1,787 research outputs found
Prepared to Pivot: Creating a Resilient Basic Course Program
The rapid transition to emergency remote teaching due to COVID-19 provides many lessons for how BCDs can design resilient basic course programs that will be prepared to adapt in any number of potential future emergencies. BCDs can design resilient courses by pre-planning how courses will maintain instructional continuity, pre-loading pivoting options into learning management systems, and adopting online texts that are accessible anywhere. BCDs can also build instructor resilience by providing high-quality training and providing continued support for instructor well-being
Advanced crew procedures development techniques
The development of an operational computer program, the Procedures and Performance Program (PPP), is reported which provides a procedures recording and crew/vehicle performance monitoring capability. The PPP provides real time CRT displays and postrun hardcopy of procedures, difference procedures, performance, performance evaluation, and training script/training status data. During post-run, the program is designed to support evaluation through the reconstruction of displays to any point in time. A permanent record of the simulation exercise can be obtained via hardcopy output of the display data, and via magnetic tape transfer to the Generalized Documentation Processor (GDP). Reference procedures data may be transferred from the GDP to the PPP
Genetic consequences of artificial selection on amino acid synthesis: Cysteine synthase and chorismate mutase
Abstract only availableFaculty Mentor: Michael D. McMullen, AgronomyGenetic diversity is crucial for progress in plant breeding as well as for adaptation to future
environmental challenges. Maize is the most genetically diverse crop species. Maize was
domesticated from teosinte about 7,500 years ago. Both domestication and crop improvement
involved selection of specific alleles at genes controlling key morphological and agronomic traits,
resulting in reduced genetic diversity relative to unselected genes. The McMullen Laboratory is
interested in the genetic consequences of selection on genes of agronomic importance. Prior
research by the Laboratory has identified a series of selected genes, including two key genes for the
synthesis of amino acids, cysteine synthase and chorismate mutase. One approach to define the
importance of a gene is to isolate a mutation and examine the resulting phenotype. A Mutator
insertion was isolated in the cysteine synthase gene. An F2 population segregating for an albino
phenotype and the Mutator insertion was genotyped by PCR to determine if the insertion was casual
for the phenotype. The albino phenotype was found to be closely linked, but distinct from the
insertion site leading to the conclusion that the albino phenotype is caused by a second linked
mutation. The chorismate mutase gene in maize shows strong evidence of selection, with high
diversity in teosinte accessions and essentially no diversity among inbred lines. Did the selection
that reduced the diversity in this gene occur at domestication or during subsequent plant breeding?
To answer this question, three segments of the chorismate mutase gene were sequenced in a panel
of 14 landraces, the historical intermediate between teosinte and inbreds. Four landraces contained
numerous polymorphism not found in inbreds, indicating that much of the selection occurred during
recent crop improvement. This result is significant as it indicates genetic diversity can be
reintroduced into selected amino acid genes by crosses with landraces
Whitewater Sound Dependence on Discharge and Wave Configuration at an Adjustable Wave Feature
Stream acoustics has been proposed as a means of monitoring discharge and wave hazards from outside the stream channel. To better understand the dependence of sound on discharge and wave characteristics, this study analyzes discharge and infrasound data from an artificial wave feature which is adjusted to accommodate daily changes in recreational use and seasonal changes in irrigation demand. Monitorable sound is only observed when discharge exceeds ∼35 m3/s, and even above that threshold the sound-discharge relationship is non-linear and inconsistent. When sound is observed, it shows consistent dependence on wave type within a given year, but the direction of this dependence varies among the 3 years studied (2016, 2021, and 2022). These findings support previous research that establishes discharge and stream morphology as relevant controls on stream acoustics and highlights the complex, combined effects of these variables
Enhancing Scholarly Publications: Developing Hybrid Monographs in the Humanities and Social Sciences
Enhancing publications has a long history but is gaining acceleration as authors and publishers explore electronic tablets as devices for dissemination and presentation. Enhancement of scholarly publications, in contrast, more often takes place in a Web environment and is coupled with presentation of supplementary materials related to research. The approach to enhancing scholarly publications presented in this article goes a step further and involves the interlinking of the “objects” of a document: datasets, supplementary materials, secondary analyses, and post-publication interventions. This approach connects the user-centricity of Web 2.0 with the Semantic Web. It aims at facilitating long-term content structure through standardized formats intended to improve interoperability between concepts and terms within and across knowledge domains. We explored this conception of enhancement on a small set of books prepared for traditional academic publishers. While the project was primarily an exercise in development, the conclusion section of the article reflects on areas where conceptual and empirical studies could be initiated to complement this new direction in scholarly publishing.FSW - CWTS - Ou
Spectroscopic Observations of New Oort Cloud Comet 2006 VZ13 and Four Other Comets
Spectral data are presented for comets 2006 VZ13 (LINEAR), 2006 K4 (NEAT),
2006 OF2 (Broughton), 2P/Encke, and 93P/Lovas I, obtained with the Cerro-Tololo
Inter-American Observatory 1.5-m telescope in August 2007. Comet 2006 VZ13 is a
new Oort cloud comet and shows strong lines of CN (3880 angstroms), the Swan
band sequence for C_2 (4740, 5160, and 5630 angstroms), C_3 (4056 angstroms),
and other faint species. Lines are also identified in the spectra of the other
comets. Flux measurements of the CN, C_2 (Delta v = +1,0), and C_3 lines are
recorded for each comet and production rates and ratios are derived. When
considering the comets as a group, there is a correlation of C_2 and C_3
production with CN, but there is no conclusive evidence that the production
rate ratios depend on heliocentric distance. The continuum is also measured,
and the dust production and dust-to-gas ratios are calculated. There is a
general trend, for the group of comets, between the dust-to-gas ratio and
heliocentric distance, but it does not depend on dynamical age or class. Comet
2006 VZ13 is determined to be in the carbon-depleted (or Tempel 1 type) class.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 6 tables; Accepted by MNRA
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