785 research outputs found

    The Port Norfolk Project: Improved Raster Navigation Products From High Resolution Source Data

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    With increasing capabilities in technology, modern hydrographic surveys are comprised of similarly increasing amounts of data, only a minute fraction of which is currently available in the nautical charts produced by the NOAA Office of Coast Survey (OCS). Simultaneously, a tremendous amount of effort goes into the generalization and optimal cartographic representation of the hydrographic data onto raster products, from which the vector products are digitized. Preserving and maintaining a single database of high-resolution vector source data will retainā€” and make accessibleā€”much more of the hydrographic data collected, alleviate the burden of generalization, and would allow for delivery of high-resolution vector products, as well as a very wide selection of raster products. From high-resolution source data, raster output could be generated at customer specifications. These ā€œuser-definedā€ raster products could be suitably tailored to meet anyoneā€™s needs, regardless if they are a mariner, a scientist, a fisherman, a student, or a casual ā€œcommon manā€ customer. The ā€œuser-definedā€ concept will ultimately improve our ability to meet the highly variable needs of our customers. This paper is intended as an exploratory endeavor, specifically, using the Paper Chart Editor component of CARIS HPD to create examples of the kinds of raster products one can create from high-resolution source data, how this process could optimize the current raster chart production workflow within OCS, while also providing a stronger focus on customer service. Finally, the capabilities and lessons learned from the experimentation with HPD will be applied toward the NOAA-wide implementation of Nautical Chart System II (NCSII)

    The Cooking and Pneumonia Study (CAPS) in Malawi: Implementation of Remote Source Data Verification

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    Background Source data verification (SDV) is a data monitoring procedure which compares the original records with the Case Report Form (CRF). Traditionally, on-site SDV relies on monitors making multiples visits to study sites requiring extensive resources. The Cooking And Pneumonia Study (CAPS) is a 24- month village-level cluster randomized controlled trial assessing the effectiveness of an advanced cook-stove intervention in preventing pneumonia in children under five in rural Malawi (www.capstudy.org). CAPS used smartphones to capture digital images of the original records on an electronic CRF (eCRF). In the present study, descriptive statistics are used to report the experience of electronic data capture with remote SDV in a challenging research setting in rural Malawi. Methods At three monthly intervals, fieldworkers, who were employed by CAPS, captured pneumonia data from the original records onto the eCRF. Fieldworkers also captured digital images of the original records. Once Internet connectivity was available, the data captured on the eCRF and the digital images of the original records were uploaded to a web-based SDV application. This enabled SDV to be conducted remotely from the UK. We conducted SDV of the pneumonia data (occurrence, severity, and clinical indicators) recorded in the eCRF with the data in the digital images of the original records. Result 664 episodes of pneumonia were recorded after 6 months of follow-up. Of these 664 episodes, 611 (92%) had a finding of pneumonia in the original records. All digital images of the original records were clear and legible. Conclusion Electronic data capture using eCRFs on mobile technology is feasible in rural Malawi. Capturing digital images of the original records in the field allows remote SDV to be conducted efficiently and securely without requiring additional field visits. We recommend these approaches in similar settings, especially those with health endpoints

    Remote file access over low-speed lines

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    A link between microcomputer and mainframe can be useful in several ways, even when, as is usually the case, the link is only a normal terminal line. One interesting example is the ā€˜Integrated applicationā€™, which divides a task between microcomputer and mainframe and can offer several benefits; in particular, reducing load on the mainframe and permitting a more advanced user interface than possible on a conventional terminal. Because integrated applications consist of two co-operating programs, they are much more difficult to construct than a single program. It would be much easier to implement integrated applications concerned with the display and/or modification of data in mainframe files if the microcomputer could confine its dealings with the mainframe to a suitable file server. However, file servers do not appear practical for use over slow (compared to disc access speed) terminal lines. It was proposed to alleviate the problems caused by the slow link with extended file operations, which would allow time-consuming file operations such as searching or copying between files to be done in the file server. It was discovered after attempting such a system that extended file operations are not, by themselves, sufficient; but, allied to a record-based file model and asynchronous operations (i.e. file operations that do not suspend the user program until they complete), useful results could be obtained. This thesis describes FLAP, a file server for use over terminal lines which incorporates these ideas, and MMMS, an inter-application transport protocol used by FLAP for communication between the microcomputer file interface and the mainframe server. Two simple FLAP applications are presented, a customer records maintenance program and a screen editor. Details are given of their construction and response time in use at various line speeds

    Enantioselective one-carbon expansion of aromatic rings by simultaneous formation and chromoselective irradiation of a transient coloured enolate

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    Enantioenriched seven-membered carbocycles are motifs in many molecules of structural and biological interest. We report a simple, practical, transition metal-free and mechanistically unusual method for the enantioselective synthesis of substituted cycloheptatrienes. By forming a coloured enolate with an appropriate absorption band and selectively irradiating in situ, we to initiate a tandem, asymmetric anionic and photochemical ring expansion of readily accessible N-benzylbenzamides. The cascade of reactions leading to the products entails enantioselective benzylic deprotonation with a chiral lithium amide, dearomatizing cyclization of the resulting configurationally defined organolithium to give an extended amide enolate, and photochemically induced formal [1,7]-sigmatropic rearrangement and 6Ļ€-electrocyclic ring-opening ā€“ the latter all evidently being stereospecific ā€“ to deliver enantioenriched cycloheptatrienes with embedded benzylic stereocentres

    A promising Start? The Local Network Fund for Children and Young People: Interim Findings from the National Evaluation

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    This is a summary of the interim evaluation report of the National Evaluation of the Local Network Fund (LNF) for Children and Young People. It is based on data gathered during the first phase of the evaluation (between October 2002 to December 2003). A final report of the National Evaluation will be available early in 2005. A consortium of research organisations, led by the University of Hull and including BMRB Social Research, The University of York and the University of Sheffield were commissioned in August 2002 by the-then Children and Young Peopleā€™s Unit (CYPU) to carry out the evaluation
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