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Selected AbstractsKnowledge Acquisition and Memory Effects Involving an Expert System Designed as a Learning Tool for Internal Control Assessment*DECISION SCIENCES JOURNAL OF INNOVATIVE EDUCATION, Issue 1 2003Mary Jane Lenard ABSTRACT The assessment of internal control is a consideration in all financial statement audits, as stressed by the Statement on Auditing Standards (SAS) No. 78. According to this statement, "the auditor should obtain an understanding of internal control sufficient to plan the audit" (Accounting Standards Board, 1995, p. 1). Therefore, an accounting student will progress through the auditing course with the responsibility of learning how and why internal controls are assessed. Research in expert systems applied to auditing has shown that there is strong support for the constructive dialogue used in expert systems as a means of encouraging their use in decision making (Eining, Jones, & Loebbecke, 1997). The purpose of this study is to provide the student or novice auditor with a method for developing a more comprehensive understanding of internal controls and the use of internal controls in audit planning. The results of the study reinforce previous findings that novices do better when an expert system applies analogies along with declarative explanations, and clarifies the length of time in which the use of active learning in a training system can provide an improvement to declarative knowledge, but procedural knowledge must be acquired over a longer time frame. [source] In Vitro Resistance to Degradation of Hyaluronic Acid Dermal Fillers by Ovine Testicular HyaluronidaseDERMATOLOGIC SURGERY, Issue 2010DEREK JONES MD BACKGROUND Although adverse events are uncommon with hyaluronic acid (HA) fillers, the use of hyaluronidase permits the reversal of treatment complications or overcorrection. OBJECTIVE This study sought to determine an in vitro dose-response relationship between ovine testicular hyaluronidase (OTH) and three HA dermal fillers (24-mg/mL smooth gel, 20-mg/mL particulate gel, and 5.5-mg/mL particulate gel with 0.3% lidocaine). METHODS AND MATERIALS The dose response of each was measured after incubation for 30 minutes in concentrations ranging between 5 and 40 U of OTH. Timed responses for the 24-mg/mL and 20-mg/mL HA fillers were obtained after incubation with 20 U of OTH for 15 to 120 minutes. RESULTS After all dose responses and timed-interval tests, the 24-mg/mL HA smooth gel filler exhibited more resistance against in vitro enzymatic degradation to OTH than the 20- and 5.5-mg/mL HA particulate gels. CONCLUSION This resistance to degradation in vitro may be attributed to the higher HA content of the 24-mg/mL HA smooth gel, the degree of crosslinking, and the cohesive property of the gel filler. This study was funded by a grant from Allergan, Inc., Santa Barbara, CA. Derek Jones, MD, is a consultant, investigator, advisory board member, and speaker for Allergan, Inc. He received no compensation for this study. Drs. Tezel and Borrell are employed by Allergan, Inc., Santa Barbara, CA. Editorial assistance was provided by Health Learning Systems, a part of CommonHealth, Parsippany, NJ. [source] The Bishop Reformed: Studies of Episcopal Power and Culture in the Central Middle Ages , Edited by John S. Ott and Anna Trumbore JonesEARLY MEDIEVAL EUROPE, Issue 3 2009SCOTT G. BRUCE No abstract is available for this article. [source] Grassland indicator species predict flowering of endangered Gaping Leek-orchid (Prasophyllum correctum D. L. Jones)ECOLOGICAL MANAGEMENT & RESTORATION, Issue 1 2005Ian D. Lunt No abstract is available for this article. [source] The Peacock Committee and Uk Broadcasting Policy , Edited by Tom O'Malley and Janet JonesECONOMIC AFFAIRS, Issue 2 2010Christian Potschka No abstract is available for this article. [source] The Oxford handbook of business history , Edited by Geoffrey Jones and Jonathan ZeitlinECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW, Issue 2 2009JOHN F WILSON No abstract is available for this article. [source] Investor Reaction to Inter-corporate Business Contracting: Evidence and ExplanationECONOMIC NOTES, Issue 3 2006Fayez A. Elayan We examine the stock market reaction to 1227 inter-corporate ordinary business contract announcements reported by Dow Jones between January 1, 1990 and December 31, 2001. Around contract announcement dates, we find statistically significant positive