2,956 research outputs found
Attitudes to telecare among older people, professional care workers and informal carers: a preventative strategy or crisis management?
This paper reports findings from an attitudinal survey towards telecare that emerged from twenty-two focus groups comprising ninety-two older people, fifty-five professional stakeholders and thirty-nine carers. These were convened in three different regions of England as a precursor to telecare service development. The results from this study suggest that informants’ views were shaped by prior knowledge of conventional health and social care delivery in their locality and the implication is that expectations and requirements in respect of telecare services in general are likely to be informed by wider perceptions about the extent to which community care should operate as a preventative strategy or as a mechanism for crisis management
Survival and Growth of American Alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) hatchlings after artificial incubation and repatriation
Hatchling American Alligators (Alligator mississippiensis) produced from artificially incubated
wild eggs were returned to their natal areas (repatriated). We compared artificially incubated and
repatriated hatchlings released within and outside the maternal alligator’s home range with naturally
incubated hatchlings captured and released within the maternal alligator’s home range on Lake Apopka,
Lake Griffin, and Orange Lake in Florida. We used probability of recapture and total length at approximately
nine months after hatching as indices of survival and growth rates. Artificially incubated hatchlings released
outside of the maternal alligator’s home range had lower recapture probabilities than either naturally
incubated hatchlings or artificially incubated hatchlings released near the original nest site. Recapture
probabilities of other treatments did not differ significantly. Artificially incubated hatchlings were
approximately 6% shorter than naturally incubated hatchlings at approximately nine months after hatching.
We concluded that repatriation of hatchlings probably would not have long-term effects on populations
because of the resiliency of alligator populations to alterations of early age-class survival and growth rates of
the magnitude that we observed. Repatriation of hatchlings may be an economical alternative to repatriation
of older juveniles for population restoration. However, the location of release may affect subsequent survival
and growth
Predictability sieve, pointer states, and the classicality of quantum trajectories
We study various measures of classicality of the states of open quantum
systems subject to decoherence. Classical states are expected to be stable in
spite of decoherence, and are thought to leave conspicuous imprints on the
environment. Here these expected features of environment-induced superselection
(einselection) are quantified using four different criteria: predictability
sieve (which selects states that produce least entropy), purification time
(which looks for states that are the easiest to find out from the imprint they
leave on the environment), efficiency threshold (which finds states that can be
deduced from measurements on a smallest fraction of the environment), and
purity loss time (that looks for states for which it takes the longest to lose
a set fraction of their initial purity). We show that when pointer states --
the most predictable states of an open quantum system selected by the
predictability sieve -- are well defined, all four criteria agree that they are
indeed the most classical states. We illustrate this with two examples: an
underdamped harmonic oscillator, for which coherent states are unanimously
chosen by all criteria, and a free particle undergoing quantum Brownian motion,
for which most criteria select almost identical Gaussian states (although, in
this case, predictability sieve does not select well defined pointer states.)Comment: 10 pages, 13 figure
Herpetofaunal Inventories of the National Parks of South Florida and the Caribbean: Volume III. Big Cypress National Preserve
Amphibian declines and extinctions have been documented around the world, often in protected
natural areas. Concern for this trend has prompted the U.S. Geological Survey and the National Park
Service to document all species of amphibians that occur within U.S. National Parks and to search for any
signs that amphibians may be declining. This study, an inventory of amphibian species in Big Cypress
National Preserve, was conducted from 2002 to 2003. The goals of the project were to create a
georeferenced inventory of amphibian species, use new analytical techniques to estimate proportion of
sites occupied by each species, look for any signs of amphibian decline (missing species, disease, die-offs,
and so forth.), and to establish a protocol that could be used for future monitoring efforts.
