Academic literature on the topic 'Cal San Diego'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cal San Diego"

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Sobo, Elisa. "A Model Protocol for Applying Anthropology in Rapid Health Services Evaluations." Practicing Anthropology 25, no. 2 (2003): 39–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.17730/praa.25.2.u17g513627w57552.

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In 1998, California launched Healthy Families/Medi-Cal for Children (HF/MCC). HF/MCC provides low- and no-cost insurance to low-income children. Six million dollars was budgeted for culturally appropriate outreach and enrollment activities and 72 community-based organizations (CBOs) were contracted to carry these out. The contracts were performance based and required measurable outcomes, such as successful enrollments, to increase local public awareness and generate enrollment in HF/MCC. Children's Hospital San Diego was hired (through the San Diego State Foundation) to evaluate the CBOs' performance. This article describes the fortuitous incorporation of a qualitative anthropological component. The protocol developed might be applied in other rapid health services evaluation contexts, especially when other members of the evaluation team (or the sponsors) have not yet been convinced of the usefulness of the qualitative approach.
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Underwood, Julie. "Under the Law: Favoring a religion or encouraging respect? A legal challenge to an antibullying program." Phi Delta Kappan 100, no. 7 (2019): 74–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0031721719841345.

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When the San Diego Unified School District implemented an antibullying program in response to reports of bullying of Muslim students, a group of citizens complained that the program constituted an unconstitutional promotion of one religion. Julie Underwood discusses the resulting case, Citizens for Quality Education v. Barrera (S.D. Cal 2018) and explains what it teaches educators about the appropriate responses to religion-based bullying.
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Alegría, Tito. "Débat sur la métropole transfrontalière : une remise en cause à partir du cas Tijuana/San Diego." Cahiers des Amériques latines, no. 56 (December 31, 2007): 63–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/cal.1791.

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Gilmer, Todd P., Christian R. Dolder, David P. Folsom, William Mastin, and Dilip V. Jeste. "Antipsychotic Polypharmacy Trends Among Medi-Cal Beneficiaries With Schizophrenia in San Diego County, 1999–2004." Psychiatric Services 58, no. 7 (2007): 1007–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/ps.2007.58.7.1007.

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Taneyhill, Dale E. "Schneider, D. C. 1994. Quantitative Ecology: Spatial and Temporal Scaling. Academic Press, San Diego, Cal." Journal of Evolutionary Biology 8, no. 3 (1995): 400–401. http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1420-9101.1995.8030400.x.

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Hutchinson, Justine A., Jason Vargo, Meredith Milet, et al. "The San Diego 2007 wildfires and Medi-Cal emergency department presentations, inpatient hospitalizations, and outpatient visits: An observational study of smoke exposure periods and a bidirectional case-crossover analysis." PLOS Medicine 15, no. 7 (2018): e1002601. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002601.

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Taylor, Kimberly. "Alternative Options for Resolution of Property and Casualty Claims Arising out of Natural Disasters." Texas A&M Journal of Property Law 5, no. 2 (2018): 193–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.37419/jpl.v5.i2.4.

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At the time of this Article, at least twelve large wildfires are burn- ing in California across more than 1,000 square miles, having damaged or destroyed over 2,000 structures, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE). At least eight people have lost their lives. The Kilauea volcano continues to erupt in Hawaii, having destroyed 600 homes. The 2018 hurricane season is in full swing, and while there have been no catastrophic events to date, residents in Houston, Florida, Puerto Rico, and elsewhere are still recovering from the devastating winds and rains wrought by Har- vey, Maria, and Irma last year. Those hurricanes are estimated to have caused more than $200 billion in damages, making the 2017 hurricane season the costliest in U.S. history. Around the world, natural disasters such as deadly heat waves, flooding, mudslides, hurricanes, and tornadoes will cause untold losses as temperatures across the globe are rising. After the smoke clears, the ash settles, the waters subside, and initial recovery efforts restore basic functions like the delivery of food, water, and electricity, survivors face the task of rebuilding. Inevitably, property and business owners either look to their insurance carriers for relief or initiate tort actions against alleged wrongdoers. In 2007, more than 2,000 law suits were filed against San Diego Gas & Electric following a series of wildfires that engulfed San Diego County in California, where faulty power lines were blamed for some of the fires. Dozens of cases have been filed in Ventura and Santa Barbara counties in California relating to the deadly Thomas Fire and related devastating mudslides that killed twenty people and destroyed hundreds of homes late last year. Traditional litigation used to resolve these disputes has the potential to overwhelm the courts, consume limited resources of insurance carriers and others, and be unduly burdensome to survivors. Alternative dispute resolution (“ADR”) mechanisms such as mediation can offer significant relief to the parties, permitting them to negotiate a resolution in a less formal setting than the courthouse, and usually within a shorter time frame than typical litigation would require. In situations where a mass disaster does not easily lend itself to individual mediations, however, providers can customize the process to ensure that all parties—those parties that have suffered losses, insurance carriers, and potentially responsible parties—experience a fair, economic, and efficient resolution. National ADR providers such as JAMS and the American Arbitration Association offer comprehensive, customized processes that can be tailored to meet the needs of the parties and the unique requirements of each case. Individual mediators around the country routinely provide assistance with ADR process design for complex, multi-party matters. Some examples follow.
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Milosavljević, A., E. Pfaf-Dolovac, M. Mitrović, et al. "First Report of Cercospora apii, Causal Agent of Cercospora Early Blight of Celery, in Serbia." Plant Disease 98, no. 8 (2014): 1157. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis-02-14-0135-pdn.

