2024-03-28T10:09:32Z
http://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/do/oai/
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1000
2011-04-12T03:47:01Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Introduction to the 2008 Conference Proceedings – “Poesía, Baile y Canción: The Politics, Implications, and Future of Chicana/os’ Cultural Production”
Castañeda, Mari, , Editor
Calderón-Zaks, Michael, , Co-Editor
Garcia, Gilberto, , Co-Editor
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T07:30:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Ethnic Studies
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Introduction</strong></p>
<p>The online publication of the proceedings for the 2008 conference held Austin, Tejas marks the beginning of a new era for the NACCS! Rather than using precious tree resources to print the proceedings, the National Board decided at the mid-year meeting before the Austin conference to publish the proceedings electronically. Not only would this ensure that all future conference proceedings would be available to members from any computer terminal at any time, but new members would be able to review the intellectual and activist trajectory of the association through e-proceedings. In addition, as digital media and information communication technology become critically important for online and offline participation in our communities and academic circles, the National Board believed NACCS needed to be at the forefront of the expanding landscape of electronic engagement. The Editorial Board for the 2008 Proceedings is honored to have been selected to take the lead of the first ever online publication of NACCS proceedings. These peer-reviewed proceedings are very important because they are a selected group of papers that act as a public record and snapshot of the various issues, case studies, and issues that NACCS members were engaging within their conference presentations. <em>Read complete Introduction.</em></p>
<p><strong>Table of Content:</strong></p>
<p>Juan Mora-Torres, “La Primavera del Inmigrante”: Media and Voice in the Making of Chicago’s Immigrant Rights’ Movement, 2005-2006"</p>
<p>Alvaro Huerta, "Looking Beyond “Mow, Blow and Go”: A Case Study of Mexican Immigrant Gardeners in Los Angeles"</p>
<p>Joaquín Castañeda, "The Oak Park Redevelopment Plan: Housing Policy Implications for a Community Undergoing Early Stage Gentrification"</p>
<p>Ann Marie Leimer, "Chicana Photography: The Power of Place"</p>
<p>Amanda Maria Morrison, "Too Mex for the Masses: Bringing Mexican Regional Music to Market"</p>
<p>Virginia Grise and Irma Mayorga, "Power to the Panza: The Politics of Panza Positive Cultural Production, a Performance"</p>
<p>Elizabeth Kessler, "Latinas in the Kitchen: The Rhetoric of Food and Desire"</p>
<p>Rebecca Romo, "Blaxican Identity: An Exploratory Study of Blacks/Chicanas/os in California"</p>
<p>Sandra K. Soto, "Transnational Knowledge Projects and Failing Racial Etiquette"</p>
<p>Alejandro Wolbert Pérez, “María y revolución, eso es lo que ocupa mi corazón”: Love and Liberation in the Prison Writings of Ricardo Flores Magón"</p>
<p>Selfa Chew, "Re-imagining Collectivities: The Mexican Japanese during World War II"</p>
<p>Daisy Salazar, "Eusebio Chacón’s Statist Narratives of Nuevo México"</p>
<p>Paula Straile-Costa, "Indigenous Ecology and Chicanada Coalition Building in the dramatic works of Cherríe Moraga: “Living Models” for a Sustainable Future"</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/1
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1001
2011-04-12T03:48:53Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
“La Primavera del Inmigrante”: Media and Voice in the Making of Chicago’s Immigrant Rights’ Movement, 2005-2006
Mora-Torres, Juan
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T08:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>As the most draconian legislative bill in modern immigration history, the Sensenbrenner Bill (H.R. 4437) aimed to criminalize the eleven million people living in this country without legal documents. What was intended to be the last nail on the “illegal alien” coffin instead generated a political blowback—it set in motion mass protests on a scale which had no parallel in American history. What began in Chicago on March 10, 2006 became contagious, spreading to the rest of the country at a speed that caught all by surprise. Millions participated in dozens of events in what came to be known as “la primavera del inmigrante.” This paper examines the relationship between media, especially Spanish-language radio, and voice (the mass mobilizations) in Chicago’s two earliest marches. On July 1, 2005 50,000 people marched to protest the Minuteman Project while the March 10 (2006) event was the first national mass action against the Sensenbrenner Bill. Using video, photographs, press clippings and field notes, I argue in this research project that the Spanish language media played a crucial role in both mobilizations, not only in promoting the events but also as main forum where people, mainly immigrants, waged their many concerns regarding all issues related to immigration. On the other hand, people (regardless of legal status) came out by the thousands because the Sensenbrenner Bill affected them in one way or another.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/2
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1005
2011-04-21T21:18:55Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Too Mex for the Masses: Bringing Mexican Regional Music to Market
Morrison, Amanda Maria
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T12:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Ethnic Studies
Music
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>This article explores the exclusion of Mexican regional music from major marketing and promotional efforts within the domestic music industry, and what that elision reveals about dominant and competing claims on “Latino” ethnic identity. Despite being the bestselling Latin music genre in the U.S., regional Mexican music receives the least development backing and attracts the fewest corporate sponsors. Unlike the suave salseros and Latin-pop divas of previous “Latin booms,” no Mexican regional artist, save for Selena, has ever been primed for mainstream “crossover” success. I argue that what is at stake in promotion of various Latin genres is the construction and reification of a desirable, market-friendly image of Latinidad in the mainstream cultural imagination, one rooted in hegemonic “tropicalist” tropes of Latinos as sensual and exotic, “hot and spicy,” sentimental and sexy. These stereotypes are reinforced by the physical location of the Latin recording and entertainment industries in Miami, where Mexican artists are handled by executives more attuned to salsa-inflected or overtly Caribbean forms of music like son, merengue, cumbia, and reggaetón—styles favored more commonly by East Coast Latinos who are primarily of Puerto Rican, Dominican, Cuban, and Colombian descent. As a result, Mexicanos and Chicanos are positioned on the lowest rungs of a pan-Latino cultural hierarchy.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/12
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1002
2011-04-22T00:28:18Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Looking Beyond “Mow, Blow and Go”: A Case Study of Mexican Immigrant Gardeners in Los Angeles
Huerta, Alvaro
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T09:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Ethnic Studies
Race and Ethnicity
Urban Studies and Planning
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>Recent research on Mexican immigrants focuses on the working conditions of farm workers, garment workers, janitors and day laborers. This coincides with successful efforts by organized labor and immigrant advocacy groups to organize these marginalized workforces. Little attention, however, has been given to Mexican paid gardeners. As part of the household service economy, paid gardeners represent a difficult labor sector to organize and research because they typically operate as independent contractors in the informal economy. This paper seeks to provide a more holistic picture of this dynamic, informal workforce. Drawing primarily upon ethnographic techniques, the paper documents how this informal sector operates and its social organization. Based on research conducted in Los Angeles, the paper also demonstrates how a select group of self-employed, Mexican gardeners function as petty-entrepreneurs, benefiting financially and socially in the informal economy by successfully utilizing their social capital and social networks.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/3
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1007
2011-04-21T21:21:01Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Latinas in the Kitchen: The Rhetoric of Food and Desire
Kessler, Elizabeth
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T14:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Ethnic Studies
Gender and Sexuality
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>Even though the commodification of women by linking them erotically to food has been accepted for decades and used by women themselves to manipulate men and their desires, this has, in turn, led to behavioral and psychological problems. Using feminist as well as psychoanalytical criticism and theory by authors such as Nancy Chodorow, Nydia Garcia-Preto, Elspeth Probyn, Sigmund Freud, and others, “Latinas in the Kitchen: The Rhetoric of Food and Desire” explores how addiction to food and sex leads to unsuitable ways to satisfy one’s needs. Beginning with untreated emotional abuse that leads to inappropriate behavior between a father and daughter and that was caused by emotional abandonment by the daughter’s mother, readers can begin to develop an image of why a child grows into a woman who has an insatiable need for both sex and food. And even if a woman recognizes that she has a problem, failure to seek help from a psychiatrist can lead to a life of misery and an inability to understand why she behaves the way she does. This article argues that Lourdes Puentes, the major character in Christina Garcia’s novel Dreaming in Cuban, employs dysfunctional eating habits as sublimation of her sexual desire, and the text reveals rhetoric associated with the desire for both food and sex to disguise Lourdes Puentes’s sexual repression and her inability to solve personal problems.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/10
