7,464 research outputs found
Secondary stresses in trusses
Structural analysis of fixed joint truss using method of secondary stresses and computer solutio
Incremental Grid-like Layout Using Soft and Hard Constraints
We explore various techniques to incorporate grid-like layout conventions
into a force-directed, constraint-based graph layout framework. In doing so we
are able to provide high-quality layout---with predominantly axis-aligned
edges---that is more flexible than previous grid-like layout methods and which
can capture layout conventions in notations such as SBGN (Systems Biology
Graphical Notation). Furthermore, the layout is easily able to respect
user-defined constraints and adapt to interaction in online systems and diagram
editors such as Dunnart.Comment: Accepted to Graph Drawing 201
Dietary flavonoid intakes and CVD incidence in the Framingham Offspring Cohort
This study examines the relationship between long-term intake of six flavonoid classes and incidence of CVD and CHD, using a comprehensive flavonoid database and repeated measures of intake, while accounting for possible confounding by components of a healthy dietary pattern. Flavonoid intakes were assessed using a FFQ among the Framingham Offspring Cohort at baseline and three times during follow-up. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to characterise prospective associations between the natural logarithms of flavonoid intakes and CVD incidence using a time-dependent approach, in which intake data were updated at each examination to represent average intakes from previous examinations. Mean baseline age was 54 years, and 45 % of the population was male. Over an average 14·9 years of follow-up among 2880 participants, there were 518 CVD events and 261 CHD events. After multivariable adjustment, only flavonol intake was significantly associated with lower risk of CVD incidence (hazard ratios (HR) per 2·5-fold flavonol increase = 0·86, Ptrend = 0·05). Additional adjustment for total fruit and vegetable intake and overall diet quality attenuated this observation (HR = 0·89, Ptrend = 0·20 and HR = 0·92, Ptrend = 0·33, respectively). There were no significant associations between flavonoids and CHD incidence after multivariable adjustment. Our findings suggest that the observed association between flavonol intake and CVD risk may be a consequence of better overall diet. However, the strength of this non-significant association was also consistent with relative risks observed in previous meta-analyses, and therefore a modest benefit of flavonol intake on CVD risk cannot be ruled out
The development and evaluation of exercises for group response to word meaning for increasing the speed of word recognition in grade I
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
Product and other fine structure in polynomial resolutions of mapping spaces
Let Map_T(K,X) denote the mapping space of continuous based functions between
two based spaces K and X. If K is a fixed finite complex, Greg Arone has
recently given an explicit model for the Goodwillie tower of the functor
sending a space X to the suspension spectrum \Sigma^\infty Map_T(K,X). Applying
a generalized homology theory h_* to this tower yields a spectral sequence, and
this will converge strongly to h_*(Map_T(K,X)) under suitable conditions, e.g.
if h_* is connective and X is at least dim K connected. Even when the
convergence is more problematic, it appears the spectral sequence can still
shed considerable light on h_*(Map_T(K,X)). Similar comments hold when a
cohomology theory is applied. In this paper we study how various important
natural constructions on mapping spaces induce extra structure on the towers.
This leads to useful interesting additional structure in the associated
spectral sequences. For example, the diagonal on Map_T(K,X) induces a
`diagonal' on the associated tower. After applying any cohomology theory with
products h^*, the resulting spectral sequence is then a spectral sequence of
differential graded algebras. The product on the E_\infty -term corresponds to
the cup product in h^*(Map_T(K,X)) in the usual way, and the product on the
E_1-term is described in terms of group theoretic transfers. We use explicit
equivariant S-duality maps to show that, when K is the sphere S^n, our
constructions at the fiber level have descriptions in terms of the
Boardman-Vogt little n-cubes spaces. We are then able to identify, in a
computationally useful way, the Goodwillie tower of the functor from spectra to
spectra sending a spectrum X to \Sigma ^\infty \Omega ^\infty X.Comment: Published by Algebraic and Geometric Topology at
http://www.maths.warwick.ac.uk/agt/AGTVol2/agt-2-28.abs.htm
Taking Place 8: Interstitial Breakfast
A contextualised presentation of an interstitial act by taking place at the AHRA conference Architecture and Feminisms: Ecologies, Economies, Technologies: 13th International Architectural Humanities Research Association Conference, KTH School of Architecture Stockholm 17-19 November 2016. Taking place (Jos Boys, Julia Dwyer, Teresa Hoskyns, Katie Lloyd Thomas and Helen Stratford) curated their 8th spatial intervention, tp8, a breakfast held early on the second conference day which addressed through conversation and evidence marked into table cloths , the conference participants' responses to an open call by taking place to the question “What are the relevant questions for architecture and feminism today
Characterizing upward lightning with and without a terrestrial gamma-ray flash
We compare two observations of gamma-rays before, during, and after lightning
flashes initiated by upward leaders from a tower during low-altitude winter
thunderstorms on the western coast of Honshu, Japan. While the two leaders
appear similar, one produced a terrestrial gamma-ray flash (TGF) so bright that
it paralyzed the gamma-ray detectors while it was occurring, and could be
observed only via the weaker flux of neutrons created in its wake, while the
other produced no detectable TGF gamma-rays at all. The ratio between the
indirectly derived gamma-ray fluence for the TGF and the 95% confidence
gamma-ray upper limit for the gamma-ray quiet flash is a factor of
. With the only two observations of this type providing such
dramatically different results -- a TGF probably as bright as those seen from
space and a powerful upper limit -- we recognize that weak, sub-luminous TGFs
in this situation are probably not common, and we quantify this conclusion.
While the gamma-ray quiet flash appeared to have a faster leader and more
powerful initial continuous current pulse than the flash that produced a TGF,
the TGF-producing flash occurred during a weak gamma-ray "glow", while the
gamma-ray quiet flash did not, implying a higher electric field aloft when the
TGF was produced. We suggest that the field in the high-field region approached
by a leader may be more important for whether a TGF is produced than the
characteristics of the leader itself.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication by the Journal of
Geophysical Research - Atmosphere
We the People: Elementary Pre-Service Teachers and Constitutional Readability
In light of increasing mandates to incorporate close reading of primary source historical documents at the elementary level, this study explored the reading difficulty level of the US Constitution with preservice elementary teachers using a traditional cloze assessment procedure. While best practice pedagogy of social studies has long included thoughtful reading of primary sources, new language arts guidelines situate the analysis of primary documents within formulaic quantifiable frameworks, often problematic to the pre-service teacher. With implications for reading and social studies, this paper explores several relevant issues to both pre-service teachers and the elementary classrooms they will teach in
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