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Celery (Apium graveolens var. dulce) is a very important vegetable crop intensively cultivated in eastern and southern Serbia. During a field survey in August and September 2012, we observed symptoms similar to those of Cercospora early blight in eastern Serbia, with some of the affected fields showing up to 80% disease severity. The lesions on leaves were amphigenous, subcircular to angular and more or less confluent. Lesions enlarged and merged with age, followed by the development of necrotic area causing a continuous deterioration of the plant. Conidiophores arising from the stromata formed dense fascicles, sometimes appearing solitary, brown at the base, paler toward the apex, simple, straight to slightly curved, and rarely geniculate (dimensions 40 to 90 × 5 to 8 μm). Conidia were solitary, hyaline, at first cylindro-obclavate then acicular to acicular-obclavate, straight to slightly curved, subacute to obtuse at the apex, while truncated and thickened at the base (dimensions 45 to 160 × 4 to 5 μm), 5 to 13 septate. Based on the morphological features, we identified the pathogen as Cercospora apii Fresen. (2). In order to obtain monosporic isolates of the fungus, single conidia were cultivated on potato dextrose agar (PDA). To confirm the pathogenicity of the isolates, 5 mm-diameter mycelial plugs from the PDA plates were placed upside down on the adaxial leaf surface of 2-week-old celery seedlings of cv. Yuta. Control plants were inoculated with a sterile PDA plug. Three leaves per plant were disinfected with 70% ethanol, epidermis was scratched with a sterile needle to promote the infection, and inoculated. A total of 12 plants were inoculated with the mycelial plugs and 12 were used as control plants. Inoculated and control plants were kept in a moist chamber for 48 h and then transferred to a greenhouse at 25 ± 2°C. After 2 weeks, the first necrotic spots appeared on inoculated leaves, similar to the symptoms manifested in the field, while control plants remained symptomless. The pathogen was re-isolated and its identity was verified based on morphological and molecular features. To confirm the pathogen's identity, three isolates (CAC4-1, CAC24, and CAC30) were subjected to molecular identification based on the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) using the ITS1/ITS4 universal primers (5), a partial calmodulin gene (CAL) using CAL-228F/CAL2Rd primers (1,4), and partial histone H3 gene (H3) using CYLH3F/CYLH3R primers (3). Sequences of the amplified regions were deposited in GenBank under accessions KJ210596 to KJ210604. The BLAST analyses of the ITS sequences revealed 100% identity with several Cercospora species (e.g., C. apii [JX143532], C. beticola [JX143556], and C. zebrina [KC172066]), while sequences of CAL and H3 showed 100% identity solely with sequences of C. apii (JX142794 and JX142548). Based on combined morphological and molecular data, the pathogen infecting celery was identified as C. apii, which to our knowledge represents the first report of the presence of the causal agent of Cercospora early blight disease in Serbia. References: (1) I. Carbone and L.M. Kohn. Mycologia 91:553, 1999. (2) P. W. Crous and U. Braun. CBS Biodivers. Ser. 1:1, 2003. (3) P. W. Crous et al. Stud. Mycol. 50:415, 2004. (4) J. Z. Groenewald. Stud. Mycol. 75:115, 2013. (5) T. J. White et al. PCR Protocols: A Guide to Methods and Applications. Academic Press, Inc., San Diego, CA, 1990.
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Villalon, L. J. Andrew. "San Diego de Alcalá and the Politics of Saint-Making in Counter-Reformation Europe." Catholic Historical Review 83, no. 4 (1997): 691–715. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cat.1997.0226.

