438 research outputs found
Loss: The First Necromancer
The God of Death, Loss has been making a plan to save the other gods and the remainder of his family from meeting the same fate as his late wife. This plan involves creating the concept of necromancy in order to tell the future and eventually create an army to destroy his enemies. He does not know that he is corrupting his soul as this goes on. When he returns, his brother punishes him for his crimes against the natural order
Learning to Create Jazz Melodies Using Deep Belief Nets
We describe an unsupervised learning technique to facilitate automated creation of jazz melodic improvisation over chord sequences. Specifically we demonstrate training an artificial improvisation algorithm based on unsupervised learning using deep belief nets, a form of probabilistic neural network based on restricted Boltzmann machines. We present a musical encoding scheme and specifics of a learning and creational method. Our approach creates novel jazz licks, albeit not yet in real-time. The present work should be regarded as a feasibility study to determine whether such networks could be used at all. We do not claim superiority of this approach for pragmatically creating jazz
Documenting the Diversity, Distribution, and Status of Maine Bumble Bees: The Maine Bumble Bee Atlas and Citizen Scientists
The Maine Bumble Bee Atlas (MBBA) is a multiyear (2015–2019) citizen science project coordinated by the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife (MDIFW) in partnership with the University of Maine. The project’s goals are to increase scientific knowledge of Maine’s bumble bee fauna and raise public appreciation for native pollinators and their conservation. Project partners accomplish these goals by training citizen scientists to conduct surveys statewide using standardized data-collection methods and by providing outreach to both project volunteers and the public on bumble bees and native pollinator conservation. During the project’s first three years, 230 volunteers have been trained to participate in MBBA at six workshops held across the state. As of the end of the second field season, MBBA citizen scientists have documented over 10,300 species records in nearly 500 townships statewide. These data have already made a valuable contribution to species status assessments conducted by MDIFW and the US Fish and Wildlife Service. MBBA staff also maintain a website, Facebook page, and blog to keep volunteers and the public informed about the project and raise awareness of, and support for, native pollinator conservation
MR448: Bees and Their Habitats in Four New England States
Bees are crucial to pollination in unmanaged ecosystems and some crops, and their roles are increasingly understood in four states in the Northeastern U.S., abbreviated “NNE” in this paper: Maine (ME), Massachusetts (MA), New Hampshire (NH), and Vermont (VT). The four states have in common many native bee and plant species, forest types, and natural communities. They share drought events and risk of wildfire (Irland 2013). They are exposed to many of the same major storms (e.g., hurricanes, Foster 1988), pollution events (Hand et al. 2014), and effects ascribed to climate change (Hayhoe et al. 2008). Beekeeping enterprises (the western honey bee, Apis mellifera, an introduced species) of various sizes exist in each of the states. By including the four states in this review, we hope to better understand wild bee distributions, inspire the expansion of floral resources to support bee populations in a strategic manner, reduce use of pesticides, create pollinator corridors, and protect subtle habitat features such as ground nest sites for solitary bees and patches of native vegetation that are free of invasive plants.
Our objective in this review is to synthesize from a conservation standpoint the state of knowledge regarding bees in NNE, including their diversity, and biology especially as it relates to climate change. We review foraging and nutrition, nest ecology, parasites and parasitoids, native vs. managed bees, and interactions with plants. We then turn our focus to bee habitats, and identify 15 habitat types we find useful for recognizing essential bee resources. We discuss habitat aspects including forest succession, invasive plants, land use alterations, and agriculture including impacts of pesticides, and cover economic aspects of crop-related pollination reservoirs in NNE that demonstrate cost-effectiveness at various scales. We present habitat improvement strategies including passive and active approaches, based on the literature and our experiences in NNE, and we suggest plants for pollinator plantings. Wherever pertinent throughout the text, we highlight threats to bees in our region such as pests and pathogens, pesticides, and habitat loss. Finally, we identify gaps in knowledge that could help in prioritizing directions for future research. We hope this review will be useful to anyone seeking to protect bees and their habitats.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/aes_miscreports/1029/thumbnail.jp
Suffering bodies in 2 Maccabees 3
This article aims to analyse the role that bodies play in different narratives implied in 2 Maccabees 3. In order to do this, a possible dominant narrative was constructed in which the motif of suffering bodies is shown. In the same way, a challenging narrative wherein the alleviation of suffering bodies is portrayed is also revealed. Furthermore the dynamics behind these two narratives, e.g. when the Jewish deity was willing to relieve this suffering, is also investigated. It was found that the Jewish deity responds positively when his high priest and his nation are in unison apropos their worship, and are willing to counter foreign invaders of the temple and their ideologies. To come to this conclusion the narrative therapeutic approach, as used by Epston and White, was applied to 2 Maccabees 3. This approach to interpretation is quite unique
Pulmonary Rehabilitation in Patients with Neuromuscular Disease
In neuromuscular disease (NMD) patients with progressive muscle weakness, respiratory muscles are also affected and hypercapnia can increase gradually as the disease progresses. The fundamental respiratory problems NMD patients experience are decreased alveolar ventilation and coughing ability. For these reasons, it is necessary to precisely evaluate pulmonary function to provide the proper inspiratory and expiratory muscle aids in order to maintain adequate respiratory function. As inspiratory muscle weakening progresses, NMD patients experience hypoventilation. At this point, respiratory support by mechanical ventilator should be initiated to relieve respiratory distress symptoms. Patients with adequate bulbar muscle strength and cognitive function who use a non-invasive ventilation aid, via a mouthpiece or a nasal mask, may have their hypercapnia and associated symptoms resolved. For a proper cough assist, it is necessary to provide additional insufflation to patients with inspiratory muscle weakness before using abdominal thrust. Another effective method for managing airway secretions is a device that performs mechanical insufflation-exsufflation. In conclusion, application of non-invasive respiratory aids, taking into consideration characterization of respiratory pathophysiology, have made it possible to maintain a better quality of life in addition to prolonging the life span of patients with NMD
2012 Wild Blueberry Project Reports
The 2012 edition of the Wild Blueberry Project Reports was prepared for the Wild Blueberry Commission of Maine and the Wild Blueberry Advisory Committee by researchers at the University of Maine, Orono. Projects in this report include:
