537 research outputs found
Measuring Community and University Impacts of Critical Civic Geography: Insights from Chicago
Measuring Community and University Impacts of Critical Civic Geography: Insights from Chicago
Associations of adult physical activity with perceived safety and police-recorded crime: the Multi-ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis
Abstract
Background
Due to the inconsistent findings of prior studies, we explored the association of perceived safety and police-recorded crime measures with physical activity.
Methods
The study included 818 Chicago participants of the Multiethnic Study of Atherosclerosis 45 to 84 years of age. Questionnaire-assessed physical activity included a) transport walking; b) leisure walking; and c) non-walking leisure activities. Perceived safety was assessed through an interviewer-administered questionnaire. Police-recorded crime was assessed through 2-year counts of selected crimes (total and outdoor incivilities, criminal offenses, homicides) per 1000 population. Associations were examined using generalized estimating equation logistic regression models.
Results
Perceiving a safer neighborhood was positively associated with transport walking and perceiving lower violence was associated with leisure walking. Those in the lowest tertile of total or outdoor incivilities were more likely to report transport walking. Models with both perceived safety and police-recorded measures of crime as independent variables had superior fit for both transport walking and leisure walking outcomes. Neither perceived safety nor police-recorded measures of crime were associated with non-walking leisure activity.
Conclusions
Perceived and police-recorded measures had independent associations with walking and both should be considered in assessing the impact of neighborhood crime on physical activity.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/112746/1/12966_2012_Article_681.pd
Synthesis and Characterization of Ag2MnSnS4, a New Diamond-like Semiconductor
Phase pure Ag2MnSnS4 was synthesized from the elements using standard high-temperature solid-state methods. Its crystal structure was solved from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data collected from a pseudo-merohedrally twinned crystal as well as by Rietveld refinement of X-ray powder diffraction data. Ag2MnSnS4 crystallizes in the monoclinic space group Pc (no. 7) with the unit cell parameters a = 6.651(1), b = 6.943(1), c = 10.536(2) angstrom, beta = 129.15(1)degrees, V = 337.3(1) angstrom(3), and Z = 2. The tetrahedraly compound crystallizes in a superstructure of the wurtzite type and the tetrahedra volumes are in good agreement with the model for diamond-related compounds derived from the wurtzite structure type. The red semiconductor Ag2MnSnS4 has an optical bandgap of E-g = 2.0 eV and is stable up to its peritectic decomposition temperature of approximately 700 degrees C. Ag2MnSnS4 is a Curie-Weiss paramagnet with an experimental magnetic moment of mu(exp) = 5.4(1) mu(B) per manganese atom. Antiferromagnetic ordering is detected at a Neel temperature of T-N = 8.8(1) K. Sn-119 Mo ss bauer spectra at 78 K underline the single tetrahedrally coordinated Sn-IV site (delta = 1.34(1) mm center dot s(-1)). The 6 K spectrum (magnetically ordered state) reveals a small transferred magnetic hyperfine field of 1.02(1) T
Portuguese Native Language Identification
This study presents the first Native Language Identification (NLI) study for L2 Portuguese.We used a sub-set of the NLI-PT dataset, containing texts written by speakers of five different native languages: Chinese, English, German, Italian, and Spanish.We explore the linguistic annotations available in NLI-PT to extract a range of (morpho-)syntactic features and apply NLI classification methods to predict the native language of the authors. The best results were obtained using an ensemble combination of the features, achieving 54:1% accuracy.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Persistent Leatherback Turtle Migrations Present Opportunities for Conservation
Effective transboundary conservation of highly migratory marine animals requires international management cooperation as well as clear scientific information about habitat use by these species. Populations of leatherback turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) in the eastern Pacific have declined by >90% during the past two decades, primarily due to unsustainable egg harvest and fisheries bycatch mortality. While research and conservation efforts on nesting beaches are ongoing, relatively little is known about this population of leatherbacks' oceanic habitat use and migration pathways. We present the largest multi-year (2004–2005, 2005–2006, and 2007) satellite tracking dataset (12,095 cumulative satellite tracking days) collected for leatherback turtles. Forty-six females were electronically tagged during three field seasons at Playa Grande, Costa Rica, the largest extant nesting colony in the eastern Pacific. After completing nesting, the turtles headed southward, traversing the dynamic equatorial currents with rapid, directed movements. In contrast to the highly varied dispersal patterns seen in many other sea turtle populations, leatherbacks from Playa Grande traveled within a persistent migration corridor from Costa Rica, past the equator, and into the South Pacific Gyre, a vast, low-energy, low-productivity region. We describe the predictable effects of ocean currents on a leatherback migration corridor and characterize long-distance movements by the turtles in the eastern South Pacific. These data from high seas habitats will also elucidate potential areas for mitigating fisheries bycatch interactions. These findings directly inform existing multinational conservation frameworks and provide immediate regions in the migration corridor where conservation can be implemented. We identify high seas locations for focusing future conservation efforts within the leatherback dispersal zone in the South Pacific Gyre
