1,004 research outputs found

    Functioning of the health objective in the secondary schools of Massachusetts

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    This item was digitized by the Internet Archive. Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universityhttps://archive.org/details/functioningofhea00kit

    Fire ecology and fire management for the conservation of plant species and vegetation communities in a National Park in northern NSW, Australia

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    Frequent fires have been suggested to result in a decline in plant species composition and structure in Australian plant communities. This is especially apparent in regions in northern NSW thought to have had a history of frequent low intensity fires, primarily due to accidental ignitions and ignited to promote grass for cattle grazing. The aim of this study was to investigate recent fire regimes and their impacts on the vegetation composition and structure to address future fire management planning. The study was undertaken in Guy Fawkes River National Park in northern NSW, through compiling a fire history by integrating hard-copy fire records and filling gaps with multi-temporal satellite imagery. The 25-year fire history provided the stratification variables for a survey of the current vegetation patterns in relation to a number of fire frequency attributes including number of fires, shortest inter-fire interval and time since last fire. The results from the vegetation study demonstrated that shrub and tree species richness declined with increasing number of fires and shorter inter-fire intervals. This was particularly evident in the Tablelands area of the study region where the fire history was more varied and the environmental variation more constrained. The study also revealed a sharp decline in the abundance of woody shrubs and an accompanying simplification of the structure of the vegetation community with increasing number of fires and shorter intervals between fires. Complementary soil seed bank studies were undertaken to compare the impacts of high and low fire frequency. A reduced abundance of shrub species was apparent in the seed bank of sites with a history of frequent fires. Shrub species, such as Acacia irrorata, were predominantly found in the seed bank of long unburnt sites. The information from these studies was used to develop a management framework based on fire thresholds for species and vegetation community conservation. Plant species data compiled from these plus other studies provided information on regenerative mechanisms following fire, the time to reproductive maturity and longevity. Fire thresholds were determined for the majority of communities in the study region, above and below which plant species were likely to decline. This framework of fire thresholds was used to identify areas where the minimum recommended time period between fires had been exceeded in the 2000/01 fire season. Five vegetation communities were identified with 80% or more of the total area exceeding the recommended fire threshold, indicating that a decline in plant species richness was possible due to recent fire regimes. The study provided the first fire ecology study in this region and a baseline on which to build future research. The integration of fire ecology information into spatially explicit fire management guidelines was demonstrated, providing the basis for future planning for the preservation of plant species and vegetation communities in large conservation areas

    How are rescaled range analyses affected by different memory and distributional properties? A Monte Carlo study

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    In this paper, we present the results of Monte Carlo simulations for two popular techniques of long-range correlations detection - classical and modified rescaled range analyses. A focus is put on an effect of different distributional properties on an ability of the methods to efficiently distinguish between short and long-term memory. To do so, we analyze the behavior of the estimators for independent, short-range dependent, and long-range dependent processes with innovations from 8 different distributions. We find that apart from a combination of very high levels of kurtosis and skewness, both estimators are quite robust to distributional properties. Importantly, we show that R/S is biased upwards (yet not strongly) for short-range dependent processes, while M-R/S is strongly biased downwards for long-range dependent processes regardless of the distribution of innovations.Comment: 15 pages, 6 table

    Evaluating Lifeworld as an emancipatory methodology

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    Disability research is conducted within a highly politicised ‘hotbed’ of competing paradigms and principles. New researchers, who want to work within the social model, are soon faced with complex and challenging methodological and philosophical dilemmas. The social model advocates research agendas that are focused on the emancipation and empowerment of disabled people but, in reality, these are rarely achieved. To be successful researchers need to engage with innovative and creative methodologies and to share their experiences of these within environments that welcome challenge and debate. This paper focuses on Lifeworld and assesses its value as a tool for emancipatory research. Using examples from a study with parents, whose children were in the process of being labelled as having autism, the paper illustrates how the principles that ‘underpin’ the methodology offered a supportive framework for a novice researcher

    Relaxation in the glass-former acetyl salicylic acid studied by deuteron magnetic resonance and dielectric spectroscopy

