2,109 research outputs found
Dynamic Resource Allocation in Conservation Planning
Consider the problem of protecting endangered species by
selecting patches of land to be used for conservation purposes.
Typically, the availability of patches changes over time, and
recommendations must be made dynamically. This is a challenging
prototypical example of a sequential optimization
problem under uncertainty in computational sustainability. Existing
techniques do not scale to problems of realistic size. In
this paper, we develop an efficient algorithm for adaptively
making recommendations for dynamic conservation planning,
and prove that it obtains near-optimal performance. We further
evaluate our approach on a detailed reserve design case study
of conservation planning for three rare species in the Pacific
Northwest of the United States
Vaporization of high-temperature potassium in forced convection at saturation temperatures of 1800 deg to 2100 deg F
Heat transfer and fluid flow during forced convection vaporization of high temperature potassiu
M-grid: Using Ubiquitous Web Technologies to create a Computational Grid
There are many potential users and uses for grid computing. However, the concept of sharing computing resources excites security concerns and, whilst being powerful and flexible, at least for novices, existing systems are complex to install and use. Together these represent a significant barrier to potential users who are interested to see what grid computing can do. This paper describes m-grid, a system for building a computational grid which can accept tasks from any user with access to a web browser and distribute them to almost any machine with access to the internet and manages to do this without the installation of additional software or interfering with existing security arrangements
Interview with Frederick J. Converse
Interview in 1978 with Frederick Converse, professor of soil mechanics emeritus, covers his family background in upper New York State, his undergraduate education in engineering at the University of Rochester, and his professional life at Caltech. At Rochester, his mentor was Frederic W. Hinrichs, who later became dean of students at Caltech in its early years. Converse was hired as an instructor in Caltech's engineering division in 1920, by the division's first chairman, Franklin Thomas. A pioneer in civil engineering and an adviser to builders, architects, and contractors, Converse taught one of the earliest courses in the country on soil mechanics and conducted research on the vibration compaction of sands and cohesive soils. He was a leader in professional organizations in his field and consulted for various firms and government agencies, including the United States Navy, the California Division of Architecture, the Kaiser Steel Mill, and Permanente Metals Corp
Bibliography on HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia and Ethiopians in the Diaspora: The 2006 Update
No Abstract. The Ethiopian Journal of Health Development Vol. 21 (1) 2007: pp. 70-9
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The quality of political information
The article conceptualizes the quality of political information and shows how the concept can be used for empirical research. I distinguish three aspects of quality (intelligibility, relevance, validity) and use them to judge the constituent foundations of political information, that is component claims (statements of alleged facts) and connection claims (argumentative statements created by causally linking two component claims). The resulting conceptual map thus entails six manifestations of information quality (component claimintelligibility, connection claim intelligibility, component claimrelevance, connection claim relevance, component claim validity, and connection claim validity). I explain how the conceptual map can be used to make sense of the eclectic variety of existing research, and how it can advance new empirical research, as a guide for determining variation in information quality, as a conceptual template for the analysis of different types of political messages and their common quality deficiencies, and as a generator of new research questions and theoretical expectations
The Distribution of Stellar Mass in the Pleiades
As part of an effort to understand the origin of open clusters, we present a
statistical analysis of the currently observed Pleiades. Starting with a
photometric catalog of the cluster, we employ a maximum likelihood technique to
determine the mass distribution of its members, including single stars and both
components of binary systems. We find that the overall binary fraction for
unresolved pairs is 68%. Extrapolating to include resolved systems, this
fraction climbs to about 76%, significantly higher than the accepted field-star
result. Both figures are sensitive to the cluster age, for which we have used
the currently favored value of 125 Myr. The primary and secondary masses within
binaries are correlated, in the sense that their ratios are closer to unity
than under the hypothesis of random pairing. We map out the spatial variation
of the cluster's projected and three-dimensional mass and number densities.
Finally, we revisit the issue of mass segregation in the Pleiades. We find
unambiguous evidence of segregation, and introduce a new method for quantifying
it.Comment: 41 pages, 14 figures To Be Published in The Astrophysical Journa
The declining representativeness of the British party system, and why it matters
In a recent article, Michael Laver has explained âWhy Vote-Seeking Parties May Make Voters Miserableâ. His model shows that, while ideological convergence may boost congruence between governments and the median voter, it can reduce congruence between the party system and the electorate as a whole. Specifically, convergence can increase the mean distance between voters and their nearest party. In this article we show that this captures the reality of todayâs British party system. Policy scale placements in British Election Studies from 1987 to 2010 confirm that the pronounced convergence during the past decade has left the Conservatives and Labour closer together than would be optimal in terms of minimising the policy distance between the average voter and the nearest major party. We go on to demonstrate that this comes at a cost. Respondents who perceive themselves as further away from one of the major parties in the system tend to score lower on satisfaction with democracy. In short, vote-seeking parties have left the British party system less representative of the ideological diversity in the electorate, and thus made at least some British voters miserable
Mycoplasmal conjunctivitis in wild songbirds: the spread of a new contagious disease in a mobile host population.
A new mycoplasmal conjunctivitis was first reported in wild house finches (Carpodacus mexicanus) in early 1994. The causative agent was identified as Mycoplasma gallisepticum (MG), a nonzoonotic pathogen of poultry that had not been associated with disease in wild songbirds. Since the initial observations of affected house finches in the mid-Atlantic region, the disease has become widespread and has been reported throughout the eastern United States and Canada. By late 1995, mycoplasmal conjunctivitis had spread to an additional species, the American goldfinch (Carduelis tristis). This new disease exemplifies the rapid spread of a pathogen following introduction into a mobile wildlife population and provides lessons that may apply to emerging human diseases
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