Academic literature on the topic 'Buckley family'

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Journal articles on the topic "Buckley family"

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LOVESEY, OLIVER. "Anti-Orpheus: narrating the dream brother." Popular Music 23, no. 3 (October 2004): 331–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261143004000200.

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Jeff Buckley seemingly resisted entrapment by the ‘Oedipal’ myths of family, corporate rock, and the cult of dead celebrities, as well as the branding of his image and identity, but his rebellious, self-mythologising anti-narrative simulated the phantom narrative he opposed. In a postmodern context, Buckley's impossible search for absolute artistic authenticity, integrity and originality, given his ambivalence about his ethereal voice – the signature of his father – found expression in hybridised ambiance, modernist collage, and postmodern pastiche.
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Alizadeh, Morad, Haitham M. Yousof, Ahmed Z. Afify, Gauss M. Cordeiro, and M. Mansoor. "The Complementary Generalized Transmuted Poisson-G Family of Distributions." Austrian Journal of Statistics 47, no. 4 (June 28, 2018): 60–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.17713/ajs.v47i4.577.

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We introduce a new class of continuous distributions called the complementary generalized transmuted Poisson-G family, which extends the transmuted class pioneered by Shaw and Buckley (2007). We provide some special models and derive general mathematical properties including quantile function, explicit expressions for the ordinary and incomplete moments, generating function, Rényi and Shannon entropies and order statistics. The estimation of the model parameters is performed by maximum likelihood. The flexibility of the new family is illustrated by means of two applications to real data sets.
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Waterhouse., Chas O., and A. Günther. "On the Coleopterous Insects belonging to the family Hispidœ collected by Mr. Buckley in Ecuador." Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 49, no. 2 (August 21, 2009): 260–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.1881.tb01288.x.

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Rustum, Ibrahim M., and ElHadi I. Elhadi. "Totally Volume Integral of Fluxes for Discontinuous Galerkin Method (TVI-DG) I-Unsteady Scalar One Dimensional Conservation Laws." Al-Mukhtar Journal of Sciences 32, no. 1 (June 30, 2017): 36–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.54172/mjsc.v32i1.124.

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The volume integral of Riemann flux in the discontinuous Galerkin (DG) method is introduced in this paper. The boundaries integrals of the fluxes (Riemann flux) are transformed into volume integral. The new family of DG method is accomplished by applying divergence theorem to the boundaries integrals of the flux. Therefore, the (DG) method is independent of the boundaries integrals of fluxes (Riemann flux) at the cell (element) boundaries as in classical (DG) methods. The modified streamline upwind Petrov-Galerkin method is used to capture the oscillation of unphysical flow for shocked flow problems. The numerical results of applying totally volume integral discontinuous Galerkin method (TVI-DG) are presented to unsteady scalar hyperbolic equations (linear convection equation, inviscid Burger's equation and Buckley-Leverett equation) for one dimensional case. The numerical finding of this scheme is very accurate as compared with other high order schemes as the weighted compact finite difference method WCOMP.
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Cartier, Michel. "Patricia Buckley Ebrey, Family and Property in Sung China : Yüan Ts'ai's Precepts for Social Life, Princeton, Princeton Univ. Press, 1984, X + 367 p." Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 40, no. 4 (August 1985): 958–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0395264900084444.

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Watson, Rubie S. "Family and Property in Sung China: Yuan Ts'ai's Precepts for Social Life. By Patricia Buckley Ebrey. [Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984. 367 pp. £37.40.]." China Quarterly 106 (June 1986): 361–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741000038753.

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Day, Kenneth. "The Adolescent with Down's Syndrome: Life for the Teenager and for the Family. By Sue Buckley and Ben Sacks. Portsmouth: Down's Syndrome Trust. 1987. 165 pp. £6.95." British Journal of Psychiatry 153, no. 1 (July 1988): 136–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/s0007125000222101.

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Larson, Steven R., Thomas A. Jones, Linnea M. Johnson, and Blair L. Waldron. "Improving Seed Retention and Germination Characteristics of North American Basin Wildrye by Marker-Assisted Gene Introgression." Agronomy 10, no. 11 (November 8, 2020): 1740. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/agronomy10111740.

