158 research outputs found
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Vortex
Vortex is a two-movement piece for 14-player chamber ensemble of approximately 12 minutes in duration. It is scored for Flute/Piccolo, Oboe, Clarinet in B-flat, Horn in F, Trumpet in B-flat, Trombone, Percussion, Drum Set, Piano, and Strings.Musi
Mediated religion : motivations for religious web site usage : an exploratory study of Christian web site users
This exploratory study examines the motivations behind Internet use by those who visit Christian Web sites. The study examined usage of religious Web sites within the context of the colorful historical lineage of mediated religion dating back over 25 centuries ago to Africa and the use of drums. The drum was used as the earliest form of mediated religion and was devised specifically to satisfy the spiritual needs and gratifications of the users; Web sites are arguably the latest in this long line of media.
This study is based upon a self-selected and non-random online survey of 912 respondents visiting Christian Church Web sites listed in the Goshen Net Directory. The respondents come from nearly every state and 23 locations outside of the United States. The respondents represent 45 Christian denominations, with over 96% claiming to have experienced spiritual or religious conversion.
Comparisons between the results of this study and other Internet studies were offered where appropriate. While the results may not be generalizable to usage of the larger World Wide Web, this sample may be generalizable to the population of users of Christian Church Web sites. The results may be used to generate additional studies on the use of Internet for religious purposes, and argues for more religious Web uses and gratifications research.
In examining uses and motives of visitors to Christian Web sites, the uses and gratifications paradigm is an appropriate theoretical perspective and informs this study. The understanding of these religious users\u27 media motives can contribute to a better understanding of this new medium and forum for religious communities and can also have practical value through enabling religious organizations to attract both religious and non-religious users to their Web sites. While this study employed standardized uses and gratifications measures, the measurement issues raised in this study point toward different gratifications associated with Web use, even for the religious television viewer.
These respondents rank Religious Web Use as the most important reason to go online. While some entertainment and information elements are embedded in their online experience, religious overtones permeate the Christian Web users\u27 encounters. For these respondents possible motivations for religious Web site usage may be found in visiting Web sites as a reaction, to reinforce faith, and as a possible alternative to traditional religious services for some. Gratifications achieved by the Christian Web user may best be understood in terms of two or three major motivations, such as faith, community, and religious belief, which drive their selection of media content.
The results of this study are framed in terms of religious uses and gratifications sought by the user of religious Web sites. The understanding of these motivations and their connections to these users serves to build the body of knowledge for both religious studies and communications research literature
Composing features by managing inconsistent requirements
One approach to system development is to decompose the requirements into features and specify the individual features before composing them. A major limitation of deferring feature composition is that inconsistency between the solutions to individual features may not be uncovered early in the development, leading to unwanted feature interactions. Syntactic inconsistencies arising from the way software artefacts are described can be addressed by the use of explicit, shared, domain knowledge. However, behavioural inconsistencies are more challenging: they may occur within the requirements associated with two or more features as well as at the level of individual features. Whilst approaches exist that address behavioural inconsistencies at design time, these are overrestrictive in ruling out all possible conflicts and may weaken the requirements further than is desirable. In this paper, we present a lightweight approach to dealing with behavioural inconsistencies at run-time. Requirement Composition operators are introduced that specify a run-time prioritisation to be used on occurrence of a feature interaction. This prioritisation can be static or dynamic. Dynamic prioritisation favours some requirement according to some run-time criterion, for example, the extent to which it is already generating behaviour
Cepheid Parallaxes and the Hubble Constant
Revised Hipparcos parallaxes for classical Cepheids are analysed together
with 10 HST-based parallaxes (Benedict et al.). In a reddening-free V,I
relation we find that the coefficient of logP is the same within the
uncertainties in our Galaxy as in the LMC, contrary to some previous
suggestions. Cepheids in the inner region of NGC4258 with near solar
metallicities (Macri et al.) confirm this result. We obtain a zero-point for
the reddening-free relation and apply it to Cepheids in galaxies used by
Sandage et al. to calibrate the absolute magnitudes of SNIa and to derive the
Hubble constant. We revise their result from 62 to 70+/-5 km/s/Mpc. The
Freedman et al. 2001 value is revised from 72 to 76+/-8 km/s/Mpc. These results
are insensitive to Cepheid metallicity corrections. The Cepheids in the inner
region of NGC4258 yield a modulus of 29.22+/-0.03(int) compared with a
maser-based modulus of 29.29+/-0.15. Distance moduli for the LMC, uncorrected
for any metallicity effects, are; 18.52+/-0.03 from a reddening-free relation
in V,I; 18.47+/-0.03 from a period-luminosity relation at K; 18.45+/-0.04 from
a period-luminosity-colour relation in J,K. Adopting a metallicity correction
in V,I from Marci et al. leads to a true LMC modulus of 18.39+/-0.05.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, on-line material from [email protected].
