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[ASAP] Introducing Virtual Oligomerization Inhibition to Identify Potent Inhibitors of Aß Oligomerization

Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.0c00185




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The virtuous cyborg / Chris Bateman

Browsery HM851.B3775 2018




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Defying reality: the inside story of the virtual reality revolution / David M. Ewalt

Browsery QA76.9.C65 E9775 2018




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Can you hear me?: how to connect with people in a virtual world / Nick Morgan

Browsery P96.T42 M665 2018




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The anxious mind: an investigation into the varieties and virtues of anxiety / Charlie Kurth

Browsery B815.K87 2018




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Download Free Doctor Who Backgrounds for Virtual Meetings (Plus Many Other BBC TV Shows)

Enthusiasm for British television is a force of nature. That goes even more so for British television fandom outside Britain. All of us have known someone, or indeed been someone, who shifted their cultural allegiances wholesale after watching a single episode of, say, Monty Python's Flying Circus. But even that hugely influential comedy series commands […]

Download Free <i>Doctor Who</i> Backgrounds for Virtual Meetings (Plus Many Other BBC TV Shows) is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don't miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooksFree Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.




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A Virtual Tour Inside the Hayao Miyazaki’s Studio Ghibli Museum

Let us pray that organization expert Marie Kondo never comes within spitting distance of A Boy’s Room, part of the Studio Ghibli museum’s Where a Film is Born installation. It’s not likely that every single item in the massive (and no doubt well dusted) collection of books, postcards, hand tools, pictures, figurines, and other assorted tchotchkes pictured above […]

A Virtual Tour Inside the Hayao Miyazaki’s Studio Ghibli Museum is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don't miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooksFree Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.




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Virtual & Augmented Reality for Dummies / by Paul Mealy

Online Resource




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Effective Virtual Project Teams: A Design Science Approach to Building a Strategic Momentum.

Online Resource




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Hybrid Virtual Teams in Shared Services Organizations: Practices to Overcome the Cooperation Problem / Thomas Afflerbach

Online Resource




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The Virtue and Necessity of Mentorship

Successful students remember the professors who guided them.




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Virtu ITG Holdings LLC (Inactive) MarketLine Company Profile [electronic journal].

Marketline




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Proceedings. 12th International Symposium on Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environment and Teleoperator Systems [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




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Haptic Interfaces for Virtual Environment and Teleoperator Systems, International Symposium on [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




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2019 International Conference on Virtual Rehabilitation (ICVR) [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




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2017 International Conference on Virtual Reality and Visualization (ICVRV) [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




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2017 International Conference on Virtual Reality and Visualization (ICVRV) [electronic journal].

IEEE Computer Society




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2017 IEEE Virtual Humans and Crowds for Immersive Environments (VHCIE) [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




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2017 IEEE 3rd VR Workshop on Sonic Interactions for Virtual Environments (SIVE) [electronic journal].

IEEE / Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Incorporated




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Handbook of research on collaborative teaching practice in virtual learning environments / Gianni Panconesi (Esplica, Italy), Maria Guida (National Institute for Documentation, Innovation, and Educational Research, Italy), [editors]




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Developing the curriculum : improved outcomes through systems approaches / William R. Gordon II, Ed.D. (Chief Operations Officer, Retired, Florida virtual School, Orlando, Florida), Rosemarye T. Taylor, Ph.D. (Professor, Educational Leadership, University

Gordon, William, II, author




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Cognitive virtual assistants using Google Dialogflow: develop complex cognitive bots using the Google Dialogflow platform / Navin Sabharwal, Amit Agrawal

Online Resource




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Augmented reality and virtual reality: changing realities in a dynamic world / Timothy Jung, M. Claudia tom Dieck, Philipp A. Rauschnabel, editors

Online Resource




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[ASAP] Structure- and Ligand-Based Virtual Screening on DUD-E<sup>+</sup>: Performance Dependence on Approximations to the Binding Pocket

Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00115




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[ASAP] Discovery of Ubiquitin-Specific Protease 7 (USP7) Inhibitors with Novel Scaffold Structures by Virtual Screening, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, and Biological Evaluation

Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00154




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[ASAP] LIT-PCBA: An Unbiased Data Set for Machine Learning and Virtual Screening

Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00155




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[ASAP] Augmenting Hit Identification by Virtual Screening Techniques in Small Molecule Drug Discovery

Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jcim.0c00113




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Legal Research Reports: Virtual Civil Trials

The Law Library of Congress is proud to present the report, Virtual Civil Trials.

This report surveys the law of 25 foreign jurisdictions on the availability and functioning of virtual civil hearings and/or trials, including the structure of civil court systems and arrangements made to ensure the continuation of hearings and proceedings during the COVID-19 pandemic. The report describes foreign court systems that have adopted a range of options and procedural conditions for virtual hearings and/or trials in noncriminal cases in each jurisdiction surveyed.

This report is one of many prepared by the Law Library of Congress. Visit the Comprehensive Index of Legal Reports page for a complete listing of reports and the Current Legal Topics page for our highlighted and newer reports. 