Several sampling methods were used to accomplish these goals. Visual encounter surveys and
anuran vocalization surveys were conducted in all habitats throughout the park to estimate the proportion
of sites or proportion of area occupied (PAO) by each amphibian species in each habitat. Opportunistic
collections, as well as limited drift fence data, were used to augment the visual encounter methods for
highly aquatic or cryptic species. A total of 545 visits to 104 sites were conducted for standard sampling
alone, and 2,358 individual amphibians and 374 reptiles were encountered. Data analysis was conducted
in program PRESENCE to provide PAO estimates for each of the anuran species.
All of the amphibian species historically found in Big Cypress National Preserve were detected
during this project. At least one individual of each of the four salamander species was captured during
sampling. Each of the anuran species in the preserve was adequately sampled using standard
herpetological sampling methods, and PAO estimates were produced for each species of anuran by habitat.
This information serves as an indicator of habitat associations of the species and relative abundance of
sites occupied, but it will also be useful as a comparative baseline for future monitoring efforts.
In addition to sampling for amphibians, all encounters with reptiles were documented. The
sampling methods used for detecting amphibians are also appropriate for many reptile species. These
reptile locations are included in this report, but the number of reptile observations was not sufficient to
estimate PAO for reptile species. We encountered 35 of the 46 species of reptiles believed to be present in
Big Cypress National Preserve during this study, and evidence exists of the presence of four other reptile
species in the Preserve.
This study found no evidence of amphibian decline in Big Cypress National Preserve. Although no
evidence of decline was observed, several threats to amphibians were identified. Introduced species,
especially the Cuban treefrog (Osteopilus septentrionalis), are predators and competitors with several
native frog species. The recreational use of off-road vehicles has the potential to affect some amphibian
populations, and a study on those potential impacts is currently underway. Also, interference by humans
with the natural hydrologic cycle of south Florida has the potential to alter the amphibian community.
Continued monitoring of the amphibian species in Big Cypress National Preserve is recommended.
The methods used in this study were adequate to produce reliable estimates of the proportion of sites
occupied by most anuran species, and are a cost-effective means of determining the status of their
populations
Alligator Diet in Relation to Alligator Mortality on Lake Griffin, FL
Alligator mississippiensis (American Alligators) demonstrated low hatchrate
success and increased adult mortality on Lake Griffin, FL, between 1998 and
2003. Dying Lake Griffin alligators with symptoms of poor motor coordination were
reported to show specific neurological impairment and brain lesions. Similar lesions
were documented in salmonines that consumed clupeids with high thiaminase levels.
Therefore, we investigated the diet of Lake Griffin alligators and compared it with
alligator diets from two lakes that exhibited relatively low levels of unexplained
alligator mortality to see if consumption of Dorosoma cepedianum (gizzard shad)
could be correlated with patterns of mortality. Shad in both lakes Griffin and Apopka
had high levels of thiaminase and Lake Apopka alligators were consuming greater
amounts of shad relative to Lake Griffin without showing mortality rates similar to
Lake Griffin alligators. Therefore, a relationship between shad consumption alone
and alligator mortality is not supported
Testing Gravity-Driven Collapse of the Wavefunction via Cosmogenic Neutrinos
It is pointed out that the Diosi-Penrose ansatz for gravity-induced quantum
state reduction can be tested by observing oscillations in the flavor ratios of
neutrinos originated at cosmological distances. Since such a test would be
almost free of environmental decoherence, testing the ansatz by means of a next
generation neutrino detector such as IceCube would be much cleaner than by
experiments proposed so far involving superpositions of macroscopic systems.
The proposed microscopic test would also examine the universality of
superposition principle at unprecedented cosmological scales.Comment: 4 pages; RevTeX4; Essentially the version published in PR
Increased abundance of frost mRNA during recovery from cold stress is not essential for cold tolerance in adult Drosophila melanogaster.
