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Western Washington - BIOL - 206
Mineral Nutrition in Plants IWhen one tugs at a single thing in nature, (s)he finds it attached to the rest of the world.John MuirOplopanax horridusDevils Club Ethnobotany, Medicinal uses, Sacred uses, herbalgram.org Modern uses, Empirica
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
Arabidopsis ExperimentsForward Genetic Screen (Ethylene Insensitive Mutants) Reverse Genetic Screen / PCR Genotyping (H+ ATPase Mutants)Arabidopsis Arabidopsis thaliana is the predominant model organism used by plant biologists today. Considered
Western Washington - BIOL - 206
Plant Responses to Signals IVPhotomorphogenesis Circadian Rhythms Gravitropismhttp:/sunflower.bio.indiana.edu/~rhangart/plantsinmotion.htmlGerminationAction Spectra Action Spectrum,Stem elongation graph of the magnitude of a biological res
Western Washington - BIOL - 321
Genetically Modified PlantsBiotechnology: underlying science Potential Risks vs.(Potential) BenefitsAssigned Reading: Chapter 10.5Genetically Modified OrganismsTypes of GMOs?- artificial selection and traditional breeding, - transgenic organis
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
Introduction to Genetic Screens in Arabidopsis thalianaGoal: To gain experience in the use of mutant screens to identify developmental and conditional mutants. Genetic screens: A genetic screen is a procedure or test used to identify and select indi
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
SEED STERILIZATION70% ETOH/0.1% Triton X 95% ETOH Whatmans filter paper, 6 cm diameter circles * Sterile plastic petri dishes (label bottom of the dish), round 1. Place seeds * in an eppendorf microtube (does not need to be sterile). Add 1ml 70% ETO
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
Biology 322, Fall 2008Part II: Transfer of genetic information in the bacterium Escherichia coli:Assignments: Review bacterial genetics in your textbook. Consider the questions on pg 3. of this handout. You will need to consult online resources to
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
Bioinformatics IIC. elegans Data MiningYou were given the following C. elegans strains. It is your assignment to match phenotype with genotype. In order to do this, you will first need to look up information that will help you to characterize each
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
Introduction to Genetic Screens in Arabidopsis thalianaGoal: To gain experience in the use of mutant screens to identify developmental and conditional mutants. Genetic screens: A genetic screen is a procedure or test used to identify and select indi
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
Introduction to Bioinformatics NCBI (Entrez)Goal: The efficient use of online databases for genetic data retrieval. Bioinformatics: is the study of biological problems through the coordination of techniques from mathematics, statistics, computer sci
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
BIOLOGY 322GENETICS LAB SYLLABUSSPRING 2008Dr. Jeff Young young@biol.wwu.edu Office Hours: BI 412 MWR 10 - 11 am or by appointment Lecture: T 11 11:50 pm in ES410 Lab: WF 1:30 - 4:30 pm in BI454 Course Content: In this course, we will examine
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
Mutagenesis LabBiology 322Spring 2008The Power of Bacterial Genetics lies in the ability to study rare events: An investigation of mutagenesis using the bacterium Escherichia coli.Reading Assignment: Review chapters on mutation and the lac ope
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
BIOLOGY 322GENETICS LAB SYLLABUSSPRING 2008Dr. Jeff Young young@biol.wwu.edu Office Hours: BI 412 MWT 10 - 11 am or by appointment Lecture: T 11 11:50 pm in ES410 Lab: WF 1:30 - 4:30 pm in BI454 Course Content: In this course, we will examine
Western Washington - BIOL - 205
Cellular MembranesLecture Series 4Reading Assignments Read Chapter 11 Membrane Structure Review Chapter 21 pages 709-717 (Animal Cell Adhesion) 709(Animal Review Chapter 12 Membrane Transport Review Chapter 15 regarding Endocytosis and Exocyt
