8,544 research outputs found
Capitalizing on National Self-Interest: The Management of International Telecommunication Conflict by the International Telecommunication Union
This article will examine the potential for conflict and the need for international cooperation in the contemporary telecommunication industry, with a particular focus on the role of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in international conflict management. After addressing particular aspects of modern telecommunication which invite international conflict, the article will present an overview of the ITU as the principal instrumentality for maintaining world order in telecommunication. The Union\u27s importance in conflict prevention, dispute resolution, and arbitration will be analyzed in detail. Finally, this article will assess the success of the ITU in conflict management and evaluate the need for change in the ITU as it enters a new era of international telecommunication
On the Optimization of Mixture Resolving Signal Processing Structures
Mixture resolving signal processing optimization with optimum linear detection operators and mixture resolving estimator
Recommended from our members
Association of Hospital Racial Composition and Payer Mix With Mortality in Acute Coronary Syndrome.
Background Patient characteristics insufficiently explain disparities in cardiovascular outcomes among hospitalized patients, suggesting a role for community or hospital-level factors. Here, we evaluate the association of hospital racial composition and payer mix with all-cause inpatient mortality for patients hospitalized with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). Methods and Results Using the National Inpatient Sample, we identified adult hospitalizations from 2014 with a primary diagnosis of ACS (n=550 005). We divided National Inpatient Sample hospitals into quartiles based on percent of minority (black, Hispanic, Asian or Pacific Islander, Native American race/ethnicity) and low-income payer (Medicaid or uninsured) discharges in 2014. We utilized logistic regression to determine whether hospital minority or low-income payer makeup associated with all-cause inpatient mortality among those admitted for ACS . In adjusted models, ACS patients admitted to hospitals with >12.4% to 25.4% (Quartile 2), >25.4% to 44.3% (Q3), and >44.3% (Q4) minority discharges experienced a 14% (OR 1.14, 95% CI 1.06-1.23), 13% (OR 1.13, 95% CI 1.04-1.23), and 15% (OR 1.15, 95% CI 1.04-1.26) increased odds of all-cause inpatient mortality compared with hospitals with ≤12.4% (Q1) minority discharges. ACS patients admitted to hospitals with >18.7% to 25.7% (Q2) and >34.0% (Q4) low-income payer discharges experienced a 9% (OR 1.09, 1.01-1.17) and 9% (OR 1.09, 1.00-1.19) increased odds of all-cause inpatient mortality when compared with hospitals with ≤18.7% (Q1) low-income payer discharges. Conclusions Hospital minority and low-income payer makeup positively associate with odds of all-cause inpatient mortality among patients admitted for acute coronary syndrome
High-performance liquid chromatographic analysis of commonly used drugs
This research project had two major goals. Selected members of six groups of clinically useful drugs were obtained to develop and optimize reverse-phase isocratic high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLO separations using the Hewlett Packard Series 1090 M HPLC. All optimized methods displayed excellent resolution between compounds within a method. Each optimized drug assay developed, displayed good linearity and precision. The second and primary goal of this research project was to provide RIT with a teaching tool. These optimized separations were incorporated into six laboratory experiments, written in a format that RIT\u27s undergraduate students of Medical Technology could easily follow and complete in one three hour student laboratory session. Each laboratory experiment is characterized by being a fast, simple, easy, and reliable reverse phase isocratic HPLC separation of select members of these drug groups that can be identified and quantitated in serum or plasma
It\u27s Not So Simple: The Role of Simplicity in Science and Theory.
The principle of simplicity (parsimony) has long been invoked as a regulative principle that helps guide theory selection in science. However, it is unclear if there is justification for a globally applicable criterion of parsimony. This paper briefly reviews the salient features of what it means for something to be simple, as well as argues for simplicity as relevant only to a set of background assumptions
Warming winters and New Hampshire’s lost ski areas: An integrated case study
New Hampshire’s mountains and winter climate support a ski industry that contributes substantially to the state economy. Through more than 70 years of history, this industry has adapted and changed with its host society. The climate itself has changed during this period too, in ways that influenced the ski industry’s development. During the 20th century, New Hampshire’s mean winter temperature warmed about 2.1° C (3.8° F). Much of that change occurred since 1970. The mult‐decadal variations in New Hampshire winters follow global temperature trends. Snowfall exhibits a downward trend, strongest in southern New Hampshire, and also correlates with the North Atlantic Oscillation. Many small ski areas opened during the early years while winters were cold and snowy. As winters warmed, areas in southern or lowelevation locations faced a critical disadvantage. Under pressure from both climate and competition, the number of small ski areas leveled off and then fell steeply after 1970. The number of larger, chairliftoperating ski areas began falling too after 1980. Aprolonged warming period increased the importance of geographic advantages, and also of capital investment in snowmaking, grooming and economic diversification. The consolidation trend continues today. Most of the surviving ski areas are located in the northern mountains. Elsewhere around the state, one can find the remains of “lost” ski areas in places that now rarely have snow suitable for downhill skiing. This case study demonstrates a general approach for conducting integrated empirical research on the human dimensions of climate change
Kolmogorov Similarity Hypotheses for Scalar Fields: Sampling Intermittent Turbulent Mixing in the Ocean and Galaxy
Kolmogorov's three universal similarity hypotheses are extrapolated to
describe scalar fields like temperature mixed by turbulence. By the analogous
Kolmogorov third hypothesis for scalars, temperature dissipation rates chi
averaged over lengths r > L_K should be lognormally distributed with
intermittency factors I that increase with increasing turbulence energy length
scales L_O as I_chi-r = m_T ln(L_O/r). Tests of Kolmogorovian velocity and
scalar universal similarity hypotheses for very large ranges of turbulence
length and time scales are provided by data from the ocean and the Galactic
interstellar medium. The universal constant for turbulent mixing intermittency
m_T is estimated from oceanic data to be 0.44+-0.01, which is remarkably close
to estimates for Kolmogorov's turbulence intermittency constant m_u of
0.45+-0.05 from Galactic as well as atmospheric data. Extreme intermittency
complicates the oceanic sampling problem, and may lead to quantitative and
qualitative undersampling errors in estimates of mean oceanic dissipation rates
and fluxes. Intermittency of turbulence and mixing in the interstellar medium
may be a factor in the formation of stars.Comment: 23 pages original of Proc. Roy. Soc. article, 8 figures; in
"Turbulence and Stochastic Processes: Kolmogorov's ideas 50 years on", London
The Royal Society, 1991, J.C.R. Hunt, O.M. Phillips, D. Williams Eds., pages
1-240, vol. 434 (no. 1890) Proc. Roy. Soc. Lond. A, PDF fil
The Viewing Angles of Broad Absorption Line Versus Unabsorbed Quasars
It was recently shown that there is a significant difference in the radio
spectral index distributions of broad absorption line (BAL) quasars and
unabsorbed quasars, with an overabundance of BAL quasars with steeper radio
spectra. This result suggests that source orientation does play into the
presence or absence of BAL features. In this paper we provide more quantitative
analysis of this result based on Monte-Carlo simulations. While the
relationship between viewing angle and spectral index does indeed contain a lot
of scatter, the spectral index distributions are different enough to overcome
that intrinsic variation. Utilizing two different models of the relationship
between spectral index and viewing angle, the simulations indicate that the
difference in spectral index distributions can be explained by allowing BAL
quasar viewing angles to extend about 10 degrees farther from the radio jet
axis than non-BAL sources, though both can be seen at small angles. These
results show that orientation cannot be the only factor determining whether BAL
features are present, but it does play a role.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
- …