Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Source Attribution And Interannual Variability Of Arctic Pollution In Spring Constrained By Aircraft (Arctas, Arcpac) And Satellite (Airs) Observations Of Carbon Monoxide, J A. Fisher, D J. Jacob, M T. Purdy, M Kopacz, P Le Sager, C C. Carouge, C D. Holmes, R M. Yantosca, R L. Batchelor, K Strong, G S. Diskin, H E. Fuelberg, J S. Holloway, E J. Hyer, W. W Mcmillan, J Warner, D G. Streets, Q Zhang, Y Yang, S Wu Feb 2015

Source Attribution And Interannual Variability Of Arctic Pollution In Spring Constrained By Aircraft (Arctas, Arcpac) And Satellite (Airs) Observations Of Carbon Monoxide, J A. Fisher, D J. Jacob, M T. Purdy, M Kopacz, P Le Sager, C C. Carouge, C D. Holmes, R M. Yantosca, R L. Batchelor, K Strong, G S. Diskin, H E. Fuelberg, J S. Holloway, E J. Hyer, W. W Mcmillan, J Warner, D G. Streets, Q Zhang, Y Yang, S Wu

Jenny A Fisher

We use aircraft observations of carbon monoxide (CO) from the NASA ARCTAS and NOAA ARCPAC campaigns in April 2008 together with multiyear (2003– 2008) CO satellite data from the AIRS instrument and a global chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem) to better understand the sources, transport, and interannual variability of pollution in the Arctic in spring. Model simulation of the aircraft data gives best estimates of CO emissions in April 2008 of 26 Tg month−1 for Asian anthropogenic, 9.4 for European anthropogenic, 4.1 for North American anthropogenic, 15 for Russian biomass burning (anomalously large that year), and 23 for Southeast Asian biomass …


Culture, Psyche, And Body Make Each Other Up, Dov Cohen, Angela K. Y. Leung, Hans Ijzerman Jan 2012

Culture, Psyche, And Body Make Each Other Up, Dov Cohen, Angela K. Y. Leung, Hans Ijzerman

Ka Yee Angela LEUNG

The commentaries make important points, including ones about the purposeful uses of embodiment effects. Research examining such effects needs to look at how such effects play themselves out in people's everyday lives. Research might usefully integrate work on embodiment with work on attribution and work in other disciplines concerned with body–psyche connections (e.g., research on somaticizing versus “psychologizing” illnesses and hypercognizing versus hypocognizing emotions). Such work may help us understand the way positive and negative feedback loops operate as culture, psyche, and body make each other up.


Why Are The Attribution And Citation Of Scientific Data Important? In: Uhlir, Paul And Cohen, Daniel (Eds.). Report From Developing Data Attribution And Citation Practices And Standards: An International Symposium And Workshop., Christine L. Borgman Dec 2011

Why Are The Attribution And Citation Of Scientific Data Important? In: Uhlir, Paul And Cohen, Daniel (Eds.). Report From Developing Data Attribution And Citation Practices And Standards: An International Symposium And Workshop., Christine L. Borgman

Christine L. Borgman

Keynote address from the Developing Data Attribution and Citation Practices and Standards: An International Symposium and Workshop in Berkeley, CA on 22 August 2011. Keynote speech is contained within the forthcoming 2012 Report from Developing Data Attribution and Citation Practices and Standards: An International Symposium and Workshop published by the National Academy of Sciences.

Preferred Citation: Borgman, C.L. (2012, forthcoming). Why are the attribution and citation of scientific data important? In: Uhlir, Paul and Cohen, Daniel (eds.). Report from Developing Data Attribution and Citation Practices and Standards: An International Symposium and Workshop. National Academy of Sciences’ Board on Research Data …