44 research outputs found

    Predicting Survival of East Texas Loblolly and Slash Pine Plantations Infected with Fusiform Rust

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    Repeated measurement during 1982-1992 of East Texas Pine Plantation Research Project permanent plots in loblolly( Pinus taedaL .) and slash( Pinus elliottii Engelm.) pine plantations throughout East Texas were used to develop equations for predicting the future number of trees per acre. A typical condition of East Texas pine plantations is the incidence of fusiform rust( Cronatrium quercuum [Berk.] Miyabe ex Shirai f. sp. fusiforme). A regression procedure for fitting nonlinear systems of equations was used to fit survival models that considered the possibility that trees with no rust galls on the stem could either (1) remain uninfected and alive, (2) become infected yet still alive or (3) die. For infected stem so, only two possible outcomes were considered in the model:(1) remain infected and alive or (2) die.Analyses of the differences between predicted and observed values indicated no adverse trends for either of the two species. Apparently the models do represent observed survival patterns.South J. Appl. For. 20(1):30-35

    Do Nurses Use Discourse Markers Differently when Using Their Second Language as Opposed to Their First while Interviewing Patients?

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    This study examined whether discourse-marker use changes in nurse-patient interactions as a function of nurses using their first (L1) or second (L2) language. Discourse markers were analyzed as turn-maintenance markers that indicate acknowledgement and discourse-shift markers that signal shifts of a topic or speaker in the conversation. These two categories differ in terms of degree of discourse management and interactional control. Sixteen nurses conducted a pain-assessment interview with a patient native speaker of English and with a patient native speaker of French, where the nurses used their own L1 in one case and their own weaker L2 in the other. The first hypothesis, that nurses would generally use discourse markers more frequently in the L1 than in the L2, was not supported. The second hypothesis, that nurses would use discourse-shift markers less frequently in their L2 compared to the L1, relative to their (baseline) use of turn-maintenance markers, was supported. The findings, especially the support for the second hypothesis, could have implications for the development of L2 training for health practitioners.</p

    A relation between liquid roll moment and liquid side moment

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    The Effects of Gain Versus Loss Message Framing and Point of Reference on Consumer Responses to Green Advertising

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    An experiment was employed to determine the effect of gain versus loss message framing, point of reference (i.e., self vs. environment), and product involvement on the effectiveness of green advertising. Results indicate that in the context of green advertising for consumer products, gain frames and self appeals elicit more favorable responses than loss frames and environment appeals. However, when combined, a self/loss framing is more persuasive than an environment/loss framing. This difference was muted for the high product involvement condition, possibly due to more message elaboration occurring under this condition. Theoretical and managerial implications are discussed
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