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Journal articles on the topic "Huts to live in"

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MacWilliams, Mark. "THE HOLY MAN'S HUT AS A SYMBOL OF STABILITY IN JAPANESE BUDDHIST PILGRIMAGE." Numen 47, no. 4 (2000): 387–416. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/156852700511603.

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AbstractIn this paper, I examine the way holy men's huts are portrayed in eighteenth century Buddhist tales from the Saikoku and Bandô Japanese Buddhist pilgrimage routes. These stories suggest that holy men's huts are ultimately located in places beyond the ordinary human life of suffering, marked as it is by impermanence and instability. That the hermit's hut transcends the transient world is indicated in two important ways in these tales. First, the holy men's statues of the Buddhist celestial bodhisattva Kannon, which they carry or carve while on the road, display a preternatural mobility or immobility which force the ascetics to stop their peregrination. Second, the places they build their huts to enshrine the statues are revealed as spiritual places (reijô), Pure Land paradises where the living Kannon has a permanent abode. These holy men's huts were the prototypes of the Saikoku and Bandô temples that continue to attract multitudes of Japanese pilgrims who travel there even today seeking freedom from the sorrows of transmigration.
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Kocój, Ewa Maria. ",,Na sałasie ni ma pani lekko“. Życie codzienne pasterzy wołoskich na szałasach na pograniczu polsko-słowackim w XXI wieku jako dziedzictwo kulturowe regionu Karpat (wybór zagadnień)." Balcanica Posnaniensia Acta et studia 25 (February 15, 2019): 269–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/bp.2018.25.15.

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The purpose of this article is to present the preliminary results of the research on the shepherds' everyday life that I have been conducting since 2015 in the field of history, migration, and cultural heritage of the Vlach minority inhabiting the areas from Albania to the northern Carpathians. One of the research stages entails the studies of the daily life and rituals of the highlanders living in the huts on the Polish side of the Carpathians. The article describes the issues concerning the organization and the time-space symbolism of a modern hut, including their daily life and schedule of activities. The research was conducted in the selected huts of Spiš, Orava, Podhale, Żywiec region, and Silesian Beskids in Poland in 2015-2018. In all cases, I applied qualitative research, mostly structured and unstructured interviews with senior and young shepherds working in the huts, as well as covert and overt participant observations conducted during selected pastoral holidays and meetings in various spaces—in temples, during highlander's and Vlach conventions, in theme meetings, and in the huts. I supplement these techniques with the analysis of the visual sources that I made during the field research, received from the enthusiasts of this topic, or found on the Internet. The research has shown that modern pastoralism oscillates between two poles: the traditional, which has made it possible to retain many elements from the past (cultural heritage), and the modern, thanks to which shepherds introduce global solutions to their huts and traditions.
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Seyoum, Aklilu, Wilber Lwande, Bart G. J. Knols, Ahmed Hassanali, Ephantus W. Kabiru, and Gerry F. Killeen. "Repellency of live potted plants against Anopheles gambiae from human baits in semi-field experimental huts." American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 67, no. 2 (August 1, 2002): 191–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.2002.67.191.

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Graham, Janet, and Susan Lynn. "Mud huts and flints: Children's images of the third world." Education 3-13 17, no. 2 (June 1989): 29–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03004278885200571.

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Islam, Mir Rabiul, Valerie Ingham, John Hicks, and Ian Manock. "The Changing Role of Women in Resilience, Recovery and Economic Development at the Intersection of Recurrent Disaster: A Case Study from Sirajgang, Bangladesh." Journal of Asian and African Studies 52, no. 1 (July 28, 2016): 50–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0021909614560244.

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Two million people were affected in the floodplains and low-lying areas in Sirajgang in 2012. Seven hundred and fifty families were made homeless and forced to live in small temporary huts on the river protection embankments. Unemployment rose alarmingly and the jobless left their villages to find work in larger cities, leaving behind their vulnerable and insecure families. Consequently, women were increasingly required to take on totally unfamiliar roles. Our research utilised in-depth interviews with women managing without the support of their husbands. Key findings highlighted that community resilience would improve if these women were engaged at the local operational level of disaster management.
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GUPTA, Janmejoy, Manjari CHAKRABORTY, Arnab PAUL, and Vamsi KORRAPATTI. "A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THERMAL PERFORMANCES OF THREE MUD DWELLING UNITS WITH COURTYARDS IN COMPOSITE CLIMATE." JOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM 41, no. 3 (September 19, 2017): 184–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.3846/20297955.2017.1355276.

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Jharkhand is a state in the eastern part of India. The tropic of Cancer (23 and a half degree north line) passes through Ranchi district in Jharkhand. Mud huts with burnt clay tiled roofs in Ranchi district in Jharkhand are an integral component of the state’s vernacular architecture. They come in various shapes, with a number of them having a courtyard type of plan. In general, it has been stated that courtyard type dwelling units show better thermal performance during summer and winter. In this paper, three types of mud huts with courtyards are taken as a study and through temperature measurements in the south side rooms and “Ecotect-Autodesk” (Version 2011) software simulations, their thermal performance during the hotter and colder parts of the year are observed. Thereafter, based on the study, the thermally better performing dwelling types in summer and winter are identified among the three sub-types studied. It is found that all courtyard type dwellings do not necessarily show better thermal performance in summer and winter in composite climate. Certain recommendations with respect to increasing thermal comfort in general in courtyard type huts are made.
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Kolaczinski, J. H., C. Fanello, J. P. Hervé, D. J. Conway, P. Carnevale, and C. F. Curtis. "Experimental and molecular genetic analysis of the impact of pyrethroid and non-pyrethroid insecticide impregnated bednets for mosquito control in an area of pyrethroid resistance." Bulletin of Entomological Research 90, no. 2 (April 2000): 125–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007485300000237.

