302 research outputs found
LIFE: Costing the digital preservation lifecycle
Having confidence in the permanence of a digital resource requires a deep understanding of the preservation activities that will need to be performed throughout its lifetime, and an ability to plan and resource for those activities. The LIFE (Lifecycle Information for E-Literature) Project1 has advanced understanding of the short and long-term costs in this complex area, facilitating better planning, comparison and evaluation of digital lifecycles.
The LIFE Project created a digital lifecycle model based on previous work undertaken on the lifecycles of paper-based materials. It applied the model to real-life collections, modelling their lifecycles and studying their constituent processes. The results were then used to estimate the costs of each element of the digital lifecycle. Organisations can now apply this process, enabling evaluation and refinement of their existing lifecycles and facilitating more effective planning for the preservation of newly acquired content.
Phase 2 of the LIFE Project began in February 2007. It is evaluating and refining the models and methodology developed in the first phase of the project and developing lifecycle costings for a range of further case studies
Factors Influencing the Strength of Mechanical Clinching
The influence of material strength and thickness, direction of load, multi-layer connections and dis-similar thicknesses of steel on the strength of mechanical clinching is considered.. Expressions to predict the strength of mechanical clinching are presented
Exploring the Global Health and Defence Engagement Interface
Militaries have an important and inevitable role in global health and will interface with existing health systems on deployments. Whilst the primary concern of militaries is not global health, there are clear, and increasingly frequent, circumstances when global health activities align with the interests of defence. Recognising this link between global health and security warrants thoughtful consideration and action where concerns affecting both intersect. In addition to providing medical support to military personnel on operations, advantageous effects can be achieved directly from military medical activities as part of Defence Engagement. Whilst there are limitations and ethical boundaries to the role of militaries in global health, further training, research and conceptual development are warranted to optimise military medical activity at the intersection of security and global health to deliver advantageous effects. This paper forms part of a special issue of BMJ Military Health dedicated to Defence Engagement
The pinprick approach: Whitehall’s top-secret anti-communist committee and the evolution of British covert action strategy
This article examines Great Britain’s approach to covert action during the formative years of British Cold War intelligence operations, 1950–1951. Rather than shy away from such activity in the wake of the failure in Albania in the late 1940s, the British increased the number of operations they pursued. This was the start of a coherent strategy regarding covert activity that can be conceptualized as the “pinprick” approach. The strategy was overseen by a highly secretive Whitehall body, the Official Committee on Communism, which in effect became the government’s covert action committee. This article uses the commission’s recently declassified papers for the first time to assess the merits of this approach
Access to quality care after injury in Northern Malawi:results of a household survey
Background Most injury care research in low-income contexts such as Malawi is facility centric. Community-derived data is needed to better understand actual injury incidence, health system utilisation and barriers to seeking care following injury.MethodsWe administered a household survey to 2200 households in Karonga, Malawi. The primary outcome was injury incidence, with non-fatal injuries classified as major or minor (> 30 or 1-29 disability days respectively). Those seeking medical treatment were asked about time delays to seeking, reaching and receiving care at a facility, where they sought care, and whether they attended a second facility. We performed analysis for associations between injury severity and whether the patient sought care, stayed overnight in a facility, attended a second facility, or received care within 1 or 2 hours. The reason for those not seeking care was asked. ResultsMost households (82.7%) completed the survey, with 29.2% reporting an injury. Overall, 611 non-fatal and four fatal injuries were reported from 531 households: an incidence of 6900 per 100,000. Major injuries accounted for 26.6%. Three quarters, 76.1% (465/611), sought medical attention. Almost all, 96.3% (448/465), seeking care attended a primary facility first. Only 29.7% (138/465), attended a second place of care. Only 32.0% (142/444), received care within one hour. A further 19.1% (85/444) received care within 2 hours. Major injury was associated with being more likely to have; sought care (94.4% vs 69.8% p<0.001), stayed overnight at a facility (22.9% vs 15.4% P=0.047), attended a second place of care (50.3% vs 19.9%, P<0.001). For those not seeking care the most important reason was the injury not being serious enough for 52.1% (74/142), followed by transport difficulties 13.4% (19/142) and financial costs 5.6% (8/142).ConclusionInjuries in Northern Malawi are substantial. Community-derived details are necessary to fully understand injury burden and barriers to seeking and reaching care. <br/
Tidal Limits to Planetary Habitability
The habitable zones of main sequence stars have traditionally been defined as
the range of orbits that intercept the appropriate amount of stellar flux to
permit surface water on a planet. Terrestrial exoplanets discovered to orbit M
stars in these zones, which are close-in due to decreased stellar luminosity,
may also undergo significant tidal heating. Tidal heating may span a wide range
for terrestrial exoplanets and may significantly affect conditions near the
surface. For example, if heating rates on an exoplanet are near or greater than
that on Io (where tides drive volcanism that resurface the planet at least
every 1 Myr) and produce similar surface conditions, then the development of
life seems unlikely. On the other hand, if the tidal heating rate is less than
the minimum to initiate plate tectonics, then CO_2 may not be recycled through
subduction, leading to a runaway greenhouse that sterilizes the planet. These
two cases represent potential boundaries to habitability and are presented
along with the range of the traditional habitable zone for main sequence,
low-mass stars. We propose a revised habitable zone that incorporates both
stellar insolation and tidal heating. We apply these criteria to GJ 581 d and
find that it is in the traditional habitable zone, but its tidal heating alone
may be insufficient for plate tectonics.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, accepted to ApJ Letters. A version with full
resolution images is available at
http://www.astro.washington.edu/users/rory/publications/bjgr09.pd
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