7,551 research outputs found
Modelling direct episodic recharge in the Western Australian wheatbelt
In agricultural regions of Western Australia, salinity is spreading. This is because the area taken up by groundwater discharge is increasing as a result of increased groundwater recharge following the replacement of native vegetation systems by annual crops and pasture species. Attempts to reduce groundwater recharge are now being made as it is hoped that this will decrease the rate of land salinisation. At several sites, average recharge rates have been estimated to be from 2% to 13% of the average annu ter hydrographs from the agricultural regions indicate that at some sites recharge does not occur as small amounts every year in a regular manner, but as infrequent, unpredictable, relatively large ©·pisodic\u27 events. At such sites, relatively small incr ses in the water use of annual crops and patures are unlikely to have a significant effect on the magnitude of large episodic pulses of recharge
2013-14 Everyone Counts Learning Community on Race & Racism
The Diversity and Multiculturalism Action Plan is the strategic plan for the University as it relates to diversity and inclusion. It aligns with the University Strategic Plan Goal #4: Ensure a diverse, inclusive, and healthy community. WMU President Bailey charged Dr. Warfield, Vice President for the Office of Diversity and Inclusion, with leading a council to develop the DMAP. Over 75 WMU community members assisted in its development. It was adopted by the Board of Trustees in 2006. The DMAP defines terms such as diversity, multiculturalism, institutional bias, global, culture, and affirmative action so that our community has a shared language
Worsening renal function and outcome in heart failure patients with reduced and preserved ejection fraction and the impact of angiotensin receptor blocker treatment: data from the CHARM-study programme
Aims
We investigated the association between worsening renal function (WRF) that occurs during reninâangiotensinâaldosterone system inhibition initation and outcome in heart failure (HF) patients with preserved ejection fraction (HFPEF) and compared this with HF patients with reduced ejection fraction (HFREF).
Methods and results
We examined changes in estimated glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and the relationship between WRF (defined as â„26.5â”mol/L and â„25% increase in serum creatinine from baseline to 6 weeks) and outcome, according to randomized treatment, in patients with HFREF (EF <45%; n = 1569) and HFPEF (EF â„45%; n = 836) in the CHARM programme. The primary outcome was cardiovascular death or HF hospitalization. Estimated GFR decreased 9.0â±â21 vs. 4.0â±â21 mL/min/1.73âm2 with candesartan and placebo, respectively, and this was similar in HFREF and HFPEF. WRF developed more frequently with candesartan, 16% vs. 7%, P < 0.001, with similar findings in patients with HFREF and HFPEF. WRF was associated with a higher risk of the primary outcome: multivariable hazard ratio (HR) 1.26, 95% confidence interval 1.03â1.54, P = 0.022, in both treatment groups, and in both HFREF and HFPEF (P for interaction 0.98). In HFREF, WRF was mostly related to HF hospitalization, while in HFPEF, WRF seemed more associated with mortality.
Conclusions
GFR decreased more and WRF was more common with candesartan compared with placebo, and this was similar in HFREF and HFPEF. WRF was associated with worse outcomes in HFREF and HFPEF. Although no formal interaction was present, the association between candesartan treatment, WRF, and type of clinical outcome was slightly different between HFREF and HFPEF
Probing the neutrino mass hierarchy with CMB weak lensing
We forecast constraints on cosmological parameters with primary CMB
anisotropy information and weak lensing reconstruction with a future
post-Planck CMB experiment, the Cosmic Origins Explorer (COrE), using
oscillation data on the neutrino mass splittings as prior information. Our MCMC
simulations in flat models with a non-evolving equation-of-state of dark energy
w give typical 68% upper bounds on the total neutrino mass of 0.136 eV and
0.098 eV for the inverted and normal hierarchies respectively, assuming the
total summed mass is close to the minimum allowed by the oscillation data for
the respective hierarchies (0.10 eV and 0.06 eV). Including information from
future baryon acoustic oscillation measurements with the complete BOSS, Type 1a
supernovae distance moduli from WFIRST, and a realistic prior on the Hubble
constant, these upper limits shrink to 0.118 eV and 0.080 eV for the inverted
and normal hierarchies, respectively. Addition of these distance priors also
yields percent-level constraints on w. We find tension between our MCMC results
and the results of a Fisher matrix analysis, most likely due to a strong
geometric degeneracy between the total neutrino mass, the Hubble constant, and
w in the unlensed CMB power spectra. If the minimal-mass, normal hierarchy were
realised in nature, the inverted hierarchy should be disfavoured by the full