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1004
2011-04-21T21:28:42Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Chicana Photography: The Power of Place
Leimer, Ann Marie
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T11:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Ethnic Studies
Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Ethnicity in Communication
Other Film and Media Studies
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>The concern with space, location, place, and geographic site has received heightened attention from artists and theorists from the 1960s onward. For critics and creators engaged with these concepts, the analysis of the interaction between of the processes of spatialization, identity formation, and memory has emerged as an important aspect of critical discourse. Lucy Lippard defines space as a physical site, understood as landscape or nature, while place implies intimacy, a familiarity with a certain geographic location. For Lippard, human interaction and, most importantly, the infusion of memory into space or a geographic site produces place. Michel de Certeau proposes that everyday practices create a text or unseen pathway in the physical nvironment. People transform space into place through interaction in their daily lived locale. Contemporary Chicana photographers Laura Aguilar, Kathy Vargas, and Delilah Montoya have produced extensive bodies of work during the past four decades that investigate the body, land, memory, and the issues of identity formation in relationship to location. The essay considers each artist in turn and first provides a general overview of each photographer’s art production. The essay then uses Lippard and Certeau’s concepts of space and place to analyze selected images from Aguilar’s <em>Stillness</em> (1999), Motion (1999), and <em>Center</em> (2001), Vargas’ My Alamo (1995), and Delilah Montoya’s <em>Sed: The Trail of Thirst</em> (2004). The work excavates the multiple meanings of the locations and bodies portrayed in these works, and demonstrates how the depiction of geographic space in these artists’ work becomes an intimate, personal site where the construction of places and identities occur.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/13
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1003
2011-04-21T20:38:12Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
The Oak Park Redevelopment Plan: Housing Policy Implications for a Community Undergoing Early Stage Gentrification
Castañeda, Joaquin
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T10:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Civic and Community Engagement
Ethnic Studies
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>With the reemerging discussion of gentrification in the urban landscape, an exploratory case study of the Oak Park Redevelopment Plan in Sacramento, CA, was conducted in order to better understand the community’s gentrifying characteristics and the implications once the redevelopment goals are met. In addition, a Conceptual Framework [CF] was formulated in order to unpack the components and processes of gentrification. The findings suggest that the Sacramento Housing and Redevelopment Agency’s redevelopment polices act as a catalyst for gentrification that exclusively favors the in-migration of middle- and upper-income residents into the area at the expense of lower-income residents. These implications include the displacement of low-income renter-residents, changes to a neighborhood’s socio-economic and cultural characteristics, and the defacto exclusion of low-income residents as they will never be able to afford to live in the gentrified Oak Park neighborhood.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/14
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1006
2011-04-21T21:19:43Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Power to the Panza: The Politics of Panza Positive Cultural Production, a Performance
Grise, Virgina
Mayorga, Irma
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T13:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Ethnic Studies
Race and Ethnicity
Theatre and Performance Studies
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p><em>The Panza Monologues</em> is a solo performance piece both written by Virginia Grise and Irma Mayorga and also composed from contributions by Chicanas in San Antonio, TX gathered by Grise and Mayorga. In live production of the piece, Grise is the solo actor and Mayorga serves as director, dramaturge, and designer. As a whole, the play focuses on stories that hinge on the metaphor of “la panza” to articulate and describe the multiple conditions of Chicanas’ lives in terms of their physical, social, racial, and class dimensions. The piece has been performed in various locations from its inception in 2004 to the present. For their NACCS 2008 Annual Conference presentation, Grise and Mayorga composed a “performative conversation” for a session that offered (1) the genealogy of the piece’s development, (2) the differences between Grise and Mayorga’s theatrical training and work as activists, which in turn yields their aesthetic and Chicana feminist strategies employed in the performance, (3) an articulation of the play’s driving ideas and tenets in relation to Chicana/o cultural production, the socio-political conditions in San Antonio, TX, and feminist art practices, and (4) select monologues from <em>The Panza Monologues</em> script presented between Grise and Mayorga’s discussion of Chicana cultural expressions. This format sought to compose a presentation that experimented with the possibilities of discussing cultural production in the academic conference setting. Therefore this essay utilizes a “script” format that attempts to capture the dialogical style of Grise and Mayorga’s presentation. The essay culminates with a manifesto for “Panza Positive Cultural Production” that enumerates Grise and Mayorga’s observations and recommendations for producing Chicana/o teatro that is socially responsible and attentive to Chicana artists, Chicana/o peoples, and practice within Chicana/o cultural organizations.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/11
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1010
2011-04-21T21:23:38Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
“María y revolución, eso es lo que ocupa mi corazón”: Love and Liberation in the Prison Writings of Ricardo Flores Magón
Wolbert Pérez, Alejandro
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T17:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Politics and Social Change
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>Over a century ago Ricardo and Enrique Flores Magón spoke out against the injustices of Porfirio Díaz’ regime through their writings in the leftist paper Regeneración and their work organizing under the banner of the Partido Liberal Mexicano (PLM); first in Mexico, and later while exiled in the United States, where Ricardo was repeatedly imprisoned for his attempts to ferment revolution. Documented in published essays in Partido papers, magonista ideology, anarchist and internationalist in nature, explicitly critiqued capitalism and the limitations of the nation-state in early 20th century Mexico. Just as important as these printed works for public dissemination, I believe, is the private correspondence Flores Magón wrote while incarcerated, in particular his exchanges with María Brousse de Talavera from the period 1908-09. Intense and powerfully poetic, his letters from the eve of the Mexican Revolution reveal him to be a romantic as much as a revolutionary and as such they shift, often with startling abruptness, from declarations of his love for Talavera to issues related to the Partido such as the campaign to free him and his companions. In this essay I argue that their letters allow us to examine what Chela Sandoval, in Methodology of the Oppressed, terms “amor en Aztlán,” a potentially decolonizing space wherein one is able to understand and actualize love as a liberatory force (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2000: 146). For, as Sandoval writes “it is love that can access and guide our theoretical and political ‘movidas’—revolutionary maneuvers toward decolonized being” (141). In that emotional space that is love, in that imaginary space that is Aztlán, what possibilities and potentials did Flores Magón and Talavera create? How did this decolonizing love sustain them? And what can we learn, one hundred years later, from the words and actions of rebels, dreamers, and lovers?</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/7
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1009
2011-04-21T21:22:27Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Transnational Knowledge Projects and Failing Racial Etiquette
Soto, Sandra
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T16:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Ethnic Studies
Gender and Sexuality
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>This essay calls upon Chicana/o Studies scholars to interrogate some of the assumptions underwriting the transnational turn. Chief among these is the implicit supposition that in order to produce transnational scholarship, one simply (but necessarily) must cross a national border. On the one hand, in taking the concept “transnational” far too literally, this simplistic assumption ignores far more substantive and compelling questions about transnational capitalism’s affects on subjectivity, desire, and resistance. On the other hand, the (sole) crossing-borders criterion suggests that those scholars who work on racial formations within the U.S. (Chicana/o Studies scholars, for instance) have no responsibility to think and work transnationally. Why should people, culture, racializations, literatures, produced within the U.S. not be studied within the larger context of transnational capitalism? Soto also critiques the fetishization of international difference and visibility politics. Queer theory, she argues, provides a helpful set of tools for negotiating these challenges of the transnational turn. Queer theory’s healthy poststructuralist skepticism of empiricism and positivism—together with its commitment to social justice and keen awareness of the power differentials within knowledge production—makes it poised to help us out of the temptation to simply shine a light on the global south.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/8
