488 research outputs found
CATFISH PRODUCER HARVEST RESPONSE TO PRODUCTION AND ASYMMETRIC PRICE RISK
Harvest response to production and asymmetric price risk was analyzed using an ordinary least squares model. Statistically significant responses to production-quality and output price risk were indicated. Results suggest that alternative pricing strategies designed to reduce risk may alter harvest response and decrease month to month harvest variability.Demand and Price Analysis, Production Economics,
A STOCHASTIC SIMULATION ANALYSIS OF A SMALL-SCALE CATFISH PROCESSING PLANT
Stochastic simulation was used to analyze revenues and costs for a small-scale catfish processing plant under various combinations of operating capacity utilization and price paid for live fish. The probability for a positive level of daily net income ranged from 11 to 100 percent depending on the price paid for live fish and level of operating capacity utilized. Daily average total cost per pound of live fish processed changed by 2.10 percent given a 10 percent change in live fish processed. Short-term cyclical patterns in revenues and costs suggest a need for financial planning to provide for possible year-end revenue shortfalls.Agribusiness,
Allies at the end of empire : loyalists, nationalists and the cold war, 1945-76
The wars of decolonization fought by European colonial powers after 1945 had their origins in the fraught history of imperial domination, but were framed and shaped by the emerging politics of the Cold War. Militia recruited from amongst the local population was a common feature in all the counter-insurgencies mounted against armed nationalist risings in this period. Styled here as âloyalistsâ, these militia fought against nationalists. Loyalist histories have often been obscured by nationalist narratives, but their experience was varied and illuminates the deeper ambiguities of the decolonization story, some loyalists being subjected to vengeful violence at liberation, others actually claiming the victory for themselves and seizing control of the emergent state, while others still maintained a role as fighting units into the Cold War. This introductory essay discusses the categorization of these âirregular auxiliaryâ forces that constituted the armed element of loyalism after 1945, and introduces seven case studies from five European colonialismsâPortugal (Angola), the Netherlands (Indonesia), France (Algeria), Belgium (Congo) and Britain (Cyprus, Kenya and southern Arabia)
Spectral Consequences of Deviation from Spherical Composition Symmetry in Type Ia Supernovae
We investigate the prospects for constraining the maximum scale of clumping
in composition that is consistent with observed Type Ia supernova flux spectra.
Synthetic spectra generated without purely spherical composition symmetry
indicate that gross asymmetries make prominent changes to absorption features.
Motivated by this, we consider the case of a single unblended line forming in
an atmosphere with perturbations of different scales and spatial distributions.
Perturbations of about 1% of the area of the photodisk simply weaken the
absorption feature by the same amount independent of the line of sight.
Conversely, perturbations of about 10% of the area of the photodisk introduce
variation in the absorption depth which does depend on the line of sight. Thus,
1% photodisk area perturbations may be consistent with observed profile
homogeneity but 10% photodisk area perturbations can not. Based on this, we
suggest that the absence of significant variation in the depths of Si II 6355
absorption features in normal Type Ia spectra near maximum light indicates that
any composition perturbations in these events are quite small. This also
constrains future three-dimensional explosion models to produce ejecta profiles
with only small scale inhomogeneities.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
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The identification of Late Holocene bog bursts at Littleton bog, Ireland: ecohydrological changes display complex climatic and non-climatic drivers
In order to clearly understand the response of raised mires to past climate change, it is important to consider the full range of drivers and responses of these ecohydrological archives. To this end, a high resolution ecohydrological record from Littleton bog, Co. Tipperary, Ireland, was generated utilizing a combination of plant macrofossils, testate amoebae, and humification analysis. Chronological control for this record was provided by a Bayesian age-depth model based on AMS radiocarbon dates. Testate amoebae-derived reconstructed peatland water tables indicate a series of sudden shifts to dry bog surface conditions at c.3140, c.2510, and c.1540 cal BP. These events display a distinctive palaeoecological signal and chronological tempo that is best explained as a result of a series of bog burst events, and which seem inconsistent with other explanations. The chronological correspondence between the bog bursts at Littleton and a set of similar events at Derryville bog, c.5km to the north, is noted, as is the broad correspondence of these events with wet-shifts indicated in regional peatland water table compilations from Britain and Ireland. A range of possible driving mechanisms for these events is proposed, including anthropogenic disturbance of the bog surface, non-linear response to climate forcing, internal bog dynamics, vegetation succession, or a combination of factors. We illustrate the need for further multi-proxy investigations to fully understand these phenomena