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AbstractExperimental huts in Côte d’Ivoire were used to evaluate the pyrethroid alpha-cypermethrin, the non-ester pyrethroid etofenprox, the organophosphate pirimiphos-methyl and the carbamate carbosulfan on bednets against pyrethroid-resistant Anopheles gambiae Giles. To test for selection for the resistance gene by the treated nets, A. gambiae collected live or dead from the huts were kept and analysed for the presence of the kdr gene using a new polymerase chain reaction followed by sequence-specific oligonucleotide probing (PCR–SSOP) for kdr-genotyping. Deliberately holed bednets freshly treated with pirimiphos-methyl or carbosulfan caused over 90% kill of A. gambiae s.s. and Culex spp. However, the mortality with alpha-cypermethrin or etofenprox treated nets was similar to that with untreated nets. Bloodfeeding of A. gambiae s.s. on the sleepers under the nets was only significantly reduced by alpha-cypermethrin and carbosulfan. Tests of the residual activity of the bednets after seven months showed that pirimiphos-methyl had lost its efficacy while carbosulfan still performed well. Once again the pyrethroid treated nets gave similar results to the untreated nets. Selection for the kdr-allele by alpha-cypermethrin and etofenprox, but not by carbosulfan, was indicated by PCR–SSOP genotyping of mosquitoes. Thus carbamates such as carbosulfan, or organophosphates of longer persistence than pirimiphos-methyl and of low mammalian toxicity, would seem to be a promising alternative to be used on bednets, particularly in areas of pyrethroid resistance.
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Alvaré, Bretton T. "‘Do they think we live in huts?’ – Cultural essentialism and the challenges of facilitating professional development in cross-cultural settings." Ethnography and Education 12, no. 1 (November 13, 2015): 33–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17457823.2015.1109466.

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Mmbando, Arnold S., Halfan S. Ngowo, Masoud Kilalangongono, Said Abbas, Nancy S. Matowo, Sarah J. Moore, and Fredros O. Okumu. "Small-scale field evaluation of push-pull system against early- and outdoor-biting malaria mosquitoes in an area of high pyrethroid resistance in Tanzania." Wellcome Open Research 2 (November 22, 2017): 112. http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/wellcomeopenres.13006.1.

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Background: Despite high coverage of indoor interventions like insecticide-treated nets, mosquito-borne infections persist, partly because of outdoor-biting, early-biting and insecticide-resistant vectors. Push-pull systems, where mosquitoes are repelled from humans and attracted to nearby lethal targets, may constitute effective complementary interventions. Methods: A partially randomized cross-over design was used to test efficacy of push-pull in four experimental huts and four local houses, in an area with high pyrethroid resistance in Tanzania. The push-pull system consisted of 1.1% or 2.2% w/v transfluthrin repellent dispensers and an outdoor lure-and-kill device (odour-baited mosquito landing box). Matching controls were set up without push-pull. Adult male volunteers collected mosquitoes attempting to bite them outdoors, but collections were also done indoors using exit traps in experimental huts and by volunteers in the local houses. The collections were done hourly (1830hrs-0730hrs) and mosquito catches compared between push-pull and controls. An. gambiae s.l. and An. funestus s.l. were assessed by PCR to identify sibling species, and ELISA to detect Plasmodium falciparum and blood meal sources. Results: Push-pull in experimental huts reduced outdoor-biting for An. arabiensis and Mansonia species by 30% and 41.5% respectively. However, the reductions were marginal and insignificant for An. funestus (12.2%; p>0.05) and Culex (5%; p>0.05). Highest protection against all species occurred before 2200hrs. There was no significant difference in number of mosquitoes inside exit traps in huts with or without push-pull. In local households, push-pull significantly reduced indoor and outdoor-biting of An. arabiensis by 48% and 25% respectively, but had no effect on other species. Conclusion: This push-pull system offered modest protection against outdoor-biting An. arabiensis, without increasing indoor mosquito densities. Additional experimentation is required to assess how transfluthrin-based products affect mosquito blood-feeding and mortality in push-pull contexts. This approach, if optimised, could potentially complement existing malaria interventions even in areas with high pyrethroid resistance.
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Vellinga, Marcel. "Merits and limits of the biographic approach." Archaeological Dialogues 6, no. 2 (December 1999): 98–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1380203800001422.

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In a well-known paper on ‘the cultural biography of things’, Kopytoff (1986) shows that the application of meaning to ‘things’ is of a processual rather than a fixed nature. Mainly focusing his attention on commodities, Kopytoff demonstrates that, like people, ‘objects’ such as slaves, cars, huts and paintings have a social life of their own. The biographies that may be drawn up of the lives of these objects may provide insight into the complex whole of political, economic, moral and aesthetic practices, values and relationships prevalent in the societies in which they are produced, used and discarded.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Huts to live in"

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Jonsson, Inga-Lill. "Grävlingar : En studie om grävlingar i fångenskap, deras naturliga beteenden och fysiologi." Thesis, Linköping University, Department of Thematic Studies, 2003. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-2317.