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1008
2011-04-21T21:21:46Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Blaxican Identity: An Exploratory Study of Blacks/Chicanas/os in California
Romo, Rebecca
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T15:00:00Z
African American Studies
Chicana/o Studies
Ethnic Studies
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>This paper explores the racial/ethnic identities of multiracial Black-Mexicans or ‘Blaxicans.’ In- depth interviews with 12 Blaxican individuals in California reveal how they negotiate distinct cultural systems to accomplish multiracial identities. I argue that choosing, accomplishing, and asserting a Blaxican identity challenges the dominant monoracial discourse in the United States, in particular among African American and Chicana/o communities. That is, Blaxican respondents are held accountable by African Americans and Chicanas/os/Mexicans to monoracial notions of ‘authenticity.’ The process whereby Blaxicans move between these monoracial spaces to create multiracial identities illustrates crucial aspects of the social construction of race/ethnicity in the United States.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/9
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1012
2011-04-21T21:24:56Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Eusebio Chacón’s Statist Narratives of Nuevo México
Salazar, Daisy
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T19:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Race and Ethnicity
Spanish Literature
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>The 1890s in New Mexico were a time of considerable political, cultural, and social upheaval as the question of statehood – which would remain unresolved until 1912 – roiled the population. In 1892 Eusebio Chacón’s two novellas, <em>El Hijo de la Tempestad</em> and <em>Tras la Tormenta la Calma</em>, appeared in “El Boletín Popular,” one of Northern New Mexico’s largest Spanish-language newspapers. “El Boletín Popular’s” positive stance towards statehood offers a political lens through which we might read Chacón’s fiction as a proactive instantiation of nuevomexicano cultural tradition. In his introductions to the novellas Chacón denies any Anglo literary influence, suggesting not only the presence of external social and political forces pressing upon the creation of his literature, but, most importantly, highlighting his desire to transcend literatura recreativa (literature as entertainment). His two novellas manifest a cultural politics from which the issue of New Mexican statehood becomes challenged and contested.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/5
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1011
2011-04-21T21:24:14Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Re-imagining Collectivities: The Mexican Japanese during World War II
Chew, Selfa
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T18:00:00Z
Asian American Studies
Asian History
Chicana/o Studies
Ethnic Studies
Race and Ethnicity
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>The removal from the United States/Mexico borderlands of persons of Japanese descent during World War II resulted in great losses which, until now, have not been acknowledged by the Mexican or the United States government. Although their forced relocation is an event of great significance in the relations of the two countries involved in their displacement, the official narratives deny any deep impact suffered by Japanese Mexicans. However, the question of their uprooting is inextricably linked to the loss of civil rights and the Mexican government’s compliance with the United States’ requirement to neutralize internal enemies. This paper explores the experience of the Japanese Mexican community during World War II through the poetry of Martin Otsuka as well as through my literary intervention in the narrative of the Japanese diaspora. Inspection of the research and creative writing process involved in narrating the Mexican Japanese relocation throws light on the reconfiguration of identities that diasporic communities forge horizontally. My research and perspective as a Chinese Mexican writer allows me to argue that geographical displacement made possible the creation of new identities and solidarities during World War II that superseded, at times, nationalist affiliations.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/6
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1013
2011-04-21T21:25:32Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Indigenous Ecology and Chicanada Coalition Building in the dramatic works of Cherríe Moraga: “Living Models” for a Sustainable Future
Straile-Costa, Paula
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T20:00:00Z
Chicana/o Studies
Race and Ethnicity
Theatre and Performance Studies
<p><strong>Abstract:</strong></p>
<p>This study focuses on three recent dramatic works by Cherríe Moraga’s written in the same period as her essay and poetry collection, <em>The Last Generation</em>. <em>Heroes and Saints</em>, <em>Watsonville: Some Place Not Here</em>, and <em>Circle in the Dirt: El Pueblo de East Palo Alto</em> draw from indigenous ecology and the historical archive of Chicano struggle that provide models for a sustainable future she envisions. The author shifts from poetry and essay - the lyrical, reflective mode of self-inquiry and expression for which she is so well known – to a collective dramatic dialogue allowing her to represent the diversity of perspectives that have always existed within and around Chicano communities. Through this plurality she is able to give voice to marginalized perspectives and exhibit the ingeniousness and courage behind a long tradition of Chicano coalition building that will be necessary for global alliances of collective resistance. As Chicano activist theater originated with Luis Valdez’s <em>Teatro Campesino</em> associated with United Farmer Workers Union and later with the Chicano Movement, Moraga’s plays are situated within the tradition of Chicano environmental political struggle. These works are infused with the author’s interpretation of an indigenous ecology that conflates her interlaced political discourses on race, sexuality, gender, community, nationalism, and art with a holistic view of the earth. Contributing to a tradition of Chicano environmental discourse and the global indigenous struggle for sovereignty, her work brings together and challenges the assumptions of ecocriticism, ecofeminism and American environmental and naturalist writing particularly in terms of race and class. In these works, Moraga prioritizes the wellbeing of those who dwell in or work the land as opposed to “pristine” open spaces perceived as untouched by human hands.</p>
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/4
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:naccs-1014
2011-03-30T19:57:48Z
publication:naccs
publication:naccs_archives
publication:scholarworks_collection
Poesía, Baile y Canción: 35th Annual Conference Proceedings
Conference Proceeding
2008-04-01T07:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/naccs/2008/Proceedings/15
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1000
2014-02-19T19:38:19Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
jsPhyloSVG: A Javascript Library for Visualizing Interactive and Vector-Based Phylogenetic Trees on the Web
Smits, Samuel A.
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Article
2010-08-18T07:00:00Z
5
8
e12267
10.1371/journal.pone.0012267
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Pathogenic Microbiology
<p><strong>Background</strong><br />Many software packages have been developed to address the need for generating phylogenetic trees intended for print. With an increased use of the web to disseminate scientific literature, there is a need for phylogenetic trees to be viewable across many types of devices and feature some of the interactive elements that are integral to the browsing experience. We propose a novel approach for publishing interactive phylogenetic trees.</p>
<p><strong>Methods/Principal Findings</strong><br /> We present a javascript library, jsPhyloSVG, which facilitates constructing interactive phylogenetic trees from raw Newick or phyloXML formats directly within the browser in Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) format. It is designed to work across all major browsers and renders an alternative format for those browsers that do not support SVG. The library provides tools for building rectangular and circular phylograms with integrated charting. Interactive features may be integrated and made to respond to events such as clicks on any element of the tree, including labels.</p>
<p><strong>Conclusions/Significance</strong><br /> jsPhyloSVG is an open-source solution for rendering dynamic phylogenetic trees. It is capable of generating complex and interactive phylogenetic trees across all major browsers without the need for plugins. It is novel in supporting the ability to interpret the tree inference formats directly, exposing the underlying markup to data-mining services. The library source code, extensive documentation and live examples are freely accessible at www.jsphylosvg.com.</p>
<p>Published in <em>PLoS ONE</em> 5(8): e12267. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0012267 http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0012267</p>
<p>Copyright: © 2010 Smits, Ouverney. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.</p>
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
2010-09-27T07:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/1
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:lib_pub-1000
2021-04-02T00:13:28Z
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:lib
publication:lib_pub
Standardised library instruction assessment: an institution-specific approach
Staley, Shannon M.
