Academic literature on the topic 'Shape Transitioning'

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Journal articles on the topic "Shape Transitioning"

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Denman, Zachary J., Vincent Wheatley, Michael K. Smart, and Ananthanarayanan Veeraragavan. "Supersonic combustion of hydrocarbons in a shape-transitioning hypersonic engine." Proceedings of the Combustion Institute 36, no. 2 (2017): 2883–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.proci.2016.08.081.

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Davidson, Brittany I., and Adam N. Joinson. "Shape Shifting Across Social Media." Social Media + Society 7, no. 1 (January 2021): 205630512199063. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2056305121990632.

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Individuals change and adapt their behavior according to their social situation (e.g., transitioning from work to home). However, how does this shape shifting of self-presentations and identity translate into various online platforms? This exploratory study utilizes a novel and mixed methodological approach to better understand user behavior across social media platforms. We interviewed 22 participants and employed a repertory grid technique to reveal deeper similarities and differences in behavior across various online platforms. We found that users had a variety of strategies for managing multiple audiences across multiple platforms. Almost all participants actively separated their professional (e.g., LinkedIn) and social (e.g., Facebook or Instagram) oriented platforms typically by self-censorship of posts rather than utilizing audience management tools. Via the repertory grid technique, we revealed a number of more subtle nuances of how participants reflect on how and why they maintain a number of social media identities.
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Denman, Zachary J., Wilson Y. K. Chan, Stefan Brieschenk, Ananthanarayanan Veeraragavan, Vincent Wheatley, and Michael K. Smart. "Ignition Experiments of Hydrocarbons in a Mach 8 Shape-Transitioning Scramjet Engine." Journal of Propulsion and Power 32, no. 6 (November 2016): 1462–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/1.b36099.

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Curran, Damian, Vincent Wheatley, and Michael Smart. "Investigation of Combustion Mode Control in a Mach 8 Shape-Transitioning Scramjet." AIAA Journal 57, no. 7 (July 2019): 2977–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/1.j057999.

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Haseeb, Abdul, Hong Chen, Yufei Huang, Ping Yang, Xuejing Sun, Adeela Iqbal, Nisar Ahmed, et al. "Remodelling of mitochondria during spermiogenesis of Chinese soft-shelled turtle (Pelodiscus sinensis)." Reproduction, Fertility and Development 30, no. 11 (2018): 1514. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rd18010.

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Mitochondria are vital cellular organelles that have the ability to change their shape under different conditions, such as in response to stress, disease, changes in metabolic rate, energy requirements and apoptosis. In the present study, we observed remodelling of mitochondria during spermiogenesis and its relationship with mitochondria-associated granules (MAG). At the beginning of spermiogenesis, mitochondria are characterised by their round shape. As spermiogenesis progresses, the round-shaped mitochondria change into elongated and then swollen mitochondria, subsequently forming a crescent-like shape and finally developing into onion-like shaped mitochondria. We also noted changes in mitochondrial size, location and patterns of cristae at different stages of spermiogenesis. Significant differences (P < 0.0001) were found in the size of the different-shaped mitochondria. In early spermatids transitioning to the granular nucleus stage, the size of the mitochondria decreased, but increased subsequently during spermiogenesis. Changes in size and morphological variations were achieved through marked mitochondrial fusion. We also observed a non-membranous structure (MAG) closely associated with mitochondria that may stimulate or control fusion during mitochondrial remodelling. The end product of this sophisticated remodelling process in turtle spermatozoa is an onion-like mitochondrion. The acquisition of this kind of mitochondrial configuration is one strategy for long-term sperm storage in turtles.
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Kim, Yijung K., and Sae Hwang Han. "Internet Use and Cognitive Functioning in Later Life: Focus on Asymmetric Effects and Contextual Factors." Gerontologist 62, no. 3 (October 6, 2021): 425–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geront/gnab149.