average abnormal returns and abnormal trading volume for contractors, but insignificant positive abnormal returns and negative abnormal volume for contractees. Cross-sectionally, contract announcement period returns are higher for contractors who are small relative to the contract size, have higher return volatility, larger market-to-book ratios and higher profitability. The announcement period returns of contract-awarding firms are not significant and are only marginally related to cross-sectional explanatory factors. The results are consistent with two explanatory stories: contractor quasi-rents induced by the winner's curse and information signalling about contractor production costs. The results are not consistent with perfect competition, with contracts having positive net present values for both parties, and with a version of incomplete contracting theory. [source] George Chapman's Masque of the Twelve Months (1619) [With text]ENGLISH LITERARY RENAISSANCE, Issue 3 2007Martin Butler George Chapman's Masque of the Twelve Months was first printed by John Payne Collier in 1848, with no author's name attached and in scrambled form. Although it was discovered in 1950 that the author must have been Chapman, it has never been reprinted or drawn into the Chapman canon. This essay re-edits the text, and shows that it was the masque performed at Whitehall by Prince Charles and the Marquis of Buckingham on Twelfth Night 1619; three scene designs by Inigo Jones can also be linked to it. The masque's theme concerns the Stuart succession, and the need to protect the Jacobean peace at a time when Europe was just beginning to descend into what would become the Thirty Years War. [source] Entry Mode Choice of SMEs in Central and Eastern EuropeENTREPRENEURSHIP THEORY AND PRACTICE, Issue 1 2002George Nakos Scholars (e.g., Burgel & Murray, 2000; Jones, 1999; Zacharakis, 1997) have suggested that small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) international entry mode selection is an important new research area. In this study we attempt to determine if a model of large firm entry mode selection can be applied to SME entry mode choice. Using Dunning's eclectic framework, we examined SME entry into Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). We found that Dunning's eclectic framework did a good job of predicting SME entry mode selection in CEE markets. Managerial implications and suggestions for future research are discussed. [source] The relationship between thermal stability and pH optimum studied with wild-type and mutant Trichoderma reesei cellobiohydrolase Cel7AFEBS JOURNAL, Issue 5 2003Harry Boer The major cellulase secreted by the filamentous fungus Trichoderma reesei is cellobiohydrolase Cel7A. Its three-dimensional structure has been solved and various mutant enzymes produced. In order to study the potential use of T. reesei Cel7A in the alkaline pH range, the thermal stability of Cel7A was studied as a function of pH with the wild-type and two mutant enzymes using different spectroscopic methods. Tryptophan fluorescence and CD measurements of the wild-type enzyme show an optimal thermostability between pH 3.5,5.6 (Tm, 62 ± 2 °C), at which the highest enzymatic activity is also observed, and a gradual decrease in the stability at more alkaline pH values. A soluble substrate, cellotetraose, was shown to stabilize the protein fold both at optimal and alkaline pH. In addition, unfolding of the Cel7A enzyme and the release of the substrate seem to coincide at both acidic and alkaline pH, demonstrated by a change in the fluorescence emission maximum. CD measurements were used to show that the five point mutations (E223S/A224H/L225V/T226A/D262G) that together result in a more alkaline pH optimum [Becker, D., Braet, C., Brumer, H., III, Claeyssens, M., Divne, C., Fagerström, R.B., Harris, M., Jones, T.A., Kleywegt, G.J., Koivula, A., et al. (2001) Biochem. J.356, 19,30], destabilize the protein fold both at acidic and alkaline pH when compared with the wild-type enzyme. In addition, an interesting time-dependent fluorescence change, which was not observed by CD, was detected for the pH mutant. Our data show that in order to engineer more alkaline pH cellulases, a combination of mutations should be found, which both shift the pH optimum and at the same time improve the thermal stability at alkaline pH range. [source] Corporate Sustainability Performance and Idiosyncratic Risk: A Global PerspectiveFINANCIAL