Branch, Nicole A.
Hewitt, Tom L.
Article
2010-09-01T07:00:00Z
Information Research
15
3
information literacy assessment
Information Literacy
Library and Information Science
<p><strong>Introduction </strong><br />We explore the use of a psychometric model for locally-relevant, information literacy assessment, using an online tool for standardised assessment of student learning during discipline-based library instruction sessions.</p>
<p><strong>Method </strong><br />A quantitative approach to data collection and analysis was used, employing standardised multiple-choice survey questions followed by individual, cognitive interviews with undergraduate students. The assessment tool was administered to five general education psychology classes during library instruction sessions.</p>
<p><strong>Analysis</strong><br />Descriptive statistics were generated by the assessment tool. Results. The assessment tool proved a feasible means of measuring student learning. While student scores improved on every survey question, there was uneven improvement from pre-test to post-test for different questions.</p>
<p><strong>Conclusion</strong><br /> Student scores showed more improvement for some learning outcomes over others, thus, spending time on fewer concepts during instruction sessions would enable more reliable evaluation of student learning. We recommend using digital learning objects that address basic research skills to enhance library instruction programmes. Future studies will explore different applications of the assessment tool, provide more detailed statistical analysis of the data and shed additional light on the significance of overall scores.</p>
<p>Published in Information Research, Sept. 2010, Vol. 15, No. 3. © The Authors.</p>
2010-09-27T07:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/lib_pub/1
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1001
2014-02-19T19:34:59Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
Phylometrics: a pipeline for inferring phylogenetic trees from a sequence relationship network perspective
Smits, Samuel A.
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Article
2010-10-07T07:00:00Z
11
6
S18
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Pathogenic Microbiology
<p><strong>Background</strong><br /> Comparative sequence analysis of the 16S rRNA gene is frequently used to characterize the microbial diversity of environmental samples. However, sequence similarities do not always imply functional or evolutionary relatedness due to many factors, including unequal rates of change and convergence. Thus, relying on top BLASTN hits for phylogenetic studies may misrepresent the diversity of these constituents. Furthermore, attempts to circumvent this issue by including a large number of BLASTN hits per sequence in one tree to explore their relatedness presents other problems. For instance, the multiple sequence alignment will be poor and computationally costly if not relying on manual alignment, and it may be difficult to derive meaningful relationships from the resulting tree. Analyzing sequence relationship networks within collective BLASTN results, however, reveal sequences that are closely related despite low rank.</p>
<p><strong>Results</strong><br /> We have developed a web application, Phylometrics, that relies on networks of collective BLASTN results (rather than single BLASTN hits) to facilitate the process of building phylogenetic trees in an automated, high-throughput fashion while offering novel tools to find sequences that are of significant phylogenetic interest with minimal human involvement. The application, which can be installed locally in a laboratory or hosted remotely, utilizes a simple wizard-style format to guide the user through the pipeline without necessitating a background in programming. Furthermore, Phylometrics implements an independent job queuing system that enables users to continue to use the system while jobs are run with little or no degradation in performance.</p>
<p><strong>Conclusions</strong><br /> Phylometrics provides a novel data mining method to screen supplied DNA sequences and to identify sequences that are of significant phylogenetic interest using powerful analytical tools. Sequences that are identified as being similar to a number of supplied sequences may provide key insights into their functional or evolutionary relatedness. Users require the same basic computer skills as for navigating most internet applications.</p>
<p>Published in <em>BMC Bioinformatics</em> 2010, 11(Suppl 6):S18. doi:10.1186/1471-2105-11-S6-S18 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2105/11/S6/S18.</p>
<p>© 2010 Smits and Ouverney; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.</p>
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
2010-10-27T07:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/2
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:acadgate-1000
2010-10-28T17:06:21Z
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
publication:acadgate
Academic Gateway, Fall 2007
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2007-10-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Academic Gateway</em> is published twice a year by SJSU’s King Library for the university faculty.
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/acadgate/1
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:acadgate-1001
2010-10-28T17:17:03Z
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
publication:acadgate
Academic Gateway, Spring 2008
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2008-04-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Academic Gateway</em> is published twice a year by SJSU’s King Library for the university faculty.
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/acadgate/2
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:acadgate-1006
2010-10-29T19:04:48Z
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
publication:acadgate
Academic Gateway, Spring 2010
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2010-04-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Academic Gateway</em> is published twice a year by SJSU’s King Library for the university faculty.
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/acadgate/7
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:acadgate-1003
2010-10-28T17:21:39Z
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
publication:acadgate
Academic Gateway, Spring 2009
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2009-04-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Academic Gateway</em> is published twice a year by SJSU’s King Library for the university faculty.
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/acadgate/4
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:acadgate-1005
2010-10-28T17:25:05Z
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
publication:acadgate
Academic Gateway, Fall 2009
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2009-10-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Academic Gateway</em> is published twice a year by SJSU’s King Library for the university faculty.
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/acadgate/6
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:acadgate-1002
2010-10-28T17:19:12Z
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
publication:acadgate
Academic Gateway, Fall 2008
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2008-10-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Academic Gateway</em> is published twice a year by SJSU’s King Library for the university faculty.
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/acadgate/3
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:libnew-1000
2010-10-28T19:19:39Z
publication:libnew
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
Library News, Spring 2007
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2007-04-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Library News</em> is published by the San Jose State University Library, One Washington Square, San Jose, CA 95192-0028
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/libnew/2
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:libnew-1001
2010-10-28T19:20:25Z
publication:libnew
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
Library News, Fall 2007
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2007-10-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Library News</em> is published by the San Jose State University Library, One Washington Square, San Jose, CA 95192-0028
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/libnew/1
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:libnew-1002
2010-10-28T19:21:46Z
publication:libnew
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
Library News, Spring 2008
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2008-04-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Library News</em> is published by the San Jose State University Library, One Washington Square, San Jose, CA 95192-0028
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/libnew/3
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:libnew-1004
2010-10-28T19:23:23Z
publication:libnew
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
Library News, Spring 2009
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2009-04-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Library News</em> is published by the San Jose State University Library, One Washington Square, San Jose, CA 95192-0028
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/libnew/5
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:libnew-1003
2010-10-28T19:22:39Z
publication:libnew
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
Library News, Fall 2008
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2008-10-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Library News</em> is published by the San Jose State University Library, One Washington Square, San Jose, CA 95192-0028
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/libnew/4
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:libnew-1005
2010-10-28T19:23:55Z
publication:libnew
publication:lib_docs
publication:campus
Library News, Fall 2009
San Jose State University Library
Newsletter
2009-10-01T07:00:00Z
Library and Information Science
<em>Library News</em> is published by the San Jose State University Library, One Washington Square, San Jose, CA 95192-0028
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/libnew/6
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:edulead_pub-1000
2014-02-26T19:09:45Z
publication:edu
publication:edulead
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:edulead_pub
Barriers and Challenges to Serving to Serving Non-Traditional Students in E-Learning Environments
Miller, Michael T.