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Abstract Background and Objectives Despite emerging literature linking Internet usage and cognitive functioning in later life, research seldom takes changes in older adults’ Internet use into account. How changes in Internet use influence older adults’ cognitive decline over time, particularly in the context of sociodemographic factors that shape Information and Communication Technology (ICT) use, remains an open question. Research Design and Methods Using 9 waves of panel data from the Health and Retirement Study (2002–2018), we examined within-person asymmetric effects of transitioning into and out of Internet use on cognitive functioning, and whether the associations vary across birth cohorts and by living arrangement. Results Transitioning into Internet use (i.e., Internet use onset) was associated with improved cognitive functioning at a given wave and decelerated cognitive decline over time. Transitioning out of the Internet (i.e., Internet use cessation) was associated with worse cognitive functioning at a given wave and accelerated cognitive decline over time. Furthermore, birth cohort and living arrangement moderated these associations. The detrimental effect of transitioning out of Internet use was worse for older adults born in 1941 or before. The cognitive benefits of transitioning into Internet use were greater for those older adults who live alone. Discussion and Implications These findings highlight the interplay between technology, social environment, and cognitive functioning in later life. The salubrious effects of using the Internet, as well as the deleterious effects of ceasing to use such technology, underscore the importance of promoting digital literacy and access to ICT among the older adult population.
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Pellegrini, Chiara. "The I in Trans Genre." TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly 7, no. 1 (February 1, 2020): 105–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/23289252-7914556.

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Abstract The following is a transcription of an interview with Juliet Jacques, conducted and edited by Chiara Pellegrini. Placing Trans: A Memoir (2015) in the context of Jacques's larger body of work, the interview discusses writing in the first person, transitioning in the media, and the normative temporalities of life writing that shape what constitutes a culturally recognizable trans identity.
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Suresh, Vignesh, Yajun Wang, and Beiwen Li. "High-dynamic-range 3D shape measurement utilizing the transitioning state of digital micromirror device." Optics and Lasers in Engineering 107 (August 2018): 176–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.optlaseng.2018.03.030.

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Han, Ok-Min. "A Study on the Constructionand Social Meaning of ‘mound-shaped monument’ in the Yeongsangang River Basin." RESEARCH INSTITUTE FOR THE MAHAN-BAEKJE CULTURE 40 (December 31, 2022): 2–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.34265/mbmh.2022.40.2.

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his study starts with the problem consciousness that it is difficult to define the concept of tombs in the Yeongsangang River basin as ancient tombs with data such as Sumyo(壽墓) or Heomyo(虛墓). Since there is no central burial facility, it is difficult to see it as an ancient tomb, and it is judged as a ‘mound-shaped monument’ in terms of shape and function. As a result of the mound-shaped monument review, it can be found in seven places from the upstream station of the Yeongsangang River to the downstream station. The shape and structure are the same as the 'mound' of the ancient tomb, and can be discussed in five ways: location, number, stone cover status, shape, and ditch facilities. The characteristics are that there are many places with a good view, many square shapes, many made of one, and many without ditch facilities. It can be said that the concept was different from the tombs gathered on the flat land with ditches. It is a ‘signature symbol’ role that shows the status of the group, and it seems to be a trend phenomenon that creates a huge ancient tomb in that it matches its appearance and function within a certain period of time. The Yeongsangang River basin was created from the middle of the 5th century to diversify its social meaning and pray for authority and well-being. From the existence of the 'mound-shaped monument' it can be seen that even in the process of gradually transitioning from Mahan to Baekje, it was completed as a tomb landscape with various components in addition to the mound. In the future, extensive archaeological approaches to space composition are expected to be made to deepen consciousness research such as Mahan's grave and funeral.
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McKillip, Mary E. M., Anita Rawls, and Carol Barry. "Improving College Access: A Review of Research on the Role of High School Counselors." Professional School Counseling 16, no. 1 (October 2012): 2156759X1201600. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2156759x1201600106.

