3,857 research outputs found

    Broadening the Mission: Research Activity among University Labor Education/Labor Studies Professionals

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    [Excerpt] This study examines research activity among university and college labor education/labor studies professionals. Using data gathered in a survey of faculty employed in the field, the paper presents information concerning the extent and focus of these research activities, the methodologies employed, the outlets for the research products that result, and the factors limiting such work. The findings of this study indicate that research, of both an applied and scholarly nature, is an increasingly significant part of the work of labor education/labor studies professionals. The study concludes with a discussion of the implications this trend has for the labor education/labor studies field, with special attention being given to the role research activity can play in meeting the needs of unions, union members, and union leaders

    Do We Have Niter Spots Forming in Iowa?

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    During the winter of 1924-25 the Soils Department of Iowa State College received a number of soil samples taken from a farm in Franklin county. The tenant on this farm claimed the soils were alkaline, basing his conclusion on the poor crop response. The county agent had tested the soils, using the regular potassium thio-cyanate method, and found them slightly acid. The owner was interested in securing a better crop growth. 13. Observations of some-Because of the importance of farm manures considerable attention has been paid from time to time to a study of some of the chemical and biological processes which take place during storage. Early references concerning the proper storage of manure can be found in the Roman literature notably that of Varro or of Columella. During the dark ages all agricultural investigations were dropped and were not revived until the middle of the nineteenth century. At this time the work of such investigators as Wagner, Moerker, Pfeiffer and Voelcker created a new interest in the chemical and biological processes which take place in manures when stored and when variously treated. The early work at Rothamsted followed the same lines as that conducted by the Germans. The practical conclusions which were drawn as a result of the early work in England, Germany and France have held to the present day. As a result only a small amount of scientific work concerning the biological processes which take place in manure in storage has been done in recent years

    SUMMARY

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    California. Water samples showed no detects of fenoxycarb, hydramethylnon, pyriproxyfen, dimethoate, and methidathion. Bifenthrin was detected in two samples at 0.495 and 0.778 parts per billion (ppb) at nursery sites F and G, respectively. Chlorpyrifos was detected in one sample at 0.06 ppb. Diazinon was detected in two samples at 0.059 and 0.06 ppb at sites F and E, respectively. Malathion was detected in one sample of nursery runoff at 0.07 ppb. Toxicity was tested at San Diego Creek at Campus Drive, an integrated site. This site was not significantly toxic (5 % mortality) to Ceriodaphnia dubia in the water collected. Additional water and sediment samples were collected from a mitigation filter strip planted with Canna to mitigate offsite movement of insecticides and nitrates. Bifenthrin and chlorpyrifos were detected in all water samples with a general trend of declining concentrations as the water passed through the filter strip. Sediment samples were positive for bifenthrin and chlorpyrifos with detections ranging from 776 to 1470 ppb and 27 to 80 ppb, respectively. SCOPE OF THIS MEMORANDUM This memorandum reports results of water sampling conducted by the Department of Pesticide Regulation (DPR), under interagency agreement with the California Department of Food an

    SUMMARY

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    California. Water samples showed no detects of fenoxycarb, hydramethylnon, pyriproxyfen, chlorpyrifos, dimethoate, and methidathion. Bifenthrin was detected in all samples ranging from 0.071 to 2.41 parts per billion (ppb). Diazinon was detected in three samples ranging from 0.055 to 0.187 ppb. Malathion was detected in three samples of nursery runoff ranging from 0.136 to 0.778 ppb. Toxicity was tested at San Diego Creek at Campus Dr., an integrated site. This site was significantly toxic (100 % mortality) to Ceriodaphnia dubia in the water collected. Sediment samples were collected from a mitigation filter strip. Samples were positive for bifenthrin and chlorpyrifos with detections ranging from 733 to 1340 ppb and 28 to 72 ppb, respectively. SCOPE OF THIS MEMORANDUM This memorandum reports results of water sampling conducted by the Department of Pesticide Regulation (DPR), under interagency agreement with the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA), for the Red Imported Fire Ant (RIFA) control project. Data included here are from the February 28, 2001 monitoring, and encompass results from both chemical analyses and aquatic biotoxicity testing. This memorandum summarizes results for bifenthrin, fenoxycarb, hydramethylnon, pyriproxyfen, and five organophosphorus insecticides

