1,113 research outputs found
The Adoption and Management of Soil Conservation Practices in Haiti: The Case of Rock Walls
Farmers are usually reluctant to adopt measures to reduce the toll of soil erosion; and even when soil conservation structures are adopted, farmers fail to manage them. This study investigates factors that influence adoption and management of soil conservation structures in Fort-Jacques, Haiti. The results show that personal characteristics of farmers, institutional factors, such as local group membership, training in soil conservation, per capita income and size of farm influence soil conservation adoption in Forte-Jacques. Age, education, per capita household income, participation in local groups, the interaction of per capita household income and farmersâ age influence rock wall management.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Speech of the Hon. James A. Bayard, in the Senate of the United States
Full title: Speech of the Hon. James A. Bayard, in the Senate of the United States, upon his motion made on the 16th of June, to postpone the further consideration of the bill declaring war against Great Britain, to the 31st of October
Algorithms for Maneuvering Spacecraft Around Small Bodies
A document describes mathematical derivations and applications of autonomous guidance algorithms for maneuvering spacecraft in the vicinities of small astronomical bodies like comets or asteroids. These algorithms compute fuel- or energy-optimal trajectories for typical maneuvers by solving the associated optimal-control problems with relevant control and state constraints. In the derivations, these problems are converted from their original continuous (infinite-dimensional) forms to finite-dimensional forms through (1) discretization of the time axis and (2) spectral discretization of control inputs via a finite number of Chebyshev basis functions. In these doubly discretized problems, the Chebyshev coefficients are the variables. These problems are, variously, either convex programming problems or programming problems that can be convexified. The resulting discrete problems are convex parameter-optimization problems; this is desirable because one can take advantage of very efficient and robust algorithms that have been developed previously and are well established for solving such problems. These algorithms are fast, do not require initial guesses, and always converge to global optima. Following the derivations, the algorithms are demonstrated by applying them to numerical examples of flyby, descent-to-hover, and ascent-from-hover maneuvers
Etude pilote sur la pertinence de la détermination du calcium dans la sueur
Le calcium est un électrolyte fréquemment mesuré en médecine, que ce soit dans les
contrÎles de routine, chez les insuffisants rénaux, en gastro-entérologie, en oncologie ou
chez les patients ayant subi une opération de la thyroïde ou des glandes parathyroïdes. En
endocrinologie par exemple, une mĂ©ta-analyse1 montre quâentre 7% et 50% des patients
prĂ©sentent une hypoparathyroĂŻdie transitoire aprĂšs une thyroĂŻdectomie dans le cadre dâun
cancer thyroĂŻdien et environ 1.2% des patients vont souffrir dâune hypoparathyroĂŻdie postopĂ©ratoire
permanente. Dans ce contexte, des suivis réguliers avec de nombreuses prises
de sang doivent ĂȘtre effectuĂ©s jusquâĂ la normalisation de la calcĂ©mie, ce qui est
chronophage, coûteux et contraignant pour le patient tout comme pour le médecin et le
systĂšme de santĂ©. Il parait alors pertinent dâenvisager dâautres mĂ©thodes pour rendre le suivi
de la calcémie plus facile et moins invasif pour le patient, avec par exemple de nouveaux
dispositifs de monitoring en continu. Ceci permettrait dans le futur dâintervenir plus
prĂ©cocement lors de dĂ©viation de la norme en ce qui concerne la calcĂ©mie, dâajuster au
mieux les traitements, de possiblement diminuer les coûts liés aux prises de sang ainsi que
de réduire le temps et le stress lié au séjour hospitalier des patients.
La sueur est déjà utilisée pour le dépistage de la fibrose kystique, grùce au test à la
pilocarpine. En effet le dosage quantitatif du chlore dans la sueur est considéré comme le
« Gold Standard » pour le diagnostic de la dysfonction du récepteur CFTR responsable de
la mucoviscidose. En outre ce test est également utilisé pour documenter la bonne réponse
des traitements modulateurs du CFTR, comme lâIvacaftor. Bien que les techniques de
stimulation de la sueur par iontophorĂšse Ă la pilocarpine, mises au point par Gibson et
Cooke2, existent depuis la fin des annĂ©es 50, ce nâest que rĂ©cemment, et grĂące aux
avancées technologiques dans le domaine de la nanotechnologie, que des études,
notamment en nĂ©phrologie, en mĂ©decine du sport etc., sâintĂ©ressent Ă ce fluide corporel qui
a longtemps Ă©tĂ©Ì laissĂ© pour compte. Que ce soit en ce qui concerne le sodium pour
lâinsuffisance rĂ©nale ou en ce qui concerne le chlore ou le potassium, des Ă©tudes ont
dĂ©montrĂ©Ì des corrĂ©lations, plus ou moins fortes suivant les Ă©lectrolytes, entre leur
concentration dans la sueur et celle dans le sang. NĂ©anmoins, ces Ă©tudes3, ne comportant
que peu de participants, ne permettent pas pour lâinstant de tirer de conclusions dĂ©finitives.
