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Evaluation and five year follow-up study : Smith Academy, Hatfield, Massachusetts.Bart, Joseph 01 January 1952 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Re:fresh* : refreshment and retail strategy for Gautrain stationsVenter, Elize 09 December 2009 (has links)
The focus of this study is the provision of refreshment, retail and supporting facilities at Gautrain stations. This forms part of an overarching strategy called for the deployment of refreshment, retail and supporting facilities at stations. For the purposes of this thesis, the concept of refreshment focuses on the aspects of bodily / physiological and mental refreshment, whether this be through sale of beverages and snacks or distribution and availability of information, news and mental stimulation through design. The strategy is explored in more detail through the design of a multifunctional kiosk for medium term deployment at any of the Gautrain stations. The Hatfield Gautrain station building interior forms the backdrop of an the in depth design and technical development of the intervention. Important factors in this scheme is the identifying of the most popular refreshment and ancillary facilities at other similar train stations as well as the integration of such facilities into the existing Gautrain system identity. The design approach is formulated on the three levels of scale and revolves around the creation of places and the railway station as public meeting place; tectonic expression and various factors relating to cost and sustainability. The aim is to contribute to the understanding of user needs in terms of refreshment, retail and ancillary behaviours (e.g. access to info) at transport interchanges. The thesis contributes to the general field of the environment and cultural landscapes as applicable to the discipline of interior architecture. / Dissertation (MInt(Prof))--University of Pretoria, 2010. / Architecture / unrestricted
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Visitor behavior at the Mark O. Hatfield Marine Science Center aquariumTissot, Susan Gaughan 29 May 1991 (has links)
Visitor behavior research has become an essential
component to many museum programs. Since its opening to the
public in 1965, Oregon State University's Mark O. Hatfield
Marine Science Center Aquarium in Newport, it has been
visited by millions of people. A clear understanding of who
this audience was and what they actually did while viewing
the exhibits in the aquarium had never been achieved. This
descriptive study describes fall season visitors and their
circulation patterns. The goal of the study was to
understand the interrelationships between visitors, exhibits
and the physical layout of the aquarium. One purpose of the
study was to provide information that would aid staff
members with long range planning decisions that include the
design of new exhibits and the renovation of older displays.
Besides identifying the aquarium's fall audience,
demographic data on visitors was desired to gain a clearer
understanding of populations that did not visit the museum.
Two-hundred and forty participants responded to a
survey questionnaire administered by HMSC volunteers and the
author. Forty unobtrusive observations of visitors were
collected by the author. Respondents included all age
groups; however, the young adults (late teens, early
twenties) were underrepresented. Over half of the
respondents had visited HMSC before; 81% of repeat visitors
were from Oregon.
A positive correlation was shown to exist between group
size and the length of visit. The larger the group the
longer the group tended to visit in the aquarium. The
average time spent in the aquarium was 30.6 minutes. Most
(82.5%) respondents overestimated the length of their visit
by an average of 22 minutes. Overall, visitors were found to
spend over 77% of their time at HMSC viewing the exhibits.
Only 7.3% of the visitors observed traveled through the
aquarium the way it was designed. The average amount of time
spent at exhibits ranged from 16.6 seconds to 212.5 seconds;
however, standard deviation and range indicate a great deal
of variability in visitor behavior.
Visitor traffic patterns and competition between
exhibits was shown to influence the visitor experience.
Survey and observation results were consistent with examples
at other museums, zoos and aquariums cited in the
literature. / Graduation date: 1992
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Beitrag zur Vorgeschichte der Auflösung Klöster in England und Wales speciell unter der Regierung Heinrichs VIII.Wilson, Gilbert B. January 1900 (has links)
Inaug.-disser. - Halle.
