756 research outputs found
Application of modern control and nonlinear estimation techniques
Control and nonlinear estimation techniques applied to optimal guidance of low thrust spacecraft, planetary soft landings, and feedback systems desig
The Formal Dynamism of Categories: Stops vs. Fricatives, Primitivity vs. Simplicity
Minimalist Phonology (MP; Pöchtrager 2006) constructs its theory based on the phonological epistemological principle (Kaye 2001) and exposes the arbitrary nature of standard Government Phonology (sGP) and strict-CV (sCV), particularly with reference to their confusion of melody and structure.
For Pöchtrager, these are crucially different, concluding that place of articulation is melodic (expressed with elements), while manner of articulation is structural. In this model, the heads (xN and xO) can license and incorporate the length of the other into their own interpretation, that is xN influences xO projections as well as its own and vice versa. This dynamism is an aspect of the whole framework and this paper in particular will show that stops and fricatives evidence a plasticity of category and that, although fricatives are simpler in structure, stops are the more primitive of the two.
This will be achieved phonologically through simply unifying the environment of application of the licensing forces within Pöchtrager's otherwise sound onset structure. In doing so, we automatically make several predictions about language acquisition and typology and show how lenition in Qiang (Sino-Tibetan) can be more elegantly explained
Effectiveness of current policing-related mental health interventions in England and Wales and Crisis Intervention Teams as a future potential model: a systematic review
Background
Experiencing mental ill health adds a layer of complexity for individuals in touch with the justice system and for those responsible for working in the justice service with these individuals, such as frontline police officers.
In England and Wales, there are three commonly used but not necessarily commonly designed or operated, mental health interventions associated with policing, Liaison and Diversion, Street Triage and specialist staff embedded in Police Contact Control Rooms. A fourth US designed model, Crisis Intervention Teams (CITs), is now attracting some interest in England and Wales, and these four are to be considered in this review. A fifth intervention, Mental Health Courts, was trialed but has now been abandoned in England and Wales and so has been excluded, but remains in use elsewhere.
In recent years, there has been an increase in the level of investment related to these intervention options. This has largely been without an evidence base being available to aid design, structure, and consistency of approach. The review will address this gap and provide a systematic review of each of these options. This will provide a baseline of research evidence for those who commission and provide services for individuals experiencing mental ill health and who are in contact with the justice system.
Methods
Twenty-nine relevant databases and sources have been selected which will be systematically searched to locate relevant studies. These studies have to meet the set inclusion criteria which require them to report an objective outcome measure(s) in respect of offending or mental health outcomes and to have an experimental or quasi-experimental design including a comparator group(s) or a pre/post comparison. The review will exclude PhD theses, papers in non-English languages and papers published prior to 1980.
Keywords have been collected through canvassing experts’ opinion, literature review, controlled vocabulary and reviewing the results of a primary scoping review carried out to aid the development of the PICO, composed of Population/Participants, Intervention/Indicator, Comparator/Control, and Outcomes. For the proposed review, the key elements of the PICO are the following: persons with mental health problems, symptoms or diagnoses who come into contact with the police; interventions involving partnership working between police and mental health nurses and related professionals to divert those with mental health problems away from criminal justice processes; comparisons with control groups or areas where such interventions have not been introduced; and outcomes concerning criminal justice and health outcomes.
The results of the searches will be screened using the set criteria and the selected papers reviewed and analysed to allow findings regarding these interventions to be reported.
Discussion
The objectives of the review are firstly to identify and report research on the relevant interventions, nationally and internationally and then secondly to consider, when possible, which interventions or aspects of those interventions are effective. This is judged with regard to changes in mental health status or service use and future offending behaviour.
The approaches to be considered have gained a good deal of support and funding over recent years, and this review will provide a systematic review of the underpinning research evidence to inform future commissioning, service design and investment decisions
Influence of the disorder on tracer dispersion in a flow channel
Tracer dispersion is studied experimentally in periodic or disordered arrays
of beads in a capillary tube. Dispersion is measured from light absorption
variations near the outlet following a steplike injection of dye at the inlet.
Visualizations using dye and pure glycerol are also performed in similar
geometries. Taylor dispersion is dominant both in an empty tube and for a
periodic array of beads: the dispersivity increases with the P\'eclet
number respectively as and and is larger by a factor of 8
in the second case. In a disordered packing of smaller beads (1/3 of the tube
diameter) geometrical dispersion associated to the disorder of the flow field
is dominant with a constant value of reached at high P\'eclet numbers.
The minimum dispersivity is slightly higher than in homogeneous nonconsolidated
packings of small grains, likely due heterogeneities resulting from wall
effects. In a disordered packing with the same beads as in the periodic
configuration, is up to 20 times lower than in the latter and varies as
with or (depending on the fluid viscosity).
