428 research outputs found
Modeling the Human Kinetic Adjustment Factor for Inhaled Volatile Organic Chemicals: Whole Population Approach versus Distinct Subpopulation Approach
The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of whole- and sub-population-related variabilities on the determination of the human kinetic adjustment factor (HKAF) used in risk assessment of inhaled volatile organic chemicals (VOCs). Monte Carlo simulations were applied to a steady-state algorithm to generate population distributions for blood concentrations (CAss) and rates of metabolism (RAMs) for inhalation exposures to benzene (BZ) and 1,4-dioxane (1,4-D). The simulated population consisted of various proportions of adults, elderly, children, neonates and pregnant women as per the Canadian demography. Subgroup-specific input parameters were obtained from the literature and P3M software. Under the âwhole populationâ approach, the HKAF was computed as the ratio of the entire population's upper percentile value (99th, 95th) of dose metrics to the median value in either the entire population or the adult population. Under the âdistinct subpopulationâ approach, the upper percentile values in each subpopulation were considered, and the greatest resulting HKAF was retained. CAss-based HKAFs that considered the Canadian demography varied between 1.2 (BZ) and 2.8 (1,4-D). The âdistinct subpopulationâ CAss-based HKAF varied between 1.6 (BZ) and 8.5 (1,4-D). RAM-based HKAFs always remained below 1.6. Overall, this study evaluated for the first time the impact of underlying assumptions with respect to the interindividual variability considered (whole population or each subpopulation taken separately) when determining the HKAF
Modeling the Human Kinetic Adjustment Factor for Inhaled Volatile Organic Chemicals: Whole Population Approach versus Distinct Subpopulation Approach
The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of whole-and sub-population-related variabilities on the determination of the human kinetic adjustment factor (HKAF) used in risk assessment of inhaled volatile organic chemicals (VOCs). Monte Carlo simulations were applied to a steady-state algorithm to generate population distributions for blood concentrations (CAss) and rates of metabolism (RAMs) for inhalation exposures to benzene (BZ) and 1,4-dioxane (1,4-D). The simulated population consisted of various proportions of adults, elderly, children, neonates and pregnant women as per the Canadian demography. Subgroupspecific input parameters were obtained from the literature and P3M software. Under the "whole population" approach, the HKAF was computed as the ratio of the entire population's upper percentile value (99th, 95th) of dose metrics to the median value in either the entire population or the adult population. Under the "distinct subpopulation" approach, the upper percentile values in each subpopulation were considered, and the greatest resulting HKAF was retained. CAss-based HKAFs that considered the Canadian demography varied between 1.2 (BZ) and 2.8 (1,4-D). The "distinct subpopulation" CAss-based HKAF varied between 1.6 (BZ) and 8.5 (1,4-D). RAM-based HKAFs always remained below 1.6. Overall, this study evaluated for the first time the impact of underlying assumptions with respect to the interindividual variability considered (whole population or each subpopulation taken separately) when determining the HKAF
Quantifying the Effect of the Drake Passage Opening on the Eocene Ocean
The opening of the Drake Passage (DP) during the Cenozoic is a tectonic event of paramount importance for the development of modern ocean characteristics. Notably, it has been suggested that it exerts a primary role in the onset of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) formation, in the cooling of high- latitude South Atlantic waters and in the initiation of North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) formation. Several model studies have aimed to assess the impacts of DP opening on climate, but most of them focused on surface climate, and only few used realistic Eocene boundary conditions. Here, we revisit the impact of the DP opening on ocean circulation with the IPSL- CM5A2 Earth System Model. Using appropriate middle Eocene (40Ă Ma) boundary conditions, we perform and analyze simulations with different depths of the DP (0, 100, 1,000, and 2,500Ă m) and compare results to existing geochemical data. Our experiments show that DP opening has a strong effect on Eocene ocean structure and dynamics even for shallow depths. The DP opening notably allows the formation of a proto- ACC and induces deep ocean cooling of 1.5Ă°C to 2.5Ă°C in most of the Southern Hemisphere. There is no NADW formation in our simulations regardless of the depth of the DP, suggesting that the DP on its own is not a primary control of deepwater formation in the North Atlantic. This study elucidates how and to what extent the opening of the DP contributed to the establishment of the modern global thermohaline circulation.Key PointsA shallow opening of the Drake Passage induces strong changes in ocean properties and dynamicsA proto- ACC is able to form during the Eocene under high levels of pCO2, but a strong ACC requires supplementary geographical changesNorth Atlantic Deep Water is probably not able to form before the separation of the Arctic and Atlantic OceansPeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156423/3/palo20904-sup-0001-2020PA003889-SI.