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2011

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Articles 1051 - 1080 of 9704

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Fundamental Properties Of Simple Emergent Feature Processing, Robert D. Hawkins, Joseph W. Houpt, Ami Eidels, James T. Townsend, Michael J. Wenger Nov 2011

Fundamental Properties Of Simple Emergent Feature Processing, Robert D. Hawkins, Joseph W. Houpt, Ami Eidels, James T. Townsend, Michael J. Wenger

Joseph W. Houpt

No abstract provided.


Rabi Flopping Induces Spatial Demixing Dynamics, E. Nicklas, H. Strobel, T. Zibold, C. Gross, B. A. Malomed, Panos Kevrekidis, M. K. Oberthaler Nov 2011

Rabi Flopping Induces Spatial Demixing Dynamics, E. Nicklas, H. Strobel, T. Zibold, C. Gross, B. A. Malomed, Panos Kevrekidis, M. K. Oberthaler

Panos Kevrekidis

We experimentally investigate the mixing and demixing dynamics of Bose-Einstein condensates in the presence of a linear coupling between two internal states. The observed amplitude reduction of the Rabi oscillations can be understood as a result of demixing dynamics of dressed states as experimentally confirmed by reconstructing the spatial profile of dressed state amplitudes. The observations are in quantitative agreement with numerical integration of coupled Gross-Pitaevskii equations without free parameters, which also reveals the criticality of the dynamics on the symmetry of the system. Our observations demonstrate new possibilities for changing effective atomic interactions and studying critical phenomena.


Fundamental Properties Of Simple Emergent Feature Processing, Robert D. Hawkins, Joseph W. Houpt, Ami Eidels, James T. Townsend, Michael J. Wenger Nov 2011

Fundamental Properties Of Simple Emergent Feature Processing, Robert D. Hawkins, Joseph W. Houpt, Ami Eidels, James T. Townsend, Michael J. Wenger

Psychology Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Concurrent Sessions 1a: Ramping It Up: From Marketing To Partnerships, Jef Sharp, Michael Mahoney, Jonathan Edwards Nov 2011

Concurrent Sessions 1a: Ramping It Up: From Marketing To Partnerships, Jef Sharp, Michael Mahoney, Jonathan Edwards

Clean Energy Connections

Cleantech startups are all the rage, but what does it take for these companies to get to that next level? Marketing the new company's brand or partnering with large companies with more resources? Either of these can help get innovations to market more quickly.


Welcome, Marla Michel, Domenic J. Sarno, Steve Goodwin Nov 2011

Welcome, Marla Michel, Domenic J. Sarno, Steve Goodwin

Clean Energy Connections

No abstract provided.


The Polylogarithm And The Lambert W Functions In Thermoelectrics, Muralikrishna Molli, Kamisetty Venkataramaniah, Sree Ram Valluri Nov 2011

The Polylogarithm And The Lambert W Functions In Thermoelectrics, Muralikrishna Molli, Kamisetty Venkataramaniah, Sree Ram Valluri

Physics and Astronomy Publications

In this work, we determine the conditions for the extremum of the figure of merit, theta2, in a degenerate semiconductor for thermoelectric (TE) applications. We study the variation of the function theta2 with respect to the reduced chemical potential mu* using relations involving polylogarithms of both integral and nonintegral orders. We present the relevant equations for the thermopower, thermal, and electrical conductivities that result in optimizing theta2 and obtaining the extremum equations. We discuss the different cases that arise for various values of r, which depends on the type of carrier scattering mechanism present in the …


The Fierce Green Fire: Vol. 2 Issue 9, Wofford College Environmental Studies Program Nov 2011

The Fierce Green Fire: Vol. 2 Issue 9, Wofford College Environmental Studies Program

The Fierce Green Fire

No abstract provided.


