1,202 research outputs found
Can geocomputation save urban simulation? Throw some agents into the mixture, simmer and wait ...
There are indications that the current generation of simulation models in practical,
operational uses has reached the limits of its usefulness under existing specifications.
The relative stasis in operational urban modeling contrasts with simulation efforts in
other disciplines, where techniques, theories, and ideas drawn from computation and
complexity studies are revitalizing the ways in which we conceptualize, understand,
and model real-world phenomena. Many of these concepts and methodologies are
applicable to operational urban systems simulation. Indeed, in many cases, ideas from
computation and complexity studies—often clustered under the collective term of
geocomputation, as they apply to geography—are ideally suited to the simulation of
urban dynamics. However, there exist several obstructions to their successful use in
operational urban geographic simulation, particularly as regards the capacity of these
methodologies to handle top-down dynamics in urban systems.
This paper presents a framework for developing a hybrid model for urban geographic
simulation and discusses some of the imposing barriers against innovation in this
field. The framework infuses approaches derived from geocomputation and
complexity with standard techniques that have been tried and tested in operational
land-use and transport simulation. Macro-scale dynamics that operate from the topdown
are handled by traditional land-use and transport models, while micro-scale
dynamics that work from the bottom-up are delegated to agent-based models and
cellular automata. The two methodologies are fused in a modular fashion using a
system of feedback mechanisms. As a proof-of-concept exercise, a micro-model of
residential location has been developed with a view to hybridization. The model
mixes cellular automata and multi-agent approaches and is formulated so as to
interface with meso-models at a higher scale
A new species of Pseudochalcura (Hymenoptera, Eucharitidae), with a review of antennal morphology from a phylogenetic perspective
Pseudochalcura alba Heraty & Heraty, sp. n. is described from Santiago del Estero and Catamarca provinces in northwestern Argentina. The male and female have long dorsal rami on all of the flagellomeres basal to the terminal segment, which is a unique feature within the genus and shared only with some species of Rhipipalloidea. Antennal modifications are compared across the Stilbula clade, of which all are parasitoids of Camponotini (Formicinae). A phylogenetic hypothesis for the group is proposed based on an analysis of 28S and 18S sequence data for 28 species. Ramose antennae are derived independently in both males and females across the clade, but with fully ramose female antennae restricted to the New World prolata group of Pseudochalcura and to some species of the Old World genus Rhipipalloidea. A sister group relationship between these genera is proposed based on both morphological and molecular data. Female antennae in other species of these genera, and other genera in the clade are at most dorsally lobate or serrate, but more commonly cylindrical. Monophyly of species of Obeza and Lophyrocera is supported and linked to a behavioral trait of ovi-position into fruits as opposed to flower heads or leaf buds. Within the Stilbula clade, a dichotomy between New and Old World taxa suggest relatively recent post-Miocene exchanges across the Northern Hemisphere.Fil: Heraty, John Michael. University of California; Estados UnidosFil: Heraty, Joanne M.. University of California; Estados UnidosFil: Torrens, Javier. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Regional de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia Tecnológica de La Rioja. - Universidad Nacional de La Rioja. Centro Regional de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia Tecnológica de La Rioja. - Universidad Nacional de Catamarca. Centro Regional de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia Tecnológica de La Rioja. - Secretaría de Industria y Minería. Servicio Geológico Minero Argentino. Centro Regional de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia Tecnológica de La Rioja. - Provincia de La Rioja. Centro Regional de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia Tecnológica de La Rioja; Argentin
Palladium and Platinum Complexes of Bis(alkylthio)alkanes
Novel bis (alkylthio )alkanes containing fluorinated substituents in either the sulphur atoms or the bridge have been prepared by metathetical or photochemical reactions e. g. CF3S- + CH3SCH2CH2Br --> CH3SCH2CH2SCF3 + Br- 2CH3SH + CF3C=CH -hv→ CH3CH(CF3)CH2SCH3 Photolytic reactions of CH3SSCH3 and CH3SH are considered to proceed via CH3S. radicals. Interaction of fluorinated bis (alkylthio )alkanes with [PdCl4]2-or [PtCl4]2- afforded 44 new complexes with the general formula (RSR'Sr'')MX2, where R and R'' - CH3, CF3, C6F5; R' = CH2CH2, CH(CH3) CH(CH3) CF2CH2,CH(CF3)CH(CF3), CH(CF3)CH2; M- Pd, Pt and X= Cl, Br, I; but not all combinations were obtained. Ligands containing both hydrocarbon and fluorocarbon sulphur substituents, e. g. CH3SC2H4SCF3, form 1:1 and 2:1 complexes acting as bidentate or monodentate ligands respectively. In the last case only the CH3S grouping is coordinated and both cis and trans isomers were