3,595 research outputs found

    Ethics of tax practice

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    The Impact of Cruise Ship Passengers in Maine: The Example of Bar Harbor

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    Maine’s expanding cruise ship industry can provide local economic benefits and add to the state’s already large tourism economy. The authors describe results of a survey they conducted among passengers from eight ship visits to Bar Harbor, a town that has emerged as a popular port of call on New England summer and autumn cruises. They found that cruise ship passengers have higher household incomes and spend substantially more per day than typical Maine tourists. They make several suggestions for how ports can maximize the benefits from cruise ship passengers. These include using cruise ship visits to extend the local tourism season; converting “non-spending” passengers to “spenders;” implementing strategies to encourage and track return visits by passengers; and developing management plans to direct the flow of passengers through town

    Does a Carbonatite Deposit Influence Its Surrounding Ecosystem?

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    Carbonatites are unusual alkaline rocks with diverse compositions. Although previous work has characterized the effects these rocks have on soils and plants, little is known about their impacts on local ecosystems. Using a deposit within the Great Lakes–St. Lawrence forest in northern Ontario, Canada, we investigated the effect of a carbonatite on soil chemistry and on the structure of plant and soil microbial communities. This was done using a vegetation survey conducted above and around the deposit, with corresponding soil samples collected for determining soil nutrient composition and for assessing microbial community structure using 16S/ITS Illumina Mi-Seq sequencing. In some soils above the deposit a soil chemical signature of the carbonatite was found, with the most important effect being an increase in soil pH compared with the non-deposit soils. Both plants and microorganisms responded to the altered soil chemistry: the plant communities present in carbonatite-impacted soils were dominated by ruderal species, and although differences in microbial communities across the surveyed areas were not obvious, the abundances of specific bacteria and fungi were reduced in response to the carbonatite. Overall, the deposit seems to have created microenvironments of relatively basic soil in an otherwise acidic forest soil. This study demonstrates for the first time how carbonatites can alter ecosystems in situ

    Fe−3s core-level splitting and local magnetism in Fe2VAl

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    X-ray and soft x-ray photoelectron spectra were taken on Fe2VAl samples. The Fe−3s spectra show a shoulder on the higher binding energy side of the main peak, split by ≈4.7 eV. Based on current understanding of core-level multiplet splitting in transition-metal compounds, we believe this is direct evidence of a local moment in Fe2VAl

    Overload Injury of the Knees With Resistance-Exercise Overtraining: A Case Study

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    This is the publisher's version, also found at http://ehis.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=3&sid=cc60431c-6281-4940-bc2d-85f4c9ff2060%40sessionmgr11&hid=17&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=s3h&AN=SPHS-67196

    The Effect of Kinesio Tape¼ on Lower Extremity Functional Movement Screenℱ Scores

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    International Journal of Exercise Science 5(3) : 196-204, 2012. The purpose was to determine if application of Kinesio Tape (KTÂź) improves lower extremity scores on the Functional Movement Screen (FMSℱ). Individual FMSℱ score assessments of 32 college students were obtained. The subjects were then randomized into treatment and control groups. The treatment group had a second FMSℱ score after application of KTÂź to the lower extremity while the control group had a second FMSℱ score with no intervention. 16 varsity women’s basketball players and 16 non-varsity female students (Tegner Scale: 6.84 ±1.25, Age: 19±1.2, Height: 165.1±15.1cm, Weight: 68.1±10.9kg) at a NCAA Division II institution participated. FMSℱ scores were collected and recorded by the principal investigator. Data was analyzed through two way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Post hoc analysis indicated the treatment group significantly improved in comparison to the control group (Left: P\u3c.001, 95% CI: .283 - .467; Right P\u3c.001, 95% CI: .327 - .523) for both sides of the Hurdle Step. There were no interactions with Deep Squat (P=0.667) or either side of In-Line Lunge (Left: P=0.291, and Right: P=0.530). There were no interactions with either group in Deep Squat and In-Line Lunge of FMSℱ. However, there was a significant interaction with both groups in the Hurdle Step of FMSℱ. Findings from this research suggest that KTÂź may improve movement that incorporates a non-weight-bearing segment

    Observed limiting cases of horizontal field coherence and array performance in a time-varying internal wavefield

