1988): 211. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1578565.

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Chen, Andrew C. N. "Cognitive Neuropsychophysiology of Thought Imagery Versus Imagination Imagery." International Journal of Neuroscience 60, no. 1 (January 1991): 65–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/00207459109082038.

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Josefowitz, Nina. "Incorporating Imagery Into Thought Records: Increasing Engagement in Balanced Thoughts." Cognitive and Behavioral Practice 24, no. 1 (February 2017): 90–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cbpra.2016.03.005.

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Klein, Elisa L. "Computer graphics, visual imagery, and spatial thought." New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development 1985, no. 28 (June 1985): 55–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cd.23219852806.

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Budiyarti, Yuliani. "THOUGHT STOPING AND GUIDED IMAGERY THERAPY EFFECTS ON ANXIETY LEVEL OF THIRD TRIMESTER PRIMIGRAVIDA PREGNANT WOMEN." Journal of Nursing Invention E-ISSN 2828-481X 2, no. 2 (December 30, 2021): 80–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.33859/jni.v2i2.123.

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Background: The first pregnancy can cause psychological problems, namely anxiety, if left untreated it will have a negative impact on both the mother and the fetus. Actions to reduce anxiety include thought stopping and guided imagery. The purpose of this study was to analyze the effect of Tought Stopping and Guided Imagery therapy on the anxiety level of third trimester primgravida pregnant women in the New Basirih Health Center area. Method: This type of research is quantitative with a non equivalent control group design pretest-posttest. The study population was all third trimester primigravida pregnant women in the Puskesmas Basirih Baru area. The research samples were 20 trimester primigravida pregnant women, divided into thought stopping intervention and guided imagery groups with total sampling technique. Instruments for measuring anxiety, namely HRS-A, Wilcoxon and Mann Whitney test analysis. Results: Thought stopping statistic result p-value = 0.005 and guided imagery statistic result p-value = 0.007 so both has affected the anxiety level of pregnant women. Conclusion: Thought stopping and guided imagery can be used by pregnant women to reduce anxiety levels. Keywords: Anxiety Level, Guided Imagery, Thought Stopping.
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Lawrence, Hannah R., and Rebecca A. Schwartz-Mette. "Imagery and verbal thought during rumination and distraction: Does imagery amplify affective response?" Cognition and Emotion 33, no. 5 (October 23, 2018): 1006–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02699931.2018.1535426.

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Miller, Arthur I., and Daniel C. Mattis. "Imagery in Scientific Thought‐Creating 20th‐Century Physics." American Journal of Physics 54, no. 8 (August 1986): 766. http://dx.doi.org/10.1119/1.14461.

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Koenig-Robert, Roger, and Joel Pearson. "Decoding Nonconscious Thought Representations during Successful Thought Suppression." Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 32, no. 12 (December 2020): 2272–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jocn_a_01617.

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Controlling our thoughts is central to mental well-being, and its failure is at the crux of a number of mental disorders. Paradoxically, behavioral evidence shows that thought suppression often fails. Despite the broad importance of understanding the mechanisms of thought control, little is known about the fate of neural representations of suppressed thoughts. Using fMRI, we investigated the brain areas involved in controlling visual thoughts and tracked suppressed thought representations using multivoxel pattern analysis. Participants were asked to either visualize a vegetable/fruit or suppress any visual thoughts about those objects. Surprisingly, the content (object identity) of successfully suppressed thoughts was still decodable in visual areas with algorithms trained on imagery. This suggests that visual representations of suppressed thoughts are still present despite reports that they are not. Thought generation was associated with the left hemisphere, and thought suppression was associated with right hemisphere engagement. Furthermore, general linear model analyses showed that subjective success in thought suppression was correlated with engagement of executive areas, whereas thought-suppression failure was associated with engagement of visual and memory-related areas. These results suggest that the content of suppressed thoughts exists hidden from awareness, seemingly without an individual's knowledge, providing a compelling reason why thought suppression is so ineffective. These data inform models of unconscious thought production and could be used to develop new treatment approaches to disorders involving maladaptive thoughts.
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Hunt, H. "A Cognitive-Psychological Perspective on Gillespie's “Lights and Lattices”: Some Relations among Perception, Imagery, and Thought." Perceptual and Motor Skills 68, no. 2 (April 1989): 631–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pms.1989.68.2.631.

