3,486 research outputs found
Human response to aircraft noise
The human auditory system and the perception of sound are discussed. The major concentration is on the annnoyance response and methods for relating the physical characteristics of sound to those psychosociological attributes associated with human response. Results selected from the extensive laboratory and field research conducted on human response to aircraft noise over the past several decades are presented along with discussions of the methodology commonly used in conducting that research. Finally, some of the more common criteria, regulations, and recommended practices for the control or limitation of aircraft noise are examined in light of the research findings on human response
The Place of the Ranke Collection at Syracuse University: Some Brief Remarks
This brief article praises the efforts of Charles W. Bennett in securing the von Ranke Library (now the von Ranke Collection) for Syracuse University. It also recognizes the partners and friends of the library for the cataloging of the collection
MICROCOMPUTER BUDGET MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
The enterprise budget, whole farm cash flow, and income statement are fundamental tools of farm and ranch management. The "Microcomputer Budget Management System" (MBMS) is a microcomputer software package that facilitates the storage and use of information for crop and livestock budgeting. It performs the calculations for several enterprise budgeting formats and for preparation of whole farm resource use reports and financial statements. The MBMS also includes internal machinery and irrigation cost calculation routines. MBMS was developed for use by extension staff, researchers, lenders, consultants, and operators of diversified farms and ranches with many enterprises that use enterprise and whole farm budgeting for analysis and planning activities. The flexibility and detailed nature of the program requires the user to have knowledge of enterprise budgeting and operation of complex computer programs. This paper presents a discussion of the features and capabilities of the software and the computational procedures used in the cost calculations.Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies,
Determining the structure of the United States marine instrumentation industry and its position in the world industry
This report is a general, but comprehensive, description and analysis of industrial organization in the field of marine electronic
instrumentation (MEl), a broadly defined "industry," which until now has received little systematic, scholarly attention. The report
reviews the current literature on international trade and competitiveness, as well as trade and scientific journals relevant to the industry.
The resul ts of a series of interviews with representatives of the industry and responsible government agencies are presented and industry
and government data on R&D and output have been collected and analyzed together with other indicators of industrial performance. On
the basis of these sources, the structure of the industry and its markets is characterized and the importance of marine electronic
instrumenation in international high technology trade is established. Over 350 firms in the U.S. industry are identified, which annually
earn total estimated gross revenues of approximately $5 billion. These firms fall into three largely distinct industry groups: (1) defense
systems contractors; (2) commercial marine electronics; and (3) scientific instrumentation. The first group is by far the largest in sales
volume and is oligopolistic in structure, consisting of a few large rivals for infrequent and complex defense systems contracts. The other
groups are more purely competitive. Four major customer groups are distinguished: (1) military; (2) commercial and recreational shipping
and boating; (3) offshore oil and gas; and (4) oceanographic/environmental. Most of the firms in the industry face international
competititon. The importance of marine electronic instrumentation to technological advance and economic activity in the world's oceans
is strongly apparent. Parameters affecting the international competitiveness of firms in this industry, including those relating to industry
structure and behavior and governmental practices and institutions such as sponsored research, procurement, intellectual property rights,
tax allowances, antitrust enforcement, small business encouragements, export controls, import restrictions, exchange rates, and
technology transfer are summarized. A number of issues relating to international competititon, economic analysis, and government policy
that are fruitful areas for further research also are identified.Funding was provided by the Department of Commerce, NOAA,
National Ocean Service, Office of Marine Operations
through a grant to the Massachusetts Centers of Excellence Corporation,
grant Number NA87-AA-D-M0037
Circles, columns and screenings: mapping the institutional, discursive, physical and gendered spaces of film criticism in 1940s London
This article revisits the period considered within ‘The Quality Film Adventure: British Critics and the Cinema 1942-1948’, mapping the professional cultures, working contexts and industry relationships that underpinned the aesthetic judgements and collective directions which John Ellis has observed within the critics published writings. Drawing on the records of the Critics’ Circle, Dilys Powell’s papers and Kinematograph Weekly, it explores the evolution of increasingly organised professional cultures of film criticism and film publicity, arguing that the material conditions imposed by war caused tensions between them to escalate. In the context of two major challenges to critical integrity and practice – the evidence given by British producer R.J. Minney in front of the 1948 Royal Commission on the Press and an ongoing libel case between a BBC critic and MGM – the different spaces of hospitality and film promotion became highly contested sites. This article focuses on the ways in which these spaces were characterised, used, and policed. It finds that the value and purpose of press screenings were hotly disputed and observes the way the advancement of women within one sector (film criticism) but not the other (film publicity) created particular difficulties, as key female critics avoided the more compromised masculine spaces of publicity, making them harder for publicists to reach and fuelling trade resentment. More broadly, the article asserts the need to consider film critics as geographically and culturally located audiences, who experience films as ‘professional’ viewers within extended and embodied cultures of habitual professional practice and physical space
Dynamic Economic Analysis of Marine Pollution Prevention Technologies: An Application to Double Hulls and Electronic Charts
Marine pollution associated with shipping accidents has resulted in a Congressional mandate for double hulls on tankers in U.S. waters. In this paper, we formulate a social planner's problem using optimal control theory to examine the relative cost-effectiveness of double hulls and alternative pollution retention technologies, and the optimal installation strategy for such technologies. The model encompasses the costs and benefits associated with shipping operations, damage to the marine environment, and investment in each technology. A computer simulation of the model is used to evaluate investment strategies for two technological options: double hulls and electronic chart systems. Results indicate that electronic charts may be a far more cost-effective approach to marine pollution control
US Army in the Iraq War Volume 2 Surge and Withdrawal
https://press.armywarcollege.edu/monographs/1932/thumbnail.jp
Analysis of Congestion Control
Agents must work. Given the trends in elec- tronic models, programmers particularly note the construction of the lookaside buffer, which embodies the theoretical principles of dis- tributed systems. In order to overcome this chal- lenge, we consider how the Turing machine can be applied to the simulation of the UNIVAC computer
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