2,169 research outputs found

    How is climate change affecting marine life in the Arctic?

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    Rising temperature is melting the ice that covers the Arctic Ocean, allowing sunlight into waters that have been dark for thousands of years. Previously barren ice-covered regions are being transformed into productive seas. Here we explain how computer modelling can be used to predict how this transformation will affect the food web that connects plankton to fish and top-predators like whales and polar bears. Images of starving polar bears have become symbolic of the effects of warming climate. Melting of the sea-ice is expected to reduce the bears’ ability to hunt for seals. However, at the same time, the food web upon which they depend is becoming more productive, so it is not completely clear what the eventual outcome will be for the bears. Computer models help us to understand these systems and inform policy decisions on the management of newly available Arctic resources

    Embodied Discourses of Literacy in the Lives of Two Preservice Teachers

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    This study examines the emerging teacher literacy identities of Ian and A.J., two preservice teachers in a graduate teacher education program in the United States. Using a poststructural feminisms theoretical framework, the study illustrates the embodiment of literacy pedagogy discourses in relation to the literacy courses’ discourse of comprehensive literacy and the literacy biographical discourses of Ian and A.J. The results of this study indicate the need to deconstruct how the discourse of comprehensive literacy limits how we, as literacy teacher educators, position, hear and respond to our preservice teachers and suggests the need for differentiation in our teacher education literacy courses

    Modelling the effects of changes in sea-ice extent on Arctic marine food webs

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    Diminishing extent of sea-ice cover in the Arctic over recent decades is well documented, and linked to global warming. The ecological effects have been profound especially in areas which have transformed from extensive seasonal ice-cover, to marginal sea-ice or year-round open water. The effects include an increase in Arctic primary production and changes in habitat and food availability for iconic marine mammals. Fishing nations anticipate increased harvesting opportunities in the Arctic as ice cover retreats further, but in November 2017 an international agreement was reached to prevent fisheries development in the Central Arctic Ocean for at least the next 16 years, to give time for development of scientific understanding. The scope for changes primary production due to diminishing sea-ice to propagate through the food web and affect higher trophic levels and charismatic megafauna such as whales, seals and polar bears, is extremely uncertain and hard to predict. The classical hypothesis would be that warming climate will result in a bottom-up trophic cascade from a) increased primary production, to b) increased zooplankton production, to c) increased fish production and harvesting potential, through to d) increased populations of charismatic marine megafauna. However, this assumes that primary production is retained in the upper layers of the water column – the outcome could be quite different if changes in vertical mixing and animal behavior associated with loss of ice cover lead instead to a greater proportion of primary production being directed to the benthos. Here we report on results from a configuration of the StrathE2E marine food web model to represent the Barents Sea. First, we show a baseline model representing sea-ice and temperature conditions during the 1980s-1990s, and then compare this with results from simulation of a warmer, year-round ice-free scenario. The results show that the increase in primary production in the ice-free scenario is amplified as it cascades up the food web. The effects preferentially benefit benthos and demersal fish, but this result is sensitive assumptions about prey preferences and vertical mixing. We also show how the food web responds to harvesting of fish, under both contemporary ice-cover and future ice-free situations. The results presented here are a starting point for a much more extensive new project under the NERC Charging Arctic Ocean Programme (Microbes to Megafauna Modelling of Arctic Seas (MiMeMo)) which we briefly introduce

    Recovering the self: a manifesto for primary care.

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    Huge political, ideological and organisational changes are engulfing primary care, placing intense pressures on the sense of self for both patient and doctor within the consultation.A recent Health Foundation report urges us to develop care practices rooted in a philosophy of people as ‘purposeful, thinking, feeling, emotional, reflective, relational, responsive beings’.1 GPs are encouraged to work collaboratively with patients, fostering shared decision-making and promoting self-management. This assumes that patients (and doctors) have agency and capacity, the ability to make their own choices and decisions and the power to take action in a given situation. But these assumptions are problematic when you are running 15 minutes late during a morning surgery with 18 patients, most of whom are unknown to you, and your QOF screen pop-up urges you to update the patient’s CVD risk assessment score and take action to reduce their HbA1c levels.We wish to give clinicians ‘permission’ to do person-centred care by offering a language of self that they can use to describe and defend their practice. Our principal motivations in establishing the centrality of the self in primary care are to offer hope to those entering the field, encourage those jaded by their current experience in practice, and provide vital underpinning to the generalist cause

    What if There Were Desktop Access to the Computer Science Literature?