1. Do wild blueberries alleviate risk factors related to the Metabolic Syndrome?
2. Development of effective intervention measures to maintain and improve food safety for wild blueberries
3. Control tactics for blueberry pest insects, 2012
4. Development and implementation of a wild blueberry thrips IPM program, 2012
5. IPM
6. Biology of blueberry and pest insects, 2012
7. Biology of beneficial insects and blueberry pollination, 2012
8. Pesticide residues on lowbush blueberry, 2012
9. Maine wild blueberry –mummy berry research and extension
10. Efficacy of Apogee growth regulator for stimulating rhizome growth into bare spots in wild blueberry fields
11. Velpar by Matrix pre and post-emergence applications - demonstration plots
12. Wild blueberry Extension Education Program in 2012
INPUT SYSTEMS STUDY:
13. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year Three of a four-year study – experimental design
14. Food safety- Prevalence study of Escherichia coli O157:H7, Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella spp. on lowbush blueberries (Vaccinium angustifolium)
15. Abundance of insect pest species and natural enemies in lowbush blueberry fields maintained under different management practices
16. Input Systems Study: Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year 3 of a four-year study, disease management results
17. Plant productivity, Year Three of a four-year study
18. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year Three of a four-year study, weed management results
19. Effects of organic and conventional management systems on the phosphorus solubility of lowbush blueberry barren soils
20. Systems approach to improving sustainability of wild blueberry production – soil health and chemistry measures
21. Evaluation of fungicides for control of mummy berry disease (ancillary study)
22. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production – Ancillary land-leveling study, Year Two of a four-year study (ancillary study)
23. Pre-emergent combinations of herbicides for weed control in wild blueberry fields – 2012 results from the 2011 trial (ancillary study)
24. Pre-emergent combinations of herbicides for weed control in wild blueberry fields – 2012 trial (ancillary study)
25. Evaluation of herbicides for control of fineleaf sheep fescue for grass control in wild blueberries (ancillary study)
26. Pre-emergence application timing and rate of Alion and Sandea in combination with Velpar or Sinbar on weed control and injury to wild blueberry (ancillary study)
27. Compost and mulch effects on soil health and nutrient dynamics in wild blueberry (ancillary study
Land/Homeland, Story/History: the social landscapes of the Southern Levant from Alexander to Augustus
This material has been published in revised form in The Social Archaeology of the Levant from Prehistory to the Present edited by Assaf Yasur-Landau, Eric H. Cline, and Yorke Rowan https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316661468.024. This version is free to view and download for private research and study only. Not for re-distribution or re-use. © Cambridge University PressThe Hellenistic era opens with Alexander the Great’s triumph over Achaemenid Persia, an event that inaugurates a millennium of western political hegemony over the Levant and paves the way for an infusion of western cultural ideas. I examine the social repercussions of this juncture of politics and culture for five self-identifying ethnoi within the region: Phoenicians (meaning Tyrians and Sidonians), Samaritans, Judeans, Idumeans, and Nabateans. I consider physical and written evidence as reflections of agency, opportunity, status, and authority, in order to reconstruct how people defined and presented themselves, and how they jockeyed for position and security in a crowded region and a volatile world. Fortunes fluctuated along with changes in imperial rule. The Ptolemies instituted a rapacious system of resource extraction, under which only the most nimble or removed kept their footing (i.e., Phoenicians, Nabateans). The Seleucids followed in the more magnanimous footsteps of the Achaemenids, offering a measure of economic and legal autonomy, an approach that placated some (e.g., Samaritans) and empowered others (e.g., Judeans). As Seleucid control weakened, groups used various means to claim status and authority. Samaritans, Judeans, and Idumeans deployed history and geography; Phoenicians and Nabateans depended on economic connections and cultural currency. Waning imperial powers in the later second century BCE left the region’s ethnoi effectively autonomous. Phoenicians and Nabateans became wealthy cosmopolitans connected to Mediterranean markets. Judeans unleashed an aggressive program of territorial acquisition, first successfully against Idumeans and Samaritans, then less so against Tyrians and Nabateans. Contemporary writers turned these events into historical narratives – divinely countenanced (1 Maccabees, Dead Sea Scrolls) vs. opportunistic circumstance (2 Maccabees, Tacitus, Josephus). These accounts offered people differing templates by which to situate themselves in place and history – templates ill-suited for co-existence. By the time Roman authorities established their imperial presence here in the mid-first century BCE, the social landscape was mined and ready to erupt.Accepted manuscrip
