8,550 research outputs found

    The influence of long-term inputs of catch crops and cereal straw on yield, protein composition and technological quality of a spring and a winter wheat

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    Under conditions of restricted nitrogen (N) input such as in organic farming systems, crop N uptake must rely on N mineralised from applied animal manure, crop residues and native soil organic matter. Scarcity of N may impede the production of quality grain for bread production, and input and retention of N in soil are therefore important parameters for soil fertility. Toretain N in the crop-soilsystem, catch crops may be grown in breaks between main crops where they provide a signiïŹcant sink for N mineralised in late summer and autumn (Thomsen, 2005). In corporation of straw may likewise retain mineralised N by microbial immobilisation (Christensen, 1986) and will also directly add to the N mineralisation potential when the N supplied in the straw accumulates (Thomsen & Christensen, 2004). Under northern European conditions, winter wheat may generally be of lower quality than spring wheat, but winter wheat has a higher yield potential. When the N uptake is mainly based on N mineralised from either applied or indigenous soil organic matter, however, this may even out the quality diïŹ€erence between winter and spring wheat as the longer growing season of winter wheat may boost its N utilisation. Growing conditions are highly important for protein quantity whereas main lygenetic factors inïŹ‚uence protein composition (Amesetal., 1999; Luoetal., 2000). Wheat grain proteins have been classiïŹed as albumins, globulins, gliadins and glutenins on the basis of their solubility (Osborne, 1907). Reverse-phase (RP) high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) allows the quantitative determination of these diïŹ€erent ïŹ‚our protein groups together with single proteins (α5-, α1,2-, α-, Îłc-type gliadins, x- and Îł-type high (HMW) and low (LMW) molecular weights subunits of glutenin) (Wieser & Seilmeier, 1998). The proteins can also be divided into polymers (glutenins) or monomers (gliadins, albumins, globulins) based on their aggregating properties. The polymeric proteins are critical for governing wheat ïŹ‚our processing properties, and their quantity and size distribution reliably measured by size-exclusion (SE) HPLC techniques have been shown to be important indicators of baking quality (Dachkevitch & Autran, 1989; Bateyetal., 1991). The aim of this study was to examine whether wheat yield and baking quality determined by chromatographic techniques together with rheological and chemical quality measurements could be improved by combining agronomic strategies consisting of wheat cultivars and long-term organic matter inputs. The variables tested were (A) a winter wheat and a spring wheat cultivar, (B) three catch crop strategies and (C) four straw incorporation rates

    Hardy is (almost) everywhere: nonlocality without inequalities for almost all entangled multipartite states

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    We show that all nn-qubit entangled states, with the exception of tensor products of single-qubit and bipartite maximally-entangled states, admit Hardy-type proofs of non-locality without inequalities or probabilities. More precisely, we show that for all such states, there are local, one-qubit observables such that the resulting probability tables are logically contextual in the sense of Abramsky and Brandenburger, this being the general form of the Hardy-type property. Moreover, our proof is constructive: given a state, we show how to produce the witnessing local observables. In fact, we give an algorithm to do this. Although the algorithm is reasonably straightforward, its proof of correctness is non-trivial. A further striking feature is that we show that n+2n+2 local observables suffice to witness the logical contextuality of any nn-qubit state: two each for two for the parties, and one each for the remaining n−2n-2 parties.Comment: 23 pages. Submitted for publicatio

    Quality-Of-Service Provisioning in Decentralized Networks: A Satisfaction Equilibrium Approach

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    This paper introduces a particular game formulation and its corresponding notion of equilibrium, namely the satisfaction form (SF) and the satisfaction equilibrium (SE). A game in SF models the case where players are uniquely interested in the satisfaction of some individual performance constraints, instead of individual performance optimization. Under this formulation, the notion of equilibrium corresponds to the situation where all players can simultaneously satisfy their individual constraints. The notion of SE, models the problem of QoS provisioning in decentralized self-configuring networks. Here, radio devices are satisfied if they are able to provide the requested QoS. Within this framework, the concept of SE is formalized for both pure and mixed strategies considering finite sets of players and actions. In both cases, sufficient conditions for the existence and uniqueness of the SE are presented. When multiple SE exist, we introduce the idea of effort or cost of satisfaction and we propose a refinement of the SE, namely the efficient SE (ESE). At the ESE, all players adopt the action which requires the lowest effort for satisfaction. A learning method that allows radio devices to achieve a SE in pure strategies in finite time and requiring only one-bit feedback is also presented. Finally, a power control game in the interference channel is used to highlight the advantages of modeling QoS problems following the notion of SE rather than other equilibrium concepts, e.g., generalized Nash equilibrium.Comment: Article accepted for publication in IEEE Journal on Selected Topics in Signal Processing, special issue in Game Theory in Signal Processing. 16 pages, 6 figure

    Multimedia courseware: Never mind the quality how much will it cost to develop?

