356 research outputs found

    Information Governance Modularity in Open Data

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    Home and Business Energy Reduction

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    Course Code: ENR/AEDE 4567The focus of our project is to reduce energy consumption community-wide by 20% over the next five years within the residential and commercial sectors. This 20% reduction is a goal within Green Memo III, set forth by the City of Columbus and Mayor Michael B. Coleman. Focusing on five objectives, we conducted research, gathered data on best practices from cities that have been making strides in this area, reached out to key energy providers, and provided a cost-benefit analysis on the financial feasibility of our goals. We hope to advise Columbus decision makers on how to effectively target homes and commercial buildings in order to market energy efficiency programs. We believe these programs will effectively reduce overall energy consumption and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions for the City of Columbus.Academic Major: Environment, Economy, Development, and Sustainabilit

    Transient Flow Routing in Channel Networks

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    The formulation of a mathematical model to predict transient flows in hydraulic networks is presented. The network formulation consists of breaking the network into a series of connected reaches; reducing the finite difference equations for each reach into two "reach" equations; forming an exterior matrix consisting of the reach equations, external boundary conditions, and interior compatibility conditions; solving the external matrix for the end values of discharge and water surface elevation for all reaches and back-substituting for all interior values. Examples presented include the James River, USA, estuary model (twenty-four nodes and twenty-six reaches), the Cork Harbour, Ireland, estuary (thirteen-reach, double-looped network), and the Rio Bayamon basin, Puerto Rico. Results are very satisfactory when compared to known data

    Equipped for Life in the Boreal Forest: The Role of the Stress Axis in Mammals

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    The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (stress axis) plays a central role in equipping mammals to succeed in the challenging environment of the boreal forest. Over the last 20 years, we have tackled a broad range of topics to understand how the stress axis functions in four key herbivore species. The central challenge for snowshoe hares is coping with their predators, whereas for the others, it is primarily coping with each other (especially during reproduction) and with their physical environment. Hares are severely stressed by their predators during the population decline. The predator threat causes major changes in the stress axis of hares and reduces their reproduction; in addition, acting through maternal programming, it is the most plausible explanation for the extended period of low numbers following the population decline. Arctic ground squirrel males have an intense breeding season for two to three weeks in early spring, after which many of them die. The functioning of their stress axis changes markedly and is key in meeting their energy demands during this period. In contrast, red-backed vole males, though also short-lived, breed repeatedly only in the summer of their life, and their stress axis shows no change in function. However, their reproductive effort negatively affects their long-term survival. Territorial red squirrels experience marked interannual fluctuations in their major food source (white spruce seed), resulting in major fluctuations in their densities and consequently in the intensity of territorial competition. Changes in the densities of red squirrels also alter maternal stress hormone levels, inducing adaptive plasticity in offspring postnatal growth rates that prepares offspring for the environment they will encounter at independence. To survive winter, red squirrels need to defend their territories year-round, and the basis of this defense appears to be adrenal dehydroepiandrosterone, which has the benefits, but not the costs, of gonadal steroids. Arctic ground squirrels survive winter by hibernating in deeply frozen ground. Unlike all other hibernators, they have evolved a unique adaptation: high levels of adrenal androgens in summer to accumulate protein reserves that they then burn in winter. With a rapidly changing climate, the stress axis will play a key role in permitting northern animals to adapt, but the linkages between the changes in the abiotic and biotic components of the boreal forest and the phenotypic plasticity in the stress response of its inhabitants are not well understood for these or any other herbivore species.L’axe hypothalamo-hypophyso-surrénalien (l’axe du stress) joue un rôle central pour aider les mammifères à réussir dans l’environnement difficile de la forêt boréale. Ces 20 dernières années, nous nous sommes penchés sur une vaste gamme de sujets afin de comprendre comment fonctionne l’axe du stress chez quatre grandes espèces herbivores. Pour le lièvre d’Amérique, le défi central consiste à faire face à ses prédateurs, tandis que pour les autres espèces, ce défi consiste à se faire face mutuellement (surtout pendant la reproduction) de même qu’à faire face à leur environnement physique. Les lièvres subissent beaucoup de stress de la part de leurs prédateurs pendant la diminution de la population. La menace des prédateurs est la cause de changements majeurs sur l’axe du stress des lièvres, ce qui a pour effet de réduire leur reproduction. De plus, en raison de leur programmation maternelle, il s’agit de l’explication la plus plausible justifiant la période prolongée de leur faible nombre suivant la diminution de la population. Le spermophile arctique mâle a une période de reproduction intense pendant deux à trois semaines au début du printemps et après cela, un grand nombre d’entre eux meurent. Le fonctionnement de son axe de stress change de façon marquée, ce qui est essentiel à sa demande en énergie pendant cette période. Par contraste, le campagnol à dos roux mâle, même s’il ne vit également pas longtemps, se reproduit à répétition seulement pendant l’été de sa vie, et le fonctionnement de son axe de stress ne montre aucun changement. Cependant, ses efforts de reproduction ont des incidences négatives sur sa survie à long terme. Pour sa part, la principale source d’alimentation (les graines d’épinette blanche) de l’écureuil roux territorial connaît des fluctuations interannuelles marquées, ce qui se traduit par une fluctuation majeure en matière de densité de cette espèce animale et, par conséquent, en matière d’intensité de la concurrence pour le territoire. Les changements de densité d’écureuils roux exercent également une influence sur les taux d’hormone maternelle de stress, ce qui donne lieu à une plasticité adaptative des taux de croissance postnatale de la progéniture qui prépare la progéniture pour faire face à l’environnement dans lequel ils évolueront au stade de l’indépendance. Pour survivre à l’hiver, l’écureuil roux doit défendre son territoire à l’année et pour y parvenir, il se sert de la déhydroépiandrostérone surrénalienne, qui comporte les avantages des stéroïdes gonades, sans les coûts. Le spermophile arctique survit à l’hiver en hibernant dans le sol gelé en profondeur. Contrairement à tous les autres hibernateurs, il s’est développé une adaptation unique en son genre, soit des taux élevés d’androgènes surrénaliens en été qui lui permettent d’accumuler les réserves de protéines qu’il brûle ensuite pendant l’hiver. À la lumière du changement climatique rapide, l’axe de stress jouera un rôle-clé pour permettre aux animaux du Nord de s’adapter, mais les liens entre les changements des composantes abiotiques et biotiques de la forêt boréale et la plasticité phénotypique de la réaction de stress de ses habitants ne sont pas bien compris dans le cas de ces espèces herbivores ou de toute autre espèce herbivore