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High school counselors potentially hold a key position to help increase the number of U.S. students receiving post-secondary degrees, particularly to address inequalities that prevent certain students from successfully transitioning to college. Using the model of student success (Perna & Thomas, 2008), this study reviewed the literature to understand how various contexts (social, school, family, student) shape high school counselor interactions with students as they work to improve post-secondary outcomes of college access and enrollment.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Shape Transitioning"

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Jonathan, Norris Allen. "Transitioning Central Appalachia: Understanding Framework Conditions Supporting the Adaptation to New Energy Economies." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1524242893014265.

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Books on the topic "Shape Transitioning"

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Harrison, Douglas. Nostalgia, Modernity, and the Reconstruction Roots of Southern Gospel. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036972.003.0003.

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This chapter traces the emergence of modern southern gospel forward from its Reconstruction roots. It pays attention to the abiding influence of the songbook publisher, songwriter, romantic poet, and melancholic Civil War veteran Aldine S. Kieffer. As the more creative half of the Ruebush–Kieffer songbook publishing empire, Kieffer played an inimitable role in the industrialization of southern gospel at a pivotal moment when shape-note music education was transitioning from a paraprofessional recreation to a commercialized economy based on songbooks and increasingly professionalized music teachers and singers. In the process, this chapter makes the first comprehensive case in extant scholarship for Kieffer as the most important originator of modern southern gospel discourse, an archetypal figure whose work in early southern gospel infuses the music with a lasting concern for tensions between the self and society that arise from sociocultural upheaval in the postbellum South.
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Martin, Jeffrey T. Sentiment, Reason, and Law. Cornell University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501740046.001.0001.

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What if the job of police was to cultivate the political will of a community to live with itself (rather than enforce law, keep order, or fight crime)? This book describes a world where that is the case. The Republic of China on Taiwan spent nearly four decades as a single-party state under dictatorial rule (1949–1987) before transitioning to liberal democracy. This book describes the social life of a neighborhood police station during the first rotation in executive power following the democratic transition. It shows an apparent paradox of how a strong democratic order was built on a foundation of weak police powers, and demonstrates how that was made possible by the continuity of an illiberal idea of policing. The conclusion from this paradox is that the purpose of the police was to cultivate the political will of the community rather than enforce laws and keep order. As the book shows, the police force in Taiwan exists as an “anthropological fact,” bringing an order of reality that is always, simultaneously and inseparably, meaningful and material. It unveils the power of this fact, demonstrating how the politics of sentiment that took shape under autocratic rule continued to operate in everyday policing in the early phase of the democratic transformation, even as a more democratic mode of public reason and the ultimate power of legal right were becoming more significant.
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Aufderheide, Dean. Communication in correctional psychiatry. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0009.

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When the competing cultures and communication styles of correctional and health care professionals clash, communication is compromised and the potential for problems and unwanted outcomes is compounded. Notwithstanding the inherent cultural differences among interdisciplinary staff, effective communication in a correctional setting is especially challenging for psychiatrists. Whether transitioning from the protective structure of a residency, or moving from a private practice or other mental health setting, psychiatrists working in a jail or prison will likely experience their new environment as replete with competing interests and priorities. Also, unlike in a health care setting, where physicians are at the top of the hierarchy, psychiatrists working in a jail or prison are further down the organizational hierarchy. It is in such an environment that it becomes critically important for psychiatrists to develop communication strategies that are successful in creating effective and sustainable working relationships not only with patients, but also with the facility’s leadership, security staff, treatment team members, and other interdisciplinary staff. This chapter will discuss ways in which psychiatrists play a critical role in mission requirements that necessitate effective communication skills with interdisciplinary staff in jails and prisons. From identifying the variables in the correctional culture that shape communication to improving interdisciplinary collaboration, this chapter will explore the ways in which correctional psychiatrists can model effective communication styles and strategies that enhance professional credibility and improve treatment outcomes.
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Shapiro, Matthew. Emerging Adult Essay. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190260637.003.0049.

