456 research outputs found

    International Business and Culture Course Development and Teacher Growth

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    This paper describes the development process of an International Business and Culture Course for a new certificate program at the Colorado International Education and Training Institute (CIETI). I was hired for the specific purpose of designing this course. This paper is a compilation of some of the resources I’ve collected, experiences of what worked and what did not work, learning and teaching ideas I’ve incorporated from my course work at SIT, and my personal values and beliefs. My keen interest is in emotional intelligence and I have used it as a unifying theme to explain why I have chosen to teach what I teach in this course

    Interactive and Animated Scalable Vector Graphics and R Data Displays

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    We describe an approach to creating interactive and animated graphical displays using R's graphics engine and Scalable Vector Graphics, an XML vocabulary for describing two-dimensional graphical displays. We use the svg() graphics device in R and then post-process the resulting XML documents. The post-processing identities the elements in the SVG that correspond to the different components of the graphical display, e.g., points, axes, labels, lines. One can then annotate these elements to add interactivity and animation effects. One can also use JavaScript to provide dynamic interactive effects to the plot, enabling rich user interactions and compelling visualizations. The resulting SVG documents can be embedded withinHTML documents and can involve JavaScript code that integrates the SVG and HTML objects. The functionality is provided via the SVGAnnotation package and makes static plots generated via R graphics functions available as stand-alone, interactive and animated plots for the Web and other venues

    In a neighborhood near you: how community health workers help people obtain health insurance and primary care

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    Implementing the health insurance mandate of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), signed into law in 2010, will require states to reach, educate, and successfully enroll individuals and families who have had little experience with health coverage. The uninsured are likely to require considerable individualized application and enrollment support. Consumer advocates believe there is a need for ongoing support so that the newly insured retain their coverage, navigate their way effectively through the health care system, and engage in wellness and prevention activities. As many states prepare to enroll millions of low-income uninsured Americans, the experience of Community Health Workers (CHWs) in Massachusetts can inform outreach and enrollment efforts across the country

    GGobi

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    GGobi is a new interactive and dynamic software system for data visualization, the result of a significant redesign of the older XGobi system [Swayne et al., 1998], whose development spanned roughly the past decade. GGobi differs from XGobi in many ways, and it is those differences that explain best why we have undertaken this redesign. GGobi’s appearance: GGobi’s appearance has changed from that of XGobi in several ways: 1) It uses a different graphical toolkit with a more contemporary look and feel and a larger set of components. The new toolkit is called GTK+, which explains the initial G in GGobi. 2) With XGobi, there is in general a single plot per process; to look at multiple views of the same data, one launches multiple processes. A single GGobi session can support multiple plots (which may represent multiple datasets), and a single process can support multiple independent GGobi sessions. 3) XGobi’s display types are essentially a single scatterplot and a subordinate parallel coordinate plot, but GGobi supports several types of plots as first class citizens: scatterplots, parallel coordinate plots, scatterplot matrices, and time series plots

    The role of premagmatic rifting in shaping a volcanic continental margin: An example from the Eastern North American Margin

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    Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2020. 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: Solid Earth 125(11),(2020): e2020JB019576, doi:10.1029/2020JB019576.Both magmatic and tectonic processes contribute to the formation of volcanic continental margins. Such margins are thought to undergo extension across a narrow zone of lithospheric thinning (~100 km). New observations based on existing and reprocessed data from the Eastern North American Margin contradict this hypothesis. With ~64,000 km of 2‐D seismic data tied to 40 wells combined with published refraction, deep reflection, receiver function, and onshore drilling efforts, we quantified along‐strike variations in the distribution of rift structures, magmatism, crustal thickness, and early post‐rift sedimentation under the shelf of Baltimore Canyon Trough (BCT), Long Island Platform, and Georges Bank Basin (GBB). Results indicate that BCT is narrow (80–120 km) with a sharp basement hinge and few rift basins. The seaward dipping reflectors (SDR) there extend ~50 km seaward of the hinge line. In contrast, the GBB is wide (~200 km), has many syn‐rift structures, and the SDR there extend ~200 km seaward of the hinge line. Early post‐rift depocenters at the GBB coincide with thinner crust suggesting “uniform” thinning of the entire lithosphere. Models for the formation of volcanic margins do not explain the wide structure of the GBB. We argue that crustal thinning of the BCT was closely associated with late syn‐rift magmatism, whereas the broad thinning of the GBB segment predated magmatism. Correlation of these variations to crustal terranes of different compositions suggests that the inherited rheology determined the premagmatic response of the lithosphere to extension.Financial support was provided by the U.S. Department of Energy Award DE‐FE‐0026087 to Battelle Memorial Institute under the “Mid‐Atlantic U.S. Offshore Carbon Storage Resource Assessment” Project.2021-04-1