2015 Wild Blueberry Project Reports
FOOD SCIENCE AND NUTRITION 1. Increasing the food safety margin of wild blueberries through improved intervention measures
ENTOMOLOGY 2. Control tactics for blueberry pest insects, 2015
3. Pest biology and IPM, 2015
4. Biology of spotted wing drosophila, 2015
5. Biology of blueberry bees, and blueberry pollination
DISEASE MANAGEMENT 6. Research and control of mummy berry disease
7. Evaluation of fungicides for control of mummy berry on lowbush blueberry (2015)
8. Evaluation of fungicides for control of leafspot on lowbush blueberry (2015)
WEED MANAGEMENT 9. Single vs split applications of post-emergent herbicides for spreading dogbane (Apocynum androsaemifolium) control in wild blueberry fields
10. Evaluation of fall applications of herbicides targeting horseweed in wild blueberry fields
11. Herbicide combinations with Sinbar and Grounded to assess efficacy on weed control in wild blueberry
EXTENSION 12. Wild Blueberry Extension Education Program in 2015
INPUT SYSTEMS STUDY – SCRI GRANT PAGE 13. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year Six of a six-year study – experimental design
14. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year 6
15. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, 2015, Year 6 of a six-year study, disease management results
16. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year Six of a six-year study, weed management results
17. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, preliminary economic comparison for 2014-15
18. Ancillary projects in disease research (ancillary study)
19. Evaluation of fall and spring combinations of preemergence herbicides to prevent weed resistance in wild blueberry fields, 2013-15 (ancillary study)
20. Post-harvest control of red sorrel in a non-crop blueberry field, 2013-2015 - crop year evaluation (ancillary study)
21. Evaluation of spring applications of herbicides targeting red sorrel in wild blueberry fields (ancillary study
2014 Wild Blueberry Project Reports
FOOD SCIENCE AND NUTRITION PAGE 1. Development of effective intervention measures to maintain and improve food safety for wild blueberries
2. Role of wild blueberries on lipid metabolism and inflammation as related to obesity and the Metabolic Syndrome
ENTOMOLOGY 3. Control tactics for blueberry pest insects, 2014
4. Pest biology and IPM, 2014
5. Biology of spotted wing drosophila, 2014
6. Biology of blueberry, beneficial insects, and blueberry pollination
DISEASE MANAGEMENT 7. Research and control of mummy berry disease
8. Evaluation of fungicides for control of mummy berry on lowbush blueberry (2014)
WEED MANAGEMENT 9. A 2014 preliminary trial for a Callisto-Matrix tank mix versus a traditional wild blueberry herbicide spray regimen
EXTENSION 10. Wild blueberry Extension Education Program in 2014
INPUT SYSTEMS STUDY – SCRI GRANT 11. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year Five of a six-year study – experimental design
12. Food safety- Prevalence study of Escherichia coli O157:H7, Listeria monocytogenes and Salmonella spp. on lowbush blueberries (Vaccinium angustifolium)
13. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year 5 – reports from Frank Drummond
14. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, 2014, Year 5 of a six-year study, disease management results
15. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year Five of a six-year study, weed management results
16. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production, Year Five of a six year study, plant productivity
17. 2014 economic analysis of Maine blueberry production systems including an introductory risk analysis
18. Biosensor development for food safety (ancillary study)
19. Ancillary projects in disease research (ancillary study)
20. Systems approach to improving the sustainability of wild blueberry production – Ancillary land-leveling study, Year Four of a four-year study (ancillary study)
21. 2013-14 evaluation of three pre-emergence herbicides alone and in combination with Velpar or Sinbar for effects on wild blueberry productivity and weed control – 2014 crop year results (ancillary study)
22. Evaluation of fall and spring combinations of preemergence herbicides to prevent weed resistance in wild blueberry fields, 2013-15 (ancillary study)
23. Post-harvest control of red sorrel in a non-crop blueberry field, 2012-2014 (ancillary study)
24. Post-harvest control of red sorrel in a non-crop blueberry field, 2013-2015 (ancillary study)
25. Effect of soil nutrient amendments on growth and yield of wild blueberries in Maine (ancillary study
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