4,493 research outputs found

    The impact of varying statutory arrangements on spatial data sharing and access in regional NRM bodies

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    Spatial information plays an important role in many social, environmental and economic decisions and increasingly acknowledged as a national resource essential for wider societal and environmental benefits. Natural Resource Management is one area where spatial information can be used for improved planning and decision making processes. In Australia, state government organisations are the custodians of spatial information necessary for natural resource management and regional NRM bodies are responsible to regional delivery of NRM activities. The access and sharing of spatial information between government agencies and regional NRM bodies is therefore as an important issue for improving natural resource management outcomes. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the current status of spatial information access, sharing and use with varying statutory arrangements and its impacts on spatial data infrastructure (SDI) development in catchment management sector in Australia. Further, it critically examined whether any trends and significant variations exist due to different institutional arrangements (statutory versus non-statutory) or not. A survey method was used to collect primary data from 56 regional natural resource management (NRM) bodies responsible for catchment management in Australia. Descriptive statistics method was used to show the similarities and differences between statutory and non-statutory arrangements. The key factors which influence sharing and access to spatial information are also explored. The results show the current statutory and administrative arrangements and regional focus for natural resource management is reasonable from a spatial information management perspective and provides an opportunity for building SDI at the catchment scale. However, effective institutional arrangements should align catchment SDI development activities with sub-national and national SDI development activities to address catchment management issues. We found minor differences in spatial information access, use and sharing due to varying institutional environment (statutory versus non-statutory). The non-statutory group appears to be more flexible and self-sufficient whilst statutory regional NRM bodies may lack flexibility in their spatial information management practices. We found spatial information access, use and sharing has significant impacts on spatial data infrastructure development in catchment management sector in Australia

    Subduction Duration and Slab Dip

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    The dip angles of slabs are among the clearest characteristics of subduction zones, but the factors that control them remain obscure. Here, slab dip angles and subduction parameters, including subduction duration, the nature of the overriding plate, slab age, and convergence rate, are determined for 153 transects along subduction zones for the present day. We present a comprehensive tabulation of subduction duration based on isotopic ages of arc initiation and stratigraphic, structural, plate tectonic and seismic indicators of subduction initiation. We present two ages for subduction zones, a long‐term age and a reinitiation age. Using cross correlation and multivariate regression, we find that (1) subduction duration is the primary parameter controlling slab dips with slabs tending to have shallower dips at subduction zones that have been in existence longer; (2) the long‐term age of subduction duration better explains variation of shallow dip than reinitiation age; (3) overriding plate nature could influence shallow dip angle, where slabs below continents tend to have shallower dips; (4) slab age contributes to slab dip, with younger slabs having steeper shallow dips; and (5) the relations between slab dip and subduction parameters are depth dependent, where the ability of subduction duration and overriding plate nature to explain observed variation decreases with depth. The analysis emphasizes the importance of subduction history and the long‐term regional state of a subduction zone in determining slab dip and is consistent with mechanical models of subduction

    Does the nonlinearity of the equation of state impose an upper bound on the buoyancy frequency?

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    Mixing in the ocean is usually accompanied by a net reduction in volume caused by the nonlinear nature of the equation of state. This contraction-on-mixing at a certain depth implies that the whole water column above this depth slumps a little and so suffers a reduction in gravitational potential energy. Under certain circumstances the gravitational potential energy of the entire water column can decrease as a consequence of mixing activity at a certain depth. We examine Fofonoff\u27s hypothesis that in these circumstances the net reduction of gravitational potential energy of the whole water column causes a local increase in the turbulent mixing activity at the location of the original mixing. Fofonoff proposed that this increased local mixing diffuses the local property gradients until the criterion for positive feedback is no longer satisfied, so providing an upper bound for the vertical stratification in the ocean. Bearing in mind the relatively inefficient nature of turbulent mixing at causing diapycnal fluxes (the majority of the turbulent kinetic energy goes directly into internal energy), we find that the criterion for positive feedback is a factor of approximately seven more difficult to achieve than has been realized to date. An examination of oceanic data shows that while Fofonoff\u27s original criterion for positive feedback is often exceeded, the more appropriate criterion is almost never approached. The positive feedback hypothesis assumes that the reduction in the gravitational potential energy of the whole water column appears at the location of the original mixing as an increase in the turbulent mixing activity. We show that this very focused oceanic response is extremely difficult to justify. For example there is no such feedback in a strictly one-dimensional water column; rather all of the reduction in gravitational potential energy appears as an increase in internal energy at the depth of the original mixing and there is no possibility of any positive feedback to increase the turbulent mixing. As the positive feedback hypothesis is lacking a convincing theoretical basis and is not supported by oceanic data, we do not believe that it acts as an effective upper bound on oceanic stratification

