5,921 research outputs found
The state of Florida's estuaries and future needs in estuarine research: Part 2. an academic research agenda (review draft)
As a program supporting academic research that addresses recognized societal needs, the
Florida Sea Grant Program is developing a research theme area on estuaries to provide a uniquely academic product that will augment mission-oriented research undertaken by government and by
the private sector. This report is not a call for proposals. It does not prescribe a specific research
plan. Rather, it is a concept paper designed to focus research on two broad "organizing themes":
(1) the hydrology of Florida's estuaries, and (2) the impact of cyclic environmental variability on
estuarine function. (46pp.
Applying Domain Knowledge from Structured Citation Formats to Text and Data Mining: Examples Using the CITE Architecture
Domain knowledge expressed in structured citation formats can be exploited in data mining. We propose four structural properties of canonically cited texts, then look at to two classic problems in the study of the scholia, or ancient scholarly commentary, found in the manuscripts of the Iliad. We cluster citations of scholia to analyze their distribution in different manuscripts; this leads to a revised view of how the manuscripts\u27 scribes drew on their source material. Correlated frequencies of named entities suggest that one group of manuscripts had access to material more closely based on the work of the greatest Hellenistic editor of Homer, Aristarchus of Samothrace
An Extensive Collection of Stellar Wind X-ray Source Region Emission Line Parameters,Temperatures, Velocities, and Their Radial Distributions as Obtained from Chandra Observations of 17 OB Stars
Chandra high energy resolution observations have now been obtained from
numerous non-peculiar O and early B stars. The observed X-ray emission line
properties differ from pre-launch predictions, and the interpretations are
still problematic. We present a straightforward analysis of a broad collection
of OB stellar line profile data to search for morphological trends. X-ray line
emission parameters and the spatial distributions of derived quantities are
examined with respect to luminosity class. The X-ray source locations and their
corresponding temperatures are extracted by using the He-like f/i line ratios
and the H-like to He-like line ratios respectively. Our luminosity class study
reveals line widths increasing with luminosity. Although the majority of the OB
emission lines are found to be symmetric, with little central line
displacement, there is evidence for small, but finite, blue-ward line-shifts
that also increase with luminosity. The spatial X-ray temperature distributions
indicate that the highest temperatures occur near the star and steadily
decrease outward. This trend is most pronounced in the OB supergiants. For the
lower density wind stars, both high and low X-ray source temperatures exist
near the star. However, we find no evidence of any high temperature X-ray
emission in the outer wind regions for any OB star. Since the temperature
distributions are counter to basic shock model predictions, we call this the
"near-star high-ion problem" for OB stars. By invoking the traditional OB
stellar mass loss rates, we find a good correlation between the fir-inferred
radii and their associated X-ray continuum optical depth unity radii. We
conclude by presenting some possible explanations to the X-ray source problems
that have been revealed by this study.Comment: Published in 2007, ApJ, 668, 456. An Erratum scheduled for
publication in 2008, ApJ, 680, is included as an Appendix. The Erratum
corrects some tabulated data in 5 tables and 2 figure
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Grindr Users Take More Risks, but Are More Open to Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Pre-exposure Prophylaxis: Could This Dating App Provide a Platform for HIV Prevention Outreach?
BackgroundTechnology has changed the way that men who have sex with men (MSM) seek sex. More than 60% of MSM in the United States use the internet and/or smartphone-based geospatial networking apps to find sex partners. We correlated use of the most popular app (Grindr) with sexual risk and prevention behavior among MSM.MethodsA nested cohort study was conducted between September 2018 and June 2019 among MSM receiving community-based human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and sexually transmitted infection (STI) screening in central San Diego. During the testing encounter, participants were surveyed for demographics, substance use, risk behavior (previous 3 months), HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) use, and Grindr usage. Participants who tested negative for HIV and who were not on PrEP were offered immediate PrEP.ResultsThe study included 1256 MSM, 1090 of whom (86.8%) were not taking PrEP. Overall, 580 of 1256 (46%) participants indicated that they used Grindr in the previous 7 days. Grindr users reported significantly higher risk behavior (greater number of male partners and condomless sex) and were more likely to test positive for chlamydia or gonorrhea (8.6% vs 4.7% of nonusers; P = .005). Grindr users were also more likely to be on PrEP (18.7% vs 8.7% of nonusers; P < .001) and had fewer newly diagnosed HIV infections (9 vs 26 among nonusers; P = .014). Grindr users were also nearly twice as likely as nonusers to initiate PrEP (24.6% vs 14%; P < .001).ConclusionsGiven the higher risk behavior and greater acceptance of PrEP among MSM who used Grindr, Grindr may provide a useful platform to promote HIV and STI testing and increase PrEP uptake
A note on cluster methods for strongly correlated electron systems
We develop, clarify and test various aspects of cluster methods dynamical
mean field methods using a soluble toy model as a benchmark. We find that the
Cellular Dynamical Mean Field Theory (C-DMFT) converges very rapidly and
compare its convergence properties with those of the Dynamical Cluster
Approximation (DCA). We propose and test improved estimators for the lattice
self energy within C-DMFT.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; major change
Report on the findings of the 2005-2006 Australian National e-Procurement Survey
The report presents the key results and findings of the 2005-2006 Australian National e-Procurement Survey.The aim of the 2005-2006 survey is to build on the findings of the 2004 survey and establish the nature, extent and adoption profile of e-procurement strategies and processes within Australian organisations. It seeks to identify e-procurement adoption patterns by activities, product types and technologies.The Australian Research Council (Grant No. LP0214841
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