Distance Scale Zero Points From Galactic Rr Lyrae Star Parallaxes, G. Fritz Benedict, Barbara E. Mcarthur, Michael W. Feast, Thomas G. Barnes, Thomas E. Harrison, Jacob L. Bean, John W. Menzies, Brian Chaboyer Nov 2011

Distance Scale Zero Points From Galactic Rr Lyrae Star Parallaxes, G. Fritz Benedict, Barbara E. Mcarthur, Michael W. Feast, Thomas G. Barnes, Thomas E. Harrison, Jacob L. Bean, John W. Menzies, Brian Chaboyer

Dartmouth Scholarship

We present new absolute trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions for seven Population II variable stars—five RR Lyr variables: RZ Cep, XZ Cyg, SU Dra, RR Lyr, and UV Oct; and two type 2 Cepheids: VY Pyx and κ Pav. We obtained these results with astrometric data from Fine Guidance Sensors, white-light interferometers on Hubble Space Telescope. We find absolute parallaxes in milliseconds of arc: RZ Cep, 2.12 ± 0.16 mas; XZ Cyg, 1.67 ± 0.17 mas; SU Dra, 1.42 ± 0.16 mas; RR Lyr, 3.77 ± 0.13 mas; UV Oct, 1.71 ± 0.10 mas; VY Pyx, 6.44 ± 0.23 …


Investigating The Role Of The Internet In Women And Minority Stem Participation: A Case Study Of Two Florida Engineering Programs, Arland Nguema Ndong Nov 2011

Investigating The Role Of The Internet In Women And Minority Stem Participation: A Case Study Of Two Florida Engineering Programs, Arland Nguema Ndong

USF Tampa Graduate Theses and Dissertations

Despite our awareness of the fascination modern humans have with the Internet, little is known about how and why colleges and universities create and maintain Websites. At the most general level, in this case study, I hypothesize that university Websites serve as communication and marketing tools in attracting students. At the most specific level, I postulate that civil engineering programs with Web pages depicting images of women and minorities would be more successful in recruiting and retaining women and students of color than civil engineering programs with Web pages displaying fewer or no images of women and minorities. The primary …


The Limits To Prediction In Ecological Systems, Brian Beckage, Louis J. Gross, Stuart Kauffman Nov 2011

The Limits To Prediction In Ecological Systems, Brian Beckage, Louis J. Gross, Stuart Kauffman

College of Agriculture and Life Sciences Faculty Publications

Predicting the future trajectories of ecological systems is increasingly important as the magnitude of anthropogenic perturbation of the earth systems grows.We distinguish between two types of predictability: the intrinsic or theoretical predictability of a system and the realized predictability that is achieved using available models and parameterizations. We contend that there are strong limits on the intrinsic predictability of ecological systems that arise from inherent characteristics of biological systems. While the realized predictability of ecological systems can be limited by process and parameter misspecification or uncertainty, we argue that the intrinsic predictability of ecological systems is widely and strongly limited …


On-Line Banking Systems: Are They Sustainable?, Satish Mahadevan Srinivasan, Sachin Pawaskar, Abhishek Tripathi, Lotfollah Najjar Nov 2011

On-Line Banking Systems: Are They Sustainable?, Satish Mahadevan Srinivasan, Sachin Pawaskar, Abhishek Tripathi, Lotfollah Najjar

Information Systems and Quantitative Analysis Faculty Proceedings & Presentations

Although the trend for on-line banking has increased in recent years, the customers have not shown enthusiastic participation in the past and in present. Since the sustainability of a bank supporting on-line-banking service depends on what capacity it can attract new customers, retain already existing customers and how well can it extend its services to the current and future customer base. This investigation is focused on examining if there is any significant difference among the factors namely the transactional security, information design, navigational design, visual design, web site trust, web site satisfaction and e-loyalty over sustainability of on-line banking for …


Habitat Use And Abundance Patterns Of Sandhill Cranes In The Central Platte River Valley, Nebraska, 2003–2010, Todd Joseph Buckley Nov 2011

Habitat Use And Abundance Patterns Of Sandhill Cranes In The Central Platte River Valley, Nebraska, 2003–2010, Todd Joseph Buckley

School of Natural Resources: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