REVIEW, Issue 2 2009Darren D. Lee G11; G30; Q56 Abstract Does investing in sustainability leaders affect portfolio performance? Analyzing two mutually exclusive leading and lagging global corporate sustainability portfolios (Dow Jones) finds that (1) leading sustainability firms do not underperform the market portfolio, and (2) their lagging counterparts outperform the market portfolio and the leading portfolio. Notably, we find leading (lagging) corporate social performance (CSP) firms exhibit significantly lower (higher) idiosyncratic risk and that idiosyncratic risk might be priced by the broader global equity market. We develop an idiosyncratic risk factor and find that its inclusion significantly reduces the apparent difference in performance between leading and lagging CSP portfolios. [source] Carbon dioxide uptake, water relations and drought survival for Dudleya saxosa, the ,rock live-forever', growing in small soil volumesFUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 4 2007P. S. NOBEL Summary 1Although many plants grow in rock crevices and other regions of small soil volume, including over 20 000 epiphytic and hemi-epiphytic species, analyses of the actual soil volume occupied, the water availability in that soil, the water-storage capacity in the shoots and underground organs, and the photosynthetic pathway utilized have rarely been combined. 2Dudleya saxosa (M.F. Jones) Britton and Rose (Crassulaceae), growing in the Sonoran Desert, has very shallow roots that occupied soil volumes averaging only 43 × 10,6 m3 per medium-sized plant. This volume of soil can hold about the same amount of water (10 g) as can be stored in the leaves, corm and roots combined (11 g), but at a sufficiently high water potential for transfer to the plant for less than 1 week after a substantial rainfall. 3About 80% of the net carbon dioxide uptake by D. saxosa over a 24-h period occurred during the daytime (C3) under wet conditions, the daily total decreasing by 34% and the pattern shifting to nocturnal net CO2 uptake (CAM) after 46 days' drought. Seventy-seven days' drought eliminated its daily net CO2 uptake. 4Stomatal frequency was only 67 mm,2 on the adaxial (upper) surface and twofold lower on the abaxial surface. The cuticle was thick, 34 µm for the adaxial surface. Leaves had 24 mesophyll cell layers, leading to a high mesophyll cell surface area per unit leaf area of 142. 5The three leaf anatomical features plus utilization of CAM increased net CO2 uptake per unit of water transpired, and helped D. saxosa thrive in a small soil volume, with the underground corm being a major supplier of water to the succulent leaves during 2.5 months of drought. The maximum water-holding capacity of the soil explored by the roots closely matched the maximum water-holding capacity of the plant, reflecting the conservative strategy used by D. saxosa in a stressful semi-arid environment. [source] Respiration and thermogenesis by cones of the Australian cycad Macrozamia machiniiFUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, Issue 6 2004R. S. SEYMOUR Summary 1While cycads are often considered to be wind-pollinated, it is now clear that insects are pollen vectors in many species. This study addresses the role of thermogenesis in pollination biology of the dioecious cycad Macrozamia machinii P.I. Forster & D.L. Jones. 2The patterns of thermogenesis in intact male and female cones were assessed with thermometry and respirometry throughout the pollination period in the field. 3Thermogenic episodes in male cones occurred from about 17.00,00.00 h on successive evenings, in association with dehiscence of sporangia and presence of their pollinating weevils (Tranes sp.). 4Temperatures of the 167 g male cones rose ,6 °C above ambient, and mean rate of oxygen consumption peaked at 7·7 µmol s,1 (3·6 W). Regulation of male cone temperature was not evident, and thermogenesis of female cones was insignificant. 