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George Gillespie's valuable observations on light and lattice imageries are placed in the context of current research and theory on cognitive imagery (Kosslyn, Pylyshyn), ordinary and lucid dreaming, representational geometric imagery in scientific thought, the author's previous writings on altered states of consciousness, and Gibson's views on perception and imagery. Gillespie's reports show categories of imagery deconstruction and abstraction that link these areas and suggest an integrative model of the varieties of symbolic imagery.
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Huang, Katherine, Marianna Szabó, and Jennifer Han. "The Relationship of Low Distress Tolerance to Excessive Worrying and Cognitive Avoidance." Behaviour Change 26, no. 4 (December 1, 2009): 223–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1375/bech.26.4.223.

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AbstractThis study explored the relationships between individuals' ability to tolerate emotional distress to their tendency to worry excessively, the amount of imagery they experience during worrying, and the concreteness of their worrisome thought. A group of 119 university students completed a thought-listing task recording their most severe current worry, estimated the amount of imagery and verbal thought during this worry episode, and completed questionnaires assessing their worry proneness, negative effect, and ability to tolerate emotional distress. The concreteness of thought-listed worry episodes was rated by independent judges. Consistent with expectations, lower distress tolerance was associated with more worrying, even when levels of negative affect were statistically controlled for. Excessive worriers also reported lower levels of imagery, but imagery and distress tolerance were unrelated. The findings concerning concreteness were in the opposite direction to those expected: more excessive worrying and lower distress tolerance were associated with more concreteness of worrisome thought. The results are consistent with avoidance theory, but future research is needed to investigate the mechanisms by which low distress tolerance may contribute to excessive worrying.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Imagery thought"

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Collins, Steven. "Selfless persons : imagery and thought in Theravāda Buddhism /." Cambridge (GB) ; New York ; Melbourne : Cambridge university press, 1995. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb374868637.

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Bosch, Naomi A. "Discovery Islands, Earth Islands: The Theory and Practice of Island Imagery in Environmental Thought." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2015. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/pomona_theses/127.

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Earth Island is a core metaphor of activist thought often applied in Environmental Analysis and related fields as a tool for thinking about the planet’s limited resources. It puts forth the claim that if only we thought of the earth as more like an island, we would better understand our connectivity to other living things and be drawn to develop better and more extensive practices of environmental stewardship. This thesis uses personal accounts of environmental life philosophies and political practices collected from residents of the Discovery Islands in British Columbia as a site for analytical comparison between the theory and practice of "Earth Island." First providing an overview of the history of Earth Island and exploring existing Anthropology and Island Studies scholarship on island community dynamics and environmental perspectives, this thesis examines how the environmental relationships experienced by Discovery Islanders reflect or differ from the type of activist consciousness theoretically proposed by Earth Island. This creates a context for critically reflecting on the limits and applications of the Earth Island metaphor, and suggesting shifts in current approaches to the use of island imagery in environmental political and philosophical thought, promoting a focus on more community cooperation-oriented, less fatalistic themes.
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Gold, Ian. "Picture, process, and pattern :." Thesis, McGill University, 1987. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=66148.

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Quash, Jonathan Ben. "A critique of Hans Urs von Balthasar's theological dramatic theory : with special reference to the thought of Hegel." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1998. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/272693.

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Hanna, Emily Lauren. "'I Am Rooted, But I Flow': Virginia Woolf and 20th Century Thought." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2012. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/97.

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My thesis is about Virginia Woolf’s novels, Mrs. Dalloway, The Waves, and To the Lighthouse. I examine these novels in relation to the theories of Henri Bergson, William James, and Sigmund Freud, and the groundwork of Modernism. I relate Woolf's use of water imagery and stream of consciousness technique to Bergson’s theory of “la durée,” or psychological, subjective time, James’ “stream of consciousness” theory in psychology, and Freud’s theory of the “oceanic” feeling of religious experience.
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Moyer, Karen E. (Karen Elizabeth). "A Survey of Singers: Is Mental Imagery Used in the Conceptualization of Pitch and Vowel?" Thesis, University of North Texas, 1992. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500626/.

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Mental imagery is a common theme in research that clarifies how musical thought relates to musical performance. Unfortunately, minimal information exists regarding mental imagery and singers. The purpose of this study was to probe the role, if any, mental imagery plays in the conceptualization of pitch and vowel. By interviewing singers at differing levels of expertise, basic information was obtained about the mental processes used by singers. Through evaluations of the singers' mental processes, it was concluded that 95% of the singers in the study employed mental imagery. All singers described using kinesthetic imagery, while the majority implemented sensory and auditory imagery. Viso-spatial imagery was implemented among the more experienced singers. The majority of singers also reported: imaging pitch and vowel interactively; imaging from an internal perspective; and utilizing mental rehearsal. Less than half of the singers described using methods other than mental imagery to conceptualize pitch and vowel.
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Kilpatrick, Jennifer Lynn. "Using guided imagery as an instructional strategy for developing creativity, Learning and relaxation with first grade students." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2001. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/2031.

