Results 141 to 150 of about 296,011 (308)
A revision of the Australian jumping spider genus Prostheclina Keyserling, 1892 (Araneae: Salticidae) [PDF]
Barry J. Richardson, Marek Żabka
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ABSTRACT Tim Burton's Christmas trilogy, Batman Returns, The Nightmare Before Christmas and Edward Scissorhands are all characterized by his trademark features. These include characters with ambiguous identities, apparently “normal” worlds adjacent to spaces associated with difference and exclusion, and the inevitable intrusion of the latter into the ...
Fran Pheasant‐Kelly
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A new species of the jumping spider genus Stenaelurillus Simon, 1886, S. albus sp. n., is described from the Western Ghats of India, one of the biodiversity hotspots of the world. Detailed morphological descriptions, diagnostic features and illustrations
Pothalil A. Sebastian +3 more
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ABSTRACT Artificial intelligence (AI) is disrupting innovation. However, our understanding of firm‐level consequences remains limited. While firms are starting to develop a strategic AI orientation (i.e., goals and strategic directions), we neither know how firms establish a strategic AI orientation nor whether it suffices to increase firms ...
Ann‐Katrin Eicke +2 more
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Background Locomotor performance in ecologically relevant activities is often linked to individual fitness. Recent controversy over evolution of extreme sexual size dimorphism (SSD) in spiders centres on the relationship between size and locomotor ...
Taylor Phillip W +2 more
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The engaged action hypothesis: Explaining the merits of external focus cues
The attentional focus effect—the theory that focusing on the body during skilled tasks leads to suboptimal results relative to focusing externally—is well established, but it is not known why it holds. The most widely cited explanation is the constrained action hypothesis: Focusing on the body interferes with beneficial automatic motor programs.
Barbara Montero, John Toner
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Australasian Arachnology, Number 71, April 2005 [PDF]
Nearly 20 years after the first meeting of the Society in Tunanda in 1986 and more than 10 years after the Internationonal Arachnological Congress in Brisbane, in 1993, there will be another ‘reunion’ of the Australasian Arachnological Society.
Framenau, Volker
core
Divergent preference functions generate directional selection in a jumping spider. [PDF]
Castilho LB.
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Leptocybe invasa Fisher & La Salle, 2004 and Ophelimus maskelli Haliday, 1844 - two new records of gall forming Eulophidae from Malta (Hymenoptera, Chalcidoidea) [PDF]
The Eulophidae (Hymenoptera, Chalcidoidea) currently accommodates more than 4,000 described species worldwide in some 300 genera (noyES, 2003). In Europe, the family is represented by about 1,100 species (GAuld & Bolton, 1988).
Mifsud, David
core
One small leap for the jumping spider but a giant step for vision science [PDF]
Robert R. Jackson, Duane P. Harland
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