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I det här arbetet presenteras en studie från ett projekt som ägde rum i Kolmården djurpark sommaren och hösten år 2003. Projektet bygger på ett uppdrag från jordbruksdepartementet. Det handlade om huruvida grävlingar i fångenskap reagerar i olika stressande situationer. För att kunna undersöka detta har grävlingarnas naturliga beteende studerats under fyra perioder från juni till september samma år. Det som studerats under perioden är grävlingarnas olika beteenden, lokationen i grävlingshägnet samt fysiologiska parametrar så som hjärtfrekvens och kroppstemperatur hos grävlingarna.

Observationerna har i huvudsak skett nattetid och då genom filmning med kamera med IR-belysning. För att kunna mäta hjärtfrekvens och kroppstemperatur opererades en sändare in i grävlingarna. Grävlingarna är nattaktiva djur som vanligtvis vilar under dagen. De är mest aktiva under våren och sommaren och därefter avtar aktiviteten successivt fram till vintern när den går i vila. De tillbringar minst tid i sina bohyddor under sommarperioden och när hösten kommer uppehåller de sig mer och mer i hyddorna. Grävlingarnas kroppstemperatur ligger på ca 37 ° C men sjunker när hösten och vintern närmar sig. Hjärtfrekvensen varierar mellan 50 och 120 slag per minut beroende på hur aktiva de är.

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West-Rosenthal, Jesse Aaron. "“We are all going into log huts – a sweet life after a most fatiguing campaign”: The Evolution and Archaeology of American Military Encampments of the Revolutionary War." Diss., Temple University Libraries, 2019. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/581517.

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Anthropology
Ph.D.
This dissertation focuses on the history and archaeology of the American military encampments of the American Revolution. The organization of this dissertation reflects the purpose and methodology of the study to create context — both historically and archaeologically — for the American military encampments of the American Revolution, in order to understand the encampments’ design, implementation, and evolution over the course of the war. By employing a multifaceted approach towards the documentary record, this dissertation illustrates as many perspectives as possible by consulting a diverse collection of primary source material to construct a historical framework that explores how the military and the individual soldiers involved negotiated the theater of war during the encampment periods. Specific attention is paid to the orders that were handed down from the military hierarchy and how the soldiers reacted. This dissertation further refines the discussion of the American military encampments of the American Revolution by examining the physical remains of the encampments through the archaeological record. Utilizing information collected from nearly a century of archaeological investigations at places such as Middlebrook, New Jersey, Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, Pluckemin, New Jersey, Redding, Connecticut, Morristown, New Jersey, and New Windsor, New York, this dissertation will provide a review and assessment of the archaeology of American military encampments of the American Revolution. In doing so, this dissertation examines the results these investigations have yielded and evaluates whether different approaches or a reevaluation of the results obtained from these investigations can provide new avenues of information to further interpret these historic sites. A case study is presented based on the author’s own excavations within the Valley Forge winter encampment on the grounds of the modern Washington Memorial Chapel. Through this case study, the physical and material remains of this encampment site are interpreted as expressions of the Continental Army’s adaptation to the landscape, as well as an expression of their status and training during this early stage of the war. Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben’s work is presented as a determining factor in this development. This dissertation uses the archaeological remains of these military landscapes to provide insight into the lifeways and power structures of the military as well as the soldiers who defined the social and economic disposition of this diverse community. Viewing each of these sites as a particular marker in time, this dissertation provides case studies of events over the course of the American Revolution to examine how the Army and its soldiers interact with the then-contemporary conflict, training, and the environment. Each of these influences played a role in the evolution of this military force.
Temple University--Theses
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Postlethwaite, Rosa. "Exploring the field of autotopography through live art practice : The frieze, The anatomy lecture theatre and The security hut." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12963.

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This paper presents: The Frieze, The Anatomy Lecture Theatre and The Security Hut as outcomes of my practice-based research project into strategies of making autotopographical performance. Departing from Gonzalez’s theory of autotopography (1995), which focuses on objects belonging to individuals that are seen to signify their identity, and drawing on Heddon’s (2002; 2008), Bal’s (2002) and Arlander’s (2012) subsequent discussions around the term, I unpack the process of making live art performances in response to a site. During the process of making I examined the relationships between the material landscape, my processes of memory and my sense-of-self.
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Duncan, Shona Margaret. "Fungal Diversity and Cellulytic Activity in the Historic Huts, Ross Island, Antarctica." The University of Waikato, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10289/2563.