En ce qui concerne le calcium, la recherche de littĂ©rature a montrĂ©Ì quâil nây avait pas dâĂ©tudes
qui sâĂ©taient intĂ©ressĂ©es Ă la corrĂ©lation entre la concentration de calcium plasmatique et
sudoral. Seules des Ă©tudes4,5 concernant les conditions de rĂ©coltes du calcium ont Ă©tĂ©Ì
rĂ©alisĂ©es. Elles ont dĂ©montrĂ©Ì quâil nây avait pas de diffĂ©rence significative (moins de 10% de
différence) en fonction de la partie du corps choisie pour la récolte. En raison du manque
dâĂ©tudes sur le sujet et le potentiel que la sueur reprĂ©sente pour le suivi de la calcĂ©mie, il
parait important que des recherches soient effectuĂ©es sur ce sujet, câest pourquoi cette Ă©tude
sây intĂ©resse
Neural Connectivity with Hidden Gaussian Graphical State-Model
The noninvasive procedures for neural connectivity are under questioning.
Theoretical models sustain that the electromagnetic field registered at
external sensors is elicited by currents at neural space. Nevertheless, what we
observe at the sensor space is a superposition of projected fields, from the
whole gray-matter. This is the reason for a major pitfall of noninvasive
Electrophysiology methods: distorted reconstruction of neural activity and its
connectivity or leakage. It has been proven that current methods produce
incorrect connectomes. Somewhat related to the incorrect connectivity
modelling, they disregard either Systems Theory and Bayesian Information
Theory. We introduce a new formalism that attains for it, Hidden Gaussian
Graphical State-Model (HIGGS). A neural Gaussian Graphical Model (GGM) hidden
by the observation equation of Magneto-encephalographic (MEEG) signals. HIGGS
is equivalent to a frequency domain Linear State Space Model (LSSM) but with
sparse connectivity prior. The mathematical contribution here is the theory for
high-dimensional and frequency-domain HIGGS solvers. We demonstrate that HIGGS
can attenuate the leakage effect in the most critical case: the distortion EEG
signal due to head volume conduction heterogeneities. Its application in EEG is
illustrated with retrieved connectivity patterns from human Steady State Visual
Evoked Potentials (SSVEP). We provide for the first time confirmatory evidence
for noninvasive procedures of neural connectivity: concurrent EEG and
Electrocorticography (ECoG) recordings on monkey. Open source packages are
freely available online, to reproduce the results presented in this paper and
to analyze external MEEG databases
Zero-dispersion Wavelength Mapping in Short Single-Mode Optical Fibers Using Parametric Amplification
We demonstrate a novel convenient nondestructive method based on optical
parametric amplification that allows retrieval of the zero-dispersion
wavelength map along a short optical fiber span with a high-spatial resolution.
The improved resolution relies on the high sensitivity to the local
longitudinal dispersion fluctuations of the parametric high-gain spectrum.Comment: 3 page
Numerical Analysis on the Optimisation of Thermal Comfort Levels in an Office Located inside a Historical Building
The present study examines the possibility of thermal comfort optimisation inside an office room where, due to historical heritage, it is possible to modify neither the energetic characteristic of the envelope nor the position of the inlet air vents. The distribution of global and local thermal comfort indices is evaluated in both heating and cooling conditions by establishing a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model validated against experimental data. The obtained results demonstrate a striking asymmetry of the air velocity and temperature distribution due to the low energy efficiency of the building. In heating mode, the predicted mean vote (PMV) values were improved if the discharged air from the fan coil was at its maximal velocity. However, at the same time, the vertical
air temperature gradient increased by around 0.5 C in each working station. In the cooling condition, in the absence of the solar radiation, the minimal air-flow rate satisfied the acceptable range of the draught rate (DR), whereas in the presence of a solar load, it could not meet the required cooling load in all positions, leading to higher floor temperature. The findings of this study allow for identifying and rearranging the optimal position of working stations in terms of thermal comfort
A qualitative study on the impacts of COVID-19 on the delivery of randomised controlled trials evaluating lay-delivered psychological interventions in five countries
COVID-19 is having substantial impacts on research conduct, including clinical trials. However, there is limited research investigating the impact of the pandemic on the conduct of clinical trials and barriers to the delivery of interventions. The current study contributes to filling this gap by investigating the impacts of COVID-19 and related mitigation strategies in the context of five randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of lay-delivered psychological interventions for Syrian refugees in Jordan, Lebanon, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Turkey. We conducted semi-structured interviews with purposively selected researchers (N = 14) across all five countries. Data were analysed using codebook thematic analysis. The trial researchers highlighted how COVID-19 has had pervasive impacts across different components of the trial including recruitment, assessment, intervention delivery, and supervision. These impacts were considered to influence the external and internal scientific validity of these trials, as well as some aspects of trial administration such as budgeting and the workforce. Various mitigation strategies to adapt to constraints imposed by pandemic responses were described by researchers, such as shifting to a remote intervention delivery and evaluation or adding COVID-19 measures to better understand the impacts of COVID-19 on outcome data. The current piece provides an account of the impacts of COVID-19 on the conduct of trials of lay-delivered psychological interventions for refugees in five countries. Our findings will be valuable for researchers testing similar interventions during COVID-19 and other public health emergencies
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