60 research outputs found

    Hydroecological investigations on the hyporheic zone to support river management from reaches to catchments

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    The hyporheic zone (HZ) is an area of interaction between surface and ground waters in riverbeds. It is characterized by a diverse fauna and by a bidirectional flow (hyporheic exchange flow - HEF). HZ plays a signifi cant role in river ecosystems as location of major physical, biogeochemical and ecological processes. Yet, predicting HEF in rivers and assessing its ecological effects is challenging due to physical and biological process- interactions in time and space. This thesis investigates HEF from a hierarchical scaling perspective and it has two components: (i) physical, and (ii) biological. The fi rst component includes discriminating and integrating the drivers of HEF across spatial scales and developing a multiscale statistical method for river restoration planning. The second component consists of testing the interaction between physical and biological processes on in-channel large wood (LW), by quantifying, in the field, the effects on hyporheic and benthic invertebrates assemblages taxonomic structure and functional traits. The multiscale approach shows that suitable areas for HEF-focused restoration embed a summary of environmental information across the domains of hydrology, geomorphology, and ecology. Field results about invertebrates' taxonomic and functional metrics, demonstrate that the increased spatial and temporal variability of abiotic conditions at LW sites drives changes in abundance, biomass, diversity and functional traits of hyporheic meiofaunal assemblages. In contrast, benthic macrofaunal assemblages were less wood-impacted. To support restoration targeting the HZ, this research emphasizes the need to (i) recognize different spatial scales of HEF to identify the underlying processes; (ii) coordinate approaches to pool hyporheic data and create long-term datasets to quantitatively assess model predictions; and (iii) establish further knowledge on how LW effects HZ in different valleys and river types

    The King and His People in the Discourse of the Ancien Capitaine.

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    The linkage between king and people in the discourse of the ancien capitaine is based on the dual roles of the captain as an intermediary representing the people to the king and as a royal officer commissioned by the king to exercise royal sovereignty. Maritime captains, Indian chiefs, and French missionaries participated in a discourse that advanced and nurtured the village leader and post captains as links between France and New France, between the king in the old world and his people in the new. Tracing the development of the diplomatic language in New France and observing the old Canadian captains as they extended French dominion into the Mississippi Valley, shows that the chain linking the king to his people was strained by the gap that developed between the interests of the king\u27s service and the welfare of the colony itself. The city of Natchitoches planted by Louis Juchereau de Saint Denis on the border between two empires became the nucleus of a viable frontier community. The economic failure of the Company of the West created new opportunities for those who were ready to learn and apply the techniques of the ancien capitaine, and by demonstrating their ability to control a vast territory with a handful of soldiers, the old captains attempted to bridge the gap between the king\u27s interest and the survival of the colony. The use of words and force by the ancien capitaine forged the strong link of the chain that tied the people--families, tribes, and traders--of the captain\u27s post to the kingdom, confederacy, or federal republic which was best able to defend and protect his people and supply their needs. The ancien capitaine presented himself as the royal agent who could bring the benefits of protection and material prosperity to the people who accepted him as their spokesman. The effective frontier commandant was a royal officer who commanded the loyalty of the fictive kinship groups surrounding his post. The key to Spanish control was the enlistment of French captains in the service of the Spanish king

    Gate-Level Commercial Microelectronics Verification with Standard Cell Recognition

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    Within the past two decades, the problem of counterfeit hardware has gained significant attention within the Department of Defense (DoD). Counterfeit electronics compromise national security systems as they may fail to meet durability requirements and/or contain malicious circuits [6, 16, 17]. This necessitates the development of methods to detect counterfeit electronics and prevent the counterfeit electronics from entering DoD systems. The DARPA TRUST program was established to address the need to verify integrated circuit (IC) electronics. This research describes the development of standard cell recognition (SCR) software intended to resolve conflicts in prior TRUST related applications of commercial software to verify IC designs. SCR software applications to circuits composed of up to 650 transistors are presented, and the resulting 90% SCR application success rate is discussed

