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In this translation of the groundbreaking Le Chant Intime,
internationally renowned baritone Francois Le Roux, in conversation
with journalist Romain Raynaldy, presents a master class on French
art song, with a thorough analysis of 60 selected songs that
deviate from the traditionally narrow repertoire of the melodie
genre. Taking an approach that goes far beyond the typical limiting
conventions, Le Roux and Raynaldy adhere to composer Francis
Poulenc's principle that a song should always be "a love affair,
not an arranged marriage." Neither theoretical nor purely academic,
this guide instills in its readers a deep appreciation for the
historical and artistic context of each piece by enriching each
analysis with the full text of the lyrical poem and several musical
examples, as well as fascinating details of historic premieres,
concert halls, singers and poets. Paired with intensive and
practical notes related to the nuances of melody and vocal
delivery, each analysis provides an essential reference for
performers and listeners alike. The translation is due to the
expertise of musicologist and pianist Sylvia Kahan, Professor of
Music at the Graduate Center and College of Staten Island, CUNY.
Agricultural systems are no longer evaluated solely on the basis of
the food they provide, but also on their capacity to limit impacts
on the environment, such as soil conservation, water quality and
biodiversity conservation, as well as their contribution to
mitigating and adapting to climate change. In order to cope with
these multiple service functions, they must internalize the costs
and benefits of their environmental impact. Payments for ecosystem
services are hoped to encourage and promote sustainable practices
via financial incentives. The authors show that while the principle
is straightforward, the practice is much more complicated. Whereas
scenic beauty and protection of water sources provide benefits to
the local population, carbon sequestration and biodiversity
conservation can be considered international public goods,
rendering potential payment schemes more complex. Few examples
exist where national or international bodies have been able to set
up viable mechanisms that compensate agricultural systems for the
environmental services they provide. However this book provides
several examples of successful programs, and aims to transfer them
to other regions of the world. The authors show that a product can
be sold if it is clearly quantified, there exists a means to
determine the service's values, and there is a willing buyer. The
first two sections of the book present methodological issues
related to the quantification and marketing of ecosystem services
from agriculture, including agroforestry. The third and final
section presents case studies of practical payments for ecosystem
services and experiences in Central and South America, and draws
some lessons learnt for effective and sustainable development of
ecosystem services compensation mechanisms.
First published in English in 1970, the first chapter of the book
is concerned with conditioned reactions. Jean Francois le Ny
discusses ways in which conditioned reactions are acquired and the
laws governing their function. The second contributor, Gerard de
Montpellier, looks at different types of learning. The varying
processes involved in both animal and human learning are
considered, together with some general factors and mechanisms of
learning. The third section of the book by Genevieve Oleron deals
with the phenomenon of transfer. Among the topics included are the
determination of transfer effects, transfer in perceptual-motor
activities and explanations of transfer. In the final chapter,
Cesar Flores examines memory, forgetting and reminiscence. The
discussion covers methodology, the influence of material, the role
of practice, the part played by attitudes, motivation and emotive
reactions in the memory process, as well as the importance of
organisation of memory tasks on the part of the subject.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
An increase in major natural disasters-and the growing number of
damaging events involving gas, electric, water, and other
utilities-has led to heightened concerns about utility operations
and public safety. Due to today's complex, compliance-based
environment, utility managers and planners often find it difficult
to plan for the action needed to help ensure organization-wide
resilience and meet consumer expectations during these incidents.
Emergency Planning Guide for Utilities, Second Edition offers a
working guide that presents new and field-tested approaches to plan
development, training, exercising, and emergency program
management. The book will help utility planners, trainers, and
responders-as well as their vendors and suppliers-to more
effectively prepare for damaging events and improve the level of
the utility's resilience. It also focuses on planning needed in the
National Incident Management System and ICS environment that many
utilities are embracing going forward. In doing so, utilities will
be able to improve the customer experience while reducing the
impact that damaging events have on the utility's infrastructure,
people, and resources.
Agricultural systems are no longer evaluated solely on the basis
of the food they provide, but also on their capacity to limit
impacts on the environment, such as soil conservation, water
quality and biodiversity conservation, as well as their
contribution to mitigating and adapting to climate change. In order
to cope with these multiple service functions, they must
internalize the costs and benefits of their environmental impact.
Payments for ecosystem services are hoped to encourage and promote
sustainable practices via financial incentives.
The authors show that while the principle is straightforward,
the practice is much more complicated. Whereas scenic beauty and
protection of water sources provide benefits to the local
population, carbon sequestration and biodiversity conservation can
be considered international public goods, rendering potential
payment schemes more complex. Few examples exist where national or
international bodies have been able to set up viable mechanisms
that compensate agricultural systems for the environmental services
they provide. However this book provides several examples of
successful programs, and aims to transfer them to other regions of
the world. The authors show that a product can be sold if it is
clearly quantified, there exists a means to determine the service's
values, and there is a willing buyer.
The first two sections of the book present methodological issues
related to the quantification and marketing of ecosystem services
from agriculture, including agroforestry. The third and final
section presents case studies of practical payments for ecosystem
services and experiences in Central and South America, and draws
some lessons learnt for effective and sustainable development of
ecosystem services compensation mechanisms.
First published in English in 1970, the first chapter of the
book is concerned with conditioned reactions. Jean Francois le Ny
discusses ways in which conditioned reactions are acquired and the
laws governing their function.
The second contributor, Gerard de Montpellier, looks at
different types of learning. The varying processes involved in both
animal and human learning are considered, together with some
general factors and mechanisms of learning. The third section of
the book by Genevieve Oleron deals with the phenomenon of transfer.