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The goal of this study was to undertake a microbial investigation of the Historic Huts areas on Ross Island, to gain knowledge of the fungal biodiversity and biochemical framework, focusing on the wood degrading potential of these fungi at both psychrophilic (cold) and mesophilic (moderate) temperatures. Eight hundred and forty nine samples were collected from three Heroic Era Historic Huts of Antarctica, from a variety of substrates but predominantly structural wood. The huts, Discovery Hut at Hut Point, Terra Nova Hut at Cape Evans and Nimrod Hut at Cape Royds, are located on Ross Island and were all assembled in the early 20th century by the Heroic Era explorers to house the expeditions, stores and animals. These wooden huts were abandoned when the expeditions left. The introduction of wood and other organic material to a pristine environment along with the creation of a microclimate within the harsh Antarctica environment created interesting sites for studying fungal diversity, wood decay and fungal cellulase enzymes in an extreme environment. Each hut can be classified as offering different conditions and circumstances for fungal propagules. Of the three huts, Terra Nova Hut is the only hut where there are visible fungal blooms within the hut and it, with Discovery Hut, had the greatest number of samples that contained fungi compared to Nimrod Hut which had the least. Discovery Hut, at less than 500 metres from the United States McMurdo Station, is the most visited by scientist and base staff and has been the most demonstrably affected by human impact of the three huts due to its closeness to the research stations on Ross Island To ensure a full understanding of the fungal diversity of the Historic Hut sites, a variety of sampling techniques were used along with a variety of culture media. Two thousand and seventy six isolates consisting of 1177 filamentous fungi and 899 single celled microorganisms (yeast and bacteria) were isolated; all these cultures were frozen and now form the University of Waikato Antarctic Culture Collection. Five genera dominated the fungal isolates that were identified and these were Cladosporium, Geomyces, Cadophora, Penicillium and Thelebolus. The fungal diversity of these Historic Huts' communities is low but the members present are metabolically active, consistent with other microbial communities in the Antarctic. The Historic Huts and surroundings contain a diverse array of provision in the way of wood and supplies, which provide nutrient sources for fungal growth. Endemic organisms present in the soil could have been enriched by using the introduced nutrient sources as primary and/or second metabolic substrates. In addition, fungi could have been introduced with the wooden huts and supplies when they were brought to Antarctica by the Heroic Era explorers, or introduced in the subsequent years with visitors and conservation work conducted at the sites. These introduced organisms, though, would have had to adapt to the change in climate and conditions posed by the Antarctic in order to survive and be subsequently isolated in this study. A screen for carboxymethylcellulase (CMCase) activity was done on a selection of the fungal isolates as the first step to understand the cellulytic potential of the Antarctica fungal community inhabiting the huts. One hundred and six fungal isolates from a total of 404, that were screened were deemed to be CMCase positive, 27 fungal isolates were chosen for further study including quantifying the activity of extracellular endo-1,4-β-glucanase at psychrophilic and mesophilic incubation temperatures. All but one isolate could produce endo-1,4-β-glucanase activity at 4 C and many produced more endo-1,4-β-glucanase activity at 4 C than at 15 C. Cadophora malorum 182, Cadophora malorum 242, Penicillium roquefortii 405, Penicillium roquefortii 408, Geomyces sp. 711, Geomyces sp. 824 and Cladosporium oxysporium 805 were selected for in-depth study of growth characteristics including growth temperature preferences, growth on a variety of cellulose substrates, water activity, and carbon sources, the latter done by using a commercially available microtitre plate containing 95 carbon sources. All seven of the fungal isolates were classified as psychrotolerant and produced, when cultured at either 4 C or at 15 C, cellulase, protease, amylase, xylanase, and pectinase and mannanase enzyme activities. The range of water activity that the Antarctic Penicillium roquefortii isolates could grow at was distinctive when compared with food Penicillium roquefortii isolates. The utilisation of different carbon sources showed that like many studies of Antarctica organism they have a diverse range of enzymatic activity, but interestingly the activity does not differ greatly with incubation temperature with most carbon sources being used or not used at both incubation temperatures tested. Although it took longer for the fungi to grow at the psychrophilic temperatures, the range of carbon sources they utilised was not reduced. The protein composition of the extracellular supernatants was visualised using various electrophoretic and staining techniques. The cellulase activity of the protein bands was visualised by cellulose-containing zymograms, which illustrated that the cellulase complex in all fungi tested was multi-enzyme and differed between species, isolates and temperatures of culturing. The cellulase activity of Cadophora malorum 182 was enriched by purification techniques including ion exchange chromatography and native preparative electrophoresis. The protein complex was not purified to homogeneity, but enriched for a mixture of proteins and the mixture was described as having the following properties; a temperature range of β-1,4-glucan cellobiohydrolase activity from 20 C to 80 C with the optimum activity seen at 60 C, β-1,4-glucan cellobiohydrolase activity that is stable at 4, 25 and 40 C for at least 24 hrs, lost at 50 C and 80 C within 24 hrs and 2 minutes respectively. Along with β-1,4-glucan cellobiohydrolase activity, the protein mixture contained Avicelase, CMCase, xylanase and mannanase activity. The thesis research showed that there was limited fungal diversity in the Historic Huts and artefacts (a total of five dominant genera were identified) but the fungi are actively growing and producing viable spores in the cold of Antarctica and producing the necessary enzymes for degradation of wood. Although the metabolism and growth rate is slower at psychrophilic temperatures, the fungal isolates studied as part of this thesis research could still function enzymatically at cold temperatures and this includes the degradation of wood as evidenced by in vitro wood decay studies examined by scanning electron microscopy where two isolates of one species demonstrated the ability to degrade wood. The cellulase complex of the investigated fungal isolate was multi-enzymed and although the components were not purified to homogeneity, an enriched mixture of proteins had enzyme activity and stability in a broad temperature range, and activity to a variety of cellulosic substrates. This thesis research adds to the knowledge of the fungal biodiversity in the Antarctic and increases the understanding of the biochemical framework, participating in relation to wood decay potential of these Antarctic fungal isolates.
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Gierow, Kristine. "The Protovillanova culture in San Giovenale : A study of ceramics and huts." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Antikens kultur och samhällsliv, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-353421.