The Central Platte River Valley (CPRV) in Nebraska is an important spring stopover area for the midcontinent population of sandhill cranes. Alterations to crop rotation and loss habitat in the CPRV pose a risk to the population. Personnel drove designated routes in the CPRV from 2003–2010 to record the presence of cranes in agricultural fields and estimate abundance. I developed and evaluated models to predict habitat use and flock sizes. Alfalfa was predicted to receive the highest use followed by corn, soybeans, winter wheat, grassland, and shrubland. Use of all habitats and flock size increased as field area increased. Flock …


Calibration Systems And Methods For Infrared Cameras, Russell Granneman, Nuwan Nagahawatte, Richard M. Goeden, Ted Takagi, Robert Ernst, Gary B. Hughes, Joseph Kostrzewa, John Graff, George Speake, Michael Kent, Neela Nalam, Stephen Lyon, Barbara Sharp, Pierre Boulanger, Neil Cutcliffe, Tim Martin, Ted Hoelter Nov 2011

Calibration Systems And Methods For Infrared Cameras, Russell Granneman, Nuwan Nagahawatte, Richard M. Goeden, Ted Takagi, Robert Ernst, Gary B. Hughes, Joseph Kostrzewa, John Graff, George Speake, Michael Kent, Neela Nalam, Stephen Lyon, Barbara Sharp, Pierre Boulanger, Neil Cutcliffe, Tim Martin, Ted Hoelter

Statistics

Systems and methods directed to calibration techniques for infrared cameras are disclosed. For example, a method of obtaining calibration information for an infrared device includes providing a calibration target adapted to provide a low-emissivity scene; performing a calibration operation on the infrared device to obtain the calibration information; and storing the calibration information.


Seasonal Stability Of A Flexible Algal-Cnidarian Symbiosis In A Highly Variable Temperate Environment, James L. Dimond, Brian L. Bingham, GisèLe Muller-Parker, Kaela Wuesthoff, Lisbeth Francis Nov 2011

Seasonal Stability Of A Flexible Algal-Cnidarian Symbiosis In A Highly Variable Temperate Environment, James L. Dimond, Brian L. Bingham, GisèLe Muller-Parker, Kaela Wuesthoff, Lisbeth Francis

Environmental Sciences Faculty and Staff Publications

We evaluated the seasonal stability of two algal symbiont populations in the temperate intertidal sea anemone Anthopleura elegantissima on San Juan Island, Washington, where the relatively thermally tolerant dinoflagellate Symbiodinium muscatinei coexists with the less thermally tolerant chlorophyte Elliptochloris marina. Random collection of anemones along repeatedly sampled transects over four seasons and three shore heights revealed S. muscatinei to be the dominant symbiont, with E. marina mostly limited to anemones in the lower intertidal zone. At the lowest shore height sampled (+0.2 m), the proportion of E. marina was between 40% and 50% of the total symbiont population throughout …


Causes And Implications Of The Correlation Between Forest Productivity And Tree Mortality Rates, Nathan L. Stephenson, Phillip J. Van Mantgem, Andrew Godard Bunn, Howard Bruner, Mark E. Harmon, Kari B. O'Connell, Dean L. Urban, Jerry F. Franklin Nov 2011

Causes And Implications Of The Correlation Between Forest Productivity And Tree Mortality Rates, Nathan L. Stephenson, Phillip J. Van Mantgem, Andrew Godard Bunn, Howard Bruner, Mark E. Harmon, Kari B. O'Connell, Dean L. Urban, Jerry F. Franklin

Environmental Sciences Faculty and Staff Publications

At global and regional scales, tree mortality rates are positively correlated with forest net primary productivity (NPP). Yet causes of the correlation are unknown, in spite of potentially profound implications for our understanding of environmental controls of forest structure and dynamics and, more generally, our understanding of broad-scale environmental controls of population dynamics and ecosystem processes. Here we seek to shed light on the causes of geographic patterns in tree mortality rates, and we consider some implications of the positive correlation between mortality rates and NPP. To reach these ends, we present seven hypotheses potentially explaining the correlation, develop an …


Nonlinear Progressive Wave Equation For Stratified Atmospheres, B. Edward Mcdonald, Andrew A. Piacsek Nov 2011

