9,176 research outputs found
Prospects for Uganda's Dairy Industry
The East African country of Uganda might not be thought of as the location of a viable, growing dairy industry. However, Uganda recorded a threefold increase in milk production from 1991 to 2004. While Uganda's dairy industry faces important challenges, the industry possesses advantages that can lead to further increases in milk production if additional, profitable markets can be found for Uganda's milk and dairy products. A major advantage possessed by Uganda's dairy industry is a favorable climate for milk production. Uganda's farmers also have demonstrated a willingness to accept new technologies that can increase milk production. The biggest challenges facing the industry are those associated with poor milk quality and pronounced seasonality of milk production.Uganda Dairy Industry, Uganda's Political and Economic Environment, Pasture-Based Dairy Industry, Poor Milk Quality, Agribusiness, Crop Production/Industries, Farm Management, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Industrial Organization, International Development, International Relations/Trade, Land Economics/Use, Political Economy, Public Economics,
A longitudinal investigation of information processing and cognitive organization in clinical depression: stability of schematic interconnectedness.
This study longitudinally investigated information processing and cognitive organization in clinical depression. The main hypothesis was that individuals whose depression had remitted would show a significant cognitive shift on information processing (e.g., deactivation of negative processing) but not on cognitive organizational tasks, Forty-five individuals with clinical depression completed 2 information processing and 2 cognitive organizational tasks at initial assessment. At 6-month follow-up, the sample (23 remitted, 22 stable depressed) was readministered the tasks. As expected, information processing shifted significantly in individuals who had improved symptomatically, whereas negative cognitive organizational indices remained stable. The implications of these results are discussed as they pertain to the cognitive vulnerability, maintenance, treatment, and recurrence of depression. Directions for future research are suggested
Quasi-Homogeneous Backward-Wave Plasmonic Structures: Theory and Accurate Simulation
Backward waves and negative refraction are shown to exist in plasmonic
crystals whose lattice cell size is a very small fraction of the vacuum
wavelength (less than 1/40th in an illustrative example). Such
``quasi-homogeneity'' is important, in particular, for high-resolution imaging.
Real and complex Bloch bands are computed using the recently developed
finite-difference calculus of ``Flexible Local Approximation MEthods'' (FLAME)
that produces linear eigenproblems, as opposed to quadratic or nonlinear ones
typical for other techniques. FLAME dramatically improves the accuracy by
incorporating local analytical approximations of the solution into the
numerical scheme.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Dispersion interactions from a local polarizability model
A local approximation for dynamic polarizability leads to a nonlocal
functional for the long-range dispersion interaction energy via an
imaginary-frequency integral. We analyze several local polarizability
approximations and argue that the form underlying the construction of our
recent van der Waals functional [O. A. Vydrov and T. Van Voorhis, Phys. Rev.
Lett. 103, 063004 (2009)] is particularly well physically justified. Using this
improved formula, we compute dynamic dipole polarizabilities and van der Waals
C_6 coefficients for a set of atoms and molecules. Good agreement with the
benchmark values is obtained in most cases
Time-dependent density functional theory beyond the adiabatic local density approximation
In the current density functional theory of linear and nonlinear
time-dependent phenomena, the treatment of exchange and correlation beyond the
level of the adiabatic local density approximation is shown to lead to the
appearance of viscoelastic stresses in the electron fluid. Complex and
frequency-dependent viscosity/elasticity coefficients are microscopically
derived and expressed in terms of properties of the homogeneous electron gas.
As a first consequence of this formalism, we provide an explicit formula for
the linewidths of collective excitations in electronic systems.Comment: RevTeX, 4 page
Avian blood parasites in an endangered columbid: Leucocytozoon marchouxi in the Mauritian Pink Pigeon Columba mayeri
There is increasing evidence that pathogens can play a significant role in species decline. This study of a complete free-living species reveals a cost of blood parasitism to an endangered host, the Pink Pigeon Columba mayeri, endemic to Mauritius. We investigated the prevalence and effect of infection of the blood parasite, Leucocytozoon marchouxi, in the free-living Pink Pigeon population. Overall, L. marchouxi infection prevalence detected was 18·3%. Juveniles were more likely to be infected than older birds and there was geographical variation in infection prevalence. Survival of birds infected with L. marchouxi was lower than that of uninfected birds to 90 days post-sampling. This study suggests that while common haematozoa are well tolerated in healthy adults, these parasites may have greater pathogenic potential in susceptible juveniles. The study is unusual given its completeness of species sampling (96%) within a short time-period, the accurate host age data, and its focus on blood parasites in a threatened bird species. Species for which long-term life-history data are available for every individual serve as valuable models for dissecting the contribution of particular pathogens to species decline
Linear Continuum Mechanics for Quantum Many-Body Systems
We develop the continuum mechanics of quantum many-body systems in the linear
response regime. The basic variable of the theory is the displacement field,
for which we derive a closed equation of motion under the assumption that the
time-dependent wave function in a locally co-moving reference frame can be
described as a geometric deformation of the ground-state wave function. We show
that this equation of motion is exact for systems consisting of a single
particle, and for all systems at sufficiently high frequency, and that it leads
to an excitation spectrum that has the correct integrated strength. The theory
is illustrated by simple model applications to one- and two-electron systems.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, 1 tabl
Continuum Mechanics for Quantum Many-Body Systems: The Linear Response Regime
We derive a closed equation of motion for the current density of an
inhomogeneous quantum many-body system under the assumption that the
time-dependent wave function can be described as a geometric deformation of the
ground-state wave function. By describing the many-body system in terms of a
single collective field we provide an alternative to traditional approaches,
which emphasize one-particle orbitals. We refer to our approach as continuum
mechanics for quantum many-body systems. In the linear response regime, the
equation of motion for the displacement field becomes a linear fourth-order
integro-differential equation, whose only inputs are the one-particle density
matrix and the pair correlation function of the ground-state. The complexity of
this equation remains essentially unchanged as the number of particles
increases. We show that our equation of motion is a hermitian eigenvalue
problem, which admits a complete set of orthonormal eigenfunctions under a
scalar product that involves the ground-state density. Further, we show that
the excitation energies derived from this approach satisfy a sum rule which
guarantees the exactness of the integrated spectral strength. Our formulation
becomes exact for systems consisting of a single particle, and for any
many-body system in the high-frequency limit. The theory is illustrated by
explicit calculations for simple one- and two-particle systems.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, 6 Appendices This paper is a follow-up
to PRL 103, 086401 (2009
Profiling a decade of information systems frontiersâ research
This article analyses the first ten years of research published in the Information Systems Frontiers (ISF) from 1999 to 2008. The analysis of the published material includes examining variables such as most productive authors, citation analysis, universities associated with the most publications, geographic diversity, authorsâ backgrounds and research methods. The keyword analysis suggests that ISF research has evolved from establishing concepts and domain of information systems (IS), technology and management to contemporary issues such as outsourcing, web services and security. The analysis presented in this paper has identified intellectually significant studies that have contributed to the development and accumulation of intellectual wealth of ISF. The analysis has also identified authors published in other journals whose work largely shaped and guided the researchers published in ISF. This research has implications for researchers, journal editors, and research institutions
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