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Strukel, W. Eric, and James V. Dunford. "55. Analysis of Calls Under-triaged by Priority Medical Dispatch in San Diego." Prehospital and Disaster Medicine 11, S2 (1996): S33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049023x00045714.

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Purpose: To identify calls “under-triaged” by priority medical dispatch and determine causes and pre-hospital outcomes.Methods: 6 month retrospective analysis identified calls dispatched “low priority” to which medics assigned “high acuity” transports (acute status or requiring ALS meds; not just IV/O2/monitor). CAD data, paramedic run-sheets, and audiotapes were reviewed to determine optimal dispatch levels and transport codes. “Under-triage” was defined as calls warranting “high priority” dispatch based on evidence from the run-sheet. Dispatcher, calling party, and patient data influencing “undertriage” were assessed.Results: In 1995, 11,178/70,887 (16%) medical aid requests were dispatched “low priority”. 201(1.8%) were subsequently assigned “high acuity” transport codes by paramedics. 105/5,737 such consecutive patients were analyzed from July-December 1995. 6 were excluded due to incomplete data. After review, 42/99 actually warranted “high priority” dispatch. 7 had potential life/limb threatening injuries; 35 required ALS intervention. None had adverse prehospital outcome. Undertriage was associated with dispatcher error, information relayed from law enforcement officers (OR =3.4, CI: 1.2-10) calls involving alcohol (OR = 2.8, CI: 0.9-9.2) or patients with ALOC(OR= 3.4, CI: 1.2-10).
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Books on the topic "Cal San Diego"

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International, Symposium on the Biological Processing of Coal (2nd 1991 San Diego California). Second international symposium on the biological processing of coal: Workshops, May 1-3, 1991, San Diego California. Electric Power Research Institute, 1991.

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International Symposium on the Biological Processing of Coal (2nd 1991 San Diego, California). Proceedings: 1991 second international symposium on the biological processing of coal, San Diego, California, May 1-3, 1991. Electric Power Research Institute, 1991.

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service), SpringerLink (Online, ed. Digital Human Modeling: Second International Conference, ICDHM 2009, Held as Part of HCI International 2009, San Diego, CA, USA, July 19-24, 2009. Proceedings. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2009.

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Abrams. Cal 97 San Diego. Browntrout Pubs (Cal), 1996.

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San Diego Chargers Magnet Cal 2006 Calendar. Browntrout Pubs (Cal), 2005.

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Wade, Webster, and Society for Computer Simulation, eds. Simulation and AI, 1989: Proceedings of the SCS Western Multiconference, 1989, 4-6 January 1989, San Diego, Cal. Society for Computer Simulation International, 1989.

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Simulation in emergency management and technology: Proceedings of the SCS Western Multiconference, 1989, 4-6 January 1989, San Diego, Cal. Society for Computer Simulation International, 1989.

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Wilson, Edward Osborne, Jane Goodall, Sean Curtice, Megan Morikawa, and Jennifer Zarzoso. San Diego Bay: A call for conservation. 2009.

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Samuel, Green Alex Edward, American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Fuels and Combustion Technologies Division. Fuels Processing and Alternative Fuels Subcommittee., American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Fuels and Combustion Technologies Division. Research Subcommittee for University-Industrial Exchange., and International Joint Power Generation Conference (1991 : San DIego, Calif.), eds. Solid fuel conversion for the transportation sector: Presented at the 1991 International Joint Power Generation Conference, October 6-10, 1991, San Diego, California. ASME, 1991.

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Proceedings of the Seventh IEEE International Workshop on Object-Oriented Real-Time Dependable Systems (Words 2002): 7-9 January 2002, San Diego, Cali. IEEE Computer Society Press, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Cal San Diego"

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Boarnet, Marlon, and Randall C. Crane. "A Case Study of Planning." In Travel by Design. Oxford University Press, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195123951.003.0014.

