2,436 research outputs found

    Biology and Management of the American Shad and Status of the Fisheries, Atlantic Coast of the United States, 1960

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    This paper summarizes current information on the American shad, Alosa sapidissima, and describes the species and its fishery. Emphasis is placed on (1) life history of the fish, (2) condition of the fishery by State and water areas in 1960 compared to 1896 when the last comprehensive description was made, (3) factors responsible for decline in abundance, and (4) management measures. The shad fishery has changed little over the past three-quarters of a century, except in magnitude of yield. Types of shad-fishing gear have remained relatively unchanged, but many improvements have been made in fishing techniques, mostly to achieve economy. In 1896 the estimated catch was more than 50 million pounds. New Jersey ranked first in production with about 14 million pounds, and Virginia second with 11 million pounds. In 1960 the estimated catch was slightly more than 8 million pounds. Maryland ranked first in production with slightly more than 1.5 million pounds, Virginia second with slightly less than 1.4 million pounds, and North Carolina third with about 1.3 million pounds. Biological and economic factors blamed for the decline in shad abundance, such as physical changes in the environment, construction of dams, pollution, over-fishing, and natural cycles of abundance, are discussed. Also discussed are methods used for the rehabilitation and management of the fishery, such as artificial propagation, installation of fish-passage facilities at impoundments, and fishing regulations. With our present knowledge, we can manage individual shad populations; but, we probably cannot restore the shad to its former peak of abundance

    Constructing connections: urban forestry and Toronto’s West Don Lands revitalization

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    The West Don Lands played an important role in Toronto’s history, primarily as an industrial centre from the mid-19th century to the mid-20th century. Therefore, the negative impacts of de-industrialization on the precinct can hardly be considered surprising. However, efforts are being made to revitalize the West Don Lands and redress the decay experienced by the precinct. This paper examines these efforts, detailed in the Waterfront Toronto’s Precinct and Block Plans, with particular focus being placed on the role that urban forestry can play on the creation of physical and social linkages.Les West Don Lands ont joué un rôle de premier plan dans l’histoire de Toronto. Du milieu du dix-neuvième siècle jusqu’au milieu du vingtième siècle cette zone est connue comme centre industriel. Aujourd’hui, force est de constater que le quartier subit les conséquences négatives de la désindustrialisation. Des travaux sont en cours pour revitalisation les West Don Lands et freiner la dégradation de ce milieu. L’étude se penche sur les initiatives proposées par la Société de revitalisation du secteur riverain de Toronto dans son plan de réaménagement, en mettant l’accent sur le rôle de la dans la création de liens physiques et sociaux