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This study presents an overview of the spreading of the Protovillanovan culture on the Acropolis of San Giovenale through a typological study of the materials such as the oval huts and the ceramics of this period. Through a typological study of ceramics this study will be able to define what type of ceramic vessels are more common during the Protovillanova period. The oval huts are included in this study in order to see the size and the spreading of the proto-urban society of San Giovenale.
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Kobets-Singkh, Olena. "Two mountain huts : architecture of interactive environments through the development of the prototype." Virtual Press, 2008. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1390312.

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To build for living is to understand that built form exists only in relationship to the life that occupies it and that human life is better when it is in constant interaction with the built environment; we design it, build it, and change it as we design, build, and change our selves. Making your own place and changing it over time is an important component of living one's life to its fullest. To explore these issues, designs were made for an adaptable building type - the "mountain hut," a temporary accommodation for its wandering inhabitants. Designing it twice, as well as relocating the initial building type across the globe, from the mountains of Sierra Nevada to the Himalayas in Nepal, provided an opportunity to compare and understand the influences of local environmental and cultural conditions on the building's adaptability, as well as the level of interactivity its inhabitants could experience as they occupied and transformed the dwelling. Both designs incorporate sustainable design principles, which strengthen the overall comparison of climatic responses and the use of local materials and building technologies.
Department of Architecture
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Fletcher, Paul. "'I know you can't see it but it hurts' : a research study into the experiences of young people, their parents and healthcare professionals, who live and work with medically unexplained physical symptoms." Thesis, University of East London, 2014. http://roar.uel.ac.uk/4154/.

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In this study I have explored first-person stories of young people, parents and healthcare professionals about their experiences of living and working with medically unexplained physical symptoms (MUPS). MUPS claims large amounts of healthcare professionals’ time and technological resources in primary and secondary healthcare. As a consequence there has been an increasing amount of research interest in MUPS sufferers in recent years. However, few studies have explored the experience of MUPS sufferers from a social constructionist, dialogical and narrative epistemological standpoint. A cross-disciplinary review of the literature on MUPS revealed the experiences of young people and their families to be similar to those with a diagnosis of chronic illness and their families. A dearth of qualitative studies have explored the first-person accounts of young people, their parents, and healthcare professionals who live and work with the condition. Research aims were generated following the review of the literature: To explore the meanings that young people, their parents and healthcare professionals attach to their experience of MUPS in the absence of a medical diagnosis To explore stories constructed from these experiences by young people, their parents, and healthcare professionals about the impact of MUPS upon identity and significant relationships To discover the discourses and narrative templates that inform healthcare professionals’ practice with young people and their families who live with MUPS To identify cultural and institutional discourses and narrative templates from focus group members’ stories of experience; that position or marginalise MUPS sufferers and their families. The focus group method was chosen for data collection. Seven focus groups were held in a Paediatric Liaison Department (PLS) in a Regional Hospital in the East Midlands, U.K. Young people and parents were recruited to the focus groups from historical casework of the PLS Department. Healthcare professionals were recruited from the hospital paediatric and PLS teams. The focus groups involved two groups for adolescents with MUPS and two groups of parents of adolescents with MUPS. Three other focus groups involved healthcare professionals who work with adolescents and their families with MUPS. The focus group discussions were videotaped and transcribed by the researcher and two forms of analysis were employed: Thematic Analysis (TA) and Dialogical Narrative Analysis (DNA). The two forms of analysis produced multiple literal themes and implicit stories abstracted from focus group members’ accounts. A major theme for young people and parents was their feelings of anger and frustration following the initial medical interview with their doctors. Young people and parents reported they were not only disbelieved by the doctor about the existence and severity of the symptoms, but the doctor attributed negative attributions about their presentation such as ‘You’re lazy’, ‘It’s psychosomatic’, ‘All in your head’, ‘Fussy parent’. Without a diagnosis concerns of the young people and their parents were not legitimised. Young people and parents lost confidence in medical institutions. Young people responded by withdrawal and increasing social isolation. Many parents took on the role of advocacy in an attempt to restore their child’s credibility and the family’s integrity. Some of the doctors interviewed spoke about the dearth of training in MUPS in both paediatrics and psychiatry. They suggest that managing MUPS patients can be very time-consuming for hard-pressed clinicians. Within the medical encounter they sometimes feel pressured or ambivalent about whether to continue to investigate despite previous negative results. Doctors also stated that MUPS patients can generate anxiety and uncertainty in clinicians. More main themes emerged including recognising MUPS as primarily ‘an idiom of distress’ and the shortcomings of the biomedical paradigm in addressing the problems and dilemmas of MUPS sufferers, their parents and healthcare professionals. In the Discussion Chapter I propose a model of training and CPD for healthcare professionals. The model proposes introducing a hermeneutic approach and open emotional postures to compliment the deductive role of the diagnosing physician. It is proposed that by accessing concepts from both the scientific and phenomenological paradigms healthcare professionals will reduce the possibility of incongruence and potential for impasse within the physicianpatient relationship. In the conclusion of the report a number of recommendations are given based upon the outcomes of the study to introduce the benefits for professionals in adding theoretical concepts from systemic family psychotherapy, dialogical and narrative theory to inform and promote a hermeneutic discursive centred practice with MUPS sufferers and their families.
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Draper, Karey Lee. "Wartime huts : the development, typology, and identification of temporary military buildings in Britain, 1914-1945." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2018. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/270649.

