33,384 research outputs found
Multidisciplinary Expert-aided Analysis and Design (MEAD)
The MEAD Computer Program (MCP) is being developed under the Multidisciplinary Expert-Aided Analysis and Design (MEAD) Project as a CAD environment in which integrated flight, propulsion, and structural control systems can be designed and analyzed. The MCP has several embedded computer-aided control engineering (CACE) packages, a user interface (UI), a supervisor, a data-base manager (DBM), and an expert system (ES). The supervisor monitors and coordinates the operation of the CACE packages, the DBM; the ES, and the UI. The DBM tracks the control design process. Models created or installed by the MCP are tracked by date and version, and results are associated with the specific model version with which they were generated. The ES is used to relieve the control engineer from tedious and cumbersome tasks in the iterative design process. The UI provides the capability for a novice as well as an expert to utilize the MCP easily and effectively. The MCP version 2(MCP-2.0) is fully developed for flight control system design and analysis. Propulsion system modeling, analysis, and simulation is also supported; the same is true for structural models represented in state-space form. The ultimate goal is to cover the integration of flight, propulsion, and structural control engineering, including all discipline-specific functionality and interfaces. The current MCP-2.0 components and functionality are discussed
Labyrinthine artery aneurysm as an internal auditory canal mass.
We present the first case report of a labyrinthine artery aneurysm masquerading as an internal auditory canal tumor. A 72-year-old woman presented with sudden onset right facial paralysis, facial pain, hearing loss, and vertigo. She demonstrated dense right-sided facial paralysis involving all branches of the facial nerve, left beating horizontal nystagmus, and anacusis of the right ear. Magnetic resonance imaging with contrast demonstrated a 6 × 7 mm peripherally enhancing lesion with lack of central uptake filling the right internal auditory canal. The patient elected to proceed with translabyrinthine approach to the internal auditory canal for definitive resection of the mass as well as to decompress the neural structures of the internal auditory canal in an attempt to recover neural function, particularly of the facial nerve. Intraoperatively, the internal auditory canal mass was resected with minimal difficulty, with intraoperative dissection notable for brisk bleeding at the medial base of the tumor just as the tumor was dissected off its medial fibrous attachments. Final pathology of the resected mass revealed a blood vessel with mucinous degeneration of the medial layer of the vessel wall, with immunohistochemical staining confirming the presence and structure of aneurysmal blood vessel
Observations of the Vertical Structure of Tidal Currents in Two Inlets
Observations of the vertical structure of broad band tidal currents were obtained at two energetic inlets. Each experiment took place over a 4 week period, the first at Hampton Inlet in southeastern New Hampshire, USA, in the Fall of 2011, and the second at New River Inlet in southern North Carolina, USA, in the spring of 2012. The temporal variation and vertical structure of the currents were observed at each site with 600 kHz and 1200 kHz RDI Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers (ADCP) deployed on low-profile bottom tripods in 7.5 and 12.5 m water depths near the entrance to Hampton Inlet, and in 8 and 9 m water depth within and outside New River Inlet, respectively. In addition, a Nortek Aquapro ADCP was mounted on a jetted pipe in about 2.5 m water depth on the flank of the each inlet channel. Flows within the Hampton/Seabrook Inlet were dominated by semi-diurnal tides ranging 2.5 - 4 m in elevation, with velocities exceeding 2.5 m/s. Flows within New River inlet were also semi-diurnal with tides ranging about 1 – 1.5 m in elevation and with velocities exceeding 1.5 m/s. Vertical variation in the flow structure at the dominant tidal frequency are examined as a function of location within and near the inlet. Outside the inlet, velocities vary strongly over the vertical, with a nearly linear decay from the surface to near the bottom. The coherence between the upper most velocity bin and the successively vertically separated bins drops off quickly with depth, with as much as 50% coherence decay over the water column. The phase relative to the uppermost velocity bin shifts over depth, with as much as 40 deg phase lag over the vertical, with bottom velocities leading the surface. Offshore, rotary coefficients indicate a stable ellipse orientation with rotational directions consistent over the vertical. At Hampton, the shallower ADCP, but still outside the inlet, shows a rotational structure that changes sign in the vertical indicating a sense of rotation at the bottom that is opposite to that at the surface. Within the inlet, the flow is more aligned with the channel, the decay in amplitude over the vertical is diminished, the coherence and phase structure is nearly uniform, and the rotary coefficients indicate no sense of rotation in the flow. The observations are qualitatively consistent with behavior described by Prandle (1982) for shallow water tidal flows
A new genus of Prioninae (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae)
Neoma, a new genus of Cerambycidae (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae: Prioninae: Macrotomini) is described for Mallodonopsis corrosus Bates, 1879, compared to related genera (Aplagiognathus Thomson, 1861; Archodontes Lameere, 1903; and Mallodonopsis Thomson, 1861), and its tribal position discussed. A lectotype for Mallodonopsis corrosus is here designated with the species redescribed and figured
Determination of complex absorbing potentials from the electron self-energy
The electronic conductance of a molecule making contact to electrodes is
determined by the coupling of discrete molecular states to the continuum
electrode density of states. Interactions between bound states and continua can
be modeled exactly by using the (energy-dependent) self-energy, or
approximately by using a complex potential. We discuss the relation between the
two approaches and give a prescription for using the self-energy to construct
an energy-independent, non-local, complex potential. We apply our scheme to
studying single-electron transmission in an atomic chain, obtaining excellent
agreement with the exact result. Our approach allows us to treat
electron-reservoir couplings independent of single electron energies, allowing
for the definition of a one-body operator suitable for inclusion into
correlated electron transport calculations.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures; to be published in the J. Chem. Phy
The Effects of Pretherapy Information on the Client\u27s Perception of a Counselor\u27s Values and Receptiveness to Treatment
Over the past thirty years there has been a growing awareness in the psychological community that a counselor\u27s personal values, including religious values, influences the therapy relationship. Despite this awareness, few counselors have made it a practice of sharing their value orientation with their clients. One way of helping clients make informed choices about whether they want to enter therapy with a certain counselor is to give them information before therapy begins about a counselor\u27s personal values that may influence the therapy relationship. This study partially replicates the work of Lewis and Epperson ( l 991) and shows that pre therapy information is an effective way of informing clients about the value orientation of therapists. The sample used for this study were 195 students taken from three post secondary institutions associated with Christianity. Ninety-five percent of the participants identified with Christianity. Participants were randomly assigned to three experimental conditions. Assignment was based upon the pretherapy value information they received (Secular/humanistic, Traditional, or Christian) and their value orientation (Evangelical vs. Other). Participants were assessed about whether they could perceive the counselor\u27s value orientation accurately based on the information they reviewed. They were then asked whether they would be willing to see this counselor for a variety of presenting problems. Results were analyzed using multivariate and univariate analyses of variance. The results show that clients could identify the counselors\u27 values accurately. Participants perceived a significant difference between the Christian counselor and the Humanistic counselor. Evangelicals preferred the Christian counselor for most problems while Others were more diverse in their preferences of a counselor. Prior research (Epperson & Lewis, 1987; Lewis & Epperson, 1991) showed Traditional counselors were preferred to Christian or feminist counselors; they concluded that revealing personal values may prompt prospective clients to seek help from others. The present results suggest that evangelical Christian clients may prefer counselors who express similar explicit personal values, while other clients may prefer counselors with various personal values depending on their specific presenting problem. The study contributes to the growing number of empirical studies showing that pretherapy value information helps clients make informed choices about whether or not to enter therapy with a specific therapist
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