Lu, Mei-Yan
Article
2002-01-01T08:00:00Z
2
17
Distance education
Online courses
Student evaluation
Curriculum and Instruction
<p>Online teaching in higher education has become increasingly common, particularly as colleges and universities attempt to serve surging enrollments in some areas and as they look to expand their offerings in other markets. A primary consumer of these courses is the nontraditional student. Because these nontraditional students have unique learning needs that must be addressed in the online classroom, this study sought to identify the barriers to success nontraditional students face in the online learning environment and the strategies teachers can use to assist these students. Assessment strategies for nontraditional students are also studied.</p>
<p>Published as ERIC Document ED468117. http://eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED468117.pdf</p>
2010-11-03T07:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/edulead_pub/1
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:edulead_pub-1001
2014-02-26T19:00:34Z
publication:edu
publication:edulead
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:edulead_pub
A Survey of Media and Instructional Technology Competencies Needed by Business, Industry, Health Professions, Agencies, Military Trainers, and Independent Contractors in Northern California, USA.
Morlan, John E.
Lu, Mei-Yan
Article
1993-01-01T08:00:00Z
719
730
Curriculum and Instruction
Education
<p>To determine whether professionals in business, industry, health professions, agencies, and the military are receiving the training they need to work as instructional designers and trainers, a 54-item survey was prepared based on competencies perceived necessary by a group of university professors.</p>
<p>Published in <em>Annual Proceedings of Selected Research and Development Presentations at the 1993 Convention of the Association for Educational Communications and Technology</em>.</p>
<p>Also published as ERIC Document ED362188 http://eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED362188.pdf</p>
2010-11-08T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/edulead_pub/2
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:edulead_pub-1002
2014-02-26T18:52:27Z
publication:edu
publication:edulead
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:edulead_pub
Confronting Difficulties Associated with Pre-Service Teacher Preparation Technology Apprehension: a Case Study.
Hidalgo, J. Francisco
Miller, Michael T.
Lu, Mei-Yan
Article
2000-08-01T07:00:00Z
2
16
Education
<p>Developments in computer technology have altered the teaching and learning process, particularly in areas of teacher preparation. Teacher education, perhaps more than any other academic discipline, utilizes the application of computer technology in human resources for both the actions of teaching and learning content and the actions of preparing others to use technology. The California State University System (CSU) has responded to the need for technologically enhanced learning by establishing specific behavior/knowledge standards for teacher education candidates. San Jose State University (SJSU) is one of the leading institutions to coordinate an institutional response to the need for technology-assisted training of teachers as well as the training of teachers to use technology. The current research is an exploration of technology apprehension among pre-service teachers at SJSU and how they learned technology in formal classroom settings. Drawing on personal narratives and a structured longitudinal survey, data revealed a loosely woven, interactive relationship-based learning environment, particularly for those with high levels of reticence toward technology.</p>
<p>Paper presented at the 25th Annual Conference of the Association for Teacher Education in Europe (Barcelona, Spain, August 2000).</p>
<p>Published as ERIC Document ED449782 http://eric.ed.gov/PDFS/ED449782.pdf</p>
2010-11-08T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/edulead_pub/3
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1002
2014-02-19T19:30:12Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
Cultivation of <em>Tropheryma whipplei</em> from Cerebrospinal Fluid
Maiwald, Matthias
Herbay, Axel von
Fredricks, David N.
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Kosek, Jon C.
Relman, David A.
Article
2003-09-15T07:00:00Z
188
801
808
10.1086/378073
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Pathogenic Microbiology
<p>Whipple disease (WD) is a systemic disorder caused by the bacterium <em>Tropheryma whipplei.</em> Since the recognition of a bacterial etiology in 1961, many attempts have been made to cultivate this bacterium in vitro. It was eventually isolated, in 2000, from an infected heart valve, in coculture with human fibroblasts. Here we report the isolation of 2 new strains of <em>T. whipplei</em> from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 2 patients with intestinal WD but no neurological signs or symptoms. One culture-positive specimen was obtained before treatment; the other was obtained 12 months after discontinuation of therapy, at a time of intestinal remission. In both cases, 15 passages of the cultures were completed over 17 months. Bacterial growth was measured by quantitative polymerase chain reaction, which suggested a generation time of 4 days. Staining with YO-PRO nucleic-acid dye showed characteristic rod-shaped bacteria arranged in chains. Fluorescent in situ hybridization with a <em>T. whipplei</em>–specific oligonucleotide probe, a broad-range bacterial probe, and a nonspecific nucleicacid stain indicated that all visible bacteria were <em>T. whipplei</em>. Scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy showed both intracellular and extracellular bacteria. This first isolation of <em>T. whipplei</em> from CSF provides clear evidence of viable bacteria in the central nervous system in individuals with WD, even after prolonged antibiotic therapy.</p>
<p>Published in <em>Journal of Infectious Diseases</em> (2003) 188: 801-808. © 2003 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdf/10.1086/378073</p>
<p>At the time of publication Cleber Ouverney was not yet affiliated with San Jose State University.</p>
2010-11-11T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/3
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1004
2021-04-02T00:01:16Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
Methanogenic <em>Archaea</em> and human periodontal disease
Lepp, Paul W.
Brinig, Mary M.
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Palm, Katherine
Armitage, Gary C.
Relman, David A.
Article
2004-04-20T07:00:00Z
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
101
16
6176
6181
10.1073/pnas.0308766101
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Pathogenic Microbiology
<p><em>Archaea</em> have been isolated from the human colon, vagina, and oral cavity, but have not been established as causes of human disease. In this study, we reveal a relationship between the severity of periodontal disease and the relative abundance of archaeal small subunit ribosomal RNA genes (SSU rDNA) in the subgingival crevice by using quantitative PCR. Furthermore, the relative abundance of archaeal small subunit rDNA decreased at treated sites in association with clinical improvement. <em>Archaea</em> were harbored by 36% of periodontitis patients and were restricted to subgingival sites with periodontal disease. The presence of archaeal cells at these sites was confirmed by fluorescent in situ hybridization. The archaeal community at diseased sites was dominated by a <em>Methanobrevibacter oralis</em>-like phylotype and a distinct <em>Methanobrevibacter </em> subpopulation related to archaea that inhabit the gut of numerous animals. We hypothesize that methanogens participate in syntrophic relationships in the subgingival crevice that promote colonization by secondary fermenters during periodontitis. Because they are potential alternative syntrophic partners, our finding of larger <em>Treponema</em> populations sites without archaea provides further support for this hypothesis.</p>
<p>Published in <em>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America</em>. 2004 April 20; 101(16): 6176–6181. © 2004, The National Academy of Sciences. BioMed Central doi: 10.1073/pnas.0308766101. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC395942/?tool=pubmed</p>
<p>At the time of publication Cleber Ouverney was not yet affiliated with San Jose State University.</p>
2010-11-12T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/4
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1003
2021-04-02T00:04:23Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
Dissecting biological “dark matter” with single-cell genetic analysis of rare and uncultivated TM7 microbes from the human mouth
Marcy, Yann
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Bik, Elisabeth M.
Lösekann, Tina
Ivanova, Natalia
Martin, Hector Garcia
Szeto, Ernest
Platt, Darren
Hugenholtz, Philip
Relman, David A.
Quake, Stephen R.
