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Recent Submissions

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Japanese Performing Arts Research Center (JPARC) Database - Preservation version
Global Performing Arts Consortium (Global Performing Arts Consortium, Cornell University, 2023)
A preservation copy of the records from the GloPAD database that are specific to JPARC expressed as a compressed, Postgres database dump file called "glopad4-30-08-23_15-43.tar.gz" To work with this file, researchers will need to download, reimport/reestablish the file as a working Postgres database.
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Global Performing Arts Database (GloPAD) Prospectus and Participants
Global Performing Arts Consortium (Global Performing Arts Consortium, Cornell University, 2003)
The prospectus includes an overview of the intended features and expansion plans for GloPAD. Also included is a list of project participants circa 2003, with brief bios.
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Global Performing Arts Database (GloPAD) - Preservation version
Global Performing Arts Consortium; Paolillo, Michelle (Global Performing Arts Consortium, Cornell University, 2023)
A preservation copy of the data from GloPAD expressed as a compressed, Postgres database dump file called "glopad3.sql.gz" To work with this file, researchers will need to download, reimport/reestablish the file as a working Postgres database. After this, the record metadata can be explored natively. The database was built without foreign keys in the tables. During preservation, Cornell University Library Preservation Services refined a python script that injects the foreign keys into the tables of the database. The code that creates the foreign keys is called create_fk.py and the code to inject them is called add_foreign_keys.sql. The resulting improved database (dumped and compressed) is called glopad3_fk.sql.zip. All three files are also offered in addition to the original database export in case the researcher finds these more suitable for the research need. The full description and rationale for the preservation strategy is provided in the file "Preservation_of_GloPAD.docx".
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Data from: Low-dose sugammadex reverses moderate rocuronium-induced neuromuscular block in horses
Martin-Flores, Manuel; Sakai, Daniel; Araos, Joaquin; Campoy, Luis (2024-01-19)
These files contain data supporting all results reported in M Martin-Flores et al, EVJ-OA-23-200.R1 - Low-dose sugammadex reverses moderate rocuronium-induced neuromuscular block in horses. Fourteen adult horses undergoing different procedures were anesthetized with detomidine and isoflurane. All horses received NMB with rocuronium 0.3 mg/kg IV. Neuromuscular function was measured with acceleromyographic train-of-four (TOF) ratio. Recovery occurred spontaneously in five horses weighing [median (range)] 548 (413 – 594) kg and was enhanced with sugammadex 200 mg (total dose) in nine horses [433 (362 – 515)] kg. Recovery time from moderate NMB to a TOF ratio 1.0, and total duration of NMB were compared between groups. The dose of sugammadex was 0.46 (0.39 – 0.55) mg/kg. The recovery period lasted 21 (17 – 39) minutes for spontaneous and 4 (3 – 7) minutes for sugammadex. Total duration of NMB was 58 (41 – 70) minutes for spontaneous and 36 (21 – 43) for sugammadex (both p ≤ 0.003). There were no instances of recurarization.
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A very public replication of the temporal pattern to people's regrets
Jerry Richardson; Thomas Gilovich (Royal Society Open Science, 2023-06-21)
Most people recognize that mistaken actions generally sting more than equally mistaken and consequential failures to act (Gleicher et al. 1990 Pers. Soc. Psychol. Bull. 16, 284–295 (doi:10.1177/ 0146167290162009); Kruger et al. 2005 J. Pers. Soc. Psychol. 88, 725–735 (doi:10.1037/0022-3514.88.5.725); Landman 1987 Pers. Soc. Psychol. Bull. 13, 524–536 (doi:10.1177/0146167287134009)). At the same time, most people have some intuitive appreciation of Whittier’s claim that ‘For all sad words of tongue and pen, the saddest are these, “It might have been”’. As a result, few are surprised to learn that when people look back on their lives and identify what they regret most, they mention regrets of inaction significantly more often than regrets of action. Gilovich and Medvec (Gilovich & Medvec 1994 J. Pers. Soc. Psychol. 67, 357–365 (doi:10.1037/ 0022-3514.67.3.357); Gilovich & Medvec 1995 Psychol. Rev. 102, 379–395 (doi:10.1037/0033-295X.102.2.379)) identified the overarching pattern that incorporates both intuitions: regrets of recent vintage tend to centre on mistakes of action, but long- term regrets tend to involve failures to act. We conducted a replication of Gilovich and Medvec in the field using a unique source: a new museum in Chicago devoted to psychological science. We replicated the significant interaction between action/inaction and temporal perspective, but the precise pattern of that interaction diverged from that reported earlier.