On: “Phase‐field imaging: The electromagnetic equivalent of seismic migration” by S. Lee, G. A. McMechan, and C. L. V. Aiken (GEOPHYSICS, 52, 678–693, May 1987)

Geophysics ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 863-863
Author(s):  
Seunghee Lee ◽  
George McMechan ◽  
Carlos Aiken

We were very happy to see the paper by Lee et al. which contains many interesting applications of electromagnetic migration to the solution of geoelectric problems. However, we were very suprised the authors were unaware of our previous papers published in both Eastern and Western international journals concerning the same subject (cf., bibliography). We proposed the generalization of seismic migration for electromagnetic data for the first time in 1982 during the Sixth Workship on EM-induction in the Earth and Moon (Zhdanov and Frenkel, 1982). Dr. John Booker from The University of Washington was the first to suggest calling our method “electromagnetic migration”; a detailed description of our method was given in Zhdanov and Frenkel (1983a and b). Work on electromagnetic migration was published by Zhdanov and Frenkel (1983c) in a special issue of the Proceedings of Oulu University. In 1985 we presented an invited paper (Velikhov et al., 1987) on this topic at the Prague General Assembly of IAGA.

2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Alexandra Kurmann ◽  
Tess Do

This special issue follows a conference entitled ‘Rencontres: A Gathering of Voices of the Vietnamese Diaspora’ that was held at the University of Melbourne, December 1-2 in 2016 and which sought to enable, for the first time, the titular transdiasporic rencontres or encounters between international authors of the Vietnamese diaspora. The present amalgam of previously unpublished texts written by celebrated Francophone and Anglophone authors of Vietnamese descent writing in France, New Caledonia and Australia today is the result of the intercultural exchanges that took place during that event. Literary texts by Linda Lê, Anna Moï and Thanh-Van Tran-Nhut are followed by writerly reflections on the theme of transdiasporic encounters from Hoai Huong Nguyen, Jean Vanmai and Hoa Pham. Framing and enriching these texts, scholarly contributions by established experts in the field consider the literary, cultural and linguistic transfers that characterize contemporary writing by authors of Vietnamese origin across the Francophone world. Ce volume spécial réunit les Actes du colloque ‘Rencontres : A Gathering of Voices of the Vietnamese Diaspora’ qui s’est tenue à l’Université de Melbourne les 1er et 2 décembre 2016 et qui visait à faciliter, pour la première fois, les rencontres entre les auteurs, chercheurs et universitaires internationaux de la diaspora vietnamienne. Les fruits de leurs échanges interculturels y sont réunis dans ce présent recueil sous deux formes complémentaires : d’un côté, les articles d’experts en littérature francophone comparée ; de l’autre, les contributions créatives de célèbres auteurs francophones et anglophones d’origine vietnamienne basés aujourd’hui en France, en Nouvelle Calédonie et en Australie. Les textes littéraires de Linda Lê, Anna Moï et Thanh-Van Tran-Nhut, suivis de réflexions d’auteurs par Hoai Huong Nguyen, Hoa Pham et Jean Vanmai sur le thème des rencontres transdiasporiques, se retrouvent enrichis par les études savantes menées sur les transferts littéraires, culturelles et linguistiques qui caractérisent l’écriture contemporaine des écrivains d’origine vietnamienne dans le monde francophone.


2018 ◽  
Vol 45 ◽  
pp. 163-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonja Martens ◽  
Christopher Juhlin ◽  
Viktor J. Bruckman ◽  
Kristen Mitchell ◽  
Luke Griffiths ◽  
...  

Abstract. Every year, the European Geosciences Union (EGU) brings together experts from all over the world at its General Assembly, covering all disciplines of the Earth, planetary and space sciences. The EGU Division on Energy, Resources and the Environment (ERE) is concerned with one of the humankind's most challenging goals – providing affordable, reliable and sustainable energy and other georesources. A collection of contributions from the ERE Division at the EGU General Assembly 2018 is assembled within the present special issue in Advances in Geosciences.