    A systematic review of electronic assistive technology within supporting living environments for people with dementia

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    Health and social care provision needs to change in order to meet the needs of an increase in the number of people living with dementia. Environmental design, technology and assistive devices have the potential to complement care, help address some of the challenges presented by this growing need and impact on the lived experience of this vulnerable population. This systematic review was undertaken to identify the research on the use of electronic assistive technology within long-term residential care settings. A total of 3229 papers published from the inception of each of the databases up until May 2016 were retrieved from searches in four major databases. Sixty-one were identified to be included in the review. The inclusion criteria were: original peer reviewed journals; an electronic assistive technology intervention; with residents or tenants living with dementia or their family or paid caregivers; in supported living environments or residential care. The data extracted from the included studies focused on the methodology, technology, outcomes and the role of people living with dementia within the research. Overall, an extensive variety of technical interventions were found, with a broad range of methodological heterogeneity to explore their effect. Additionally, wide-spanning outcomes to support the potential of technology solutions and the challenges presented by such intervention were found

    Learning software engineering at a distance

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    There are many challenges in delivering a software engineering curriculum by distance learning. The Open University has offered distance learning master's programs in computing and software engineering for over 20 years. The nature of the main student constituency shapes the curriculum's structure, content, and delivery for its master's in software development and related programs. Theses programs are characterized as part-time, open, large-scale distance learning, professionally accredited, and primarily aimed at practitioners in the IT industry. The article discusses the implications of each of these characteristics for the curriculum and its delivery and outlines the program's future directions

    The Demographics and Atmospheres of Giant Planets with the ELTs

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    Gas giants are the most readily detectable exoplanets but fundamental questions about their system architectures, formation, migration, and atmospheres have been unanswerable with the current generation of ground- and space-based facilities. The dominant techniques to detect and characterize giant planets −- radial velocities, transits, direct imaging, microlensing, and astrometry −- are each isolated to a limited range of planet masses, separations, ages, and temperatures. These windows into the arrangement and physical properties of giant planets have spawned new questions about the timescale and location of their assembly; the distributions of planet mass and orbital separation at young and old ages; the composition and structure of their atmospheres; and their orbital and rotational angular momentum architectures. The ELTs will address these questions by building bridges between these islands of mass, orbital distance, and age. The angular resolution, collecting area, all-sky coverage, and novel instrumentation suite of these facilities are needed to provide a complete map of the orbits and atmospheric evolution of gas giant planets (0.3−-10 MJupM_\mathrm{Jup}) across space (0.1−-100 AU) and time (1 Myr to 10 Gyr). This white paper highlights the scientific potential of the GMT and TMT to address these outstanding questions, with a particular focus on the role of direct imaging and spectroscopy of large samples of giant planets that will soon be made available with GaiaGaia.Comment: White paper for the Astro2020 decadal surve

    Recombinant interleukin-21 plus sorafenib for metastatic renal cell carcinoma: a phase 1/2 study

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    Abstract Background Despite the positive impact of targeted therapies on metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC), durable responses are infrequent and an unmet need exists for novel therapies with distinct mechanisms of action. We investigated the combination of recombinant Interleukin 21 (IL-21), a cytokine with unique immunostimulatory properties, plus sorafenib, a VEGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Methods In this phase 1/2 study, 52 mRCC patients received outpatient treatment with oral sorafenib 400 mg twice daily plus intravenous IL-21 (10–50 mcg/kg) on days 1–5 and 15–19 of each 7-week treatment course. The safety, antitumor activity, pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic effects of the combination were evaluated. Results In phase 1 (n = 19), the maximum tolerated dose for IL-21 with the standard dose of sorafenib was determined to be 30 mcg/kg/day; grade 3 skin rash was the only dose-limiting toxicity. In phase 2, 33 previously-treated patients tolerated the combination therapy well with appropriate dose reductions; toxicities were mostly grade 1 or 2. The objective response rate was 21% and disease control rate was 82%. Two patients have durable responses that are ongoing, despite cessation of both IL-21 and sorafenib, at 41+ and 30+ months, respectively. The median progression-free survival in phase 2 was 5.6 months. The pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of IL-21 appeared to be preserved in the presence of sorafenib. Conclusion IL-21 plus sorafenib has antitumor activity and acceptable safety in previously treated mRCC patients. IL-21 may represent a suitable immunotherapy in further exploration of combination strategies in mRCC. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT0038928
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