1,892 research outputs found
Time to Talk? How the Structure of Dialog Processes Shapes Stakeholder Learning in Participatory Water Resources Management
Public participation is increasingly viewed as a means to initiate social
learning among stakeholders, resource managers, and policy makers rather than to
ensure democratic representation. This growing understanding of participatory
activities as learning platforms can be seen as a direct response to shifts in
how natural resources management is framed, namely as uncertain, non-linear, and
interlinked with the human dimensions. Social learning as it is discussed within
the natural resources management (NRM) context features a process of collective
and communicative learning that is thought to enable stakeholders to arrive at a
shared understanding of a specific environmental situation and to develop new
solutions as well as ways of acting together in pursuit of a shared ambition.
Yet, although case-study research on social-learning processes provides multiple
accounts of positive experiences, there are also reports of mistaken learning,
the intensification of tensions or conflict, and failure to reach agreement or
verifiable consensus. Based on results of a postal survey of stakeholder
experiences in two involvement initiatives, we can draw two main conclusions:
First, social learning is a multidimensional and dynamic process and, as such,
evolves in stages and to various degrees. Second, stakeholder processes are
shaped and affected by a multitude of factors that constrain the occurrence of
learning processes and eventually limit the extent to which these can contribute
to sustainable NRM. Foremost, the fact that the intensity of stakeholder
learning differed in the two investigated initiatives reinforces the role
organizational arrangements play in encouraging the type of communicative
process necessary for stakeholder learning
A heuristic for the distribution of point counts for random curves over a finite field
How many rational points are there on a random algebraic curve of large genus
over a given finite field ? We propose a heuristic for this
question motivated by a (now proven) conjecture of Mumford on the cohomology of
moduli spaces of curves; this heuristic suggests a Poisson distribution with
mean . We prove a weaker version of this statement in which
and tend to infinity, with much larger than .Comment: 16 pages; v2: refereed version, Philosophical Transactions of the
Royal Society A 201
Methodology Matters: Designing a Pilot Study Guided by Indigenous Epistemologies
Indigenous individuals and communities have historically and continuously had negative experiences with Western health care and biomedical research. To rebuild trust and mitigate power structures between researchers and Indigenous Peoples, researchers can adopt Indigenous epistemologies in methodologies, such as non-hierarchical approaches to relationship. This paper shares models developed to bridge Indigenous epistemologies with Western qualitative and quantitative research methods and demonstrates how these epistemologies can be used to guide the development of pilot study
Discrepancies in Written Versus Calculated Durations in Opioid Prescriptions: Pre-Post Study.
BACKGROUND: The United States is in the midst of an opioid epidemic. Long-term use of opioid medications is associated with an increased risk of dependence. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention makes specific recommendations regarding opioid prescribing, including that prescription quantities should not exceed the intended duration of treatment.
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to determine if opioid prescription quantities written at our institution exceed intended duration of treatment and whether enhancements to our electronic health record system improved any discrepancies.
METHODS: We examined the opioid prescriptions written at our institution for a 22-month period. We examined the duration of treatment documented in the prescription itself and calculated a duration based on the quantity of tablets and doses per day. We determined whether requiring documentation of the prescription duration affected these outcomes.
RESULTS: We reviewed 72,314 opioid prescriptions, of which 16.96% had a calculated duration that was greater than what wasdocumented in the prescription. Making the duration a required field significantly reduced this discrepancy (17.95% vs 16.21%,P
CONCLUSIONS: Health information technology vendors should develop tools that, by default, accurately represent prescription durations and/or modify doses and quantities dispensed based on provider-entered durations. This would potentially reduce unintended prolonged opioid use and reduce the potential for long-term dependence
Genetic isolation and morphological divergence mediated by high-energy rapids in two cichlid genera from the lower Congo rapids
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>It is hypothesized that one of the mechanisms promoting diversification in cichlid fishes in the African Great Lakes has been the well-documented pattern of philopatry along shoreline habitats leading to high levels of genetic isolation among populations. However lake habitats are not the only centers of cichlid biodiversity - certain African rivers also contain large numbers of narrowly endemic species. Patterns of isolation and divergence in these systems have tended to be overlooked and are not well understood.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We examined genetic and morphological divergence among populations of two narrowly endemic cichlid species, <it>Teleogramma depressum </it>and <it>Lamprologus tigripictilis</it>, from a 100 km stretch of the lower Congo River using both nDNA microsatellites and mtDNA markers along with coordinate-based morphological techniques. In <it>L. tigripictilis</it>, the strongest genetic break was concordant with measurable phenotypic divergence but no morphological disjunction was detected for <it>T. depressum </it>despite significant differentiation at mtDNA and nDNA microsatellite markers.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The genetic markers revealed patterns of philopatry and estimates of genetic isolation that are among the highest reported for any African cichlid species over a comparable geographic scale. We hypothesize that the high levels of philopatry observed are generated and maintained by the extreme hydrology of the lower Congo River.</p
Integrated assessment of oyster reef ecosystem services: Quantifying denitrification rates and nutrient fluxes
Fluxes of N2-N (denitrification), dissolved ammonium, nitrate plus nitrite, and dissolved oxygen were determined at teh 350 acre oyster restoration project at Harris Creek, Maryland. The ex situ incubation approach involved adding oyster communities to embedded trays for ~1 mo incubating the trays under dark and light conditions for 1-2 hour time courses for gas and solute sampling, adn determination of the rates of gas and solute exchange for 136 individual reef tray incubations. Reef exchange rates were compared to rates of sediment water exchange in core incubations throughout Harris Creek and in reef-adjacent environments
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Dietary Omega-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid Deprivation Does Not Alter Seizure Thresholds but May Prevent the Anti-seizure Effects of Injected Docosahexaenoic Acid in Rats.