Western Washington - BIOL - 206
Plant Responses to Signals IVPhotomorphogenesis Circadian Rhythms Gravitropismhttp:/sunflower.bio.indiana.edu/~rhangart/plantsinmotion.htmlGerminationAction Spectra Action Spectrum,Stem elongation graph of the magnitude of a biological res
Western Washington - BIOL - 322
Week 7, 322Monday: remove female Nasonia Tuesday: no class Wednesday: mt DNA Friday: Bacteria, ConjugationMonday, Nasonia Gently tap the fly pupae onto a folded piece of paper, Tap adult wasps into the Morgue, Replace the fly pupae in the same
Western Washington - PSY - 515
!" #$"!#"" %$!& ) *+ , "-+ & & ' & ( +, ./" 0 $.12+-3+ 444 .1 44 445 $ ( 5 $ 5 $ ! 5 ) !"$" 6 7#% 5)9 95 * &: : ; !&%'+!! ; !(& !(&'(65 6! ! &!!! ! !8##+ ( <9:&$= 5!!! >&! >&
Western Washington - ENVR - 442
Using Color-Infrared Imagery for Impervious Surface Analysis.Chris Behee City of Bellingham Planning & Community Development NW GIS Users Group - March 18, 2005Outline What is Color Infrared Imagery? Vegetation Indices (NDVI) Building an Imper
Western Washington - ESCI - 101
ESCI 101 Study guide for the first mid-term examUpdated: January 22, 2009Know the following terms: Environment, ecology, biome, goods, marginal value, opportunity cost, demand, supply, luxury goods, inferior goods, welfare economics, sustainable
Western Washington - PSY - 515
HLMPSY515 JimGraham Fall2007FixedEffects Sofar,mostofwehavedealtwithuseswhat arecalledfixedeffects. Afixedvariableisassumedtobemeasured withouterror. Regressionconsidersyashavingerror,butnot thepredictors:=a+b(x) y=a+b(x)+error y=+errorX1
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS 430 Database TheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 14: Additional SQL Topics1Additional Topics Views Programmatic Interface2Views Views are Virtual tables They can be referenced in SELECT statements just like another table They can be refer
Western Washington - CS - 496
CS 496 Senior Project, Winter 2007SyllabusInstructor: Christopher (Chris) Reedy Office CF463 Email mailto:Chris.Reedy@wwu.edu?subject=CS496 Phone 650-4838 To be arranged by teamOffice Hours:DescriptionExecute a software development project, in
Western Washington - CS - 496
CS 496 Senior Project, Fall 2006SyllabusInstructor: Christopher (Chris) Reedy Office CF463 Email mailto:Chris.Reedy@wwu.edu?subject=CS496 Phone 650-4838 To be arranged by teamOffice Hours:DescriptionExecute a software development project, incl
Western Washington - CS - 496
CS 496 Senior Project, Winter 2008SyllabusInstructor: Christopher (Chris) Reedy Office: CF463 Email: mailto:Chris.Reedy@wwu.edu?subject=CS496 Phone: 650-4838 http:/faculty.cs.wwu.edu/reedyc/CS496_Winter_2008/index.html To be arranged by teamWeb S
Western Washington - CS - 496
Presentation and Poster Guidelines (Fall 2008) The demonstrations will be held in December during Finals Week. The department will provide pizza and drinks (non-alcoholic, of course). 1. Your team will have about 30 minutes. In order to avoid impacti
Western Washington - CS - 496
CS 496 Senior Project, Fall 2008SyllabusInstructor: Christopher (Chris) Reedy, Office CF463, Phone 650-4838 Email mailto:Chris.Reedy@wwu.edu?subject=CS496 Course Coordinator: Phil Nelson, Office CF471, Phone 650-3035 Office Hours: To be arranged by
Western Washington - CS - 496
CS 496 Senior Project, Spring 2008SyllabusInstructor: Christopher (Chris) Reedy Office CF463, Phone 650-4838 Email mailto:Chris.Reedy@wwu.edu?subject=CS496 Course Coordinator: David Bover Office Hours: To be arranged by teamCourse OutcomesOn com
Western Washington - CS - 225
Possible Points Presentation Style: Personal appearance (posture, expression); speaking (articulation, projection); energy, interest, audience contact15 Presenter appears professional and lively, articulates and projects well, is interested in th
Western Washington - CS - 225
CS 225 IntroductionChris ReedySyllabus on web site Web Site:http:/faculty.cs.wwu.edu/reedyc/CS225_Summer_2006 Speaking schedule: To Be DeterminedWhy take this class? Other than it is a requirement for your CS degree? Why does ABET want you
