6,238 research outputs found
Uniform: The Form Validation Language
Digital forms are becoming increasingly more prevalent but the ease of creation is not. Web Forms are difficult to produce and validate. This design project seeks to simplify this process. This project is comprised of two parts: a logical programming language (Uniform) and a web application.
Uniform is a language that allows its users to define logical relationships between web elements and apply simple rules to individual inputs to both validate the form and manipulate its components depending on user input. Uniform provides an extra layer of abstraction to complex coding.
The web app implements Uniform to provide business-level programmers with an interface to build and manage forms. Users will create form templates, manage form instances, and cooperatively complete forms through the web app.
Uniform’s development is ongoing, it will receive continued support and is available as open-source. The web application is software owned and maintained by HP Inc. which will be developed further before going to market
Impacts of Agricultural Nutrient Regulation in a Heterogeneous Region
Nonpoint sources of water pollutants, in particular, nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus, are increasingly a focus of US water pollution policy. In most cases, agriculture is the largest contributor of these pollutants, in part because, until recently, it has largely remained unregulated. Recently, however, a number of initiatives have targeted nutrient runoff and leaching from animal agriculture. Many states have promulgated new nutrient management regulations stipulating that manure be disposed of in ways that limit runoff and leaching to acceptably low levels. Stricter state regulations have been especially common in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast, where excess nutrients have proven particularly problematic (Gollehon et al.). In 2003, the US Environmental Protection Agency updated its regulatory oversight of confined animal feeding operations. The new regulations apply to a larger subset of such operations than in the past, most notably large poultry producers. In addition, they require all such operations to create and implement nutrient management plans that restrict land application of manure such that the quantity of nutrients a crop needs are correlated with the amount of nutrients applied to the crop. Several studies have examined the economics of nutrient management regulations. Fleming et al. assess the profitability of land application of swine manure for a single operation using data from Iowa. Innes presents a theoretical analysis for manure application in a region in cases where manure may be subject to both leaching and catastrophic spills into nearby water bodies in extreme weather events. Goetz and Zilberman present a theoretical analysis of optimal manure application and pollution taxes in a spatially differentiated region where phosphorus runoff is a stock pollutant. Feinerman et al. analyze least-cost combinations of manure and chemical fertilizer use at a regional level under nitrogen- and phosphorus-based nutrient management plans in the case of a linear-with-plateau von Liebig production technology both theoretically and empirically using data from Virginia. All of the aforementioned studies, except Goetz and Zilberman, assume that land is homogeneous in terms of its potential for nutrient runoff and leaching. In most cases, however, there is substantial heterogeneity in pollution potential due to differences in such factors as proximity to water bodies, soils, topography, phosphorus status, and BMP implementation. In many parts of the US, for instance, nutrient management regulations are based explicitly on the phosphorus site index (PSI), which incorporates information about soil phosphorus levels, leaching potential, and indicators of potential environmental damage. This paper examines the impacts of nutrient management regulations in a heterogeneous region. We extend existing frameworks in several ways that are critical from the perspective of practical regulation. First, both nitrogen and phosphorus are potential sources of water quality degradation; thus, nutrient management regulation needs to take both nutrients into account. Second, manure contributes to stocks of nutrients held in soils and nutrients are released only gradually, i.e., carryover is significant. As noted above for the case of phosphorus, nutrient management regulations are often conditioned on these soil stocks. Third, land heterogeneity determines nutrient application rates as well as runoff and leaching rates. Fourth, the use of manure can involve extra application costs and, in some instances, significant costs of transportation to suitable sites. Fifth, manure may have other uses than application to cropland, e.g., composting, pelletization for export, energy production, and forest fertilization. We develop a theoretical model of optimal manure application and chemical fertilizer use that incorporates all of these elements. Returns to crop production are modeled as a general function of nitrogen and phosphorus uptake. Available nitrogen is modeled as the sum of chemical fertilizer input plus releases from a stock of soil organic matter less land-type-specific losses to leaching and runoff. Changes in soil