124 research outputs found

    Urea drilled with seed affects germination and yield

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    Trials in 1968 at Burracoppin and York again showed it is safer to topdress urea just before seeding than to drill a mixture of seed and urea. At all but the lowest urea rates, urea drilled with the seed reduced the number of plants emerging and surviving, and reduced final wheat yields

    Intelligence, reason of state and the art of governing risk and opportunity in early modern Europe

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    Drawing upon primary and secondary historical material, this paper explores the role of intelligence in early modern government. It focuses upon developments in seventeenth- and early-eighteenth-century England, a site-specific genealogical moment in the broader history of state power/knowledges. Addressing a tendency in Foucauldian work to neglect pre-eighteenth-century governance, the analysis reveals a set of interrelated processes which gave rise to an innovative technique for anticipating hazard and opportunity for the state. At the intersection of raison d’État, the evolving art of government, widespread routines of secrecy and a post-Westphalia field of European competition and exchange, intelligence was imagined as a fundamental solution to the concurrent problems of ensuring peace and stability while improving state forces. In the administrative offices of the English Secretary of State, an assemblage of complex and interrelated procedures sought to produce and manipulate information in ways which exposed both possible risks to the state and potential opportunities for expansion and gain. As this suggests, the art of intelligence played an important if largely unacknowledged role in the formation and growth of the early modern state. Ensuring strategic advantage over rivals, intelligence also limited the ability of England's neighbours to dominate trade, control the seas and master the colonies, functioning as a constitutive feature of European balance and equilibrium. As the analysis concludes, understanding intelligence as a form of governmental technique – a way of doing something – reveals an entirely novel way of thinking about and investigating its myriad (historical and contemporary) formations

    Research Priorities for Childhood Apraxia of Speech: A Long View

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    This article introduces the Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research Special Issue: Selected Papers From the 2022 Apraxia Kids Research Symposium. The field of childhood apraxia of speech (CAS) has developed significantly in the past 15 years, with key improvements in understanding of basic biology including genetics, neuroscience, and computational modelling; development of diagnostic tools and methods; diversity of evidence-based interventions with increasingly rigorous experimental designs; and understanding of impacts beyond impairment-level measures. Papers in this special issue not only review and synthesize the some of the substantial progress to date but also present novel findings addressing critical research gaps and adding to the overall body of knowledge. A second aim of this prologue is to report the current research needs in CAS, which arose from symposium discussions involving researchers, clinicians, and Apraxia Kids community members (including parents of children with CAS). Four primary areas of need emerged from discussions at the symposium. These were: (a) What questions should we ask? (b) Who should be in the research? (c) How do we conduct the research? and (d) How do we move from research to practice? Across themes, symposium attendees emphasized the need for CAS research to better account for the diversity of people with CAS and improve the timeliness of implementation of high-level evidence-based practice across the lifespan. It is our goal that the articles and prologue discussion in this special issue provide an appreciation of advancements in CAS research and an updated view of the most pressing needs for future research

    Algorithmic Verification of Invalidation-Based Protocols

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    We propose an extension of the model of Broadcast Protocols in which individual processes are allowed to have unbounded local data and to communicate via value passing. Our specification language is based on multiset rewriting over first order atomic formulas enriched with a mechanism for global synchronization to model broadcasts, and constraints to model the relations over internal data and value passing. For this new class of parameterized systems, we provide a symbolic validation procedure for checking safety properties, and termination conditions defined on special classes of multiset rewriting systems with linear constraints. We report here on practical experiments with coherence protocols for virtual shared memory, and multiprocessors systems in which the number of processors, pages or cache lines are left as parameters

    Algorithmic Verification of Invalidation-Based Protocols

    Full text link
    We propose an extension of the model of Broadcast Protocols in which individual processes are allowed to have unbounded local data and to communicate via value passing. Our specification language is based on multiset rewriting over first order atomic formulas enriched with a mechanism for global synchronization to model broadcasts, and constraints to model the relations over internal data and value passing. For this new class of parameterized systems, we provide a symbolic validation procedure for checking safety properties, and termination conditions defined on special classes of multiset rewriting systems with linear constraints. We report here on practical experiments with coherence protocols for virtual shared memory, and multiprocessors systems in which the number of processors, pages or cache lines are left as parameters
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