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The use of temporary, prefabricated buildings in Britain during the twentieth century arose from wartime need to provide better, and perhaps more importantly, portable shelter for troops and equipment. This thesis provides the first comprehensive list of hut designs for the First and Second World Wars. The full lists and descriptions of each hut are given in the appendices. These lists, 20 types for the First World War and 52 from the Second World War, show the huge range and scope of the huts used and is the major contribution of this thesis. The concentration here is on generic types. Some huts were designed as one-offs and there is no possible way to catalogue these. This thesis has focused instead on those designs or industrially-produced types, which were meant to be produced en-masse as generic solutions to the problem: the sort of hut that might justifiably be given a name (such as a ‘Tarran’, a ‘Seco’, etc.). This thesis provides essential information enabling historians to be able to identify these types. It uses primary and secondary sources to trace the development of these huts and the effect that wartime shortages had on their design. Beginning with the earliest examples of temporary military building, it then focuses on the huts of the First and Second World Wars followed by a study of huts grouped in chapters by material. This research shows that the wartime period pushed industry to make giant leaps forward with construction methods and materials in just a few short years, where otherwise it may have taken decades. This thesis aims to provide the first overview of this process and to enable future researchers to identify and understand the development of these important wartime structures, many of which survive to this day.
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Tsai, Michael SKN. "You'll Live." Thesis, University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/10125/7092.

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Armstrong, Christopher J. "Live Surface." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2007. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1029.

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Live Surface allows users to segment and render complex surfaces from 3D image volumes at interactive (sub-second) rates using a novel, Cascading Graph Cut (CGC). Live Surface consists of two phases. (1) Preprocessing for generation of a complete 3D watershed hierarchy followed by tracking of all catchment basin surfaces. (2) User interaction in which, with each mouse movement, the 3D object is selected and rendered in real time. Real-time segmentation is ccomplished by cascading through the 3D watershed hierarchy from the top, applying graph cut successively at each level only to catchment basins bordering the segmented surface from the previous level. CGC allows the entire image volume to be segmented an order of magnitude faster than existing techniques that make use of graph cut. OpenGL rendering provides for display and update of the segmented surface at interactive rates. The user selects objects by tagging voxels with either (object) foreground or background seeds. Seeds can be placed on image cross-sections or directly on the 3D rendered surface. Interaction with the rendered surface improves the user's ability to steer the segmentation, augmenting or subtracting from the current selection. Segmentation and rendering, combined, is accomplished in about 0.5 seconds, allowing 3D surfaces to be displayed and updated dynamically as each additional seed is deposited. The immediate feedback of Live Surface allows for the segmentation of 3D image volumes with an interaction paradigm similar to the Live Wire (Intelligent Scissors) tool used in 2D images.
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Books on the topic "Huts to live in"

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Four huts: Asian writings on the simple life. Boston: Shambhala, 1994.

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Tan fang Zhongguo xi shi min ju: Hai cao fang = Tanfang Zhongguo xishi minju. Beijing Shi: Hai yang chu ban she, 2008.

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I live in a hut: Poems. Cleveland: Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 2012.

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Kern, Kathleen. When it hurts to live: Devotions for difficult times. Newton, Kan: Faith & Life Press, 1994.

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The bathing huts. London: M. Boyars, 1986.

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Angie, Shanahan, and Gallery Press (Loughcrew Ireland), eds. Huts and sheds. Loughcrew, Oldcastle, County Meath, Ireland: Gallery Press, 2011.

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A hut of one's own: Life outside the circle of architecture. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1997.

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Charles, Fisher. --Obliged to live-- on the outside of the fort: A report on the soldiers' huts found during archaeological survey of the proposed maintenance building site, Crown Point State Historic Site, Essex County, New York. Peebles Island, Waterford, N.Y: New York State, Parks, Recreation, and Historic Presservation, Bureau of Historic Sites, 1993.

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Kawamata, Tadashi. Tadashi Kawamata: Tree huts. Paris: Kamel Mennour, 2010.

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Silliman, Ronald. The age of huts. New York, N.Y: Roof, 1986.

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Book chapters on the topic "Huts to live in"

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Rothchild, Jennifer, and Priti Shrestha Piya. "Rituals, Taboos, and Seclusion: Life Stories of Women Navigating Culture and Pushing for Change in Nepal." In The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Menstruation Studies, 915–29. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-0614-7_66.

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Abstract Drawing from life history narratives of 84 women in Nepal, we examine women’s particular lived experiences of cultural rituals, traditions, and taboos surrounding menstruation, as well as the practice of seclusion, which in it extreme form, sequesters menstruating women into menstrual huts (chaupadi). Grounding our analysis in the specific sociocultural context of Nepali women themselves reveals important dynamics about gender formation, the perpetuation of power, relationships with one’s own body, and resistance to gendered constructions. These findings can then inform effective policies and programs to create awareness and change people’s understandings of and practices surrounding menstruation not only in the context of Nepal, but elsewhere as well.
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Bianchini, Paolo, Circe Maria Fernandes Bittencourt, and Pompeo Vagliani. "La bellezza come strumento di accesso alla conoscenza storica. La mostra Scuole come capanne. Libri come opere d’arte. Dal Brasile all’Agro romano." In Studi e saggi, 223–34. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-009-2.21.

