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      • 인터뷰 : Purdue University의 Eric Matson교수

        ( Eric Matson ),조영임 한국공학교육학회(구 한국공학교육기술학회) 2013 공학교육동향 Vol.20 No.2

        Eric Matson, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer and information Technology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA. Prof. Matson is also an International Faculty Scholar in theDepartment of Radio and Electronics Engineering at Kyung Hee University, Yongin City, Korea, Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering At Dongguk University in Seoul, Korea and a Visiting Professor in the Laboratoire Images, Signaux & Systemes Intelligents in LISSI at the University of Paris et Creteil (UPEC), Paris 12 University, Paris, France. He is also a co-founder of the M2M Lab at Purdue University, which performs research in the areas of intelligent systems, robotics, wireless communication and Founder and Director of the Robotic Innovation, Commercialization and Education (RICE) Research Center at Purdue University inWest Lafayette, Indiana, USA. Prior to his position at PurdueUniversity, Prof. Matsonwas in industrial and commercial software development as a consultant, software engineer, manager and director for 14 years. In his software development experience, he developed and lead numerous large software engineering projects dealing with intelligent systems, applied artificial intelligence, distributed object technologies, enterprise resource planning and product data management implementations. Prof. Matson has a Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering fromtheUniversity of Cincinnati, M.B.A inOperations Management fromOhio StateUniversity and B.S. and M.S.E. degrees in Computer Science fromKansas StateUniversity.

      • Purdue University의 Eric Matson교수

        Eric Matson,조영임 한국공학교육학회 2013 Ingenium(人材니움) Vol.20 No.2

        Eric Matson, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Computer and information Technology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA. Prof. Matson is also an International Faculty Scholar in theDepartment of Radio and Electronics Engineering at Kyung Hee University, Yongin City, Korea, Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering At Dongguk University in Seoul, Korea and a Visiting Professor in the Laboratoire Images, Signaux & Systemes Intelligents in LISSI at the University of Paris et Creteil (UPEC), Paris 12 University, Paris, France. He is also a co-founder of the M2M Lab at Purdue University, which performs research in the areas of intelligent systems, robotics, wireless communication and Founder and Director of the Robotic Innovation, Commercialization and Education (RICE) Research Center at Purdue University inWest Lafayette, Indiana, USA. Prior to his position at PurdueUniversity, Prof. Matsonwas in industrial and commercial software development as a consultant, software engineer, manager and director for 14 years. In his software development experience, he developed and lead numerous large software engineering projects dealing with intelligent systems, applied artificial intelligence, distributed object technologies, enterprise resource planning and product data management implementations. Prof. Matson has a Ph.D. in Computer Science and Engineering fromtheUniversity of Cincinnati, M.B.A inOperations Management fromOhio StateUniversity and B.S. and M.S.E. degrees in Computer Science fromKansas StateUniversity.

      • KCI등재

        Counts and sequences, observations that continue to change ourunderstanding of viruses in nature

        K. Eric Wommack,Daniel J. Nasko,Jessica Chopyk,Eric G. Sakowski 한국미생물학회 2015 The journal of microbiology Vol.53 No.3

        The discovery of abundant viruses in the oceans and on landhas ushered in a quarter century of groundbreaking advancementsin our understanding of viruses within ecosystems. Two types of observations from environmental samples –direct counts of viral particles and viral metagenomic sequences– have been critical to these discoveries. Accuratedirect counts have established ecosystem-scale trends in theimpacts of viral infection on microbial host populations andhave shown that viral communities within aquatic and soilenvironments respond to both short term and seasonal environmentalchange. Direct counts have been critical for estimatingviral production rate, a measurement essential toquantifying the implications of viral infection for the biogeochemicalcycling of nutrients within ecosystems. Whiledirect counts have defined the magnitude of viral processes;shotgun sequences of environmental viral DNA – viromesequences – have enabled researchers to estimate the diversityand composition of natural viral communities. Virome-enabledstudies have found the virioplankton to contain thousandsof viral genotypes in communities where the mostdominant viral population accounts for a small fraction oftotal abundance followed by a long tail of diverse populations. Detailed examination of long virome sequences hasled to new understanding of genotype-to-phenotype connectionswithin marine viruses and revealed that viruses carrymetabolic genes that are important to maintaining cellularenergy during viral replication. Increased access to long viromesequences will undoubtedly reveal more genetic secretsof viruses and enable us to build a genomics rulebook forpredicting key biological and ecological features of unknownviruses.

