302 research outputs found

    Ascospore release and survival in Sclerotinia sclerotiorum

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    The release and survival of ascospores of a UK Sclerotinia sclerotiorum isolate were studied. Apothecia placed in a spore clock apparatus with different lighting regimes at 15 °C released ascospores continuously with an increasing rate for the duration of experiments (72–84 h). Spore release was not confined to light or dark periods in alternating regimes and occurred in continuous dark or light. Ascospores were released in both saturated air (90–95% rh) and at 65–75% rh. High temperature and rh were detrimental to ascospore survival but spore viability was maintained for longer periods than previously reported. The significance of these results in relation to disease control is discussed

    Do quantum dots allow one access to pseudogap Kondo physics?

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    For the last decade, tunable quantum dot systems have allowed the investigation of Kondo physics wherein the quenching of a single spin on an artificial atom affects the conductance. The pseudogap Kondo model featuring a density of states ρ(ϵ)\rho(\epsilon) = Cϵr|\epsilon|^{r}, introduced by Withoff and Fradkin in 1990 was predicted to exhibit Kondo-like physics above a critical value of the Kondo coupling, Jc_c, which several groups have shown by numerical renormalization group (RG) is finite for r<1/2< {1/2}. Gonzalez-Buxton {\it{et al}} showed that the strong coupling limit of the particle-hole symmetric model leads to a non-trivial π(1r)2\frac{\pi (1-r)}{2} phase shift at low temperatures indicating incomplete screening of the local moment, while away from particle-hole symmetry one generically flows towards a ground state with δπ\delta \sim \pi. We examine the implications of this model for quantum dots whose leads are Fermi-liquid-like, yet possess a tunneling density of states which is suppressed at the Fermi energy as a power law.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, poster to be presented at SCES'04 Karlsruhe July 26-3

    On Life, Movement and Stoppage: Agency and Ethics in the Anthropocene

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    Responding to the current narratives about the impending planetary catastrophe caused by our human activity, this philosophy-cum-art piece develops a more affirmative story about life, death and extinction. Framed as a non-normative ethics for the Anthropocene, it considers the human’s expanded obligations towards the bio- and geosphere, while also critically reflecting on the very constitution of this “human”

    Navigating the Range of Statistical Tools for Inferential Network Analysis

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    The last decade has seen substantial advances in statistical techniques for the analysis of network data, as well as a major increase in the frequency with which these tools are used. These techniques are designed to accomplish the same broad goal, statistically valid inference in the presence of highly interdependent relationships, but important differences remain between them. We review three approaches commonly used for inferential network analysis—the quadratic assignment procedure, exponential random graph models, and latent space network models—highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of the techniques relative to one another. An illustrative example using climate change policy network data shows that all three network models outperform standard logit estimates on multiple criteria. This article introduces political scientists to a class of network techniques beyond simple descriptive measures of network structure, and it helps researchers choose which model to use in their own research

    A Landscape Cannot Be A Homeland

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this record.What is the problem for which landscape is the answer? In this paper, I offer a response to this question, first posed at a meeting of landscape researchers in Brussels in 2011. I argue that the problem can be defined as ontopology, or what I call here homeland thinking, and I propose that a landscape cannot be a homeland. The salience of landscape as a critical term instead involves modes of thinking and feeling that chafe against invocations of homeland as a site of existential inhabitation, as a locus of sentiment and attachment, and a wellspring of identity. The paper explores the connections between ideas of landscape and homeland through discussions of the European Landscape Convention, phenomenology and the term homeland itself. I conclude by arguing that a landscape must be understood as a kind of dislocation or distancing from itself. There are, after all, no original inhabitants

    “No powers, man!”: A student perspective on designing university smart building interactions

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    Smart buildings offer an opportunity for better performance and enhanced experience by contextualising services and interactions to the needs and practices of occupants. Yet, this vision is limited by established approaches to building management, delivered top-down through professional facilities management teams, opening up an interaction-gap between occupants and the spaces they inhabit. To address the challenge of how smart buildings might be more inclusively managed, we present the results of a qualitative study with student occupants of a smart building, with design workshops including building walks and speculative futuring. We develop new understandings of how student occupants conceptualise and evaluate spaces as they experience them, and of how building management practices might evolve with new sociotechnical systems that better leverage occupant agency. Our findings point to important directions for HCI research in this nascent area, including the need for HBI (Human-Building Interaction) design to challenge entrenched roles in building management

