Beryl Bainbridge – “Master Georgie” The story is set between 1846 and 1854, it tells the story about Cirmean War from the British point of view. The story has 3 narrators: Myrtle, the adopted sister of George Hardy; Dr. Potter and Pompey Jones The main character of the book is of course George Hardy aka. Master Georgie. He is attractive, intelligent and bisexual. He is a surgeon, also, he is an amateur photographer. There are 3 other main characters: 1) Myrtle – the adopted sister, who Master Georgie absolutely adores, Myrtle is the only one in the book referring to George Hardy as Master Georgie, she constantly follows him around and never lets him out of her sight 2) Dr Potter - sententious geologist who eventually marries another of the Hardy children, he, like Hardy is also an intellectual 3) Pompey Jones – He is a street performer, and also he learns photography from Hardy, as a child he used to ste...
Wilma A. Bainbridge. The Memorability of People: Intrinsic Memorability Across Transformations of a Person’s Face. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition. 2017, Vol. 43, nr. 5. Lk 706–716. Artikkel käsitleb uuringut kus juureldakse millisel määral püsib meeldejäämine stabiilne tundmatu inimese näo miimika ja vaatenurga muutusel. Peale esimest kohtumist jäävad teatud inimesed meelde terveks eluks, teistega võid kohtuda kordi ja kordi, kuid ikka on raskusi mäletamisega. Kui sa kohtuksid kahe inimesega jooniselt, siis on suur tõenäosus, et isik A jääks sulle meelde, kuid isiku B unustaksid. Joonis. Kõige paremini meelde jäänud isik (A) ja kõige vähem meelde jäänud isik (B) käesoleva referaadi aluseks olnud artikli uurimustöös. Pildid on lisatud inimeste nõusolekul Erinevad uuringud seovad mäletamist näo tajulise eristusvõimega ning näod mis kattuvad jälgija demograafilise sarnasuseg...
form, is placed within diagonals, according to the convention widely followed in linguistics; thus /t/ refers to the unvoiced stop normally represented by that letter and not to the graphic symbol t. D. K. 1. One Day of Magic: I AT1:28 on the morning of December 7, 1941, the big ear of the Navy's radio station on Bainbridge Island near Seattle trembled to vibrations in the ether. A message was coming through on the Tokyo-Washington circuit. It was addressed to the Japanese embassy, and Bainbridge reached up and snared it as it flashed overhead. The message was short, and its radiotelegraph transmission took only nine minutes. Bainbridge had it all by 1:37. The station's personnel punched the intercepted message on a teletype tape, dialed a number on the teletypewriter exchange, and when