4,874 research outputs found

    Global Series and Stages for the Ordovician System : a Progress Report

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    There is no global standard set of chronostratigraphic/geochronologic subdivisions for the Ordovician System/Period. British series/epochs are often used as de facto nomenclature on stratigraphic correlation charts and geologic time scales. However, they were not widely adopted outside of the British Isles because the high degree of biogeographic provincialism and ecologic differentiation of Ordovician faunas prevent the British series from being correlated with precision and high resolution. As a result, several independent and very different regional sets of series and constituent stages were established for the Ordovician System with each generally applicable to a different paleoplate or modern continent. Of course, this has greatly confused Ordovician chronostratigraphy/geochronology and often results in imprecise correlations of Ordovician stratigraphic successions. An example is the Argentine Precordillera where British series are traditionally used to correlate Ordovician strata that contain faunas of predominately Laurentian affinity. The Subcommission on Ordovician Stratigraphy of the International Commission on Stratigraphy is addressing this problem by developing a standard set of Global Series and Stages for the Ordovician System. The Subcommission has made considerable progress, but it must complete its work expeditiously. The new global standard will facilitate reliable global correlation. It will provide a common language for discussing Ordovician strata, fossils, and geologic events. It will be of fundamental importance in advancing research on Ordovician rocks worldwide

    The Parautochthonous Gondwanan origin of the Cuyania (greater Precordillera) terrane of Argentina : a re-evaluation of evidence used to support an allochthonous Laurentian origin

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    A substantial, diverse body of evidence has been interpreted as suggesting that the Cuyania terrane of northwestern Argentina, which includes the Argentine Precordillera, rifted from the Ouachita embayment of Laurentia in the Early Cambrian, drifted across the Iapetus ocean as a microcontinent, and docked with the proto-Andean margin of Gondwana in the Mid to Late Ordovician. This is the so-called Laurentian microcontinent model. However, several lines of evidence (basement age and affinity, stratigraphic, paleomagnetic and paleobiogeographical records) also point to a parautochthonous origin of this terrane. In this parautochthonous model, Cuyania migrated along a transform fault from a position on the southern margin of West Gondwana (present coordinates) in the Mid Ordovician to its modern position outboard of the Famatina magmatic belt in Devonian time. With regard to basement age and characteristics, recently acquired U-Pb geochronology of detrital zircons from Cambrian and Ordovician sandstones and of zircons from igneous clasts in an Ordovician conglomerate are difficult to explain with the Laurentian model and indicate, instead, a Gondwanan origin of the Cuyania terrane. Furthermore, potential basement rocks of Cuyania of Neoproterozoic to Early Cambrian age and Early Mesoproterozoic age are characteristic of Gondwana, rather than Laurentia. Pb isotopic ratios of Grenvillian-age basement rocks are not only similar to those of Grenvillian basement in Laurentia but also to those in other areas of West Gondwana. In terms of the stratigraphic record, the similarity of the Cambrian-Ordovician carbonate platform succession of Cuyania to that of Laurentia reflects similar paleolatitude and eustatic histories but not a direct connection. Moreover, the Middle-Upper Ordovician siliciclastic successions of Cuyania do not represent a peripheral foreland basin, but instead were deposited in strike-slip related basins in a transform fault zone. Middle Ordovician K-bentonites do not indicate that Cuyania was approaching the Famatina Magmatic arc from the west (modern coordinates), but instead that it was located to the southeast. In light of paleomagnetic data, the Cambrian paleolatitude of Cuyania is consistent not only with the location of the Ouachita embayment of Laurentia but also with the southern margin of West Gondwana. Finally, most of the paleobiogeographic criteria used to support the Laurentian model must be reconsidered. Brachiopod and conodont faunas in lower Middle Ordovician strata of the Precordillera have many more genera in common with Laurentia than those in Lower Ordovician strata. Cambrian trilobites faunas of Cuyania are of very limited abundance and diversity in comparison to correlative faunas of southeastern Laurentia; many species are endemic to Cuyania; olenellid trilobites considered to be restricted to Laurentia probably had the ability to disperse between paleoplates with similar environments. Mid Ordovician graptolites of the Precordillera on the one hand and of the Famatinian belt and Cordillera Oriental on the other belong to different oceanic provinces and likely did not live in close proximity

    Organizational stressors associated with job stress and burnout in correctional officers: a systematic review.