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Basin wildrye [Leymus cinereus (Scribn. and Merr.) Á. Löve] and creeping wildrye [Leymus triticoides (Buckley) Pilg.] are native perennial grasses cultivated for seed used for fire rehabilitation and revegetation in western North America. Although L. cinereus produces large spike inflorescences with many seeds, it is prone to seed shattering. Seed can be harvested before shattering, but often displays poor germination and seedling vigor. Conversely, L. triticoides has fewer seeds per spike, but relatively strong seed retention. Both species are allotetraploid (2n = 4x = 28) and form fertile hybrids used for breeding and genetic research. A dominant, major-effect seed-shattering gene (SH6) from L. cinereus was previously identified in an L. triticoides backcross population. In this study, a DNA marker was used to select the recessive L. triticoides seed-retention allele (sh6) in cycle six (C6) of a L. cinereus × L. triticoides breeding population and evaluate gene × harvest date effects on seed yield and germination characteristics in a full-sib family derived from homozygous (sh6/sh6) and heterozygous (SH6/sh6) C6 parents. Although seed yields of shattering genotypes were 19.4% greater than non-shattering genotypes on the first harvest dates, yields of non-shattering genotypes were 167% greater on the last harvest dates. Seed harvested on the last harvest date reached 50% germination 4.2 days (26.4%) earlier and displayed 20.5% higher upper percentage germination limits than seed harvested on the first harvest date. Results indicate that the sh6 seed-retention gene will improve basin wildrye seed retention and indirectly improve seed germination by enabling later harvest dates.
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WOOD, Ian C., Mireia GARRIGA CANUT, Claire L. PALMER, Stefania PEPITONI, and Noel J. BUCKLEY. "Neuronal expression of the rat M1 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor gene is regulated by elements in the first exon." Biochemical Journal 340, no. 2 (May 25, 1999): 475–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bj3400475.

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Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor genes are members of the G-protein coupled receptor superfamily. Each member of this family studied to date appears to have a distinct expression profile, however the mechanisms determining these expression patterns remain largely unknown. We have previously isolated a genomic clone containing the M1 muscarinic receptor gene and determined its gene structure [Pepitoni, Wood and Buckley (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 17112-17117]. We have now identified DNA elements responsible for driving cell specific expression in transient transfection assays of immortalized cell lines. A region of the gene spanning 974 nucleotides and containing 602 nucleotides of the first exon is sufficient to drive specific expression in cell lines. Like the M4 and M2 gene promoters, the M1 promoter contains an Sp1 motif which can recruit transcription factor Sp1 and at least one other protein, although this site does not appear to be functionally important for M1 expression in our assay. We have identified a region within the first exon of the M1 gene that regulates expression in cell lines, contains several positive and negative acting elements and is able to drive expression of a heterologous promoter. A polypyrimidine/polypurine tract and a sequence conserved between M1 genes of various species act in concert to enhance M1 transcription and are able to activate a heterologous promoter. We show that DNA binding proteins interact in vitro with single-stranded DNA derived from these regions and suggest that topology of the DNA is important for regulation of M1 expression.
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Dunstan, Helen. "Family and property in Sung China: Yüan Ts'ai's “Precepts for Social Life”. Translated, with annotations and introduction, by Patricia Buckley Ebrey. (Princeton Library of Asian Translations.) pp. x, 367. Princeton University Press1984. £37.40." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland 118, no. 1 (January 1986): 159–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0035869x00139723.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Buckley family"

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Williams, Stacey L., Abbey K. Mann, Sarah A. Job, E. McConocha, S. Chaudoir, and J. Pachankis. "The Buckle of the Bible Belt: Sexual Minority Stress in South Central Appalachia." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2019. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/8039.

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Books on the topic "Buckley family"

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Buckley, Shirley Gray. The Buckley family genealogy: A genealogical history of the descendants of James Buckley. Bradford, Tenn: Skullbone Print. Service, 1987.

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Buckley, Fergus Reid. An American family: The Buckleys. New York: Threshold Editions, 2009.