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Gautrans sub-urban train stationRoccon, Bernard 27 November 2003 (has links)
No abstract available. / Dissertation (MArch (Prof))--University of Pretoria, 2005. / Architecture / unrestricted
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Christopher Maginn / Steven G. Ellis, The Tudor Discovery of IrelandBähr, Matthias 15 July 2020 (has links)
Als im Jahr 1485 mit Heinrich VII. der erste Tudorkönig den englischen Thron bestieg, galt Irland als unbedeutendes, von gälischen Barbaren beherrschtes Randgebiet. Auf der politischen Agenda der jungen Dynastie gewann die Insel nur langsam an Bedeutung. Irland, so die zentrale Überlegung der beiden Autoren Christopher Maginn und Stephen G. Ellis, war also ein weißer Fleck auf der englischen Landkarte, der in der frühen Tudorzeit erst noch besucht, beschrieben und entdeckt werden musste. Belastbare Informationen wurden in London erst nach und nach verfügbar, zumeist auf der Grundlage schriftlicher Berichte und Traktate. Wie dieses Wissen über Irland gewonnen und in der höfischen Gesellschaft in politisches Kapital umgemünzt wurde, wollen Maginn und Ellis in ihrer 2015 erschienenen Untersuchung zeigen.
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The influence of surface detail on object identification in Alzheimer's patients and healthy participantsAdlington, R. L. January 2009 (has links)
Image format (Laws, Adlington, Gale, Moreno-Martínez, & Sartori, 2007), ceiling effects in controls (Fung et al., 2001; Laws et al., 2005; Moreno-Martínez, & Laws, 2007; 2008), and nuisance variables (Funnell & De Mornay Davis, 1996; Funnell & Sheridan, 1992; Stewart, Parkin & Hunkin, 1992) all influence the emergence of category specific deficits in Alzheimer‟s dementia (AD). Thus, the predominant use of line drawings of familiar, everyday items in category specific research is problematic. Moreover, this does not allow researchers to explore the extent to which format may influence object recognition. As such, the initial concern of this thesis was the development of a new corpus of 147 colour images of graded naming difficulty, the Hatfield Image Test (HIT; Adlington, Laws, & Gale, 2009), and the collection of relevant normative data including ratings of: age of acquisition, colour diagnosticity, familiarity, name agreement, visual complexity, and word frequency. Furthermore, greyscale and line-drawn versions of the HIT corpus were developed (and again, the associated normative data obtained), to permit research into the influence of image format on the emergence of category specific effects in patients with AD, and in healthy controls. Using the HIT, several studies were conducted including: (i) a normative investigation of the effects of category and image format on naming accuracy and latencies in healthy controls; (ii) an exploration of the effects of image format (using the HIT images presented in colour, greyscale, and line-drawn formats) and category on the naming performance of AD patients, and age-matched controls performing below ceiling; (iii) a longitudinal investigation comparing AD patient performance to that of age-matched controls, on a range of semantic tasks (naming, sorting, word-picture matching), using colour, greyscale, and line-drawn versions of the HIT; (iv) a comparison of naming in AD patients and age-matched controls on the HIT and the (colour, greyscale and line-drawn) images from the Snodgrass and Vanderwart (1980) corpus; and (v) a meta-analysis to explore category specific naming in AD using the Snodgrass and Vanderwart (1980) versus other corpora. Taken together, the results of these investigations showed first, that image format interacts with category. For both AD patients and controls, colour is more important for the recognition of living things, with a significant nonliving advantage emerging for the line-drawn images, but not the colour images. Controls benefitted more from additional surface information than AD patients, which chapter 6 shows results from low-level visual cortical impairment in AD. For controls, format was also more important for the recognition of low familiarity, low frequency items. In addition, the findings show that adequate control data affects the emergence of category specific deficits in AD. Specifically, based on within-group comparison chapters 6, 7, and 8 revealed a significant living deficit in AD patients. However, when compared to controls performing below ceiling, as demonstrated in chapters 7 and 8, this deficit was only significant for the line drawings, showing that the performance observed in AD patients is simply an exaggeration of the norm.
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Matewan before the massacre politics, coal, and the roots of conflict in Mingo County, 1793-1920 /Bailey, Rebecca J. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--West Virginia University, 2001. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains xxxvii, 556 p. : ill. (some col.), maps (some col.). Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 505-530).
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The development and evaluation of an interactive exhibit to support real-time water quality data interpretation by the public at an informal education setting /Mikulak, Sarah E. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Oregon State University, 2010. / Printout. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 210-214). Also available on the World Wide Web.
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Transforming public space : re-generating Rissik stationLe Roux, J.C. (Johannes Calvyn) 24 November 2008 (has links)
The proposed project aims to transform the selected site and buildings at Rissik Station to new uses, along with the restoration and reuse of historical buildings. This amounts to a recycling and improved use of existing resources. / Dissertation (MArch(Prof))--University of Pretoria, 2009. / Architecture / unrestricted
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