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    BackgroundIn adult correctional facilities, correctional officers (COs) are responsible for the safety and security of the facility in addition to aiding in offender rehabilitation and preventing recidivism. COs experience higher rates of job stress and burnout that stem from organizational stressors, leading to negative outcomes for not only the CO but the organization as well. Effective interventions could aim at targeting organizational stressors in order to reduce these negative outcomes as well as COs' job stress and burnout. This paper fills a gap in the organizational stress literature among COs by systematically reviewing the relationship between organizational stressors and CO stress and burnout in adult correctional facilities. In doing so, the present review identifies areas that organizational interventions can target in order to reduce CO job stress and burnout.MethodsA systematic search of the literature was conducted using Medline, PsycINFO, Criminal Justice Abstracts, and Sociological Abstracts. All retrieved articles were independently screened based on criteria developed a priori. All included articles underwent quality assessment. Organizational stressors were categorized according to Cooper and Marshall's (1976) model of job stress.ResultsThe systematic review yielded 8 studies that met all inclusion and quality assessment criteria. The five categories of organizational stressors among correctional officers are: stressors intrinsic to the job, role in the organization, rewards at work, supervisory relationships at work and the organizational structure and climate. The organizational structure and climate was demonstrated to have the most consistent relationship with CO job stress and burnout.ConclusionsThe results of this review indicate that the organizational structure and climate of correctional institutions has the most consistent relationship with COs' job stress and burnout. Limitations of the studies reviewed include the cross-sectional design and the use of varying measures for organizational stressors. The results of this review indicate that interventions should aim to improve the organizational structure and climate of the correctional facility by improving communication between management and COs

    In Memoriam: Albert Hofmann (1906–2008)

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    Commentary on the life achievements of Albert Hofmann (1906–2008), one of UZH's most honored alumni

    Adobe Flash as a medium for online experimentation: a test of reaction time measurement capabilities

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    Adobe Flash can be used to run complex psychological experiments over the Web. We examined the reliability of using Flash to measure reaction times (RTs) using a simple binary-choice task implemented both in Flash and in a Linux-based system known to record RTs with millisecond accuracy. Twenty-four participants were tested in the laboratory using both implementations; they also completed the Flash version on computers of their own choice outside the lab. RTs from the trials run on Flash outside the lab were approximately 20 msec slower than those from trials run on Flash in the lab, which in turn were approximately 10 msec slower than RTs from the trials run on the Linux-based system (baseline condition). RT SDs were similar in all conditions, suggesting that although Flash may overestimate RTs slightly, it does not appear to add significant noise to the data recorded

    Modular input-parallel-output-series DC/DC converter control with fault detection and redundancy

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    Large offshore wind farms will require an extensive sub-sea power network to provide internal interconnection. Present solutions are based around conventional medium-voltage AC architectures. This paper proposes an alternative DC collection network based around modular DC/DC converters with input-parallel-output-series (IPOS) connection. Small-signal analysis of the converter is presented, to assist in control scheme development for the converter input and output stages. A Lyapunov controller is embedded within the conventional output voltage sharing control loop. A master-slave control scheme is proposed to ensure power sharing under a range of operating conditions, and provides fault-tolerant operation since the status of 'master' can be reallocated in the event that the present 'master' module fails

    Grid fault ride-through of an LCC-VSC tandem converter, used as a grid interface for a multi-MW wind turbine

