1,105 research outputs found

    Accidental Elder

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    Almost a Sense of Property : Henry James\u27s The Turn of the Screw, modernism, and commodity culture

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    [extract] Metaphorical, if not literal, homelessness has seemed to many to be a defining condition of the life and work of Henry James. His friend Edmund Gosse, for instance, wrote that James was a homeless man in a peculiar sense, one who was never truly settled either in England, his adopted country, or the United States, his country of origin.More recently, John Carlos Rowe has related James\u27s deracination to cosmopolitanism, outlining how the concerns of his fiction foreshadow recent efforts within the humanities to renovate the cosmopolitan ideal of respect for international and intranational differences.And John Landau has argued that James\u27s complex late style both highlights and attempts to compensate for a general sense of cultural homelessness —that is, the increasingly unstable grounds of belief and knowledge in late-Victorian and Edwardian culture

    Effects of soil type and composition of rhizodeposits on rhizosphere priming phenomena

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    Inputs of fresh plant-derived C may stimulate microbially-mediated turnover of soil organic matter (SOM) in the rhizosphere. But studies of such ‘priming’ effects in artificial systems often produce conflicting results, depending on such variables as rates of substrate addition, substrate composition, whether pure compounds or mixtures of substrates are used, and whether the addition is pulsed or continuous. Studies in planted systems are less common, but also produce apparently conflicting results, and the mechanisms of these effects are poorly understood. To add to the evidence on these matters, we grew a C4 grass for 61 d in two contrasting soils – an acid sandy soil and a more fertile clay-loam – which had previously only supported C3 vegetation. We measured total soil respiration and its C isotope composition, and used the latter to partition the respiration between plant- and soil-C sources. We found SOM turnover was enhanced (i.e. positive priming) by plant growth in both soils. In treatments in which the grass was clipped, net growth was greatly diminished, and priming effects were correspondingly weak. In treatments without clipping, net plant growth, total soil respiration and SOM-derived respiration were all much greater. Further, SOM-derived respiration increased over time in parallel with increases in plant growth, but the increase was delayed in the less fertile soil. We conclude the observed priming effects were driven by microbial demand for N, fuelled by deposition of C substrate from roots and competition with roots for N. The extent of priming depended on soil type and plant growing conditions. In a further experiment, we simulated rhizodeposition of soluble microbial substrates in the same two soils with near-continuous additions for 19 d of either C4-labelled sucrose (i.e. a simple single substrate) or a maize root extract (i.e. a relatively diverse substrate), and we measured soil respiration and its C isotope signature. In the more fertile soil, sucrose induced increasingly positive priming effects over time, whereas the maize root extract produced declining priming effects over time. We suggest this was because N and other nutrients were provided from the mineralization of this more diverse substrate. In the less-fertile soil, microbial N demand was probably never satisfied by the combined mineralization from added substrate and soil organic matter. Therefore priming effects were approximately constant over time. We conclude that the chemical nature of putative priming compounds can greatly influence priming phenomena

    Evaluation of a structured preceptorship programme

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    Preceptorship is a period in which newly qualified staff nurses receive support from an experienced nurse to smooth their transition into the service. District nurses (DNs) from the authors' trust informally expressed the need for a better transition between the completion of district nursing education and entry into the workforce. Hence, a structured preceptorship programme was developed and delivered. This article describes this service initiative and its evaluation by preceptors (n=14) and preceptees (newly qualified DNs; n=13). Both groups valued having a structured preceptorship programme. Preceptees agreed that having a named preceptor was very important, and preceptors felt that the role which they played was rewarding. Both groups felt that the role of the DN was a specialist role and that the preceptorship programme helped to support newly qualified staff make the transition into qualified DNs, clinical team leaders and, ultimately, caseload holders. A large-scale study of DN practice is required to develop a national consensus on the structure and content of preceptorship programmes for district nursing

    Direct Measurement of the System-Environment Coupling as a Tool For Understanding Decoherence and Dynamical Decoupling

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    Decoherence is a major obstacle to any practical implementation of quantum information processing. One of the leading strategies to reduce decoherence is dynamical decoupling --- the use of an external field to average out the effect of the environment. The decoherence rate under any control field can be calculated if the spectrum of the coupling to the environment is known. We present a direct measurement of the bath coupling spectrum in an ensemble of optically trapped ultracold atoms, by applying a spectrally narrow-band control field. The measured spectrum follows a Lorentzian shape at low frequencies, but exhibits non-monotonic features at higher frequencies due to the oscillatory motion of the atoms in the trap. These features agree with our analytical models and numerical Monte-Carlo simulations of the collisional bath. From the inferred bath-coupling spectrum, we predict the performance of well-known dynamical decoupling sequences: CPMG, UDD and CDD. We then apply these sequences in experiment and compare the results to predictions, finding good agreement in the weak-coupling limit. Thus, our work establishes experimentally the validity of the overlap integral formalism, and is an important step towards the implementation of an optimal dynamical decoupling sequence for a given measured bath spectrum.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure

    Sympathy for the Devil: A Conservation Strategy for Devil and Manta Rays

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    Background  International trade for luxury products, medicines, and tonics poses a threat to both terrestrial and marine wildlife. The demand for and consumption of gill plates (known as Peng Yu Sai, “Fish Gill of Mobulid Ray”) from devil and manta rays (subfamily Mobulinae, collectively referred to as mobulids) poses a significant threat to these marine fishes because of their extremely low productivity. The demand for these gill plates has driven an international trade supplied by largely unmonitored and unregulated catches from target and incidental fisheries around the world. Scientific research, conservation campaigns, and legal protections for devil rays have lagged behind those for manta rays despite similar threats across all mobulids. Methods  To investigate the difference in attention given to devil rays and manta rays, we examined trends in the scientific literature and updated species distribution maps for all mobulids. Using available information on target and incidental fisheries, and gathering information on fishing and trade regulations (at international, national, and territorial levels), we examined how threats and protective measures overlap with species distribution. We then used a species conservation planning approach to develop the Global Devil and Manta Ray Conservation Strategy, specifying a vision, goals, objectives, and actions to advance the knowledge and protection of both devil and manta rays. Results and Discussion  Our literature review revealed that there had been nearly 2.5-times more “manta”-titled publications, than “mobula” or “devil ray”-titled publications over the past 4.5 years (January 2012–June 2016). The majority of these recent publications were reports on occurrence of mobulid species. These publications contributed to updated Area of Occupancy and Extent of Occurrence maps which showed expanded distributions for most mobulid species and overlap between the two genera. While several international protections have recently expanded to include all mobulids, there remains a greater number of national, state, and territory-level protections for manta rays compared to devil rays. We hypothesize that there are fewer scientific publications and regulatory protections for devil rays due primarily to perceptions of charisma that favour manta rays. We suggest that the well-established species conservation framework used here offers an objective solution to close this gap. To advance the goals of the conservation strategy we highlight opportunities for parity in protection and suggest solutions to help reduce target and bycatch fisheries
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