    An Investigation of the Dimensional Stability of Dental Alginates

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    Dimensional stability was defined by Nicholls (1977) as “the ability (of a material) to maintain accuracy over time”, and the result of loss of accuracy, “distortion”, as “the relative movement of a single point, or group of points, away from some originally specified reference position such that permanent deformation is apparent”. Maintaining dimensional stability of dental impression materials is vital if the impression cannot be cast (in stone) soon after removal from the mouth. Dental irreversible hydrocolloid (alginate) is a major dental impression material used worldwide in many clinical procedures. However, alginate is dimensionally unstable and changes its dimensions (suffers “distortion”) after removal from the mouth. With storage times of more than ten minutes, alginate begins to distort, and after one to three hours (depending on the product and storage conditions) cannot be used for many clinical purposes, especially fixed prosthodontics such as crowns and bridges (Hampson 1955, Skinner & Hoblit 1956, Wilson & Smith 1963, Rudd et al. 1969, Miller 1975, Inohara 1977, Schoen et al. 1978, Coleman et al. 1979, Linke et al. 1985, Habu et al. 1986, Peutfeldt & Asmussen 1989, Mathilde & Peters 1992, Khan & Aziz Sahu 1995, Eriksson et al. 1998, Schleier et al. 2001, and Donovan & Chee 2004). This loss of accuracy, due to dimensional instability, manifests as a time-dependent distortion of the poured stone cast, and thus any prosthesis fabricated will not fit in the mouth. With the introduction of the more stable elastomers in the 1950s (Stackhouse 1970, Glenner 1997, Brown 2003) that could be stored for days if necessary, without loss of accuracy, the alginates fell out of favour for fixed prosthodontics. Recently, there has been a resurgence of interest in alginate for use in dental procedures where dimensional stability is critical (Peutzfeldt and Asmussen 1989, Eriksson et al. 1998). This in part is due to the favourable properties of alginate not found in the elastomers. Of greatest significance is that alginate hydrocolloid is hydrophilic, whereas elastomers are hydrophobic (Phillips & Ito 1958, Glenner 2004). Thus, alginate materials are able to reproduce wet oral areas with greater precision and to produce a superior "fit" of, say, a gold casting produced by the Lost Wax technique (Skinner and Phillips 1982). A number of reports have been published which investigate newer alginate materials that are claimed to be more dimensionally stable than older formulations. Puetzfeldt and Asmussen (1989) found that a newer alginate , if stored at 100% relative humidity, retained accuracy over 24 hours that was equivalent to that of the elastomers. More recently, the manufacturer of another alginate has claimed equivalent dimensional stability to the elastomers for up to 100 hours, and, whilst this claim has not been reported on in the literature, the present thesis will show that, under favourable conditions of storage, the material maintained clinically useful accuracy for up to 100 hours. Another approach to improving the accuracy of alginate impressions has been to combine reversible hydrocolloid with alginate (the “Bilaminar” technique). Frederick and Caputo (1997) confirmed that the new agar reversible hydrocolloids are just as accurate (at the time of removal from the mouth) as the new elastomers. Mathilde et al. (1992) and Eriksson et al. (1998) have shown that several of the “bilaminar” impression techniques for fixed prosthodontics, where alginate is used as a tray material supporting a reversible hydrocolloid (agar) wash, are as accurate and dimensionally stable as elastomers for up to three hours. However, these studies are difficult to interpret due to lack of uniformity in the testing methods, and the fact that there is no regulatory standard available to measure dimensional stability for dental alginates. The International Standard (IS) for alginate impression materials (ISO 1563:1990E) contains no specification for dimensional stability, and thus places no requirement for manufacturers to state dimensional stability properties on their labels. In contrast, ISO 4823:1992(E) specifies the IS for elastomeric dental impression materials, and it does specify a requirement for dimensional stability (less than 1.5% distortion after 24 hours). Further, the IS sets a method for determination of dimensional stability. Briefly, this method (the Optical Method) uses a travelling optical microscope to measure the accuracy of the distance between score lines on an impression of a test grid, at various time periods. The American Dental Association Specification No. 19 for dental elastomeric impression materials is identical to the IS. There is currently no specific Australian Standard (AS) for the dimensional stability of any dental impression material. Overview of Experimental Methods A. The Optical Method The aim of Part A of this investigation was to: 1. Adapt the Optical Method of the IS for elastomers to be reproducible for dental alginates. This was achieved by using a perforated test tray (to simulate clinical conditions), and measuring the grid pattern on a dental stone button after casting the test impression, rather than direct measurement of the impression, as for the IS. 2. To measure and rank the dimensional stability of a number of locally available dental alginates. Measurements of the test stone buttons proved reproducible, and the results were different for each sample, allowing them to be ranked according to dimensional stability after 50 and 100 hours of storage. The results show that the traditional optical method for measuring dimensional stability, as specified in the IS for dental elastomers, can be adapted to measure the dimensional stability of dental alginates However, the Optical Method of measuring dimensional stability of dental alginates is cumbersome and time-consuming. It was hypothesised that dimensional stability of dental alginates could be measured more conveniently by finding a thermal property that is directly proportional to dimensional stability. This method could be useful for the rapid determination of relative performance, and allow comparison with a determined benchmark. B. The Thermal Method Recently, modern methods of Thermal Analysis, Thermal Gravimetric Analysis (TGA) and Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) have been used to rapidly age various polymers, including food alginates (Chinachoti 1996), in order to measure thermal stability. This thesis shows that thermal stability is an indicator of dimensional stability. The aim of Part B of this investigation was therefore to adapt thermal analysis techniques to dental alginates, and develop a method to measure their thermal stability. These results were then compared with those for dimensional stability measured by the Optical Method to determine the relationship between thermal and dimensional stability for dental alginates. The results show that current thermal analysis methods of TGA and DSC can be adapted to measure relative dental alginate dimensional stability, and are both rapid and convenient. This study also provides evidence that commercial products differ as regards the property of dimensional stability, and can be ranked accordingly. C. Practical Application of the Methods The aim of part C of this thesis was to validate the methods (both optical and thermal) developed in this study by using them to investigate the effect of varying the water/powder ratio on the dimensional stability of dental alginates. It was shown that dimensional stability is affected by changes to the recommended water/powder ratio, that both the methods detected and measured the changes, and that the results were proportional, in that any percentage change detected by the optical method, was mirrored by the thermal method, confirming that the more convenient thermal methods can be used to measure dimensional stability

    A treatment planning comparison of dual-arc VMAT vs. helical tomotherapy for post-mastectomy radiotherapy

