97 research outputs found
An interprofessional, intercultural, immersive short-term study abroad program: public health and service systems in rome
The purpose of this paper is to describe a short-term study abroad program that exposes engineering and nursing undergraduate students from the United States and Italy to an intercultural and interprofessional immersion experience. Faculty from Purdue University and Sapienza Università di Roma collaborated to design a technical program that demonstrates the complementary nature of engineering and public health in the service sector, with Rome as an integral component of the program. Specifically, the intersection of topics including systems, reliability, process flow, maintenance management, and public health are covered through online lectures, in-class activities and case study discussions, field experiences, and assessments. Herein, administrative issues such as student recruitment, selection, and preparation are elucidated. Additionally, the pedagogical approach used to ensure constructive alignment among the program goals, the intended learning outcomes, and the teaching and learning activities is described. Finally, examples of learning outcomes resulting from this alignment are provided
Random walk of magnetic field lines for different values of the energy-range spectral index
An analytical nonlinear description of field-line wandering in partially
statistically magnetic systems was proposed recently [A. Shalchi, I. Kourakis,
Astronomy and Astrophysics, 470, 405 (2007)]. In this article we investigate
the influence of the wave-spectrum in the energy-range onto field line random
walk by applying this formulation. It is demonstrated that in all considered
cases we clearly obtain a superdiffusive behaviour of the field-lines. If the
energy-range spectral index exceeds unity a free-streaming behaviour of the
field-lines can be found for all relevant length-scales of turbulence. Since
the superdiffusive results obtained for the slab model are exact, it seems that
superdiffusion is the normal behavior of field line wandering.Comment: Submitted to Physics of Plasmas; 13 pages, no figure
An Exact Renormalization Group analysis of 3-d Well Developed turbulence
We take advantage of peculiar properties of three dimensional incompressible
turbulence to introduce a nonstandard Exact Renormalization Group method. A
Galilean invariance preserving regularizing procedure is utilized and a field
truncation is adopted to test the method. Results are encouraging: the energy
spectrum E(k) in the inertial range scales with exponent -1.666+/- 0.001 and
the Kolmogorov constant C_K, computed for several (realistic) shapes of the
stirring force correlator, agrees with experimental data.Comment: 12 pg, 2figures, LaTex, To be published on Physics Letters
Conceptual mechanization studies for a horizon definition spacecraft electrical power subsystem
Solar cell-battery electrical power subsystem for horizon definition spacecraf
Programa Atividade Curricular de Extensão: Apoio técnico aos pescadores do manejo comunitário de pirarucu (Arapaima gigas) realizado em lagos de várzea na Ilha da Paciência, Iranduba - Amazonas
Community management of the pirarucu Arapaima gigas (Schinz, 1822) has proven to be an efficient strategy for the conservation of the species in the state of Amazonas. The objective of this work was to carry out and propose, through extension projects (PACEs), environmental education actions for children and training of fishermen from the Nossa Senhora de Fátima community, on Ilha da Paciência, Iranduba - Amazonas, in order to contribute to the strengthening of the productive chain of pirarucu management. Through the Extension Curricular Activity Program - PACEs, the following were approved: PACE - Fishing Knowledge: The art of Learning and Teaching, held in 2016, and PACE - Technical Support for fishermen handling the Arapaima gigas (Schinz, 1822), held in 2017. The environmental education workshop with the children was carried out through playful activities, while the lectures and short courses were carried out through expository, explanatory and practical classes. In total, six (6) activities were carried out with community residents: (1) environmental education workshop; (2) lectures and (3) short courses. As a result of the activities carried out, there was an exchange of traditional and scientific knowledge between the members involved, a feat that made it possible to improve and strengthen the productive chain of handling the Arapaima gigas pirarucu in the community of Nossa Senhora de Fátima (Ilha da Paciência), in the municipality from Iranduba – Amazonas. O manejo comunitário do pirarucu Arapaima gigas (Schinz, 1822) tem se mostrado uma estratégia eficiente para a conservação da espécie no estado do Amazonas. O objetivo deste trabalho foi realizar e propor através de projetos de extensão (PACEs), ações de educação ambiental para crianças e capacitação dos pescadores da comunidade Nossa Senhora de Fátima, na Ilha da Paciência, Iranduba – Amazonas, a fim de contribuir com o fortalecimento da cadeia produtiva do manejo do pirarucu. Através do Programa Atividade Curricular de Extensão – PACEs foram