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Stultz, Carolyne. The Buckley family from Edmond & Sarah (Taylor) Buckley ...: An incomplete listing of their descendants both in England & the United States. Danville, Ind: C.J.E. Stultz, 1996.

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Buckley, Kenneth Welch. The descendants of Butler Buckley and Elizabeth Story, 1710-1994. Baltimore, MD: Gateway Press, 1995.

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Kennedy, Helen M. Along Pond Creek Road: For descendants of Alda Buckley Kennedy. [S.l.]: Xlibris Corp., 2010.

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Taylor, Thomas. From Bulkeley to Bulkley to Buckley: The ancestors and descendants of Moses Bulkley (1727-1812). United States?: Xlibris, 2008.

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Edwards, Ann Ryall. The family of James Webb, 1788-1875 and Grace Coham Braund, 1803-1878: Jane Webb Symons, John Webb, Mary Webb Ryall Rogers, Grace Webb Luxon, Caroline Webb Matthews, Ann Webb Brough, Elizabeth Webb Buckley, Christiana Webb Lampshire, Margery Webb Potterton. Burlington, Wis: A.R. Edwards, 1991.

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Buckley, Fergus Reid. An American family: The Buckleys. New York: Threshold Editions, 2009.

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Christopher, Buckley. Losing Mum and Pup: A memoir. New York: Twelve, 2009.

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Anderson, Bobby. Captain James Buckner Ryan. Goodlettsville, Tenn. (7965 Ridgewood Rd., Goodlettsville 37072): B. Anderson, 1992.

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Book chapters on the topic "Buckley family"

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Houston, Gail Turley. "‘Buckle’, ‘The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe. A Story for Emigrants’." In Hunger and Famine in the Long Nineteenth Century, 102–4. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429198069-32.

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Buffton, Deborah. "Bertha von Suttner." In The Oxford Handbook of Peace History, C22.P1—C22.N96. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197549087.013.22.

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Abstract Bertha von Suttner (1843–1914) was the first woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize (1905) and one of the most important and best-known peace activists in Europe between 1889 and 1914. In 1889 she wrote the most popular antiwar novel of the late nineteenth century, Die Waffen nieder! (Lay Down Your Arms!), and numerous other books and articles related to peace. She worked tirelessly to promote international arbitration through the Interparliamentary Union, helped organize the Austrian and German Peace Societies and conferences, edited a newsletter promoting peace, and lectured throughout Europe and the United States. Her upbringing in an aristocratic, military Austrian family makes her conversion to peace activism surprising. This chapter will examine how she became a peace activist, the influence of Charles Darwin and Henry Thomas Buckle on her ideas, how her approach to peace compared with those of Leo Tolstoy and Alfred Nobel, and her significance for the peace movement in the European belle époque.
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Emmott, Bill. "Making a Political Impact." In Japan's Far More Female Future, 106–20. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198865551.003.0006.

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In many countries women have made more rapid advances in politics than in other fields, but not in Japan where family dynasties and conservative party rules have slowed their progress. However in the Governor of Tokyo, Koike Yuriko, and the Mayor of Yokohama, Hayashi Fumiko, are two women who have bucked the trend and are providing inspiration for younger generations. Koike-san came from a successful background in journalism while Hayashi-san was a rare businesswoman in her generation of the 1970s and 1980s, reaching leadership positions in several auto sales firms. Political journalism provided Kuniya Hiroko with her means of making an impact, holding politicians to account on her long-running show on the public broadcaster, NHK, Close Up Gendai.
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Rippon, Stephen. "Romano-British material culture." In Kingdom, Civitas, and County. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198759379.003.0012.

