Masthead,
2010
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Back Matter,
2010
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
A Generalized Multidimensional Index Structure For Multimedia Data To Support Content-Based Similarity Searches In A Collaborative Search Environment,
2010
Florida International University
A Generalized Multidimensional Index Structure For Multimedia Data To Support Content-Based Similarity Searches In A Collaborative Search Environment, Kasturi Chatterjee
FIU Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Since multimedia data, such as images and videos, are way more expressive and informative than ordinary text-based data, people find it more attractive to communicate and express with them. Additionally, with the rising popularity of social networking tools such as Facebook and Twitter, multimedia information retrieval can no longer be considered a solitary task. Rather, people constantly collaborate with one another while searching and retrieving information. But the very cause of the popularity of multimedia data, the huge and different types of information a single data object can carry, makes their management a challenging task. Multimedia data is commonly represented …
Genetic Variation In Past And Current Landscapes: Conservation Implications Based On Six Endemic Florida Scrub Plants,
2010
Butler University
Genetic Variation In Past And Current Landscapes: Conservation Implications Based On Six Endemic Florida Scrub Plants, Eric S. Menges, Rebecca W. Dolan, Robert Pickert, Rebecca Yahr, Doria R. Gordon
Rebecca W. Dolan
If genetic variation is often positively correlated with population sizes and the presence of nearby populations and suitable habitats, landscape proxies could inform conservation decisions without genetic analyses. For six Florida scrub endemic plants (Dicerandra frutescens, Eryngium cuneifolium, Hypericum cumulicola, Liatris ohlingerae, Nolina brittoniana, and Warea carteri), we relate two measures of genetic variation, expected heterozygosity and alleles per polymorphic locus (APL), to population size and landscape variables. Presettlement areas were estimated based on soil preferences and GIS soils maps. Four species showed no genetic patterns related to population or landscape factors. The other two species showed significant but inconsistent …
Incommensurability And Multi-Paradigm Grounding In Design Science Research: Implications For Creating Knowledge,
2010
Bond University
Incommensurability And Multi-Paradigm Grounding In Design Science Research: Implications For Creating Knowledge, Dirk S. Hovorka
Dirk Hovorka
The ‘problem identification-design-build-evaluate-theorize’ structure of Design Science Research has been proposed as an approach to creating knowledge in information systems and in broader organizational and social domains. Although the approach has merit, the philosophical foundations of two specific components warrant attention. First, the grounding of design theory on potentially incommensurate kernel theories may produce incoherent design theory. In addition, the newly design theory has no strong logical connection to the kernel theories, and so cannot be used to test or validate the contributing kernel theories. Second, the philosophical grounding of evaluation may inadvertently shift from functionally-based measures of utility and …
Simple Examples Of Estimating Causal Effects Using Targeted Maximum Likelihood Estimation,
2010
Johns Hopkins University
Simple Examples Of Estimating Causal Effects Using Targeted Maximum Likelihood Estimation, Michael Rosenblum, Mark J. Van Der Laan
U.C. Berkeley Division of Biostatistics Working Paper Series
We present a brief overview of targeted maximum likelihood for estimating the causal effect of a single time point treatment and of a two time point treatment. We focus on simple examples demonstrating how to apply the methodology developed in (van der Laan and Rubin, 2006; Moore and van der Laan, 2007; van der Laan, 2010a,b). We include R code for the single time point case.
Limnological Assistance For Lake Mead National Recreation Area: Quarterly Report, Period Ending March 30, 2010,
2010
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Limnological Assistance For Lake Mead National Recreation Area: Quarterly Report, Period Ending March 30, 2010, Margaret N. Rees
Limnological Studies
Project 1
• Technical assistance with the implementation of the Interagency Monitoring Action Plan (I-MAP) for Quagga Mussels is ongoing. Three sampling events took place this quarter and analysis of all samples (fall 2009 – spring 2010) is underway.
• Two graduate students are undergoing necessary training for the two small-scale research projects funded by this task agreement. Sampling is anticipated to begin in June 2010.
• The quarterly Interagency Quagga Mussel Meeting was held in March 2010.
Project 2
• Protocols relevant to the Long-term Limnological Aquatic Resource Monitoring and Research Plan (Plan) for Lakes Mead and Mohave have …
Improved Methods For Teaching Science,
2010
Utath State University
Improved Methods For Teaching Science, Stephanie Peterson, Sara Scott
Browse All Undergraduate research
Utah State University’s Get Away Special (GAS) team will conduct research aboard NASA's microgravity research aircraft, the “vomit comet,” through the Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunities program. Team members come from mechanical and aerospace engineering, computer science, physics, science education, and business backgrounds. The team will spend ten days this summer at NASA’s Johnson Space Center and perform experiments on the aircraft to better understand nucleate boiling, a potential method of efficient heat transfer in space.