stocks of organic matter are assumed to equal additions from manure less releases to available nitrogen. Changes in soil phosphorus stocks are equal to additions from manure less crop uptake and losses to the environment at rates that depend on land type and existing stock levels. All soil phosphorus is assumed to be bioavailable. Environmental damage is assumed to depend on aggregate losses of nitrogen and phosphorus to the environment. We use the model to derive field- (land-type-) specific nutrient management recommendations for both manure application and chemical fertilizer use. We distinguish conditions under which nutrient management leads to (a) reliance on chemical fertilizer only, (b) reliance on manure application only, and (c) simultaneous use of chemical fertilizer and manure. We discuss the evolution of those recommendations over time as manure nutrient levels change due to alterations in feed, and as soil phosphorus and organic matter stocks change. We also discuss steady state recommendations. We apply the model empirically to the case of the Delmarva Peninsula, where regulators in Maryland and Delaware have introduced strict nutrient management regulations to address problems of phosphorus and nitrogen runoff into the Chesapeake Bay, with an emphasis on the management of poultry litter. This region has been identified as having large excesses of nitrogen and phosphorus relative to assimilative capacity, suggesting a need for long-distance export of much of the region's poultry litter (Gollehon et al.). We combine PSI estimates derived from soil test data with agronomic information on crop uptake rates to derive land-type-specific nutrient application rates under nitrogen- and phosphorus-based nutrient management regulations. We use a spatial model to estimate poultry litter transportation costs. We use engineering and agronomic studies to estimate demand for poultry litter in uses other than land application; they indicate that land application is likely the highest value use. In contrast to Gollehon et al., our results suggest a minimal need for long-distance transport under nutrient management regulations intended to limit leaching and runoff. The distribution of pollution potential is highly skewed: There is a small amount of land with extremely high PSI while most land has very low PSI. As a result, estimates based on county-level averages are highly misleading. In the short run, export from the Peninsula is not needed; in a steady state, some export may be needed. Overall, the impact of strict nutrient management regulations in this region will depend on the acceptability of land application of poultry litter to lands that are currently only using commercial fertilizer. Keeping those impacts low depends on the success of educational programs that promote poultry litter use (predominantly nutrient management programs) and on the creation of marketing institutions that minimize transaction costs of manure marketing.Environmental Economics and Policy,
ENVIRONMENTAL RISK MANAGEMENT IN THE HORTICULTURAL INDUSTRY
This paper uses environmental risk assessment as a nutrient management planning tool to determine the best set of actions to control nutrient nonpoint source pollution in the horticultural industry. The framework minimizes costs subject to obtaining an environmental risk management score at or below a threshold value.Crop Production/Industries, Environmental Economics and Policy,
Understanding and Eliminating Discrimination Against Blacks
This paper discusses the US history of discrimination against blacks which should be understood by students and others who are concerned with human rights and who want to participate in some form of civic engagement for the realization of these rights. The first part of this paper examines slavery, an extreme form of racial discrimination, and its repetition as involuntary servitude in earlier historical periods in the US. The second part of the paper examines recent and current severe, though not extreme, forms of racial discrimination such as residential segregation and the workfare and imprisonment imposed by the emerging US neoliberal state. The final part of the paper discusses proposals for change made more than a century ago as well as what can be learned from the planning and organization of a city in southern California
Understanding and Eliminating Discrimination Against Blacks
This paper discusses the US history of discrimination against blacks which should be understood by students and others who are concerned with human rights and who want to participate in some form of civic engagement for the realization of these rights. The first part of this paper examines slavery, an extreme form of racial discrimination, and its repetition as involuntary servitude in earlier historical periods in the US. The second part of the paper examines recent and current severe, though not extreme, forms of racial discrimination such as residential segregation and the workfare and imprisonment imposed by the emerging US neoliberal state. The final part of the paper discusses proposals for change made more than a century ago as well as what can be learned from the planning and organization of a city in southern California
Learning Style Diversity in Post –Secondary Distance Education