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    A tandem converter, consisting of a line-commutated converter in parallel with a voltage source active filter, is proposed as a grid interface for a 10 and 20MW superconducting wind turbine generator. A commutation assistance scheme is introduced which allows the active filter to regulate the commutation of the LCC thyristors. This can allow ride through of grid faults by enabling the LCC thyristors to continue commutating with reduced grid voltage, which enables the use of tandem converters as a grid interface for renewable energy sources. The commutation assistance scheme is verified using simulation

    The Early Paleozoic history of the Cuyania (greater Precordillera) terrane of western Argentina : evidence from geochronology of detrital zircons from Middle Cambrian sandstones

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    U-Pb geochronology of large detrital zircons populations is a powerful tool for interpreting sandstone provenance. Here, it is applied to three Middle Cambrian sandstones from the Precordillera of Argentina with the purpose of using the provenance interpretations to test paleogeographic and paleotectonic models proposed for the Cuyania or Precordillera terrane. Two samples from the La Laja Formation have distinctive detrital zircon age distributions. All zircon grains fall within unimodal populations of 1688-1200 Ma in one sample and 1559- 1316 Ma in the other. Of these grains, 23% and 65%, respectively, are within the age range of the North American magmatic gap (1610-1490 Ma), indicating a non-Laurentian provenance. A very different sample was taken from a sandstone interval in a large olistolith within the Estancia San Isidro Formation. Its zircon population is dominated by a single, prominent 615-511 Ma age cluster, which is indicative of a provenance in a Brasiliano orogenic belt. The absence of zircons with Grenvillian ages (1200 to 950 Ma) is difficult to reconcile with paleogeographic and geotectonic models in which Cuyania rifted from Laurentia in Cambrian or Ordovician time. The data are most consistent with models in which Cuyania rifted from the southern margin of West Gondwana. Given a Cambrian association with Gondwana and a post-Ordovician arrival at its present position in Gondwana, the Cuyania terrane must have migrated along the southern and western margins of Gondwana during the Ordovician Period

    The actin binding proteins cortactin and HS1 are dispensable for platelet actin nodule and megakaryocyte podosome formation

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    A dynamic, properly organised actin cytoskeleton is critical for the production and haemostatic function of platelets. The Wiskott Aldrich Syndrome protein (WASp) and Actin-Related Proteins 2 & 3 Complex (Arp2/3 complex) are critical mediators of actin polymerisation and organisation in many cell types. In platelets and megakaryocytes, these proteins have been shown to be important for proper platelet production and function. The cortactin family of proteins (Cttn & HS1) are known to regulate WASp-Arp2/3-mediated actin polymerisation in other cell types and so here we address the role of these proteins in platelets using knockout mouse models. We generated mice lacking Cttn and HS1 in the megakaryocyte/platelet lineage. These mice had normal platelet production, with platelet number, size and surface receptor profile comparable to controls. Platelet function was also unaffected by loss of Cttn/HS1 with no differences observed in a range of platelet function assays including aggregation, secretion, spreading, clot retraction or tyrosine phosphorylation. No effect on tail bleeding time or in thrombosis models was observed. In addition, platelet actin nodules, and megakaryocyte podosomes, actin-based structures known to be dependent on WASp and the Arp2/3 complex, formed normally. We conclude that despite the importance of WASp and the Arp2/3 complex in regulating F-actin dynamics in many cells types, the role of cortactin in their regulation appears to be fulfilled by other proteins in platelets

    Using Adobe Flash Lite on mobile phones for psychological research: reaction time measurement reliability and inter-device variability

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    Mobile telephones have significant potential for use in psychological research, possessing unique characteristics—not least their ubiquity—that may make them useful tools for psychologists. We examined whether it is possible to measure reaction times (RTs) accurately using Adobe Flash Lite on mobile phones. We ran simple and choice RT experiments on two widely available mobile phones, a Nokia 6110 Navigator and a Sony Ericsson W810i, using a wireless application protocol (WAP) connection to access the Internet from the devices. RTs were compared within subjects with those obtained using a Linux-based millisecond-accurate measurement system. Results show that measured RTs were significantly longer on mobile devices, and that overall RTs and distribution of RTs varied across device
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