Article
2007-07-17T07:00:00Z
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
104
29
11889
11894
10.1073/pnas.0704662104
environmental microbiology
metagenomics
microfluidics
single-cell analysis
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Pathogenic Microbiology
<p>We have developed a microfluidic device that allows the isolation and genome amplification of individual microbial cells, thereby enabling organism-level genomic analysis of complex microbial ecosystems without the need for culture. This device was used to perform a directed survey of the human subgingival crevice and to isolate bacteria having rod-like morphology. Several isolated microbes had a 16S rRNA sequence that placed them in candidate phylum TM7, which has no cultivated or sequenced members. Genome amplification from individual TM7 cells allowed us to sequence and assemble >1,000 genes, providing insight into the physiology of members of this phylum. This approach enables single-cell genetic analysis of any uncultivated minority member of a microbial community.</p>
<p>Published in <em>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America</em>. 2007 July 17; 104(29): 11889–11894. © 2007 BioMed Central doi: 10.1073/pnas.0704662104. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1924555/?tool=pubmed</p>
2010-11-12T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/5
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1005
2014-02-19T18:41:20Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
Single-Cell Enumeration of an Uncultivated TM7 Subgroup in the
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Armitage, Gary C.
Relman, David A.
Article
2003-10-01T07:00:00Z
69
10
6294
6298
10.1128/AEM.69.10.6294-6298.2003
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Pathogenic Microbiology
<p>Specific oligonucleotide hybridization conditions were established for single-cell enumeration of uncultivated TM7 and IO25 bacteria by using clones expressing heterologous 16S rRNA. In situ analysis of human subgingival crevice specimens revealed that a greater proportion of samples from sites of chronic periodontitis than from healthy sites contained TM7 subgroup IO25. In addition, IO25 bacterial cells from periodontitis site samples were more abundant and fourfold longer than IO25 cells from healthy site samples.</p>
<p>Published in <em>Applied and Environmental Microbiology</em>. 2003 October; 69(10): 6294–6298. doi: 10.1128/AEM.69.10.6294-6298.2003. Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology PMCID: PMC201210</p>
<p>At the time of publication Cleber Ouverney was not yet affiliated with San Jose State University</p>
2010-11-18T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/6
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1005
2015-08-12T22:56:38Z
publication:kins
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:kins_grad
publication:etd
Flank formation football; stress: defense
Walsh, Bill
1958-01-01T08:00:00Z
2010-11-09T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Kinesiology
Robert T. Bronzan
<p>Describes and illustrates flank formation football.</p>
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.ern7-jtcj
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/9
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1006
2014-02-19T18:47:45Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
Prevalence of Bacteria of Division TM7 in Human Subgingival Plaque and Their Association with Disease
Brinig, Mary M.
Lepp, Paul W.
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Armitage, Gary C.
Relman, David A.
Article
2003-03-01T08:00:00Z
69
3
1687
1694
10.1128/AEM.69.3.1687-1694.2003
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Pathogenic Microbiology
<p>Members of the uncultivated bacterial division TM7 have been detected in the human mouth, but little information is available regarding their prevalence and diversity at this site. Human subgingival plaque samples from healthy sites and sites exhibiting various stages of periodontal disease were analyzed for the presence of TM7 bacteria. TM7 ribosomal DNA (rDNA) was found in 96% of the samples, and it accounted for approximately 0.3%, on average, of all bacterial rDNA in the samples as determined by real-time quantitative PCR. Two new phylotypes of this division were identified, and members of the division were found to exhibit filamentous morphology by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The abundance of TM7 rDNA relative to total bacterial rDNA was higher in sites with mild periodontitis (0.54% ± 0.1%) than in either healthy sites (0.21% ± 0.05%, P < 0.01) or sites with severe periodontitis (0.29% ± 0.06%, P < 0.05). One division subgroup, the I025 phylotype, was detected in 1 of 18 healthy samples and 38 of 58 disease samples. These data suggest that this phylotype, and the TM7 bacterial division in general, may play a role in the multifactorial process leading to periodontitis.</p>
<p><em>Published in Applied and Environmental Microbiology</em>. 2003 March; 69(3): 1687–1694. doi: 10.1128/AEM.69.3.1687-1694.2003. Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. PMCID: PMC150096</p>
<p>At the time of publication Cleber Ouverney was not yet affiliated with San Jose State University.</p>
2010-11-18T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/7
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1007
2014-02-19T18:52:18Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
Marine Planktonic Archaea Take Up Amino Acids
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Fuhrman, Jed A.
Article
2000-11-01T08:00:00Z
66
11
4829
4833
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Pathogenic Microbiology
<p>Archaea are traditionally thought of as “extremophiles,” but recent studies have shown that marine planktonic Archaea make up a surprisingly large percentage of ocean midwater microbial communities, up to 60% of the total prokaryotes. However, the basic physiology and contribution of Archaea to community microbial activity remain unknown. We have studied Archaea from 200-m depths of the northwest Mediterranean Sea and the Pacific Ocean near California, measuring the archaeal activity under simulated natural conditions (8 to 17°C, dark and anaerobic) by means of a method called substrate tracking autoradiography fluorescence in situ hybridization (STARFISH) that simultaneously detects specific cell types by 16S rRNA probe binding and activity by microautoradiography. In the 200-m-deep Mediterranean and Pacific samples, cells binding the archaeal probes made up about 43 and 14% of the total countable cells, respectively. Our results showed that the Archaea are active in the uptake of dissolved amino acids from natural concentrations (nanomolar) with about 60% of the individuals in the archaeal communities showing measurable uptake. Bacteria showed a similar proportion of active cells. We concluded that a portion of these Archaea is heterotrophic and also appears to coexist successfully with Bacteria in the same water.</p>
<p>Published in <em>Applied and Environmental Microbiology</em>. 2000 November; 66(11): 4829–4833. Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. PMCID: PMC92387</p>
<p>At the time of publication Cleber Ouverney was not yet affiliated with San Jose State University.</p>
2010-11-18T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/8
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1008
2010-11-22T18:41:34Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
A theoretical model for a volcanic column-plume
Giordano, M. E.
1987-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Graduate Studies and Research
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.qgtn-2xb3
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/3
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1007
2010-11-18T22:36:05Z
publication:cos
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:geol_grad
publication:etd
publication:geol
Side slope sedimentation following new work dredging on the Lower Columbia River, Oregon and Washington
Babcock, Sarah J
1989-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Geology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.ag7d-3fus
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/2
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1009
2014-02-18T22:09:46Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
Increase in Fluorescence Intensity of 16S rRNA In Situ Hybridization in Natural Samples Treated with Chloramphenicol
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Fuhrman, Jed A.
Article
1997-07-01T07:00:00Z
63
7
2735
2740
Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology
Pathogenic Microbiology
<p>Despite the numerous advantages of fluorescent in situ hybridization for the identification of single prokaryotic cells with 16S rRNA probes, use of the technique with natural samples, especially those from the marine environment, is still problematic. The low percentage of fluorescently labeled cells constitutes the primary problem for in situ hybridization of natural samples, probably due to low cellular rRNA content. This study represents an attempt to improve detection of marine prokaryotes by increasing cellular rRNA content without changing the species composition. Cells from three California coastal sites were treated with chloramphenicol, an inhibitor of protein synthesis and rRNA degradation, at 100 (mu)g/ml and then were probed with a "universal" 16S rRNA fluorescent probe and viewed by image-intensified video microscopy. Counts of fluorescent cells increased from ca. 75% for untreated samples to ca. 93 to 99% for chloramphenicol-treated samples, compared to counts produced by DAPI (4(prm1),6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) staining, after at least 45 min of exposure to the drug (these percentages include autofluorescent cells, which averaged 6%). This suggests that most cells in these samples were active. We hypothesize that the low fluorescent-cell counts previously reported were probably often due to the fluorescence intensity of labeled cells being below the detection level rather than to high levels of dead cells in marine environments. This method may aid in the characterization of bacterioplankton with fluorescent probes.</p>
<p>Published in <em>Applied and Environmental Microbiology</em>. 1997 July; 63(7): 2735–2740. PMCID: PMC1389203</p>
<p>At the time of publication Cleber Ouverney was not yet affiliated with San Jose State University.</p>
2010-11-18T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/10
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:biol_pub-1008
2014-02-19T19:04:16Z
publication:cos
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:biol_pub
Combined Microautoradiography–16S rRNA Probe Technique for Determination of Radioisotope Uptake by Specific Microbial Cell Types In Situ
Ouverney, Cleber C.