    Ordered groupoids and the holomorph of an inverse semigroup

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    We present a construction for the holomorph of an inverse semigroup, derived from the cartesian closed structure of the category of ordered groupoids. We compare the holomorph with the monoid of mappings that preserve the ternary heap operation on an inverse semigroup: for groups these two constructions coincide. We present detailed calculations for semilattices of groups and for the polycyclic monoids.Comment: 16 page

    Persistence of anticancer activity in berry extracts after simulated gastrointestinal digestion and colonic fermentation

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    Fruit and vegetable consumption is associated at the population level with a protective effect against colorectal cancer. Phenolic compounds, especially abundant in berries, are of interest due to their putative anticancer activity. After consumption, however, phenolic compounds are subject to digestive conditions within the gastrointestinal tract that alter their structures and potentially their function. However, the majority of phenolic compounds are not efficiently absorbed in the small intestine and a substantial portion pass into the colon. We characterized berry extracts (raspberries, strawberries, blackcurrants) produced by in vitro-simulated upper intestinal tract digestion and subsequent fecal fermentation. These extracts and selected individual colonic metabolites were then evaluated for their putative anticancer activities using in vitro models of colorectal cancer, representing the key stages of initiation, promotion and invasion. Over a physiologically-relevant dose range (0–50 µg/ml gallic acid equivalents), the digested and fermented extracts demonstrated significant anti-genotoxic, anti-mutagenic and anti-invasive activity on colonocytes. This work indicates that phenolic compounds from berries undergo considerable structural modifications during their passage through the gastrointestinal tract but their breakdown products and metabolites retain biological activity and can modulate cellular processes associated with colon cancer

    The effect of interstitial pressure on therapeutic agent transport : coupling with the tumor blood and lymphatic vascular systems

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    Vascularized tumor growth is characterized by both abnormal interstitial fluid flow and the associated interstitial fluid pressure (IFP). Here, we study the effect that these conditions have on the transport of therapeutic agents during chemotherapy. We apply our recently developed vascular tumor growth model which couples a continuous growth component with a discrete angiogenesis model to show that hypertensive IFP is a physical barrier that may hinder vascular extravasation of agents through transvascular fluid flux convection, which drives the agents away from the tumor. This result is consistent with previous work using simpler models without blood flow or lymphatic drainage. We consider the vascular/interstitial/lymphatic fluid dynamics to show that tumors with larger lymphatic resistance increase the agent concentration more rapidly while also experiencing faster washout. In contrast, tumors with smaller lymphatic resistance accumulate less agents but are able to retain them for a longer time. The agent availability (area-under-the curve, or AUC) increases for less permeable agents as lymphatic resistance increases, and correspondingly decreases for more permeable agents. We also investigate the effect of vascular pathologies on agent transport. We show that elevated vascular hydraulic conductivity contributes to the highest AUC when the agent is less permeable, but to lower AUC when the agent is more permeable. We find that elevated interstitial hydraulic conductivity contributes to low AUC in general regardless of the transvascular agent transport capability. We also couple the agent transport with the tumor dynamics to simulate chemotherapy with the same vascularized tumor under different vascular pathologies. We show that tumors with an elevated interstitial hydraulic conductivity alone require the strongest dosage to shrink. We further show that tumors with elevated vascular hydraulic conductivity are more hypoxic during therapy and that the response slows down as the tumor shrinks due to the heterogeneity and low concentration of agents in the tumor interior compared with the cases where other pathological effects may combine to flatten the IFP and thus reduce the heterogeneity. We conclude that dual normalizations of the micronevironment ? both the vasculature and the interstitium ? are needed to maximize the effects of chemotherapy, while normalization of only one of these may be insufficient to overcome the physical resistance and may thus lead to sub-optimal outcomes.PostprintPeer reviewe

