13,691 research outputs found

    A Biological Comparison of Two Sites: an Ecological Approach Using Community Ecology Metrics Based on Insect Faunal Composition

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    Two natural sites in the Portland urban area, River View Natural Area (RVNA) and Powers Marine Park (PMP), were sampled to assess their insect faunal composition with the intention of determining whether the areas are sufficiently similar ecologically that they could potentially be managed as a single unit. The two areas were compared using community ecology metrics based on their respective invertebrate fauna. The results suggested that RVNA and PMP had statistically different ecological communities. The Shannon Diversity Index for PMP was 0.303, and 0.819 for RVNA. The Horn Index of Community Overlap suggested a 93.46% overlap based on these data; however, a Hutcheson’s t-test for community ecology data suggested significant differences (P \u3c\u3c\u3c 0.0001) between PMP and RVNA’s insect faunal compositions

    Correction of Optical Aberrations in Elliptic Neutron Guides

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    Modern, nonlinear ballistic neutron guides are an attractive concept in neutron beam delivery and instrumentation, because they offer increased performance over straight or linearly tapered guides. However, like other ballistic geometries they have the potential to create significantly non-trivial instrumental resolution functions. We address the source of the most prominent optical aberration, namely coma, and we show that for extended sources the off-axis rays have a different focal length from on-axis rays, leading to multiple reflections in the guide system. We illustrate how the interplay between coma, sources of finite size, and mirrors with non-perfect reflectivity can therefore conspire to produce uneven distributions in the neutron beam divergence, the source of complicated resolution functions. To solve these problems, we propose a hybrid elliptic-parabolic guide geometry. Using this new kind of neutron guide shape, it is possible to condition the neutron beam and remove almost all of the aberrations, whilst providing the same performance in beam current as a standard elliptic neutron guide. We highlight the positive implications for a number of neutron scattering instrument types that this new shape can bring.Comment: Presented at NOP2010 Conference in Alpe d'Huez, France, in March 201

    Use of a 3-item short-form version of the Barthel Index for use in stroke: systematic review and external validation

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    Background and Purpose—There may be a potential to reduce the number of items assessed in the Barthel Index (BI), and shortened versions of the BI have been described. We sought to collate all existing short-form BI (SF-BI) and perform a comparative validation using clinical trial data. Methods—We performed a systematic review across multidisciplinary electronic databases to find all published SF-BI. Our validation used the VISTA (Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive) resource. We describe concurrent validity (agreement of each SF-BI with BI), convergent and divergent validity (agreement of each SF-BI with other outcome measures available in the data set), predictive validity (association of prognostic factors with SF-BI outcomes), and content validity (item correlation and exploratory factor analyses). Results—From 3546 titles, we found 8 articles describing 6 differing SF-BI. Using acute trial data (n=8852), internal reliability suggested redundancy in BI (Cronbach α, 0.96). Each SF-BI demonstrated a strong correlation with BI, modified Rankin Scale, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (all ρ≄0.83; P<0.001). Using rehabilitation trial data (n=332), SF-BI demonstrated modest correlation with quality of life measures Stroke Impact Scale and 5 domain EuroQOL (ρ≄0.50, P<0.001). Prespecified prognostic factors were associated with SF-BI outcomes (all P<0.001). Our factor analysis described a 3 factor structure, and item reduction suggested an optimal 3-item SF-BI comprising bladder control, transfer, and mobility items in keeping with 1 of the 3-item SF-BI previously described in the literature. Conclusions—There is redundancy in the original BI; we have demonstrated internal and external validity of a 3-item SF-BI that should be simple to use

    An agent based approach for improvised explosive device detection, public alertness and safety

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    One of the security challenges faced by our contemporary world is terror threats and attacks, and this is no doubt posing potential threats to lives, properties and businesses all around us; affecting the way we live and also travel. Terror attacks have been perpetrated in diverse ways whether from organized terror networks through coordinated attacks or by some lone individuals such that it is now a major concern to people and government. Indeed, there are numerous forms of terror attacks. In this proposal, we look at how the explosive substance kind of threats can be perceived and taken care of prior to potential attacks using intelligent agent systems requirement analysis. Thus, the paper demonstrates using an agent-oriented system analysis and design methodology to decompose. Through defined percepts, goals and plans, agents possess capabilities to observe and perform actions. This proposal demonstrates: how agents can be situated in our cities, goal refinement for agents in the detection and rescue of potential terror attacks, and inter-agent communication for the prevention of chemical terror attack

    Considering a Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth

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    P. F. Hoffman et al. and N. Christie-Blick et al. discuss Hoffman et al.'s paper that "developed a modified 'snowball Earth' hypothesis (2) to explain the association of Neoproterozoic low-latitude glaciation with the deposition of 'cap carbonate' rocks bearing highly depleted carbon isotopic values (ÎŽ13C ≀ −5‰). According to Hoffman et al., the ocean became completely frozen over as a result of a runaway albedo feedback, and primary biological productivity collapsed for an interval of geological time exceeding the carbon residence time (greater than 105 years). During this interval, continental ice cover is inferred to have been thin and patchy owing to the virtual elimination of the hydrological cycle.
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