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The apparent adoption of a relatively uniform repertoire of material culture by Romano-British communities is one reflection of what in the past has been referred to as ‘Romanization’ (e.g. Haverfield 1912; Millett 1990), and as Eckardt (2014, 127) has noted, ‘public and academic perception has perhaps had a tendency to focus on the homogenizing influence of Roman trade and, within the theoretical framework of Romanization, to look for uniformity rather than local diversity’. The concept of Romanization has, however, recently come in for much criticism (e.g. Mattingly 2006; 2011; Revell 2016), one problem being that there is far more regional variation in artefact styles than was once thought. Dress accessories, for example, will reflect current local communal traditions, family heirlooms, religious beliefs, and what is currently fashionable, as well as wealth and status (Swift 2000b, 27–9). Regionality is clearer in the early Roman period, after which it was replaced by greater uniformity (e.g. hairpins: Cool 2000), although it is still present in some classes of later Roman material (e.g. military buckles and belt-fittings: discussed further below). While many forms of artefact were used very widely across Roman Britain, such as certain types of brooches (Bayley and Butcher 2004, figs. 166–79; Mackreth 2011) and toilet instruments (e.g. Eckardt and Crummy 2008), there were some regionally specific variants. ‘Polden Hill’ brooches, for example, were largely used in the West Midlands and the West Country (Bayley and Butcher 2004, fig. 171), rear-hook brooches in East Anglia (Plouviez 2008; 2014, 35–6), and the ‘Head Stud’ type in Yorkshire and the East Midlands (Pearce and Worrell 2014, fig. 6). Walton (2012, 37–41) has even identified some marked regional differences in coin loss. Some have argued that regionally distinctive styles of artefact were used to directly signal a particular tribal or civitas identity. Laycock (2008, fig. 51), for example, has mapped stylistic variation in late fourth-century belt-fittings and argued for distinct types that he believes were related to the putative Icenian, Trinovantian, Catuvellaunian, and Corieltauvian civitates.
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Leopold, Estella B. "Fall." In Stories From the Leopold Shack. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190463229.003.0010.

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In the fall we had great fun picking our orchard apples and harvesting in the garden. There were two old apple trees, undoubtedly planted by the Baxter family in the late 1800s. One bore very large sweet apples, which probably was a Wolf River type, in Mother’s estimation, and the other bore just nice, tasty apples. The trunks of these two trees were ten to twelve inches in diameter, so they were really mature trees. Under and around these apple trees we usually had planted potatoes (our best crop!), corn, and huge beefsteak tomatoes. A slice from a beefsteak tomato warmed by the sun and just picked would cover a whole slab of bread. What fabulous sandwiches these made with mayonnaise. Makes me hungry to think about it. It was always such fun to visit our garden with Mother, as she would get very enthusiastic about our crops. Most fun was to dig potatoes. I might be at the shovel, and Mother with a bucket was collecting the potatoes, which were invariably healthy and robust. We would both get on our knees and feel around for the potatoes. Mother would get excited and ooh and ah about their size, their ruddiness, and their abundance. “Oh, Estella. Look at THAT one! Put your hands through that loose soil and make sure we did not leave any potatoes behind! Those little potatoes are hiding,” she would say, or words to that effect. Boiling these little potatoes up for supper was a special treat, as they were so tasty with butter when lightly cooked. Our corn occasionally bore enough cobs to give us a meal. We usually had good luck with onions, too. To weed this garden we had a one-wheeled cultivator with a hoe or blade attached behind the wheel, which was about one foot in diameter. The wooden handles formed a V sprouting from the axis of the wheel. With two hands one would push this wheeled implement between the rows of crops, and it would turn over the weeds, so one could keep the space between the rows pretty weed-free without too much work.
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Agrawal, Ravi. "The Great Indian Currency Scramble: Digital Money." In India Connected. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190858650.003.0014.