5Male cones probably heat to augment scent production and enhance weevil activity, including mating and egg-laying, but female cones may benefit from reduced visitation and freedom from damage by weevil larvae. Male cones may be sacrificial in providing the reward to the pollinators while the female cones are safeguarded. [source] All Bound up Together: The Woman Question in African American Public Culture, 1830,1900 by Martha S. JonesGENDER & HISTORY, Issue 1 2009JOHN A. KIRK No abstract is available for this article. [source] Audit committees and earnings qualityACCOUNTING & FINANCE, Issue 2 2009Peter Baxter G30; G38; M41 Abstract This research investigates whether audit committees are associated with improved earnings quality for a sample of Australian listed companies prior to the introduction of mandatory audit committee requirements in 2003. Two measures of earnings quality are used based on models first developed by Jones (1991) and Dechow and Dichev (2002). Our results indicate that formation of an audit committee reduces intentional earnings management but not accrual estimation errors. We also find differences in the associations between audit committee accounting expertise and the two earnings quality measures. Other audit committee characteristics examined are not significantly related to either earnings quality measure. [source] Measuring inequality in self-reported health,discussion of a recently suggested approach using Finnish dataHEALTH ECONOMICS, Issue 7 2004Jorgen Lauridsen Health surveys often include a general question on self-assessed health (SAH), usually measured on an ordinal scale with three to five response categories, from ,very poor' or ,poor' to ,very good' or ,excellent'. This paper assesses the scaling of responses on the SAH question. It compares alternative procedures designed to impose cardinality on the ordinal responses. These include OLS, ordered probit and interval regression approaches. The cardinal measures of health are used to compute and decompose concentration indices for income-related inequality in health. Results are provided using Finnish data on 15D and the SAH questions. Further evidence emerges for the internal validity of a method used in a pioneering study by van Doorslaer and Jones which was based on Canadian data on the McMaster Health Utility Index Mark III (HUI) and SAH. The study validates the conclusions drawn by van Doorslaer and Jones. It confirms that the interval regression approach is superior to OLS and ordered probit regression in assessing health inequality. However, regarding the choice of scaling instrument, it is concluded that the scaling of SAH categories and, consequently, the measured degree of inequality, are sensitive to characteristics of the chosen scaling instrument. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Fashioning victims: Dr. Henry Jones and the plight of Irish Protestants, 1642HISTORICAL RESEARCH, Issue 186 2001Joseph Cope This article explores Dr. Henry Jones's work in conveying first-hand testimony on the Irish rising to English audiences in 1642. It compares Jones's Remonstrance of Diverse Remarkable Passages Concerning the Church and Kingdom of Ireland with the archival materials from which he drew his information. In order to persuade the English parliament and the English people to support charitable projects for Ireland's poor, Jones needed to portray the victims of the rising in a positive light. The resulting image of deserving war victims was broadly sympathetic but in fact reflected a distorted view of the experiences of those despoiled in the rebellion. [source] Engendering Whiteness: White Women and Colonialism in Barbados and North Carolina, 1627,1865 By Cecily JonesHISTORY, Issue 312 2008HENRICE ALTINK No abstract is available for this article. [source] Smith & Jones LLP: Charting a Path to the Future,ACCOUNTING PERSPECTIVES, Issue 2 2009Norman T. Sheehan ABSTRACT This case requires accounting students to shift their focus from learning about the practice of auditing to learning about the business of auditing. It describes the strategy, vision, and mission of a medium-sized, Canadian audit firm and the external and internal challenges the firm faces as it looks to improve its profitability. Students should reflect on which behaviors Smith & Jones would like to encourage and what the partners can do to encourage its employees to exhibit these behaviors. [source] Laboratory findings associated with thrombophilia are not more common in inflammatory bowel diseaseINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LABORATORY HEMATOLOGY, Issue 4 2000K. K. Sundaram Summary Thromboembolic disease (TED) has been recognized as a complication of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) since the 1930s ( Bargen & Barker 1936). The relative contributions of inherited or acquired thrombophilia and the inflammatory response to the mechanism of this tendency is unclear. Thrombotic events are more common in active disease