254 research outputs found
The influence of design team communication content upon the architectural decision making process in the pre contract design stages
Patterns of communication in the decision-making process of
Design Team Architects are considered. Variations in the verbal
content of Architect and other Design Team member interaction
behaviour are analysed over the various stages of the design
process.
A pilot study building design and a main subject study building
design are investigatted on a longditudinal basis. Fourteen
other building designs are investigated on a cross sectional
basis. The presented results represent a data collection period
of approximately eighteen months.
Design Team interaction is measured using content analysis. The
measurement scales used are largely based upon existing
methodologies, although some measurement scales are developed
specifically for this research. Quantitative data analysis is by
mainframe computer, using analysis programs which are developed
specifically for this research. Additional qualitative
substantiations are provided by extracts of supportive interview
responses.
The results show pronounced patterns of variation in the
interaction content of Design Team members throughout the design
process over a range of design types. The conclusions are of use
to Design Team members since they illustrate the likely patterns
of future interaction for the future stages of any design process. Potential areas of interaction conflict are presented,
together with likely variations in Design Team member
preoccupations as the design develops. Reference to the results
allow the Designer to design in order to avoid likely design
interaction problems associated with long term variations in
Design Team interaction behaviour.
Results indicate that the Architect becomes less assertive during
the middle stages of the design, as does the influence of the
initial brief. The Architect is consistently the most creative
Design Team member, although cost considerations increasingly
influence the decision-making process of the Architect, largely
at the expense of aesthetic considerations. The professional
Design Team members increasingly form a coalition against the
Client Representative, to some extent as a defence against late
stage disruptive cost reduction exercises, as construction
factors increasingly influence interaction behaviour
Magnetospectroscopy of epitaxial few-layer graphene
The inter-Landau level transitions observed in far-infrared transmission
experiments on few-layer graphene samples show a behaviour characteristic of
the linear dispersion expected in graphene. This behaviour persists in
relatively thick samples, and is qualitatively different from that of thin
samples of bulk graphite.Comment: Invited short review to appear in a special issue of Solid State
Communication
Temperature and Photoperiod Effects on Sterility in a Cytoplasmic Male-Sterile Soybean
Manual cross-pollination to produce large quantities of hybrid soybean seed is difficult and time consuming. An environmentally stable sterility system is one of the necessary components to produce large quantities of hybrid seed. The objective of this study was to subject cytoplasmic male-sterile (CMS) BC5F1 plants, from a cross of a Chinese Glycine max wild-type soybean with a Chinese wild annual soybean G. soja (male parent) and controls, to a variety of different temperature and photoperiod treatments to test whether CMS is stable under various environmental conditions. Plants were grown in growth chambers under controlled temperature, photoperiod, and irradiance regimes until pod set, and then they were transferred to a glasshouse until they matured. Plants were evaluated for time of anthesis after photoperiod induction (13 h light/11 h dark) and fertility or sterility. Anther squash and pod set data showed that sterility of the CMS line was stable under all environmental conditions tested, whereas fertility-restored control plants remained fertile. Extreme environmental conditions led to delayed floral induction and/or stunted growth
Scattering of charge carriers in graphene induced by topological defects
We study the scattering of graphene quasiparticles by topological defects,
represented by holes, pentagons and heptagons. For holes, we found that at low
concentration they give a negligible contribution to the resistivity. Whenever
pentagons or heptagons are introduced we realize that a fermionic current is
scattered by defects
The Organization of Agricultural Research in Western Developed Countries
This paper reviews agricultural research structural and organization changes in western developed countries, examines new financing prospects for agricultural research, and provides some tentative conclusions about which organizations are best positioned to provide services for the 21st century. Giventhat these countries faces many similar economic, political, scientific, andagroclimatic factors and fiscal issues, we canexpect a similar set of similar new developments thathave potentially important and widespread long-run implications. After three common developments are outlined, principles ofimpure public good financing are applied leading to the following agricultural science policy recommendations (i) new political jurisdictions should be formed to finance research, e.g., new alliances across countries and subregions within large countries, (ii) intellecmal property rights should be strengthened to increase the total amount and share oftotal (public and private) agricultural research that is privately financed and conducted, i.e., the private sector should find it profitable to undertake a large share ofapplied research but not be expected to finance public sector agriculmral research, (iii) the public sector should redirect its research efforts increasingly to areas that are socially worthwhile but not privately undertaken, e.g.,in the basic and pretechnology areas, on envkonmental, resources, food safety and human nutrition, and policy. Finally, large countries that have developed asystem ofshared public and private financmg and performance and decentralized public support ofagricultural research seem best position for meeting the needs ofthe 21st centur
Large-scale replicated field study of maize rhizosphere identifies heritable microbes
Soil microbes that colonize plant roots and are responsive to differences in plant genotype remain to be ascertained for agronomically important crops. From a very large-scale longitudinal field study of 27 maize inbred lines planted in three fields, with partial replication 5 y later, we identify root-associated microbiota exhibiting reproducible associations with plant genotype. Analysis of 4,866 samples identified 143 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) whose variation in relative abundances across the samples was significantly regulated by plant genotype, and included five of seven core OTUs present in all samples. Plant genetic effects were significant amid the large effects of plant age on the rhizosphere microbiome, regardless of the specific community of each field, and despite microbiome responses to climate events. Seasonal patterns showed that the plant root microbiome is locally seeded, changes with plant growth, and responds to weather events. However, against this background of variation, specific taxa responded to differences in host genotype. If shown to have beneficial functions, microbes may be considered candidate traits for selective breeding
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