    Facilitating Access to Health Coverage and Care by Advancing Health Insurance Literacy

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    Although Massachusetts currently has the highest rate of health insurance coverage in the nation, reports suggest health care consumers do not fully understand how their insurance works. Thus, the insured and uninsured populations alike need ongoing support in order to develop health insurance literacy, defined as the degree to which individuals obtain, process, and understand information about health insurance in order to make informed decisions about choosing and using their coverage, which in turn can lead to positive health outcomes. Educating consumers and giving them tools and resources are strategies that advance health insurance literacy. Since 2001, the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation (the Foundation) has awarded over $5 million to community health centers and community-based organizations throughout Massachusetts, through its Connecting Consumers with Care (CCC) grant program, to conduct outreach, provide education and help consumers enroll in health insurance and access primary care. In 2015, the Foundation focused its CCC grant activities to improve health insurance literacy and engage consumers to utilize the health care system more effectively. Grantees have collected data on common measures, using adaptable data collection tools (e.g., brief client surveys), to assess changes in clients\u27 knowledge, confidence, and/or preparedness to better navigate complex systems of coverage and care. The poster presentation will discuss: - the importance of health insurance literacy and its relevance to improving population and community health - strategies currently used to increase health insurance literacy among diverse populations, including successes and challenges - how the impact of these strategies was measured - how assessments were designed to reflect consumers\u27 voices

    Review of trend analysis and climate change projections of extreme precipitation and floods in Europe

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    International audienceThis paper presents a review of trend analysis of extreme precipitation and hydrological floods in Europe based on observations and future climate projections. The review summaries methods and methodologies applied and key findings from a large number of studies. Reported analyses of observed extreme precipitation and flood records show that there is some evidence of a general increase in extreme precipitation, whereas there are no clear indications of significant trends at large-scale regional or national level of extreme streamflow. Several studies from regions dominated by snowmelt-induced peak flows report decreases in extreme streamflow and earlier spring snowmelt peak flows, likely caused by increasing temperature. The review of likely future changes based on climate projections indicates a general increase in extreme precipitation under a future climate, which is consistent with the observed trends. Hydrological projections of peak flows show large impacts in many areas with both positive and negative changes. A general decrease in flood magnitude and earlier spring floods are projected for catchments with snowmelt-dominated peak flows, which is consistent with the observed trends. Finally, existing guidelines in Europe on design flood and design rainfall estimation are reviewed. The review shows that only few countries have developed guidelines that incorporate a consideration of climate change impacts.Cet article prĂ©sente une revue bibliographique des Ă©tudes de dĂ©tection de tendances et de projection climatique relatives aux pluies et crues extrĂȘmes en Europe. Il prĂ©sente les mĂ©thodes utilisĂ©es et les principaux rĂ©sultats. Il est possible de conclure Ă  une tendance Ă  l’augmentation des pluies extrĂȘmes, que ce soient sur les observations que sur les prĂ©visions des modĂšles climatiques. Aucune Ă©volution significative et gĂ©nĂ©ralisĂ©e n’est dĂ©tectĂ©e pour les crues, que ce soit Ă  l’échelle nationale ou rĂ©gionale. Dans certaines rĂ©gions dont le rĂ©gime des crues est influencĂ© par la fonte nivale, les tendances constatĂ©es et les prĂ©dictions des modĂšles climatiques sont les mĂȘmes : diminution des pointes de crue et occurrence prĂ©coce au cours du printemps. Pour les autres bassins, les prĂ©dictions des modĂšles climatiques sur les crues sont plus contrastĂ©es, avec des tendances significatives Ă  la hausse ou Ă  la baisse. L’article conclut sur un inventaire en Europe des mĂ©thodes opĂ©rationnelles d’estimation des pluies et crues extrĂȘmes. A ce jour trĂšs peu de pays ont intĂ©grĂ© un volet correctif en lien avec l’impact du changement climatique

    The effect of self-efficacy on behavior and weight in a behavioral weight-loss intervention.

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    To determine whether eating self-efficacy and physical activity self-efficacy are predictive of dietary intake, physical activity, and weight change within a behavioral weight loss intervention, and whether dietary intake and physical activity mediate relationships between self-efficacy and weight change
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