4,029 research outputs found
Application of NASAP to the design of communication circuits
Modifications to CDC 3600 NASAP for design of linear communication circuit
William E. Rooney to Dr. Silver, 2 September 1958
Professional correspondenc
The Effect of Playback Theatre on Managing Elderly Bullying in Senior Communities
This qualitative research project explores the long established social problem of bullying among the expanding population of adults over 65. One of the main goals is to identify effective interventions in addressing the problem, specifically Playback Theatre. Grounded theory was implemented in data analysis. The social work theory of Person in Environment (PIE) and Systems Theory were used as the theoretical framework for formulating questions and interpreting answers. Seven professionals working in assisted living and senior public housing were questioned regarding their observations and experiences of elderly bullying within their facilities. Data analysis occurred within a three-month period. The main theme that emerged is the lack of evidence-based interventions. Other prominent themes include: (a) what bullying looks like in the studied population, (b) where bullying most often occurs, (c) reasons for bullying among older adults, (d) what interventions are currently being used, (e) Playback Theatre, (f) use and attitudes towards art-based interventions, (g) what type of training professionals have in dealing with bullying, and (h) messages communities can use to address bullying
A study of the Rhode Island schools' science fair and its winners, 1946 through 1949
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
Links Between Social Support, Thwarted Belongingness, and Suicide Ideation among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual College Students
Emerging adults with a lesbian, gay, or bisexual (LGB) identity are at greater risk for engaging in suicide-related behaviors. This disparity highlights a need to elucidate specific risk and protective factors associated with suicide-related behaviors among LGB youth, which could be utilized as targets for suicide prevention efforts in this population. Informed by the interpersonal-psychological theory of suicide, the present study hypothesized that social support would be indirectly associated with decreased suicide ideation via lower thwarted belongingness. A sample of 50 emerging adults (62.0% male, 70.0% Hispanic) who identified as gay, lesbian, bisexual, questioning, or “other” orientation, with a mean age of 20.84 years (SD = 3.30 years), completed self-report assessments. Results indicated that support from both family and the LGB community were associated with lower thwarted belongingness over and above the effects of age, sex, and depressive symptoms. Indirect effects models also indicated that both family and LGB community support were associated with suicide ideation via thwarted belongingness. The results of the present study suggest that family and LGB community support may represent specific targets for reducing thwarted belongingness that could be leveraged in suicide prevention efforts for LGB emerging adults
lHuman cytotoxic T lymphocytes with reduced sensitivity to Fas-induced apoptosis
Effector-memory T cells expressing Fas (Apo-1/CD95) are switched to an apoptotic program by cross-linking with Fas-ligand (FasL). Consequently, tumors that express FasL can induce apoptosis of infiltrating Fas-positive T lymphocytes and subdue any antitumor host immune response. Since Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-associated tumors such as Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) express FasL, we determined whether EBV-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (EBV-CTLs) could be modified to resist this evasion strategy. We show that long-term down-modulation of Fas can be achieved in EBV-CTLs by transduction with small interfering RNA (siRNA) encoded in a retrovirus. Modified T cells resisted Fas/FasL-mediated apoptosis compared with control cells and showed minimal cleavage of the caspase3 substrate poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) protein after Fas engagement. Prolonged Fas stimulation selected a uniformly Fas(low) and FasL resistant population. Removal of responsiveness to this single death signal had no other discernible effects on EBV-CTLs. In particular, it did not lead to their autonomous growth since the modified EBV-CTLs remained polyclonal, and their survival and proliferation retained dependence on antigen-specific stimulation and on the presence of other physiologic growth signals. EBV-CTLs with knocked down Fas should have a selective functional and survival advantage over unmodified EBV-CTLs in the presence of tumors expressing FasL and may be of value for adoptive cellular therapy. (c) 2005 by The American Society of Hematology
Magmatic Rifting and Active Volcanism Conference, Afar Rift Consortium
The Magmatic Rifting and Active Volcanism (MRAV) Conference took place in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia January 10-13, 2012, convened by members of the Afar Rift Consortium, an international team investigating active magmatism and deformation in the Afar region. Over 200 people from around the world attended. The conference participants primarily presented the results of work on ongoing rifting processes in Afar, but work was also presented that addressed other portions of the East African Rift, comparable rift settings elsewhere, rifting processes in general, and the hazards and resources associated with the East African Rift.
