3,639 research outputs found

    Logic programming and metadata specifications

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    Artificial intelligence (AI) ideas and techniques are critical to the development of intelligent information systems that will be used to collect, manipulate, and retrieve the vast amounts of space data produced by 'Missions to Planet Earth.' Natural language processing, inference, and expert systems are at the core of this space application of AI. This paper presents logic programming as an AI tool that can support inference (the ability to draw conclusions from a set of complicated and interrelated facts). It reports on the use of logic programming in the study of metadata specifications for a small problem domain of airborne sensors, and the dataset characteristics and pointers that are needed for data access

    Alien Registration- Crane, Marguerite M. (Houlton, Aroostook County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/36234/thumbnail.jp

    Alien Registration- Rego, Marguerite M. (Portland, Cumberland County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/25464/thumbnail.jp

    Alien Registration- Mccormack, Marguerite M. (Limestone, Aroostook County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/35236/thumbnail.jp

    Alien Registration- Sample, Marguerite M. (Strong, Franklin County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/19298/thumbnail.jp

    Controls on the seasonal exchange of CH3Br in temperate peatlands

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    Measurements of CH3Br exchange at two New Hampshire peatlands (Sallie\u27s Fen and Angie\u27s Bog) indicate that net flux from these ecosystems is the sum of competing production and consumption processes. Net CH3Br fluxes were highly variable and ranged from net emission to net uptake between locations within a single peatland. At Sallie\u27s Fen, net CH3Br flux exhibited positive correlations with peat temperature and air temperature during all seasons sampled, but these relationships were not observed at Angie\u27s Bog where flux varied according to microtopography. The major CH3Br production process at Sallie\u27s Fen appeared dependent on aerobic conditions within the peat, while CH3Br production at Angie\u27s Bog was favored by anaerobic conditions. There was evidence of aerobic microbial consumption of CH3Br within the peat at both sites. In a vegetation removal experiment conducted at Sallie\u27s Fen with dynamic chambers, all collars exhibited net consumption of CH3Br. Net CH3Br flux had a negative correlation with surface temperature and a positive correlation with water level in collars with all vegetation clipped consistent with aerobic microbial consumption. Vegetated collars showed positive correlations between net CH3Br flux and air temperature. A positive correlation between net CH3Br flux and surface temperature was also observed in collars in which all vegetation except Sphagnum spp. were clipped. These correlations are consistent with seasonal relationships observed in 1998, 1999, and 2000 and suggest that plants and/or fungi are possible sources of CH3Br in peatlands. Estimates of production and consumption made on two occasions at Sallie\u27s Fen suggest that peatlands have lower rates of CH3Br consumption compared to upland ecosystems, but a close balance between production and consumption rates may allow these wetlands to act as either a net source or sink for this gas

    Book Reviews: Clinical Experiences, Indoctrination and Education in Alcoholism

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    HEAVY DRINKING: THE MYTH OF ALCOHOLISM AS A DISEASE Herbert Fingarette Berkeley, University of California Press 1988, 166 page
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