5,554 research outputs found
Attention Allocation and Managerial Decision Making
One of the major problems of managerial behavior is the setting of priorities.
Time is a scarce resource and managers have to find ways to deal with the multiple tasks
that face them. This paper addresses the issue of priority-setting among tasks by
managers by proposing analogies from job-shop scheduling theory. We develop a model
that views managers employing a combination of rationality and affective judgments with a
limited processing capacity.Information Systems Working Papers Serie
Intraoperative Indocyanine Green Laser Angiography in Pediatric Autologous Ear Reconstruction.
Skin flap vascularity is a critical determinant of aesthetic results in autologous ear reconstruction. In this study, we investigate the use of intraoperative laser-assisted indocyanine green angiography (ICGA) as an adjunctive measure of skin flap vascularity in pediatric autologous ear reconstruction. Twenty-one consecutive pediatric patients undergoing first-stage autologous total ear reconstruction were retrospectively evaluated. The first 10 patients were treated traditionally (non-ICGA), and the latter 11 patients were evaluated with ICGA intraoperatively after implantation of the cartilage construct and administration of suction. Relative and absolute perfusion units in the form of contour maps were generated. Statistical analyses were performed using independent sample Student t test. Statistically significant differences in exposure and infection were not found between the 2 groups. However, decreased numbers of surgical revisions were required in cases with ICGA versus without ICGA (P = 0.03), suggesting that greater certainty in skin flap perfusion correlated with a reduction in revision surgeries. In cases of exposure, we found an average lowest absolute perfusion unit of 14.3, whereas cases without exposure had an average of 26.1 (P = 0.02), thereby defining objective parameters for utilizing ICGA data in tailoring surgical decision making for this special population of patients. Defined quantitative parameters for utilizing ICGA in evaluating skin flap vascularity may be a useful adjunctive technique in pediatric autologous ear reconstruction
Interferometric Observations of V838 Monocerotis
We have used long-baseline near-IR interferometry to resolve the peculiar
eruptive variable V838 Mon and to provide the first direct measurement of its
angular size. Assuming a uniform disk model for the emission we derive an
apparent angular diameter at the time of observations (November-December 2004)
of milli-arcseconds. For a nominal distance of kpc,
this implies a linear radius of . However, the data are
somewhat better fit by elliptical disk or binary component models, and we
suggest that the emission may be strongly affected by ejecta from the outburst.Comment: 12 pages, 1 two-part encapsulated postscript figure. Accepted by
ApJL. Added a table of observation
Copepod life strategy and population viability in response to prey timing and temperature : testing a new model across latitude, time, and the size spectrum
A new model ("Coltrane": Copepod Life-history Traits and Adaptation to Novel Environments) describes environmental controls on copepod populations via (1) phenology and life history and (2) temperature and energy budgets in a unified framework. The model tracks a cohort of copepods spawned on a given date using a set of coupled equations for structural and reserve biomass, developmental stage, and survivorship, similar to many other individual-based models. It then analyzes a family of cases varying spawning date over the year to produce population-level results, and families of cases varying one or more traits to produce community-level results. In an idealized global-scale testbed, the model correctly predicts life strategies in large Calanus spp. ranging from multiple generations per year to multiple years per generation. In a Bering Sea testbed, the model replicates the dramatic variability in the abundance of Calanus glacialis/marshallae observed between warm and cold years of the 2000s, and indicates that prey phenology linked to sea ice is a more important driver than temperature per se. In a Disko Bay, West Greenland testbed, the model predicts the viability of a spectrum of large-copepod strategies from income breeders with a adult size ~100 ÎĽgC reproducing once per year through capital breeders with an adult size > 1000 ÎĽgC with a multiple-year life cycle. This spectrum corresponds closely to the observed life histories and physiology of local populations of Calanus finmarchicus, C. glacialis, and Calanus hyperboreus. Together, these complementary initial experiments demonstrate that many patterns in copepod community composition and productivity can be predicted from only a few key constraints on the individual energy budget: the total energy available in a given environment per year; the energy and time required to build an adult body; the metabolic and predation penalties for taking too long to reproduce; and the size and temperature dependence of the vital rates involved
