15,982 research outputs found

    Albedo measurements at the Mt. Lassen test site

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    Solar energy and reflected radiation flux measurements on mountainous test sit

    Surface chemistry of major rock types of Sonora Pass Test Site, California

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    Chemical study of selected rock samples tabulated as oxide percentage

    JPL microwave experiment support

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    Geological parameter effects on remote microwave radiometer response

    Ground data investigations Mt. Lassen, site 56-mission 76

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    Microwave radiometry and infrared photography for meteorological dat

    Structural Analysis and Matrix Interpetive System /SAMIS/ program report Technical memorandum, Feb. 1963 - Dec. 1965

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    High speed digital computer program and data handling instructions for problem solving with structural analysis and interpretive syste

    Ground truth flight data missions 55 and 56. Site 56, Mt. Lassen, Site 19, Sonora Pass, Site 3, Mono Craters

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    Radiosonde measurement of temperature and moisture content in infrared spectrometer experimen

    Modelling the impact of referral guideline changes for mild dyskaryosis on colposcopy services in England

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    Objectives: This model examines the effects of changing referral strategies within the established structure of NHS cervical screening driven colposcopy practice. It considers the effects of the new strategy on colposcopy workload, patient waiting times, and associated costs and health benefits. Methods: By postal survey, the current operational strategies of colposcopy services were established by questionnaire with respect to referral practices and management protocols. After first-cut piloting, and utilising published and original research, a Markovian model was constructed, and the impact of the new strategy was determined on colposcopy workload and patient waiting times for three hypothetical clinic types. Expected costs and benefits of the new policy were assessed through the adaptation of a previous ScHARR cervical screening model. Results: Clinic workload is expected to increase by between 21% and 35% within three years of the policy change, depending on clinic efficiency in other areas; the majority of this impact would be seen within the first year. It is predicted that particularly inefficient clinics would struggle to meet the existing waiting time requirements for women referred with low-grade disease, owing to the increased level of workload seen throughout the patient pathway as a result of the implementation of the new policy. The impact of the new policy can, however, be mitigated through improving the efficiency of existing clinics, by altering policies relating to surveillance of low grade disease, post-treatment follow-up, treatment policy (whether or not treatment is performed at the initial colposcopy visit), and through adherence to national guidelines. A cost-effectiveness analysis using the ScHARR liquid-based cytology model suggests that the policy change is likely to be have a cost per quality-adjusted lifeyear gained of between £1,400 and £5,500 per quality-adjusted life-year gained (excluding the costs of follow-up), which would be deemed acceptable to organisations such as the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence

    Beyond and beneath the hierarchical market economy: global production and working-class conflict in Argentina's automobile industry

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    This paper argues that the hierarchical market economy (HME) category does not provide an adequate starting point for addressing capitalist diversity in Latin America. Building from a critical perspective on the global commodity chain (GCC) and global production network (GPN) approaches, it instead considers the impact of firms’ transnational relations and the often neglected role of working-class struggles. It will argue that capitalist diversity can only be understood at the nexus of these ostensibly global and local phenomena; and by specifying the strategic decisions taken by firms in Argentina’s automobile industry, it will account for the failure of that sector. Finally, it examines the role of working-class struggles in the industry in Córdoba, Argentina, arguing that these were vital in shaping the specific and unstable form of capitalist diversity in Argentina, as well as potential alternatives to it
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