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This project examines the theories of guided imagery as a basis for a teaching strategy for developing a student's creativity, promoting learning by increasing concentration techniques and relaxing students. This study discusses how one first grade teacher used guided imagery with her students. The strategy was first used as a morning practice and later incorporated into the language arts program. The topics addressed in this project include: (a) What is guidedimagery? (b) How can guided imagery be applied within a classroom setting? and (c) What guided imagery exercises are appropriate for first grade students? The project concludes that guided imagery can be effectively used with first grade students to enhance the learning process.
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Cantinho, Beatriz. "Choreographing thought : movement as an image of thought, seen through the Deleuzian pure optical and sound image." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/8979.

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To assume that dance as an art form is about creating and displaying sequences of movement in space is to undermine choreography’s potential as a way of thinking through movement. The interdisciplinary relations between philosophy and dance explored in this research introduce a framework for exploring new possibilities of thinking through choreographic practice. How can dance be perceived as thought, considered as an experimental process, where the articulation between practice and theory becomes fundamental? The cinematic reversal of the subordination of time to movement proposed by French philosopher Gilles Deleuze in his time-image concept offers a paradigmatic shift which has the potential to find profound resonance in the perception of movement in dance. This research explores how this shift informs a new perspective on choreography by discussing the implications of approaching choreographic composition through the lenses of Deleuze’s Pure Optical and Sound Image. As part of the practical choreographic investigation undertaken in this research, I have sought to challenge the conditions of the act of ‘seeing’ dance and to create an ‘opening condition’ for the use of choreography. To maintain an ‘open condition’ within the the practice of choreography, it is necessary to acknowledge the constant becoming of its materials that depend on non-hierarchical relations and on duration itself. My approach is improvisational and my compositional strategies, which are manifestly dependent on interdisciplinary collaborative processes, emphasise ways of thinking through both movement and the image.
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cantinho, beatriz. "Choreographing thought: movement as an image of thought, seen through the Deleuzian Pure Optical and Sound Image." Doctoral thesis, Repositório da Universidade de Edimburgo, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/8979.

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Abstract: To assume that dance as an art form is about creating and displaying sequences of movement in space is to undermine choreography’s potential as a way of thinking through movement. The interdisciplinary relations between philosophy and dance explored in this research introduce a framework for exploring new possibilities of thinking through choreographic practice. How can dance be perceived as thought, considered as an experimental process, where the articulation between practice and theory becomes fundamental? The cinematic reversal of the subordination of time to movement proposed by French philosopher Gilles Deleuze in his time-image concept offers a paradigmatic shift which has the potential to find profound resonance in the perception of movement in dance. This research explores how this shift informs a new perspective on choreography by discussing the implications of approaching choreographic composition through the lenses of Deleuze’s Pure Optical and Sound Image. As part of the practical choreographic investigation undertaken in this research, I have sought to challenge the conditions of the act of ‘seeing’ dance and to create an ‘opening condition’ for the use of choreography. To maintain an ‘open condition’ within the practice of choreography, it is necessary to acknowledge the constant becoming of its materials that depend on non-hierarchical relations and on duration itself. My approach is improvisational and my compositional strategies, which are manifestly dependent on interdisciplinary collaborative processes, emphasise ways of thinking through both movement and the image.
Fundação para a ciência e tecnologia; Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian; Dgartes_Ministério da Cultura.
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Montgomery, Eric R. "The Image of God in Pauline thought." Theological Research Exchange Network (TREN), 2006. http://www.tren.com/search.cfm?p001-1103.

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Books on the topic "Imagery thought"

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Miller, Arthur I. Imagery in scientific thought: Creating 20thcentury physics. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1986.

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Miller, Arthur I. Imagery in scientific thought: Creating 20th-century physics. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1986.

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Selfless persons: Imagery and thought in Theravāda Buddhism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990.

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Shepard, Roger N. Mental images and their transformations. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1986.

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Abakumova, I. V. Psikhologii︠a︡ strategiĭ smysloobrazovanii︠a︡: Polimodalʹnostʹ kazualʹnykh obrazov i vybor v uslovii︠a︡kh neopredelennosti : monografii︠a︡. Moskva: Izdatelʹstvo Kredo, 2021.