    Patient Controlled, Privacy Preserving IoT Healthcare Data Sharing Framework

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    Healthcare data personally collected by individuals with wearable devices have become important sources of information for healthcare professionals and medical research worldwide. User-Generated Data (UGD) offers unique and sometimes fine-grained insight into the lived experiences and medical conditions of patients. The sensitive subject-matter of medical data can facilitate the exploitation and/or control of victims. Data collection in medical research therefore restricts access control over participant-data to the researchers. Therefore, cultivating trust with prospective participants concerned about the security of their medical data presents formidable challenges. Anonymization can allay such concerns, but at the cost of information loss. Moreover, such techniques cannot necessarily be applied on real-time streaming health data. In this paper, we aim to analyze the technical requirements to enable individuals to share their real-time wearable healthcare data with researchers without compromising privacy. An extension for delay-free anonymization techniques for real-time streaming health data is also proposed

    MSIS 2006 Curriculum Preview

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    The MSIS 2000 curriculum is now over 5 years old. That curriculum (the first revisions for the MS program since 1982) was widely adopted by IS departments throughout the world. A committee established jointly by AIS and ACM started working in summer 2003 on revising and updating the MS curriculum based on the experience of the adopting schools. The work is nearing completion. This paper describes the state of the revisions as of April 2005

    The Lick-Carnegie Survey: A New Two-Planet System Around the Star HD 207832

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    Keck/HIRES precision radial velocities of HD 207832 indicate the presence of two Jovian-type planetary companions in Keplerian orbits around this G star. The planets have minimum masses of 0.56 and 0.73 Jupiter-masses with orbital periods of ~162 and ~1156 days, and eccentricities of 0.13 and 0.27, respectively. Stromgren b and y photometry reveals a clear stellar rotation signature of the host star with a period of 17.8 days, well separated from the period of the radial velocity variations, reinforcing their Keplerian origin. The values of the semimajor axes of the planets suggest that these objects have migrated from the region of giant planet formation to closer orbits. In order to examine the possibility of the existence of additional (small) planets in the system, we studied the orbital stability of hypothetical terrestrial-sized objects in the region between the two planets and interior to the orbit of the inner body. Results indicated that stable orbits exist only in a small region interior to planet b. However, the current observational data offer no evidence for the existence of additional objects in this system.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in Ap

    MSIS 2006: Model Curriculum and Guidelines for Graduate Degree Programs in Information Systems

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    This article presents the MSIS 2006 Model Curriculum and Guidelines for Graduate Degree Programs in Information Systems. As with MSIS 2000 and its predecessors, the objective is to create a model for schools designing or revising an MS curriculum in Information Systems. The curriculum was designed by a joint committee of the Association for Information Systems and the Association for Computing Machinery. MSIS2006 is a major update of MSIS 2000. Features include increasing the number of required courses from 10 to 12 while revising prerequisites, introducing new courses and revising existing courses to modernize the curriculum, and alternatives for phased upgrading from MSIS2000 to MSIS 2006. As with the previous curriculum, it is the product of detailed consultation with the IS community. The curriculum received the endorsement of 8 major IS professional groups

    Assessing the Proposed IAM, UAW, and USW Merger: Critical Issues and Potential Outcomes

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    [Excerpt] We examine the many difficult issues facing the IAM, UAW, and USW as they move toward the creation of a single organization. In order to place this merger in con- text, the larger issue of mergers in the American labor movement will be addressed, as will the origins and history of each of the three unions. The specific issues confronting the unions will be examined in three categories — structure, administration, and functions and services. We conclude with an assessment of the current status of the unification effort and the prospects for its realization
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