Western Washington - CS - 410
1.- languages employ a computational model based on the recursive definition of functions. They take their inspiration from the lambda calculus, a formal computational model developed by Alonzo Church in the 1930s. (a) von Neumann (b) Object-oriented
Western Washington - PVM - 3
PVM: Parallel Virtual MachineScienti c and Engineering ComputationJanusz Kowalik, EditorData-Parallel Programming on MIMD Computersby Philip J. Hatcher and Michael J. Quinn, 1991Unstructured Scienti c Computation on Scalable Multiprocessors
Western Washington - CS - 460
CS460, Introduction to Operating Systems Winter 2005 Final ExamInstructions: Answer all questions on the answer sheet provided by filling in the bubble corresponding to the correct answer. Each correct answer is worth one point. There is only one co
Western Washington - CS - 367
CS367 Winter 2005 Midterm Exam 1. HTTP header information is transmitted as (a) binary data (b) ASCII text (c) hexified ASCII (d) hexified 7-bit binary (e) EBCDIC 2. The original technique employed to provide a mechanism for a web document to cause t
Western Washington - CS - 467
CS467 Spring 2005 Final Exam 1. The ONC RPC mechanism specifies that at most one remote procedure in a remote program can be invoked at a given time. (a) True (b) False 2. IN ONC RPC the procedures inside a remote program (server) all share access to
Western Washington - CS - 513
Western Washington - CS - 460
CS460 Introduction to Operating Systems Spring 2005 Midterm ExamInstructions: Answer all questions on the blue scan document provided by filling in the bubble corresponding to the correct answer. Remember to use only a number 2 pencil or it will not
Western Washington - CS - 512
1. _ languages are sometimes described as computing via side effects. (a) imperative (b) Object-oriented (c) dataflow (d) functional (e) logic or constraint-based 2. _languages employ a computational model based on the recursive definition of functio
Western Washington - CS - 460
CS460, Introduction to Operating Systems Winter 2005 Midterm ExamInstructions: Answer all questions on the blue scan document provided by filling in the bubble corresponding to the correct answer. There is only one correct answer per question. Each
Western Washington - CS - 512
CS 512 Programming Languages Fall 2005 Midterm Exam Instructions: Answer all questions on the scan document provided. There is no penalty for guessing (well technically I guess there is a penalty for guessing incorrectly). You must fill in all name a
Western Washington - CS - 410
Western Washington - CS - 410
1.- languages employ a computational model based on the recursive definition of functions. They take their inspiration from the lambda calculus, a formal computational model developed by Alonzo Church in the 1930s. (a) von Neumann (b) Object-oriented
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
Modula-2 report by Loren Loiseau For CSCI 512, Fall 2005 History Niklaus Wirth designed the Modula language in the mid-1970s as an experiment with concurrency and modularization. Modula was never released and development discontinued after Wirth publ
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
MODULE myhello;IMPORT InOut;PROCEDURE Greeting; VAR name : ARRAY [1 . 80] OF CHAR; PROCEDURE SecretNumber() : INTEGER; BEGIN RETURN 42; END SecretNumber; PROCEDURE GetName; BEGIN InOut.WriteString("Who are you?"); InOut.Re
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
IMPLEMENTATION MODULE ListUtil;FROM InOut IMPORT WriteString, WriteLn, WriteInt;FROM SYSTEM IMPORT ADDRESS;FROM Storage IMPORT ALLOCATE, DEALLOCATE;TYPE List = POINTER TO ListPair; ListElement = POINTER TO ListElemData; ListElemD
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
MODULE sieve;IMPORT InOut;CONST SIZE = 8190;VAR iter, maxiter, count: CARDINAL; flags: ARRAY [0.SIZE] OF BOOLEAN;PROCEDURE iteration;VAR i, k, prime: CARDINAL;BEGIN FOR i := 0 TO SIZE DO flags[i] := TRUE; END; count := 0;
Western Washington - MODULA - 2