Database Demolition: Exploding the Scope of Information Literacy and Leading Through Pedagogy
A panel of instructional librarians will demonstrate how to become pedagogical leaders on campus by moving away from traditional database demonstrations and expanding the scope of information literacy topics covered in instruction sessions. The panel will share actionable elements of successful one-shot lesson planning, including detailed learning outcomes, classroom activities, presentation styles, and assessment. Attendees will work in groups to construct their own innovative lesson plans and receive immediate peer feedback
Flipped Classrooms Panel
Flipped instruction is an instructional strategy where âstudents gain first exposure to new material outside of class, usually via reading or lecture videos, and then use class time to do the harder work of assimilating that knowledge, perhaps through problem-solving, discussion, or debatesâ (Cynthia J. Brame, Assistant Director, Center for Teaching, Vanderbilt University)
Quantitative Spectroscopy of Supernovae for Dark Energy Studies
Detailed quantitative spectroscopy of Type Ia supernovae (SNe~Ia) provides
crucial information needed to minimize systematic effects in both ongoing SNe
Ia observational programs such as the Nearby Supernova Factory, ESSENCE, and
the SuperNova Legacy Survey (SNLS) and in proposed JDEM missions such as SNAP,
JEDI, and DESTINY.
Quantitative spectroscopy is mandatory to quantify and understand the
observational strategy of comparing ``like versus like''. It allows us to
explore evolutionary effects, from variations in progenitor metallicity to
variations in progenitor age, to variations in dust with cosmological epoch. It
also allows us to interpret and quantify the effects of asphericity, as well as
different amounts of mixing in the thermonuclear explosion.Comment: White paper submitted to the Dark Energy Task Force, 13 pages, 5
figure
The Impact of Augmented Reality (AR) on the Academic Performance of High School Students
New technologies currently play a fundamental role in the educational context. As a result, augmented reality (AR) has recently gained a presence in educational centres. However, this educational technology has not been explored in depth at the secondary education level. Therefore, this research aims to analyse the impact of augmented reality on the academic performance of secondary education students, considering gender and the studentsâ attitudes toward this technology. In this mixed-method research based on convenient sampling, 321 students aged 14 to 17 years from the same secondary education school were assigned to an experimental group (n = 159) and a control group (n = 162). The control group used a traditional methodology in a slide-based learning environment, while the experimental group worked with an AR mobile application (ComputAR) designed with the same concepts. The data collection instruments used comprised a pre-test/post-test in both groups and semi-structured interviews in the experimental group. The results showed that the students who used augmented reality achieved better grades, highlighting the potential benefits of integrating this technology into the teaching process. No significant differences were observed regarding the gender of the students. In conclusion, this study provides findings that encourage the use of augmented reality in secondary schools
Power in Voxel-based LesionâSymptom Mapping
Lesion analysis in brain-injured populations complements what can be learned from functional neuroimaging. Voxelbased approaches to mapping lesionâbehavior correlations in brain-injured populations are increasingly popular, and have the potential to leverage image analysis methods drawn from functional magnetic resonance imaging. However, power is a major concern for these studies, and is likely to vary regionally due to the distribution of lesion locations. Here, we outline general considerations for voxel-based methods, characterize the use of a nonparametric permutation test adapted from functional neuroimaging, and present methods for regional power analysis in lesion studies
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