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156423/2/palo20904.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/156423/1/palo20904_am.pd
Leadership and decision-making practices in public versus private universities in Pakistan
The goal of this study is to examine differences in leadership and decision-making practices in public and private universities in Pakistan, with a focus on transformational leadership (TL) and participative decision-making (PDM). We conducted semi-structured interviews with 46 deans and heads of department from two public and two private universities in Pakistan. Our findings indicate that leadership and decision-making practices are different in public and private universities. While differences were observed in all six types of TL-behaviour, the following three approaches emerged to be crucial in both public and private universities: (1) articulating a vision, (2) fostering the acceptance of group goals, and (3) high-performance expectations. In terms of PDM, deans and heads of department in public and private universities adopt a collaborative approach. However, on a practical level this approach is limited to teacher- and student-related matters. Overall, our findings suggest that the leadership and decision-making practices in Pakistani public and private universities are transformational and participative in nature
Didactical use of a remote lab: a qualitative reflection of a teacher
This work describes the teacher reflections about a didactical
implementation using a remote laboratory and their impact on his
practice. These reflections are analyzed from three different
perspectives: how the literature review influenced the design of
the didactical implementation (namely the first); how his
reflection upon his practice influenced its modifications; how his
research activity impacted and affected his teaching practices in
the subsequent implementations and guided the modifications
made. The remote lab was introduced in a Physics Course in an
Engineering degree and was intended to be a learning space where
students had the opportunity to practice before the lab class,
supporting the development of experimental competences,
fundamental in an engineer profile. After the first implementation
in 2016/17 academic year it has undergone two subsequent
editions with adjustments and modifications.
Some features previously reported in literature such as: teacherâs
experience with VISIR, the importance of an introductory activity
and defining VISIR tasks objectives, were corroborated by the
teacher during his practice and research. Others, such as the
difficulty some students have in understanding the difference
between simulation and remote labs appeared directly from his
practice and were pursued in his research in order to deeply
understand its implications
Recommended from our members
The METAFOR project: preserving data through metadata standards for climate models and simulations
Climate modeling is a complex process, requiring accurate and complete metadata in order to identify, assess and use climate data stored in digital repositories. The preservation of such data is increasingly important given the development of ever-increasingly complex models to predict the effects of global climate change.
The EU METAFOR project has developed a Common
Information Model (CIM) to describe climate data and the models and modelling environments that produce this data. There is a wide degree of variability between different climate models and modelling groups. To accommodate this, the CIM has been designed to be highly generic and flexible, with extensibility built in. METAFOR describes the climate modelling process simply as "an activity undertaken using software on computers to produce data." This process has been described as separate UML packages (and, ultimately, XML schemas). This fairly generic structure canbe paired with more specific "controlled vocabularies" in order to
restrict the range of valid CIM instances.
The CIM will aid digital preservation of climate models as it will provide an accepted standard structure for the model metadata.
