12,734 research outputs found
Evaluation of a JAIBG-Funded Project: Emmonak Elders' Group
Since 1999, the Emmonak Elders' Group Project has handled certain non-felony juvenile cases in the village of Emmonak, a predominately Yup'ik community on the Yukon Delta of western Alaska. The project permits youth to remain within the community while their offenses are adjudicated through the body of elders – thus avoiding formal justice system processing which usually entails removal from the village. Youths are held accountable within the context of the local community and its traditions. This article describes the results of an initial evaluation of the program in early 2001, after the court had been in operation for approximately a year and a half. The evaluation comprised a review of program files, direct observations of meetings, discussions with community residents and interviews with parents and juveniles. It primarily focused on project implementation: how the court was established, its procedures, and the working relationships among institutions and individual participants.Bureau of Justice Statistics, United States Department of Justice.
Grant No. 1999-JR-VX-K005Background / Introduction / Methodology / Overview of Program / Collaborative Relationships with Key Entities / Results / Interviews / Summary and Recommendations / Appendice
In Vivo Evaluation of the Secure Opportunistic Schemes Middleware using a Delay Tolerant Social Network
Over the past decade, online social networks (OSNs) such as Twitter and
Facebook have thrived and experienced rapid growth to over 1 billion users. A
major evolution would be to leverage the characteristics of OSNs to evaluate
the effectiveness of the many routing schemes developed by the research
community in real-world scenarios. In this paper, we showcase the Secure
Opportunistic Schemes (SOS) middleware which allows different routing schemes
to be easily implemented relieving the burden of security and connection
establishment. The feasibility of creating a delay tolerant social network is
demonstrated by using SOS to power AlleyOop Social, a secure delay tolerant
networking research platform that serves as a real-life mobile social
networking application for iOS devices. SOS and AlleyOop Social allow users to
interact, publish messages, and discover others that share common interests in
an intermittent network using Bluetooth, peer-to-peer WiFi, and infrastructure
WiFi.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted in ICDCS 2017. arXiv admin note: text
overlap with arXiv:1702.0565
A Reinforcement Learning Approach to Weaning of Mechanical Ventilation in Intensive Care Units
The management of invasive mechanical ventilation, and the regulation of
sedation and analgesia during ventilation, constitutes a major part of the care
of patients admitted to intensive care units. Both prolonged dependence on
mechanical ventilation and premature extubation are associated with increased
risk of complications and higher hospital costs, but clinical opinion on the
best protocol for weaning patients off of a ventilator varies. This work aims
to develop a decision support tool that uses available patient information to
predict time-to-extubation readiness and to recommend a personalized regime of
sedation dosage and ventilator support. To this end, we use off-policy
reinforcement learning algorithms to determine the best action at a given
patient state from sub-optimal historical ICU data. We compare treatment
policies from fitted Q-iteration with extremely randomized trees and with
feedforward neural networks, and demonstrate that the policies learnt show
promise in recommending weaning protocols with improved outcomes, in terms of
minimizing rates of reintubation and regulating physiological stability
Functional characterization of synthetic leukotriene B and its stereochemical isomers.
Leukotriene B (LTB), a potent lipid chemotactic factor for neutrophils, is 5S,12R-dihydroxy-6,14-cis,8,10-trans-eicosatetraenoic acid (Fig 1), based upon direct comparison of natural LTB with synthetic 5S,12R-dihydroxy-6,8,10,14-eicosatetraenoic acid (5,12-di-HETE) stereoisomers in three biological assays. Of the six synthetic stereoisomers evaluated, only the 5S,12R,6,14-cis,8,10-trans compound had chemotactic potency for human neutrophils in vitro that was comparable to that of natural LTB, with a concentration of 3 X 10(9-9) M eliciting a one-half maximum response. In contrast, the racemic mixture of 5R,12R- and 5S,12S-6,10-trans,8,14-cis, the racemic mixture of 5S,12R- and 5R,12S-6,10-trans,8,14-cis, the 5S,12R-6,8-trans,10,14-cis, the 5S,12R-6,8,10-trans,14-cis, and the 5S,12S-6,8,10-trans,14-cis stereoisomers required concentrations of 3 X 10(-7) to 1 X 10(-6) M to elicit comparable responses. Only natural LTB and its synthetic counterpart elicited a local neutrophil infiltration when injected into the skin of the rhesus monkey at 10 ng and 100 ng per site. Natural and synthetic LTB at a concentration of 3 X 10(-8) M each provoked an EC25 contractile response of guinea pig pulmonary parenchymal strips in vitro, whereas the other four tested stereoisomers of 5,12-di-HETE were inactive at this concentration. Structure-function analyses suggest that the neutrophil chemotactic activity depends critically upon the C-1 to C-12 domain, including the stereochemistry of the 6-,8-,and 10-olefinic bonds and the presence of both hydroxyl groups
Migration costs and observational returns to migration in the developing world
Recent studies find that observational returns to rural-urban migration are near zero in three developing countries. We revisit this result using panel tracking surveys from six countries, finding higher returns on average. We then interpret these returns in a multi-region Roy model with heterogeneity in migration costs. In the model, the observational return to migration confounds the urban premium and the individual benefits of migrants, and is not directly informative about the welfare gain from lowering migration costs. Patterns of regional heterogeneity in returns, and a comparison of experimental to observational returns, are consistent with the model’s predictions
Reply to "Comment on `Jamming at zero temperature and zero applied stress: The epitome of disorder' "
We answer the questions raised by Donev, Torquato, Stillinger, and Connelly
in their "Comment on "Jamming at zero temperature and zero applied stress: The
epitome of disorder.' " We emphasize that we follow a fundamentally different
approach than they have done to reinterpret random close packing in terms of
the "maximally random jammed" framework. We define the "maximally random jammed
packing fraction" to be where the largest number of initial states, chosen
completely randomly, have relaxed final states at the jamming threshold in the
thermodynamic limit. Thus, we focus on an ensemble of states at the jamming
threshold, while DTSC are interested in determining the amount of order and
degree of jamming for a particular configuration. We also argue that
soft-particle systems are as "clean" as those using hard spheres for studying
jammed packings and point out the benefits of using soft potentials
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