701 research outputs found
Gendered Differences: Postmodern Feminist Perspectives and Young Women Identified as Emotionally Disabled
Copyright 2002 Families International, Inc.Little consideration has been given to adolescent girls identified as having emotional disabilities in either the
research or clinical literature. Social workers continue to use developmental theories that are based on males, and
thus contribute to the persistent silence about the needs of this population. Feminist and postmodern perspectives
can serve to highlight how dominant discourses around "gender/7 "emotional disabilities/7 and "psychological
development" influence social work theory and practice with this population. This paper uses feminist and postmodern
re-visions of developmental theories to deconstruct the current research and clinical practices with female
adolescents and shows how these re-visions can inform our thinking about adolescent girls identified as having
emotional or behavioral disabilities
Intermittent permeation of cylindrical nanopores by water
Molecular Dynamics simulations of water molecules in nanometre sized
cylindrical channels connecting two reservoirs show that the permeation of
water is very sensitive to the channel radius and to electric polarization of
the embedding material. At threshold, the permeation is {\emph{intermittent}}
on a nanosecond timescale, and strongly enhanced by the presence of an ion
inside the channel, providing a possible mechanism for gating. Confined water
remains surprisingly fluid and bulk-like. Its behaviour differs strikingly from
that of a reference Lennard-Jones fluid, which tends to contract into a highly
layered structure inside the channel.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Digital Triplet Approach for Real-Time Monitoring and Control of an Elevator Security System
As Digital Twins gain more traction and their adoption in industry increases, there is a need to integrate such technology with machine learning features to enhance functionality and enable decision making tasks. This has lead to the emergence of a concept known as Digital Triplet; an enhancement of Digital Twin technology through the addition of an ’intelligent activity layer’. This is a relatively new technology in Industrie 4.0 and research efforts are geared towards exploring its applicability, development and testing of means for implementation and quick adoption. This paper presents the design and implementation of a Digital Triplet for a three-floor elevator system. It demonstrates the integration of a machine learning (ML) object detection model and the system Digital Twin. This was done to introduce an additional security feature that enabled the system to make a decision, based on objects detected and take preliminary security measures. The virtual model was designed in Siemens NX and programmed via Total Integrated Automation (TIA) portal software. The corresponding physical model was fabricated and controlled using a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) S7 1200. A control program was developed to mimic the general operations of a typical elevator system used in a commercial building setting. Communication, between the physical and virtual models, was enabled using the OPC-Unified Architecture (OPC-UA) protocol. Object recognition using “You only look once” (YOLOV3) based machine learning algorithm was incorporated. The Digital Triplet’s functionality was tested, ensuring the virtual system duplicated actual operations of the physical counterpart through the use of sensor data. Performance testing was done to determine the impact of the ML module on the real-time functionality aspect of the system. Experiment results showed the object recognition contributed an average of 1.083s to an overall signal travel time of 1.338 s
Ecology and Geography of Human Monkeypox Case Occurences Across Africa
This is the published version. The original is available from http://www.jwildlifedis.org/content/48/2/335.full.pdf+htmlAs ecologic niche modeling (ENM) evolves as a tool in spatial epidemiology and public health, selection of the most appropriate and informative environmental data sets becomes increasingly important. Here, we build on a previous ENM analysis of the potential distribution of human monkeypox in Africa by refining georeferencing criteria and using more-diverse environmental data to identify environmental parameters contributing to monkeypox distributional ecology. Significant environmental variables include annual precipitation, several temperature-related variables, primary productivity, evapotranspiration, soil moisture, and pH. The potential distribution identified with this set of variables was broader than that identified in previous analyses but does not include areas recently found to hold monkeypox in southern Sudan. Our results emphasize the importance of selecting the most appropriate and informative environmental data sets for ENM analyses in pathogen transmission mapping
Mapping Monkeypox Transmission Risk through Time and Space in the Congo Basin
