1,033 research outputs found

    Cómo evitar pérdidas en el secado y en la cocción

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    Not availableUna vez concluido el proceso de cocción, cada ladrillo desechado representa una pérdida financiera equivalente al costo de un ladrillo de primera calidad. El término "desechado" debe abarcar también a los ladrillos defectuosos y a los de calidad inferior, en mayor o menor grado. Por ejemplo dos ladrillos de baja calidad vendidos a mitad de precio puede considerarse como un ladrillo de pérdida

    Impact of in-crop and soil residual herbicides on effective nitrogen fixation in field pea (Pisum sativum L.) and chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)

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    Non-Peer ReviewedA three-year project was initiated in 2004 to examine the effects of residual herbicides and registered “in-crop” herbicides, both soil and foliar applied, on N fixation and consequent yield of field peas and chickpeas. Inoculation strategies were examined to determine if inoculant formulation (i.e., peat powder versus granular inoculant) influences the degree to which herbicides can affect N fixation. This research is ongoing and thus all results are considered preliminary. Preliminary results in field pea, suggest that where herbicides had a negative effect on N fixation, the effects occurred at relatively early growth stages (i.e., soon after herbicide application) and were typically overcome at later growth stages. In addition, granular inoculants were associated with increased N fixation as compared to peat powder inoculants, and may have mitigated any negative herbicide effects. Chickpea incurred damage from the herbicides and all treatments had significantly less N fixation than the control. In general, results suggest that N fixation may be compromised if herbicides cause significant plant damage; however, improved weed control associated with herbicide application may counter the negative impact on early N fixation

    Robust Inference of Trees

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    This paper is concerned with the reliable inference of optimal tree-approximations to the dependency structure of an unknown distribution generating data. The traditional approach to the problem measures the dependency strength between random variables by the index called mutual information. In this paper reliability is achieved by Walley's imprecise Dirichlet model, which generalizes Bayesian learning with Dirichlet priors. Adopting the imprecise Dirichlet model results in posterior interval expectation for mutual information, and in a set of plausible trees consistent with the data. Reliable inference about the actual tree is achieved by focusing on the substructure common to all the plausible trees. We develop an exact algorithm that infers the substructure in time O(m^4), m being the number of random variables. The new algorithm is applied to a set of data sampled from a known distribution. The method is shown to reliably infer edges of the actual tree even when the data are very scarce, unlike the traditional approach. Finally, we provide lower and upper credibility limits for mutual information under the imprecise Dirichlet model. These enable the previous developments to be extended to a full inferential method for trees.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figure

    Process evaluation of integrated diabetes management at primary healthcare facilities in Pakistan: a mixed-methods study

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    Background: Integrated care for diabetes and associated conditions at primary level health facilities can make care available to a much larger population, especially in rural areas. Aim: This process evaluation was to understand how the authors' integrated care was implemented and experienced by the care providers and patients, and to inform modifications prior to province-wide scale-up. Design & setting: The mixed-method study was conducted as part of a cluster randomised trial on integrated diabetes care at 14 public health facilities. Method: The care practices were assessed by analysing the routine clinical records of 495 registered patients with diabetes. Then semi-structured interviews with service providers and patients were used to understand their respective care experiences. A framework approach was applied to analyse and interpret the qualitative data. Results: The intervention and the study were implemented as intended under routine conditions in rural health centres. Key service processes effectively delivered included: skill-based training; screening and diagnostic tests; treatment card records; and the additional case management as per desk guide, including monitoring progress in glucose and weight at follow-up consultations, and mobile phone calls to help adherence. However, social and cultural factors affected clients' ability to change lifestyles, especially for women. The intervention effect was limited by the short study follow-up of only 9 months. Conclusion: Integrated diabetes care was feasible, both for providers and patients, and potentially scalable at primary care facilities under routine conditions in Pakistan. Additional operational interventions are required for sustained drug supplies, supervision, in-service training, and to address the social challenges to healthy activity and eating, especially for women
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