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The facts, figures, and inferences in chapter 7 regarding municipal behavior toward transit-oriented housing opportunities illustrate many points. Still, there is much that even a careful statistical analysis might miss or misunderstand. For that reason, we also explored what we could learn by talking to real planners about these issues. The case of San Diego is interesting and useful for several reasons. First, the San Diego Trolley is the oldest of the current generation of light rail projects in the United States. Unlike many newer systems, the age of San Diego’s rail transit (the South Line opened in 1981) allows time for land use planning to respond to the fixed investment. Second, the San Diego system is no stranger to modern transit-based planning ideas. The San Diego City Council approved a land-use plan for their stations that includes many of the ideas promoted by transit-oriented development (TOD) advocates (City of San Diego, 1992). Third, the light rail transit (LRT) authority in San Diego County, the Metropolitan Transit Development Board (MTDB), is often regarded as one of the more successful municipal LRT agencies. The initial parts of the MTDB rail transit system were constructed strictly with state and local funds, using readily available, relatively low-cost technology (Demoro and Harder, 1989, p. 6). Portions of San Diego’s system have high fare-box recovery rates, including the South Line, which in its early years recovered as much as 90 percent of operating costs at the fare box (Gómez-Ibáñez, 1985). All of these factors make San Diego potentially a “best-case” example of TOD implementation. When generalizing from this case study, it is important to remember that the transit station area development process in San Diego is likely better developed than in many other urban areas in the United States. The results from San Diego County can illustrate general issues that, if they have not already been encountered, might soon become important in other urban areas with rail transit systems. Also, given San Diego County’s longer history of both LRT and TOD when compared with most other regions, any barriers identified in San Diego County might be even more important elsewhere.
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Patiño, Jimmy. "The Sheriff Must Be Obsessed with Racism!" In Raza Sí, Migra No. University of North Carolina Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469635569.003.0007.

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Chapter 6 explores how Herman Baca and San Diego Chicano/Mexicano created the Committee on Chicano Rights (CCR) in 1976. These activists fought the San Diego Sherriff’s Department issued order for taxi cab drivers, under penalty of citation and fines, to report any of their clientele who they “feel” might be undocumented to their offices for apprehension in 1972. The San Diego Police Department, under the administration of San Diego Mayor (and future California governor) Pete Wilson, followed suit in 1973 by assuming the responsibility of determining resident’s legal status and apprehending the undocumented to assist the U.S. Border Patrol. This culminated in the founding of the CCR through the struggle on behalf of the family of a Puerto Rican barrio youth, Luis “Tato” Rivera, killed by a National City police officer.
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Maher, Kristen Hill, and David Carruthers. "Framing the Neighbors." In Unequal Neighbors. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197557198.003.0007.

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How does photojournalism in San Diego represent Tijuana and its residents? This chapter analyzes both articles and photographs in the San Diego Union-Tribune over the course of a decade (2000–2010), using visual methods and a broad heuristic to capture four dimensions of stigmatizing narratives about Tijuana. On one hand, the analysis finds a complex portrait of Tijuana that encompassed not only the expected images from the drug war but also stories from business and daily life that would feel familiar and empathetic to San Diego readers. On the other hand, themes of violence and disorder pervaded much of the content, even on topics unrelated to crime, particularly in headlines and captions. This chapter demonstrates how bordering and debordering representations in local media can coexist in paradoxical ways and how they shift scales from local to national, depending on the topic and framing.
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Maher, Kristen Hill, and David Carruthers. "Imagining the Border-City Relationship." In Unequal Neighbors. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197557198.003.0009.

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Many alternative visions of the border-city relationship between San Diego and Tijuana circulate among local actors. Some visualize an egalitarian, integrated future. Others have various stakes in reinforcing a bordered imaginary that exaggerates asymmetries and obscures complex economic realities on the ground. Bordering can create local opportunities for profit and contribute to the availability of marginalized labor on both sides of the line. Bordering discourse also provides an identity foil for San Diegans who have come to define themselves as superior, in contrast to a Tijuana stigmatized as impoverished, disorderly, corrupt, dirty, and dangerous. The place images of these cities are intertwined, such that more positive representations of Tijuana will require a reimaging of San Diego. Ultimately, this chapter examines the promise of and constraints on developing a more equal shared regional future, a reduction in Tijuana’s place stigma, and a less bordered imaginary.
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Serpas, Shaila, Christina Khaokham, Sharon Hillidge, and Virginia Watson. "San Diego, California, Promotes Healthy Weight to Improve Community Health." In The Practical Playbook. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190222147.003.0026.

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Drawing on the experiences of hundreds of public health and primary care clinicians from across the United States, this book explains why population health is receiving so much attention from policy makers in states and federal agencies, the practical steps that clinicians and public health professionals can take to work together to meet the needs of their community, signs that you are on the right track (or not) and how to sustain successes to the benefit of patients, community members, and the health care and public health teams that care for them.
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Crocker, MK, SP Mehta, CA Van Ryzin, and DP Merke. "Females with Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia (CAH) and Hyperandrogenism Have Similar Measures of Insulin Sensitivity Compared to Females with CAH and Normal Androgen Levels." In The Endocrine Society's 92nd Annual Meeting, June 19–22, 2010 - San Diego. Endocrine Society, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/endo-meetings.2010.part2.p14.p2-683.