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1943-, Denis Michel, ed. Imagery, language, and visuo-spatial thinking. Hove, East Sussex, UK: Psychology Press, 2001.

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1943-, Denis Michel, ed. Imagery, language, and visuo-spatial thinking. Philadelphia: Psychology Press, 2000.

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L'image et la pensée. Toulouse: Érès, 2011.

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1958-, Poe Richard, ed. The Einstein factor: A proven new method for increasing your intelligence. Rocklin, CA: Prima Pub., 1996.

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Ronchi, Rocco. Il pensiero bastardo: Figurazione dell'invisibile e comunicazione indiretta. Milano: C. Marinotti, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Imagery thought"

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Miller, Arthur I. "Visual Imagery in Scientific Thought." In Insights of Genius, 263–324. New York, NY: Springer New York, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-2388-7_8.

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Aylwin, Susan. "Cognitive Structure in Thought and Personality." In Cognitive and Neuropsychological Approaches to Mental Imagery, 317–25. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-1391-2_29.

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Datan, Nancy. "Illness and Imagery: Feminist Cognition, Socialization, and Gender Identity." In Gender and Thought: Psychological Perspectives, 175–87. New York, NY: Springer New York, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-3588-0_9.

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Gauker, Christopher. "Visual Imagery in the thought of Monkeys and Apes." In The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Animal Minds, 25–33. 1 [edition]. | New York : Routledge, 2017. | Series: Routledge handbooks in philosophy: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315742250-3.

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Gavrilovic, Zaga. "St. Ephraim the Syrian’s Thought and Imagery as an Inspiration to Byzantine Artists." In Hugoye: Journal of Syriac Studies (Volume 1), edited by George Kiraz, 227–52. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463214067-014.

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Giambra, Leonard M., and Alicia Grodsky. "Task-Unrelated Images and Thoughts While Reading." In Imagery, 27–31. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-0876-6_3.

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Tallis, Frank. "Unintended Thoughts and Images." In Handbook of Cognition and Emotion, 281–300. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/0470013494.ch15.

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jagodzinski, jan, and Jason Wallin. "The Contemporary Image of Thought." In Arts-Based Research, 19–51. Rotterdam: SensePublishers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6209-185-6_2.

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Golding, Johnny. "The Photograph of Thought." In Fragmentation of the Photographic Image in the Digital Age, 212–23. New York, NY: Routledge, 2020. | Series: [Routledge history of photography]: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351027946-16.

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"Scripted Thought." In Persuasive Imagery, 154–65. Routledge, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781410607256-16.

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Conference papers on the topic "Imagery thought"

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Chug, Stuti, and Vandana Agarwal. "SENN: Self-evolving Neural Network to Recognize Motor Imagery Thought Patterns." In 14th International Conference on Neural Computation Theory and Applications. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0011526800003332.

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YANG, QIN. "AN EMPIRICAL STUDY ON THE USE OF FOUR IMAGERY THINKING ACTIVITIES IN NOVEL TRANSLATION." In 2021 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED EDUCATION AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT (AEIM 2021). Destech Publications, Inc., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12783/dtssehs/aeim2021/35963.

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Abstract. Both literary translation and creation use language to shape artistic images, and artistic images are the crystallization of artistic thinking. Translation is not only cross-lingual transfer, but also conversion of thought. In novel translation, the translator's image thinking plays a vital role because of the characteristics of literary works. By the translation of Charles Frazier’s novel Nightwoods as an example, this paper illustrates how to make full use of four activities of imagery thinking (perception, association and imagination, emotion and harmony) during the translation process. By using of imagery thinking, the translation shows the charm and beauty of original works, and achieves images reproduction of novel character.
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Lee, Jong-Hwan, Matthew Marzelli, Ferenc A. Jolesz, and Seung-Schik Yoo. "Mind reading: An automated classification of thought processes from imagery fMRI data." In 2010 International Conference on Machine Learning and Cybernetics (ICMLC). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icmlc.2010.5580708.

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Zeringue, Kyle J., and Robert M. Suggs. "First U.S. satellite imagery of noctilucent clouds." In OSA Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C.: Optica Publishing Group, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/oam.1991.thp2.

