Browsing Harvard Central Administration and University Research Centers by Title
Now showing items 335-354 of 1016
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A haiku introduction to open access
(Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, 2004) -
A Harm-Reduction Framework for Algorithmic Fairness
(Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2018)In this article, we recognize the profound effects that algorithmic decision-making can have on people's lives and propose a harm-reduction framework for algorithmic fairness. We argue that any evaluation of algorithmic ... -
Harvard Library Digital Strategy - Version 1.0
(Harvard Library, 2016) -
HarvardX and MITx: The First Year of Open Online Courses, Fall 2012-Summer 2013
(2014)HarvardX and MITx are collaborative institutional efforts between Harvard University and MIT to enhance campus-based education, advance educational research, and increase access to online learning opportunities worldwide. ... -
Health care productivity
(Brookings Institution Press, 1997) -
Health outcomes and costs of community mitigation strategies for an influenza pandemic in the United States
(Oxford University Press, 2010)Background The optimal community-level approach to control pandemic influenza is unknown. Methods We estimated the health outcomes and costs of combinations of 4 social distancing strategies and 2 antiviral medication ... -
Helen of Sparta and her very own Eidolon
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2016-05-02)In Classical Inquiries 2016.02.18, I analyzed a scene in the Homeric Odyssey where Telemachus finds himself transported into a kind of “Mycenaean heaven” while visiting the palace in Sparta where Menelaos lives together ... -
Helping scholars and helping libraries
(Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, 2005) -
Herodotus and a courtesan from Naucratis
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2015-07-01) -
Heroesx: The Ancient Greek Hero: Spring 2013 Course Report
(2014)CB22x: The Ancient Greek Hero, was offered as a HarvardX course in Spring 2013 on edX, a platform for massive open online courses (MOOCs). It was taught by Professor Greg Nagy. The report was prepared by researchers external ... -
A historical Cato caught in the vortex of an ancient biography
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2015-08-05)Renaissance Opera is notorious for taking liberties with the facts in its portrayal of historical characters. Vivaldi’s Cato in Utica is no exception. My presentation explores here some strikingly comparable situations in ... -
Holyoke: A Massachusetts Municipal Light Plant Seizes Internet Access Business Opportunities
(Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, 2015)This case study documents the success of a municipally-owned electric utility in providing Internet access services. Massachusetts has 41 such “munis” –- serving more than 900,000 people and thousands of businesses -– but ... -
Homeric problems and bibliographical challenges, Part 2: More on the performances of rhapsodes at the festival of the Panathenaia
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2018-11-30)This post, dated 2018.11.30, picks up from where I left off in Classical Inquiries 2018.11.22. Here again I am dealing with problems I have encountered in figuring out the historical circumstances of Homeric performances ... -
Homo ludens at play with the songs of Sappho: Experiments in comparative reception theory, Part Five
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-02-08) -
Homo ludens at play with the songs of Sappho: Experiments in comparative reception theory, Part Four
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-01-31)This posting for 2019.01.31 is Part Four of a long-term project that started with Part One at 2019.01.08 and continued with Part Two at 2019.01.16 and with Part Three at 2019.01.25. The numbering of my paragraphs here in ... -
Homo ludens at play with the songs of Sappho: Experiments in comparative reception theory, Part One
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-01-08)This essay is the first in a set of consecutive postings that will have the same title, differentiated as Part One, Part Two, and so on. The first two words in the title of each posting derive from an earlier essay, Nagy ... -
Homo ludens at play with the songs of Sappho: Experiments in comparative reception theory, Part Seven
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-03-01)This posting for 2019.03.01 is Part Seven of a long-term project that started with Part One at 2019.01.08. The numbering of my paragraphs here in Part Seven continues from §110 of Part Six, posted 2019.02.22, continuing ... -
Homo ludens at play with the songs of Sappho: Experiments in comparative reception theory, Part Six
(Harvard University, Center for Hellenic Studies, 2019-02-22)This posting for 2019.02.22 is Part Six of a long-term project that started with Part One at 2019.01.08. The numbering of my paragraphs here in Part Six continues from §95 of Part Five, posted 2019.02.08, continuing from ...