Mismatches in scale between highly mobile marine megafauna and marine protected areas
Marine protected areas (MPAs), particularly large MPAs, are increasing in number and size around the globe in part to facilitate the conservation of marine megafauna under the assumption that large-scale MPAs better align with vagile life histories; however, this alignment is not well established. Using a global tracking dataset from 36 species across five taxa, chosen to reflect the span of home range size in highly mobile marine megafauna, we show most MPAs are too small to encompass complete home ranges of most species. Based on size alone, 40% of existing MPAs could encompass the home ranges of the smallest ranged species, while only \u3c 1% of existing MPAs could encompass those of the largest ranged species. Further, where home ranges and MPAs overlapped in real geographic space, MPAs encompassed \u3c 5% of core areas used by all species. Despite most home ranges of mobile marine megafauna being much larger than existing MPAs, we demonstrate how benefits from MPAs are still likely to accrue by targeting seasonal aggregations and critical life history stages and through other management techniques
Total Hadronic Cross Section Data and the Froissart-Martin Bound
The energy dependence of the total hadronic cross section at high energies is
investigated with focus on the recent experimental result by the TOTEM
Collaboration at 7 TeV and the Froissart-Martin bound. On the basis of a class
of analytical parametrization with the exponent in the leading
logarithm contribution as a free parameter, different variants of fits to
and total cross section data above 5 GeV are developed. Two
ensembles are considered, the first comprising data up to 1.8 TeV, the second
also including the data collected at 7 TeV. We shown that in all fit variants
applied to the first ensemble the exponent is statistically consistent with
= 2. Applied to the second ensemble, however, the same variants yield
's above 2, a result already obtained in two other analysis, by U.
Amaldi \textit{et al}. and by the UA4/2 Collaboration. As recently discussed by
Ya. I. Azimov, this faster-than-squared-logarithm rise does not necessarily
violate unitarity. Our results suggest that the energy dependence of the
hadronic total cross section at high energies still constitute an open problem.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, introduction extended and general references
added to match editorial style, to appear in the Brazilian Journal of Physic
Integrating the Totality of Food and Nutrition Evidence for Public Health Decision Making and Communication
The interpretation and integration of epidemiological studies detecting weak associations (RR < 2) with data from other study designs (e.g., animal models and human intervention trials) is both challenging and vital for making science-based dietary recommendations in the nutrition and food safety communities. The 2008 ILSI North America “Decision-Making for Recommendations and Communication Based on Totality of Food-Related Research” workshop provided an overview of epidemiological methods, and case-study examples of how weak associations have been incorporated into decision making for nutritional recommendations. Based on the workshop presentations and dialogue among the participants, three clear strategies were provided for the use of weak associations in informing nutritional recommendations for optimal health. First, enable more effective integration of data from all sources through the use of genetic and nutritional biomarkers; second, minimize the risk of bias and confounding through the adoption of rigorous quality-control standards, greater emphasis on the replication of study results, and better integration of results from independent studies, perhaps using adaptive study designs and Bayesian meta-analysis methods; and third, emphasize more effective and truthful communication to the public about the evolving understanding of the often complex relationship between nutrition, lifestyle, and optimal health
Barred Galaxies in the Abell 901/2 Supercluster with STAGES
We present a study of bar and host disk evolution in a dense cluster
environment, based on a sample of ~800 bright (MV <= -18) galaxies in the Abell
901/2 supercluster at z~0.165. We use HST ACS F606W imaging from the STAGES
survey, and data from Spitzer, XMM-Newton, and COMBO-17. We identify and
characterize bars through ellipse-fitting, and other morphological features
through visual classification. (1) We explore three commonly used methods for
selecting disk galaxies. We find 625, 485, and 353 disk galaxies, respectively,
via visual classification, a single component S'ersic cut (n <= 2.5), and a
blue-cloud cut. In cluster environments, the latter two methods miss 31% and
51%, respectively, of visually-identified disks. (2) For moderately inclined
disks, the three methods of disk selection yield a similar global optical bar
fraction (f_bar-opt) of 34% +10%/-3%, 31% +10%/-3%, and 30% +10%/-3%,
respectively. (3) f_bar-opt rises in brighter galaxies and those which appear
to have no significant bulge component. Within a given absolute magnitude bin,
f_bar-opt is higher in visually-selected disk galaxies that have no bulge as
opposed to those with bulges. For a given morphological class, f_bar-opt rises
at higher luminosities. (4) For bright early-types, as well as faint late-type
systems with no evident bulge, the optical bar fraction in the Abell 901/2
clusters is comparable within a factor of 1.1 to 1.4 to that of field galaxies
at lower redshifts (5) Between the core and the virial radius of the cluster at
intermediate environmental densities, the optical bar fraction does not appear
to depend strongly on the local environment density and varies at most by a
factor of ~1.3. We discuss the implications of our results for the evolution of
bars and disks in dense environments.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ, abstract abridged, for high
resolution figures see
http://www.as.utexas.edu/~marinova/STAGES/STAGES_bars.pd
- …