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Noctilucent clouds (NLC) are observed in the northern latitudes during the summer months. The clouds, thought to be composed of crystalline ice, occur between 80- and 85-km altitude where the temperature of the mesopause can dip to 120 K. These clouds can be seen by ground-based observers when the sun is 6-16° below the horizon. This viewing geometry assures that the clouds will be illuminated by the sun while the lower atmosphere is dark. Imagery collected by Delta Star is presented as well as correlated ground-based and aircraft-based observations. Narrow field of view images obtained by Delta Star resemble NLC photographs made from the ground and from aircraft. Delta Star imaged NLCs on four of the six nights the experiment was attempted, three over central Alaska and one over Finland. Corroborating observations are available for three of these four nights. Altitude measurements made from Delta Star data place the NLCs at 81-km altitude with an estimated thickness of 4 km.
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Rifai Chai, Sai Ho Ling, G. P. Hunter, and H. T. Nguyen. "Toward fewer EEG channels and better feature extractor of non-motor imagery mental tasks classification for a wheelchair thought controller." In 2012 34th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC). IEEE, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/embc.2012.6347182.

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Mesa, Felipe, and Miguel Mesa. "Clouds of Wood: A Columbian Design-Build Experience." In Schools of Thought Conference. University of Oklahoma, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15763/11244/335064.

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The idea of complexity in the teaching and practice of architectural design is linked to formal processes or their programmatic features, leaving aside relevant aspects of the complete cycle of an emergent building: the relationships with the communities involved, management of financial and material resources, technical designs, environmental qualities, construction, and performance. In this way, too much relevance is given to the production of architectural representations and the student’s individual work, in detriment to the real impact that the student's activities may have on our society. In the Clouds of Wood Design-Build Studio (Medellín, Colombia, 2013–17), complexity was understood as the passage of a team of two professors and thirty students through the stages of design and construction of small-format buildings, made in association with rural communities near Medellín and a local company specializing in building with immunized wood. Constructions with a light program, low cost, and high impact on the communities’ daily lives were agreed on between all parties. Excessive production of drawings, models, and simulations was avoided, and collaboration between students, teachers, community leaders, representatives of municipal governments, and construction instructors was encouraged. In each semester of this course (ten studios in five years), the students worked in an articulated way in five groups with defined roles and responsibilities (fund-raising, drawing, wooden models, budget, construction). They only drew plans after knowing in depth the materials and construction technologies to be implemented; they only designed after visiting the communities involved; and they only built after understanding the budgets and the various constraints in play. If in a traditional design studio the students spend at least 80 percent of their time in activities of representation, often disconnected from everyday reality, in this course, they spent half of their time in meetings with experts and leaders, generating not only a balance in favor of the project but also a limited number of precise drawings. The course ran in four one-month modules: the first one to define in a group the overall aspects of the design (program, size, location, qualities) and evaluate five variants; the second, to develop the chosen design proposal; the third, to plan the construction phase; and the last, to build and inaugurate the building with the community. The result was the creation of a family of permeable buildings that are resistant and adapted to the tropical climate; have minimal geometric, structural, and tectonic variations; and made use of the constructive advantages of immunized wood. In addition, the consolidation of a group of students committed to the particular problems of communities, who can propose necessary, relevant, and unexpected buildings, raised the question about what is significant or even radical, today, in the education of architectural design: (a) the exploration of worlds (not yet seen) through images and models, or (b) the incorporation of design into the (already existing) complex and restrictive dynamics through a built architecture project?
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Hudyma, N., N. Walker, and B. Chittoori. "Mapping and Characterization of Rockfall Runout Talus Deposits from Columnar Basalt Cliffs in Boise, ID." In 56th U.S. Rock Mechanics/Geomechanics Symposium. ARMA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.56952/arma-2022-2071.