Background: Brain concentrations of omega-3 docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6n-3) have been reported to positively correlate with seizure thresholds in rodent seizure models. It is not known whether brain DHA depletion, achieved by chronic dietary omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) deficiency, lowers seizure thresholds in rats. Objective: The present study tested the hypothesis that lowering brain DHA concentration with chronic dietary n-3 PUFA deprivation in rats will reduce seizure thresholds, and that compared to injected oleic acid (OA), injected DHA will raise seizure thresholds in rats maintained on n-3 PUFA adequate and deficient diets. Methods: Rats (60 days old) were surgically implanted with electrodes in the amygdala, and subsequently randomized to the AIN-93G diet containing adequate levels of n-3 PUFA derived from soybean oil or an n-3 PUFA-deficient diet derived from coconut and safflower oil. The rats were maintained on the diets for 37 weeks. Afterdischarge seizure thresholds (ADTs) were measured every 4-6 weeks by electrically stimulating the amygdala. Between weeks 35 and 37, ADTs were assessed within 1 h of subcutaneous OA or DHA injection (600 mg/kg). Seizure thresholds were also measured in a parallel group of non-implanted rats subjected to the maximal pentylenetetrazol (PTZ, 110 mg/kg) seizure test. PUFA composition was measured in the pyriform-amygdala complex of another group of non-implanted rats sacrificed at 16 and 32 weeks. Results: Dietary n-3 PUFA deprivation did not significantly alter amygdaloid seizure thresholds or latency to PTZ-induced seizures. Acute injection of OA did not alter amygdaloid ADTs of rats on the n-3 PUFA adequate or deficient diets, whereas acute injection of DHA significantly increased amygdaloid ADTs in rats on the n-3 PUFA adequate control diet as compared to rats on the n-3 PUFA deficient diet (P < 0.05). Pyriform-amygdala DHA percent composition did not significantly differ between the groups, while n-6 docosapentaenoic acid, a marker of n-3 PUFA deficiency, was significantly increased by 2.9-fold at 32 weeks. Conclusion: Chronic dietary n-3 PUFA deficiency does not alter seizure thresholds in rats, but may prevent the anti-seizure effects of DHA
Comparison of methods for determining biogeochemical fluxes from a restored oyster reef
Oyster reef restoration can significantly increase benthic denitrification rates. Methods applied to measure nutrient fluxes and denitrification from oyster reefs in previous studies include incubations of sediment cores collected adjacent to oyster clumps, benthic chambers filled with intact reef segments that have undergone in situ equilibration and ex situ incubation, and cores with single oysters. However, fluxes of nutrients vary by orders of magnitude among oyster reefs and methods. This study compares two methods of measuring nutrient and metabolic fluxes on restored oyster reefs: incubations including intact segments of oyster reef and incubations containing oyster clumps without underlying sediments. Fluxes of oxygen (O-2), dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), ammonium (NH4+), combined nitrate and nitrite (NO2/3-), di-nitrogen (N-2), and soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) were determined in June and August in Harris Creek, a tributary of the Chesapeake Bay, Maryland, USA. Regression of fluxes measured from clumps alone against those measured from intact reef segments showed significant positive relationships for O-2, DIC, NH4+, and SRP (R-2 = 0.920, 0.61, 0.26, and 0.52, respectively). Regression of clump fluxes against the oyster tissue biomass indicates significant positive relationships for O-2 and NH4+, marginally significant and positive relationships for DIC and N-2, and no significant relationship for NO2/3- or SRP. Although these results demonstrate that the incubation of oyster clumps without underlying sediments does not accurately represent biogeochemical fluxes measured from the whole oyster and sediment community, this work supports the need to understand the balance between the metabolism of oysters and local sediments to correctly estimate biogeochemical rates
The Design and Operation of The Keck Observatory Archive
The Infrared Processing and Analysis Center (IPAC) and the W. M. Keck
Observatory (WMKO) operate an archive for the Keck Observatory. At the end of
2013, KOA completed the ingestion of data from all eight active observatory
instruments. KOA will continue to ingest all newly obtained observations, at an
anticipated volume of 4 TB per year. The data are transmitted electronically
from WMKO to IPAC for storage and curation. Access to data is governed by a
data use policy, and approximately two-thirds of the data in the archive are
public.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figs, 4 tables. Presented at Software and
Cyberinfrastructure for Astronomy III, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes +
Instrumentation 2014. June 2014, Montreal, Canad
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