A simple model accounting for this latter result is suggested.Comment: available online at
http://www.edpsciences.org/journal/index.cfm?edpsname=epjap&niv1=contents&niv2=archive
Flow and nutrient dynamics in a subterranean estuary (Waquoit Bay, MA, USA) : field data and reactive transport modeling
Author Posting. © Elsevier B.V., 2008. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 72 (2008): 3398-3412, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2008.04.027.A two-dimensional (2D) reactive transport model is used to investigate the controls on
nutrient (NO3-, NH4+, PO4) dynamics in a coastal aquifer. The model couples density
dependent flow to a reaction network which includes oxic degradation of organic
matter, denitrification, iron oxide reduction, nitrification, Fe2+ oxidation and sorption of PO4 onto iron oxides. Porewater measurements from a well transect at Waquoit
Bay, MA, USA indicate the presence of a reducing plume with high Fe2+, NH4+, DOC
(dissolved organic carbon) and PO4 concentrations overlying a more oxidizing NO3--rich plume. These two plumes travel nearly conservatively until they start to overlap in the intertidal coastal sediments prior to discharge into the bay. In this zone, the aeration of the surface beach sediments drives nitrification and allows the
precipitation of iron oxide, which leads to the removal of PO4 through sorption. Model
simulations suggest that removal of NO3-
through denitrification is inhibited by the
limited overlap between the two freshwater plumes, as well as by the refractory nature
of terrestrial DOC. Submarine groundwater discharge is a significant source of NO3-
to the bay.This research was funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
(NWO) and WHOI Guest Student Program (C. Spiteri), the Royal Netherlands
Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) and the Netherlands Organization for
Scientific Research (NWO VIDI-grant) (C.P. Slomp), the US National Science
Foundation NSF-OCE0095384 and NSF-OCE0425061 (M.A. Charette) and the
Georgia Sea Grant of the National Sea Grant College Program of the U.S. Department
of Commerce’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration under NOAA
Grant #NA04OAR4170033 (C. Meile)
pH-Dependent iron oxide precipitation in a subterranean estuary
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2005. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geochemical Exploration 88 (2006): 399-403, doi:10.1016/j.gexplo.2005.08.084.Iron-oxide coated sediment particles in subterranean estuaries can act as a geochemical barrier (“iron curtain”) for various chemical species in groundwater (e.g. phosphate), thus limiting their discharge to coastal waters. Little is known about the factors controlling this Fe-oxide precipitation. Here, we implement a simple reaction network in a 1D reactive transport model (RTM), to investigate the effect of O2 and pH gradients along a flow-line in the subterranean estuary of Waquoit Bay (Cape Cod, Massachusetts) on oxidative precipitation of Fe(II) and subsequent PO4 sorption. Results show that the observed O2 gradient is not the main factor controlling precipitation and that it is the pH gradient at the mixing zone of freshwater (pH 5.5) and seawater (pH 7.9) near the beach face that causes a ~7-fold increase in the rate of oxidative precipitation of Fe(II) at ~15 m. Thus, the pH gradient determines the location and magnitude of the observed iron oxide accumulation and the subsequent removal of PO4 in this subterranean estuary.Financial support was provided by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) and WHOI Guest Student Program (grants to C. Spiteri), the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) (fellowship to C.P. Slomp) and US National Science Foundation NSF-OCE0095384 and NSF-OCE0425061 (grants to M.A. Charette)
Disruption in murine Eml1 perturbs retinal lamination during early development.