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ABSTRACT: The Boise Valley contains several columnar jointed basalt cliffs, which were deposited approximately 1.4 to 0.5 Ma on terraces formed by downcutting of the Boise River. Three runout talus deposits on Whitney Terrace were characterized using unmanned aerial vehicle visual imagery. Although the runout talus deposits were from different areas and were of varying size, they contained roughly the same dimensions and distributions of blocks. Images of the cliff face indicated that blocks were detached from the base of columns along horizontal discontinuities which lacked support (undercut columns) and by toppling of basalt columns. The mapped block sizes in the cliff face were larger than the blocks in the associated runout, indicating the cliff blocks were fragmented during impacts in the runout. 1. INTRODUCTION The movement of geologic materials downslope, commonly referred to as landslides, is one of the most well-known geologic hazards. Varnes (1978) developed the most widely used classification framework for landslides. Since the Varnes classification scheme was developed, various modifications have been proposed and adopted. Still, the goal is to be able to describe the movement(s) and the end result(s) of the landslide using well-known terminology which incorporates the focus of the investigators (Hungr et al., 2014). Our focus is to characterize the runout talus deposits formed from the dislodgement and subsequent downslope movement of rock blocks from columnar basalt cliffs. Columnar basalt, or specifically columnar jointing in basalt, is a type of rock mass that is divided into long prismatic blocks. The formation of the jointing is complex and thought to be a series of events rather than simple cooling of the lava. The vertical discontinuities are continuous and horizontal discontinuities are less prominent and generally end at the edges of the vertical discontinuities (Spry, 1962). Failures of rock masses with columnar jointing have been studied in several geographical locations, including Australia (Dahlhaus and Miner, 2000), Chile (Holm and Jakob, 2009), Spain (Abellán et al., 2011), and Washington State (Guzek, 2019). The failure mechanism most often reported in these studies has been the somewhat generic term "rockfall", even though the studies mentioned above have shown that two failure (detachment) modes occur, rockfalls and rock topples.
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Watanabe, Masahiro, and Teruo Matsuzawa. "Computational Simulation of Flow in a Dissecting Aortic Aneurysm Reconstructed From CT Images." In ASME/JSME 2004 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. ASMEDC, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2004-3122.

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We have simulated blood flow through the shape of dissecting aortic aneurysm reconstructed from CT images. An aortic dissection is a tear in the inner lining of the aorta, creating a space between the inner and outer layers called a false lumen. The pipe where the usual bloodstream flows is called a true lumen. The thrombus or the bloodstream exists at the exit of the false lumen. Currently, there are not flow simulations of dissecting aortic aneurysms that use the individual patient’s shape. Under these circumstances, we thought that it would be useful to examine the stress that joins the vessel walls by numerical simulation, in order to changes after the onset of the disease. To obtain accurate simulation results, we examined a method for obtaining a highly accurate dissected aortic aneurysm shape. We assumed the maximum Reynolds number for systolic pressure. The constant flow was given by the entrance boundary. The calculation scheme is a finite volume method. The Reynolds number was about 9000. The result showed that flow in the false lumen was rotational flow and lower than that in the true lumen. Flow in the true lumen was not rotational flow. In general, MRI imagery has shown that flow in the aortic arch is rotational. The magnitude of the velocity in the true lumen was about 11 times the velocity in the false lumen. Therefore, high wall shear stress was showed three areas at wall in true lumen. Both wall shear stress and pressure values were high in the re-entry portion.
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Porcu, Daniela. "Trust, Mystery, Love and The Search for Wholeness Stories of Transference and Countertransference in The Gospels." In 7th International Conference on Spirituality and Psychology. Tomorrow People Organization, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.52987/icsp.2022.012.

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Abstract The purpose of this presentation is to contribute to the archetypal aspects of the transference and the countertransference through an exploration of the Christian imagery, strengthening the relationship between religion and analytical psychology. C.G. Jung thought that the transference had a key role in the healing process, allowing the doctor to take over the patient’s suffering, so it can be shared, explored creatively, and integrated into consciousness. He believed that this type of relationship could also have archetypal aspects beside personal ones, triggering projections such as the saviour complex on the side of the patient and identifications with the wounded-healer on the side of the therapist. Building on Jung’s and the post-Jungians’ insightful remarks, this presentation will investigate the transference dynamics in the stories of the Gospel, drawing parallels between the analytic couple on the one hand and Christ and his community on the other. In particular, it will focus on aspects such as trust and mystery, love that heals and the endless search for wholeness, considering both episodes of healing and spiritual rebirth, like The Bleeding Woman, and of preaching and revelation, like The Road to Emmaus. KEYWORDS: gospel, transference, analytical psychology
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Prasad, Rai Sachindra, Shishir Prasad, and Vikas Prasad. "Patterns identification in thought-form images." In 2017 Second International Conference on Electrical, Computer and Communication Technologies (ICECCT). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icecct.2017.8117942.

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Reports on the topic "Imagery thought"

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Hodul, M., H. P. White, and A. Knudby. A report on water quality monitoring in Quesnel Lake, British Columbia, subsequent to the Mount Polley tailings dam spill, using optical satellite imagery. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/330556.