During the fall semester of 2005, 153 university graduate students’ preferred learning styles were measured with the Kolb Learning Style Inventory, online version 3.1. The primary findings of the study indicated all of the learning styles and processes described by Kolb were represented in the distance learning population and suggested distance and residential learners uniquely engage the learning process. Biblical references were discussed with respect to the uniqueness displayed by study participants
Extending single molecule spectroscopic techniques to multi-particle systems of semiconductor nanocrystals
2011 Summer.Includes bibliographical references.This dissertation describes the application of single molecule spectroscopic techniques to individual semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs), small clusters of NCs, and NCs used as the light harvesting layer in sensitized solar cells. We first examine how coupling between close-packed NCs may alter their photophysical properties by studying isolated NCs and small clusters of NCs via single molecule time-correlated single-photon counting, from which fluorescence intensity trajectories, autocorrelation functions, decay histograms, and lifetime-intensity distributions have been constructed. These measurements confirm that NC clusters exhibit unique photoluminescence behavior not observed in isolated NCs. In particular, the NC clusters exhibit a short-lifetime component in their photoluminescence decay that is correlated with low photoluminescence intensity of the cluster. A model based on radiative energy transfer to NCs within a cluster that have smaller energy gaps, combined with independent blinking for the NCs in a cluster, accounts for the main experimental features. This energy transfer may lead to energy sinks when an excitation is transferred to a NC that is in the off state. We then examine a model photovoltaic system where a sub-monolayer film of NCs is chemically coupled to a single crystal semiconductor (TiO2 or ZnO) substrate through a variety of capping ligands. Again, utilizing time-correlated single photon counting and internal photon conversion efficiency we have studied both the photoluminescence intensity, photoluminescence decay time, and sensitized photocurrents. We find that for all configurations of capping ligands and substrate the photoluminescence decay rate is quenched compared to the free NCs in solution; whereas, only the short chain capping ligands that promote electron coupling to the substrate produce photocurrents. The longer chain capping groups both inhibit the electron injection and promote NC clustering on the surface where interactions between the individual NCs or the NCs and substrate alter the radiative rate. This result confirms that the possibility of NC clusters leading to a loss of energy due to inter-NC coupling is present in devices and warrants further study
Baseline Hydrologic Monitoring for Mining Projects
Objectives of baseline hydrologic monitoring are dependent on and derived from the ultimate use of the data. Baseline hydrological data collection for mining projects typically has several functions including: 1) assembly of adequate information to obtain an understanding of hydrologic and hydrogeologic systems; 2) documentation of baseline conditions for permitting and public disclosure purposes; and 3) documentation of baseline conditions for comparison with future conditions to be measured during mine operation. The scope of such investigations and level of detail required for these different objectives may vary significantly. It is in the interest of mining project proponents, the public and the regulatory agencies to ensure that baseline studies are adequate to meet these objectives.
Collection of adequate information to understand the hydrologic system typically requires an inventory of surface and ground water features, characterization of surface and ground water quality, identification and quantification of ground water flow regimes, depth to groundwater, aquifer characteristics, determination of stream flow variation, and establishment of the degree of seasonal variation in these parameters.
The baseline water resources monitoring program conducted by ASARCO, Inc. for the proposed Rock Creek Mine near Noxon, Montana illustrates several issues relating to baseline hydrologic monitoring for mining projects. ASARCO has developed a comprehensive database and has collected more hydrologic baseline data than any mining project in Montana. The proposed Rock Creek Mine is located in the headwaters of Rock Creek, which is a tributary of the Clark Fork River (Figure 1). The Rock Creek ore body underlies the Cabinet Mountain Wilderness Area and will be mined by underground mining techniques from an access point outside of the wilderness area. The proposed mine related surface facilities would be in the Rock Creek drainage except for portions of the tailings impoundment, which is near the Clark Fork River. Rock Creek is an intermittent stream with a drainage area of approximately 33 square miles al its confluence with the Clark Fork River just below the Noxon Rapids Dam, about twenty miles east of the Montana/Idaho stale line. Baseline monitoring has focused on surface water and ground water in the Rock Creek drainage near the proposed facilities in the tailings impoundment area
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