8,124 research outputs found
Resilient ecological solutions for urban regeneration
There is a need for biological conservation at the global scale, and urban conservation has the potential to support the delivery of this wider goal. Despite historic trends, efforts are underway to protect and enhance the quality, quantity and accessibility of green infrastructure within cities, including biodiversity features within new developments. However, there are questions over their long-term persistence and function. This paper applies an urban futures resilience analysis to a case study site to illustrate how such concerns may be explored and addressed in practice. The analysis identifies vulnerable sustainability solutions and clarifies the aspects that may be improved. The results suggest that the resilience of these solutions is questionable, even though resilience has clearly been considered. In particular, future compliance with, and enforcement of, planning conditions is questionable. The resilience of these ecological solutions may be improved by including some redundancy, designing for low maintenance, incorporating microclimate buffers and locating features in areas unlikely to be subject to future disturbance. The establishment of endowment funds or other dedicated funding mechanisms should also be explored. The paper also recommends that a futures-based resilience analysis be included within the development planning process
Increased GFAP immunoreactivity by astrocytes in response to contact with dorsal root ganglia cells in a 3D culture model
Failure of repair mechanisms in the injured CNS is widely
attributed to the inhibitory environment of the lesion site,
most notably the formation of the glial scar which forms a
physical and physiological barrier to axon regeneration. We developed an in vitro 3D cell culture model to investigate the
response of astrocytes to cells found at the inhibitory
interfaces formed following damage to the spinal cord.
CellTrackerTM labelled dissociated DRGs were seeded onto
astrocyte-populated collagen gels and maintained in culture
for 5 days. Astrocytes near the DRG interface showed marked
GFAP up-regulation and adopted a reactive morphology
which was observed up to 1mm away. Intensity of GFAP
fluorescence at this interface was 3 fold higher than that seen
away from the interface or in controls (astrocyte only gels).
Furthermore, the presence of DRG conditioned medium was
not capable alone of eliciting this response. In conclusion this
model may provide a useful tool for understanding reactive
astrogliosis in response to cells found at inhibitory interfaces
following spinal cord or dorsal root injury. The contact
between astrocytes and satellite cells may be enough to induce
astrocyte reactivity and formation of the gliotic scar, or this
contact may induce the secretion of a soluble factor which is not
released from DRG cultures under physiological conditions
Biology, Ecology, and Management of Deer in the Chicago Metropolitan Area W-87-R-8, Annual Job Progress Report
Annual Job Progress Report July 1, 1986 - June 30, 1987 issued September 28, 1987.
Includes Appendix A: Helminthic and protozoan parasites of white-tailed deer in urban
areas of northeastern Illinois, Jose G. Cisneros; Appendix B: Recommendations for a
cooperative new initiative on urban deer management for Cook County, Illinois; Appendix
C: Recommendations for deer removal on O'Hare International Airport.Report issued on: 28 September 1987INHS Technical Report prepared for Illinois Department of Conservation Division of
Wildlife Resource
Lifeguard: Local Health Awareness for More Accurate Failure Detection
SWIM is a peer-to-peer group membership protocol with attractive scaling and
robustness properties. However, slow message processing can cause SWIM to mark
healthy members as failed (so called false positive failure detection), despite
inclusion of a mechanism to avoid this.
We identify the properties of SWIM that lead to the problem, and propose
Lifeguard, a set of extensions to SWIM which consider that the local failure
detector module may be at fault, via the concept of local health. We evaluate
this approach in a precisely controlled environment and validate it in a
real-world scenario, showing that it drastically reduces the rate of false
positives. The false positive rate and detection time for true failures can be
reduced simultaneously, compared to the baseline levels of SWIM
Legitimating Inequality: Fooling Most of the People All of the Time
Over the three decades leading up to the crisis of 2008, inequality dramatically increased in the United States and Great Britain. What stands out, but is seldom noted, is that this occurred within democracies where the relative losers -- the overwhelming majority -- could in principle have used the political system to block or reverse rising inequality. Why did they not do so? A glance at history reveals that peoples have only very infrequently contested inequality because they were led to believe that their inferior status in terms of income, wealth, and privilege was just, that it was not really so bad, or that it was necessary for their future wellbeing. Ideological systems legitimated a status quo of inequality, or in more modern times even increasing inequality. This article surveys the manner in which inequality has been historically legitimated, first predominantly by religion, then predominately by economic thought. Attention is then focused on the manner in which contemporary economic science and its popular interpretations in the media have served to legitimate inequality in the U.S. since the mid-1970s. The paper concludes with a reflection on the unique conditions that enable the legitimation of inequality to be delegitimated.Ideology, class power, utility of poverty, trickle down, vertical social mobility
The Principal Principle Implies the Principle of Indifference
We argue that David Lewis’s principal principle implies a version of the principle of indifference. The same is true for similar principles that need to appeal to the concept of admissibility. Such principles are thus in accord with objective Bayesianism, but in tension with subjective Bayesianism.
1 The Argument
2 Some Objections Me
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Multiscale structuring of materials - a hybrid additive, subtractive and directed assembly approach
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Aligned cellular and acellular collagen guidance substrates for peripheral nerve repair
There is a clinical demand to shorten the delay of reinnervation and improve functional recovery after peripheral nerve injury. A peripheral nerve repair device with the ability to direct and promote axon growth across a lesion would be a promising alternative to nerve autograft repair, the current gold standard treatment. The growth of axons across a lesion is most effective when supported by columns of aligned Schwann cells, as found in an autograft. Here we report the development of a robust aligned cellular collagen biomaterial that supports and directs neuronal growth. We also investigate the potential of these aligned cells to precondition the collagen biomaterial, before they are freeze-killed, leaving an acellular guidance matrix
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