Selective List of Recent Articles from Periodicals

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Selective List of Recent Articles from Periodicals

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  • Dataset
  • 10.32614/cran.package.regexselect
RegexSelect: Regular Expressions in 'shiny' Select Lists
  • Sep 22, 2017
  • Jonathan Sidi

regexSelect: Regular Expressions in 'shiny' Select Lists

  • Book Chapter
  • 10.1007/978-1-4471-0843-6_18
User Interface Programming
  • Jan 1, 1999
  • John Hunt

In the last chapter you saw how to create a window and place a panel on it that allows you to draw graphic objects (lines, rectangles, etc.). However, today’s graphical user interfaces (GUIs) go far beyond this, allowing buttons, input and output fields, selection lists, menus etc. The Abstract Window Toolkit (AWT) provides many classes which directly support these types of facility. As Java is a pure object-oriented language, a button is an object, a menu is an object, a text field is an object and so is a selection list. Thus to create a GUI in Java, you create the window and instances of the facilities you require; then you add these instances to the window instance. You use the Frame and Panel classes, just as you did in the previous chapter, to display such GUI component objects. Of course life is not quite as simple as this; you need to take into account how the various components in the window should be laid out, what the window should do in response to an event (such as a user clicking a button) and how to terminate the window cleanly. In the last chapter, you briefly saw part of this when the WindowListener interface was used to catch the windowClosing event.KeywordsText FieldGraphic ObjectRadio ButtonBoolean StateMethod ProtocolThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1080/17449857408588305
New Zealand literature: A select list with some background titles
  • Nov 1, 1974
  • World Literature Written in English
  • Peter C M Alcock

(1974). New Zealand literature: A select list with some background titles. World Literature Written in English: Vol. 13, No. 2, pp. 231-234.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0021121400017612
Dissertations on British agrarian history: a select list. By Raine Morgan. Pp xxvi, 170. Reading: University of Reading. 1981. £3.50. (Institute of Agricultural History bibliographies in agricultural history, no. 2)
  • Jan 1, 1982
  • Irish Historical Studies
  • F.A D’Arcy

Dissertations on British agrarian history: a select list. By Raine Morgan. Pp xxvi, 170. Reading: University of Reading. 1981. £3.50. (Institute of Agricultural History bibliographies in agricultural history, no. 2) - Volume 23 Issue 90

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.1089/hs.2023.0007
Chimeric Viruses Containing Select Agents: The Biology Behind Their Creation, Attenuation, and Exclusion From Regulation.
  • Sep 13, 2023
  • Health security
  • Elizabeth W Wells + 1 more

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as part of the Federal Select Agent Program, and under the purview of 42 CFR §73.3, has the ability to regulate chimeric viruses that contain portions of pathogens that are part of the select agents and toxins list. In addition, the CDC is responsible for excluding pathogens from regulation, including chimeric viruses, that are sufficiently attenuated. Since 2003, the CDC has excluded over 20 chimeric viruses that contain portions of select agents. But in late 2021, the CDC proposed a regulatory first-the addition of a chimeric virus to the select agents and toxins list. To better understand the importance and applicability of this action, we surveyed the landscape of previous exclusions from select agent regulation. First, we reviewed the exclusion criteria used by the Intragovernmental Select Agents and Toxins Technical Advisory Committee in their advisement of the Federal Select Agent Program. We then reviewed the literature on chimeric viruses that contain portions of select agents and that have been excluded from regulation due to sufficient attenuation, focusing on chimeric alphaviruses and chimeric avian influenza viruses. By analyzing biological commonalities and patterns in the structure and methodology of the development of previously excluded chimeric viruses, we provide insight into how the CDC has used exclusion criteria in the past to regulate chimeric viruses. We conclude by contrasting previous exclusions with the recent addition of SARS-CoV-1/SARS-CoV-2 chimeric viruses to the select agents and toxins list, demonstrating that this addition strays from established, effective regulatory processes, and is thus a regulatory misstep.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1121/1.1507015
Correcting speech recognition without first presenting alternatives
  • Jan 1, 2002
  • The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
  • Steven J Friedland

A method and a system within a computer speech recognition system to automatically correct portions of text. The invention receives text derived from a first user input for inclusion in a body of text. Concurrently upon receipt of the first user input, and based upon the first user input, the system identifies a list of alternate text selections potentially intended by the user. Next, the system stores each of the alternate text selections in a memory location associated with the text. In response to a second user input, and without displaying the list of alternate text selections to the user, the system automatically retrieves a first one of the alternate text selections from the memory location and inserts the first one of the alternate text selections in place of the text in the body of text.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1093/screen/11.4-5.148
Popular Culture and Mass Media Studies — A Select Reading List
  • Jul 1, 1970
  • Screen

Journal Article Popular Culture and Mass Media Studies — A Select Reading List Get access Screen, Volume 11, Issue 4-5, July/October 1970, Pages 148–171, https://doi.org/10.1093/screen/11.4-5.148 Published: 01 July 1970