    Third World gap year projects: Youth transitions and the mediation of risk

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    This is the post-print version of the final published article. The definitive, peer-reviewed and edited version of this article is available from the link below. Copyright @ 2008 Pion.In recent years in the UK there has been a great expansion in the number of young people travelling to Third World countries between school and university in order to participate as volunteers on structured gap year projects. Travel to such places is commonly perceived as ‘risky’, and takes young people outside the protective cocoon of UK health and safety legislation. One of the functions played by the providers of gap year projects is to mediate risk. On the basis of analysis of promotional literature, interviews with organisers of gap year projects, and focus groups of returned volunteers, in this paper I argue that the various strategies of risk mediation undertaken by gap year providers serve to reconcile modernising tendencies in UK society toward risk control and structure with postmodern inclinations towards individualisation and uncertainty

    Lifetime of d-holes at Cu surfaces: Theory and experiment

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    We have investigated the hole dynamics at copper surfaces by high-resolution angle-resolved photoemission experiments and many-body quasiparticle GW calculations. Large deviations from a free-electron-like picture are observed both in the magnitude and the energy dependence of the lifetimes, with a clear indication that holes exhibit longer lifetimes than electrons with the same excitation energy. Our calculations show that the small overlap of d- and sp-states below the Fermi level is responsible for the observed enhancement. Although there is qualitative good agreement of our theoretical predictions and the measured lifetimes, there still exist some discrepancies pointing to the need of a better description of the actual band structure of the solid.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors negatively impact on pro-reparative characteristics of human cardiac progenitor cells

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    Receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors improve cancer survival but their cardiotoxicity requires investigation. We investigated these inhibitors' effects on human cardiac progenitor cells in vitro and rat heart in vivo. We applied imatinib, sunitinib or sorafenib to human cardiac progenitor cells, assessing cell viability, proliferation, stemness, differentiation, growth factor production and second messengers. Alongside, sunitinib effects were assessed in vivo. Inhibitors decreased (\u1d631 < 0.05) cell viability, at levels equivalent to 'peak' (24 h; imatinib: 91.5 ± 0.9%; sunitinib: 83.9 ± 1.8%; sorafenib: 75.0 ± 1.6%) and 'trough' (7 days; imatinib: 62.3 ± 6.2%; sunitinib: 86.2 ± 3.5%) clinical plasma levels, compared to control (100% viability). Reduced (\u1d631 < 0.05) cell cycle activity was seen with imatinib (29.3 ± 4.3% cells in S/G2/M-phases; 50.3 ± 5.1% in control). Expression of PECAM-1, Nkx2.5, Wnt2, linked with cell differentiation, were decreased (\u1d631 < 0.05) 2, 2 and 6-fold, respectively. Expression of HGF, p38 and Akt1 in cells was reduced (\u1d631 < 0.05) by sunitinib. Second messenger (p38 and Akt1) blockade affected progenitor cell phenotype, reducing c-kit and growth factor (HGF, EGF) expression. Sunitinib for 9 days (40 mg/kg, i.p.) in adult rats reduced (\u1d631 < 0.05) cardiac ejection fraction (68 ± 2% \u1d637\u1d634. baseline (83 ± 1%) and control (84 ± 4%)) and reduced progenitor cell numbers. Receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors reduce cardiac progenitor cell survival, proliferation, differentiation and reparative growth factor expression
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