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    Author Posting. © Acoustical Society of America, 2008. This article is posted here by permission of Acoustical Society of America for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 124 (2008): EL97-EL103, doi:10.1121/1.2947630.Using a moored source and horizontal/vertical line array combination, horizontal coherence properties of high signal to noise ratio (>=20 dB) 100–1600 Hz signals have been measured. Internal waves in the area of the measurement created moving episodic sound-speed anomaly structures, influencing coherence length. Measured horizontal coherence scales for 100 Hz ranged from 5 to 20 acoustic wavelengths, and were inversely related to the sound-speed anomaly strength. Horizontal field properties were compared with fields computed using modal decompositions of the vertical signals. The comparison allows azimuthal field coherence properties to be studied apart from normal-mode interference effects.This work was funded by grants to Boston University and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution from the Ocean Acoustics Program at the U.S. Office of Naval Research, including an ONR Postdoctoral Fellowship award to the first author

    The Structure At 198 K Of (1R,5R,15R,16R)-5-Isopropenyl-2-Methyl-1(N-(Trans-2-Phenylcyclohexyloxyc Arbonyl)Amino)-2-Cyclohexene

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    trans-2-Phenylcyclohexyl N-(5-isopropenyl-2-methyl-2-cyclohexan-1-yl)carbamate, C23H31NO2, M(r) = 353.50, orthorhombic, P2(1)2(1)2(1), a = 8.813 (2), b = 9.043 (2), c = 25.643 (5) angstrom, V = 2043.6 (8) angstrom 3, Z = 4, D(x) = 1.15 g cm-3 (198 K), Mo K-alpha radiation, lambda = 0.7107 angstrom, mu = 0.6734 cm-1, F(000) = 768, T = 198 K, R = 0.0547 for 1772 reflections [F(o) greater-than-or-equal-to 4-sigma-(F(o))]. Molecules are H-bonded into infinite columns parallel to a. The H bond involves the NH group and the carbonyl O atom of the carbamate moiety with relevant parameters: N11-H11...O13 (related by 1/2 + x, 1/2 - y, - z); N...O 2.910 (5), H...O 2.11 (5) angstrom, N-H...O 159 (4)-degrees.Robert A. Welch Foundation (F-626)National Institutes of Health (GM 31750)ChemistryBiochemistr

    Winter 1993 observations of oceanography and sediment transport at the LEO-15 site

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    The NOAA National Underseas Research Program at Rutgers University is establishing a Long-term Ecosystem Observatory off New Jersey in 15 meters of water. As part of a bottom boundary layer study at this site, WHOI deployed a bottom instrument frame during the winter of 1993-94. The bottom instrument carried a current meter, a vertical array of optical back scattering sensors, temperature, pressure and conductivity sensors and an Acoustical Backscattering Sensor. The deployment was partially successful as the acoustic system failed. The other instrumentation worked well for 3 weeks returning data on winter conditions at the site. The extreme winter waves ended the experiment by tipping the instrument over on its side. The optical instrumentation was calibrated with sediment from the site, and the results from the experiment presented.Funding was provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration through Contract No. 4-25020 to Rutgers/SUNY National Underseas Research Program

    Normative Alethic Pluralism

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    Some philosophers have argued that truth is a norm of judgement and have provided a variety of formulations of this general thesis. In this paper, I shall side with these philosophers and assume that truth is a norm of judgement. What I am primarily interested in here are two core questions concerning the judgement-truth norm: (i) what are the normative relationships between truth and judgement? And (ii) do these relationships vary or are they constant? I argue for a pluralist picture—what I call Normative Alethic Pluralism (NAP)—according to which (i) there is more than one correct judgement-truth norm and (ii) the normative relationships between truth and judgement vary in relation to the subject matter of the judgement. By means of a comparative analysis of disagreement in three areas of the evaluative domain—refined aesthetics, basic taste and morality—I show that there is an important variability in the normative significance of disagreement—I call this the variability conjecture. By presenting a variation of Lynch’s scope problem for alethic monism, I argue that a monistic approach to the normative function of truth is unable to vindicate the conjecture. I then argue that normative alethic pluralism provides us with a promising model to account for it
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