    Climate change: an exciting challenge for new and underutilised crops

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    Selected Topics in Gravity, Field Theory and Quantum Mechanics

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    Quantum field theory has achieved some extraordinary successes over the past sixty years; however, it retains a set of challenging problems. It is not yet able to describe gravity in a mathematically consistent manner. CP violation remains unexplained. Grand unified theories have been eliminated by experiment, and a viable unification model has yet to replace them. Even the highly successful quantum chromodynamics, despite significant computational achievements, struggles to provide theoretical insight into the low-energy regime of quark physics, where the nature and structure of hadrons are determined. The only proposal for resolving the fine-tuning problem, low-energy supersymmetry, has been eliminated by results from the LHC. Since mathematics is the true and proper language for quantitative physical models, we expect new mathematical constructions to provide insight into physical phenomena and fresh approaches for building physical theories

    Governance and organizational sponsorship as success factors in free/libre and open source software development: An empirical investigation using structural equation modeling

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    Recent advances in information technologies and subsequent explosive growth of computer software use in practically all aspects of everyday life provide tremendous opportunities and benefits for improving people\u27s lives. However, significant proportion of software projects represents cancelled, abandoned or otherwise failed projects. This situation exists not only in commercial software products or government information systems, but also in an increasingly popular and important domain of free/libre and open source software (FLOSS). The problem of failures in software development projects requires identification and understanding of the factors of success and their interrelationships. Practice and previous research suggest that governance of software development projects plays crucial role in their success. Increasing adoption and sponsorship of FLOSS by commercial firms and government organizations present additional challenges; such sponsorship may also interact with governance in FLOSS projects and play a role in determining their success. This dissertation focused on analyzing the role and significance of governance and organizational sponsorship in the success of FLOSS development. This study used both conceptual analysis and empirical methods. The conceptual analysis phase, a preliminary study based on the review of existing literature, produced a partial model of success in FLOSS development. This model was verified in an empirical phase, which statistically analyzed data from multiple FLOSS repositories and other public sources. The statistical analysis was based on structural equation modeling (SEM) approach. Results of this study did not confirm hypothesized effects of the main two factors (governance and organizational sponsorship) on FLOSS success, but confirmed a positive effect of project maturity on the success. The likely reason of the lack of support for the main factors is unavailability of sufficient and correct data for proper operationalization. This and other uncovered issues are planned to be addressed in the future research on the topic, for which this dissertation formed a solid conceptual and data analysis framework

    Genetic and Phenotypic Variation in Tree Crops Biodiversity

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    Recently, there has been a dramatic increase in the use of DNA-derived data and innovative phenotyping to obtain insights into the causative genes underlying traits of agronomical interest or to characterize tree genetic resources. The latter, in particular, could represent an important source of genetic diversity that can be readily used to enhance the adaptability to limiting environmental factors and resistance to biotic stresses or to promote novel genotypes with improved agronomic traits. On the whole, the studies collected in this book report on tree crop biodiversity characterization that could provide the essential building blocks to ensure future improvements in production and quality, as well as for innovations in tree crop development and utilization

    Integrated Scenario-Based Methodology for Project Risk Management

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    Project risk management is currently used in several industries and mandated by government acquisition agencies around the world to manage uncertainty in an effort to improve a project's probability of success. Common practice involves developing a list of risk items scored with probability and consequence ordinal scales by committee usually focusing on cost and schedule issues. A scenario based process modeling construct is introduced using a hybrid Probabilistic Risk Assessment and Decision Analysis framework integrating project development risks with operational system risks. Project management's decisions are explicitly modeled and ranked based on risk importance to the project. Multiple consequence attributes are unified providing a basis for computing total project risk. This study shows that such an approach leads to an analysis system where scenarios tracing risk items to many possible consequences are explicitly understood; the interaction between cost, schedule, and performance models drive the analysis; probabilities for overruns, delays, increased system hazards are determined directly; and state-of-the-art quantification techniques are directly applicable. All these enhance project management's capability to respond with more effective decisions
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