Fuhrman, Jed A.
Article
1999-04-01T08:00:00Z
65
4
1746
1752
<p>We propose a novel method for studying the function of specific microbial groups in situ. Since natural microbial communities are dynamic both in composition and in activities, we argue that the microbial “black box” should not be regarded as homogeneous. Our technique breaks down this black box with group-specific fluorescent 16S rRNA probes and simultaneously determines 3H-substrate uptake by each of the subgroups present via microautoradiography (MAR). Total direct counting, fluorescent in situ hybridization, and MAR are combined on a single slide to determine (i) the percentages of different subgroups in a community, (ii) the percentage of total cells in a community that take up a radioactively labeled substance, and (iii) the distribution of uptake within each subgroup. The method was verified with pure cultures. In addition, in situ uptake by members of the α subdivision of the class <em>Proteobacteria</em> (α-Proteobacteria) and of the <em>Cytophaga-Flavobacterium</em> group obtained off the California coast and labeled with fluorescent oligonucleotide probes for these subgroups showed that not only do these organisms account for a large portion of the picoplankton community in the sample examined (∼60% of the universal probe-labeled cells and ∼50% of the total direct counts), but they also are significant in the uptake of dissolved amino acids in situ. Nearly 90% of the total cells and 80% of the cells belonging to the α-Proteobacteria and <em>Cytophaga-Flavobacterium</em> groups were detectable as active organisms in amino acid uptake tests. We suggest a name for our triple-labeling technique, substrate-tracking autoradiographic fluorescent in situ hybridization (STARFISH), which should aid in the “dissection” of microbial communities by type and function.</p>
<p>Published in <em>Applied and Environmental Microbiology</em>. 1999 April; 65(4): 1746–1752. Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. PMCID: PMC91246</p>
<p>At the time of publication Cleber Ouverney was not yet affiliated with San Jose State University.</p>
2010-11-18T08:00:00Z
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/biol_pub/9
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1009
2010-11-18T22:36:05Z
publication:pols
publication:coss
publication:pols_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
Elements of decision making during the 1961 Bay of Pigs action
Anderson, Edwin E.
1989-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Political Science
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.8vkd-waxq
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/4
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1010
2013-03-18T04:31:30Z
publication:hum
publication:music_dance_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:music_dance
publication:etd
The Spanish idiom in the works of non-Hispanic European composers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
Las Heras de Mendez, Celia
1988-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Music
<p>Winner of the SJSU Outstanding Thesis Award.</p>
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.9yw5-h553
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/5
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1013
2013-03-18T04:31:59Z
publication:cos
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:geol_grad
publication:etd
publication:geol
Depositional environments and paleogeographic setting of the middle Mississippian section in eastern California
Klingman, Darrell
1987-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Geology
<p>Winner of the SJSU Outstanding Thesis Award.</p>
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.8b3p-uvt2
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/8
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1014
2010-11-18T22:48:06Z
publication:hum
publication:eng_complit
publication:eng_complit_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
The Parallel mysteries of grace and place in Flannery O'Connor's Wise blood
Petersen, Marc
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
English
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.5gam-bzqp
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/18
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1015
2010-11-18T22:48:06Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:psych_grad
publication:etd
publication:psych
Personality and work style characteristics of the telecommuter
Ross, Kathy
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Psychology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.244q-38j5
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/19
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1016
2010-11-18T22:48:06Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
High school students' awareness of high blood pressure as a major problem in our society
Sadlier, Carol
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.ayh9-sd6r
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/20
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1012
2013-03-18T04:32:34Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:hist
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:hist_grad
publication:etd
A Liberal view of Germany from 1933 to 1939
Stevens, Margaret
1987-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
History
<p>Winner of the SJSU Outstanding Thesis Award.</p>
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.9gqv-jwtv
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/7
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1011
2010-11-18T22:36:05Z
publication:edu
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:education_grad
publication:etd
publication:education
Speech sound discrimination ability in a Lowland gorilla
Goodreau, May
1987-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Special Education
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.g74e-hr6h
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/6
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1017
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:soc_sci
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
publication:sociology_grad
Consolidation of the Islamic Republic of Iran
Shahrokhi, Shapour
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Sociology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.tjvw-c9zf
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/21
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1018
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:psych_grad
publication:etd
publication:psych
L-Tryptophan, REM sleep, and the behavioral changes occurring from REM sleep deprivation
Shaw, Paul
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Psychology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.xvxd-3eqz
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/22
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1019
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
Relationship between perceived meaning in life and death anxiety in the elderly
Sheth, Kamal
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.c63t-euz3
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/23
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1020
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
Comparison of diet and exercise versus diet alone in relapse of obesity
Smith, Carolyn I
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.d4am-8zmz
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/24
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1022
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
A study of the conflict management style of black and white nurse executives
Stringer, Olivia Yarbrough
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.y75p-ey2g
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/26
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1034
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:geol_grad
publication:etd
publication:geol
Depositional history at a site in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico revealed by tephrochronology and oxygen isotope stratigraphy
Brown, Cynthia Louise
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Geology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.eqnj-5ez4
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/38
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1046
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:hist
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:hist_grad
publication:etd
Nelson A. Miles' winter campaign of 1876/77 and the Battle of Wolf Mountain
Golda, John F
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
History
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.x5ae-tewm
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/50
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1051
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
Case studies : home care needs of ventilator dependent children with congenital central alveolar hypoventilation syndrome
Jackson, Davia
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.vkgy-mgs9
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/55
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1052
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:geol_grad
publication:etd
publication:geol
Laramide basin subsidence and fluvial architecture of the Fort Union and Wasatch Formations, Southern Green River Basin, Wyoming
Johnson, Philip L
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Geology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.m6sw-gqfq
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/56
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1058
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
Assessment of nursing staff knowledge regarding reversible and irreversible forms of confusion in the elderly
Luotto, Julie Gleisner
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.wz63-m2bx
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/62
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1061
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:hist
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:hist_grad
publication:etd
The history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Mexico
McNeil, Byron James
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
History
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.85af-scbh
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/65
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1084
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
Type A behavior and coronary artery disease risk factors in adolescents
Addington, Jane Kochka
1991-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.34da-dv4a
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/88
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1082
2013-03-18T04:33:38Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:hist
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:hist_grad
publication:etd
Descent into anarchy : the German High Command, 1933 to 1943
Megargee, Geoffrey P
1991-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
History
<p>Winner of the SJSU Outstanding Thesis Award.</p>
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.af95-xhvw
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/86
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1089
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
Female caregivers of elderly relatives with dementia : implications for day center intervention
Baldwin, Betty S
1991-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.st2z-aufb
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/93
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1090
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
An evaluation of postpartum teaching
Bamber, Judith A
1991-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.zg7e-6246
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/94
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1021
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:psych_grad
publication:etd
publication:psych
Turnover analysis of pharmacy ancillary personnel
Steiber, Hariclia Constantina
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Psychology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.s5qq-e9xj
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/25
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1023
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chem
publication:etd
publication:chem_grad
Dimerization of Bovine PAS IV is an artifact of the solubilization procedure
Suresh, Sundari
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Chemistry
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.7gxj-wyrn
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/27
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1024
2013-03-18T04:35:03Z
publication:hum
publication:film_theatre_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:film_theatre
publication:etd
Towards an aesthetics of the puppet
Tillis, Steve
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Theatre Arts
<p>Winner of the SJSU Outstanding Thesis Award.</p>
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.hncc-r3cu
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/28
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1025
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:world_lang
publication:hum
publication:world_lang_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
La construccion de la subjectividad femenina y feminista en dos obras de marta traba
Vaughn, Jeanne Marie
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Foreign Languages
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.gjns-frp7
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/29
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1026