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The essay deals with the exhibition “Schools as huts and books as works of art. From Brazil to the Agro Romano” (Scuole come capanne e libri come opere d’arte. Dal Brasile all’Agro Romano), which collected educational materials and objects of daily life made for the schools of the Brazilian Indians, as well as those of the farmers of the Agro Romano of the early 20th Century. The dialogue between these materials underlines the centrality of beauty in education and in creating a better world.
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Carlyon, David. "Live." In The Education of a Circus Clown, 127–36. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137547439_10.

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Kristjan, Jai. "Live." In We Deserve Better Villains, 191–206. Boca Raton, FL : Taylor & Francis, 2019.: CRC Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9780429196553-9.

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Walker, Stuart. "Live." In Design Realities, 229. spirit / Stuart Walker. Description: First edition. |: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429489037-88.

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Ullán, Ana M., and Manuel H. Belver. "With Plush Toys, It Hurts Less." In Handbook of Medical Play Therapy and Child Life, 314–28. New York: Routledge, 2018.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315527857-17.

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Grubel, Mathew. "Building the Log Hut City." In Historical Archaeology of the Revolutionary War Encampments of Washington's Army, 125–63. University Press of Florida, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813056401.003.0006.

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This chapter uses experimental archaeology to attempt to learn how soldiers constructed the huts they would live in during the winter at Morristown, New Jersey. For the historic reconstruction, the same tools and techniques were, as much as possible, employed to replicate the technology available in 1777. The research touches on numerous topics that have not seen much attention, such as the integration of the camps with the local economy, the acquisition of provisions for the camps, the historic technology the soldiers used, and the many roles and skills that were necessary for hut building.
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Ireland, Eleanor. "We were the world’s first computer operators." In The Turing Guide. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198747826.003.0023.

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In 1944 I worked at Bletchley Park and lived at nearby Woburn Abbey. My job was to assist the codebreakers by operating one of the Colossus machines. In this chapter I describe how this came to be and what it was like to live and work at Bletchley Park during the last months of the war. In 1944 I was working in London, in a philatelist’s business. One of my friends joined the Women’s Royal Naval Service (WRNS) as a motor transport driver, and I decided to join too. In great trepidation I went to Queen Anne’s Gate and volunteered. I was interviewed immediately and very soon was called to a medical. Not long after, I received a letter telling me to report on 2 August 1944 to a WRNS establishment at Tullichewan Castle near Glasgow. I found out much later that it would have been more usual to report to Mill Hill in London, but there had been a spate of bombing and the powers that be did not wish to take any chances with the new intake, so they sent us up to Scotland. Strangely enough, in the week before I was due to set off on this adventure I met a school friend who was also joining the WRNS and had been asked to report to Tullichewan on the same day. I was pleased to discover that I had a companion to go with. As it turned out, we were to stay together until we were demobbed at the end of December 1946. We travelled to Glasgow and then out to a small station on the edge of Loch Lomond, where we were picked up and taken to Tullichewan WRNS reception camp, a requisitioned castle standing in a large hillside estate. At the bottom of the hill was the Regulating Office, together with a large number of Nissen huts—the sleeping quarters, a mess, the stores hut, and so forth. Opposite the huts was an enormous parade ground, while at the top of the hill was the castle, used by the officers, and another parade ground with the naval flag. Every day a bell sounded at 5 a.m. to get us up, after which we were required to do various menial tasks, such as cleaning out the huts, potato peeling, and blancoing the steps of the castle.
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Potts, Charlotte R. "The first religious buildings: ‘sacred huts’." In Religious Architecture in Latium and Etruria, c. 900-500 BC. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198722076.003.0009.

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The votive assemblages that form the primary archaeological evidence for non-funerary cult in the Neolithic, Bronze, and early Iron Ages in central Italy indicate that there is a long tradition of religious activity in Latium and Etruria in which buildings played no discernible role. Data on votive deposits in western central Italy is admittedly uneven: although many early votive assemblages from Latium have been widely studied and published, there are few Etruscan comparanda; of the more than two hundred Etruscan votive assemblages currently known from all periods, relatively few date prior to the fourth century BC, while those in museum collections are often no longer entire and suffer from a lack of detailed provenance as well as an absence of excavations in the vicinity of the original find. Nevertheless, it is possible to recognize broad patterns in the form and location of cult sites prior to the Iron Age, and thus to sketch the broader context of prehistoric rituals that pre-dated the construction of the first religious buildings. In the Neolithic period (c.6000–3500 BC), funerary and non-funerary rituals appear to have been observed in underground spaces such as caves, crevices, and rock shelters, and there are also signs that cults developed around ‘abnormal water’ like stalagmites, stalactites, hot springs, and pools of still water. These characteristics remain visible in the evidence from the middle Bronze Age (c.1700–1300 BC). Finds from this period at the Sventatoio cave in Latium include vases containing traces of wheat, barley seed cakes, and parts of young animals including pigs, sheep, and oxen, as well as burned remains of at least three children. The openair veneration of underground phenomena is also implied by the discovery of ceramic fragments from all phases of the Bronze Age around a sulphurous spring near the Colonelle Lake at Tivoli. Other evidence of cult activities at prominent points in the landscape, such as mountain tops and rivers, suggests that rituals began to lose an underground orientation during the middle Bronze Age. By the late Bronze Age (c.1300–900 BC) natural caves no longer seem to have served ritual or funerary functions.
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Michalski, Krzysztof. "Reason, Which Hurts." In The Flame of Eternity, translated by Benjamin Paloff. Princeton University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691143460.003.0004.