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    This paper evaluates multimedia courseware costing techniques such as the US Airforce Interactive Courseware Method (Golas, 1993), CBT Analyst (Kearsley, 1985), CEAC (Schooley, 1988) and MEEM (Marshall, Samson, Dugard, & Scott, 1994) against the data from ten multimedia courseware developments. The Relative Error and Mean Absolute Relative Error (MARE) are calculated to allow comparison of the different methods

    Learning Equilibria with Partial Information in Decentralized Wireless Networks

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    In this article, a survey of several important equilibrium concepts for decentralized networks is presented. The term decentralized is used here to refer to scenarios where decisions (e.g., choosing a power allocation policy) are taken autonomously by devices interacting with each other (e.g., through mutual interference). The iterative long-term interaction is characterized by stable points of the wireless network called equilibria. The interest in these equilibria stems from the relevance of network stability and the fact that they can be achieved by letting radio devices to repeatedly interact over time. To achieve these equilibria, several learning techniques, namely, the best response dynamics, fictitious play, smoothed fictitious play, reinforcement learning algorithms, and regret matching, are discussed in terms of information requirements and convergence properties. Most of the notions introduced here, for both equilibria and learning schemes, are illustrated by a simple case study, namely, an interference channel with two transmitter-receiver pairs.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. To appear in IEEE Communication Magazine, special Issue on Game Theor

    The quiescent progenitors of four Type II-P/L supernovae

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    We present Large Binocular Telescope difference imaging data for the final years of four Type II-P/L supernovae progenitors. For all four, we find no significant evidence for stochastic or steady variability in the U, B, V, or R-bands. Our limits constrain variability to no more than roughly 5-10% of the expected R-band luminosities of the progenitors. These limits are comparable to the observed variability of red supergiants in the Magellanic Clouds. Based on these four events, the probability of a Type II-P/L progenitor having an extended outburst after Oxygen ignition is <37% at 90% confidence. Our observations cannot exclude short outbursts in which the progenitor returns to within ~10% of its quiescent flux on the time scale of months with no dust formation.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, 1 table. Accepted to MNRA

    Satisfaction Equilibrium: A General Framework for QoS Provisioning in Self-Configuring Networks

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    This paper is concerned with the concept of equilibrium and quality of service (QoS) provisioning in self-configuring wireless networks with non-cooperative radio devices (RD). In contrast with the Nash equilibrium (NE), where RDs are interested in selfishly maximizing its QoS, we present a concept of equilibrium, named satisfaction equilibrium (SE), where RDs are interested only in guaranteing a minimum QoS. We provide the conditions for the existence and the uniqueness of the SE. Later, in order to provide an equilibrium selection framework for the SE, we introduce the concept of effort or cost of satisfaction, for instance, in terms of transmit power levels, constellation sizes, etc. Using the idea of effort, the set of efficient SE (ESE) is defined. At the ESE, transmitters satisfy their minimum QoS incurring in the lowest effort. We prove that contrary to the (generalized) NE, at least one ESE always exists whenever the network is able to simultaneously support the individual QoS requests. Finally, we provide a fully decentralized algorithm to allow self-configuring networks to converge to one of the SE relying only on local information.Comment: Accepted for publication in Globecom 201

    Wasted Citizenship? Reclaimers and the Privatised Expansion of the Public Sphere

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    A large body of literature explores changes in the public sphere related to the transfer of services and activities performed by the public into the private sector. Less attention has been paid, however, to the privatised expansion of the public sphere. This article explores such a process in Metsimaholo, South Africa, where the municipality sought to bring landfill recycling into the realm of public policy through a public-private partnership. As informal reclaimers had salvaged recyclables at the dump for several decades, this contract amounted to an enclosure of the waste commons which dispossessed them of control over their livelihood and confined them to the informal economy. Countering structuralist accounts of accumulation by dispossession and top-down approaches to governmentality, the article focuses on how reclaimers contested these processes. It argues that before the reclaimers could negotiate with the state, they needed to mount an ‘ontological insurrection’ to counter their dismissal as mere ‘detritus’ and demand that the conception of the public sphere be expanded to include them as legitimate actors in the realm of public policy. While this may result in a reconfiguration of the public sphere, it is unclear whether it would challenge the current privatised nature of its expansion.RĂ©sumĂ©Il existe une littĂ©rature abondante sur le transfert des services et activitĂ©s du domaine public vers le privĂ©. Cependant, la privatisation de l’expansion de l’espace public a Ă©tĂ© nĂ©gligĂ©e. Cette Ă©tude analyse les processus sociaux de contestation par lesquels la MunicipalitĂ© de Metsimaholo, en Afrique du Sud, a cherchĂ© Ă  formaliser la rĂ©cupĂ©ration des matĂ©riaux recyclables sur la dĂ©charge publique de Sasolburg et Ă  ramener ces activitĂ©s dans la l’espace de la politique publique Ă  travers un contrat signĂ© avec une compagnie de promotion Ă©conomique des noirs. Les rĂ©cupĂ©rateurs informels ayant pratiquĂ© la rĂ©cupĂ©ration sur cette dĂ©charge pendant de nombreuses annĂ©es, cette tentative par la ville revient donc Ă  interdire l’accĂšs Ă  cette dĂ©charge collective privant du coup les rĂ©cupĂ©rateurs du contrĂŽle de leurs moyens de subsistance. L’article dĂ©fie la perspective structuraliste de l’accumulation par la dĂ©possession et de l’approche paternaliste de la gouvernance. Cette Ă©tude analyse la rĂ©sistance des rĂ©cupĂ©rateurs par rapport Ă  ce processus. Elle dĂ©fend qu’une « insurrection ontologique » Ă©tait nĂ©cessaire de la part des rĂ©cupĂ©rateurs informels avant de pouvoir nĂ©gocier avec l’Etat et contrecarrer le rejet qu’ils subissent comme les « dĂ©tritus », et exiger quel’expansion de l’espace public les prenne en compte en tant qu’acteurs lĂ©gitimes dans l’arĂšne des politiques publiques. MĂȘme si ceci peut rĂ©sulterĂ  une reconfiguration de l’espace public, le fait que sa nature privatisĂ©e puisse ĂȘtre remise en cause n’est toujours pas Ă©vident
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