although significant numbers also occur spontaneously, when the disease is in clinical remission ( Talbot et al. 1986 ; Jackson et al. 1997 ). Studies looking at the prevalence of specific thrombophilic states such as Antithrombin III deficiency ( Jackson et al. 1997 ; Lake, Stauffer & Stuart 1978; Cianco et al. 1996 ; Ghosh et al. 1983 ), Factor V Leiden mutation (APC Resistance) ( Jackson et al. 1997 ; Probert et al. 1997 ; Ardizzone et al. 1998 ; Liebman et al. 1998 ), anticardiolipin antibodies ( Ciancio et al. 1996 ), Protein C ( Wyshock, Caldwell & Crowley 1988; Korsten & Reis 1992) and Protein S deficiencies ( Jorens et al. 1990 ; Aadland et al. 1992 ) in IBD have been contradictory or equivocal. We had previously found that IBD patients with a history of TED are not more likely to have a laboratory thrombophilic abnormality than those with uncomplicated disease. We also demonstrated that the prevalence of heterogenous laboratory thrombophilic abnormalities (usually minor) in all IBD patients may be as high as 60%, much higher than the recognized prevalence of TED ( Lim, Jones & Gould 1996). We wondered how this would compare with the healthy non-IBD population. We have therefore explored the prevalence of such thrombophilic abnormalities in a group of IBD patients who had no history of TED and compared them with healthy age and sex matched controls. [source] Implementing on-the-job training: critical success factorsINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT, Issue 3 2000Simone J. van Zolingen Post Offices Inc. in The Netherlands has developed and implemented a new instruction model for the training of desk employees. The quality of the new instruction model was assessed by means of the evaluation model of Jacobs and Jones for on-the-job training. It is concluded that the implementation of the training model has not been completely successful. Critical success factors, such as the performance of the mentors as well as the quality of the self-study material, have to be improved. Mentors are expected to serve as a behavioural model, to provide feedback, arrange an adequate environment for self-study, motivate trainees for self-study and evaluate trainees' progress on a regular basis. This study shows that mentors must be fully convinced of the benefit of a new instructional model, if not, the implementation will not be successful. Besides, the study shows that the quality of the self-study material depends very much on the similarity between the knowledge needed in work and the knowledge presented in the self-study material. [source] Economic Adjustment and Political Transformation in Small States , By E. JonesJCMS: JOURNAL OF COMMON MARKET STUDIES, Issue 1 2009ANDERS WIVEL No abstract is available for this article. [source] The Symphony in Beethoven's Vienna , By David Wyn JonesJOURNAL FOR EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY STUDIES, Issue 1 2010Nicholas Marston First page of article [source] Do Stock Prices Fully Reflect the Implications of Special Items for Future Earnings?JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, Issue 3 2002David Burgstahler Previous research (Rendleman, Jones, and Latane [1987]; Freeman and Tse [1989]; Bernard and Thomas [1990]; and Ball and Bartov [1996]) indicates that security prices do not fully reflect predictable elements of the relation between current and future quarterly earnings. We investigate whether this finding also holds for the special items component of earnings. Given that special items are prominent in financial analysis and are assumed to have relatively straightforward implications for future earnings (special items are assumed to be largely transitory), one might expect that prices would fully impound the implications of special items for future earnings. Based on the "two-equation" approach used in Ball and Bartov [1996] and other studies (e.g., Abarbanell and Bernard [1992]; Sloan [1996]; Rangan and Sloan [1998]; and Soffer and Lys [1999]), we find that while prices reflect relatively more of the effects of special items compared to other earnings components, we still reject the null hypothesis that prices fully impound the implications of special items for future earnings. The "two-equation" approach assesses the consistency of coefficients in a pair of prediction and pricing equations, and thus depends on an assumed functional form. However, a less structured abnormal returns methodology like that used in