Nonlinear Progressive Wave Equation For Stratified Atmospheres, B. Edward Mcdonald, Andrew A. Piacsek

All Faculty Scholarship for the College of the Sciences

The nonlinear progressive wave equation (NPE) [McDonald and Kuperman, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 81, 1406–1417 (1987)] is expressed in a form to accommodate changes in the ambient atmospheric density, pressure, and sound speed as the time-stepping computational window moves along a path possibly traversing significant altitude differences (in pressure scale heights). The modification is accomplished by the addition of a stratification term related to that derived in the 1970s for linear range-stepping calculations and later adopted into Khokhlov-Zabolotskaya-Kuznetsov-type nonlinear models. The modified NPE is shown to preserve acoustic energy in a ray tube and yields analytic similarity solutions for …


2011 Aquatic Weed Surveys In Timothy Lake, Lake Harriet And North Fork Reservoir : Final Report, Mark D. Sytsma, Vanessa Howard Morgan Nov 2011

2011 Aquatic Weed Surveys In Timothy Lake, Lake Harriet And North Fork Reservoir : Final Report, Mark D. Sytsma, Vanessa Howard Morgan

Center for Lakes and Reservoirs Publications and Presentations

Portland General Electric (PGE) was issued a new license by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for the continued operation and maintenance of the Clackamas River Hydroelectric Project No. 2195 (Project) on December 21, 2010. This Project is located on both the lower 16 miles of Oak Grove Fork of the Clackamas River (Oak Grove Fork) and the mainstem of the Clackamas River in Clackamas County, Oregon. The effects of relicensing this Project were addressed in the Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) completed in December 2006 and included the issue of invasive aquatic weed species. The term “aquatic weed” is …


Climate Change In The Piscataqua/Great Bay Region: Past, Present, And Future, Cameron P. Wake, Elizabeth Burakowski, Eric Kelsey, Katharine Hayhoe, Anne Stoner, Chris Watson, Ellen Douglas Nov 2011

Climate Change In The Piscataqua/Great Bay Region: Past, Present, And Future, Cameron P. Wake, Elizabeth Burakowski, Eric Kelsey, Katharine Hayhoe, Anne Stoner, Chris Watson, Ellen Douglas

The Sustainability Institute Publications

Earth ’s climate changes. It always has and always will. However, an extensive body of scientific evidence indicates that human activities are now a significant force driving change in the Earth’s climate system. This report describes how the climate of the Piscataqua/Great Bay region of coastal New Hampshire in the United States has changed over the past century and how the future climate of the region will be affected by human activities that are warming the planet.

Overall, the region has been getting warmer and wetter over the last century, and the rate of change has increased over the last …


A Comparison Of Factor Rotation Methods For Dichotomous Data, W. Holmes Finch Nov 2011

A Comparison Of Factor Rotation Methods For Dichotomous Data, W. Holmes Finch

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) is frequently used in the social sciences and is a common component in many validity studies. A core aspect of EFA is the determination of which observed indicator variables are associated with which latent factors through the use of factor loadings. Loadings are initially extracted using an algorithm, such as maximum likelihood or weighted least squares, and then transformed - or rotated - to make them more interpretable. There are a number of rotational techniques available to the researcher making use of EFA. Prior work has discussed the advantages of a number of these criteria from …


Sensitivity Analysis For Two-Level Value Functions With Applications To Bilevel Programming, S Dempe, Boris S. Mordukhovich, B Zemkoho Nov 2011

Sensitivity Analysis For Two-Level Value Functions With Applications To Bilevel Programming, S Dempe, Boris S. Mordukhovich, B Zemkoho

Mathematics Research Reports

This paper contributes to a deeper understanding of the link between a now conventional framework in hierarchical optimization spread under the name of the optimistic bilevel problem and its initial more difficult formulation that we call here the original optimistic bilevel optimization problem. It follows from this research that, although the process of deriving necessary optimality conditions for the latter problem is more involved, the conditions themselves do not to a large extent differ from those known for the conventional problem. It has been already well recognized in the literature that for optimality conditions of the usual optimistic bilevel program …