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Digital Reference Section (DRS) Virtual Programs: New blog post invites readers to "Sample a Taste of History This Thanksgiving"

Find a new and historic recipe for a dish to put on your Thanksgiving table in What Mrs. Fisher Knows About Old Southern Cooking. This cookbook, published in 1881, is highlighted in a recent post on the Library of Congress Blog. Abby Fisher perfected her culinary skills as an enslaved cook on a South Carolina plantation but went on to establish a successful catering business in San Francisco and publish a compilation of her recipes—one of the first by an African-American. Learn more about this remarkable woman and, this Thanksgiving, sample a taste of history!

Click here to go to the Library of Congress Blog post, "Sample a Taste of History This Thanksgiving!"




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Albon denies Leclerc a virtual F1 'trick

The Thai's victory over his Ferrari rival gave Red Bull something to celebrate on a day that should have seen the return of Max Verstappen's home Dutch Grand Prix after a 35-year absence.




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Developing public sector leadership: new rationale, best practices and tools / Petri Virtanen, Marika Tammeaid

Online Resource




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Apple to host its annual developers conference virtually from June 22

The company also announced the Swift Student Challenge, an opportunity for student developers to showcase their coding skills by creating their own Swift playground




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Coastal and marine stewardship in Western Australia : the case for a virtue ethic / John Davis

Davis, John K., author




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Animal virtues & choice fetishism

The following is an interesting extract from Straw Dogs by John Gray (pp. 109–116) discussing some of the differences between Western and Taoist philosophical traditions.

The fetish of choice

For us, nothing is more important than to live as we choose. This is not because we value freedom more than people did in earlier times. It is because we have identified the good life with the chosen life.

For the pre-Socratic Greeks, the fact that our lives are framed by limits was what makes us human. Being born a mortal, in a given place and time, strong or weak, swift or slow, brave or cowardly, beautiful or ugly, suffering tragedy or being spared it – these features of our lives are given to us, they cannot be chosen. If the Greeks could have imagined a life without them, they could not have recognised it as that of a human being.

The ancient Greeks were right. The ideal of the chosen life does not square with how we live. We are not authors of our lives; we are not even part-authors of the events that mark us most deeply. Nearly everything that is most important in our lives is unchosen. The time and place we are born, our parents, the first language we speak – these are chance, not choice. It is the casual drift of things that shapes our most fateful relationships. The life of each of us is a chapter of accidents.

Personal autonomy is the work of our imagination, not the way we live. Yet we have been thrown into a time in which everything is provisional. New technologies alter our lives daily. The traditions of the past cannot be retrieved. At the same time we have little idea of what the future will bring. We are forced to live as if we were free.

The cult of choice reflects the fact that we must improvise our lives. That we cannot do otherwise is a mark of our unfreedom. Choice has become a fetish; but the mark of a fetish is that it is unchosen.

Animal virtues

The dominant Western view…teaches that humans are unlike other animals, which simply respond to the situations in which they find themselves. We can scrutinise our motives and impulses; we can know why we act as we do. By becoming ever more self-aware, we can approach a point at which our actions are the results of our choices. When we are fully conscious, everything we do will be done for reasons we can know. At that point, we will be authors of our lives.

This may seem fantastical, and so it is. Yet it is what we are taught by Socrates, Aristotle and Plato, Descartes, Spinoza and Marx. For all of them, consciousness is our very essence, and the good life means living as a fully conscious individual.

Western thought is fixated on the gap between what is and what ought to be. But in everyday life we do not scan our options beforehand, then enact the one that is best. We simply deal with whatever is at hand. …Different people follow different customs; but in acting without intention, we are not simply following habit. Intentionless acts occur in all sorts of situations, including those we have never come across before.

Outside the Western tradition, the Taoists of ancient China saw no gap between is and ought. Right action was whatever comes from a clear view of the situation. They did not follow moralists – in their day, Confucians – in wanting to fetter human beings with rules or principles. For Taoists, the good life is only the natural life lived skillfully. It has no particular purpose. It has nothing to do with the will, and it does not consist in trying to realise any ideal. Everything we do can be done more or less well; but if we act well it is not because we translate our intentions into deeds. It is because we deal skillfully with whatever needs to be done. The good life means living according to our natures and circumstances. There is nothing that says that it is bound to be the same for everybody, or that it must conform with ‘morality’.

In Taoist thought, the good life comes spontaneously; but spontaneity is far from simply acting on the impulses that occur to us. In Western traditions such as Romanticism, spontaneity is linked with subjectively. In Taoism it means acting dispassionately, on the basis of an objective view of the situation at hand. The common man cannot see things objectively, because his mind is clouded by anxiety about achieving his goals. Seeing clearly means not projecting our goals into the world; acting spontaneously means acting according to the needs of the situation. Western moralists will ask what is the purpose of such action, but for Taoists the good life has no purpose. It is like swimming in a whirlpool, responding to the currents as they come and go. ‘I enter with the inflow, and emerge with the outflow, follow the Way of the water, and do not impose my selfishness upon it. This is how I stay afloat in it,’ says the Chuang-Tzu.