DEFINITION MODULE ListUtil;FROM SYSTEM IMPORT ADDRESS;TYPE List;TYPE ListElement;TYPE ListElementType = (letString, letInteger, letList);(* list creation, destruction *)PROCEDURE CreateList() : List;PROCEDURE DestroyList(VAR list : List);
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS 430 Database TheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 5: Relational Algebra1What is the Relational Algebra?Answer: A collection of operations that can be applied to Relations yielding new Relations What's the idea behind the Relational Algebra? Defi
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS430 DatabaseTheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 11: SQL DDL1SQLDataTypesNumericINTEGER, INT, SMALLINTMySQL: TINYINT (1 BYTE), SMALLINT (2 BYTE), MEDIUMINT (3 BYTE), INT or INTEGER (4 BYTE), BIGINT (8 BYTE), both SIGNED and UNSIGNED MySQL: FLOAT
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS430 DatabaseTheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 7: Designing a Database Logical Level1LogicalDesignDefine the Relations and Attributes for a Relational Database Key problems: What tables will there be? What columns will each table have? Where wi
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS 430 Database TheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 16: Inside a DBMS1Topics Phyical Storage Indexing Query Optimization Making ACID Work Transactions Concurrency Journaling Rollback/Rollforward RecoveryDistributed Database2Physical Stor
Western Washington - CS - 430
CS 430 Database TheoryWinter 2005 Lecture 3: A Fifty Minute Introduction to Data Modeling1What is Data Modeling?Answer: Modeling the data that will be in our database What data will be in our database? The data needed to support our appl
Western Washington - CS - 241
Balanced Trees 2-3Trees 2-3-4 Trees Red-Black Trees AVL Balanced TreesBased on slides prepared by David Bover1Red-Black Trees Binarytree implementation of 2-3-4 treesbenefits of 2-3-4 tree without overheads Representeach 3-node a
Western Washington - CS - 241
EfficiencyofSortingAlgorithms Insertionsort Bubblesort Mergesort Quicksort RadixsortBasedonslidespreparedbyDavidBover1InsertionSort Arrayconsideredtobeintwosections sorted(initiallyempty) unsorted(initiallythewholearray) Ineachstep,tak
Western Washington - CS - 241
Trees Tree definitions and terminology Binary tree definition, properties, ADT traversals representation Binary Search Tree definition, properties, ADT efficiency of algorithms tree sort, saving trees Representation of general treesBased on s
Western Washington - CS - 241
Balanced Trees 2-3Trees 2-3-4 Trees Red-Black Trees AVL Balanced TreesBased on slides prepared by David Bover12-3-4 Trees Similarto a 2-3 tree, but can contain 4-nodes A 4-node contains 3 data items and can have 4 children Inserts and
Western Washington - CS - 141
CS141 Student Survey Form - Spring 2005 Name:Preferred e-mail address: Prior programing experience: (include programming language(s)you have studied and/or used, high school and college courses,work experience, etc.)Personal computer: (If
Western Washington - CS - 430
drop table if exists EMPLOYEE;create table EMPLOYEE ( FNAME VarChar(20) not null, MINIT Char(1) null, LNAME VarChar(20) not null, SSN Char(9) not null, BDATE Date not null, ADDRE
Western Washington - CS - 141
F:\Examples\Min_Max_Three>dir Volume in drive F has no label. Volume Serial Number is 3B69-1AFD Directory of F:\Examples\Min_Max_Three10/18/2004 09:36 AM <DIR> .10/18/2004 09:36 AM <DIR> .10/17/2004 02:39 PM
Western Washington - CS - 2
Sequential Index for Program Distribution Accompanying"Software Construction and Data Structures with Ada 95"by Michael B. Feldmancopyright 1996, Addison Wesley Publishing CompanyISBN 0-201-88795-9Comments and questions to mfeldman@seas.gwu.edu
Western Washington - CS - 430
drop table if exists Employee;create table Employee ( EID Integer not null, EName VarChar(30) not null, WorkLoc VarChar(20), MgrID Integer, constraint PK_EID primary key (EID) );drop table if exists
Western Washington - CS - 145
Professional John Smith0123456789 12 5500.00Hourly James Brown012345678 14 15.50