2,343 research outputs found

    Ground Systems Development Environment (GSDE) interface requirements analysis: Operations scenarios

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    This report is a preliminary assessment of the functional and data interface requirements to the link between the GSDE GS/SPF (Amdahl) and the Space Station Control Center (SSCC) and Space Station Training Facility (SSTF) Integration, Verification, and Test Environments (IVTE's). These interfaces will be involved in ground software development of both the control center and the simulation and training systems. Our understanding of the configuration management (CM) interface and the expected functional characteristics of the Amdahl-IVTE interface is described. A set of assumptions and questions that need to be considered and resolved in order to complete the interface functional and data requirements definitions are presented. A listing of information items defined to describe software configuration items in the GSDE CM system is included. It also includes listings of standard reports of CM information and of CM-related tools in the GSDE

    Attachment disorders in residential treatment

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    Various aspects of developmental attachment are explored in this power point presentation. Attachment is defined and differentiated from bonding. The variations of attachment are described as they relate to the work of Mary Ainsworth (1978) and Katharine Leslie (2004). Trauma is also explored as one of the major contributors to attachment disorders. The trauma information is also linked with how the brain develops and ultimately is affected by trauma. Lastly, the symptoms of reactive attachment disorder are discussed and explored as they relate to other diagnoses such as depression and oppositional defiant disorder

    Seamless Online Distribution of Amundsen Multibeam Data

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    Since 2003, all underway multibeam and sub-bottom data from the Canadian Coast Guard Ship Amundsen has been posted online within approximately six months of the end of each cruise. A custom interface allowing the user to access 15\u27 latitude by 30\u27 longitude mapsheets was implemented in 2006, allowing the user to download the bathymetric and backscatter data at 10 metre resolution. While this interface matched the underlying data management scheme implemented at the University of New Brunswick, the zoom and pan capability was at a fixed scale with limited contextual data. In the past few years, with the introduction of web-based geographic information systems (GIS) (e.g. Google Maps, Yahoo Maps, Bing Maps), there have been thousands of maps published online. These online GIS programs are a suitable platform to display the seven years of Amundsen coverage within the context of the GIS-served satellite imagery and allow the user to freely browse all data in a familiar interface. The challenge, however, for serving up third party data through these map engines is to efficiently cope with the multiple zoom levels and changing resolutions. Custom tiling software was developed to take all the raw data from the seven years of Amundsen (and others\u27) multibeam coverage and convert it into multiple scale resolution images suitable for interpretation by Google Maps. The images were stored in a pyramid structure utilizing Google\u27s map projection and uniquely named to reflect their georeferencing and resolution. This image pyramid is then accessed by Google Maps according to the user\u27s current zoom level to optimize visualization. This multi-resolution data is served up on demand from the University of New Brunswick for dynamic overlay on Google\u27s satellite data. This web interface allows any interested parties to easily view multibeam and sub-bottom data from the Pacific Ocean through the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and into the Atlantic Ocean. The broad overview helps to understand regional trends and then focus on areas of interest at high resolutions to see particular features. The web interface also provides a link to the 15\u27 by 30\u27 mapsheet model with full source traceability

    Recent Developments: Broussard v. State and the Not So Obvious Application of the Open and Obvious Doctrine

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    The article discusses Louisiana Supreme Court tort case Broussard v. State based on the open and obvious doctrine. Topics discussed include procedural history of Broussard case, Court case Murray v. Ramada Inns Inc. and the U.S Second Circuit Court of Appeals opinion in case Michalski v. Home Depot. It informs that the open and obvious doctrine eliminates landowner liability to business visitors resulting from open and obvious dangers restatement

    Health Politics And Structural Interests: The Development Of Community Health Centres In Ontario

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    Health care politics can be understood as a competition among interests for control and power. Traditionally, the medical profession has dominated the health sector because of its monopoly position as the provider of medical services. In Canada, the entrance of government into the medical market as a monopoly purchaser of medical services has challenged the dominant position of the medical profession.;Since the introduction of publicly financed health insurance, politicians and administrators have been concerned with gaining control over the cost of the health care system. A rethinking of the basic policy assumptions has led to efforts to rationalize the delivery of services. This has challenged the professional autonomy of physicians, especially in terms of the fee-for-service method of remuneration and the solo-practice method of organization. As an alternative means of funding and organizing the delivery of primary care, community health centres challenge both of these central aspects of the medical profession.;In Ontario, politicians and administrators have enlisted the support of other interests who might benefit from an alteration of the existing power structure in health care. These interests include corporate rationalist physicians, community-based service providers, local activists and previously repressed consumer interests, such as the poor and otherwise disadvantaged. The purpose of this alliance with other challenging and repressed interests is the desire to overcome the existing bias of the system which favours the entrepreneurial core of organized medicine.;Community health centres have developed as an outcome of the competition among these structural interests in the health sector. The development of community health centres reflects both the extent of the challenge to medical dominance and the ability of coalitions of community activists, representing repressed interests, to develop a local consensus around the introduction of new services within individual communities.;The outcome of the research indicates that the urban policy arena has proved to be a particularly fruitful setting for the alliance of challenging and repressed interests. In the seven case studies presented, the alliance of local activists and corporate rationalists was key to the successful development of CHCs. In the urban setting physicians have been less adept in meeting the challenge to their dominant position than in the provincial or federal policy arenas. However, the cost of the alliance for CHC advocates appears to be an increased propensity for bureaucratic organization at the local level
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