1,286 research outputs found
Modeling the Influence of Land Use Developments on Transportation System Performance
The growth in the urban population has influenced urban sprawl, congestion, and subsequently, delays on the existing road infrastructure. New land use developments occur in every part of the city due to rapid economic development and to meet the demand for better living standards. The induced traffic volume generated from such land use developments often results in increased congestion and vehicular delay on the existing roads. With recent advancements in the technology, it is possible to capture continuous, and comprehensive travel time data for every major corridor in a city. Therefore, the goal of this research is to model the influence of land use developments on travel time variations to improve the mobility of people and goods.
Data for 259 road links were selected within the city of Charlotte, North Carolina (NC). Three years of travel time data, from the year 2013 to the year 2015, were collected from the private agency. Thirty-five different types of land use developments were considered in this research. The spatial dependency was incorporated by considering the land use developments within 0.5 miles, 1 mile, 2 miles, and 3 miles of the selected road link. Forty-eight statistical models were developed.
The results obtained indicate that land use developments have a significant influence on travel times. Different land use categories contribute to the average travel time based on the buffer width, area type, and the link speed limit. Developing the models by classifying the links based on the speed limit (\u3c 45 mph, 45 to 50 mph, and \u3e 50 mph) was observed to be the best approach to examine the relationship between land use developments and the average travel time. Also, typically travel time on a selected road link is higher during the evening peak period compared to the morning peak and the afternoon off-peak period. Further, the results obtained indicate that the number of lanes and the posted speed limit are negatively associated with the travel time of the selected link
Dissortative From the Outside, Assortative From the Inside: Social Structure and Behavior in the Industrial Trade Network
It is generally accepted that neighboring nodes in financial networks are
negatively assorted with respect to the correlation between their degrees. This
feature would play an important 'damping' role in the market during downturns
(periods of distress) since this connectivity pattern between firms lowers the
chances of auto-amplifying (the propagation of) distress. In this paper we
explore a trade-network of industrial firms where the nodes are suppliers or
buyers, and the links are those invoices that the suppliers send out to their
buyers and then go on to present to their bank for discounting. The network was
collected by a large Italian bank in 2007, from their intermediation of the
sales on credit made by their clients. The network also shows dissortative
behavior as seen in other studies on financial networks. However, when looking
at the credit rating of the firms, an important attribute internal to each
node, we find that firms that trade with one another share overwhelming
similarity. We know that much data is missing from our data set. However, we
can quantify the amount of missing data using information exposure, a variable
that connects social structure and behavior. This variable is a ratio of the
sales invoices that a supplier presents to their bank over their total sales.
Results reveal a non-trivial and robust relationship between the information
exposure and credit rating of a firm, indicating the influence of the neighbors
on a firm's rating. This methodology provides a new insight into how to
reconstruct a network suffering from incomplete information.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, To appear in conference proceedings of the
IEEE: HICSS-4
Are SDGs being translated into accounting terms? Evidence from European cities
IMPACT: The challenge launched by the United Nations (UN) on the achievement of SDGs requires local governments to rethink how to devote their resources and report on their results regarding SDGs. The article analyses how existing frameworks communicate, through financial indicators, the efforts done towards sustainable development. The Voluntary Local Reviews (VLR) published by European cities and made available on the UN website can stimulate further reflection and actions toward making SDGs an accounting issue
Vascular risk factors and diabetic neuropathy
Background: Other than glycemic control, there are no treatments for diabetic neuropathy. Thus, identifying potentially modifiable risk factors for neuropathy is crucial. We studied risk factors for the development of distal symmetric neuropathy in 1172 patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus from 31 centers participating in the European Diabetes (EURODIAB) Prospective Complications Study.
Methods: Neuropathy was assessed at baseline (1989 to 1991) and at follow-up (1997 to 1999), with a mean (±SD) follow-up of 7.3±0.6 years. A standardized protocol included clinical evaluation, quantitative sensory testing, and autonomic-function tests. Serum lipids and lipoproteins, glycosylated hemoglobin, and the urinary albumin excretion rate were measured in a central laboratory.