The scientific program outlined the current state of knowledge in the East African rift and placed recent discoveries within the broader context of rift-related research globally. Central to the meeting was the presentation of results from thematic, multi-collaborator, international programs (e.g. Afar Consortium, RiftLink, Actions Marges), individual research groups, and industrial partners. The rich detail and modern datasets presented at the meeting highlight the importance of the existing infrastructure of international research in East Africa, which should be leveraged by GeoPRISMS to effectively focus resources in the extensive East African Rift System primary site
Spherical Harmonics for the 1D Radiative Transfer Equation I: Reflected Light
A significant challenge in radiative transfer theory for atmospheres of
exoplanets and brown dwarfs is the derivation of computationally efficient
methods that have adequate fidelity to more precise, numerically demanding
solutions. In this work, we extend the capability of the first open-source
radiative transfer model for computing the reflected light of exoplanets at any
phase geometry, PICASO: Planetary Intensity Code for Atmospheric Spectroscopy
Observations. Until now, PICASO has implemented two-stream approaches to the
solving the radiative transfer equation for reflected light, in particular
following the derivations of Toon et al. (1989) (Toon89). In order to improve
the model accuracy, we have considered higher-order approximations of the phase
functions, namely, we have increased the order of approximation from 2 to 4,
using spherical harmonics. The spherical harmonics approximation decouples
spatial and directional dependencies by expanding the intensity and phase
function into a series of spherical harmonics, or Legendre polynomials,
allowing for analytical solutions for low-order approximations to optimize
computational efficiency. We rigorously derive the spherical harmonics method
for reflected light and benchmark the 4-term method (SH4) against Toon89 and
two independent and higher-fidelity methods (CDISORT & doubling-method). On
average, the SH4 method provides an order of magnitude increase in accuracy,
compared to Toon89. Lastly, we implement SH4 within PICASO and observe only
modest increase in computational time, compared to two-stream methods (20%
increase).Comment: Accepted ApJ; 27 pages; 5 figures; Code available at
https://github.com/natashabatalha/picaso; Zenodo release at
https://zenodo.org/record/7765171#.ZC3G7uzMI8Y; Tutorials/figure
reproducibility at
https://natashabatalha.github.io/picaso/notebooks/10b_AnalyzingApproximationsReflectedLightSH.htm
In-situ feasibility study of freshwater mussel reintroduction : survival and growth of the wavy-rayed lampmussel (Lampsilis fasciola) in the Pigeon River, NC
The Pigeon River, North Carolina has a long history of habitat degradation due to water diversion and high levels of toxic effluents from a paper mill. Over the last 20 years the paper mill has modernized its processes and reduced water use and waste production greatly. Historically, the wavy-rayed lampmussel, Lampsilis fasciola, was believed to have been present throughout the river from Canton to its mouth in Tennessee, but it currently persists only upstream of Canton, NC. In this preliminary study of the feasibility of restoring the mussels to the downstream reach, I compared the survival and growth of L. fasciola placed in the Pigeon River downstream from Canton with those placed upstream. Captively propagated mussels were individually marked and placed in enclosures in the river at two upstream sites and three downstream sites in December 2008. They were monitored for survival and growth monthly from December 2008-November 2009. Mortality rates among sites were not significantly different; however, growth rates of mussels held in the downstream sites were significantly greater than for those held at upstream sites. Highest growth rates were observed at a site located approximately 18 km downstream from Canton. Several influences may have impacted these growth rates, such as elevated temperature due to heated effluent and agricultural runoff with elevated nutrients. Assessment of survival at other life stages is needed before the full extent of potential for reintroduction of mussels to the studied reach of the Pigeon River is known
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