73 research outputs found

    Diptych 4

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    Diptych 3

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    Diptych 1

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    Local Residents\u27 Experience of the Coal Ash Spill in Kingston, Tennessee: A Phenomenological Study

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    On December 22, 2008, near Kingston, Tennessee, a Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) retention pond holding approximately 1.7 million cubic yards of coal fly ash failed, spilling the ash into the nearby Emory River and inundating farms and homes in the Swan Pond community. As a result more than 100 people were permanently displaced from their homes and the clean-up effort is ongoing. The purpose of this study was to explore the experience of living near Kingston, Tennessee, in the aftermath of the spill. Using existential phenomenology as the guiding research methodology, I interviewed 9 participants from the area and asked the question, “Please tell me about a time when you have been aware of the ash spill.” Interviews were digitally recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using an approach to existential phenomenological research developed by Thomas and Pollio (2002). Analysis of the interview transcripts revealed four themes: 1) Change, Loss, and Uncertainty, 2) Inconvenience, 3) Powerlessness in the Face of Government (“You can’t fight city hall”), and 4) Shouldering the Cost Burden/People Getting Something for Nothing (in general, economics). In addition, three sub-themes were identified with Change, Loss, and Uncertainty: landscape, community, and recreation. Each theme stood out against the dual grounds of the world and time. A review of the literature in conjunction with the theme analysis indicates two theories at work: inhibition of collective action and a generational power structure that contributes to quiescence

    Effects of Thresholding on Voxel-Wise Correspondence of Breath-Hold and Resting-State Maps of Cerebrovascular Reactivity

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    Functional magnetic resonance imaging for presurgical brain mapping enables neurosurgeons to identify viable tissue near a site of operable pathology which might be at risk of surgery-induced damage. However, focal brain pathology (e.g., tumors) may selectively disrupt neurovascular coupling while leaving the underlying neurons functionally intact. Such neurovascular uncoupling can result in false negatives on brain activation maps thereby compromising their use for surgical planning. One way to detect potential neurovascular uncoupling is to map cerebrovascular reactivity using either an active breath-hold challenge or a passive resting-state scan. The equivalence of these two methods has yet to be fully established, especially at a voxel level of resolution. To quantitatively compare breath-hold and resting-state maps of cerebrovascular reactivity, we first identified threshold settings that optimized coverage of gray matter while minimizing false responses in white matter. When so optimized, the resting-state metric had moderately better gray matter coverage and specificity. We then assessed the spatial correspondence between the two metrics within cortical gray matter, again, across a wide range of thresholds. Optimal spatial correspondence was strongly dependent on threshold settings which if improperly set tended to produce statistically biased maps. When optimized, the two CVR maps did have moderately good correspondence with each other (mean accuracy of 73.6%). Our results show that while the breath-hold and resting-state maps may appear qualitatively similar they are not quantitatively identical at a voxel level of resolution
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