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Kaupert, L. C., R. P. P. Moreira, M. P. de Mello, et al. "Association ofCYP3A7, POR,SRD5A2andHSD17B5Gene Polymorphisms with the Prader Score in Females with Classical Form of CAH." In The Endocrine Society's 92nd Annual Meeting, June 19–22, 2010 - San Diego. Endocrine Society, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/endo-meetings.2010.part1.p13.p1-651.

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Ni, X., XJ You, L. Gao, N. Hui, and H. Gu. "Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone Acts on CRHR1 To Differentially Modulate [Ca2+]i in Human Myometrium Cell before and during Labour." In The Endocrine Society's 92nd Annual Meeting, June 19–22, 2010 - San Diego. Endocrine Society, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/endo-meetings.2010.part3.p7.p3-348.

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Moura Fellow, V. O., L. C. Kaupert Fellow, L. G. Gomes, J. A. M. Marcondes, B. B. Mendonca, and T. A. S. S. Bachega. "The Presence of Clitoromegaly in Nonclassical Form of 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency Is Modulated by the CAG Polymorphic Tract of Androgen Receptor Gene." In The Endocrine Society's 92nd Annual Meeting, June 19–22, 2010 - San Diego. Endocrine Society, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/endo-meetings.2010.part2.p9.p2-408.

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Ornston, Darius. "Lessons for Large States." In Good Governance Gone Bad. Cornell University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501726101.003.0008.

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At first glance, large states such as France, Germany, and the United States appear very different from their Nordic counterparts. Reform and restructuring proceeds at a slower pace, overshooting is less pronounced, and economic volatility is lower. At the same time, I suggest that even fragmented, polarized countries may resemble the Nordic countries at a local level, where individuals are more likely to know and trust one another. Examining the politics of economic adjustment in San Diego, California and Waterloo, Ontario, I illustrate how local communities can use the politics of interconnectedness to accelerate restructuring, as well as the risks associated with this strategy.
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Conference papers on the topic "Cal San Diego"

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Yatagai, Toyohiko, Martial H. Geiser, Ronglong Tian, Xinkang Tian, and Hajime Onda. "CAD system for CGHs and laser beam lithography." In San Diego, '91, San Diego, CA, edited by Ivan Cindrich and Sing H. Lee. SPIE, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.50616.

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Brown, Gordon M., Thomas E. Allen, Shih-Emn Chen, and Mark Moeller. "Stepped strobe phase CAH technique for measuring vibration amplitude and phase." In San Diego '92, edited by Gordon M. Brown, Osuk Y. Kwon, Malgorzata Kujawinska, and Graeme T. Reid. SPIE, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.140786.

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Delingette, Herve, Martial Hebert, and Katsushi Ikeuchi. "Deformable surfaces: a free-form shape representation." In San Diego, '91, San Diego, CA, edited by Baba C. Vemuri. SPIE, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.49972.

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Wang, Yuan-Fang. "New method for sensor data fusion in machine vision." In San Diego, '91, San Diego, CA, edited by Baba C. Vemuri. SPIE, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.49973.

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Pentland, Alexander P. "Spatial and temporal surface interpolation using wavelet bases." In San Diego, '91, San Diego, CA, edited by Baba C. Vemuri. SPIE, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.49974.

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Sinha, Saravajit S. "Differential properties from adaptive thin-plate splines." In San Diego, '91, San Diego, CA, edited by Baba C. Vemuri. SPIE, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.49975.

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Dudek, Gregory. "Shape metrics from curvature-scale space and curvature-tuned smoothing." In San Diego, '91, San Diego, CA, edited by Baba C. Vemuri. SPIE, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.49976.

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Barth, Erhardt, Terry M. Caelli, and Christoph Zetzsche. "Efficient visual representation and reconstruction from generalized curvature measures." In San Diego, '91, San Diego, CA, edited by Baba C. Vemuri. SPIE, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.49977.

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Taubes, C. H., and Ping Liang. "Orientation-based differential geometric representations for computer vision applications." In San Diego, '91, San Diego, CA, edited by Baba C. Vemuri. SPIE, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.49978.

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Delingette, Herve, Martial Hebert, and Katsushi Ikeuchi. "Energy functions for regularization algorithms." In San Diego, '91, San Diego, CA, edited by Baba C. Vemuri. SPIE, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.49979.

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