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chem
publication:etd
publication:chem_grad
The synthesis and characterization of bonded liquid crystal stationary phases for use in high performance liquid chromatography
Vidensek, Mark Allen
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Chemistry
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.jt56-dwc8
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/30
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1029
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:math
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
publication:math_grad
Computer extended perturbation series in fluid mechanics
Alfar, Abed Alhamid
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Mathematics
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.3qsc-tgx2
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/33
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1030
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:hist
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:hist_grad
publication:etd
Cooperation or collaboration : Latvia under German occupation 1941-1945
Apsitis, Astra M
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
History
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.6n42-5jcx
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/34
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1031
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:chem_mat_eng_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:coe
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chem_mat_eng
publication:etd
Thermal cycling effects on polyimide films for multilayer applications
Baba, Stacey T
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Materials Engineering
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.zvup-87eu
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/35
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1032
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:hum
publication:film_theatre_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:film_theatre
publication:etd
Sartre--in struggle with god : an examination of selected plays
Barefoot, Sybil
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Theatre Arts
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.nzg2-fzpe
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/36
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1033
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:biol_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:etd
Photoaffinity labeling of benzyladenine-binding proteins in plant mitochondria
Blumenthal, Sonal
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Biological Sciences
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.xpz2-n8pn
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/37
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1035
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nufs_grad
publication:nufs
publication:etd
HEME requirement and effect of medium surface area exposure on population growth and ATP production of Caenorhabditis elegans
Chang, Claudine
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nutrition and Food Science
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.8pd9-g4p6
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/39
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1036
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:biol_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:etd
Studies of genes controlling early flowering in Lactuca sativa
Coker, Mary E
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Biological Sciences
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.hvqv-56p8
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/40
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1037
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:hum
publication:film_theatre_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:film_theatre
publication:etd
Marketing and modern dance
De Jong, Tammy
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Theatre Arts
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.wuk3-uwvn
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/41
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1038
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:hum
publication:eng_complit
publication:eng_complit_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
The new formalism : patterned verse in the 1990s : a creative and critical study
Llata, Robin de la
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
English
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.nrc8-2mtd
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/42
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1039
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:marine_lab
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:marine_lab_grad
publication:etd
Parental care and diet of California gull (Larus californicus) chicks at Alviso, California
Dierks, Ann Jennifer
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Moss Landing Marine Laboratories
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.8jut-qxxk
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/43
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1040
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:marine_lab
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:marine_lab_grad
publication:etd
Distribution, behavior, and food habits of harbor porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) in Monterey Bay
Dorfman, Eric J
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Moss Landing Marine Laboratories
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.bb4q-cksy
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/44
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1041
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:pols
publication:coss
publication:pols_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
The Italian Socialist Party (1892-1925) constitutional or revolutionary action
Franco, Eugene Michael
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Political Science
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.b8hz-zsqw
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/45
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1042
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:hum
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:journ_masscomm
publication:etd
publication:journ_masscomm_grad
The response of the Australian press to Australia's change in foreign policy toward Indonesia between 1963 and 1970
Whalen Gaines, Marisa
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Journalism and Mass Communications
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.mjuy-f9bb
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/46
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1043
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:occu_ther_grad
publication:occu_ther
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:etd
Relationship of activity to pain perception
Garg, Nandita
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Occupational Therapy
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.8de3-euvp
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/47
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1044
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:world_lang
publication:hum
publication:world_lang_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
Manlio Argueta : literatura de liberacion
Gavidia, Anna Margarita
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Foreign Languages
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.wcat-3sba
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/48
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1045
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:hum
publication:eng_complit
publication:eng_complit_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:etd
For foul purposes
Gaylord, Jane
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
English
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.psnu-6ab6
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/49
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1047
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
A needs assessment : the health status of migrant children as they enter kindergarten
Good, Mary Ellen
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.jrcu-7rqj
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/51
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1048
2015-10-20T22:33:26Z
publication:coss
publication:hum
publication:eng_complit
publication:eng_complit_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:envs_grad
publication:etd
publication:envs
Song to ospreys : photographs, poems, and short stories on the Northern California coast
Harris, Michael
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Environmental Studies
Gary Klee
<p>A Special Major Master's Project in the Fields of Environmental Studies, Natural Science, English.</p>
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.ccch-z3fb
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/52
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1049
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cpge
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:slis
publication:slis_grad
publication:etd
San Francisco Bay Area corporate history : a selected annotated bibliography
Homan, Madeline K
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS)
Library and Information Science
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.3e3v-gca6
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/53
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1050
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:geol_grad
publication:etd
publication:geol
Late tertiary synorogenic sedimentation in the northern Livermore Basin, California
Isaacson, Kathleen A
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Geology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.axmf-ntp8
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/54
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1055
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cos
publication:biol_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:biol
publication:etd
Media-dependent mutator activity of the dnaQ49 allele of Escherichia coli
Krishnaswamy, Shalini
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Biological Sciences
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.2ur6-byna
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/59
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1054
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cpge
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:slis
publication:slis_grad
publication:etd
A study to identify racial or sexual stereotypical behavior in the Newbery Award books
Kimmel, Wynona Mae
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Library Science (MLS)
Library and Information Science
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.j8bw-7qhr
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/58
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1056
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:psych_grad
publication:etd
publication:psych
Student characteristics associated with interest in studying undergraduate psychology
Lawler, Jerry T
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Psychology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.nnxc-6s5q
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/60
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1057
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:hum
publication:music_dance_grad
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:music_dance
publication:etd
Collected pieces
Leber, Jeremy
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Music
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.gns4-2f4h
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/61
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1059
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:coss
publication:comm
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:comm_grad
publication:etd
Communicator style as a predictor of rhetorical sensitivity
McCormick, Karen L
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Arts (MA)
Communication Studies
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.58hz-m8p5
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/63
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1060
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:chhs
publication:nursing_grad
publication:nursing
publication:etd
Trends in HIV antibody testing
Hertenstein-McKinnon, Tamara
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Nursing
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.6ycr-f68a
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/64
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1062
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:cpge
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:slis
publication:slis_grad
publication:etd
A historical look at the ALA code of ethics
Murray, Barbara June
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS)
Library and Information Science
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.pwz2-duuk
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/66
oai:scholarworks.sjsu.edu:etd_theses-1063
2010-11-22T17:30:07Z
publication:coss
publication:etd_theses
publication:scholarworks_collection
publication:psych_grad
publication:etd
publication:psych
Organizational and job characteristics related to self-managing work teams
Near, Rebecca
1990-01-01T08:00:00Z
Thesis
Master of Science (MS)
Psychology
https://doi.org/10.31979/etd.44fm-jxwn
https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/etd_theses/67
1551039/qualified-dublin-core/100//