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 16
  • 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2003.tb07456.x
Development of Rickettsia prowazekii DNA vaccine: cloning strategies.
  • Jun 1, 2003
  • Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
  • Christopher Coker + 2 more

Rickettsia prowazekii, the etiologic agent of louse-borne typhus, is listed as a category B agent under the select agent list of the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. R. prowazekii was placed on the select agent list due to its potential to cause epidemic, high mortality in untreated and/or misdiagnosed cases, and ease of spread in vulnerable populations. Historically, R. prowazekii vaccines using crude antigen and/or inactivated rickettsia were partially protective but have been accompanied with undesirable toxic reactions and difficulties in standardization. The availability of the genome sequence of R. prowazekii allowed us to select genes that encode proteins with potential in immuno-protection against this human pathogen. We successfully PCR-amplified a group of genes involved in invasion (invA), cell division (fts), protein secretion (sec gene family), and virulence (ompA and ompB, virB gene family, cap and tlyA and tlyC). The generated PCR products were cloned into the Gateway cloning system and the cloned products will be introduced into Vical VR 1020-DV and VR 1012-DV DNA vaccine plasmids. Twenty-four target genes from R. prowazekii have been PCR amplified, of which fifteen have been introduced into the pENTR/SD/D-TOPO entry cloning vector.

  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 8
  • 10.1177/0192623313501726
The 26-Week Tg.Rash2 Mice Carcinogenicity Studies
  • Aug 19, 2013
  • Toxicologic Pathology
  • Madhav G Paranjpe + 2 more

A typical 26-week Tg.rasH2 mouse carcinogenicity study usually has 4 dose groups, composed of 25 mice/sex, which include 1 control and 3 test article-treated groups. In every study, there is a protocol required full tissue list of 49 tissues which is examined microscopically in all animals of these 4 dose groups. Based on retrospective analysis of the historical control data collected from studies conducted in Tg.rasH2 mice from 2004 to 2012, we propose that a full tissue list be examined as usual in the control and high-dose groups; however, in the low- and mid-dose groups, only select tissues should be examined. The select tissue list is generated after analyzing common tumors, uncommon tumors seen grossly, uncommon tumors not seen grossly, organ weight variations with accountable microscopic lesions, and target organs identified in the high-dose groups. The proposed changes to the International Conference on Harmonization S1 guidance may lead to an increased need for 26-week Tg.rasH2 mice studies. The time savings resulting from processing and evaluating a select tissue list rather than a full tissue list from low- and mid-dose groups of Tg.rasH2 mouse studies will further accelerate early completion of these studies without compromising the quality and integrity.

  • Book Chapter
  • 10.1007/978-1-4842-6249-8_7
Frames and Textboxes
  • Nov 7, 2020
  • Sujay Raghavendra

The previous chapter explained how to locate buttons like default, radio, checkbox, and select list. Each button has a functionality associated with it, such as submit, select, or deselect. Button functionalities are performed with a click action from a mouse (see Chapter 3). This chapter discusses locating web elements like frames and textboxes. It also explains handling single and multiple frames on a web page.

  • Book Chapter
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.1007/978-0-85729-320-6_92
Detecting mis-entered values in large data sets
  • Jan 1, 2010
  • Kalaivany Natarajan + 2 more

Data is the valuable asset of business organizations and companies. Quality data is essential for business intelligence and intelligence decision-making. Data quality is a main issue in quality information management. Data quality control has been aware of by most large business organizations. Various mechanisms have been employed to ensure obtaining quality data, for example, using electronic forms for data collection. With the popularity of collecting data from electronic forms, mis-entered values become a major source of dirty values in a database. Mis-entered values can be caused b y randomly ticking multiple choices from drop down selection lists. These dirty values are more inconspicuous than traditional data entry errors and misspellings since mis-entered values have right spelling and normally do not caused integrity violation. In this paper, we discuss some data mining methods that are used for detecting mis-entered values in large data sets. We present a framework for detecting mis-entered values using association rules.

  • Conference Article
  • Cite Count Icon 11
  • 10.1145/1516360.1516487
Estimating aggregates in time-constrained approximate queries in Oracle
  • Mar 24, 2009
  • Ying Hu + 2 more

The concept of time-constrained SQL queries was introduced to address the problem of long-running SQL queries. A key approach adopted for supporting time-constrained SQL queries is to use sampling to reduce the amount of data that needs to be processed, thereby allowing completion of the query in the specified time constraint. However, sampling does make the query results approximate and hence requires the system to estimate the values of the expressions (especially aggregates) occurring in the select list. Thus, coming up with estimates for aggregates is crucial for time-constrained approximate SQL queries to be useful, which is the focus of this paper. Specifically, we address the problem of estimating commonly occurring aggregates (namely, SUM, COUNT, AVG, MEDIAN, MIN, and MAX) in time-constrained approximate queries. We give both point and interval estimates for SUM, COUNT, AVG, and MEDIAN using Bernoulli sampling for various type of queries, including join processing with cross product sampling. For MIN (MAX), we give the confidence level that the proportion 100γ% of the population will exceed the MIN (or be less than the MAX) obtained from the sampled data.