Results: At follow-up, neuropathy had developed in 276 of 1172 patients without neuropathy at baseline (23.5 percent). The cumulative incidence of neuropathy was related to the glycosylated hemoglobin value and the duration of diabetes. After adjustment for these factors, we found that higher levels of total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides, a higher body-mass index, higher von Willebrand factor levels and urinary albumin excretion rate, hypertension, and smoking were all significantly associated with the cumulative incidence of neuropathy. After adjustment for other risk factors and diabetic complications, we found that duration of diabetes, current glycosylated hemoglobin value, change in glycosylated hemoglobin value during the follow-up period, body-mass index, and smoking remained independently associated with the incidence of neuropathy. Cardiovascular disease at baseline was associated with double the risk of neuropathy, independent of cardiovascular risk factors.
Conclusions: This prospective study indicates that, apart from glycemic control, the incidence of neuropathy is associated with potentially modifiable cardiovascular risk factors, including a raised triglyceride level, body-mass index, smoking, and hypertension
Public sector accounting harmonization in the European Union through the lens of the garbage can model
The public sector accounting harmonization process that started in the European Union in the aftermath of the financial crisis led the European Commission to launch a project for the development of a set of European Public Sector Accounting Standards (EPSAS). This paper analyses the process and the decision-making around development of the EPSAS through the lens of the garbage can model (Cohen, M. D., March, J. G., & Olsen, J. P. (1972). A garbage can model of organizational choice. Administrative Science Quarterly, 17(1), 1â25). More specifically, by identifying problems, participants, solutions, and choice opportunities, it discusses why the development of the EPSAS is taking so long and why the process does not seem to be progressing as planned. To this end, documents related to the process of EPSAS development are analyzed. The results provide evidence of problematic preferences and fluid participation possibly coupled with flight decisionsâthree elements of the garbage can model. Postponing decisions can be an option to dampen reluctance. The more the public sector becomes accustomed to the International Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS) by adopting IPSAS-like accrual accounting standards while waiting for the completion of the EPSAS, the less resistance there might be to moving to accrual accounting standards. However, at the same time, an imminent change to a new set of EPSAS standards might become less plausible if changes demand extra reform
Vascular risk factors and diabetic neuropathy
Background: Other than glycemic control, there are no treatments for diabetic neuropathy. Thus, identifying potentially modifiable risk factors for neuropathy is crucial. We studied risk factors for the development of distal symmetric neuropathy in 1172 patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus from 31 centers participating in the European Diabetes (EURODIAB) Prospective Complications Study.
Methods: Neuropathy was assessed at baseline (1989 to 1991) and at follow-up (1997 to 1999), with a mean (±SD) follow-up of 7.3±0.6 years. A standardized protocol included clinical evaluation, quantitative sensory testing, and autonomic-function tests. Serum lipids and lipoproteins, glycosylated hemoglobin, and the urinary albumin excretion rate were measured in a central laboratory.
Results: At follow-up, neuropathy had developed in 276 of 1172 patients without neuropathy at baseline (23.5 percent). The cumulative incidence of neuropathy was related to the glycosylated hemoglobin value and the duration of diabetes. After adjustment for these factors, we found that higher levels of total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides, a higher body-mass index, higher von Willebrand factor levels and urinary albumin excretion rate, hypertension, and smoking were all significantly associated with the cumulative incidence of neuropathy. After adjustment for other risk factors and diabetic complications, we found that duration of diabetes, current glycosylated hemoglobin value, change in glycosylated hemoglobin value during the follow-up period, body-mass index, and smoking remained independently associated with the incidence of neuropathy. Cardiovascular disease at baseline was associated with double the risk of neuropathy, independent of cardiovascular risk factors.
