12,052 research outputs found

    Science requirements for a global change technology architecture trade study

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    Science requirements for a global change technology initiative (GCTI) Architecture Trade Study were established by reviewing and synthesizing results from recent studies. A scientific rationale was adopted and used to identify a comprehensive set of measureables and their priorities. Spatial and temporal requirements for a number of measurement parameters were evaluated based on results from several working group studies. Science requirements were defined using these study results in conjunction with the guidelines for investigating global changes over a time scale of decades to centuries. Requirements are given separately for global studies and regional process studies. For global studies, temporal requirements are for sampling every 1 to 12 hours for atmospheric and radiation parameters and 1 day or more for most earth surface measurements. Therefore, the atmospheric measureables provide the most critical drivers for temporal sampling. Spatial sampling requirements vary from 1 km for land and ocean surface characteristics to 50 km for some atmospheric parameters. Thus, the land and ocean surface parameters have the more significant spatial variations and provide the most challenging spatial sampling requirements

    Successful restoration of arteriovenous dialysis access patency after late intervention.

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    BACKGROUND: Arteriovenous dialysis access may be lost due to stenosis and thrombosis. Patency may be restored by thrombectomy or thrombolysis, but this is often not undertaken when the presentation is delayed. The success rate of delayed intervention is largely unknown. METHODS: In this single-centre study, we identified all instances of arteriovenous vascular access (VA) failure treated with angioplasty, thrombectomy or thrombolysis between August 2010 and July 2013. Patency rates immediately after intervention, and after 3 months, were assessed using multilevel mixed effects logistic regression. RESULTS: Sixty failures occurred in 41 accesses (38 patients). The access age at failure was 495 (316-888) days. Intervention was carried out after >48 h in 19 failures (32%). Immediate patency was achieved in 46 failures, of which 32 remained patent after 3 months. Delaying intervention increased the likelihood of achieving immediate patency (OR 0.55, 95% CI 0.31-1.0, P = 0.05). Having lost arteriovenous accesses previously increased the risk of immediate failure (OR 4.0, 95% CI 1.07-14.95, P = 0.04). There was no association between failure-to-intervention-time and 3-month patency rates (P = 0.23). Effect estimates did not differ between arteriovenous fistulae and synthetic arteriovenous grafts. CONCLUSION: Delayed intervention for failed arteriovenous VA may result in superior early patency rates and yields equivalent 3-month patency rates.This is the author's accepted version and will be under embargo until 12 months from the date of publication. The final version is available from OUP at http://ckj.oxfordjournals.org/content/8/1/8

    Automatic semigroups

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    AbstractThe area of automatic groups has been one in which significant advances have been made in recent years. While it is clear that the definition of an automatic group can easily be extended to that of an automatic semigroup, there does not seem to have been a systematic investigation of such structures. It is the purpose of this paper to make such a study.We show that certain results from the group-theoretic situation hold in this wider context, such as the solvability of the word problem in quadratic time, although others do not, such as finite presentability. There are also situations which arise in the general theory of semigroups which do not occur when considering groups; for example, we show that a semigroup S is automatic if and only if S with a zero adjoined is automatic, and also that S is automatic if and only if S with an identity adjoined is automatic. We use this last result to show that any finitely generated subsemigroup of a free semigroup is automatic

    Evaluation of Potential Attractants for Six Species of Stored- Product Psocids (Psocoptera: Liposcelididae, Trogiidae)

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    Psocids have emerged as worldwide pests of stored commodities during the past two decades, and are difficult to control with conventional management tactics such as chemical insecticides. Therefore, it is necessary to investigate alternative management strategies, such as the use of attractants for monitoring and controlling psocids, which can be incorporated into integrated pest management programs for psocids. Using a two-choice pitfall test, we studied the response of adults of different ages and sexes of Liposcelis entomophila (Enderlein) (Psocoptera: Liposcelididae), Liposcelis paeta Pearman, Liposcelis decolor (Pearman), Liposcelis brunnea Motschulsky, Liposcelis corrodens (Heymons), and Lepinotus reticulatus Enderlein (Psocoptera: Trogiidae) to volatiles from different potential attractants including grains, grain-based oils, brewer’s yeast, wheat germ, and commercially available kairomone lures. For all species tested, sex and age did not have a major influence on response to the different potential attractants. Brewer’s yeast most consistently elicited the strongest response for psocids, but this response frequently was not different from that to wheat germ and wheat germ oil. The percentage response to brewer’s yeast varied among the psocid species tested: L. decolor (73–78%), L. entomophila (62–73%), L. brunnea (64–68%), L. paeta (42–57%), Lep. reticulatus (40%), and L. corrodens (15–19%). Two psocids species (L. corrodens and Lep. reticulatus) had low responses to all the potential attractants evaluated compared with the other four species. These results show there is high potential for using these attractants in a psocid-monitoring program. En las ultimas dos decadas los psocidos han emergido como plagas cosmopolitas. Los pso - cidos son difıciles de controlar con metodos convencionales de control como los insecticidas quımicos. Por lo tanto, es necesario investigar estrategias de manejo alternativas, como el uso de atrayentes para monitorear y/o controlar pso cidos, que puedan ser incorporadas a un programa de manejo integrado de plagas (MIP) para psocidos. Por medio de experimentos de libre seleccion, se estudio la respuesta de adultos (diferentes edades y sexos) de Liposcelis entomophila (Enderlein) (Psocoptera: Liposcelididae), Liposcelis paeta Pearman, Liposcelis decolor (Pearman), Liposcelis brunnea Motschulsky, Liposcelis corrodens (Heymons), y Lepinotus reticulatus Enderlein (Psocoptera: Trogiidae) a volatiles de diferentes atrayentes potenciales que incluyeron granos, aceites de diferentes granos, levadura de cerveza, germen de trigo y cebos con kairomonas disponibles comercialmente. En todas las especies evaluadas, el sexo y la edad no tuvieron una mayor influencia en la respuesta a los diferentes atrayentes potenciales. La levadura de cerveza fue el material que consistentemente provoco la respuesta mas fuerte por parte de las especies de psocidos evaluadas, pero en general esta respuesta no fue diferente a la de el germen de trigo y el aceite de germen de trigo. El porcentaje de respuesta a la levadura de cerveza vario entre las especies de psocidos evaluadas: L. decolor (73–78%), L. entomophila (62–73%), L. brunnea (64–68%), L. paeta (42–57%), Lep. reticulatus (40%), y L. corrodens (15–19%). Dos species de psocidos (L. corrodens y Lep. reticulatus) tuvieron baja respuesta a los diferentes atrayentes potenciales evaluados comparados con las otras cuatro especies. Estos resultados indican un alto potencial para incorporar estos atrayentes a un programa de monitoreo de psocidos

    Damage spreading in random field systems

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    We investigate how a quenched random field influences the damage spreading transition in kinetic Ising models. To this end we generalize a recent master equation approach and derive an effective field theory for damage spreading in random field systems. This theory is applied to the Glauber Ising model with a bimodal random field distribution. We find that the random field influences the spreading transition by two different mechanisms with opposite effects. First, the random field favors the same particular direction of the spin variable at each site in both systems which reduces the damage. Second, the random field suppresses the magnetization which, in turn, tends to increase the damage. The competition between these two effects leads to a rich behavior.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX, 3 eps figure
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