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Throughout life, transitions can create some of the most daunting experiences anyone will encounter. Leaving school, finding a job, moving out on your own, finding someone to share your life with—these all constitute life transitions and events that force everyone to look outside of their comfort zone to formulate a solution. Everyone dreads the change, but we all must face it head-on and accept the challenge of something different. For people with disabilities these changes may be overwhelming and, at times, debilitating. The key to success while transitioning is having attained the proper skill set to help overcome whatever transitional barrier(s) your particular disability mandates....
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Bowen, Raven. Work, Money and Duality. Policy Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447358800.001.0001.

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This book provides readers a rare opportunity to hear from some of the most hidden off-street sex workers in the population, those living dual lives, trading sex alongside ‘square’ mainstream employment. Stereotypes about who trades sex, of ‘exiting’ and transitioning to and from sex work as being chaotic, as well as simplistic, binary framings of sex work as something one is either in or out of, trapped or survived, are challenged by these sex workers whose practices uncover a fluid Continuum of Sex Industry Work and Square Work (SIWSQ) Involvement. Sex workers (Contributors) share lived experiences of combating labour precarity and insecure work, concerns about Brexit, and the UK Whorearchy that stratifies the sex industry and influences pricing and value, along with the stress of keeping secrets while living under the constant threat of being outed. Contributors engage in skilful stigma-avoidance, selective disclosure, on-and offline audience/information segregation, and manage people and devices to conceal stigmatised work in the digital age. The phenomenon of duality is thoroughly examined and in doing so we learn about the impacts of constructing a precarious labour markets while legislating poverty, and the lies we propagate about who trades sex and how we treat them. Ultimately, those living dual lives do so in response to economic conditions that we co-create. Our focus must be on reshaping the structures, systems and social forms that circumscribe our social realities and not in the vilification of these innovators.
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Book chapters on the topic "Shape Transitioning"

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Hereth, Blake. "The Shape of Trans Afterlife Justice." In Voices from the Edge, 185–205. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198848844.003.0009.

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Trans persons endure terrible injustices in this life: They are bullied, murdered, forced to conceal their identities, and denied opportunities that would be available to them if they were cis. This chapter offers grounds for theological hope—in particular, hope that the afterlife would be better for trans persons. I argue that we should view trans identities as worthy of respect and that, as a matter of justice, their gender identities should be preserved in the afterlife. I focus specifically on trans persons with interests in transitioning and argue that they are owed an opportunity to transition in the afterlife. Moreover, the parties responsible for their earthly abuse are principally responsible for any transitioning costs and must participate directly in the process. Finally, trans persons should be provided opportunities to procreate and enter romantic unions they were denied during their earthly lives because of their trans identities.
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Gahman, Levi, Shelda-Jane Smith, Filiberto Penados, Nasha Mohamed, Johannah-Rae Reyes, and Atiyah Mohamed. "The coloniser’s model/neoliberal state of the world." In A Beginner's Guide to Building Better Worlds, 33–46. Policy Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447362135.003.0003.

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Chapter 3 focuses largely on neoliberalism, with specific attention paid to policies and discourses that both shape and affect health, education, and knowledge more generally. In addition to providing a definition of neoliberalism and demonstrating how it operates differently across varying geographical contexts and social institutions, the chapter critically discusses global health, biopower, docility, surveillance and the ways in which neoliberalism not only shapes the global economy and governance, but also psyches and subjectivities. The chapter highlights how universities are being corporatised and inculcating the people who learn and work in them with neoliberal ideology and market-oriented subjectivities by advocating extreme individualism, self-centrism (protagonism), capitalist mentalities and consumerism. Overall, Chapter 3 offers a sobering glimpse of the realities of neoliberal education before transitioning to ideas about how things can be changed.
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Bloomer, Fiona, Claire Pierson, and Sylvia Estrada Claudio. "Abortion discourses: religion, culture, nation." In Reimagining Global Abortion Politics, 51–68. Policy Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447340430.003.0004.