aprovados: o PACE - Pescando Conhecimento: A arte de Aprender e Ensinar, realizado em 2016, e o PACE – Apoio Técnico a pescadores do manejo do pirarucu Arapaima gigas (Schinz, 1822), realizado em 2017. A oficina de educação ambiental com as crianças foi realizada por meio de atividades lúdicas, enquanto que as palestras e minicursos foram realizados por meio de aulas expositivas, explicativas e práticas. Ao total foram realizadas seis (6) atividades com os moradores da comunidade: (1) oficina de educação ambiental; (2) palestras e (3) minicursos. Como resultado das atividades realizadas houve a troca de conhecimento tradicional e cientÃfico entre os membros envolvidos, feito este que possibilitou a melhoria e o fortalecimento da cadeia produtiva do manejo do pirarucu Arapaima gigas na comunidade Nossa Senhora de Fátima (Ilha da Paciência), no municÃpio de Iranduba – Amazonas
Pattern Formation in Interface Depinning and Other Models: Erratically Moving Spatial Structures
We study erratically moving spatial structures that are found in a driven
interface in a random medium at the depinning threshold. We introduce a
bond-disordered variant of the Sneppen model and study the effect of extremal
dynamics on the morphology of the interface. We find evidence for the formation
of a structure which moves along with the growth site. The time average of the
structure, which is defined with respect to the active spot of growth, defines
an activity-centered pattern. Extensive Monte Carlo simulations show that the
pattern has a tail which decays slowly, as a power law. To understand this sort
of pattern formation, we write down an approximate integral equation involving
the local interface dynamics and long-ranged jumps of the growth spot. We
clarify the nature of the approximation by considering a model for which the
integral equation is exactly derivable from an extended master equation.
Improvements to the equation are considered by adding a second coupled equation
which provides a self-consistent description. The pattern, which defines a
one-point correlation function, is shown to have a strong effect on ordinary
space-fixed two-point correlation functions. Finally we present evidence that
this sort of pattern formation is not confined to the interface problem, but is
generic to situations in which the activity at succesive time steps is
correlated, as for instance in several other extremal models. We present
numerical results for activity-centered patterns in the Bak-Sneppen model of
evolution and the Zaitsev model of low-temperature creep.Comment: RevTeX, 18 pages, 19 eps-figures, To appear in Phys. Rev.
Third ventriculostomy through the lamina terminalis for intracranial pressure monitoring after aneurysm surgery: technical note
Global Analysis of Genetic, Epigenetic and Transcriptional Polymorphisms in Arabidopsis thaliana Using Whole Genome Tiling Arrays
Whole genome tiling arrays provide a high resolution platform for profiling of genetic, epigenetic, and gene expression polymorphisms. In this study we surveyed natural genomic variation in cytosine methylation among Arabidopsis thaliana wild accessions Columbia (Col) and Vancouver (Van) by comparing hybridization intensity difference between genomic DNA digested with either methylation-sensitive (HpaII) or -insensitive (MspI) restriction enzyme. Single Feature Polymorphisms (SFPs) were assayed on a full set of 1,683,620 unique features of Arabidopsis Tiling Array 1.0F (Affymetrix), while constitutive and polymorphic CG methylation were assayed on a subset of 54,519 features, which contain a 5′CCGG3′ restriction site. 138,552 SFPs (1% FDR) were identified across enzyme treatments, which preferentially accumulated in pericentromeric regions. Our study also demonstrates that at least 8% of all analyzed CCGG sites were constitutively methylated across the two strains, while about 10% of all analyzed CCGG sites were differentially methylated between the two strains. Within euchromatin arms, both constitutive and polymorphic CG methylation accumulated in central regions of genes but under-represented toward the 5′ and 3′ ends of the coding sequences. Nevertheless, polymorphic methylation occurred much more frequently in gene ends than constitutive methylation. Inheritance of methylation polymorphisms in reciprocal F1 hybrids was predominantly additive, with F1 plants generally showing levels of methylation intermediate between the parents. By comparing gene expression profiles, using matched tissue samples, we found that magnitude of methylation polymorphism immediately upstream or downstream of the gene was inversely correlated with the degree of expression variation for that gene. In contrast, methylation polymorphism within genic region showed weak positive correlation with expression variation. Our results demonstrated extensive genetic and epigenetic polymorphisms between Arabidopsis accessions and suggested a possible relationship between natural CG methylation variation and gene expression variation
Tumor necrosis factor-α attenuates starvation-induced apoptosis through upregulation of ferritin heavy chain in hepatocellular carcinoma cells
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