Bernard and Thomas [1990] also supports the conclusion that the implications of special items are not fully impounded in prices. Specifically, a trading strategy based only on the sign of special items earns small but statistically significant abnormal returns during a 3-day window four quarters subsequent to the original announcement of special items. [source] Cover Picture: On the Nature of the Active Species in Palladium Catalyzed Mizoroki,Heck and Suzuki,Miyaura Couplings , Homogeneous or Heterogeneous Catalysis, A Critical Review: (Adv. Synth.ADVANCED SYNTHESIS & CATALYSIS (PREVIOUSLY: JOURNAL FUER PRAKTISCHE CHEMIE), Issue 6 2006Catal. Abstract The cover picture shows several forms of palladium which have been utilized as precatalysts for Heck and Suzuki coupling reactions. Over the years myriad different precat-alysts have been used and the nature of the true catalytic palladium species has been a subject of intense debate. What is the real catalyst in these reactions? For more details see the review by Nam T.,S. Phan, Matthew Van Der Sluys and Christopher W. Jones on pages,609,679. [source] Study of peptide conformation in terms of the ABEEM/MM methodJOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY, Issue 1 2006Zhong-Zhi Yang Abstract The ABEEM/MM model (atom-bond electronegativity equalization method fused into molecular mechanics) is applied to study of the polypeptide conformations. The Lennard,Jones and torsional parameters were optimized to be consistent with the ABEEM/MM fluctuating charge electrostatic potential. The hydrogen bond was specially treated with an electrostatic fitting function. Molecular dipole moments, dimerization energies, and hydrogen bond lengths of complexes are reasonably achieved by our model, compared to ab initio results. The ABEEM/MM fluctuating charge model reproduces both the peptide conformational energies and structures with satisfactory accuracy with low computer cost. The transferability is tested by applying the parameters of our model to the tetrapeptide of alanine and another four dipeptides. The overall RMS deviations in conformational energies and key dihedral angles for four di- or tetrapeptide, is 0.39 kcal/mol and 7.7°. The current results agree well with those by the accurate ab initio method, and are comparable to those from the best existing force fields. The results make us believe that our fluctuating charge model can obtain more promising results in protein and macromolecular modeling with good accuracy but less computer cost. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem 27: 1,10, 2006 [source] The validation of a rating scale to assess dietitians' use of behaviour change skillsJOURNAL OF HUMAN NUTRITION & DIETETICS, Issue 4 2008G. Bonner Background:, Evidence suggests that education alone is unlikely to elicit dietary-behavioural change (Contento, 1995). Consequently, many dietitians are moving from a traditional advice-giving role to one which utilises ,behaviour change skills' (BCS) in dietary counselling. BCS is an umbrella term used to cover a wide range of skills and techniques drawn from the fields of counselling, motivational interviewing (MI) and cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). In order to assess the efficacy of this approach, a means of quantifying BCS-use is required. This two-stage study aimed to validate a newly-devised scale to assess dietitians' BCS-use in one-to-one dietary counselling. Methods:, Items for the scale were generated by drawing on the literature, syllabi for training in BCS and its parent disciplines (counselling, MI and CBT), and specialist dietitians. The resulting scale and manual were revised following assessment of content validity by expert panel and piloting. In stage one, 21 dietetic consultations were audiotaped and rated for BCS-use by three BCS-trained dietitians. Inter-rater agreement was calculated using the kappa statistic and intra-class correlation (ICC), to give a ,chance corrected' measure of agreement. Validity was tested using a psychologist's subjective assessment of BCS-use as a proxy ,gold-standard' compared with the dietitians' ratings, again using kappa and ICC. In stage two the scale was further revised before an additional 20 audiotaped consultations were analysed using the same procedure. Ethical approval for the study was given by the appropriate NHS and university research ethics committees. Results:, At stage one, although kappas were fairly poor for