Tools to write and manage CIM instances, and to allow
convenient and powerful searches of CIM databases,. Are also
under development. Community buy-in of the CIM has been
achieved through a continual process of consultation with the climate modelling community, and through the METAFOR teamâs development of a questionnaire that will be used to collect the metadata for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Changeâs (IPCC) Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) model runs
Development and exploitation of a controlled vocabulary in support of climate modelling
There are three key components for developing a metadata system: a container structure laying out the key semantic issues of interest and their relationships; an extensible controlled vocabulary providing possible content; and tools to create and manipulate that content. While metadata systems must allow users to enter their own information, the use of a controlled vocabulary both imposes consistency of definition and ensures comparability of the objects described. Here we describe the controlled vocabulary (CV) and metadata creation tool built by the METAFOR project for use in the context of describing the climate models, simulations and experiments of the fifth Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5). The CV and resulting tool chain introduced here is designed for extensibility and reuse and should find applicability in many more projects
The Herschel Virgo Cluster Survey: VII. Dust in cluster dwarf elliptical galaxies
We use the Science Demonstration Phase data of the Herschel Virgo Cluster
Survey to search for dust emission of early-type dwarf galaxies in the central
regions of the Virgo Cluster as an alternative way of identifying the
interstellar medium.We present the first possible far-infrared detection of
cluster early-type dwarf galaxies: VCC781 and VCC951 are detected at the 10
sigma level in the SPIRE 250 micron image. Both detected galaxies have dust
masses of the order of 10^5 Msun and average dust temperatures ~20K. The
detection rate (less than 1%) is quite high compared to the 1.7% detection rate
for Hi emission, considering that dwarfs in the central regions are more Hi
deficient. We conclude that the removal of interstellar dust from dwarf
galaxies resulting from ram pressure stripping, harassment, or tidal effects
must be as efficient as the removal of interstellar gas.Comment: Letter accepted for publication in A&A (Herschel special issue
Recommended from our members
Mediterranean Sea response to climate change in an ensemble of twenty first century scenarios
The Mediterranean climate is expected to become warmer and drier during the twenty-first century. Mediterranean Sea response to climate change could be modulated by the choice of the socio-economic scenario as well as the choice of the boundary conditions mainly the Atlantic hydrography, the river runoff and the atmospheric fluxes. To assess and quantify the sensitivity of the Mediterranean Sea to the twenty-first century climate change, a set of numerical experiments was carried out with the regional ocean model NEMOMED8 set up for the Mediterranean Sea. The model is forced by airâsea fluxes derived from the regional climate model ARPEGE-Climate at a 50-km horizontal resolution. Historical simulations representing the climate of the period 1961â2000 were run to obtain a reference state. From this baseline, various sensitivity experiments were performed for the period 2001â2099, following different socio-economic scenarios based on the Special Report on Emissions Scenarios. For the A2 scenario, the main three boundary forcings (river runoff, near-Atlantic water hydrography and airâsea fluxes) were changed one by one to better identify the role of each forcing in the way the ocean responds to climate change. In two additional simulations (A1B, B1), the scenario is changed, allowing to quantify the socio-economic uncertainty. Our 6-member scenario simulations display a warming and saltening of the Mediterranean. For the 2070â2099 period compared to 1961â1990, the sea surface temperature anomalies range from +1.73 to +2.97 °C and the SSS anomalies spread from +0.48 to +0.89. In most of the cases, we found that the future Mediterranean thermohaline circulation (MTHC) tends to reach a situation similar to the eastern Mediterranean Transient. However, this response is varying depending on the chosen boundary conditions and socio-economic scenarios. Our numerical experiments suggest that the choice of the near-Atlantic surface water evolution, which is very uncertain in General Circulation Models, has the largest impact on the evolution of the Mediterranean water masses, followed by the choice of the socio-economic scenario. The choice of river runoff and atmospheric forcing both have a smaller impact. The state of the MTHC during the historical period is found to have a large influence on the transfer of surface anomalies toward depth. Besides, subsurface currents are substantially modified in the Ionian Sea and the Balearic region. Finally, the response of thermosteric sea level ranges from +34 to +49 cm (2070â2099 vs. 1961â1990), mainly depending on the Atlantic forcing
- âŠ