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The Extraction of 3D Shape in the Visual System of Human and Nonhuman Primates: Supplemental Video 4
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Guy A. Orban "The Extraction of 3D Shape in the Visual System of Human and Nonhuman Primates" from the Annual Review of Neuroscience. Translating random lines portraying a 2D wire figure.
A Conversation with Kenneth Waltz
Kenneth Waltz's books and articles have definitively shaped the study of international relations over the past fifty years. He developed a version of “Realist” thinking on the subject that has structured research in the entire field for critics and supporters alike. On March 11 2011 at his home in New York he was interviewed by James Fearon a member of the Editorial Committee of the Annual Review of Political Science. The conversation ranged over some of his best-known arguments and the relationships between them his thinking about contemporary international politics and issues in the field that he thinks are understudied relative to their importance.
Roaming Radicals: Supplemental Video 1
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Joel M. Bowman and Benjamin C. Shepler "Roaming Radicals" from the Annual Review of Physical Chemistry. Dissociation via the conventional saddle-point.
Roaming Radicals: Supplemental Video 2
Roaming Radicals: Supplemental Video 3
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Joel M. Bowman and Benjamin C. Shepler "Roaming Radicals" from the Annual Review of Physical Chemistry. New animation showing another roaming trajectory in H2CO dissociation.
Roaming Radicals: Supplemental Video 4
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Joel M. Bowman and Benjamin C. Shepler "Roaming Radicals" from the Annual Review of Physical Chemistry. Change in structures in going from the roaming saddle point to the conventional molecular saddle point in H2CO.
Roaming Radicals: Supplemental Video 5
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Joel M. Bowman and Benjamin C. Shepler "Roaming Radicals" from the Annual Review of Physical Chemistry. OH+NO2 trajectory illustrating long-range isomerization from HOONO to HONO2.
An Interview with John M. Prausnitz
John Prausnitz Editor of the Annual Review of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering talks to journalist Anna Rascouët-Paz about his career in chemical engineering and biotechnology. He also discusses the importance of interdisciplinary study and looking beyond a single field of study to benefit from the knowledge and viewpoint of others. (Posted May 24 2011)
A Conversation with Govindjee
Dr. Govindjee Professor Emeritus of Biochemistry Biophysics and Plant Biology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign talks about his life and career with Dr. Donald Ort Professor of Plant Biology at the same university and Associate Editor of the Annual Review of Plant Biology. Dr. Ort describes Dr. Govindjee as an icon of photosynthesis and Dr. Govindjee discusses some of his most exciting discoveries on photosynthesis since he started investigating the matter with Robert Emerson in the 1950s. Dr. Govindjee also tells Dr. Ort about his beginnings at the University of Allahabad in India and explains why he doesn't have a family name.
An Interview with Sidney Verba
Nancy Rosenblum Associate Editor of the Annual Review of Political Science talks with Sidney Verba at Harvard University. In this interview Dr. Verba reflects on the lively contrasts and changes encompassed by his career which included 24 years as Director of the Harvard University Library as well as his ground-breaking work on inequalities in citizen participation in democracies.
An Interview with Elinor Ostrom
Margaret Levi Editor of the Annual Review of Political Science talks with Elinor Ostrom. In this prefatory interview Dr. Ostrom talks about her personal journey in academia not only as a woman but also as a non-traditional student who worked outside of academia before pursuing graduate work. She discusses her belief in collaboration and multi-disciplinary research as well as her research in common-pool resources and governance.
An Interview with Esther Duflo (French)
An Interview with Esther Duflo
An Interview with Roger D. Kornberg
Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation: Supplemental Video 1
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Élisabeth Guazzelli and John Hinch "Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Shown: Sedimentation of a suspension of spheres having Φ ≈ 0.3 in a test tube at low Reynolds number showing a sharp front between the clear fluid and the suspension (Credits: B. Metzger & É Guazzelli).
Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation: Supplemental Video 2
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Élisabeth Guazzelli and John Hinch "Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Sedimentation of a suspension of fibers having Φ ≈ 0.005 in a test tube at low Reynolds number showing a diffuse front and the formation of clusters of fibers that organize in downward streamers (Credits: B. Metzger & É Guazzelli).
Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation: Supplemental Video 3
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Élisabeth Guazzelli and John Hinch "Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Sedimentation of a dilute suspension of fluorescing fibers within a laser sheet showing the evolution of the streamer structure (Credits: B. Metzger J. E. Butler & É Guazzelli) (accelerated movie).
Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation: Supplemental Video 4
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Élisabeth Guazzelli and John Hinch "Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
(Left) Point-fiber simulations with bottom wall (Credits: D. Saintillan E. Darve & E.S.G. Shaqfeh) and (right) experiments (Credits: B. Metzger J. E. Butler & É Guazzelli) under similar conditions (accelerated movie).
Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation: Supplemental Video 5
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Élisabeth Guazzelli and John Hinch "Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Bottom view of a cloud of colored spheres settling in silicon oil.
Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation: Supplemental Video 6
A supplemental video from the 2011 review by Élisabeth Guazzelli and John Hinch "Fluctuations and Instability in Sedimentation" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Shown: Side and bottom view of a simulation of a sedimenting cloud of point particles in an infinite fluid. The initial number of particles is 3000 but only half of them are plotted. The timescale is the Stokes time of the cloud.