Frost (Fst) is a candidate gene associated with the response to cold in Drosophila melanogaster because Fst mRNA accumulation increases during recovery from low temperature exposure. We investigated the contribution of Fst expression to chill-coma recovery time, acute cold tolerance and rapid cold hardening (RCH) in adult D. melanogaster by knocking down Fst mRNA expression using GAL4/UAS-mediated RNA interference. In this experiment, four UAS-Fst and one tubulin-GAL4 lines were used. We predicted that if Fst is essential for cold tolerance phenotypes, flies with low Fst mRNA levels should be less cold tolerant than flies with normal levels of cold-induced Fst mRNA. Cold-induced Fst abundance and recovery time from chill-coma were not negatively correlated in male or female flies. Survival of 2 h exposures to sub-zero temperatures in Fst knockdown lines was not lower than that in a control line. Moreover, a low temperature pretreatment increased survival of severe cold exposure in flies regardless of Fst abundance level during recovery from cold stress, suggesting that Fst expression is not essential for RCH. Thus, cold-induced Fst accumulation is not essential for cold tolerance measured as chill-coma recovery time, survival to acute cold stress and RCH response in adult D. melanogaster
Home range and habitat use by Kemp's Ridley turtles in West-Central Florida
The Kemp's ridley turtle (Lepidochelys kempii) is an endangered species whose recovery depends in part on
the identification and protection of required habitats. We used radio and sonic telemetry on subadult Kemp's ridley
turtles to investigate home-range size and habitat use in the coastal waters of west-central Florida from 1994 to
1996. We tracked 9 turtles during May-August up to 70 days after release and fou.ld they occupied 5-30 km2 foraging
ranges. Compositional analyses indicated that turtles used rock outcroppings in their foraging ranges at a
significantly higher proportion than expected. based on availability within the study area. Additionally. turtles used
live bottom (e.g .• sessile invertebrates) and green macroalgae habitats significantly more than seagrass habitat. Similar
studies are needed through'mt the Kemp's ridley turtles' range to investigate regional and stage-specific differences
in habitat use. which can then be used to conserve important foraging areas
Control of Integrable Hamiltonian Systems and Degenerate Bifurcations
We discuss control of low-dimensional systems which, when uncontrolled, are
integrable in the Hamiltonian sense. The controller targets an exact solution
of the system in a region where the uncontrolled dynamics has invariant tori.
Both dissipative and conservative controllers are considered. We show that the
shear flow structure of the undriven system causes a Takens-Bogdanov
birfurcation to occur when control is applied. This implies extreme noise
sensitivity. We then consider an example of these results using the driven
nonlinear Schrodinger equation.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, resubmitted to Physical Review E March 2004
(originally submitted June 2003), added content and reference
Statistical methods in cosmology
The advent of large data-set in cosmology has meant that in the past 10 or 20
years our knowledge and understanding of the Universe has changed not only
quantitatively but also, and most importantly, qualitatively. Cosmologists rely
on data where a host of useful information is enclosed, but is encoded in a
non-trivial way. The challenges in extracting this information must be overcome
to make the most of a large experimental effort. Even after having converged to
a standard cosmological model (the LCDM model) we should keep in mind that this
model is described by 10 or more physical parameters and if we want to study
deviations from it, the number of parameters is even larger. Dealing with such
a high dimensional parameter space and finding parameters constraints is a
challenge on itself. Cosmologists want to be able to compare and combine
different data sets both for testing for possible disagreements (which could
indicate new physics) and for improving parameter determinations. Finally,
cosmologists in many cases want to find out, before actually doing the
experiment, how much one would be able to learn from it. For all these reasons,
sophisiticated statistical techniques are being employed in cosmology, and it
has become crucial to know some statistical background to understand recent
literature in the field. I will introduce some statistical tools that any
cosmologist should know about in order to be able to understand recently
published results from the analysis of cosmological data sets. I will not
present a complete and rigorous introduction to statistics as there are several
good books which are reported in the references. The reader should refer to
those.Comment: 31, pages, 6 figures, notes from 2nd Trans-Regio Winter school in
Passo del Tonale. To appear in Lectures Notes in Physics, "Lectures on
cosmology: Accelerated expansion of the universe" Feb 201
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