487 research outputs found

    Weather data dissemination to aircraft

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    Documentation exists that shows weather to be responsible for approximately 40 percent of all general aviation accidents with fatalities. Weather data products available on the ground are becoming more sophisticated and greater in number. Although many of these data are critical to aircraft safety, they currently must be transmitted verbally to the aircraft. This process is labor intensive and provides a low rate of information transfer. Consequently, the pilot is often forced to make life-critical decisions based on incomplete and outdated information. Automated transmission of weather data from the ground to the aircraft can provide the aircrew with accurate data in near-real time. The current National Airspace System Plan calls for such an uplink capability to be provided by the Mode S Beacon System data link. Although this system has a very advanced data link capability, it will not be capable of providing adequate weather data to all airspace users in its planned configuration. This paper delineates some of the important weather data uplink system requirements, and describes a system which is capable of meeting these requirements. The proposed system utilizes a run-length coding technique for image data compression and a hybrid phase and amplitude modulation technique for the transmission of both voice and weather data on existing aeronautical Very High Frequency (VHF) voice communication channels

    PSYX 632.01: Current Clinical Topics - Introduction to Clinical Neuropsychology

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    PSYX 530.01: Clinical Interviewing

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    PSYX 595.02: Clinical Assessment

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    PSYX 632.01: Introduction to Clinical Neuropsychology

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    PSYX 632.01: Current Clinical Topics - Introduction to Clinical Neuropsychology

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    PSYX 625.01: Clinical Assessment

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    Imagining a Better Future: Identifying Cognitive Mechanisms to Improve Prospective Memory

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    The aims of this UGP funded project were to 1) to develop a clearer understanding of the mechanisms that support implementation intentions and visual imagery (e.g., heightened awareness to intention-relevant stimuli, strengthened stimulus-intention associations), and 2) to apply that increased understanding of mechanisms to the development of more effective PM (prospective memory) strategies

    PSYX 391.01: Special Topics - Health Psychology

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    PSYX 625.01: Clinical Assessment

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