2,947 research outputs found
High-resolution N-body Simulations of Galactic Cannibalism: The Magellanic Stream
Hierarchical clustering represents the favoured paradigm for galaxy formation
throughout the Universe; due to its proximity, the Magellanic system offers one
of the few opportunities for astrophysicists to decompose the full
six-dimensional phase-space history of a satellite in the midst of being
cannibalised by its host galaxy. The availability of improved observational
data for the Magellanic Stream and parallel advances in computational power has
led us to revisit the canonical tidal model describing the disruption of the
Small Magellanic Cloud and the consequent formation of the Stream. We suggest
improvements to the tidal model in light of these recent advances.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, LaTeX (gcdv.sty). Refereed contribution to the
5th Galactic Chemodynamics conference held in Swinburne, July 2003. Accepted
for publication in PASA. Version with high resolution figures available at
http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/staff/tconnors/publications.htm
Uneconomical Diagnosis of Cladograms: Comments on Wheeler and Nixon's Method for Sankoff Optimization
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/74972/1/j.1096-0031.1997.tb00249.x.pd
Transnational Medical and Nursing Education : An exploration of its impact on Bahraini females
This thesis explores the impact of the phenomenon of transnational medical and nursing education on the lifeworlds of a small group of Bahraini female medicine and nursing graduates in Bahrain as they ‘became’ Irish qualified doctors and nurses ‘at home’ in the Middle East. A regional hub of transnational medical and nursing education was created in the tiny Kingdom of Bahrain ten years’ ago when a leading Irish medical university, pursuing a strategy of internationalization, opened a branch campus on the island. Students in Bahrain are conferred with the same degrees as those awarded in Ireland, but little is known about local student experiences of transnational medical and nursing education in this particular socio-cultural context. Bahraini female medical and nursing students occupy and embody a unique local cultural sphere grounded in Arab Islamic values and patriarchal norms, yet have to imagine themselves in different ways informed by the global discourse of transnational education. The purpose of this study was to investigate how these students gave meaning to and made sense of their lived experiences as they navigated complex issues of gender, power relations and socio-cultural values during their lengthy socialization into the professional persona of a western educated doctor or nurse. The study design was qualitative and employed Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) as its methodological framework. Data were collected from two focus group discussions and nine individual in-depth interviews, according to conventions of qualitative research and principles of IPA. Findings were interpreted through the lens of postmodern feminism. The importance of reflexivity in IPA and postmodern feminist thought was highlighted as the voices of participants were clearly heard from the position of their own lifeworlds, filtered through the researcher’s own positioning within the research process. A deep and contexualised investigation into Bahraini female student experiences was undertaken, moving forward the discourse of transnational medical and nursing education. As these young women became empowered learners, they articulated self-determination, self-efficacy and personal agency within their uniquely constructed Transnational Community of Practice (TCP), through which they redefined cultural boundaries and developed coping strategies in order to succeed in an emotionally charged and challenging transnational space. The study demonstrates that gendered ways of knowing and the tensions of negotiating differing cultural contexts are often ignored and invisible components of a hidden curriculum which shape student personal, academic and professional achievement. This study revealed new conceptualisations for Bahraini female engagement within the discourse of transnational medical and nursing education in the Middle East, from which a particular Bahraini female discursive positioning and standpoint emerged, grounded in a distinct Arab Islamic feminist reflexivity. The impact of their educational experiences was transformational in character as the graduates became agents of change, shifting the balance of local gendered power relations and extending their influence into wider Bahraini society. This study concludes by calling for new metaphors in transnational medical and nursing education which take into account local student voices and move beyond the realm of western cultural norms in order to enhance student empowerment, engagement and success in specific contexts
Stability of the viscously spreading ring
We study analytically and numerically the stability of the pressure-less,
viscously spreading accretion ring. We show that the ring is unstable to small
non-axisymmetric perturbations. To perform the perturbation analysis of the
ring we use a stretching transformation of the time coordinate. We find that to
1st order, one-armed spiral structures, and to 2nd order additionally two-armed
spiral features may appear. Furthermore, we identify a dispersion relation
determining the instability of the ring. The theoretical results are confirmed
in several simulations, using two different numerical methods. These
computations prove independently the existence of a secular spiral instability
driven by viscosity, which evolves into persisting leading and trailing spiral
waves. Our results settle the question whether the spiral structures found in
earlier simulations of the spreading ring are numerical artifacts or genuine
instabilities.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures; A&A accepte
Photographic Assessment of Change in Trichotillomania: Psychometric Properties and Variables Influencing Interpretation
