6 research outputs found

    Shade estimation over streams using distributed temperature sensing

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    The characterization of temporal and spatial distribution of sunlight is essential for understanding energy transport in natural ecosystems. Fiber?optic distributed temperature sensing (DTS) allows meter resolution measurements of temperature at subminute resolution. The difference in temperature due to absorption and reflection of a pair of helically twisted black and white fiber?optic cables was measured with a DTS to document areas exposed to sunlight over the Walla Walla River. A high correlation (R2 = 0.99) was found between DTS?based results and manual field observations of effective shade. These preliminary results provide proof of the concept that this method can be used for estimating the effective shade at fine spatial resolutions. Potential shortcomings and the need for a more quantitative physical model are suggested for further research.Water ManagementCivil Engineering and Geoscience

    Helping children apply their knowledge to their behavior on a dimension-switching task

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    To investigate why 3‐year‐olds have difficulty in switching sorting dimensions, children of 3 and 4 years were tested in one of four conditions on Zelazo's card sort task: standard, sleeve, label and face‐up. In the standard condition, children were required to sort blue‐truck and red‐star cards under either a blue‐star or red‐truck model card, first by color or shape, and then by the other dimension. Here 3‐year‐olds sorted correctly until the dimension changed; they continue to sort by the initial dimension. The sleeve condition (placing the sorting cards in an envelope prior to sorting) had little effect. In the label condition, the child labeled the relevant sorting dimension on each trial. Most 3‐year‐olds succeeded; evidently their labeling helped them refocus their attention, overcoming ‘attentional inertia’ (the pull to continue attending to the previously relevant dimension). In the face‐up condition, attentional inertia was strengthened because sorted cards were left face‐up; 4‐year‐olds performed worse than in the standard condition. We posit that attentional inertia is the core problem for preschoolers on the card sort task

    Elektrokrampftherapie

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