8,158 research outputs found
Against the grain
An Organic Research Centre project is examining how diversity-based tools can assist in the on-farm improvement of organic wheat.
Successful organic crop production requires varieties that are resistant to diseases, competitive against weeds, and effective at scavenging nutrients. Yet conventional plant breeding has largely neglected organic systems by breeding varieties exclusively for high input conditions. As a consequence, organic producers currently do not have enough choice of plant varieties for organic conditions.
One way to expand the choice is to create plant diversity anew and subject it to natural selection on organic farms.
After several generations the dominating plants would be better suited to organic systems. This idea is being tested in the Organic Research Centre’s Wheat Breeding LINK project
Kinetic theory for systems of self-propelled particles with metric-free interactions
A model of self-driven particles similar to the Vicsek model [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 75 (1995) 1226] but with metric-free interactions is studied by means of
a novel Enskog-type kinetic theory. In this model, N particles of constant
speed v0 try to align their travel directions with the average direction of a
fixed number of closest neighbors. At strong alignment a global flocking state
forms. The alignment is defined by a stochastic rule, not by a Hamiltonian. The
corresponding interactions are of genuine multi-body nature. The theory is
based on a Master equation in 3N-dimensional phase space, which is made
tractable by means of the molecular chaos approximation. The phase diagram for
the transition to collective motion is calculated and compared to direct
numerical simulations. A linear stability analysis of a homogeneous ordered
state is performed using the kinetic but not the hydrodynamic equations in
order to achieve high accuracy. In contrast to the regular metric Vicsek-model
no instabilities occur. This confirms previous direct simulations that for
Vicsek-like models with metric-free interactions, there is no formation of
density bands and that the flocking transition is continuous.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figure
On Teaching, Without Disciplines
Processes of becoming know no disciplines. And yet professors cannot teach without first absorbing the priorities and protocols of a discipline. This means that we have to be attuned to the ways in which our teaching of persons gets usurped by the teaching of a body of knowledge or a method of knowing that is only tangentially connected to where students are. K-12 teachers understand this better than university and college professors. This article suggests professors experiment with the idea of a defense of teaching, which would be a moment to articulate one\u27s teaching aims apart from one\u27s disciplinary and career goals
Developing modern multifunctional agroforestry systems for sustainable intensification
Agroforestry is a land-use system that integrates trees and shrubs with crops and/or livestock production. It has been identified by the International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD, 2008) as a ‘win-win’ approach that balances the production of commodities (food, feed, fuel, fibre, etc.) with non-commodity outputs such as environmental protection and cultural and landscape amenities. This paper will review the potential of agroforestry as part of a multifunctional working landscape in temperate regions, and will consider management and policy implications of widespread adoption of this form of land-use
Software for Replicating Data Between X.500 and LDAP Directories
X500/LDAP Directory Replication Utility is a computer program for replicating information between X.500 and LDAP directories. [X.500 is an international standard for on-line directory services. LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol) is a simple directory access protocol.] The utility can be used to replicate an object of any type from X.500 to LDAP or from LDAP to X.500. The program uses the LDAP version 2 protocol, which is capable of working with both X.500 and LDAP directories. The program can provide any or all of the following services: (1) replicate only modified objects; (2) force replication of all objects; (3) replicate individual objects, one level of objects, or a subtree of objects; (4) filter sets of objects to select ones to be replicated; (5) remove and/or modify object classes from objects that are replicated; and (6) select and/or limit attributes that are replicated. The program includes a separate program that is used to remove objects that are no longer required to be replicated
Forensic Analysis of Compromised Computers
Directory Tree Analysis File Generator is a Practical Extraction and Reporting Language (PERL) script that simplifies and automates the collection of information for forensic analysis of compromised computer systems. During such an analysis, it is sometimes necessary to collect and analyze information about files on a specific directory tree. Directory Tree Analysis File Generator collects information of this type (except information about directories) and writes it to a text file. In particular, the script asks the user for the root of the directory tree to be processed, the name of the output file, and the number of subtree levels to process. The script then processes the directory tree and puts out the aforementioned text file. The format of the text file is designed to enable the submission of the file as input to a spreadsheet program, wherein the forensic analysis is performed. The analysis usually consists of sorting files and examination of such characteristics of files as ownership, time of creation, and time of most recent access, all of which characteristics are among the data included in the text file
- …