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    What if there was an electronic computer science library? Consider the possibilities of having your favorite publications available within finger's reach. Consider project Envision, an ongoing effort to build a user-centered database from the computer science literature. This paper describes our first year progress, stressing the motivation underlying project Envision, user-centered development, and overall design

    North American carbon dioxide sources and sinks: magnitude, attribution, and uncertainty

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    North America is both a source and sink of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). Continental sources - such as fossil-fuel combustion in the US and deforestation in Mexico - and sinks - including most ecosystems, and particularly secondary forests - add and remove CO2 from the atmosphere, respectively. Photosynthesis converts CO2 into carbon as biomass, which is stored in vegetation, soils, and wood products. However, ecosystem sinks compensate for only similar to 35% of the continent's fossil-fuel-based CO2 emissions; North America therefore represents a net CO2 source. Estimating the magnitude of ecosystem sinks, even though the calculation is confounded by uncertainty as a result of individual inventory- and model-based alternatives, has improved through the use of a combined approach. Front Ecol Environ 2012; 10(10): 512-519, doi:10.1890/12006

    Displays of authority in the clinical consultation: A linguistic ethnographic study of the electronic patient record

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    AbstractThe introduction of computers into general practice settings has profoundly changed the dynamics of the clinical consultation. Previous research exploring the impact of the computer (in what has been termed the ‘triadic’ consultation) has shown that computer use and communication between doctor and patient are intricately coordinated and inseparable. Swinglehurst et al. have recently been critical of the ongoing tendency within health communication research to focus on ‘the computer’ as a relatively simple ‘black box’, or as a material presence in the consultation. By re-focussing on the electronic patient record (EPR) and conceptualising this as a complex collection of silent but consequential voices, they have opened up new and more nuanced possibilities for analysis. This orientation makes visible a tension between the immediate contingencies of the interaction as it unfolds moment-by-moment and the more standardised, institutional demands which are embedded in the EPR (‘dilemma of attention’). In this paper I extend this work, presenting an in-depth examination of how participants in the consultation manage this tension. I used linguistic ethnographic methods to study 54 video recorded consultations from a dataset collected between 2007 and 2008 in two UK general practices, combining microanalysis of the consultation with ethnographic attention to the wider organisational and institutional context. My analysis draws on the theoretical work of Erving Goffman and Mikhail Bakhtin, incorporating attention to the ‘here and now’ of the interaction as well as an appreciation of the ‘distributed’ nature of the EPR, its role in hosting and circulating new voices, and in mediating participants' talk and social practices. It reveals – in apparently fleeting moments of negotiation and contestation – the extent to which the EPR shapes the dynamic construction, display and circulation of authority in the contemporary consultation

    Bridging Alone: Religious Conservatism, Marital Homogamy, and Voluntary Association Membership

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    This study characterizes social insularity of religiously conservative American married couples by examining patterns of voluntary associationmembership. Constructing a dataset of 3938 marital dyads from the second wave of the National Survey of Families and Households, the author investigates whether conservative religious homogamy encourages membership in religious voluntary groups and discourages membership in secular voluntary groups. Results indicate that couples’ shared affiliation with conservative denominations, paired with beliefs in biblical authority and inerrancy, increases the likelihood of religious group membership for husbands and wives and reduces the likelihood of secular group membership for wives, but not for husbands. The social insularity of conservative religious groups appears to be reinforced by homogamy—particularly by wives who share faith with husbands

    An Extracellular Polysaccharide-Rich Organic Layer Contributes to Organization of the Coccosphere in Coccolithophores

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    This is the final version. Available from Frontiers Media via the DOI in this record.Coccolithophores are globally abundant marine microalgae characterized by their ability to form calcite platelets (coccoliths). The coccoliths are produced internally in a Golgi-derived vesicle. Mature coccoliths are extruded from the cell to form a protective covering on the cell surface, known as the coccosphere. Current evidence indicates that calcite precipitation in the coccolith vesicle (CV) is modulated by coccolith-associated polysaccharides (CAPs). Whilst previous research into CAPs has focussed on their roles in calcite precipitation within the CV, little is known of their extracellular roles. Using fluorescent lectins, we visualize the extracellular polysaccharide-rich organic layer associated with external coccoliths and demonstrate that it differs between species in structure and composition. Biochemical analysis of polysaccharide extracted from coccoliths indicated substantial differences between species in monosaccharide composition and uronic acid content. In Coccolithus braarudii our studies indicate that polysaccharide-rich material is extruded with the coccoliths, where it plays a role in the adhesion of the coccoliths to the cell surface and contributes to the overall organization of the coccosphere. Together, these results highlight the important extracellular roles of CAPs and their contribution to the dynamic nature of the coccosphere.The authors acknowledge funding from NERC SPITFIRE DTP studentship to CW. GW and CB acknowledge support from NERC (NE/N011708/1) and the European Research Council (ERC-ADG 670390). CW was additionally supported by the Gillings Graduate Exchange Programme (University of Southampton/University of North Carolina Wilmington). AT acknowledges NSF support (NSFGEO-NERC-1638838)
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