2,157 research outputs found

    A reduction in ag/residential signature conflict using principal components analysis of LANDSAT temporal data

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    Methods to accurately delineate the types of land cover in the urban-rural transition zone of metropolitan areas were considered. The application of principal components analysis to multidate LANDSAT imagery was investigated as a means of reducing the overlap between residential and agricultural spectral signatures. The statistical concepts of principal components analysis were discussed, as well as the results of this analysis when applied to multidate LANDSAT imagery of the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area

    Relative potentials of concentrating and two-axis tracking flat-plate photovoltaic arrays for central-station applications

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    The purpose of this study is to assess the relative economic potentials of concenrating and two-axis tracking flat-plate photovoltaic arrays for central-station applications in the mid-1990's. Specific objectives of this study are to provide information on concentrator photovoltaic collector probabilistic price and efficiency levels to illustrate critical areas of R&D for concentrator cells and collectors, and to compare concentrator and flat-plate PV price and efficiency alternatives for several locations, based on their implied costs of energy. To deal with the uncertainties surrounding research and development activities in general, a probabilistic assessment of commercially achievable concentrator photovoltaic collector efficiencies and prices (at the factory loading dock) is performed. The results of this projection of concentrator photovoltaic technology are then compared with a previous flat-plate module price analysis (performed early in 1983). To focus this analysis on specific collector alternatives and their implied energy costs for different locations, similar two-axis tracking designs are assumed for both concentrator and flat-plate options

    Reclaiming Albany\u27s Arboreal Abundance

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    Senior Project submitted to The Division of Social Studies of Bard College

    The Moral Justification for Journalism

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    Papers presented for the Center for the Study of Ethics in Society Western Michigan Universit

    Understanding and Targeting the Eukaryotic Translation Initiation Factor eIF4E in Head and Neck Cancer

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    The eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF4E is elevated in about 30% of human malignancies including HNSCC where its levels correlate with poor prognosis. Here, we discuss the biochemical and molecular underpinnings of the oncogenic potential of eIF4E. Studies in human leukemia specimens, and later in a mouse model of prostate cancer, strongly suggest that cells with elevated eIF4E develop an oncogene dependency to it, making them more sensitive to targeting eIF4E than normal cells. We describe several strategies that have been suggested for eIF4E targeting in the clinic: the use of a small molecule antagonist of eIF4E (ribavirin), siRNA or antisense oligonucleotide strategies, suicide gene therapy, and the use of a tissue-targeting 4EBP fusion peptide. The first clinical trial targeting eIF4E indicates that ribavirin effectively targets eIF4E in poor prognosis leukemia patients and more importantly leads to striking clinical responses including complete and partial remissions. Finally, we discuss the relevance of these findings to HNSCC

    Spatial patterns of natural hazards mortality in the United States

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Studies on natural hazard mortality are most often hazard-specific (e.g. floods, earthquakes, heat), event specific (e.g. Hurricane Katrina), or lack adequate temporal or geographic coverage. This makes it difficult to assess mortality from natural hazards in any systematic way. This paper examines the spatial patterns of natural hazard mortality at the county-level for the U.S. from 1970–2004 using a combination of geographical and epidemiological methods.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Chronic everyday hazards such as severe weather (summer and winter) and heat account for the majority of natural hazard fatalities. The regions most prone to deaths from natural hazards are the South and intermountain west, but sub-regional county-level mortality patterns show more variability. There is a distinct urban/rural component to the county patterns as well as a coastal trend. Significant clusters of high mortality are in the lower Mississippi Valley, upper Great Plains, and Mountain West, with additional areas in west Texas, and the panhandle of Florida, Significant clusters of low mortality are in the Midwest and urbanized Northeast.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>There is no consistent source of hazard mortality data, yet improvements in existing databases can produce quality data that can be incorporated into spatial epidemiological studies as demonstrated in this paper. It is important to view natural hazard mortality through a geographic lens so as to better inform the public living in such hazard prone areas, but more importantly to inform local emergency practitioners who must plan for and respond to disasters in their community.</p

    Tagging Two-Photon Production at the LHC

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    Tagging two-photon production offers a significant extension of the LHC physics programme. Effective luminosity of high-energy gamma-gamma collisions reaches 1% of the proton-proton luminosity and the standard detector techniques used for measuring very forward proton scattering should allow for a reliable extraction of interesting two-photon interactions. Particularly exciting is a possibility of detecting two-photon exclusive Higgs boson production at the LHC.Comment: 9 pages and 4 figure

    Host preference by Saperda calcarata Say (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae)

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    We conducted five laboratory and one field experiments to examine potential host selection mechanisms of Saperda calcarata Say in British Columbia. Olfactory bioassays indicated that female (and possibly male) beetles were attracted to volatiles from leafy twigs of trembling aspen, Populus tremuloides Michaux. However, wounding of the bole, ethanol baiting, or both, did not result in significant orientation toward or attack of trembling aspens in the field. Feeding preferences for trembling aspen were strong for both sexes in choice bioassays, but in no-choice bioassays, females did not discriminate between trembling aspen and black cottonwood, P. trichocarpa Torrey &amp; Gray. Scouler's willow, Salix scouleriana Barrat in Hooker, was fed upon the least by both sexes. When diameter of bolts offered as oviposition hosts was equalized, frequency of oviposition was similar among the three hosts. Our data suggest that feeding preference is the predominant mechanism of host selection by S. calcarata
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