    Archean crustal evolution of the Suthern São Francisco Craton\ud reviewed

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    The Southern São Francisco Craton contains a number of ancient granite-greenstone associations and medium- to high grade rocks (TIG type) encompassing migmatites which collectively address an isotopic record of sialic crust from ca. 3.8 to 2.5 Ga. We present an integrated interpretation based on new and compiled U-Pb ages and Nd-Sr-Pb isotope constraints, and trace element geochemistry, providing inferences for the Archean geodynamic processes through time and space. In addition, \ud U-Pb detrital zircon dating of both the Rio das Velhas and Minas Supergroups is merged to infer \ud main Archean sources as landmarks of the protracted, polycyclic history. Considering the geologic \ud framework and ages, two crustal segments (Mesoarchean; Neoarchean) can be distinguished, \ud although there is indirect isotopic evidence of Paleoarchean protholithS given by a smallnumber of \ud Pb inherited ages and some Sm-Nd TOM ages. The Mesoarchean remnant (Campo Belo and Santa \ud Bárbara metamorphic complexes) originated through juvenile accretion episodes (3.21-3.20 Ga; 3.0- \ud 2.90 Ga), herein termed the Campo Belo orogeny. Some occurrences of ancient greenstone belts \ud within the Proterozoic framework marginal to the Craton suggest a larger extent of the Mesoarchean \ud core. The Neoarchean segment, formed during the so-called Rio das Velhas orogeny, comprises \ud two tectonic-magmatic episodes. The early episode (2.79-2.75 Ga), marking vigorous crustal growth \ud by juvenile accretion, originated the granite-greenstone terrain comprised by the Belo Horizonte \ud and Bonfim gneissic complexes and the coeval Rio das Velhas Supergroup. In contrast, the latest \ud episode (2.75-2.69 Ga) included development of tholeiitic to calc-alkaline magmatism, high grade \ud metamorphism having the fingerprintof polyphase defomnation and sub-arc cnustal anatexis, \ud highlighted by mafic-ultramafic layered suites and the Passa Tempo granulitic complex - now exposed \ud as roots of a continental collision that eventually assembled the landmass. This stage also generated \ud granitic plutons and mafic dikes between 2.66 and 2.55 Ga, as post-tectonic to anorogenic activity

    Effectiveness of a structured educational intervention using psychological delivery methods in children and adolescents with poorly controlled type 1 diabetes: a cluster-randomized controlled trial of the CASCADE intervention.

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    INTRODUCTION: Type 1 diabetes (T1D) in children and adolescents is increasing worldwide with a particular increase in children <5 years. Fewer than 1 in 6 children and adolescents achieve recommended glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) values. METHODS: A pragmatic, cluster-randomized controlled trial assessed the efficacy of a clinic-based structured educational group incorporating psychological approaches to improve long-term glycemic control, quality of life and psychosocial functioning in children and adolescents with T1D. 28 pediatric diabetes services were randomized to deliver the intervention or standard care. 362 children (8-16 years) with HbA1c≥8.5% were recruited. Outcomes were HbA1c at 12 and 24 months, hypoglycemia, admissions, self-management skills, intervention compliance, emotional and behavioral adjustment, and quality of life. A process evaluation collected data from key stakeholder groups in order to evaluate the feasibility of delivering the intervention. RESULTS: 298/362 patients (82.3%) provided HbA1c at 12 months and 284/362 (78.5%) at 24 months. The intervention did not improve HbA1c at 12 months (intervention effect 0.11, 95% CI -0.28 to 0.50, p=0.584), or 24 months (intervention effect 0.03, 95% CI -0.36 to 0.41, p=0.891). There were no significant changes in remaining outcomes. 96/180 (53%) families in the intervention arm attended at least 1 module. The number of modules attended did not affect outcome. Reasons for low uptake included difficulties organizing groups and work and school commitments. Those with highest HbA1cs were less likely to attend. Mean cost of the intervention was £683 per child. CONCLUSIONS: Significant challenges in the delivery of a structured education intervention using psychological techniques to enhance engagement and behavior change delivered by diabetes nurses and dietitians in routine clinical practice were found. The intervention did not improve HbA1c in children and adolescents with poor control. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN52537669, results

    Black gold: trustworthiness in artistic research (seen from the sidelines of arts and health)

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    Rigour plays a central role in contemporary research culture. But how appropriate a concept is it to think, perform, and make judgements with on what is trustworthy and excellent in artistic research and its neighbouring field of arts and health? The historical meanings of rigour suggest severity and rigidity: straight lines, austere habits, privations. As a word, rigour has a mixed ancestry – French, Latin, Middle English. Some of its earliest uses coincide with a feudal system of government in Europe, with rigge [verb] meaning to plough a straight line in a narrow strip, and rig [verb] to provide a straight ridge to a house. Rig [noun] a derivation of ridge, was used in England five hundred years ago of human and animal backbones, perhaps reflecting everyday physical burdens. Rigours [noun] conveyed the meting out of un-cautioned punishments and cruelty. While the temperament of rigour might be appropriate for research that follows pre-set norms and standards of repeatability, its use to judge what is trustworthy in artistic research is questionable. Though artistic researchers need to understand the rigour concept, by contrast, artistic research as a kind of ‘thinking through making’ (Ravetz, 2011, 159; Ingold, 2013, 6), places value on improvisation, chance encounter, unforeseen admixture and the in- and outward- folding of process, affect and material. Once it is accepted that poiesis is part of the research process (Ingold, 2013; Haraway, 2016), it becomes apparent that artistic research cannot easily accommodate straight backed rigour
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