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This chapter presents an account of human life primarily through Nietzsche's character of Zarathustra, who argues that human life is irreducibly diverse and thoroughly dangerous. We are constantly trying to rebuild our home within it, constantly trying to glue all the pieces of the world we live in into a whole, to order it, to turn it into “our world.” But we will never be able to remove from this world the threat of catastrophe, of destruction, of the end; we will never achieve certainty that the next step in our lives won't march us into the abyss, into which everything that has been familiar till now, everything nice and warm and orderly, vanishes. In other words, an essential feature of life as we live it is chance: the new, unexpected, alien side of life. In its every moment, life is torn open, discontinuous, fractured: diversified.
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Conference papers on the topic "Huts to live in"

1

Bredikhina, Liudmila, Toya Sakaguchi, and Akihiko Shirai. "Web3D Distance live workshop for children in Mozilla Hubs." In Web3D '20: The 25th International Conference on 3D Web Technology. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3424616.3424724.

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Gosselin, O., S. I. Aanonsen, I. Aavatsmark, A. Cominelli, R. Gonard, M. Kolasinski, F. Ferdinandi, L. Kovacic, and K. Neylon. "History Matching Using Time-lapse Seismic (HUTS)." In SPE Annual Technical Conference and Exhibition. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/84464-ms.

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Foris, Diana, Danut Tokar, Adriana Tokar, and Tiberiu Foris. "Sustainable rural development through improving water supply in mountain huts." In 19th International Scientific Conference "Economic Science for Rural Development 2018". Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies. Faculty of Economics and Social Development, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22616/esrd.2018.009.

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Mori, Mitja, Rok Stropnik, Manuel Gutierrez, and Pedro Casero. "Toward sustainable mountain huts with environmental impact assessment of used technologies." In 2019 7th International Youth Conference on Energy (IYCE). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iyce45807.2019.8991581.

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Agrawal, Arti, Francisco J. Cabrera-España, Andrew Oates, and Hari Reehal. "Hut-Like Pillar Si Solar Cells." In CLEO: Science and Innovations. Washington, D.C.: OSA, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/cleo_si.2016.sf2p.3.

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Ohno, Yoshi, Youngshin Kwak, and Semi Oh. "VISION EXPERIMENT ON CHROMA SATURATION PREFERENCE IN DIFFERENT HUES." In CIE 2017 Midterm Meetings and Conference on Smarter Lighting for Better Life. International Commission on Illumination, CIE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.25039/x44.2017.pp07.

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Fraga, Cesar, Jose M. Enguita, Ignacio Alvarez, Jorge Marina, and Nestor Martinez. "On-line non-contact measuring of synchronizer hubs." In Optical Metrology, edited by Wolfgang Osten, Christophe Gorecki, and Erik L. Novak. SPIE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.612258.

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Hoadley, Richard. "Live Coding, Live Notation, Live Performance." In Electronic Visualisation and the Arts. BCS Learning & Development, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.14236/ewic/eva2016.8.

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Long, Daniel, and Scott Ferguson. "Exploring System Architecture Attributes and Dynamic Change Propagation." In ASME 2018 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2018-86049.

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Long-lived systems will experience many successive changes during their lifecycle as they are adapted to meet new system requirements. Existing change propagation tools predict how changes to a system’s design at a fixed point in its life are likely to spread, but have not been extended to consider a series of successive modifications where the change probabilities update. This change in propagation probabilities in response to successive changes is introduced as Dynamic Change Propagation (DCP). This paper integrates research from change propagation, network theory, and excess to achieve the following objectives: 1) describe how a DCP model predicts system propagation change trajectories, 2) use a new synthetic test case generator to correlate network parameters like degree distribution with DCP, and 3) determine the correlations between a measure of DCP and a selection of existing change propagation metrics. Results indicate that DCP is limited by reducing the number of dependencies between components (affirming the usefulness of adding modularity to a system) and including high degree component ‘hubs’ between components.
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Yanting Wang, Fan Xie, and Zhiguo Hao. "Analytical method for the initial travelling wave of transmission line faults in VSC-HVDC grid." In 2020 Tsinghua - HUST-IET Electrical Engineering Academic Forum. Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp.2020.0006.

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Reports on the topic "Huts to live in"

1

Marshak, David. Macromedia Breeze Live. Boston, MA: Patricia Seybold Group, May 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1571/pr5-27-04cc.

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May, W. HTTP Live Streaming. Edited by R. Pantos. RFC Editor, August 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc8216.

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Birman, Kenneth P. Live Information Objects. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, June 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada545398.

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Mullahy, John. Live Long, Live Well: Quantifying the Health of Heterogenous Populations. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, September 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w7895.

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Chochoms, Michael. Hearing Conservation Live #2430. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), August 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1296653.

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Singledecker, Amalia. Lockout/Tagout Live 53493. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1343689.

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Marshak, David. Microsoft Office Live Meeting. Boston, MA: Patricia Seybold Group, July 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1571/pr7-16-04cc.

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Tackett, Gregory B. Live/Virtual Seamless Simulation. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, March 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada392766.

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Chochoms, Michael. Ladder Safety Live #12985. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1345132.

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Sanchez, Makayla Marie. General Employee Training Live 43173. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), October 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1475326.

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