agreement on individual criteria, the ICC for overall scores indicated a ,fair' level of agreement, according to Shrout's (1998) classifications: ICC = 0.584 (CI 0.339,0.784). Results for validity were poor with the psychologist frequently rating higher than the dietitians. At stage two, following scale revision, results for inter-rater agreement improved with more criteria showing ,moderate' or ,substantial' agreement. Ten out of the 21 criteria achieved levels of agreement classified as ,fair' or higher for all three rater pairs. The ICC for overall scores improved to indicate ,moderate' agreement: ICC = 0.640 (CI 0.404,0.821). Validity results remained poor. Discussion:, The moderate level of overall inter-rater agreement observed in the revised scale is considered acceptable (Jones, 2006) and indicates this tool is useful. This measure is more relevant to the purpose of the tool than agreement on individual criteria given it is intended to classify consultations overall as low/medium/high use of BCS rather than to examine individual skills. However, in terms of validity, the discrepancy between dietitian and psychologist ratings requires further investigation. It is hypothesized that the dietitians had higher expectations of what a dietitian could achieve in terms of proficiency in BCS and, as such, rated more stringently than the psychologist. Achieving a clear picture of validity usually necessitates a series of assessments (Murphy & Davidshofer, 2005); the BCS rating scale is no exception with further testing required. Conclusions:, The revised scale shows acceptable inter-rater reliability and robust content validity in our study sample. However, quantitative examination of validity gave poor results and further assessment is required to provide a tool with which we can confidently assess dietitians' use of BCS. References, Contento, I., Balch, G.I., Bronner, Y.L. et al. (1995) The effectiveness of nutrition education and implications for nutrition education policy, programs, and research: a review of the research. J. Nutr. Educ.27, 355,364. Jones, J.M. (2006) Nutritional Screening and Assessment Tools. New York: Nova Science Publishers. Murphy, K.R. & Davidshofer, C.O. (2005) Psychological Testing , Principles and Applications, 6th edn. New Jersey: Pearson Education Inc. Shrout, P. (1998) Measurement reliability and agreement in psychiatry. Stat. Methods Med. Res. 7, 301,317. [source] Thorncrown and the Mildred B. Cooper Chapels: Sacred Structures Designed by Fay JonesJOURNAL OF INTERIOR DESIGN, Issue 2 2001Stephanie A. Watson Ed.D. The purpose of this study was to analyze how structures designed by Fay Jones become invested with sacredness. The spaces being reviewed include Thorncrown Chapel and the Mildred B. Cooper Chapel. The framework for this criticism was based upon the symbolic principles expressed through architecture. Other strategies performed in this investigation included interviews with Maurice Jennings, on-site studies, and photographic examinations. Analysis of Thorncrown and the Mildred B. Cooper Chapels was based upon the relationship of architecture and the cosmos, number symbolism, natural rhythms, patterns, and materials. Jones's craftsmanlike structures examine humankind's relation to nature and its place in the larger cosmic order. The "principles" Fay Jones espouses evoke a universal harmony present in the physical universe. Harmony resonates through the work. Jones's work is inclusive, incorporating and repeating congruent themes at small and large scale into a total statement of universal order. Both chapels represent a quiet celebration of the American belief in the sacredness and ultimate worth of each individual. [source] 10th international symposium on the synthesis and applications of isotopes and isotopically labelled compounds,Professor John R. Jones memorial lectures, Monday, June 15, 2009JOURNAL OF LABELLED COMPOUNDS AND RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS, Issue 5-6 2010David Hesk Session Chair Abstract The first Session of the Conference was dedicated to the memory of Professor John R. Jones. Labelling with Deuterium and Tritium was the common theme. William J.S. Lockley, Frank Tang and Shuiyu Lu gave presentations. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] 50th anniversary special issue, in memoriam John JonesJOURNAL OF LABELLED COMPOUNDS AND RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS, Issue 9-10 2007John Allen [source] |