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This chapter explores the interplay of culture, nationalism and religion and their interaction with legality and access to abortion in particular contexts. Starting from the position that institutions do not operate in a vacuum but are influenced by values and norms which makes them part of the cultural fabric of a society, the chapter explores gendered notions of nationalism and culture. The role of faith based organisations in shaping international policy illustrates how religious norms shape conservatism and alternately how liberal organisations challenge such norms. A consideration of transitional societies allows for an analysis of how abortion is positioned in a framework whereby cultural, national and religious norms typically influence conservative discourses. In such settings gender rights becomes subservient to national and cultural identity or alternately may become core to legal reform. Two case studies, Northern Ireland and South Africa, illustrate how abortion discourses are shaped in transitioning societies.
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Aboutalebi, Reza. "Building Blocks of the Industry and Strategizing." In Advanced Perspectives on Global Industry Transitions and Business Opportunities, 229–69. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-4303-0.ch012.

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Industry features are considered by Porter, Schmalensee, and many other scholars as the determinants of effective strategy formulation and implementation. While industries are widely different from each other, some common features shape all existing and future industries. This chapter aims to identify these common building blocks of industries and their possible effects on strategizing for the future in a fast transitioning business world. The chapter employs a systematic literature review from the top related journals with at least one of the nine keywords about the industry. The chapter reviews 47 factors or characteristics that form every industry. These industry features are grouped into ten sets of elements, which shapes the ten forces framework, reflecting the interaction among building-blocks of the industry with each other and with strategy implementation practice inside an organization. The chapter concludes by proposing the 'macro-environment, industry, and organization' (MIO) model, which could be utilized by integrating three levels of analyses.
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Cameron, James. "Anticommunism, Trade, and Debt." In The Reagan Moment, 280–300. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501760686.003.0014.

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This chapter expounds on the relationship between the United States and Brazil when Ronald Reagan took office. Brazil was transitioning away from military dictatorship by the time the Reagan administration took an active role in South American countries. The White House tried to enlist Brazil in prosecuting its renewed crusade against communism. The chapter then explores the extended US–Brazilian feud over the shape of the emerging knowledge-based global economy. It includes Brazil's central role in the less developed country (LDC) debt crisis, which weakened its ability to press its views. Neither the Brazilian dictatorship nor civilian governments were fully on board the Reagan administration's conceptions of Brazil's supposed place in the world.
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Rode, Alan K. "A River Runs through It." In Michael Curtiz. University Press of Kentucky, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813173917.003.0001.

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Curtiz’s birth and early life in Hungary are delineated. Despite the numerous erroneous birth dates, some deliberately promulgated by Curtiz, his Christmas evening birthday of 1886 is verified by a birth certificate. Born as Mano Kaminer, he changed his name to MihályKertész to cloak his Jewish heritage while identifying himself as a Hungarian. The artistic role of pre–World War I Budapest, with its cultural incubator of coffeehouses—particularly the Café New York—is described in terms of its effect on the young Kertész. Transitioning from a circus roustabout to an apprentice actor, he was transfixed by the new technology of film and was determined to shape it into a new art form.
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Kahn, Andrew. "The Voronezh Poems (1934–7) and the Geometry of Exile." In Mandelstam's Worlds, 487–533. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198857938.003.0012.

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This chapter concentrates on the poems of the First Voronezh Notebook that chronicle exile, starting with the journey into the unknown and transitioning unevenly to the theme of habituation. Drawing on folkloric tropes as well as cinematic devices, the poems represent a hope that the exile might escape through shape-shifting or heroic antics, as well as the fear of oblivion that he faces. One key anxiety and source of inspiration concerns the endlessness of the flat steppe extending from Voronezh, and the poet turns his mind to plotting the geography of exile in relation to the Kremlin, to metropolitan culture, to Voronezh itself, and ultimately to the vast space that threatens to engulf him. Counterpointing poems about human contact and socialization are lyrics that with ‘an eye sharper than steel’ scrutinize space for forms that can be moulded by the imagination.
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DiPietro, Pedro J. "Hallucinating Knowing." In Theories of the Flesh, 220–36. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190062965.003.0014.

