1 0 0 0 OA 官報

著者
大蔵省印刷局 [編]
出版者
日本マイクロ写真
巻号頁・発行日
vol.1930年03月15日, 1930-03-15

1 0 0 0 OA 官報

著者
大蔵省印刷局 [編]
出版者
日本マイクロ写真
巻号頁・発行日
vol.1935年10月31日, 1935-10-31

1 0 0 0 OA 官報

著者
大蔵省印刷局 [編]
出版者
日本マイクロ写真
巻号頁・発行日
vol.1933年03月09日, 1933-03-09

1 0 0 0 OA 官報

著者
大蔵省印刷局 [編]
出版者
日本マイクロ写真
巻号頁・発行日
vol.1935年07月24日, 1935-07-24

1 0 0 0 OA 官報

著者
大蔵省印刷局 [編]
出版者
日本マイクロ写真
巻号頁・発行日
vol.1932年11月11日, 1932-11-11

1 0 0 0 OA 官報

著者
大蔵省印刷局 [編]
出版者
日本マイクロ写真
巻号頁・発行日
vol.1931年11月11日, 1931-11-11
著者
神作 研一
出版者
大学共同利用機関法人 人間文化研究機構 国文学研究資料館
雑誌
日本古典籍講習会テキスト
巻号頁・発行日
no.19, pp.1-6, 2021-07-06

本テキストは、「第19回日本古典籍講習会(2021年度)」(2021/7/6-8:国文学研究資料館、国立国会図書館共催)で使用された資料の一部です。
出版者
育徳財団
巻号頁・発行日
vol.本編, 1937
著者
中島 一郎
出版者
日本神経治療学会
雑誌
神経治療学 (ISSN:09168443)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.36, no.3, pp.220-224, 2019 (Released:2019-11-25)
参考文献数
27

Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) is a glycoprotein exclusively expressed on the surface of myelin sheath in the central nervous system (CNS). Although the precise function of MOG is not yet known, it is possibly related to the maintenance of the myelin structure. Although the IgG antibodies against MOG (MOG–IgG) are investigated in various demyelinating diseases, pathogenic antibodies had not been identified in any of the diseases. Using CBA, we are now able to detect a disease–specific MOG–IgG of IgG1 subclass. The specific MOG–IgG was initially reported in a study of pediatric demyelinating diseases, followed by studies of seronegative neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD) and optic neuritis. However, since the patients with MOG–IgG have various phenotype and are relatively rare compared with multiple sclerosis (MS), it is still yet unknown what a prototypic phenotype of this disease is.
著者
池上 二良
出版者
東洋文庫
雑誌
東洋学報 = The Toyo Gakuho
巻号頁・発行日
vol.54, no.1, pp.130-131, 1971-06
著者
大坊 真洋 田山 典男 長谷川 辰雄 南幅 留男
出版者
The Society of Instrument and Control Engineers
雑誌
計測自動制御学会論文集 (ISSN:04534654)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.34, no.12, pp.1937-1944, 1998-12-31 (Released:2009-03-27)
参考文献数
25

This paper describes a new approach to the X-ray computed tomography in order to find defects of the products in manufacturing industry. Our approach which is Fast Model Reconstruction Computed Tomography (FMR-CT), involves two key ideas: 1) for forward problem, integration two dimensional sinc functions along the X-ray on the sampled two-dimentional planee model and 2) for inverse problem, solving the liner inverse problem using a truncated singular value decomposition (SVD) method.Our algorithm is favorable fast computation capability because image vector can be obtained simple formula such as pseudo-inverse matrix (constant) multiplied by projection data vector, and is also compatible with multiprocessor implementations. The combination of sampling theorem and the SVD allows smooth reconstruction image with even smaller numbers of projections, because each techniques contribute interpolation and least-squares optimization, respectively.We demonstrate the cross section image which is reconstructed real projection data sets acquired by using the micro-focused X-ray TV. Further, we discuss practical determination of truncation rank with the visualization of decomposed v-singular vector and the distribution of singular values.
著者
加藤 有子
出版者
ロシア・東欧学会
雑誌
ロシア・東欧研究 (ISSN:13486497)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.2018, no.47, pp.35-53, 2018