A Systemic Study Of Nucleate Boiling,
2010
Utah State University
A Systemic Study Of Nucleate Boiling, Justin Koeln
Posters
Nucleate boiling is a heavily researched form of heat transfer due to its associated high heat transfer rates. Applying two-phase heat transfer to space systems would allow these systems to become more capable, efficient, and compact. However, a fundamental understanding of boiling dynamics in the absence of buoyancy is yet to be developed. This study intends to analyze the effects of gravity, power input, and surface geometry during successive periods of microgravity provided by NASA’s “vomit comet” through the Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunities Program.
Funboe - Follow-Up Nucleate Boiling On-Flight Experiment: A Systematic Study Of Nucleate Boiling In Microgravity,
2010
Utah State University
Funboe - Follow-Up Nucleate Boiling On-Flight Experiment: A Systematic Study Of Nucleate Boiling In Microgravity, Jt Farnsworth, Frank Mccown
Posters
Utah State University’s Get Away Special (GAS) team was awarded the opportunity to participate in Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunities program administered by NASA. Six members of the GAS team will fly in a specialized jet which will simulate microgravity where the experiment can be performed in 30 second intervals. The purpose of the experiment is to determine the properties of nucleate boiling of water in weightlessness. The experiment will be monitored with temperature sensors, accelerometers, and high definition cameras and the results will be analyzed frame by frame. This will provide important information related to the dynamics of heat …
Follow Up Nucleate Boiling On-Flight Experiment,
2010
Utah State University
Follow Up Nucleate Boiling On-Flight Experiment, Andrew Fassmann
Presentations
No abstract provided.
Guest-Free Monolayer Clathrate And Its Coexistence With Two-Dimensional High-Density Ice,
2010
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Guest-Free Monolayer Clathrate And Its Coexistence With Two-Dimensional High-Density Ice, Jaeil Bai, C. Austen Angell, Xiao Cheng Zeng
Xiao Cheng Zeng Publications
Three-dimensional (3D) gas clathrates are ice-like but distinguished from bulk ices by containing polyhedral nano-cages to accommodate small gas molecules. Without space filling by gas molecules, standalone 3D clathrates have not been observed to form in the laboratory, and they appear to be unstable except at negative pressure. Thus far, experimental evidence for guest‐free clathrates has only been found in germanium and silicon, although guest‐free hydrate clathrates have been found, in recent simulations, able to grow from cold stretched water, if first nucleated. Herein, we report simulation evidence of spontaneous formation of monolayer clathrate ice, with or without gas molecules, …
Publication Bias In Reports Of Animal Stroke Studies Leads To Major Overstatement Of Efficacy,
2010
University of Edinburgh
Publication Bias In Reports Of Animal Stroke Studies Leads To Major Overstatement Of Efficacy, Emily Sena, H. Bart Van Der Worp, Philip M.W. Bath, David W. Howells, Malcolm Macleod
Validation of Animal Experimentation Collection
The consolidation of scientific knowledge proceeds through the interpretation and then distillation of data presented in research reports, first in review articles and then in textbooks and undergraduate courses, until truths become accepted as such both amongst “experts” and in the public understanding. Where data are collected but remain unpublished, they cannot contribute to this distillation of knowledge. If these unpublished data differ substantially from published work, conclusions may not reflect adequately the underlying biological effects being described. The existence and any impact of such “publication bias” in the laboratory sciences have not been described. Using the CAMARADES (Collaborative Approach …
Can Animal Models Of Disease Reliably Inform Human Studies?,
2010
Rudolf Magnus Institute of Neuroscience
Can Animal Models Of Disease Reliably Inform Human Studies?, H. Bart Van Der Worp, David W. Howells, Emily Sena, Michelle J. Porritt, Sarah Rewell, Victoria O'Collins, Malcolm Macleod
Validation of Animal Experimentation Collection
- The value of animal experiments for predicting the effectiveness of treatment strategies in clinical trials has remained controversial, mainly because of a recurrent failure of interventions apparently promising in animal models to translate to the clinic.
- Translational failure may be explained in part by methodological flaws in animal studies, leading to systematic bias and thereby to inadequate data and incorrect conclusions about efficacy.
- Failures also result because of critical disparities, usually disease specific, between the animal models and the clinical trials testing the treatment strategy.
