176 research outputs found

    From: Bob Mason

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    From/To: Mr. & Mrs. Bob Mason (Chalk\u27s reply filed first)

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    From/To: Bob Mason (Chalk\u27s reply filed first)

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    Montreal Ukulele

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    BSC Football: The Swenson Era

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    A recollection of Bridgewater State College Coach Edward Swenson’s efforts to bring varsity-level football back into a Massachusetts state college and the stories of the trials and tribulations of his first eight years as head coach. The book is a Bridgewater State University Football Alumni project inspired by many of Coach Swenson’s former players, commemorating the coach and several of their former teammates

    Paper Session II-C - Command and Control Through Space-Based Systems

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    A new space-based command and control concept is presented that combines a ground station in conjunction with satellites utilizing modern RF communications technology. By using current satellites such as TDRSS, GPS or the proposed LEO/MEO commercial constellations, the command system of the future will provide a reliable and highly redundant replacement for the current command system that requires as many as seven UHF transmitter sites along the various launch vehiclesÕ flight paths. This space-based command system requires a look at new technologies to provide innovative ways to transmit secure and jam resistant messages from the launch operations center. These messages would then be relayed through a satellite to the launch vehicle and back to the operations center for confirmation. This new command system must conform to Range Safety guidelines in terms of minimal propagation time, communication security, maximum reliability and design efficiency to ensure that no single point of failure will deny the capability to terminate or result in the inadvertent termination of a launch vehicle or payload

    Sex-specific effects of psychoactive pollution on behavioral individuality and plasticity in fish

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    Lay Summary Prozac is present in freshwater systems across the globe as the pharmaceutical contaminant fluoxetine. The effect of fluoxetine on aquatic species' behavioral variability is not yet clear. We show that male guppies become more similar to each other after exposure to fluoxetine, and females become less flexible in their behavior. These sex-specific differences in response to fluoxetine can have a meaningful impact on their ability to survive in a changing world.The global rise of pharmaceutical contaminants in the aquatic environment poses a serious threat to ecological and evolutionary processes. Studies have traditionally focused on the collateral (average) effects of psychoactive pollutants on ecologically relevant behaviors of wildlife, often neglecting effects among and within individuals, and whether they differ between males and females. We tested whether psychoactive pollutants have sex-specific effects on behavioral individuality and plasticity in guppies (Poecilia reticulata), a freshwater species that inhabits contaminated waterways in the wild. Fish were exposed to fluoxetine (Prozac) for 2 years across multiple generations before their activity and stress-related behavior were repeatedly assayed. Using a Bayesian statistical approach that partitions the effects among and within individuals, we found that males-but not females-in fluoxetine-exposed populations differed less from each other in their behavior (lower behavioral individuality) than unexposed males. In sharp contrast, effects on behavioral plasticity were observed in females-but not in males-whereby exposure to even low levels of fluoxetine resulted in a substantial decrease (activity) and increase (freezing behavior) in the behavioral plasticity of females. Our evidence reveals that psychoactive pollution has sex-specific effects on the individual behavior of fish, suggesting that males and females might not be equally vulnerable to global pollutants

    Psychoactive pollution suppresses individual differences in fish behaviour

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    Environmental contamination by pharmaceuticals is global, substantially altering crucial behaviours in animals and impacting on their reproduction and survival. A key question is whether the consequences of these pollutants extend beyond mean behavioural changes, restraining differences in behaviour between individuals. In a controlled, two-year, multigenerational experiment with independent mesocosm populations, we exposed guppies (Poecilia reticulata) to environmentally realistic levels of the ubiquitous pollutant fluoxetine (Prozac). Fish (unexposed: n = 59, low fluoxetine: n = 57, high fluoxetine: n = 58) were repeatedly assayed on four separate occasions for activity and risk-taking behaviour. Fluoxetine homogenized individuals' activity, with individual variation in populations exposed to even low concentrations falling to less than half that in unexposed populations. To understand the proximate mechanism underlying these changes, we tested the relative contribution of variation within and between individuals to the overall decline in individual variation. We found strong evidence that fluoxetine erodes variation in activity between but not within individuals, revealing the hidden consequences of a ubiquitous contaminant on phenotypic variation in fish—likely to impair adaptive potential to environmental change

    Tacky Elastomers to Enable Tear-Resistant and Autonomous Self-Healing Semiconductor Composites

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    Mechanical failure of π-conjugated polymer thin films is unavoidable under cyclic loading conditions, due to intrinsic defects and poor resistance to crack propagation. Here, the first tear-resistant and room-temperature self-healable semiconducting composite is presented, consisting of conjugated polymers and butyl rubber elastomers. This new composite displays both a record-low elastic modulus
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