779 research outputs found
An Iterative Algorithm for Objective Wind Field Analysis
A wind field interpolated from a limited supply of observed data often implies a specific field of divergence, or a violation of the conservation of mass. To minimize the divergence, various objective analyses have been proposed. Three different methods of analysis are investigated and compared with respect to the degree of minimization of wind divergence and the accuracy of wind data at a measured station. The methods are a variational formulation in which the residual error in the continuity equation is minimized, a fixed-vorticity technique, and the presently proposed algorithm in which the measured winds are held fixed while winds at adjacent points are adjusted in order to reduce the divergence. The reduction of wind divergence and the convergence of the iterative scheme are examined. Results of the objective wind field analysis at times depend on subjective judgment in selecting the appropriate initialization algorithm especially for regions with scattered stations
Validity and Accuracy of Atmospheric Air Quality Models
Effective evaluation of air pollution
control strategies requires the use of validated
and reliable mathematical models that can relate
pollutant emissions to atmospheric air quality.
The derivation and use of such models, at least
for inert and linearly decaying pollutants such
as CO and SO_2, has received a great deal of
attention. Much less work has been devoted to
assessing how the model predictions are related
to actual atmospheric concentrations. The
objectives of this paper are to formulate the
concepts of validity and accuracy and to suggest
and describe some experiments that can be performed
to assess these features
An Iterative Algorithm for Objective Wind Field Analysis
A wind field interpolated from a limited supply of observed data often implies a specific field of divergence, or a violation of the conservation of mass. To minimize the divergence, various objective analyses have been proposed. Three different methods of analysis are investigated and compared with respect to the degree of minimization of wind divergence and the accuracy of wind data at a measured station. The methods are a variational formulation in which the residual error in the continuity equation is minimized, a fixed-vorticity technique, and the presently proposed algorithm in which the measured winds are held fixed while winds at adjacent points are adjusted in order to reduce the divergence. The reduction of wind divergence and the convergence of the iterative scheme are examined. Results of the objective wind field analysis at times depend on subjective judgment in selecting the appropriate initialization algorithm especially for regions with scattered stations
Nudges and other moral technologies in the context of power: Assigning and accepting responsibility
Strawson argues that we should understand moral responsibility in terms of our practices of holding responsible and taking responsibility. The former covers what is commonly referred to as backward-looking responsibility , while the latter covers what is commonly referred to as forward-looking responsibility . We consider new technologies and interventions that facilitate assignment of responsibility. Assigning responsibility is best understood as the second- or third-personal analogue of taking responsibility. It establishes forward-looking responsibility. But unlike taking responsibility, it establishes forward-looking responsibility in someone else. When such assignments are accepted, they function in such a way that those to whom responsibility has been assigned face the same obligations and are susceptible to the same reactive attitudes as someone who takes responsibility. One family of interventions interests us in particular: nudges. We contend that many instances of nudging tacitly assign responsibility to nudgees for actions, values, and relationships that they might not otherwise have taken responsibility for. To the extent that nudgees tacitly accept such assignments, they become responsible for upholding norms that would otherwise have fallen under the purview of other actors. While this may be empowering in some cases, it can also function in such a way that it burdens people with more responsibility that they can (reasonably be expected to) manage
Problematizing Choice: Responsible consumers and sceptical citizens
About the book: Governance, Consumers and Citizens is the first book to bring together a study of governance with consumption, examining the changing place of the consumer as citizen in recent trends in governance, the tensions between competing ideas and practices of consumerism and the active role consumers play in the construction and practice of governance.
Radically pushing forward the debate on consumers and governance, this collection outlines new conceptions and posits new policy agendas. Bringing together international experts from political science, history, geography, social policy and media studies, this study shows how governance and consumption are intertwined in crucial aspects of public policy and contemporary politics
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Development of the Performance Confirmation Program at Yucca Mountain, Nevada
The Yucca Mountain Performance Confirmation program consists of tests, monitoring activities, experiments, and analyses to evaluate the adequacy of assumptions, data, and analyses that form the basis of the conceptual and numerical models of flow and transport associated with a proposed radioactive waste repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. The Performance Confirmation program uses an eight-stage risk-informed, performance-based approach. Selection of the Performance Confirmation activities (a parameter and a test method) for inclusion in the Performance Confirmation program was done using a risk-informed performance-based decision analysis. The result of this analysis and review was a Performance Confirmation base portfolio that consists of 20 activities. The 20 Performance Confirmation activities include geologic, hydrologic, and construction/engineering testing. Several of the activities were initiated during site characterization and are ongoing. Others activities will commence during construction and/or post emplacement and will continue until repository closure
Heterologous expression screens in Nicotiana benthamiana identify a candidate effector of the wheat Yellow Rust Pathogen that associates with processing bodies
Rust fungal pathogens of wheat (Triticum spp.) affect crop yields worldwide. The molecular mechanisms underlying the virulence of these pathogens remain elusive, due to the limited availability of suitable molecular genetic research tools. Notably, the inability to perform high-throughput analyses of candidate virulence proteins (also known as effectors) impairs progress. We previously established a pipeline for the fast-forward screens of rust fungal candidate effectors in the model plant Nicotiana benthamiana. This pipeline involves selecting candidate effectors in silico and performing cell biology and protein-protein interaction assays in planta to gain insight into the putative functions of candidate effectors. In this study, we used this pipeline to identify and characterize sixteen candidate effectors from the wheat yellow rust fungal pathogen Puccinia striiformis f sp tritici. Nine candidate effectors targeted a specific plant subcellular compartment or protein complex, providing valuable information on their putative functions in plant cells. One candidate effector, PST02549, accumulated in processing bodies (P-bodies), protein complexes involved in mRNA decapping, degradation, and storage. PST02549 also associates with the P-body-resident ENHANCER OF mRNA DECAPPING PROTEIN 4 (EDC4) from N. benthamiana and wheat. We propose that P-bodies are a novel plant cell compartment targeted by pathogen effectors
SPECIAL ISSUE HIV and CHRONIC PAIN (The Global Task Force for Chronic Pain in People with HIV (PWH): Developing a research agenda in an emerging field)
Chronic pain is a common comorbidity in people with HIV (PWH), with prevalence estimates of 25-85%. Research in this area is growing, but significant gaps remain. A Global Task Force of HIV experts was organized to brainstorm a scientific agenda and identify measurement domains critical to advancing research in this field. Experts were identified through literature searches and snowball sampling. Two online questionnaires were developed by Task Force members. Questionnaire 1 asked participants to identify knowledge gaps in the field of HIV and chronic pain and identify measurement domains in studies of chronic pain in PWH. Responses were ranked in order of importance in Questionnaire 2, which was followed by a group discussion. 29 experts completed Questionnaire 1, 25 completed Questionnaire 2, and 21 participated in the group. Many important clinical and research priorities emerged, including the need to examine etiologies of chronic pain in PWH. Pain-related measurement domains were discussed, with a primary focus on domains that could be assessed in a standardized manner across various cohorts that include PWH in different countries. We collaboratively identified clinical and research priorities, as well as gaps in standardization of measurement domains, that can be used to move the field forward
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