Accepted for MNRA
Are your lights off? Using problem frames to diagnose system failures
This paper reports on our experience of investigating the role of software systems in the power blackout that affected parts of the United States and Canada on 14 August 2003. Based on a detailed study of the official report on the blackout, our investigation has aimed to bring out requirements engineering lessons that can inform development practices for dependable software systems. Since the causes of failures are typically rooted in the complex structures of software systems and their world contexts, we have deployed and evaluated a framework that looks beyond the scope of software and into its physical context, directing attention to places in the system structures where failures are likely to occur. We report that (i) Problem Frames were effective in diagnosing the causes of failures and documenting the causes in a schematic and accessible way, and (ii) errors in addressing the concerns of biddable domains, model building problems, and monitoring problems had contributed to the blackout
Sea surface pCO2 and O2 dynamics in the partially ice-covered Arctic Ocean
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2017. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans 122 (2017): 1425–1438, doi:10.1002/2016JC012162.Understanding the physical and biogeochemical processes that control CO2 and dissolved oxygen (DO) dynamics in the Arctic Ocean (AO) is crucial for predicting future air-sea CO2 fluxes and ocean acidification. Past studies have primarily been conducted on the AO continental shelves during low-ice periods and we lack information on gas dynamics in the deep AO basins where ice typically inhibits contact with the atmosphere. To study these gas dynamics, in situ time-series data have been collected in the Canada Basin during late summer to autumn of 2012. Partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2), DO concentration, temperature, salinity, and chlorophyll-a fluorescence (Chl-a) were measured in the upper ocean in a range of sea ice states by two drifting instrument systems. Although the two systems were on average only 222 km apart, they experienced considerably different ice cover and external forcings during the 40–50 day periods when data were collected. The pCO2 levels at both locations were well below atmospheric saturation whereas DO was almost always slightly supersaturated. Modeling results suggest that air-sea gas exchange, net community production (NCP), and horizontal gradients were the main sources of pCO2 and DO variability in the sparsely ice-covered AO. In areas more densely covered by sea ice, horizontal gradients were the dominant source of variability, with no significant NCP in the surface mixed layer. If the AO reaches equilibrium with atmospheric CO2 as ice cover continues to decrease, aragonite saturation will drop from a present mean of 1.00 ± 0.02 to 0.86 ± 0.01.U.S. National Science Foundation Arctic Observing Network Grant Number: ARC-1107346 and ARC-08564792017-08-2
The Lick AGN Monitoring Project 2011: Dynamical Modeling of the Broad-Line Region
We present models of the H-emitting broad-line region (BLR) in seven
Seyfert 1 galaxies from the Lick AGN (Active Galactic Nucleus) Monitoring
Project 2011 sample, drawing inferences on the BLR structure and dynamics as
well as the mass of the central supermassive black hole. We find that the BLR
is generally a thick disk, viewed close to face-on, with preferential emission
back toward the ionizing source. The dynamics in our sample range from
near-circular elliptical orbits to inflowing or outflowing trajectories. We
measure black hole masses of for PG 1310108, for Mrk 50,
for Mrk 141, for Mrk 279,
for Mrk 1511, for NGC 4593, and
for Zw 229015. We use these black hole mass
measurements along with cross-correlation time lags and line widths to recover
the scale factor used in traditional reverberation mapping measurements.
Combining our results with other studies that use this modeling technique,
bringing our sample size to 16, we calculate a scale factor that can be used
for measuring black hole masses in other reverberation mapping campaigns. When
using the root-mean-square (rms) spectrum and using the line dispersion to
measure the line width, we find . Finally, we search for correlations between and other AGN
and BLR parameters and find marginal evidence that is correlated with
and the BLR inclination angle, but no significant evidence of a
correlation with the AGN luminosity or Eddington ratio.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
BLIS-Net: Classifying and Analyzing Signals on Graphs
Graph neural networks (GNNs) have emerged as a powerful tool for tasks such
as node classification and graph classification. However, much less work has
been done on signal classification, where the data consists of many functions
(referred to as signals) defined on the vertices of a single graph. These tasks
require networks designed differently from those designed for traditional GNN
tasks. Indeed, traditional GNNs rely on localized low-pass filters, and signals
of interest may have intricate multi-frequency behavior and exhibit long range
interactions. This motivates us to introduce the BLIS-Net (Bi-Lipschitz
Scattering Net), a novel GNN that builds on the previously introduced geometric
scattering transform. Our network is able to capture both local and global
signal structure and is able to capture both low-frequency and high-frequency
information. We make several crucial changes to the original geometric
scattering architecture which we prove increase the ability of our network to
capture information about the input signal and show that BLIS-Net achieves
superior performance on both synthetic and real-world data sets based on
traffic flow and fMRI data
Racial disparities in modifiable risk factors and statin usage in Black patients with familial hypercholesterolemia
Background Black men and women are at higher risk for, and suffer greater morbidity and mortality from, atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) compared with adults of European Ancestry (EA). Black patients with familial hypercholesterolemia are at particularly high risk for ASCVD complications because of lifelong exposure to elevated levels of low-density-lipoprotein cholesterol. Methods and Results This retrospective study analyzed ASCVD prevalence and risk factors in 808 adults with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia from 5 US-based lipid clinics, and compared findings in Black versus EA patients. Multivariate logistic regression models were used to determine the strongest predictors of ASCVD as a function of race. No significant difference was noted in the prevalence of ASCVD in Black versus EA patients with familial hypercholesterolemia (39% versus 32%, respectively
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