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In the early morning on the 4th of August 2014, a tailings dam near Quesnel, BC burst, spilling approximately 25 million m3 of runoff containing heavy metal elements into nearby Quesnel Lake (Byrne et al. 2018). The runoff slurry, which included lead, arsenic, selenium, and vanadium spilled through Hazeltine Creek, scouring its banks and picking up till and forest cover on the way, and ultimately ended up in Quesnel Lake, whose water level rose by 1.5 m as a result. While the introduction of heavy metals into Quesnel Lake was of environmental concern, the additional till and forest cover scoured from the banks of Hazeltine Creek added to the lake has also been of concern to salmon spawning grounds. Immediate repercussions of the spill involved the damage of sensitive environments along the banks and on the lake bed, the closing of the seasonal salmon fishery in the lake, and a change in the microbial composition of the lake bed (Hatam et al. 2019). In addition, there appears to be a seasonal resuspension of the tailings sediment due to thermal cycling of the water and surface winds (Hamilton et al. 2020). While the water quality of Quesnel Lake continues to be monitored for the tailings sediments, primarily by members at the Quesnel River Research Centre, the sample-and-test methods of water quality testing used, while highly accurate, are expensive to undertake, and not spatially exhaustive. The use of remote sensing techniques, though not as accurate as lab testing, allows for the relatively fast creation of expansive water quality maps using sensors mounted on boats, planes, and satellites (Ritchie et al. 2003). The most common method for the remote sensing of surface water quality is through the use of a physics-based semianalytical model which simulates light passing through a water column with a given set of Inherent Optical Properties (IOPs), developed by Lee et al. (1998) and commonly referred to as a Radiative Transfer Model (RTM). The RTM forward-models a wide range of water-leaving spectral signatures based on IOPs determined by a mix of water constituents, including natural materials and pollutants. Remote sensing imagery is then used to invert the model by finding the modelled water spectrum which most closely resembles that seen in the imagery (Brando et al 2009). This project set out to develop an RTM water quality model to monitor the water quality in Quesnel Lake, allowing for the entire surface of the lake to be mapped at once, in an effort to easily determine the timing and extent of resuspension events, as well as potentially investigate greening events reported by locals. The project intended to use a combination of multispectral imagery (Landsat-8 and Sentinel-2), as well as hyperspectral imagery (DESIS), combined with field calibration/validation of the resulting models. The project began in the Autumn before the COVID pandemic, with plans to undertake a comprehensive fieldwork campaign to gather model calibration data in the summer of 2020. Since a province-wide travel shutdown and social distancing procedures made it difficult to carry out water quality surveying in a small boat, an insufficient amount of fieldwork was conducted to suit the needs of the project. Thus, the project has been put on hold, and the primary researcher has moved to a different project. This document stands as a report on all of the work conducted up to April 2021, intended largely as an instructional document for researchers who may wish to continue the work once fieldwork may freely and safely resume. This research was undertaken at the University of Ottawa, with supporting funding provided by the Earth Observations for Cumulative Effects (EO4CE) Program Work Package 10b: Site Monitoring and Remediation, Canada Centre for Remote Sensing, through the Natural Resources Canada Research Affiliate Program (RAP).
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Connell, Sean D. Geologic map of the Albuquerque - Rio Rancho metropolitan area and vicinity, Bernalillo and Sandoval counties, New Mexico. New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.58799/gm-78.

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This is the most comprehensive compilation of the geology of the Albuquerque Basin to be printed in 30 years. The area covered by this new compilation, though not as large as the earlier map, is presented at a scale nearly four times the detail (1:50,000 scale compared to the earlier map's 1:190,000 scale). This new geologic map is a compilation of sixteen 7.5-min USGS quadrangle maps and encompasses an area from Tijeras Arroyo on the south to Santa Ana Mesa north of Santa Ana and San Felipe Pueblos, and from the crest of the Sandia Mountains westward across the Rio Grande and onto the Llano de Albuquerque (West Mesa) west of the city limits of Albuquerque and Rio Rancho.This geologic map graphically displays information on the distribution, character, orientation, and stratigraphic relationships of rock and surficial units and structural features. The map and accompanying cross sections were compiled from geologic field mapping and additionally from available aerial photography, satellite imagery, and drill-hole data (many published and unpublished reports, examination of lithologic cuttings, and from the interpretation of borehole geophysical log data).The map and accompanying cross sections represent the most informed interpretations of the known faults in the Albuquerque-Rio Rancho area that are presently available. In addition to the positions of many faults, the cross sections show the approximate vertical extent of poorly consolidated earth materials that may pose liquefaction hazards. This map also contains derivative maps selected to portray geologically important features in the metropolitan area, such as elevations of ground water levels, and the mostly buried boundary between generally poorly consolidated and saturated aquifer materials and the more consolidated underlying materials. The gravity anomaly map is a geophysical dataset that shows major geological structures buried beneath the metropolitan area and vicinity.
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Horwitz, Benjamin, and Barbara Gillian Turgeon. Secondary Metabolites, Stress, and Signaling: Roles and Regulation of Peptides Produced by Non-ribosomal Peptide Synthetases. United States Department of Agriculture, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/2005.7696522.bard.