      • MYTHICIZING ASIAN BRANDS IN THE GLOBAL MARKETPLACE

        Eric Li,Sangwon Lee 글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 2016 Global Marketing Conference Vol.2016 No.7

        Emerging Asian markets such as China and India have drawn tremendous attention to marketing and consumer researchers in the past decades (e.g., Cayla & Eckhardt, 2008; Dong & Tian, 2009). The increasing purchasing power of the new middle-class Asian consumers attracted not only global brands but also local brands from the region. Previous studies on Asian consumers found that consumers are actively using Western brands to construct their modern or global identities (e.g., Dong & Tian, 2009). Other studies explored how regional or local brands redefine themselves in both regional and transnational markets (Cayla & Eckhardt, 2008; Wu, Borgerson & Schroeder, 2013). In this study, we employed a cultural approach (Cayla & Arnould, 2008) to examine how Asian brands mythicize themselves in the global marketplace through various storytelling and myth-making strategies. We compare and contrast the mythology and storytelling strategies (Boje, 1995; Lundqvist, Liljander, Gummerus & van Riel, 2013; Vincent, 2001) employed by three Asian consumer electronic brands, Samsung (South Korea), Sony (Japan), and Xiaomi Technology (China) and report our key findings in the following sections. In marketing literature, brand is defined as “name, term, design, symbol, or any other feature that identifies one seller’s good or service as distinct from those other sellers” by the American Marketing Association (Keller, 2013, p. 2). In recently years, brands have been viewed as an integral part of contemporary popular culture (Cayla & Arnould, 2008; Hancock, 2009, 2013; Holt, 2004, 2006; Klein, 2001; Moor, 2007). Brands, like other cultural artefacts such as folklore, dance, songs, and costumes, have significant impact on shaping consumers’ everyday lives and influence on how they define their world

      • KCI등재

        A Novel Technique for Visualizing the Intralymphatic Primo Vascular System by Using Hollow Gold Nanospheres

        Eric Carlson,Gustavo Perez-Abadia,Staci Adams,Jin Z. Zhang,강경애,Claudio Maldonado 사단법인약침학회 2015 Journal of Acupuncture & Meridian Studies Vol.8 No.6

        Until recently, the primo vascular system (PVS) has been unnoticed by most anatomists due to the small diameter and translucent features of the threadlike network. These properties make primo vessels (PVs) difficult to visualize for harvest and for further characterization. One particular PVS subtype that is located within the lymphatic vessels (LVs) is of strong interest because with a proper contrast, these long PVs can be visualized through the transparent LV wall and can be harvested to provide sufficient sample material for analysis. The most common method to visualize this PVS subtype utilizes Alcian blue as the contrast agent. This technique is effective, but tedious, and has relatively low repeatability. The purpose of this study was to develop a new technique that allows reliable visualization of the intralymphatic PVS (IL-PVS) in a user-friendly manner. The method was designed to provide optical contrast to the PVS by taking advantage of the porous nature of the PV's external wall and interstitial matrix. Turquoise-green-colored hollow gold nanospheres (HGNs) in the size range of 50–125 nm were found to provide excellent optical contrast for the IL-PVS in rats. The PVS was visualized within 10 minutes after HGN administration at a 95% success rate.

      • Dynamic Criteria Mapping (DCM) Heuristics for Communal Writing Assessment Practices

        ( Eric Wesley Stations ) 현대영미어문학회 2019 현대영미어문학회 춘계학술대회 발표논문집 Vol.2019 No.-

        This paper validates the assumption that Dr. Bob Broad’s Dynamic Criteria Mapping (DCM) can be used to study, understand, and articulate rhetorical assessment procedures, in order to improve Communal Writing Assessment Practices (CWA)--rhetorical, deliberative, collaborative assessments--as well as to reflect more accurately on curricular criteria. This paper discusses the “Theory of Complementarity,” the theoretical rational for “Communal Writing Assessment” practices. Most importantly, this paper offers a “Streamlined DCM Approach” for educator-educator collaborations and a “Classroom-Based DCM Approach” for educator-student collaborations with regard to writing assessment heuristics.

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