New insights on the AU-scale circumstellar structure of FU Orionis
We report new near-infrared, long-baseline interferometric observations at
the AU scale of the pre-main-sequence star FU Orionis with the PTI, IOTA and
VLTI interferometers. This young stellar object has been observed on 42 nights
over a period of 6 years from 1998 to 2003. We have obtained 287 independent
measurements of the fringe visibility with 6 different baselines ranging from
20 to 110 meters in length, in the H and K bands. Our extensive (u,v)-plane
coverage, coupled with the published spectral energy distribution data, allows
us to test the accretion disk scenario. We find that the most probable
explanation for these observations is that FU Ori hosts an active accretion
disk whose temperature law is consistent with standard models. We are able to
constrain the geometry of the disk, including an inclination of 55 deg and a
position angle of 47 deg. In addition, a 10 percent peak-to-peak oscillation is
detected in the data (at the two-sigma level) from the longest baselines, which
we interpret as a possible disk hot-spot or companion. However, the oscillation
in our best data set is best explained with an unresolved spot located at a
projected distance of 10 AU at the 130 deg position angle and with a magnitude
difference of DeltaK = 3.9 and DeltaH = 3.6 mag moving away from the center at
a rate of 1.2 AU/yr. we propose to interpret this spot as the signature of a
companion of the central FU Ori system on an extremely eccentric orbit. We
speculate that the close encounter of this putative companion and the central
star could be the explanation of the initial photometric rise of the luminosity
of this object
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Relationships of in situ spectral absorption, pigment ratios and environmental parameters for phytoplankton assemblages in coastal waters
In situ optical measurements of spectral absorption and beam attenuation provide information on the fine scale horizontal and vertical variations in phytoplankton pigments and other measures of phytoplankton photophysiology and ecology in coastal waters. Phytoplankton pigment ratios from discrete sample analyses with High Performance Liquid Chromatography were compared to in situ spectral absorption, hydrography, light and nutrients in protected waters in East Sound, Washington and in coastal waters off Oregon. Clear linear relationships were seen between ratios of photoprotective: photosynthetic carotenoids (PPC: PSC) and the shape of the in situ phytoplankton absorption (aph) spectra in East Sound. Linear relationships between PPC: PSC ratios and aph spectra were also found for Oregon coastal waters within groups of samples (grouped by collection date, location and temperature salinity characteristics). Inshore samples showed a similar relationship as East Sound samples. Diatoms were dominant in East Sound and Oregon shelf waters, with prokaryotes and prymnesiophytes important in Oregon waters further offshore. Environmental parameters were associated with variations in PPC: PSC ratios. Light was clearly an important factor in East Sound with a strong positive association seen between PPC: PSC ratios and recent light history. In Oregon waters, PPC: PSC ratios varied with prior light exposure, nutrients and temperature. Light exposure and temperature predicted 61% of the variability in PPC: PSC ratios for samples with low nutrients (dissolved inorganic nitrogen <2 ÎĽ M). In situ optical measurements indicated considerable spatial variation in phytoplankton photophysiology and taxonomic composition in the Oregon costal region. Phytoplankton assemblages often had lower PPC: PSC ratios, flatter particle size distributions slopes suggesting greater contributions by large particles, higher chlorophyll a per particle, and more packaging in the nutrient-rich upwelled waters near shore compared to further offshore. These results indicate that in situ measurements of spectral absorption and beam attenuation can predict PPC: PSC ratios and other photophysiological and taxonomic indices in coastal waters. Such data provide high-resolution information on phytoplankton characteristics on the same temporal and spatial scales as physical properties such as temperature and salinity, and offer important insights into light history and the transfer of absorbed light within phytoplankton cells
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