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    Supercooled liquid and glassy acetyl salicylic acid was studied using dielectric spectroscopy and deuteron relaxometry in a wide temperature range. The supercooled liquid is characterized by major deviations from thermally activated behavior. In the glass the secondary relaxation exhibits the typical features of a Johari-Goldstein process. Via measurements of spin-lattice relaxation times the selectively deuterated methyl group was used as a sensitive probe of its local environments. There is a large difference in the mean activation energy in the glass with respect to that in crystalline acetyl salicylic acid. This can be understood by taking into account the broad energy barrier distribution in the glass.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Disability activism and the politics of scale

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    In this paper, we examine the role of spatial scale in mediating and shaping political struggles between disabled people and the state. Specifically, we draw on recent theoretical developments concerning the social construction of spatial scale to interpret two case studies of disability activism within Canada and Ireland. In particular, we provide an analysis of how successful the disability movement in each locale has been at 'jumping scale' and enacting change, as well as examining what the consequences of such scaling-up have been for the movement itself. We demonstrate that the political structures operating in each country markedly affect the scaled nature of disability issues and the effectiveness of political mobilization at different scales

    Geospatial information infrastructures

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    Manual of Digital Earth / Editors: Huadong Guo, Michael F. Goodchild, Alessandro Annoni .- Springer, 2020 .- ISBN: 978-981-32-9915-3Geospatial information infrastructures (GIIs) provide the technological, semantic,organizationalandlegalstructurethatallowforthediscovery,sharing,and use of geospatial information (GI). In this chapter, we introduce the overall concept and surrounding notions such as geographic information systems (GIS) and spatial datainfrastructures(SDI).WeoutlinethehistoryofGIIsintermsoftheorganizational andtechnologicaldevelopmentsaswellasthecurrentstate-of-art,andreflectonsome of the central challenges and possible future trajectories. We focus on the tension betweenincreasedneedsforstandardizationandtheever-acceleratingtechnological changes. We conclude that GIIs evolved as a strong underpinning contribution to implementation of the Digital Earth vision. In the future, these infrastructures are challengedtobecomeflexibleandrobustenoughtoabsorbandembracetechnological transformationsandtheaccompanyingsocietalandorganizationalimplications.With this contribution, we present the reader a comprehensive overview of the field and a solid basis for reflections about future developments

    The Image of the City Out of the Underlying Scaling of City Artifacts or Locations

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    Two fundamental issues surrounding research on the image of the city respectively focus on the city's external and internal representations. The external representation in the context of this paper refers to the city itself, external to human minds, while the internal representation concerns how the city is represented in human minds internally. This paper deals with the first issue, i.e., what trait the city has that make it imageable? We develop an argument that the image of the city arises from the underlying scaling of city artifacts or locations. This scaling refers to the fact that, in an imageable city (a city that can easily be imaged in human minds), small city artifacts are far more common than large ones; or alternatively low dense locations are far more common than high dense locations. The sizes of city artifacts in a rank-size plot exhibit a heavy tailed distribution consisting of the head, which is composed of a minority of unique artifacts (vital and very important), and the tail, which is composed of redundant other artifacts (trivial and less important). Eventually, those extremely unique and vital artifacts in the top head, i.e., what Lynch called city elements, make up the image of the city. We argue that the ever-increasing amount of geographic information on cities, in particular obtained from social media such as Flickr and Twitter, can turn research on the image of the city, or cognitive mapping in general, into a quantitative manner. The scaling property might be formulated as a law of geography. Keywords: Scaling of geographic space, face of the city, cognitive maps, power law, and heavy tailed distributions.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, 2 table

    Steam reforming on transition-metal carbides from density-functional theory

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    A screening study of the steam reforming reaction (CH_4 + H_2O -> CO + 3H_2) on early transition-metal carbides (TMC's) is performed by means of density-functional theory calculations. The set of considered surfaces includes the alpha-Mo_2C(100) surfaces, the low-index (111) and (100) surfaces of TiC, VC, and delta-MoC, and the oxygenated alpha-Mo_2C(100) and TMC(111) surfaces. It is found that carbides provide a wide spectrum of reactivities towards the steam reforming reaction, from too reactive via suitable to too inert. The reactivity is discussed in terms of the electronic structure of the clean surfaces. Two surfaces, the delta-MoC(100) and the oxygen passivated alpha-Mo_2C(100) surfaces, are identified as promising steam reforming catalysts. These findings suggest that carbides provide a playground for reactivity tuning, comparable to the one for pure metals.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
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