Monkeypox is a major public health concern in the Congo Basin area, with changing patterns of human case occurrences reported in recent years. Whether this trend results from better surveillance and detection methods, reduced proportions of vaccinated vs. non-vaccinated human populations, or changing environmental conditions remains unclear. Our objective is to examine potential correlations between environment and transmission of monkeypox events in the Congo Basin. We created ecological niche models based on human cases reported in the Congo Basin by the World Health Organization at the end of the smallpox eradication campaign, in relation to remotely-sensed Normalized Difference Vegetation Index datasets from the same time period. These models predicted independent spatial subsets of monkeypox occurrences with high confidence; models were then projected onto parallel environmental datasets for the 2000s to create present-day monkeypox suitability maps. Recent trends in human monkeypox infection are associated with broad environmental changes across the Congo Basin. Our results demonstrate that ecological niche models provide useful tools for identification of areas suitable for transmission, even for poorly-known diseases like monkeypox.This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health grant 1R01TW008859-01 ("Sylvatic Reservoirs of Human Monkeypox"). Use of trade, product, or firm names does not imply endorsement by the United States Government. The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
High Resolution XMM-Newton Spectroscopy of the Cooling Flow Cluster A3112
We examine high signal to noise XMM-Newton European Photon Imaging Camera
(EPIC) and Reflection Grating Spectrometer (RGS) observations to determine the
physical characteristics of the gas in the cool core and outskirts of the
nearby rich cluster A3112. The XMM-Newton Extended Source Analysis Software
data reduction and background modeling methods were used to analyze the XMM-
Newton EPIC data. From the EPIC data we find that the iron and silicon
abundance gradients show significant increase towards the center of the cluster
while the oxygen abundance profile is centrally peaked but has a shallower
distribution than that of iron. The X-ray mass modeling is based on the
temperature and deprojected density distributions of the intra-cluster medium
determined from EPIC observations. The total mass of A3112 obeys the M-T
scaling relations found using XMM-Newton and Chandra observations of massive
clusters at R500. The gas mass fraction f_gas= 0.149^{+0.036}_{-0.032} at R500,
is consistent with the seven-year WMAP results. The comparisons of line fluxes
and flux limits on the Fe XVII and Fe XVIII lines obtained from high resolution
RGS spectra indicate that there is no spectral evidence for cooler gas
associated with the cluster with temperature below 1.0 keV in the central <38"
(\sim 52 kpc) region of A3112. High resolution RGS spectra also yield an upper
limit to the turbulent motions in compact core of A3112 (206 km/s). We find
that the energy contribution of turbulence to total energy is less than 6 per
cent. This upper limit is consistent with the amount of energy contribution
measured in recent high resolution simulations of relaxed galaxy clusters.Comment: Accepted for publication. 14 pages, 12 Figures and 9 Table
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Initial C IV lag results from four years of data
K.H. acknowledges support from STFC grant ST/M001296/1.We present reverberation-mapping (RM) lags and black hole mass measurements using the C iv λ1549 broad emission line from a sample of 348 quasars monitored as a part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey RM Project. Our data span four years of spectroscopic and photometric monitoring for a total baseline of 1300 days, allowing us to measure lags up to ~750 days in the observed frame (this corresponds to a rest-frame lag of ~300 days in a quasar at z = 1.5 and ~190 days at z = 3). We report significant time delays between the continuum and the C iv λ1549 emission line in 48 quasars, with an estimated false-positive detection rate of 10%. Our analysis of marginal lag measurements indicates that there are on the order of ~100 additional lags that should be recoverable by adding more years of data from the program. We use our measurements to calculate black hole masses and fit an updated C iv radius–luminosity relationship. Our results significantly increase the sample of quasars with C iv RM results, with the quasars spanning two orders of magnitude in luminosity toward the high-luminosity end of the C iv radius–luminosity relation. In addition, these quasars are located at some of the highest redshifts (z ≈ 1.4–2.8) of quasars with black hole masses measured with RM. This work constitutes the first large sample of C iv RM measurements in more than a dozen quasars, demonstrating the utility of multiobject RM campaigns.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
The multi-wavelength view of shocks in the fastest nova V1674 Her
Classical novae are shock-powered multi-wavelength transients triggered by a
thermonuclear runaway on an accreting white dwarf. V1674 Her is the fastest
nova ever recorded (time to declined by two magnitudes is t_2=1.1 d) that
challenges our understanding of shock formation in novae. We investigate the
physical mechanisms behind nova emission from GeV gamma-rays to cm-band radio
using coordinated Fermi-LAT, NuSTAR, Swift and VLA observations supported by
optical photometry. Fermi-LAT detected short-lived (18 h) 0.1-100 GeV emission
from V1674 Her that appeared 6 h after the eruption began; this was at a level
of (1.6 +/- 0.4)x10^-6 photons cm^-2 s^-1. Eleven days later, simultaneous
NuSTAR and Swift X-ray observations revealed optically thin thermal plasma
shock-heated to kT_shock = 4 keV. The lack of a detectable 6.7 keV Fe K_alpha
emission suggests super-solar CNO abundances. The radio emission from V1674 Her
was consistent with thermal emission at early times and synchrotron at late
times. The radio spectrum steeply rising with frequency may be a result of
either free-free absorption of synchrotron and thermal emission by unshocked
outer regions of the nova shell or the Razin-Tsytovich effect attenuating
synchrotron emission in dense plasma. The development of the shock inside the
ejecta is unaffected by the extraordinarily rapid evolution and the
intermediate polar host of this nova.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Accepted to MNRA
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