<p>In the interwar period, after the end of the partition, Polish literature was finally freed from national themes, and writers could focus more on language. Moreover, languages of the newly independent nations became national languages of their respective countries. Based on the understanding that artistic and social interest in languages increased during this period, this paper explores the concept of a new language in the futurist manifests (1921) and the novel <i>I Burn Paris</i> (1928), both written by Bruno Jasieński. My aim is to present <i>I Burn Paris</i>—regarded as a communist ideological novel—as a work featuring issues related to language, and to show Jasieński's consequent longing for a new universal language.</p><p>First, I discuss the recreation of the traditional Polish messianism (i.e., the suffering Poland would be reborn to save the world) by Jasieński, in one of his futurist manifests: "To the Polish Nation. Manifest of Immediate Futurization of Life" (1921). Jasieński rewrote the messianism as a socialist one, according to which the new Poland would reform the old capitalist Europe. This idea of a new world recurs in <i>I Burn Paris</i> as the concept of a new common language.</p><p>Second, based on archival research, I show <i>I Burn Paris</i> was simultaneously translated into many languages and went through many printings, through that its different versions circulated. This research also shows the role of the international communist network in circulating literary works. Thanks to the network, East European writers writing in minor languages could join the modernist movement centered in big cities in Western Europe or in Russia. This was true also for the writers writing in Yiddish, a diaspora language. Considering these two diasporic networks, I propose to reconsider the West-Eurocentric map of 20th century modernism.</p><p>Third, I present an unknown version of <i>I Burn Paris</i> with an alternative ending to the standard Polish version. My archival research shows that this version was circulated in Russian by 1934, when the socialist realist version revised by Jasieński was issued. The alternative ending is set two years after the ending of the standard version and mentions that the global revolution has already been accomplished. The novel's reception by the Polish community in the USSR suggests that the ending was added to the Russian version to protect Jasieński from the expected criticism for the initial ideologically weak ending and the lack of depiction of class struggles. Further, I suggest that Jasieński wrote the alternative ending because it involves a longing for a new common language, which was his ultimate concern in his 1921 futurism manifest to the 1930 article written in Moscow. Jasieński believed that a new world should have a new common language, understandable by everyone and which, in turn, would create a new society.</p><p>The repeated rewriting hints at Jasieński's opportunism, but in fact, it was a result of his view on artistic creation. "Every movement ends with its manifest." He viewed a novel as a performative "manifest," which he had to ceaselessly overcome to create new one.</p>
著者
山中 克己 明石 都美 宮尾 克 石原 伸哉
出版者
JAPANESE SOCIETY FOR TUBERCULOSIS
雑誌
結核 (ISSN:00229776)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.74, no.2, pp.99-105, 1999-02-15 (Released:2011-05-24)
参考文献数
20
被引用文献数
1

An Investigation by questionnaire was conducted in 1996 to know the tuberculosis (TB) status and living conditions of 50 homeless people registered as TB patients at one of Nagoya city's 16 health centers.1. All patients had one or more symptoms of TB, 64% of them showed positive TB bacilli on smear, and 35.3% of them had a previous history of TB treatment. However, only 15.2% suspected they had TB at the onset of symptoms.2. Main reasons of seeking medical treatment: 28.6% arrived by ambulance after falling down from exhaustion, 25.7% had consulted with welfare agencies after the onset of symptoms, and 20.0% had been diagnosed during the treatment of other diseases.3. When they were admitted to the hospital they had many concerns 29.0% loss of income, 19.4% living expenses, 19.4% smoking prohibition, 12.9% admission fee, and 9.7% privacy.4. They lived in the following: 42.9% construction camps, 20.0% parks or streets, 17.1% single room occupancy hotels, 17.1% daily or monthly paid apartments, and 11.4% sauna baths.5. Past medical histories of the subjects included 40.6% injuries by labor accidents, and 25.0% stomach ulcers. Current diseases were 15.6% mental diseases, 15.6% liver diseases, 15.6% diabetes mellitus, and 9.4% alcoholic dependance. Seventy percent of them consumed alcohol daily (average pure ethanol 125m1 per day).6. From the results outlined above, the following proposals relating to TB control of the homeless should be considered.1) Educating the homeless as to the need for a health check when TB symptoms are present.2) Opening a clinic for the homeless for easy access to consultation on TB.3) Directly observed therapy, short-course, for TB in the homeless.4) Health examination of the employees of single-room occupancy hotels and sauna baths which are used frequently by the homeless.5) A fundamental countermeasure to deal with alcoholic dependancy among the homeless.