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Through ancestral and submerged sensual repertoires, through healing practices, spoken word poetry, and other forms of psychic praxis, Latina and Xicana feminist theorizing resists the westernizing idioms of cognitive impairment. This chapter examines the ways that the coloniality of gender—as an injunction to inhabit heterosexualist, human-centered, notions of sanity—exclude Latina and Xicana experience and knowledge from the realm of cognitive accuracy. It suggests that heterosexualism creates conditions for hallucinations to arise within Latinx communities. Specifically, it explores healing traditions several centuries long as they shape contemporary Latina and Xicana theories and their ties to hallucinating perception. Positing that hallucinating knowing carries the healing properties of spiritual practices among mixed-race indigenous-Latinx peoples, this chapter gathers evidence of gender-nonconforming subjectivities and the more-than-human remedies that they concoct in their negotiation of perceptual repertoires. More-than-human knowing ultimately illustrates the role of perceptual cross-referencing, or transitioning, between tangible and intangible domains.
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E. Cress, Phaedra. "Transitioning to Transgender: How Can We Help?" In Transgender Health: Advances and New Perspectives [Working Title]. IntechOpen, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.104599.

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Change is not easy in a professional environment and it is even more challenging in our personal lives. In this chapter, I explore how we can all become champions of the transgender population. My interest in the transgender population started 3 years ago when my child came out as transgender. My daughter is now a son and I have become an ally of the LGBTQ+ community. I have learned to embrace the journey and am continuously learning how I can support and elevate the transgender community in myriad ways. I share the experiences that have shaped my life recently with the hope it might help others, particularly parents of transgender children, understand one simple idea: “you are not alone”.
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Finley, Stacie Lynn, and Dennis L. Rudnick. "ApPARENTly We're Scholars." In Teacher Reflections on Transitioning From K-12 to Higher Education Classrooms, 250–66. IGI Global, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-3460-4.ch018.

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This chapter is a culmination of conversations between two ParentScholars. One, an academic mother; the other, an academic father. Both share their journey from PK12 classrooms into higher education. Their lived experiences have shaped their identities and continue to transform who they are as parents and as scholars. The ParentScholars in this chapter examine not only their roles as parents and scholars, but also the ways in which gender and other social identities impact their lives. Major themes explored through their personal stories include expectations, communications, teaching, and decision-making. The authors name ParentScholar in an effort to better define and understand the complexities of what it means to be a parent and a scholar.
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Conference papers on the topic "Shape Transitioning"

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Barth, James, Vincent Wheatley, Michael Smart, David Petty, and Kevin Basore. "Flow Physics Inside a Shape-Transitioning Scramjet Engine." In 18th AIAA/3AF International Space Planes and Hypersonic Systems and Technologies Conference. Reston, Virigina: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/6.2012-5888.

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Barth, James E., Vincent Wheatley, and Michael Smart. "Inlet Fuel Injection in a Mach 12 Shape-Transitioning Scramjet." In 52nd Aerospace Sciences Meeting. Reston, Virginia: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/6.2014-1159.

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Gollan, Rowan, and Michael Smart. "Design of Modular, Shape-transitioning Inlets for a Conical Hypersonic Vehicle." In 48th AIAA Aerospace Sciences Meeting Including the New Horizons Forum and Aerospace Exposition. Reston, Virigina: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/6.2010-940.

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Curran, Damian R., Vincent Wheatley, and Michael K. Smart. "Investigation of Combustion Mode Control in a Mach 8 Shape-Transitioning Scramjet." In 22nd AIAA International Space Planes and Hypersonics Systems and Technologies Conference. Reston, Virginia: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/6.2018-5380.

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Denman, Zachary J., Stefan Brieschenk, Anand Veeraragavan, Vincent Wheatley, and Michael Smart. "Experimental Design of a Cavity Flameholder in a Mach 8 Shape-Transitioning Scramjet." In 19th AIAA International Space Planes and Hypersonic Systems and Technologies Conference. Reston, Virginia: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/6.2014-2953.

