259 research outputs found
Australian Airports: The Case for Privatisation
Privatisation of the airports of the Federal Airports Corportation has been supported by both sides of Parliament. After reviewing the Labor party policy which established airport privatisation on the national agenda, this Paper examines the various changes that have been introduced into that policy and discusses their effects in terms of efficiency and price benefits and disbenefits together with price maximisation. It concludes that the policy has been devaluated over time and that the final outcome cannot deliver the tangible benefits that were originally promised
A Case Study of Health Risk Behaviors in a Sample of Residents in Rural Appalachia
The purpose of this paper was to examine health risk behaviors from a sample of adults living in one of the nation’s poorest counties in Central Appalachia. A descriptive secondary analysis of data collected for a public health surveillance project was conducted to determine the most pressing health problems and risk behaviors affecting this unique population. Residents reported high rates of hypertension, back pain, and sleep problems. They also reported very low levels of physical activity. A discussion of results is provided, including a comparison of the study population to information from national surveys. The limitations of the study and implications for social work practice, policy and research are also discussed
The power of quantum systems on a line
We study the computational strength of quantum particles (each of finite
dimensionality) arranged on a line. First, we prove that it is possible to
perform universal adiabatic quantum computation using a one-dimensional quantum
system (with 9 states per particle). This might have practical implications for
experimentalists interested in constructing an adiabatic quantum computer.
Building on the same construction, but with some additional technical effort
and 12 states per particle, we show that the problem of approximating the
ground state energy of a system composed of a line of quantum particles is
QMA-complete; QMA is a quantum analogue of NP. This is in striking contrast to
the fact that the analogous classical problem, namely, one-dimensional
MAX-2-SAT with nearest neighbor constraints, is in P. The proof of the
QMA-completeness result requires an additional idea beyond the usual techniques
in the area: Not all illegal configurations can be ruled out by local checks,
so instead we rule out such illegal configurations because they would, in the
future, evolve into a state which can be seen locally to be illegal. Our
construction implies (assuming the quantum Church-Turing thesis and that
quantum computers cannot efficiently solve QMA-complete problems) that there
are one-dimensional systems which take an exponential time to relax to their
ground states at any temperature, making them candidates for being
one-dimensional spin glasses.Comment: 21 pages. v2 has numerous corrections and clarifications, and most
importantly a new author, merged from arXiv:0705.4067. v3 is the published
version, with additional clarifications, publisher's version available at
http://www.springerlink.co
A Comparison of Expert vs. Novice Delivery of STEAM-based Instruction on the Academic Achievement of Kindergarten Students
In an earlier research project (2014-2015) a university in the southcentral US in collaboration with a local Independent School District (ISD) configured a Curriculum Design Team who designed, developed, and reviewed a STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics with integrated arts) based multimodal curriculum. The curriculum was developed on the foundation of social constructivist pedagogical strategies and science and engineering processes and sought to explore the curriculum impact on underserved kindergarten students’ school academic achievement and readiness, inclusive of levels of literacy learning, cognitive development, academic achievement, and consequently, social/behavioral performance. The current comparative, case study examined the effects of the aforementioned STEAM-based integrated hands-on science activities, and on participating underserved kindergarten students’ academic achievement in science content from the context of teacher expertise (expert vs. novice). Two science lessons with the same content were utilized as the reference point for comparison to reveal the science academic achievement of students when delivered by an expert teacher versus a novice teacher. Additionally, the researchers examined how hands-on science activities affected the participating expert and novice teachers’ pedagogical beliefs and practices regarding the inclusion of science in the kindergarten classroom
Sheep Updates 2003 - Husbandry
This session covers seven papers from different authors:1. Setting up a successful, low input feedlot Paul Barrett, ‘Bimberdong’ Jerramungup 2. Effective mineral supplementation of sheep Kevin Bell, Sheep Management and Production Consultants, Kojonup, WA 3. Genetic benchmarking for WA sheep producers J. Greeff, L. Butler, S. Brown, K. Hart and A. Gray Department of Agriculture Western Australia 4. Does selecting sheep for low WEC reduce scouring? John Karlsson, Johan Greeff and Paula Coombe, Department of Agriculture Western Australia 5. Summer quarters for sheep - stubbles Ron McTaggart, Department of Agriculture Western Australia, Albany 6. Thinking about breeding Easy Care Sheep? David Scobie, AgResearch PO Box 60 Lincoln, 8152, New Zealand 7. Increasing lambing percentages and lamb survival Sandy White, Department of Agriculture Western Australia, Jerramungu
Autophagy Is Required for Glucose Homeostasis and Lung Tumor Maintenance
Macroautophagy (autophagy hereafter) recycles intracellular components to sustain mitochondrial metabolism that promotes the growth, stress tolerance, and malignancy of lung cancers, suggesting that autophagy inhibition may have antitumor activity. To assess the functional significance of autophagy in both normal and tumor tissue, we conditionally deleted the essential autophagy gene, autophagy related 7 (Atg7), throughout adult mice. Here, we report that systemic ATG7 ablation caused susceptibility to infection and neurodegeneration that limited survival to 2 to 3 months. Moreover, upon fasting, autophagy-deficient mice suffered fatal hypoglycemia. Prior autophagy ablation did not alter the efficiency of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) initiation by activation of oncogenic KrasG12D and deletion of the Trp53 tumor suppressor. Acute autophagy ablation in mice with preexisting NSCLC, however, blocked tumor growth, promoted tumor cell death, and generated more benign disease (oncocytomas). This antitumor activity occurred before destruction of normal tissues, suggesting that acute autophagy inhibition may be therapeutically beneficial in cancer.
Significance: We systemically ablated cellular self-cannibalization by autophagy in adult mice and determined that it is dispensable for short-term survival, but required to prevent fatal hypoglycemia and cachexia during fasting, delineating a new role for autophagy in metabolism. Importantly, acute, systemic autophagy ablation was selectively destructive to established tumors compared with normal tissues, thereby providing the preclinical evidence that strategies to inhibit autophagy may be therapeutically advantageous for RAS-driven cancers.Val Skinner FoundationNational Institutes of Health (U.S.) (RC1 CA147961)Rutgers Cancer Institute of New JerseyRutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey (P30 CA072720)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (R01 CA163591)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (R37 CA53370)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (R01 CA130893
Expressions 1979
Expressions contains selected work from the 1979 Creative Writing Contest winners and honorable mentions along with Commercial Art students at Des Moines Area Community College. Design, typography and layout was done by Journalism students.https://openspace.dmacc.edu/expressions/1001/thumbnail.jp
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