1,502 research outputs found

    On local structures of cubicity 2 graphs

    Full text link
    A 2-stab unit interval graph (2SUIG) is an axes-parallel unit square intersection graph where the unit squares intersect either of the two fixed lines parallel to the XX-axis, distance 1+ϵ1 + \epsilon (0<ϵ<10 < \epsilon < 1) apart. This family of graphs allow us to study local structures of unit square intersection graphs, that is, graphs with cubicity 2. The complexity of determining whether a tree has cubicity 2 is unknown while the graph recognition problem for unit square intersection graph is known to be NP-hard. We present a polynomial time algorithm for recognizing trees that admit a 2SUIG representation

    DIREITO INSTITUCIONAL ECONÔMICO E ARRANJOS INSTITUCIONAIS: UM DIAGNÓSTICO SOBRE OS CONSELHOS E FUNDO MUNICIPAL DE SEGURANÇA ALIMENTAR E NUTRICIONAL EM MINAS GERAIS

    Get PDF
    O presente estudo tem como objetivo analisar o processo de construção das políticas públicas de efetivação do direito humano à alimentação, em particular, a elaboração, organização e implementação dos Fundos Municipais de Segurança Alimentar e Nutricional no Estado de Minas Gerais. A situação-problema consiste em indagar em que medida os atuais arranjos institucionais são capazes de induzir a formulação de fundos específicos destinados ao financiamento das políticas de Segurança Alimentar e Nutricional. Em termos teóricos, o objeto de estudo propõe um diálogo interdisciplinar entre o Direito Econômico e o institucionalismo. Na perspectiva da presente investigação, para além de uma análise estritamente legalista, as instituições importam para compreensão adequada do “Fundo” como um fenômeno jurídico-político-econômico. A metodologia adota é o estudo de caso da estruturação dos Fundos no Estado de Minas Gerais a partir de uma pesquisa entre os 161 que possuem o Conselho Municipal de Segurança Alimentar e Nutricional  Os resultados da pesquisa evidenciaram que – diferentemente de outros arranjos institucionais, como a estruturação do Conselho de Saúde e o Fundo de Saúde – o atual arranjo institucional de nosso Sistema Nacional de Segurança Alimentar e Nutricional  não induziu o desenvolvimento de fundos destinados ao financiamento das políticas de segurança alimentar e nutricional

    Sulfonated 1,3-bis­(4-pyrid­yl)propane

    Get PDF
    In the title compound, 4-[3-(3-sulfonato­pyridin-1-ium-4-yl)prop­yl]pyridin-1-ium-3-sulfonate, C13H14N2O6S2, the mol­ecule is zwitterionic, with the sulfonic acid proton transfered to the basic pyridine N atom. Also, the structure adopts a butterfly-like conformation with the sulfonate groups on opposite sides of the ‘wings’. The dihedral angle between the two pyridinium rings is 83.56 (7)°, and this results in the mol­ecule having a chiral conformation and packing. There is strong inter­molecular hydrogen bonding between the pyridinium H and sulfonate O atoms of adjoining mol­ecules. In addition, there are weaker inter­molecular C—H⋯O inter­actions

    Long-Term Vegetation Dynamics in a Megadiverse Hotspot: The Ice-Age Record of a Pre-montane Forest of Central Ecuador.

    Get PDF
    Tropical ecosystems play a key role in many aspects of Earth system dynamics currently of global concern, including carbon sequestration and biodiversity. To accurately understand complex tropical systems it is necessary to parameterise key ecological aspects, such as rates of change (RoC), species turnover, dynamism, resilience, or stability. To obtain a long-term (>50 years) perspective on these ecological aspects we must turn to the fossil record. However, compared to temperate zones, collecting continuous sedimentary archives in the lowland tropics is often difficult due to the active landscape processes, with potentially frequent volcanic, tectonic, and/or fluvial events confounding sediment deposition, preservation, and recovery. Consequently, the nature, and drivers, of vegetation dynamics during the last glacial are barely known from many non-montane tropical landscapes. One of the first lowland Amazonian locations from which palaeoecological data were obtained was an outcrop near Mera (Ecuador). Mera was discovered, and analysed, by Paul Colinvaux in the 1980s, but his interpretation of the data as indicative of a forested glacial period were criticised based on the ecology and age control. Here we present new palaeoecological data from a lake located less than 10 km away from Mera. Sediment cores raised from Laguna Pindo (1250 masl; 1°27'S, 78°05'W) have been shown to span the late last glacial period [50-13 cal kyr BP (calibrated kiloyears before present)]. The palaeoecological information obtained from Laguna Pindo indicate that the region was characterised by a relatively stable plant community, formed by taxa nowadays common at both mid and high elevations. was the dominant taxon until around 30 cal kyr BP, when it was replaced by , Asteraceae and among other taxa. Heat intolerant taxa including , , and peaked around the onset of the Last Glacial Maximum (c. 21 cal kyr BP). The results obtained from Laguna Pindo support Colinvaux's hypothesis that glacial cooling resulted in a reshuffling of taxa in the region but did not lead to a loss of the forest structure. Wide tolerances of the plant species occurring to glacial temperature range and cloud formation have been suggested to explain Pindo forest stability. This scenario is radically different than the present situation, so vulnerability of the tropical pre-montane forest is highlighted to be increased in the next decades