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An hour before dawn on November 8, 2016—a Tuesday—Sarvesh Kumar woke abruptly from what had been restless sleep. As he propped himself up on his charpoy, he told me, his eyes adjusted to the darkness of his tiny room, tucked away in a slum near New Delhi’s prosperous Vasant Kunj neighborhood. It was, he recalls, pitch black. Kumar’s inability to see enhanced his other senses. His ears picked up a chorus of mournful howls from the stray dogs roaming the streets some distance away. A few seconds later, he began to take account of a gentle rumble of snoring. Bandhana, his wife, was still asleep beside him. The next stimulation to hit him, he said, was that of smell: they had saved leftovers from dinner in a small dish, placed on the floor in one corner of the bedroom. (There was no kitchen, no fridge, no cupboards.) The smell of stale dal and starchy rice lingered in the air, mingling with the stench of urine from the latrine right outside. The apartment’s only toilet had no working flush, just a mug and a bucket with which to pour water. At night, Kumar’s father—who slept in the next room—would get up to urinate in the dark, sitting on his haunches and peeing all over the cramped toilet floor. Kumar was only twenty-two years old but looked much older. He was developing a hunch. His gray shirt and trousers—both made of the same rough, fraying cotton—seemed to fall over his limbs like oversized bags. Life was wearing him down. Kumar was working sixteen-hour shifts driving a three-wheeled auto-rickshaw, seven days a week. Ever since he had gotten married and brought Bandhana to join him in the city, his expenses had ballooned. His father, meanwhile, was working less and less, his health and eyesight beginning to fail him. Asha Ram Kumar worked as a chauffeur for a family nearby in Vasant Kunj. He had recently bumped their car into a lamppost. Any day now, Kumar told me, his father would lose his job.
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Crouch, Dora P. "Profile of Individual Water User." In Water Management in Ancient Greek Cities. Oxford University Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195072808.003.0036.

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One way to show our understanding of ancient Greek management of water is to follow an ordinary person in her daily patterns, observing when and how she uses water. This schedule ignores differences that derive from local geology, climate, or customs, but rather tries to set out the common patterns. 1. At daylight. Wake up. Go to room or alcove set aside for excreting and do that. Rinse with previously used water. Then go to courtyard, pull up bucket of water from cistern, pour into louter, and wash face and hands. Save water for re-use (Fig. 13.3). 2. First meal. Fix breakfast, using water from cistern for any cooking. Water donkey, dog, house plants, with water from cistern or re-usable water from cooking or bathing. 3. Work. Morning and mid-afternoon to late day: A. Do family laundry—use giant pithos or scrub-board at edge of courtyard, filled from downspout from roof or with buckets of water from the cistern; hang clothes to dry on poles or rope strung between posts (columns) supporting roofs around courtyard. Alternate: laundry might be done communally at a large tank that received the overflow from a fountain near the agora, and the wet clothes carried home and spread out to dry, as above (Fig. 17.5). B. Or do craft activity such as making pottery, using courtyard and water from cistern. C. Or go out to farm. Excrement and garbage were probably carried daily to the farm for fertilizer. An important farming task was to monitor the irrigation of timber lots, fields, orchards, and vineyards with waste water from the town or with spring or river water or dispersed rainwater. D. Or do shopping and/or selling. Periodically carry craft items to Agora to sell them. If need be, rinse items such as vases in public fountains to show off their best colors. In Athens, women participated in the markets, selling lettuce and other farm or craft products, but in some Greek cities shopping and selling were solely masculine activities. 4. Recreation. A. Talk with cousin from the country who waters his donkey at the public trough in the Agora. B. On the way home stop at neighborhood fountain to chat with other people fetching water to drink (Fig. 21.1). C. On special occasions (marriage, birth) go to a sanctuary for a ritual bath. (Fig. 6.1).
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Conference papers on the topic "Buckley family"

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Podob, Roger, and Charles Druff. "Development of an Improved Gunner Seat Restraint." In Vertical Flight Society 77th Annual Forum & Technology Display. The Vertical Flight Society, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4050/f-0077-2021-16757.

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Legacy gunner seats in the H-60 family of helicopters have long been known for their poor crash performance(i) and poor ergonomics(ii). The seat occupant is poorly restrained in a crash and can move significantly away from the seat to impact other interior hard structure, causing injury and death. The poor seating and posture induced by the seat's design can lead to lost work days and reduced operational readiness due to chronic back pain. Recently, a NAVAIR program designed and developed a new gunner's seat to address the legacy seat's shortcomings. A critical component of the seat is the restraint system, which must protect the occupant in the event of a crash, yet provide a significant level of mobility away from the seat, while still buckled into the restraint, during flight to allow the aircrew to perform their mission duties. This paper discusses the symbiotic relationship between aircrew, maintainers, and engineers used to develop the completely redesigned restraint system as part of a rapid gunner seat upgrade program.
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