data combination at typically greater than the 2-sigma level. For the
minimal-mass inverted hierarchy, we compute the Bayes' factor between the two
hierarchies for various combinations of our forecast datasets, and find that
the future probes considered here should be able to provide `strong' evidence
(odds ratio 12:1) for the inverted hierarchy. Finally, we consider potential
biases of the other cosmological parameters from assuming the wrong hierarchy
and find that all biases on the parameters are below their 1-sigma marginalised
errors.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures; minor changes to match the published version,
references adde
Supporting the Participation of Disabled Children and Young People in Decision-making
Increasing children's and young people's participation in decisions, about their own care and about service development, is a policy priority. Although in general participation is increasing, disabled children are less likely to be involved than non-disabled children and it is unclear to what extent children with complex needs or communication impairments are being included in participation activities. This article presents research exploring factors to support good practice in participation and discusses policy and practice implications
Early assessment of the impact of BIS equity fund initiatives
CEEDR provided an early assessment of the economic effectiveness of four equity funds (Enterprise Capital Fund, Capital for Enterprise Fund, Aspire Fund and Early Growth Fund) that the Government has introduced in recent years to address market failures in the provision of finance to SMEs. The research, largely undertaken by Professor North and Dr Baldock involved 51 in-depth qualitative face-to-face and extended telephone interviews with SME managers in order to provide analysis of the impacts of the government equity funds on successful and unsuccessful applicant businesses and the extent to which alternative sources of equity and debt finance were considered and sourced
Comparative report on the innovation groups
Work package four focuses on healthy organisations, defined as those that meet the dual needs of the organisation and its employees. The first phase involved individual interviews in one case study organisation in each partner country, examining workplace change and its impact on current quality of life.
The second phase involved innovation groups, building on the interviews. This report focuses on the innovation groups.
The aims of the innovation groups were:
âą to disseminate the analysis of the interviews to participants,
âą to address the challenges identified in this analysis in terms of the potential impacts on the dual agenda of enhancing quality of (working) life and workplace effectiveness,
âą to begin to engage participants in the collaborative development of small innovations that could help to meet these dual objectives
Large UK retailers' initiatives to reduce consumers' emissions: a systematic assessment
In the interest of climate change mitigation, policy makers, businesses and non-governmental organisations have devised initiatives designed to reduce in-use emissions whilst, at the same time, the number of energy-consuming products in homes, and household energy consumption, is increasing. Retailers are important because they are at the interface between manufacturers of products and consumers and they supply the vast majority of consumer goods in developed countries like the UK, including energy using products. Large retailers have a consistent history of corporate responsibility reporting and have included plans and actions to influence consumer emissions within them.
This paper adapts two frameworks to use them for systematically assessing large retailersâ initiatives aimed at reducing consumersâ carbon emissions. The Framework for Strategic Sustainable Development (FSSD) is adapted and used to analyse the strategic scope and coherence of these initiatives in relation to the businessesâ sustainability strategies. The ISM âIndividual Social Materialâ framework is adapted and used to analyse how consumer behaviour change mechanisms are framed by retailers. These frameworks are used to analyse eighteen initiatives designed to reduce consumer emissions from eight of the largest UK retail businesses, identified from publicly available data.
The results of the eighteen initiatives analysed show that the vast majority were not well planned nor were they strategically coherent. Secondly, most of these specific initiatives relied solely on providing information to consumers and thus deployed a rather narrow range of consumer behaviour change mechanisms. The research concludes that leaders of retail businesses and policy makers could use the FSSD to ensure processes, and measurements are comprehensive and integrated, in order to increase the materiality and impact of their initiatives to reduce consumer emissions in use. Furthermore, retailers could benefit from exploring different models of behaviour change from the ISM framework in order to access a wider set of tools for transformative system change
- âŠ