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Hanson, Robert R., Jeffrey L. Summers, and Cary R. Clark. "From Mars to your living room: transitioning shape memory alloys from aerospace to commercial markets." In 5th Annual International Symposium on Smart Structures and Materials, edited by Janet M. Sater. SPIE, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.310648.

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Bhabhrawala, Talib, and Venkat Krovi. "Shape Recovery From Medical Image Data Using Extended Superquadrics." In ASME 2005 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2005-84738.

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Rapid and representative reconstruction of geometric shape models from surface measurements has applications in diverse arenas ranging from industrial product design to biomedical organ/tissue modeling. However, despite the large body of work, most shape models have had limited success in bridging the gap between reconstruction, recognition, and analysis due to conflicting requirements. On one hand, large numbers of shape parameters are necessary to obtain meaningful information from noisy sensor data. On the other hand, search and recognition techniques require shape parameterizations/abstractions employing few robust shape descriptors. The extension of such shape models to encompass various analysis modalities (in the form of kinematics, dynamics and FEA) now necessitates the inclusion of the appropriate physics (preferably in parametric form) to support the simulation based refinement process. Thus, in this paper we discuss development of a class of parametric shape abstraction models termed as extended superquadrics. The underlying geometric and computational data structure intimately ties together implicit-, explicit- and parametric- surface representation together with a volumetric solid representation that makes them well suited for shape representation. Furthermore, such models are well suited for transitioning to analysis, as for example, in model-based non rigid structure and motion recovery or for mesh generation and simplified volumetric-FEA applications. However, the development of the concomitant methods and benchmarking is necessary prior to widespread acceptance. We will explore some of these aspects further in this paper supported with case studies of shape abstraction from image data in the biomedical/life-sciences arena whose diversity and irregularities pose difficulties for more traditional models.
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Shim, Do-Jun, Robert Kurth, and David Rudland. "Development of Non-Idealized Surface to Through-Wall Crack Transition Model." In ASME 2013 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2013-97092.

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Recent work by the authors have shown that a subcritical surface crack (SC) can transition to a through-wall crack (TWC) with significant differences between the inner diameter (ID) and outer diameter (OD) crack lengths. In the current versions of the xLPR code (Ver. 1.0), an idealized through-wall crack (which has the same area as the final surface crack) is formed once the surface crack penetrates the wall thickness. This type of crack transition was selected since no general stress intensity factor (K) and crack-opening displacement (COD) solutions were available for crack shapes that would form during the transitioning stages, i.e., non-idealized through-wall cracks. However, it has been demonstrated that this idealized through-wall crack may result in an overestimate of the leak rate. Thus, it is necessary to further investigate and develop a model that can handle the surface crack to through-wall crack transition. In this paper, a surface to through-wall crack transition model was proposed using existing K and COD solutions for non-idealized through-wall cracks. This model includes a criterion for transitioning the final surface crack to the initial non-idealized through-wall crack which determines when the transition should occur (based on surface crack depth) and determines the two crack lengths (at ID and OD surfaces) of the initial non-idealized through-wall crack. Furthermore non-idealized through-wall crack growth can be conducted using the proposed model. Example results (crack shape and COD) obtained from the proposed model were compared to those obtained from the natural crack growth simulations for a circumferential crack. Results presented in this paper demonstrated the applicability of the proposed model for simulating crack transition. Limitation of the present model and plans for future work are also discussed in the paper.
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Shim, Do-Jun, David Rudland, and Jeong-Soon Park. "Surface to Through-Wall Crack Transition Model for Axial Cracks in Pipes." In ASME 2014 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2014-28048.

