2,449 research outputs found
Member and Non-Member Perceptions of the CDPAANYS Outreach and Education Grant
The New York State Department of Health (DOH) recently began funding a grant to the CDPANNYS, on organization whose members focus on the delivery of self-directed home care. This grant funds outreach and education to stakeholders concerning the statewide availability of the Consumer Directed Personal Assistance Program (CDPAP), a home care program for Medicaid eligible New Yorkers. CDPAANYS is an inter-organizational membership organization, and its 14 members do not cover all of the New Yorks 62 counties. However, the DOH grant required CDPAANYS to conduct statewide outreach that promotes both member organization and non-members. This research study examined how the outreach and education grant was perceived by CDPAANYs members and non-members
Mably on international war and peace.
This study of Mably’s works was undertaken because of the scant treatment thus far accorded the writings of a philosopher, important in his own century, and peculiarly interesting today in view of the present partial realization of many of his plans for the improvement of society. It was at first intended to make the subject of this paper an exposition of Mably’s communistic theories. That it is not, is partly due to accident. The reading of his works in the order of their composition, necessitated beginning with his Principes des Negotiations which, though not written first, was designed as an introduction to his first important work, the Driot Public de l’Europe. So strong was his insistence upon the necessity for international peace in that work, and so vital is that subject to the world today, that I resolved to make international peace the subject of this paper. I hope at some future time, to carry out my original intention in connection with a more comprehensive exposition of Mably’s philosophy
Teachers\u27 Salaries and Finance Equity
Contemporary efforts to adjust state finance plans for differences in teacher salaries are, at best, premature
Pacific Hake, Merluccius productus, Autecology: A Timely Review
Pacific hake, Merluccius productus, the most abundant groundfish in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem
(CCLME), is a species of both commercial significance, supporting a large international fishery, and ecological importance, connecting other species as both predator and prey. Coastal Pacific hake migrations are characterized by movements between northern summer feeding areas and southern winter spawning areas, with variations in annual abundance, distribution, and the extent of these movements
associated with varying climate-ocean conditions. In general, warm (cool) years with enhanced (reduced) stratification and poleward (equatorward) transport are
often related to good (poor) recruitment, increased (decreased) northward distribution, and reduced (enhanced) growth. However, the classic periodic pattern of annual migration and distribution may no longer be fully representative. Based on recent advances in the understanding of climate-ocean variability off the U.S. west
coast, we hypothesize that the annual movements of Pacific hake are more responsive to climate-ocean variability than previously thought, and further, that changes observed in Pacific hake distributions may reflect long-term changes in climate-ocean conditions in the CCLME. Therefore, an updated
model of these relations is key to effective monitoring and management of this stock, as well as to devising scenarios of future change in the CCLME as a result of climate
variations. The current state of knowledge of the relationship between the Pacific hake and its environment is reviewed, highlighting emerging ideas compared to those of the past, and priorities for future research are suggested
Optimized Surface Code Communication in Superconducting Quantum Computers
Quantum computing (QC) is at the cusp of a revolution. Machines with 100
quantum bits (qubits) are anticipated to be operational by 2020
[googlemachine,gambetta2015building], and several-hundred-qubit machines are
around the corner. Machines of this scale have the capacity to demonstrate
quantum supremacy, the tipping point where QC is faster than the fastest
classical alternative for a particular problem. Because error correction
techniques will be central to QC and will be the most expensive component of
quantum computation, choosing the lowest-overhead error correction scheme is
critical to overall QC success. This paper evaluates two established quantum
error correction codes---planar and double-defect surface codes---using a set
of compilation, scheduling and network simulation tools. In considering
scalable methods for optimizing both codes, we do so in the context of a full
microarchitectural and compiler analysis. Contrary to previous predictions, we
find that the simpler planar codes are sometimes more favorable for
implementation on superconducting quantum computers, especially under
conditions of high communication congestion.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, The 50th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium
on Microarchitectur
Vascular Anatomy of the Pig Kidney Glomerulus: A Qualitative Study of Corrosion Casts
Pig kidney glomerular vascular anatomy was studied by scanning electron microscopy of vascular corrosion casts. A generalized vascular architecture is presented to describe the pig kidney glomerulus based upon the observation of 3,800 vascular cast glomeruli. The relative simplicity of the pig glomerular vascular architecture has allowed the characterization of different vascular segments more completely than has been possible in other mammals. Based upon relationships to the afferent arteriole, a nomenclature and definition of primary, secondary, tertiary and anastomotic vessels is proposed for the distributing vessels comprising the glomerular tuft. The existence and formation of a large central hemispheric vessel deep within the confines of a glomerular hemisphere is micrographically documented. Micrographic evidence is presented supporting the formation of the single efferent arteriole by the merging of two central hemispheric vessels within the confines of the glomerular tuft. Failure of the merging of these two vessels may result in multiple efferent arterioles
Inside a gay world: a heuristic self-search inquiry of one gay man’s experience of a ‘cultic’ gay male friendship group
This thesis is a Heuristic Self-Search Inquiry (HSSI) that explores the personal experience of
one gay man’s participation in a gay male friendship group whose culturally constructed
sense of being gay, characterised by specific places, customs and practices the researcher
considers ‘cultic’. The study is undertaken through the researcher who found himself
outside a closed group of emotionally intimate gay friends, which represented an entire
world.
Using the HSSI model created by Sela-Smith (2002), this profoundly personal qualitative
study considers the researcher's internal experiencing as the primary source of knowledge.
Material from online images, academic papers and personal writing of the inquirer’s lived
experience of the research topic provided for periods of contemplative incubation and
illumination, typical of HSSI. The output was the depiction of six emergent themes that
highlight the qualities and nuances of the topic: pain, frustration, mistrust, joy, disgust and
confusion. The other main findings are: this gay male friendship group developed
characteristics of a symbolically enclosed cultic institution; that gay men are susceptible to
forming cultic relationships; and a depth of distress experienced when intimate friendships
between gay men fail. The findings finish by offering a creative synthesis, which captures
the resultant integrated understanding of the experience in the form of a short story.
Recommendations are made for counselling professionals to trouble their understanding of
gay male friendship groups, and for public and third sector organisations working with
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) identifying peoples to begin
discussing interpersonal issues inside LGBTQ populations
Variation in prey delivered to common Black-Hawk (Buteogallus anthracinus) nests in Arizona drainage basins
Understanding how raptor diets vary across local and regional scales can be important when human actions have the potential to alter prey abundances. We combined data on prey delivered to 16 Common Black-Hawk (Buteogallus anthracinus) nests in three tributaries of the Verde River, Arizona, in 2008 and 2009 with similar data reported previously (1994) for three other Arizona drainage basins to better understand variation in diet composition within and across drainage basins. Within the three drainage basins studied in 2008 and 2009, nests clustered into two groups: those along Fossil Creek, where fish and amphibians were common, and those in Wet Beaver and Oak Creek drainage basins, where reptiles and nonnative crayfish were more abundant. When data from all six drainage basins were combined, drainage basins again clustered into two groups, with prey deliveries in one cluster dominated by fish and amphibians and in the other cluster by reptiles. These results confirm the opportunistic nature of prey use by Common Black-Hawks and highlight the variation in diet that can occur both within and among drainage basins. Management targeting the eradication of nonnative crayfish or the reintroduction of native amphibians and fish could alter prey availability for this raptor species
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