Fumihiko Saito

EVALUATION OF A 3-D VISUAL PROGRAMMING ENVIRONMENT IN AN INTRODUCTORY COURSE OF OBJECT-ORIENTED PROGRAMMING (2007)

Keizo Nagaoka, Noritaka Osawa, Kaname Mochizuki, Hideaki Takahashi, Emi Nishina, Fumihiko Saito

Abstract — A newly developed visual programming environment has been evaluated. It allows students to visualize and manipulate programs in 3-D representation. That visual programming environment is...

Uganda's Local Council and the Management of Commons: An Attempt of Theoretical Reassessment (2006)

Saito, Fumihiko

"Environmental degradation is a global concern, and developing countries including African are no exception. It is perhaps very ironical to observe the coexistence of rich wildlife and stark poverty...

A Dancing Programmer in an Immersive Virtual Environment (2001)

Noritaka Osawa, Kikuo Asai, Yuji Y. Sugimoto, Fumihiko Saito

Our immersive programming system allows programs to be edited and controlled by direct manipulation and hand gestures in an immersive virtual environment utilizing multimodal interfaces. It lets...

Mutant Genes of Gramicidin S Synthetase 1 Defective in Phenylalanine Racemization Have the Same Sequence as the Wild Gene (1994)

Hori, Kazuko, Saito, Fumihiko, Tokita, Kazuhiko, Kurotsu, Toshitsugu, Kanda, Masayuki, Saito, Yoshitaka

Mutant grs1 genes were cloned and sequenced from the Bacillus brevis Nagano BI-4, C-3, E-l, and E-2 strains, which produce defective gramicidin S synthetase 1 (GS1), lacking racemase activity....

The Nucleotide Sequence for a Proline-Activating Domain of Gramicidin S Synthetase 2 Gene from Bacillus brevis (1991)

Hori, Kazuko, Yamamoto, Yoshihiro, Tokita, Kazuhiko, Saito, Fumihiko, Kurotsu, Toshitsugu, Kanda, Masayuki, ...

A fragment encoding proline-activating domain (grs 2-pro) of gramicidin S synthetase 2 (GS 2) was found in an 8.1-kilobase pairs (kb) DNA fragment of Bacillus brevis Nagano, which contained the full...

Titoism' and China in American national security planning 1948-1950 (1986)

Saito, Fumihiko

This thesis is not available electronically or by photocopy. Please contact Archives and Special Collections at archives@amherst.edu for more information.