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Recent studies have shown that a subcritical surface crack, due to PWSCC, can transition to a through-wall crack with significant differences between the inner diameter and outer diameter crack lengths. This behavior has been observed for both circumferential and axial cracks. Recently, a surface to through-wall crack transition model has been developed for circumferential cracks using existing K and COD solutions for non-idealized circumferential through-wall cracks. In this paper, a similar crack transition model was developed for axial cracks. As a first step, a study was conducted to define the appropriate crack front shape for non-idealized axial through-wall cracks. Then, elastic finite element analyses were carried out to develop K and COD solutions using these crack front shapes. The newly developed solutions were utilized for the crack transition model. The present crack transition model includes a criterion for transitioning the final surface crack to the initial non-idealized TWC. This criterion determines when the transition should occur (based on surface crack depth) and determines the two crack lengths (at ID and OD surfaces) of the initial non-idealized TWC. Furthermore non-idealized TWC growth can be conducted using the proposed model. Example results (crack length and COD) obtained from the proposed model were compared to those obtained from the natural crack growth simulations. Results presented in this paper demonstrated the applicability of the proposed model for simulating axial crack transition.
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Zhang, Catty Dan. "Animating Mediums: From Visuality of Superimposition to Drawings for Afterimage." In 2019 ACSA Teachers Conference. ACSA Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.teach.2019.32.

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In her book Phantasmagoria, Marina Warner states a relationship between vision and mentality that “one kind of mental image was described as ‘eidetic’, referring to optical experiences that are retained in the mind’s eye with hallucinatory intensity. It comes from eidos, used by Aristotle for that which is seen, or ‘form, shape, figure’, both of something particular and of a generic kind of form, and it is related to ide in, to see, and eidolon, a shape, image, spectre, or phan-tom, also an image in mind, a vision or fancy”1.It was within a relatively short period of time— comparing with over a century long obsession of the aesthetics of superimposed moving sequences— that the discourse of animation in architecture has diverged its paradigm from analytical motion forms in the digital environment towards new possible optical experiences and atmospheric effects in physical spaces. Differing from the traditional cinematic model implemented in architectural design which stitches series of views through spatial organizations, recent investigations regarding these dynamic spatial effects have been largely inspired by mapping techniques, autonomous drawings, and hybrid mediums; or in other words- expanded operations on visuals. The long tradition of the spatiotemporal visual practice in forms of superimposed images, however, has taken on various trajectories transitioning from the static basis to animated implications. Historically used for capturing and representing motion, it is recognized identically assets of frames with discrete positions, where the animation virtually emerges from the viewer’s subconscious process of translation.
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Reports on the topic "Shape Transitioning"

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Hicks, Jacqueline. Drivers of Compliance with International Human Rights Treaties. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), August 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.130.

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Are international human rights treaties associated with better rights performance? The appetite for a conclusive answer has driven a number of large scale quantitative studies that have broadly shown little or no effect, and sometimes even a backsliding. However, the headline conclusions belie much more complicated findings, and the research methods used are controversial. These issues undermine confidence in the findings. Comparative and individual case studies allow for more detailed information about how domestic human rights activists use international human rights laws in practice. They tend to be more positive about the effect of treaties, but they are not as systematic as the quantitative work. Some indirect measures of treaty effect show that the norms contained within them filter down into domestic constitutions, and that the process of human rights reporting at the UN may be useful if dialogue can be considered an a priori good. It is likely that states are driven to comply with human rights obligations through a combination of dynamic influences. Drivers of compliance with international law is a major, unresolved question in the research that is heavily influenced by the worldview of researchers. The two strongest findings are: Domestic context drives compliance. In particular: (1) The strength of domestic non-governmental organisations (NGOs), and links with international NGOs (INGOs), and (2) in partial and transitioning democracies where locals have a reason to use the treaties as tools to press their claims. External enforcement may help drive compliance when: (1) other states link human rights obligations in the treaties to preferential trade agreements, and (2) INGOs ‘name and shame’ human rights violations, possibly reducing inward investment flows from companies worried about their reputation. Scholars also identify intermediate effects of continued dialogue and norm socialisation from the UN’s human rights reporting processes. Interviews with diplomats involved in UN reporting say that the process is more effective when NGOs and individual governments are involved.
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