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Census Snapshot: Indiana
Using data from the U.S. Census Bureau, this report provides demographic and economic information about same-sex couples and same-sex couples raising children in Indiana. We compare same-sex "unmarried partners," which the Census Bureau defines as an unmarried couple who "shares living quarters and has a close personal relationship," to different-sex married couples in Indiana
Census Snapshot: Minnesota
Using data from the U.S. Census Bureau, this report provides demographic and economic information about same-sex couples and same-sex couples raising children in Minnesota. We compare same-sex "unmarried partners," which the Census Bureau defines as an unmarried couple who "shares living quarters and has a close personal relationship," to different-sex married couples in Minnesota
Census Snapshot: Ohio
Using data from the U.S. Census Bureau, this report provides demographic and economic information about same-sex couples and same-sex couples raising children in Ohio. We compare same-sex "unmarried partners," which the Census Bureau defines as an unmarried couple who "shares living quarters and has a close personal relationship," to different-sex married couples in Ohio
WLAN Channel Selection Without Communication
In this paper we consider how a group of wireless
access-points can self-configure their channel choice so as to
avoid interference between one another and thereby maximise
network capacity. We make the observation that communication
between access points is not necessary, although it is a feature
of almost all published channel allocation algorithms. We argue
that this observation is of key practical importance as, except
in special circumstances, interfering WLANs need not all lie
in the same administrative domain and/or may be beyond
wireless communication distance (although within interference
distance). We demonstrate the feasibility of the communicationfree
paradigm via a new class of decentralized algorithms that
are simple, robust and provably correct for arbitrary interference
graphs. The algorithm requires only standard hardware and we
demonstrate its effectiveness via experimental measurements
Henneguya sp. in yellowfin goby Acanthogobius flavimanus from the San Francisco Estuary.
Myxozoan spores were observed in yellowfin goby Acanthogobius flavimanus collected from Suisun Marsh, San Francisco Estuary (SFE). Although histopathological changes associated with the parasite were not observed, the spores formed plasmodia that partially blocked the gastric and intestinal mucosa and gut lumen and may affect the perfomance and survival of the yellowfin goby. Morphological features of the spores resembled Henneguya sp. and molecular analysis of the 18S ribosomal DNA (Domain III) confirmed close similarity to H. rhinogobii and H. pseudorhinogobii isolated from the Japanese freshwater goby. The yellowfin goby myxozoan however, is likely an undescribed species based on phylogenetic analysis and morphologic features. Detailed description of vegetative and spore stages are currently lacking for proposal to a new species of Henneguya. A specific PCR test was developed, which confirmed a 100% prevalence of the parasite among randomly collected gobies in group 1 (N = 30) and group 2 (N = 15) at termination of the study at one month in captivity. The myxozoan was also detected from 18 gobies (12%) that died in the first group within two weeks in captivity. Apparently healthy gobies that served as controls did not reveal the presence of the myxozoan by PCR. This study documents the occurrence of a potentially new species of myxozoan in the yellowfin goby and underscores the detection of a parasitic infection in an introduced fish in the SFE. Although the pathogenesis of the myxozoan was not assessed and the prevalence as reported here is restricted to a comparatively small collection site in Suisun slough, the reemergence, identification, and ecological relevance of the parasite on goby populations in the SFE may be investigated in the future using the specific diagnostic tool developed in this study
Hard, soft and thin governance spaces in land-use change: comparing office-to-residential conversions in England, Scotland and the Netherlands
In recent years, converting office buildings to residential use became a high-profile issue in the UK and in the Netherlands. There has, however, been differentiation in the policy response between England and Scotland (planning policy being devolved within the UK), and the Netherlands. We conceptualize this differentiation through the lens of variegated neoliberalism in the forms of hard, soft and thin governance spaces. England, where planning deregulation is more strongly adopted, represents a thin governance space. Scotland, where there has been little policy change, illustrates a hard governance space. The Netherlands represents a soft governance space, where proactive partnerships between government and developers predominate. This paper characterizes these distinct governance spaces and explores their impact on housing delivery and place-making, and the impact of underlying ideologies and planning culture(s) in governing office-to-residential conversions in the three countries. Drawing on national government assessments and statistics, interviews with stakeholders, and case study data from three cities: Leeds, Glasgow and Rotterdam, we conclude that while both hard and soft governance spaces, to different degrees and with different merits, are environments that enable planning, thin governance spaces – being driven more by ideology than notions of good governance – imply weak planning and place-making
Neutrino Oscillations, Fluctuations and Solar Magneto-gravity Waves
This review has two parts. The first part summarizes the current
observational constraints on fluctuations in the solar medium deep within the
solar Radiative Zone, and shows how the KamLAND and SNO-salt data combine to
make the experimental determination of the neutrino oscillation parameters
largely insensitive to prior assumptions about the nature of these
oscillations. As part of a search for plausible sources of solar fluctuations
to which neutrinos could be sensitive, the second part of the talk summarizes a
preliminary analysis of the influence of magnetic fields on helioseismic waves.
Using simplifying assumptions which should apply to modes in the solar
radiative zone, we find a resonance between Alfven waves and helioseismic
g-modes which potentially modifies the solar density profile fairly
significantly over comparatively short distance scales, too narrow to be ruled
out by present-day analyses of p-wave helioseismic spectra.Comment: Plenary talk presented at AHEP 2003, Valencia, Spain, October 200
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