Although photographic assessment has been found to be reliable in assessing hair loss in Trichotillomania, the validity of this method is unclear, particularly for gauging progress in treatment. The current study evaluated the psychometric properties of photographic assessment of change in Trichotillomania. Photographs showing hair loss of adults with Trichotillomania were taken before and after participating in a clinical trial for the condition. Undergraduate college students (N = 211) rated treatment response according to the photos, and additional archival data on hair pulling severity and psychosocial health were retrieved from the clinical trial. Photographic assessment of change was found to possess fair reliability (ICC = 0.53), acceptable criterion validity (r = 0.51), good concurrent validity (r = 0.30–0.36), and excellent incremental validity (ΔR2 = 8.67, p \u3c 0.01). In addition, photographic measures were significantly correlated with change in quality of life (r = 0.42), and thus could be considered an index of the social validity of Trichotillomania treatment. Gender of the photo rater and pulling topography affected the criterion validity of photographic assessment (partial η2 = 0.05–0.11). Recommendations for improving photographic assessment and future directions for hair pulling research are discussed
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Upstream cyclone influence on the predictability of block onsets over the Euro-Atlantic region
Atmospheric blocking has been shown to be a phenomenon that models struggle to predict accurately, particularly the onset of a blocked state following a more zonal flow. This struggle is, in part, due to the lack of a complete dynamical theory for block onset and maintenance. Here, we evaluate the impact cyclone representation had on the forecast of block onset in two case studies from the North Atlantic Waveguide and Downstream Impact Experiment field campaign and the 20 most unpredictable block onsets over the Euro-Atlantic region in medium-range forecasts from the ECMWF. The six-day forecast of block onset in the case studies is sensitive to changes in the forecast location and intensity of upstream cyclones (one cyclone for one case and two for the other case) in the days preceding the onset. Ensemble sensitivity analysis reveals that this is often the case in unpredictable block onset cases: a one-standard deviation change in 1000-hPa geopotential height near an upstream cyclone, or 320-K potential vorticity near the tropopause, two or three days prior to block onset is associated with more than a 10% change in block area on the analyzed onset day in 17 of the 20 onset cases. These results imply that improvement in the forecasts of upstream cyclone location and intensity may help improve block onset forecasts
Efficient FPT algorithms for (strict) compatibility of unrooted phylogenetic trees
In phylogenetics, a central problem is to infer the evolutionary
relationships between a set of species ; these relationships are often
depicted via a phylogenetic tree -- a tree having its leaves univocally labeled
by elements of and without degree-2 nodes -- called the "species tree". One
common approach for reconstructing a species tree consists in first
constructing several phylogenetic trees from primary data (e.g. DNA sequences
originating from some species in ), and then constructing a single
phylogenetic tree maximizing the "concordance" with the input trees. The
so-obtained tree is our estimation of the species tree and, when the input
trees are defined on overlapping -- but not identical -- sets of labels, is
called "supertree". In this paper, we focus on two problems that are central
when combining phylogenetic trees into a supertree: the compatibility and the
strict compatibility problems for unrooted phylogenetic trees. These problems
are strongly related, respectively, to the notions of "containing as a minor"
and "containing as a topological minor" in the graph community. Both problems
are known to be fixed-parameter tractable in the number of input trees , by
using their expressibility in Monadic Second Order Logic and a reduction to
graphs of bounded treewidth. Motivated by the fact that the dependency on
of these algorithms is prohibitively large, we give the first explicit dynamic
programming algorithms for solving these problems, both running in time
, where is the total size of the input.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figur
The fundamental problem of command : plan and compliance in a partially centralised economy
When a principal gives an order to an agent and advances resources for its implementation, the temptations for the agent to shirk or steal from the principal rather than comply constitute the fundamental problem of command. Historically, partially centralised command economies enforced compliance in various ways, assisted by nesting the fundamental problem of exchange within that of command. The Soviet economy provides some relevant data. The Soviet command system combined several enforcement mechanisms in an equilibrium that shifted as agents learned and each mechanism's comparative costs and benefits changed. When the conditions for an equilibrium disappeared, the system collapsed.Comparative Economic Studies (2005) 47, 296–314. doi:10.1057/palgrave.ces.810011
Longevity, body dimension and reproductive mode drive differences in aquatic versus terrestrial life-history strategies
1. Aquatic and terrestrial environments display stark differences in key environmental factors and phylogenetic composition but their consequences for the evolution of species' life-history strategies remain poorly understood. 2. Here, we examine whether and how life-history strategies vary between terrestrial and aquatic species. We use demographic information for 685 terrestrial and 122 aquatic animal and plant species to estimate key life-history traits. We then use phylogenetically corrected least squares regression to explore potential differences in trade-offs between life-history traits between both environments. We contrast life-history strategies of aquatic versus terrestrial species in a principal component analysis while accounting for body dimensions and phylogenetic relationships. 3. Our results show that the same trade-offs structure terrestrial and aquatic life histories, resulting in two dominant axes of variation that describe species' pace of life and reproductive strategies. Terrestrial plants display a large diversity of strategies, including the longest-lived species in this study. Aquatic animals exhibit higher reproductive frequency than terrestrial animals. When correcting for body size, mobile and sessile terrestrial organisms show slower paces of life than aquatic ones. 4. Aquatic and terrestrial species are ruled by the same life-history trade-offs, but have evolved different strategies, likely due to distinct environmental selective pressures. Such contrasting life-history strategies have important consequences for the conservation and management of aquatic and terrestrial species
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