Borders, Barriers, And Breakthroughs In The Cascadia Corridor, Troy D. Abel, Jenni Pelc, Lauren F. Miller, Jacqueline Quarre, Kathryn Mork Nov 2011

Borders, Barriers, And Breakthroughs In The Cascadia Corridor, Troy D. Abel, Jenni Pelc, Lauren F. Miller, Jacqueline Quarre, Kathryn Mork

College of the Environment on the Peninsulas Publications

This project focused on dilemmas of political biogeography through a case study of wildlife conservation and management efforts in the transboundary Cascadia region. Our team examined the interface of political science and biogeography, or “political biogeography,” through its manifestations in the evolving opportunities and barriers to regional wildlife conservation in the shared terrestrial ecosystems of British Columbia and Washington. Our research combined content analysis of policy documents and semi-structured stakeholder interviews and questionnaires. We also produced a series of maps and GIS data layers that provide useful spatial information about the wildlife commons in the Cascadia region. The results of …


The Power Of Fair Pricing Mechanisms, Christine Chung, Katrina Ligett, Aaron Roth, Kirk Pruhs Nov 2011

The Power Of Fair Pricing Mechanisms, Christine Chung, Katrina Ligett, Aaron Roth, Kirk Pruhs

Computer Science Faculty Publications

We explore the revenue capabilities of truthful, monotone (“fair”) allocation and pricing functions for resource constrained auction mechanisms within a general framework that encompasses unlimited supply auctions, knapsack auctions, and auctions with general non-decreasing convex production cost functions. We study and compare the revenue obtainable in each fair pricing scheme to the profit obtained by the ideal omniscient multi-price auction. We show that for capacitated knapsack auctions, no constant pricing scheme can achieve any approximation to the optimal profit, but proportional pricing is as powerful as general monotone pricing. In addition, for auction settings with arbitrary bounded non-decreasing convex production …


Historical Evolution Of The Geological Researches In The Menderes Massif, O. Özcan Dora Nov 2011

Historical Evolution Of The Geological Researches In The Menderes Massif, O. Özcan Dora

Bulletin of the Mineral Research and Exploration

The Pan-African basement of Menderes Massif is made up of homogenous paragneiss and schist units (metaclastic sequence) which are intruded by metagabbros and gneisses derived from different types of granites. The basement is unconformably overlain by Early Palaeozoic metaclastic series consisting of quartzite and metaconglomerate at the lowest level. They show a transition into schists, and the Palaeozoic sequence ends with Permo-Carboniferous black marbles of Göktepe formation. Both basement and Palaeozoic sequence are intruded by Early Triassic leucocratic granites which were converted into orthogneisses by Alpine metamorphism. The Mesozoic series of the Menderes Massif begins with Late Triassic meta-sandstone/metaconglomerate intercalation …


The Communicator, Volume 7, Issue 2 -- November 2011 Nov 2011

The Communicator, Volume 7, Issue 2 -- November 2011

The Communicator: News from the Nebraska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit

We welcome Noelle Chaine, Kent Fricke, Danielle Haak, Caroline Jezierski, Jessica Laskowski, Lindsey Messinger, Shana Sundstrom and Kelly Turek to the Coop Unit.

Population Assessment of Channel Catfish in Nebraska’s Reservoirs

Graduate Student News: Dustin Martin, Kristine Nemec, Shana Sundstrom, Aaron Lotz

Announcements: Nate Gosch, Ashley Manley, Carla Bobier, Dan Uden, Carla (Knight) Bobier, Chris and Lindsey (Richters) Chizinski, and Nick Smeenk

Weed Management Summit at the Ramada Inn, Kearney, NE. January 17–18, 2012

Outreach Activities: Karie Decker, Chris Chizinski, Karie Decker, Alex Engle, Carla Bobier, Natalie Luben, Dustin Martin, and Kevin Pope, Chris Jorgensen, Lindsey Messinger, and Ryan Stutzman, …


Understanding The Molecular Information Contained In Principal Component Analysis Of Vibrational Spectra Of Biological Systems, Franck Bonnier, Hugh Byrne Nov 2011