During mammalian development, establishing functional neural networks in stratified tissues of the mammalian central nervous system depends upon the proper migration and positioning of neurons, a process known as lamination. In particular, the pseudostratified neuroepithelia of the retina and cerebrocortical ventricular zones provide a platform for progenitor cell proliferation and migration. Lamination defects in these tissues lead to mispositioned neurons, disrupted neuronal connections, and abnormal function. The molecular mechanisms necessary for proper lamination in these tissues are incompletely understood. Here, we identified a nonsense mutation in the Eml1 gene in a novel murine model, tvrm360, displaying subcortical heterotopia, hydrocephalus and disorganization of retinal architecture. In the retina, Eml1 disruption caused abnormal positioning of photoreceptor cell nuclei early in development. Upon maturation, these ectopic photoreceptors possessed cilia and formed synapses but failed to produce robust outer segments, implying a late defect in photoreceptor differentiation secondary to mislocalization. In addition, abnormal positioning of Müller cell bodies and bipolar cells was evident throughout the inner neuroblastic layer. Basal displacement of mitotic nuclei in the retinal neuroepithelium was observed in tvrm360 mice at postnatal day 0. The abnormal positioning of retinal progenitor cells at birth and ectopic presence of photoreceptors and secondary neurons upon maturation suggest that EML1 functions early in eye development and is crucial for proper retinal lamination during cellular proliferation and development
Submarine groundwater discharge to a small estuary estimated from radon and salinity measurements and a box model
Author Posting. © 2005 Author(s). This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. The definitive version was published Biogeosciences 2 (2005): 141-157, doi:10.5194/bg-2-141-2005.Submarine groundwater discharge was quantified by a variety of methods for a 4-day period during the early summer of 2004, in Salt Pond, adjacent to Nauset Marsh, on Cape Cod, USA. Discharge estimates based on radon and salinity took advantage of the presence of the narrow channel connecting Salt Pond to Nauset Marsh, which allowed constructing whole-pond mass balances as water flowed in and out due to tidal fluctuations. The data suggest that less than one quarter of the discharge in the vicinity of Salt Pond happened within the pond itself, while three quarters or more of the discharge occurred immediately seaward of the pond, either in the channel or in adjacent regions of Nauset Marsh. Much of this discharge, which maintains high radon activities and low salinity, is carried into the pond during each incoming tide. A box model was used as an aid to understand both the rates and the locations of discharge in the vicinity of Salt Pond. The model achieves a reasonable fit to both the salinity and radon data assuming submarine groundwater discharge is fresh and that most of it occurs either in the channel or in adjacent regions of Nauset Marsh. Salinity and radon data, together with seepage meter results, do not rule out discharge of saline groundwater, but suggest either that the saline discharge is at most comparable in volume to the fresh discharge or that it is depleted in radon. The estimated rate of fresh groundwater discharge in the vicinity of Salt Pond is 3000-7000 m3 d-1. This groundwater flux estimated from the radon and salinity data is comparable to a value of 3200-4500 m3 d-1 predicted by a recent hydrologic model (Masterson, 2004; Colman and Masterson, 2004), although the model predicts this rate of discharge to the pond whereas our data suggest most of the groundwater bypasses the pond prior to discharge. Additional work is needed to determine if the measured rate of discharge is representative of the long-term average, and to better constrain the rate of groundwater discharge seaward of Salt Pond.Financial support was provided by the US Geological Survey
and by National Science Foundation grant #OCE-0346933 to MAC
Factors influencing the practice of new graduate nurses : a focused ethnography of acute care settings
Aim: To explore the influence of an acute care setting on competency deployment of new graduate
nurses (NGNs) from a competency
-based undergraduate programme
.
Background: In the last 15 years, nursing education has shifted to competency
-based education
(CBE). Few studies have focused on how NGNs from these reformed programmes use the
competencies they have developed. To be paradigmatically coherent with the nature of a
competence, studies should also examine how context influences nursing practice and competency
deployment.
Design: A focused ethnography of three acute care units from one academic hospital in Canada.
Methods: Purposive and snowball sampling strategies were used to recruit 19 participants: NGNs (n
= 4), nurse preceptors (n = 2), clinical nurse specialists (n = 9)
, and nurse managers (n = 4). Data were
collected through individual interviews, focus groups
, observation and documentation. Data were
analysed according to Roper and Shapira’s (2000) ethnographic nursing analysis framework.
Results: Organizational and individual factors were identified as influencing NGNs
’ competenc
y
deployment. Organizational factors are orientation, stability, workload, and the scientific culture of
the unit. Personal factors have been linked to groups of professionals: for NGNs, personality and
clinical placements during their initial education; for nurses working with NGNs, to be role models,
to promote integration and to denounce bullying; and for other health professionals, to recognize
nursing expertise.
Conclusion: One way to s
mooth the transition from academic to clinical settings for NGNs is by
offering transition or orientation programmes that will provide them with stability and a reduced
workload, allowing them to progressively deploy their competencies.
Relevance to clinical practice: Organizational and individual factors influence how new graduate
nurses deploy their competencies. Clinical educators and nurse managers can help new nurses by
acting on these factors
Early stage adoption of ISO/IEC 29110 software project management practices: a case study
The ISO/IEC 29110 standard has at its core a Management and Engineering Guide [1] which are targeted at very small entities (enterprises, organizations, departments or projects) having up to 25 people [2], to assist them unlock the potential benefits of using standards which are specifically designed to address their needs. This paper discusses the role and structure of Project Management in the ISO/IEC 29110 standard and the design and development of project management support documentation. In particular this paper describes a case study of an early adopter of ISO/IEC 29110 project management practices and their experiences with implementing these in an industrial context
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