1,652 research outputs found

    Voices from the Source: Struggles with Local Water Security in Ethiopia

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    This report explores local water security in two different sites in Ethiopia, Shinile and Konso. This issue cannot be reduced to a single diagnostic such as measures of water use or presence of an improved source. The pressures of water security on livelihoods and household-level responses are discussed and local and national government responses are examined

    Accessing information by voice

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    Getting up to date agricultural information to rural farmers has always been a challange, especially in areas with low literacy rates. A system to read out text, available via mobile phone, could help reach many more communitie

    Fine Tuning Mission to reach those influenced by Darwinism

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    The scientifically aware section of the South African population is increasing. Many are being exposed to the concept of Darwinian evolution. Exposure has generated a religious sub �people group� who have problems with Christianity because they have been influenced by the naturalistic element in Darwinian philosophy. Christian antagonism towards evolution has often prejudiced them unfavourably towards the gospel. Recent discoveries concerning the fine-tuning of the universe have now presented a window of opportunity for overcoming this. It may enable the church to �fine-tune� its missionary approach to present them with the gospel in a more acceptable manner. It is suggested that Paul�s Areopagus speech provides a model for such cross-cultural evangelism. A section is included at the end, describing some objections that have been raised against the cosmological fine-tuning apologetic.</p

    Accès vocal à l'information

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    Les paysans des zones rurales, surtout celles où le niveau d'alphabétisation est faible, ont toujours eu du mal à se tenir au courant des dernières évolutions dans leur domaine. Un système de synthèse vocale accessible via le téléphone portable ouvre désormais le monde de l'information à ces communautés

    The effects of corpus size and homogeneity on language model quality

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    Generic speech recognition systems typically use language models that are trained to cope with a broad variety of input. However, many recognition applications are more constrained, often to a specific topic or domain. In cases such as these, a knowledge of the particular topic can be used to advantage. This report describes the development of a number of techniques for augmenting domain-specific language models with data from a more general source. Two investigations are discussed. The first concerns the problem of acquiring a suitable sample of the domain-specific language data from which to train the models. The issue here is essentially one of quality, since it is shown that not all domain-specific corpora are equal. Moreover, they can display significantly different characteristics that affect the quality of any language models built therefrom. These characteristics are defined using a number of statistical measures, and their significance for language modelling is discussed. The second investigation concerns the empirical development and evaluation of a set of language models for the task of email speech-u>-text dictation. The issue here is essentially one of quantity, since it is shown that effective language models can be built from very modestly sized corpora, providing the training data matches the target appfication. Evaluations show that a language model trained on only 2 million words can perform better than one trained on a corpus of over 100 times that size

    Hydro-mechanical processing of brewer's spent grain as a novel route for separation of protein products with differentiated techno-functional properties

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    © 2019 Elsevier Ltd Hydro-mechanical processing using a colloid mill with a large gap setting leads to the preferential breakup of the residual aleurone and endosperm tissues of brewer's spent grain, forming a protein rich fines material with small particle size around 1–10 μm. This fraction can be separated from the coarser husk fraction by centrifugation, giving a protein product with enhanced techno-functional properties. The fines have good stability in aqueous suspensions, with potential for stabilising other particulate materials in food or drink formulations. The fines particles can stabilise oil-water emulsions, possibly through a Pickering mechanism, which may also support use in food applications. Fines suspensions have strong shear-thinning behaviour, which may be beneficial from a textural or transport perspective. Spray drying of fines suspensions is shown to avoid particle coalescence, which is important for effective resuspension on rehydration. The high surface area of the fines also leads to more efficient digestion by proteases. Industrial relevance: A novel hydro-mechanical milling process has been investigated for separation of a protein fine fraction from brewer's spent grain having enhanced techno-functional properties. The small particle size of the fines would be a key attribute for formulation in shake or smoothie products, where sensory attributes of the product would not be compromised and the properties of the fines could confer stability against settling. Applications may be found for the fines material as an ingredient in spreads and sauces or infant purees, in-particular where it might be used to stabilise of products based on oil-water emulsions. The market for protein-rich ingredients for foods and drinks is already established in the fitness and well-being market, as derived from other vegetable or cereal sources such as hemp, pea or rice. This controlled pre-milling step is also shown to lead to greater rate and extent of protease digestion of spent grain, which may be of value for generation of protein and peptide products for well-being and cosmetics applications

    Structural reorganisation of cellulose fibrils in hydrothermally deconstructed lignocellulosic biomass and relationships with enzyme digestibility

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    Background: The investigation of structural organisation in lignocellulose materials is important to understand changes in cellulase accessibility and reactivity resulting from hydrothermal deconstruction, to allow development of strategies to maximise bioethanol process efficiencies. To achieve progress, wheat straw lignocellulose and comparative model wood cellulose were characterised following increasing severity of hydrothermal treatment. Powder and fibre wide-angle X-ray diffraction techniques were employed (WAXD), complemented by enzyme kinetic measurements up to high conversion. Results: Evidence from WAXD indicated that cellulose fibrils are not perfectly crystalline. A reduction in fibril crystallinity occurred due to hydrothermal treatment, although dimensional and orientational data showed that fibril coherency and alignment were largely retained. The hypothetical inter-fibril spacing created by hydrothermal deconstruction of straw was calculated to be insufficient for complete access by cellulases, although total digestion of cellulose in both treated straw and model pulp was observed. Both treated straw and model pulps were subjected to wet mechanical attrition, which caused separation of smaller fibril aggregates and fragments, significantly increasing enzyme hydrolysis rate. No evidence from WAXD measurements was found for preferential hydrolysis of non-crystalline cellulose at intermediate extent of digestion, for both wood pulp and hydrothermally treated straw. Conclusions: The increased efficiency of enzyme digestion of cellulose in the lignocellulosic cell wall following hydrothermal treatment is a consequence of the improved fibril accessibility due to the loss of hemicellulose and disruption of lignin. However, incomplete accessibility of cellulase at the internal surfaces of fibrillar aggregates implies that etching type mechanisms will be important in achieving complete hydrolysis. The reduction in crystalline perfection following hydrothermal treatment may lead to an increase in fibril reactivity, which could amplify the overall improvement in rate of digestion due to accessibility gains. The lack of preferential digestion of non-crystalline cellulose is consistent with the existence of localised conformational disorder, at surfaces and defects, according to proposed semicrystalline fibril models. Cellulases may not interact in a fully selective manner with such disordered environments, so fibril reactivity may be considered as a function of average conformational states

    Development of a Method to Predict the Contaminant Capacities of Low Micron, Woven Stainless Steel Filter Elements

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