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Outputs (102)

Statistical Characterisation of Fluvial Sand Bodies: Implications for Complex Reservoir Models (2019)
Presentation / Conference Contribution
Franzel, M., Jones, S., Jermyn, I., Allen, M., & McCaffrey, K. (2019). Statistical Characterisation of Fluvial Sand Bodies: Implications for Complex Reservoir Models. . https://doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201902215

The three-dimensional geometry of fluvial channel sand bodies has received considerably less attention than their internal sedimentology, despite the importance of sandstone body geometry for subsurface reservoir modelling. The aspect ratio (width/th... Read More about Statistical Characterisation of Fluvial Sand Bodies: Implications for Complex Reservoir Models.

Rijnvos Portrait (2019)
Exhibition / Performance
Snijders, J., Rijnvos, R., Ensemble, I., & Barker-Mill, A. Rijnvos Portrait. [Performance]. Performed at Amsterdam (NL). 22 September 2019. (Unpublished)

A Council at War: Whickham Urban District Council 1939-45 (2019)
Journal Article
Pears, R. (2019). A Council at War: Whickham Urban District Council 1939-45. Northern History, 56(1-2), 117-137. https://doi.org/10.1080/0078172x.2019.1660065

This article will examine the responses to the dangers of the Second World War by a local authority in north-east England, Whickham Urban District Council. Councillors and officials received guidance from central Government, Durham County Council and... Read More about A Council at War: Whickham Urban District Council 1939-45.

Old French and new money: Jews and the aesthetics of the Old Regime in transnational perspective, c.1860–1910 (2019)
Journal Article
Stammers, T. (2019). Old French and new money: Jews and the aesthetics of the Old Regime in transnational perspective, c.1860–1910. Journal of Modern Jewish Studies, 18(4), 489-512. https://doi.org/10.1080/14725886.2019.1658945

At the dawn of the twentieth century, styles synonymous with the French Old Regime were hailed as the epitome of good taste. French fashions from the reigns of Louis XIV, Louis XV, and Louis XVI were an international luxury brand, the proliferation o... Read More about Old French and new money: Jews and the aesthetics of the Old Regime in transnational perspective, c.1860–1910.

Family, lineage and dynasty in the late medieval city: Re-thinking the English evidence (2019)
Journal Article
Liddy, C. (2020). Family, lineage and dynasty in the late medieval city: Re-thinking the English evidence. Urban History, 47(4), 648-670. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0963926819000671

Ever since the publication in 1948 of Sylvia Thrupp's seminal book, The Merchant Class of Medieval London, successive generations of historians of English cities have advanced two central claims about the distinctiveness of the English urban landscap... Read More about Family, lineage and dynasty in the late medieval city: Re-thinking the English evidence.

Laterality and (in)visibility in emotional face perception: Manipulations in spatial frequency content (2019)
Journal Article
Hausmann, M., Innes, B., Birch, Y., & Kentridge, R. (2021). Laterality and (in)visibility in emotional face perception: Manipulations in spatial frequency content. Emotion, 21(1), 175-183. https://doi.org/10.1037/emo0000648

It is widely agreed that hemispheric asymmetries in emotional face perception exist. However, the mechanisms underlying this lateralization are not fully understood. In the present study, we tested whether (a) these asymmetries are driven by the low... Read More about Laterality and (in)visibility in emotional face perception: Manipulations in spatial frequency content.

Aesthetic Appreciation and Spanish Art: Insights from Eye-Tracking (2019)
Journal Article
Bailey-Ross, C., Beresford, A., Smith, D., & Warwick, C. (2019). Aesthetic Appreciation and Spanish Art: Insights from Eye-Tracking. Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, 34(Supplement 1), i17-i35. https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqz027

Eye-tracking—the process of capturing and measuring human eye movement—is becoming an increasingly prevalent tool in the cultural heritage sector to understand visual processing and audience behaviours. Yet, most applications to date have focused on... Read More about Aesthetic Appreciation and Spanish Art: Insights from Eye-Tracking.

Wenceslas looks out: monarchy, locality, and the symbolism of power in fourteenth-century Bavaria (2019)
Journal Article
Scales, L. (2019). Wenceslas looks out: monarchy, locality, and the symbolism of power in fourteenth-century Bavaria. Central European History, 52(2), 179-210. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0008938919000141

This article reassesses the reputation enjoyed by Charles IV of Luxemburg, emperor and king of Bohemia (r. 1346/1347–1378), as the author of a program aimed at projecting his monarchy via visual media. Current scholarship, which stresses the centrall... Read More about Wenceslas looks out: monarchy, locality, and the symbolism of power in fourteenth-century Bavaria.

Law and Architecture in Early Modern Durham (2019)
Book Chapter
Green, A. (2019). Law and Architecture in Early Modern Durham. In M. Lobban, J. Begatio, & A. Green (Eds.), Law, Lawyers and Litigants in Early Modern England: Essays in Memory of Christopher W. Brooks (265-291). Cambridge University Press

Exploring the semantic content of unsupervised graph embeddings: an empirical study (2019)
Journal Article
Bonner, S., Kureshi, I., Brennan, J., Theodoropoulos, G., McGough, S., & Obara, B. (2019). Exploring the semantic content of unsupervised graph embeddings: an empirical study. Data Science and Engineering, 4(3), 269-289. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41019-019-0097-5

Graph embeddings have become a key and widely used technique within the field of graph mining, proving to be successful across a broad range of domains including social, citation, transportation and biological. Unsupervised graph embedding techniques... Read More about Exploring the semantic content of unsupervised graph embeddings: an empirical study.

“You can change your noses, but you can’t change your Moses”: Olfactory Aesthetics and the Jewish “Race” (2019)
Journal Article
Roth, Z. (2019). “You can change your noses, but you can’t change your Moses”: Olfactory Aesthetics and the Jewish “Race”. Esprit Créateur, 59(2), 72-87. https://doi.org/10.1353/esp.2019.0017

This article shifts the analysis of the ‘Jewish’ nose away from its visual significance to its olfactory capacity. It develops the notion of an olfactory aesthetics as a way of becoming attuned to the role smell plays in the interpretation of racial... Read More about “You can change your noses, but you can’t change your Moses”: Olfactory Aesthetics and the Jewish “Race”.