New public release to more than 1,600 materials digitized selected from the paper of Leonidas H. Berry
Dr. Berry 's new single percussion CD "DIMENSION - Mark Berry, Percussion" has recently been released from the Equilibrium label. In the room of music in the room, Dr. Berry percussion performance can be heard on several recordings of Equilibrium label and Centaur label. His research was published in percussion notes of the Percussion Art Society magazine titled "13 Drums, Works". 66: simultaneous interpretation with the concept of "time and space" by Maki Ishii "His percussion work has been published by C - Alan Publications, HoneyRock Publishing, and Tapspace Publications.
Prior to coming to the West of Kentucky, Dr. Berry taught percussion with Flint at the University of West Virginia and the University of Michigan. Dr. Berry got a degree from the University of Michigan and Ohio State University. His main teachers include additional research by Michael Judou, Salvatore Rabbio, James L. Moore, and Michael Bump and Fernando Mesa.
Through a scholarship awarded by the Kentucky State Higher Education Committee, Dr. founded WKU Steelband in 2004. In 2008 he was accredited as "University / University Teacher of the Year" by TDK MEA and served as arranger, director, referee and consultant for many high school military band projects in the Midwestern region of percussion writers.
Dr. Michael D. Berry served as president of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the Clean Industry Association (CIRI) in 2006. The information presented here comes from Dr. Berry's paper and presentation at the CIRI 2007 Clean Science Council. And a seminar. Not to mention his entire paper and power point presentation, as well as lectures from other seminar speakers can be found at www.ciri-research.org.
Michael Berry is Associate Professor of Molecular Biology at Princeton University. He has studied retinal neurological calculations for more than 20 years and operates the Belly Laboratory at Princeton Neuroscience Laboratory. In this episode, Dr. Matt and Dr. Berry discuss the complexity of the retina, the mechanism by which the retina encodes photons, and the optic nerve. We look forward to episode 3 of Eric Jonas, a postdoctoral researcher at Berkeley Computing Imaging Center. He has studied a wide range of topics such as acquisition of bio signals, machine learning, neuroscience and solar physics. In this episode, Dr. Matt and Dr. Jonas explain neuron and transistor, brain damage and connectors.