Among the topics included are the determination of transfer
effects, transfer in perceptual-motor activities and explanations
of transfer. In the final chapter, Cesar Flores examines memory,
forgetting and reminiscence. The discussion covers methodology, the
influence of material, the role of practice, the part played by
attitudes, motivation and emotive reactions in the memory process,
as well as the importance of organisation of memory tasks on the
part of the subject."
Lagom is a uniquely Swedish term that doesn't have an English
equivalent (Which I find to be pretty common, the Swedish language
has denser words that the English language usually uses two or
three words to describe.) Not only does it not translate perfectly
but its just a very Swedish idea, or feeling. A popular
etymological translation is "around the team" meaning enough food
or drink for everyone at the table, this translation is said to go
back to Viking times. Lagom is "Just enough," "Not too much or too
little," "Just right," "Enough to go around," "Fair share." It
indicates balance. Lagom doesn't have the negative connotation of
"sufficient" nor does it claim perfection SHARE LAGOM contains 50
inspired artworks carefully selected amongst the best up-and-coming
first time published artists. Following the success of SHARE Vol. 1
&2 this third installment combines the winning concept of high
quality prints on perforated pages with the trendy theme of Lagom.
Each featured artist presents a single piece of work along with
companion text in a two page format. The specially designed LAGOM
size book is optimized for its intended purpose: every page's
perforation encourages readers to pull them as individual works of
art. 1 A chance to offer an elegant, modern volume which transforms
the pages into high quality art prints ready for hanging. 2 An
original way to experience and share the culture and art of
Scandinavia, the main inspiration of Lagom, within and beyond the
borders of publishing. 3 The first of the SHARE series as a special
edition. Half price, smaller, more flexible, but keep the high
quality of the content and the paper. 4 Lagom is the new Hugge.
This book offers a rigorous and self-contained presentation of
stochastic integration and stochastic calculus within the general
framework of continuous semimartingales. The main tools of
stochastic calculus, including Ito's formula, the optional stopping
theorem and Girsanov's theorem, are treated in detail alongside
many illustrative examples. The book also contains an introduction
to Markov processes, with applications to solutions of stochastic
differential equations and to connections between Brownian motion
and partial differential equations. The theory of local times of
semimartingales is discussed in the last chapter. Since its
invention by Ito, stochastic calculus has proven to be one of the
most important techniques of modern probability theory, and has
been used in the most recent theoretical advances as well as in
applications to other fields such as mathematical finance. Brownian
Motion, Martingales, and Stochastic Calculus provides a strong
theoretical background to the reader interested in such
developments. Beginning graduate or advanced undergraduate students
will benefit from this detailed approach to an essential area of
probability theory. The emphasis is on concise and efficient
presentation, without any concession to mathematical rigor. The
material has been taught by the author for several years in
graduate courses at two of the most prestigious French
universities. The fact that proofs are given with full details
makes the book particularly suitable for self-study. The numerous
exercises help the reader to get acquainted with the tools of
stochastic calculus.
Sticky Pictures examines and celebrates the evolving work of
Montreal-based artist Janet Werner. In her paintings, Werner builds
a constellation of spatial and figurative explorations drawn from
fashion magazines and art history to create collage-like composite
figures that slip easily between articulations of beauty, gender,
psychology and emotion. Werner's painterly operations are both
unsettling and seductive, revealing the conditions of perception
and looking as passageways to understanding the intensity of the
world at hand. Werner's unique combination of abstraction,
fictional portraiture, and the rich history of painting are
explored in Sticky Pictures through texts by art and media
historians, as well as an interview with the artist. Janet Werner's
work has been featured in international solo exhibitions from New
York to Los Angeles and as far away as Cape Town. Her work was
included in the Prague Biennale in 2003 and is featured in the
collections of the Musee national des beaux-arts du Quebec, Musee
d'art contemporain in Montreal, The Art Gallery of Ontario in
Toronto, Winnipeg Art Gallery, the Canadian Embassy in Berlin, the
University of Lethbridge, Owens Art Gallery in Sackville, the
Mendel Art Gallery in Saskatoon, Dunlop Art Gallery in Regina,
McEvoy Foundation for the Arts in San Francisco, and numerous
private and corporate collections. Werner lives and works in
Montreal.
The text includes a presentation of the measure-valued branching
processes also called superprocesses and of their basic properties.
In the important quadratic branching case, the path-valued process
known as the Brownian snake is used to give a concrete and powerful
representation of superprocesses. This representation is applied to
several connections with a class of semilinear partial differential
equations. On the one hand, these connections give insight into
properties of superprocesses. On the other hand, the probabilistic
point of view sometimes leads to new analytic results, concerning
for instance the trace classification of positive solutions in a
smooth domain. An important tool is the analysis of random trees
coded by linear Brownian motion. This includes the so-called
continuum random tree and leads to the fractal random measure known
as ISE, which has appeared recently in several limit theorems for
models of statistical mechanics. This book is intended for
postgraduate students and researchers in probability theory. It
will also be of interest to mathematical physicists or specialists
of PDE who want to learn about probabilistic methods. No
prerequisites are assumed except for some familiarity with Brownian
motion and the basic facts of the theory of stochastic processes.
Although the text includes no new results, simplified versions of
existing proofs are provided in several instances.
CONTENTS: M.I. Freidlin: Semi-linear PDE's and limit theorems for
large deviations.- J.F. Le Gall: Some properties of planar Brownian
motion.
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