Understanding The Molecular Information Contained In Principal Component Analysis Of Vibrational Spectra Of Biological Systems, Franck Bonnier, Hugh Byrne

Articles

K-means clustering followed by Principal Component Analysis (PCA) is employed to analyse Raman spectroscopic maps of single biological cells. K-means clustering successfully identifies regions of cellular cytoplasm, nucleus and nucleoli, but the mean spectra do not differentiate their biochemical composition. The loadings of the principal components identified by PCA shed further light on the spectral basis for differentiation but they are complex and, as the number of spectra per cluster is imbalanced, particularly in the case of the nucleoli, the loadings under-represent the basis for differentiation of some cellular regions. Analysis of pure bio-molecules, both structurally and spectrally distinct, in …


Geosciences Newsletter - 2011, Department Of Geosciences Nov 2011

Geosciences Newsletter - 2011, Department Of Geosciences

Geological and Environmental Sciences News

Vol. 5, No. 1

  • Publications
  • MGRRE
  • Field Trips
  • Graduate News
  • Alumni
  • Advisory Board
  • Gifts
  • Grants
  • Alumni Update


Heavy Metal Analysis Of Sabine River And Toledo Bend Reservoir Bed Sediments, Michael A. Janusa Nov 2011

Heavy Metal Analysis Of Sabine River And Toledo Bend Reservoir Bed Sediments, Michael A. Janusa

Faculty Posters

Core samples were collected from the Sabine River and Toledo Bend Reservoir beds, digested, and analyzed using atomic absorption spectroscopy for several heavy metals. The magnitude of heavy metal concentrations in the bed sediments and the pattern of deposition can help determine which heavy metals are present, the source of heavy metals found in the fish (bed sediment or water), and the source of the heavy metal pollution, if any: industrial, geologic, or atmospheric.


A Mild One-Pot Conversion Of Alkenes Into Amines Through Tandem Ozonolysis And Reductive Amination, Shivakumar Kyasa, Thomas J. Fisher, Patrick Dussault Nov 2011

A Mild One-Pot Conversion Of Alkenes Into Amines Through Tandem Ozonolysis And Reductive Amination, Shivakumar Kyasa, Thomas J. Fisher, Patrick Dussault

Patrick Dussault Publications

The selective reduction of hydroperoxyacetals to aldehydes by sodium triacetoxyborohydride provides the basis for a mild one-pot synthesis of amines from alkenes.

Includes Supplementary Materials.


Type I Error Rates Of The Two-Sample Pseudo-Median Procedure, Nor Aishah Ahad, Abdul Rahman Othman, Sharipah Soaad Syed Yahaya Nov 2011

Type I Error Rates Of The Two-Sample Pseudo-Median Procedure, Nor Aishah Ahad, Abdul Rahman Othman, Sharipah Soaad Syed Yahaya

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

The performance of the pseudo-median based procedure is examined in terms of controlling Type I error for a two independent groups test. The procedure is a modification of the one-sample Wilcoxon statistic using the pseudo-median of differences between group values as the central measure of location. The proposed procedure was shown to have good control of Type I error rates under the study conditions regardless of distribution type.


Robustness, Power And Interpretability Of Pairwise Tests Of Discriminant Functions In Manova, Philip H. Ramsey, Patricia P. Ramsey, Priscila Hachimine, Nancy Andiloro Nov 2011

Robustness, Power And Interpretability Of Pairwise Tests Of Discriminant Functions In Manova, Philip H. Ramsey, Patricia P. Ramsey, Priscila Hachimine, Nancy Andiloro

Journal of Modern Applied Statistical Methods

Limiting follow-up hypotheses to be tested can reduce problems relating to the control of Type I and Type II errors in multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA). Such limitations can also improve the interpretability of results. The importance of sample size, shape of population distribution, within-group correlations and heterogeneity of variances are demonstrated. The protected greatest characteristic root (GCR) procedure is shown to work well for small, group size, N (≤ 10). The unprotected GCR is shown to work well for larger N.