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Item Item Item Farewell to Associate Professor Richard Hosking, 27 April 2012.(1-May-12) Thurnwald, AdrianTribute to Dr Rick Hosking at his retirement party: transcript of Address by PhD Candidate Adrian ThurnwaldItem Three poems: 1. Invisible Borders; 2. Remember Armagh; 3. The Hill of Tara(1-May-12) O'Reilly, NathanaelPoetryItem Item Item Item Item Item Transnational Literature, May 2012: Creative writing: Prose(1-May-12)All prose creative writing from Transnational Literature, May 2012, in one file for ease of printing and downloadingItem Item Four Frames: 1.Down Memory Lane; 2. An Old Story Re-told; 3. Door Keeping; 4. Lover Cancer.(1-May-12) Haque, Md RezaulPoetryItem Phenotypic Association Analyses With Copy Number Variation in Recurrent Depressive Disorder(Elsevier, 15-02-20) Rucker, James J H; Tansey, Katherine E; Rivera, Margarita; Pinto, Dalila; Cohen-Woods, Sarah; Uher, Rudolf; Aitchison, Katherine J; Craddock, Nick; Owen, Michael J; Jones, Lisa; Jones, Ian; Korszun, Ania; Barnes, Michael R; Preisig, Martin; Mors, Ole; Maier, Wolfgang; Rice, John P; Rietschel, Marcella; Holsboer, Florian; Farmer, Anne E; Craig, Ian W; Scherer, Stephen W; Scherer, Peter; Breen, GeromeBackground Defining the molecular genomic basis of the likelihood of developing depressive disorder is a considerable challenge. We previously associated rare, exonic deletion copy number variants (CNV) with recurrent depressive disorder (RDD). Sex chromosome abnormalities also have been observed to co-occur with RDD. Methods In this reanalysis of our RDD dataset (N = 3106 cases; 459 screened control samples and 2699 population control samples), we further investigated the role of larger CNVs and chromosomal abnormalities in RDD and performed association analyses with clinical data derived from this dataset. Results We found an enrichment of Turner’s syndrome among cases of depression compared with the frequency observed in a large population sample (N = 34,910) of live-born infants collected in Denmark (two-sided p = .023, odds ratio = 7.76 [95% confidence interval = 1.79–33.6]), a case of diploid/triploid mosaicism, and several cases of uniparental isodisomy. In contrast to our previous analysis, large deletion CNVs were no more frequent in cases than control samples, although deletion CNVs in cases contained more genes than control samples (two-sided p = .0002). Conclusions After statistical correction for multiple comparisons, our data do not support a substantial role for CNVs in RDD, although (as has been observed in similar samples) occasional cases may harbor large variants with etiological significance. Genetic pleiotropy and sample heterogeneity suggest that very large sample sizes are required to study conclusively the role of genetic variation in mood disorders.Item Health librarians and Grey Literature: what do we need to know?(1/10/2014) Tyndall, JessicaItem Jessy, or the happy pair(London Magazine, 1747) Gillian Dooley [transcriber]; Moore, EdwardSong from Austen music collections, CHWJA/19/1:20. Transcribed from manuscript for performance. MS available online at https://archive.org/stream/austen1671414-2001#page/n41/mode/2up. Words found in 'The Poetical Works of Edward Moore (London, 1806) p 143-4.Item Colin and Lucy: a ballad in seven parts for high voice and piano(J. Dale, 1783) Gillian Dooley [transcriber]; Giordani, Tommaso; Tickell, Thomas;Colin and Lucy (1783), A ballad in seven parts for high voice and piano; Music by Tommaso Giordani (c1730-1806), Words by Thomas Tickell (1685-1740), Transcribed and arranged for vocal duet by Gillian Dooley (2017) from the copy in the Austen Family Music Books reference no. CHWJA/19/8. https://archive.org/details/austenfamilymusicbooksItem Seaton Clifts(Southampton University Library (Internet Archive), 1785) Gillian Dooley (transcriber); Jane Austen (copyist); Philip Hayes (arranger)'To thy Cliffs rocky Seaton adieu. Adieu to Seaton Cliffs.' [Song.] ... The Words & Melody ... by a Gentleman of Oxford, at whose request Dr P. Hayes added a Bass and the Accompaniments.London : Printed for the Author ... by S. A. & P. Thompson, [1785?]. In Austen's manuscript she spells 'cliffs' as 'clifts'.Item Pauvre Jacques(Southampton University Library (Internet Archive), 1789) Gillian Dooley (transcriber); Jane Austen (copyist); Marquise de Travenet (composer/lyricist); Marie Antoinette, Queen of France (composer/lyricist)This is a transcript of a manuscript song in one of Jane Austen's music books, digitised by the University of Southampton Library. No composer is given in the manuscript. Many arrangements of this tune are recorded in various indexes, in different keys. In some the tune is attributed to Queen Marie Antoinette and the words to the Marquise de Travenet (1753-1828), or vice versa. There is a French Wikipedia page for this song which gives details of the various theories and further references, and provides a date of 1789. It is supposed to have been inspired by the story of a Swiss dairy-maid employed by Marie Antoinette.Item Laisse la sur l'herbette(1810) Gillian Dooley [transcriber]; Austen, Jane [copyist]; Pollet, Benoit (attrib.)Transcript of song in Jane Austen's handwriting in an album (catalogue no. CHWJA/19/7:18) digitised by University of Southampton at Internet Archive. Also includes English translation of words. Manuscript is online at https://archive.org/stream/austen1676459-2001#page/n81/mode/2up A song with this title by Benoit Pollet is held by University of Oxford Library with the title 'Le refus'. The tune is the same, with a different accompaniment and slight variations in the ornamentation of the refrain, and the words of verse 3 have significant differences.