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Fungal pathogens of plants produce a diverse array of small molecules. Often referred to as secondary metabolites because they were thought to be dispensable for basic functions, they may indeed have central roles as signals for the fungal cell, and in interactions with the host. We have identified more than a dozen genes encoding nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NPS) in Cochliobolusheterostrophus, the agent of southern corn leaf blight. The aim of this project was to identify roles of these genes in stress responses and signaling. The first objective was to test a complete collection of C. heterostrophus nonribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS)-encoding gene deletion mutant and wildtype (WT) strains for sensitivity to various agents of oxidative (ROS) and nitrosative (RNOS) stress, in vitro. The second objective and next step in this part of the project was to study the relevance of sensitivity to ROS and RNOS in the host pathogen interaction, by measuring the production of ROS and RNOS in planta, when plants are inoculated with wild type and mutant strains. A third objective was to study expression of any genes shown to be involved in sensitivity to ROS or RNOS, in vitro and in planta. Another objective was to determine if any of the genes involved in oxidative or nitrosative stress responses are regulated by components of signal transduction pathways (STP) that we have identified and to determine where mechanisms overlap. Study of the collection of nps mutants identified phenotypes relevant for virulence, development and oxidative stress resistance for two of the genes, NPS2 and NPS6. Mutants in genes related to RNOS stress have no virulence phenotypes, while some of those related to ROS stress have reduced virulence as well as developmental phenotypes, so we focused primarily on ROS stress pathways. Furthermore, the identification of NPS2 and NPS6 as encoding for NRPS responsible for siderophore biosynthesis lent a new focus to the project, regulation by Fe. We have not yet developed good methods to image ROS in planta and work in this direction is continuing. We found that NPS6 expression is repressed by Fe, responding over the physiological Fe concentration range. Studying our collection of mutants, we found that conserved MAPK and G protein signal transduction pathways are dispensable for Fe regulation of NPS6, and initiated work to identify other pathways. The transcription factor SreA is one candidate, and is responsible for part, but not all, of the control of NPS6 expression. The results of this project show that the pathogen contends with oxidative stress through several signaling pathways. Loss of the siderophore produced by Nps6 makes the fungus sensitive to oxidative stress, and decreases virulence, suggesting a central role of the ability to sequester and take up extracellular iron in the host-pathogen interaction. Siderophores, and manipulation of Fe levels, could be targets for new strategies to deal with fungal pathogens of maize and other plants.
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OCD. ACAMH, May 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.13056/acamh.6488.

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People with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) experience unpleasant and intrusive thoughts, images, doubts or urges (called obsessions) and repetitive behaviours (called compulsions). Compulsions are usually carried out as a way of reducing the distress caused by obsessions. OCD takes many different forms and causes distress and interference to day-to-day life.
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5

Comparison of mechanical behavior between longitudinal lap-welded joints and transverse fillet welded joints of high strength steel. The Hong Kong Institute of Steel Construction, August 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.18057/icass2020.p.302.

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Mechanical behavior of twenty-eight longitudinal lap-welded joints made of high strength steels (HSS) under tension load was investigated by experimental study. Weaknesses due to traditional deformation measurements for fillet welded joints can be perfectly solved by digital image correlation techniques (DIC). The effect of parameters (e.g. weld size, weld length and mismatch ratio) on mechanical properties (e.g. ultimate strength, failure modes, weld ductility and fracture angle) of longitudinal fillet welds and transverse fillet welds, which was introduced in detail in previous work by the authors, were compared. Generally, because of the difference on the combination of shear force and tension force, the fracture angle of longitudinal welded specimens (around 50) were much more divergent from transverse welded specimens (around 20) even though both of them failed at welded zone (welded zone only refers to weld metal in this paper), resulting that the mean strength of longitudinal welded specimens were only 0.58 time of transverse welded specimens. Conversely, the mean deformation capacity of longitudinal welded specimens was almost 4.0 times of transverse welded specimens. Moreover, it was confirmed that the predicted loads of EC3 and AISC Specification were close and slightly conservative for all specimens.
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