In this view, ethics is simply a practical skill, like fishing or swimming. The core of ethics is not choice or conscious awareness, but the knack of knowing what to do. It is a skill that comes with practice and an empty mind. A.C. Graham explains:

The Taoist relaxes the body, calms the mind, loosens the grip of categories made habitual by naming, frees the current of thought for more fluid differentiations and assimilations, and instead of pondering choices lets the problems solve themselves as inclination spontaneously finds its own direction. …He does not have to make decisions based on standards of good and bad because, granted only that enlightenment is better than ignorance, it is self-evident that among spontaneous inclinations the one prevailing in the greatest clarity of mind, other things being equal, will be best, the one in accord with the Way.

Few humans beings have the knack of living well. Observing this, the Taoists looked to other animals as their guides to the good life. Animals in the wild know how to live, they do not need to think or choose. It is only when they are fettered by humans that they cease to live naturally.

As the Chuang-Tzu puts it, horses, when they live wild, eat grass and drink water; when they are content, they entwine their necks and rub each other. When angry, they turn their backs on each other and kick out. This is what horses know. But if harnessed together and lined up under constraints, they know how to look sideways and to arch their necks, to career around and try to spit out the bit and rid themselves of the reins.

For people in thrall to ‘morality’ , the good life means perpetual striving. For Taoists it means living effortlessly, according to our natures. The freest human being is not the one who acts on reasons he has chosen for himself, but one who never has to choose. Rather than agonising over alternatives, he responds effortlessly to situations as they arise. He lives not as he chooses but as he must. Such a human has the perfect freedom of a wild animal – or a machine. As the Lieh-Tzu says: ‘The highest man at rest is as though dead, in movement is like a machine. He knows neither why he is at rest nor why he is not, why he is in movement nor why he is not.’

The idea that freedom means becoming like a wild animal or machine is offensive to Western religious and humanist prejudices, but it is consistent with the most advanced scientific knowledge. A.C. Graham explains:

Taoism coincides with the scientific worldview at just those points where the latter most disturbs westerners rooted in the Christian tradition – the littleness of man in a vast universe; the inhuman Tao which all things follow, without purpose and indifferent to human needs; the transience of life, the impossibility of knowing what comes after death; unending change in which the possibility of progress is not even conceived; the relativity of values; a fatalism very close to determinism; even a suggestion that the human organism operates like a machine.

Autonomy means acting on reasons I have chosen; but the lesson of cognitive science is that there is no self to do the choosing. We are far more like machines and wild animals than we imagine. But we cannot attain the amoral selflessness of wild animals, or the choiceless automatism of machines. Perhaps we can learn to live more lightly, less burdened by morality. We cannot return to a purely spontaneous existence.




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Perfect phrases for virtual teamwork [electronic resource] : hundreds of ready-to-use phrases for fostering collaboration at a distance / Meryl Runion with Lynda McDermott

Runion, Meryl




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Virtual training basics [electronic resource] / Cindy Huggett

Huggett, Cindy, author




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Beyond virtue and vice: rethinking human rights and criminal law / edited by Alice M. Miller and Mindy Jane Roseman

Dewey Library - K3240.B496 2019




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ACS launches virtual platform for sharing research from Philadelphia national meeting

Posters and presentations can be uploaded to SciMeetings starting on March 19




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ACS launches virtual platform for sharing research from Philadelphia national meeting




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How one ACS division took its Philadelphia technical program virtual

Members of the Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry presented 155 virtual talks over 3 days




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[ASAP] Dual Resolution Membrane Simulations Using Virtual Sites

The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.0c01842




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The Power of Virtual Distance: A Guide to Productivity and Happiness in the Age of Remote Work, 2nd Edition


 

This revised second edition presents 15 years of data on Virtual Distance metrics and their predictive impact on organizational success factors ¯shedding new light on how to correct for communication challenges that often show up as a foggy set of digital disconnects where the vitality of the virtual workforce often gets lost in transmission.

This still-evolving Digital Age conundrum continues to present new complications. The rise of remote work which



Read More...




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Effect of a Postdischarge Virtual Ward on Readmission or Death for High-Risk Patients

Interview with Irfan A. Dhalla, MD, MSc, author of Effect of a Postdischarge Virtual Ward on Readmission or Death for High-Risk Patients




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ET Catalyse Virtual: The role of brand communication during a lockdown

Speaking on the role of authentic and informative content, Meera said, “Digital is brilliant as it has destroyed information asymmetry."




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Summer internship at top B-schools deferred or made virtual due to Covid-19

In some cases, existing internship offers have even been cancelled or squeezed to 5 weeks from the normal 7-8 weeks




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From BMW to M G Motor, auto brands shift gears on the virtual highway

Specific tailored marketing pitches using first party data, smoother payment and financing processes and digital launches are among the ways in which auto majors are keeping their brands in the game.




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As COVID-19 forces conferences online, scientists discover upsides of virtual format

The scientific community is “making lemonade out of lemons,” one researcher says




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Osceola's enemies acknowledged his virtues




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Organizational office space in the virtual age




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Development and testing of a haptic interface to assist and improve the manipulation functions in virtual environments for persons with disabilities