  • Research Article
  • 10.3233/jhs-150517
A data extraction and layout generation framework for web service
  • Jul 10, 2015
  • Journal of High Speed Networks
  • Wu Gui-Cheng + 1 more

SOA web services are widely used as the new platform to build interoperable distributed applications which can eliminate the differences between the enterprise systems. Web services deployed over the network are accessible for a wider user base. However, the user interfaces are still implemented manually, and concepts that aim to automate this process are still in their infancy. In this paper, we introduce a web service customization method with a UI display and layout model as well as a UI layout algorithm. By using web service, we allow generation of form controls such as selection lists, text boxes, text areas, checkboxes and radio buttons on the client side. The UI layout algorithm is described and the time consumed by building service is compared in table. Performance tests are given in different testing environments. The experimental results demonstrate that our generated web services are efficient and effective in interoperability, flexibility and visualization.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1353/sho.2000.0101
Israel at 50: A Journalist's Perspective (review)
  • Jun 1, 2000
  • Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies
  • Frank Tachau

130 SHOFAR Summer 2000 Vol. 18, No.4 The [mal section of the volume focuses upon what Elazar and Sandler refer to as "The New Politics," andprimarily focuses upon the direct election ofthe prime minister and how the new political structures somehow "transformed" Israel politics at this time and in the future. Bernard Susser does a good job of explaining what the objectives were in the change to a direct election ofa prime minister, what criticisms were made ofthe new system, how we should interpret the new system, and how the output of the electoral structures (i.e., the election ofNetanyahu and strengthened religious parties) differed from what would likely have eventuated from the previous electoral system. In the final essay of the volume Michael Keren writes an extremely insightful essay about the "new politics" oflsraeli elections, and how the framework ofa "new politics" can be applied to the Israeli context. This latest edition to the Elections in Israel series will be a "must have" for students ofIsraeli politics who have a full collection of volumes on past Israeli elections. Even individuals who are not specialists in electoral behavior will want to own this volume as a very valuable "snapshot" ofwhich factors in Israeli politics proved to be crucial at one key point in time. We can only sit back and await the sequel! Gregory Mahler Provost Kalamazoo College Israel at 50: A Journalist's Perspective, by John Hohenberg. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1998. 356 pp. $29.95. John Hohenberg is ajournalist who served as political and diplomatic correspondent in New York and Washington as well as at the U.N. He was Professor ofJournalism at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism from 1950 to 1976, and was administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes and Secretary of the Pulitzer Board from 1954 to 1976. He apparently visited Israel early and often, and interviewed a number of its leaders. These are impressive credentials. Unfortunately, the book which this highly experienced individual has produced, and which is published by a major university press, is a disappointment. For starters, neither the author nor his editor seem to have bothered to check many of the facts, resulting in frequent misstatements, errors, and hopeless muddles. There is also some evidence ofbias or at least major oversight. For example, the bibliography contains not a single work by or about Ben Gurion, although the great founding figure is mentioned frequently in the text. By contrast, books by Moshe Dayan, Golda Meir, Shimon Peres, Leah and Yitzhak Rabin, Ariel Sharon, and Ezer Weizman are included, as are no less than four titles by or about Menachem Begin. Uninitiated readers may gain a distorted impression ofthe role ofBegin in Israeli history, and may fail to fully Book Reviews 131 appreciate the contributions of Ben Gurion. Similarly, some readers will see an exaggerated role for a young Ariel Sharon as platoon leader during the 1948--49 independence war, with little or no mention ofthe exploits ofother more senior military officers ofthat time. This exaggeration is only slightly compensated for by the critical tone of Hohenberg's description of Sharon's fateful role in the Lebanese War of the early 1980s, by which time he had become Defense Minister. Factual errors are so numerous that even a selective list does not suffice. Perhaps the most serious one is an apparent confusion in Hohenberg's mind concerning the geography of the Sinai Peninsula and the Red Sea. He seems to believe that the Strait of Tiran, which provides access to the Gulf of Aqaba and the southern Israeli port of Eilat, also controls access to the Suez Canal. This confusion is compounded by the statement that the UN Emergency Force deployed in the Sinai in 1957 was to control the Canal, and that it "kept the Suez Canal open after ... 1957" (pp. 73, 74). If Hohenberg means that UNEF opened the Canal to Israeli shipping, he is dead wrong. UNEF had nothing whatsoever to do with the Canal, which remained closed to Israeli shipping throughout most of the existence of Israel. Other errors and distortions abound. Hohenberg suggests that the Hizbullah of Lebanon existed as early as 1967 (p. 33); in fact...

  • Single Book
  • 10.5962/bhl.title.112450
Select list [of] gladioli, dahlias, roses, hardy plants and shrubs : spring 1916 /
  • Jan 1, 1916
  • N A Hallauer

Select list [of] gladioli, dahlias, roses, hardy plants and shrubs : spring 1916 /

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