2013 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Hawkridge ◽  
Steven Verjans ◽  
Gail Wilson

This special issue contains the six research papers presented at the Association for Learning Technology (ALT) conference, “Building new cultures of learning”, held at the University of Nottingham, England, 10–12 September 2013. This was the first time that the research papers accepted for the annual conference were to be published as a special issue. The editors decided to use a full journal review procedure and required a high standard.(Published: 6 September 2013)Citation: Research in Learning Technology 2013, 21: 22564 - http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/rlt.v21i0.22564


Geophysics ◽  
1971 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanley H. Ward

The motivation for preparing a special issue of Geophysics devoted to electromagnetic scattering lies largely with a sudden and dramatic improvement in our ability to model the earth in theoretical analyses of the electromagnetic exploration problem. This improvement was in turn generated by a need for better interpretation of electromagnetic data, a need for better design of electromagnetic systems, and a need to develop better criteria for selection of electromagnetic systems suited to a given prospecting problem.


2010 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-92
Author(s):  
Frank Cranmer

The 2010 General Assembly was perhaps most notable for two events: on Sunday 23 May a special session was held to mark the 450th anniversary of the Scottish Reformation and on 26 May, for the first time in its history, it was addressed by a Muslim, Dr Mona Siddiqui, Professor of Islamic Studies in the University of Glasgow. Otherwise, the Assembly devoted much of its time to detailed issues of church law, governance and the more general needs of Scotland's wider society.2


2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Sondra L. Hausner

This issue of Durkheimian Studies presents the collective efforts of the participants of a workshop held in late 2017, the centenary anniversary of Émile Durkheim’s death, at the University of Oxford. The articles that emerged from it, published together in this special issue for the first time along with some new material, demonstrate a continuation of classic Durkheimian themes, but with contemporary approaches. First, they consider the role of action in the production of society. Second, they rely on authors’ own ethnographies: the contributors here engage with Durkheimian questions from the data of their own fieldsites. Third, effervescence, one of Durkheim’s most innovative contributions to sociology, is considered in depth, and in context: how do societies sustain themselves over time? Finally, what intellectual histories did Durkheim himself draw upon – and how can we better understand his conceptual contributions in light of these influences?


2012 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 427-447
Author(s):  

In this paper we write our way into the space generated by the ending/not ending of the Bristol Collaborative Writing Group that we had all engaged with for over seven years. This writing was to have taken the form of a post script or ‘after writes,’ since we ended, or ‘petered out,’ some months before. Rather than ending responsibly, with attention to matters of ‘closure,’ talk of transition and carefully held space for reflective thinking (Birnbaum & Cichetti, 2008), we unravelled somewhat unceremoniously on the way back from lunch at the Pizza Express, perched outside the gents in the downstairs foyer at the university, unable to find an empty room to host our farewells. Yet in a manner completely congruent with our starting out and working together, the task we had set ourselves to end did not materialise as it ‘should.’ This special issue has afforded us the opportunity to attend differently to our endings/beginnings and also to each other “as if for the first time” (Eliot, 1944). And in doing so, we have learnt more about a richness of being together, an invisible dynamic, that has lurked secretly throughout our meanderings, revealing itself only when we abandoned intentfulness and allowed ourselves the indulgence of being, rather than doing.


2019 ◽  
Vol 49 ◽  
pp. 31-35
Author(s):  
Sonja Martens ◽  
Christopher Juhlin ◽  
Viktor J. Bruckman ◽  
Gregor Giebel ◽  
Thomas Nagel ◽  
...  

Abstract. Since 2004, the European Geosciences Union (EGU) brings together experts from all over the world at its annual General Assembly, covering all disciplines of the earth, planetary and space sciences. With this special issue in Advances in Geosciences, we are pleased to present a collection of contributions from the Division on Energy, Resources and the Environment (ERE) which were presented at the EGU General Assembly 2019 in Vienna.


1982 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 499-504
Author(s):  
Manfred G. Schmidt

The Stein Rokkan Prize was set up by the International Social Science Council and the Conjunto Universitario Candido Mendes to honour a seminal work by a young social scientist in comparative social science. The Prize, in the sum of two thousand dollars, was awarded for the first time on 17 November 1981 at a session of the General Assembly of the ISSC to Manfred G. Schmidt, Lecturer in Politics at the University of Konstanz, for his manuscript entitled: “Wohlfahrtstaatliche Politik unter bürgerlichen und sozialdemokratischen Regierungen. Ein internationaler Vergleich”. We are pleased to print the speech he made on receiving the award.


1985 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seunghee Lee ◽  
George A. McMechan ◽  
Carlos L. V. Aiken

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