obtained. No reaction was found to take place between fluorinated sulphides, e. g. CH3SCF3, and either palladium(II) or platinum(II) salts. Differences in the observed chemical reactions of hydrocarbon and fluorocarbon sulphides and dithioethers towards Pd(II) and Pt(II) are discussed in relation to the sulphur-metal bond. X-ray studies of (CF3SCH(CH3) CH2SCF3)PtCl2 have shown that sulphur-platinum bond lengths are slightly shorter than in cis ((p-C6H4Cl)2S)2PtCl2, the most directly comparable structure known. The results have also revealed strong non bonded sulphur-chlorine interactions between pairs of centrosymmetrically related molecules. In solution, all five membered chelate ring complexes exhibit isomerism due to inversion of configuration at sulphur. The total number of stereoisomers depends also on the substituents in the bridge. Thus for compound containing BSCH2CH2SR, RSCH(R)CH2SR and RSCH(R)CH(R)SR ligands, 2, 4 and 6 isomers are possible. N. m. r. spectra of the anti isomers of compounds containing bis (perfluoro-alkylthio)alkanes e. g. (CF3SC2H4SCF3)PtCl2 show fluorine-fluorine coupling between fluorine atoms in different sulphur substituents. This coupling is rationalized in terms of a 'through space' mechanism. N. m. r. spectra of (CF3SC2H4SCF3)PtClBr confirm the proposed structural assignment. The isomeric structure of most platinum compounds have also been tentatively assigned based on n. m. r. parameters. The effect of variable concentration in the bromine substitution reaction involving (CH3SCF3)PtCl2 has been monitored by n. m. r. spectroscopy. Substitution takes place, preferentially trans to the CF3S grouping. Viariable temperature n. m. r. of (CF3SC2H4SCF3)PtCl2 shows that the coalescence temperature of this compound is higher than that found for the corresponding hydrocarbon analogue, probably due to the higher electronegativity and larger mass of the fluorinated substituents. Dynamic n. m. r. studies of (CH3SCH(CF3)CH(CF3)SCH3)PtI2 found two different intramolecular processes: at 183 K the bridge carbon-carbon bond rotation is sufficiently slow to detect the individual resonances arising from two diastereoisomers of a syn isomer. At high temperature the coalescence of resonances arising from anti and syn structures is discussed in terms of sulphur inversion taking place preferentially at single sulphur atoms. Platinum chemical shifts determined for several complexes have been found to be dependent on both the ligands present and the structure of the compounds. The values of d195 Pt for different halide complexes seem to follow additive rules. Values of platinum chemical shift for different stereoisomers of a given complex are qualitatively discussed in terms of intramolecular magnetic fields. Brief studies of reduction and ligand substitution reactions e. g. bis(cyclo-octa-1,5-diene)platinum(0) + CF3SC2H4SCF3, were carried out in an attempt to obtain zerovalent platinum complexes with sulphur containing ligands
Andrea Pearson, Envisioning Gender in Burgundian Devotional Art, 1350-1530: Experience, Authority, Resistance. Women and Gender in the Early Modern World. Ashgate, 2005
Description of the species of Dicoelothorax Ashmead (Chalcidoidea, Eucharitidae) and biology of D. platycerus Ashmead
Descriptions of the adults of the two species of Dicoelothorax Ashmead, Dicoelothorax parviceps and Dicoelothorax platycerus, and the eggs, planidia and pupae of Dicoelothorax platycerus Ashmead are provided. Females of Dicoelothorax platycerus deposit their eggs on the underside of leaves of Pseudabutilon virgatum (Cav.) Fryxell (Malvaceae). The host of Dicoelothorax platycerus is Ectatomma brunneum Smith (Formicidae: Ectatomminae).Fil: Torrens, Javier. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Regional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Transferencia Tecnológica de Anillaco; ArgentinaFil: Heraty, John M.. University of California; Estados Unido
Andrea Pearson, Envisioning Gender in Burgundian Devotional Art, 1350-1530: Experience, Authority, Resistance. Women and Gender in the Early Modern World. Ashgate, 2005
A Legacy of Resistance: The Case of the Freckenhorst Baptismal Font
Since 1823 the consecration date of 1129 for the Church of St. Boniface, inscribed on the Freckenhorst baptismal font from the imperial convent of St. Boniface (Westphalia, Germany), has continued to be considered, by some, the date for when the font was carved. For over two hundred years this precocious date has divided academic communities, despite the numerous and comprehensive counter arguments asserting that the font is a later twelfth century if not early thirteenth century vessel. This raises the question, “Why has there been such resistance to recognize this vessel as a later product of the prolific Westphalian stone industry?” This article reviews the historiography to uncover the roots of the ‘sanctified status’ that the Freckenhorst font acquired over the centuries from the post-Imperial period of Germany through the two World Wars. The literature reveals not only why the Freckenhorst font came to symbolize ‘Germanic ingenuity’ for German art historians but also the challenges and changes within the evolving discipline of art history and the scholarly networks that connected art historians in the first half of the twentieth century
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