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    Purpose: To investigate the feasibility of volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) for post-mastectomy radiotherapy (PMRT) and to compare dual-arc VMAT treatment plans to helical tomotherapy (HT) plans on the basis of dosimetric quality, radiobiological calculations and delivery efficiency. Methods: Dual-arc VMAT and HT treatment plans were created for fifteen patients previously treated at our clinic. Planning target volumes (PTV) included the chest wall and regional lymph nodes. The following metrics were used to compare treatment plans for each patient: dose homogeneity index (DHI) and conformity index (CI); coverage of the PTV; dose to organs at risk (OAR); tumor control probability (TCP), normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) and secondary cancer complication probability (SCCP); and treatment delivery time. Differences between treatment plans were tested for significance using the paired Student’s t-test. Results: Both modalities produced clinically acceptable PMRT plans. VMAT plans showed better CI (p \u3c 0.01) and better OAR sparing at low doses than HT plans. For example, VMAT plans showed a 26% (p \u3c 0.01) and 9% (p \u3c 0.01) decrease in V5Gy in the lungs and heart respectively. On the other hand, HT plans showed better DHI (p \u3c 0.01) and PTV coverage (p \u3c 0.01). HT plans also showed better sparing at higher doses for some OARs, including 8% (p \u3c 0.01) and 9% (p \u3c 0.01) lower maximum doses to the lungs and heart, respectively. Both modalities achieved nearly 100% tumor control and approximately 1% NTCP in the lungs and heart, with VMAT showing lower SCCP (p \u3c 0.01). VMAT plans also required 66.2% less time to deliver. Conclusion: Both VMAT and HT provide acceptable treatment plans for PMRT. Our study showed that VMAT — in addition to being significantly faster — achieved better CI and low-dose OAR sparing while HT achieved better DHI

    Independent particle descriptions of tunneling from a many-body perspective

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    Currents across thin insulators are commonly taken as single electrons moving across classically forbidden regions; this independent particle picture is well-known to describe most tunneling phenomena. Examining quantum transport from a different perspective, i.e., by explicit treatment of electron-electron interactions, we evaluate different single particle approximations with specific application to tunneling in metal-molecule-metal junctions. We find maximizing the overlap of a Slater determinant composed of single particle states to the many-body current-carrying state is more important than energy minimization for defining single particle approximations in a system with open boundary conditions. Thus the most suitable single particle effective potential is not one commonly in use by electronic structure methods, such as the Hartree-Fock or Kohn-Sham approximations.Comment: 4+ pages, 4 figures; accepted to Phys. Rev. B Rapid Communication

    Ohio River Bridges Project: Communications & Public Outreach

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    The Ohio River Bridges Project has provided a special opportunity for communication and public outreach. The project, administered by the states of Indiana and Kentucky and bordering numerous municipalities, has presented challenging internal and external communication issues. Through defined protocols and innovative tracking, communications and public involvement has been a success story for our customers. In this session we will discuss the effort to date and lessons learned for the future

    Increasing power for voxel-wise genome-wide association studies : the random field theory, least square kernel machines and fast permutation procedures

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    Imaging traits are thought to have more direct links to genetic variation than diagnostic measures based on cognitive or clinical assessments and provide a powerful substrate to examine the influence of genetics on human brains. Although imaging genetics has attracted growing attention and interest, most brain-wide genome-wide association studies focus on voxel-wise single-locus approaches, without taking advantage of the spatial information in images or combining the effect of multiple genetic variants. In this paper we present a fast implementation of voxel- and cluster-wise inferences based on the random field theory to fully use the spatial information in images. The approach is combined with a multi-locus model based on least square kernel machines to associate the joint effect of several single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) with imaging traits. A fast permutation procedure is also proposed which significantly reduces the number of permutations needed relative to the standard empirical method and provides accurate small p-value estimates based on parametric tail approximation. We explored the relation between 448,294 single nucleotide polymorphisms and 18,043 genes in 31,662 voxels of the entire brain across 740 elderly subjects from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). Structural MRI scans were analyzed using tensor-based morphometry (TBM) to compute 3D maps of regional brain volume differences compared to an average template image based on healthy elderly subjects. We find method to be more sensitive compared with voxel-wise single-locus approaches. A number of genes were identified as having significant associations with volumetric changes. The most associated gene was GRIN2B, which encodes the N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor NR2B subunit and affects both the parietal and temporal lobes in human brains. Its role in Alzheimer's disease has been widely acknowledged and studied, suggesting the validity of the approach. The various advantages over existing approaches indicate a great potential offered by this novel framework to detect genetic influences on human brains

    What is the best portable method of purifying water to prevent infectious disease?

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    There isn't a single best method, but there are 5 that adequately purify water according to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standards. These include 1) boiling for 1 minute if below 2000 m (6562 feet) and 3 minutes if above, 2) chlorine dioxide tablets, 3) MIOX purifier, 4) ultraviolet light (SteriPEN ), and 5) portable filtration with a absolute pore size <1 micrometer combined with halogenation or charcoal filtration (strength of recommendation [SOR ]: C, based on expert opinion and microbiological testing). Halogenation alone (ie, chlorine and iodine) is not effective against Cryptosporidium (SOR : C, based on microbiological testing)

    Oak pruning in the Missouri Ozarks

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    Cover title.Includes bibliographical references
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