Results 1 to 10 of about 54,124 (254)
Analysis of the genealogy process in forensic genetic genealogy
AbstractThe genealogy process is typically the most time‐consuming part of—and a limiting factor in the success of—forensic genetic genealogy, which is a new approach to solving violent crimes and identifying human remains. We formulate a stochastic dynamic program that—given the list of matches and their genetic distances to the unknown target—chooses
Mine Su Erturk, Lawrence M Wein
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AbstractThe use of the symbol$\mathbin {\boldsymbol {\vee }}$for disjunction in formal logic is ubiquitous. Where did it come from? The paper details the evolution of the symbol$\mathbin {\boldsymbol {\vee }}$in its historical and logical context. Some sources say that disjunction in its use as connecting propositions or formulas was introduced by ...
Landon D. C. Elkind, Richard Zach
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Why can’t librarians “Just Say No”? To answer this question, we look at workplace refusal through the fine arts, literature, and popular culture to construct a genealogy of workplace refusal. In it, we also begin to trace a lineage of crisis narrative critique alongside the library profession’s inheritance of vocational awe.
Natalie Meyers +3 more
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The genealogy of genealogy of neurons
Two scenarios of neuronal evolution (monophyly and polyphyly) are discussed in the historical timeline starting from the 19th century. The recent genomic studies on Ctenophores re-initiated a broad interest in the hypotheses of independent origins of neurons.
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The article describes how an intellectual community of those following French trends in the academy have, for the past forty years, been offering a mistaken reading of Friedrich Nietzsche's concept of genealogy. The essay shows how Nietzsche mocks moral psychologists by calling them genealogists, contrasts Nietzsche's work with that of genealogists ...
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This commentary is about the article by Feng, Cho, and Doolittle (1), a paper that addresses genealogical relationships between the three domains of organisms. First, however, I would like to be as forthcoming as possible on issues of nepotism and reveal another genealogy—that relating this paper’s senior author and me. Russell F.
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Four genealogies of postsecularity [PDF]
This publication is part of Beaumont, Justin (ed.) (2018). The Routledge Handbook of Postsecularity, New York: Routledge. Fundings For this publication, Kristina Stoeckl acknowledges funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (POSEC, grant agreement no. ERC-STG-2015-676804).
Stoeckl, Kristina, Uzlaner, Dmitry
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Genealogy is a historical perspective and investigative method, which offers an intrinsic critique of the present. It provides people with the critical skills for analysing and uncovering the relationship between knowledge, power and the human subject in modern society and the conceptual tools to understand how their being has been shaped by historical
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“Antihero”, as a literary term, entered literature in the nineteenth century with Dostoevsky, and its usage flourished in the second half of the twentieth century. However, the antihero protagonists or characters have been on stage since the early Greek drama and their stories are often told in the works of the twentieth century literature.
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