    Diffusion Tensor Imaging Analysis Along the Perivascular Space in the UK Biobank

    Get PDF
    Background: The recently discovered glymphatic system may support the removal of neurotoxic proteins, mainly during sleep, that are associated with neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s Disease. Diffusion tensor image analysis along the perivascular space (DTI-ALPS) has been suggested as a method to index the health of glymphatic system (with higher values indicating a more intact glymphatic system). Indeed, in small-scale studies the DTI-ALPS index has been shown to correlate with age, cognitive health, and sleep, and is higher in females than males. Objective: To determine whether these relationships are stable we replicated previous findings associating the DTI-ALPS index with demographic, sleep-related, and cognitive markers in a large sample of participants from the UK Biobank. Methods: We calculated the DTI-ALPS index in UK Biobank participants (n = 17723). Using Bayesian and Frequentist analysis approaches, we replicate previously reported relationships between the DTI-ALPS index. Results: We found the predicted associations between the DTI-ALPS index and age, longest uninterrupted sleep window (LUSWT) on a typical night, cognitive performance, and sex. However, these effects were substantially smaller than those found in previous studies. Parameter estimates from this study may be used as priors in subsequent studies using a Bayesian approach. These results suggest that the DTI-ALPS index is consistently, and therefore predictably, associated with demographics, LUWST, and cognition. Conclusion: We propose that the metric, calculated for the first time in a large-scale, population-based cohort, is a stable measure, but one for which stronger links to glymphatic system function are needed before it can be used to understand the relationships between glymphatic system function and health outcomes reported in the UKBiobank

    The adoption of pottery on Kodiak Island: Insights from organic residue analysis

    Get PDF
    Pottery technology, originating in Northeast Asia, appeared in Alaska some 2800 years ago. It spread swiftly along Alaska’s coastline but was not adopted on Kodiak Island until around 500 cal BP, as part of the Koniag tradition. While in the southeast pottery was used extensively, people on the northern half of the island did not adopt the technology. What drove these patterns of adoption and non-adoption on Kodiak Island? To better understand the role of ceramic technology in the Koniag tradition we used organic residue analysis to investigate pottery function. Results indicate that pottery was used to process aquatic resources, including anadromous fish, but especially marine species. Based on archaeological and ethnographic data, and spatial analysis of pottery distributions and function, we hypothesize that Koniag pottery was a tool inherent to the rendering of whale oil on the southeast coast of Kodiak Island, supporting previous suggestions by Knecht (1995) and Fitzhugh (2001). When viewed in the broader historical context of major technological and social transformations, we conclude that social identity and cultural boundaries may also have played a role in the delayed and partial adoption of pottery on Kodiak Island

    Thermodynamics of quantum systems under dynamical control

    Full text link
    In this review the debated rapport between thermodynamics and quantum mechanics is addressed in the framework of the theory of periodically-driven/controlled quantum-thermodynamic machines. The basic model studied here is that of a two-level system (TLS), whose energy is periodically modulated while the system is coupled to thermal baths. When the modulation interval is short compared to the bath memory time, the system-bath correlations are affected, thereby causing cooling or heating of the TLS, depending on the interval. In steady state, a periodically-modulated TLS coupled to two distinct baths constitutes the simplest quantum heat machine (QHM) that may operate as either an engine or a refrigerator, depending on the modulation rate. We find their efficiency and power-output bounds and the conditions for attaining these bounds. An extension of this model to multilevel systems shows that the QHM power output can be boosted by the multilevel degeneracy. These results are used to scrutinize basic thermodynamic principles: (i) Externally-driven/modulated QHMs may attain the Carnot efficiency bound, but when the driving is done by a quantum device ("piston"), the efficiency strongly depends on its initial quantum state. Such dependence has been unknown thus far. (ii) The refrigeration rate effected by QHMs does not vanish as the temperature approaches absolute zero for certain quantized baths, e.g., magnons, thous challenging Nernst's unattainability principle. (iii) System-bath correlations allow more work extraction under periodic control than that expected from the Szilard-Landauer principle, provided the period is in the non-Markovian domain. Thus, dynamically-controlled QHMs may benefit from hitherto unexploited thermodynamic resources
    corecore