Conclusions: This prospective study indicates that, apart from glycemic control, the incidence of neuropathy is associated with potentially modifiable cardiovascular risk factors, including a raised triglyceride level, body-mass index, smoking, and hypertension
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Session B4: New Insights into Schooling Behavior in Response to Flow
Abstract:
Gregarious behaviour is found throughout the animal kingdom. Although many fish species live in groups during a certain period of their life cycle, rarely has this collective behaviour been incorporated in fish passage studies, which tend to focus on individual behaviour of target species. Near fish passes, local hydrodynamics are highly variable, potentially affecting school cohesion. Since schooling has several drivers, such as antipredatory benefits and energy savings mechanisms, a loss of school integrity might be a reason fish passes act as an ecological trap for fish species that live in schools. An understanding of how hydrodynamics, encountered near fish passes, affect school cohesion and schooling behaviour is needed. A âback-to-basicsâ study was executed that explored the response of fish schools to hydrodynamics in an experimental setting. The Common Minnow (Phoxinus phoxinus) was chosen, since it is a strong schooling species and abundant in English rivers. Minnows are quite similar in morphology and swimming movements to the important (migratory) salmonids and could therefore serve as a proxy. Movements of schools of two individuals were recorded in flowing and standing water, and their individual trajectories extracted from video data. Results show that minnows switch from a tandem configuration in standing water to a close side-by-side configuration in flowing water. Modelling work revealed that in this side-by-side configuration, energy savings could not be realised. It was concluded that fish aim to maximize information transfer when encountering flow and therefore have to rely on vision more than their lateral line system as the effectiveness of the latter is disturbed by the flow conditions. These findings suggest that passage of schooling fish is highly dependent on flow characteristics as these determine the success of collective movement and navigation through fish passes
Search for the most stable massive state in superstring theory
In ten dimensional type II superstring, all perturbative massive states are
unstable, typically with a short lifetime compared to the string scale. We find
that the lifetime of the average string state of mass M has the asymptotic form
T < const.1/(g^2 M). The most stable string state seems to be a certain state
with high angular momentum which can be classically viewed as a circular string
rotating in several planes ("the rotating ring"), predominantly decaying by
radiating soft massless NS-NS particles, with a lifetime T = c_0 M^5/g^2.
Remarkably, the dominant channel is the decay into a similar rotating ring
state of smaller mass. The total lifetime to shrink to zero size is ~ M^7. In
the presence of D branes, decay channels involving open strings in the final
state are exponentially suppressed, so the lifetime is still proportional to
M^5, except for a D brane at a special angle or flux. For large mass, the
spectrum for massless emission exhibits qualitative features typical of a
thermal spectrum, such as a maximum and an exponential tail. We also discuss
the decay properties of rotating rings in the case of compact dimensions.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figure. Correction on lifetime of average stat
Multiscale integration of satellite, airborne and field data for Mediterranean vegetation studies in the natural area of the Castelporziano Estate (Rome)
new experimental approach to land analysis has recently been developed, based on the integration of information
acquired on different scales; it enables the structure and the functionality of the vegetation in natural ecosystems
to be analysed. This research aims at assessing the potentiality of the experimental approach by the integration
of airborne and satellite remotely sensed data with ground measurements of structural parameters. In July
1999 a joint campaign for the acquisition of airborne (MIVIS, spatial resolution 3 m) and satellite remotely
sensed data (Landsat 5TM, spatial resolution 30 m) and measures taken at ground (PAI), was deployed in the
Presidential Estate at Castelporziano (Rome, Italy). The spectral signatures of the main vegetational types of the
Estate were examined and the PAI were related to NDVI values, calculated by means of satellite and airborne
images. The adopted approach enabled PAI maps to be produced. The linear relation between measured PAI and
estimated PAI showed a higher coefficient of determination when the MIVIS data were used. The sensor high
spectral resolution has moreover allowed to better describe the structural characteristics of the main plant typologies
at Castelporziano Estate
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