- Systematic review and meta-analysis of animal studies may aid in the selection of the most …
Electrodeposited Silica Thin Films,
2010
Virginia Commonwealth University
Electrodeposited Silica Thin Films, Debbie Campbell-Rance
Theses and Dissertations
Sol-gel derived silica thin film synthesis has gained prominence because of the mild processing conditions and widespread understanding of the chemistry of the process. Traditionally, silicate films are prepared by spin- and dip-coating but these materials lack the desired porosity for sensing, separations and catalysis applications. Electrochemical deposition was proposed to improve the porosity of silicate films. The main aims of this work were threefold. First we wanted to elucidate what parameters influenced film formation during electrodeposition. Then we wanted to understand how these parameters affected the morphology of the materials prepared. These films were characterized by profilometry, AFM, and …
An Analysis Of Nonignorable Nonresponse In A Survey With A Rotating Panel Design,
2010
University of Pisa
An Analysis Of Nonignorable Nonresponse In A Survey With A Rotating Panel Design, Caterina Giusti, Roderick J. Little
The University of Michigan Department of Biostatistics Working Paper Series
Missing values to income questions are common in survey data. When the probabilities of nonresponse are assumed to depend on the observed information and not on the underlining unobserved amounts, the missing income values are missing at random (MAR), and methods such as sequential multiple imputation can be applied. However, the MAR assumption is often considered questionable in this context, since missingness of income is thought to be related to the value of income itself, after conditioning on available covariates. In this article we describe a sensitivity analysis based on a pattern-mixture model for deviations from MAR, in the context …
Morphological Evolution Of Single-Crystal Ultrathin Solid Films,
2010
Western Kentucky University
Morphological Evolution Of Single-Crystal Ultrathin Solid Films, Mikhail Khenner
Mikhail Khenner
An introduction to mathematical modeling of ultrathin solid films and the role of such modeling in nanotechnologies: Educational/Research presentation for senior physics majors
New Experimental Limits On The Pauli-Forbidden Transitions In 12c Nuclei Obtained With 485 Days Borexino Data,
2010
University of Massachusetts - Amherst
New Experimental Limits On The Pauli-Forbidden Transitions In 12c Nuclei Obtained With 485 Days Borexino Data, G. Bellini, J. Benziger, S. Bonetti, M. Buizza Avanzini, B. Caccianiga, L. Cadonati, F. Calaprice, C. Carraro, A. Chavarria, F. Dalnoki-Veress, D. D'Angelo, S. Davini, H. De Kerret, A. Derbin, A. Etenko, K. Fomenko, D. Franco, C. Galbiati, S. Gazzana, C. Ghiano, M. Giammarchi, M. Goeger-Neff, A. Goretti, C. Grieb, E. Guardincerri, S. Hardy, Aldo Ianni, Andrea Ianni, M. Joyce, G. Korga, D. Kryn, M. Leung, T. Lewke, E. Litvinovich, B. Loer, P. Lombardi, L. Ludhova, I. Machulin, S. Manecki, W. Maneschg, G. Manuzio, Q. Meindl, E. Meroni, L. Miramonti, M. Misiaszek, D. Montanari, V. Muratova, L. Oberauer, M. Obolensky, F. Ortica, M. Pallavicini, L. Papp, L. Perasso, S. Perasso, Andrea Pocar, R. S. Raghavan, G. Ranucci, A. Razeto, A. Re, P. Risso, A. Romani, D. Rountree, A. Sabelnikov, R. Saldanha, C. Salvo, S. Schoenert, H. Simgen, M. Skorokhvatov, O. Smirnov, A. Sotnikov, S. Sukhotin, Y. Surorov, R. Tartaglia, G. Testera, D. Vignaud, R. B. Vogelaar, F. Von Feilitzsch, Y. Winter, M. Wojcik, M. Wurm, J. Xu, O. Zaimidoroga, S. Zavatarelli, G. Zuzel
Andrea Pocar
The Pauli exclusion principle (PEP) has been tested for nucleons (n,p) in 12C with the Borexino detector. The approach consists of a search for γ, n, p, and β± emitted in a non-Paulian transition of 1P3/2-shell nucleons to the filled 1S1/2 shell in nuclei. Due to the extremely low background and the large mass (278 tons) of the Borexino detector, the following most stringent up-to-date experimental bounds on PEP violating transitions of nucleons have been established: τ(12C→12C~+γ)⩾5.0×1031 yr, τ(12C→11B~+p)⩾8.9×1029 yr, τ(12C→11C~+n)⩾3.4×1030 yr, τ(12C→12N~+e-+νe~)⩾3.1×1030 yr, and τ(12C→12B~+e++νe)⩾2.1×1030 yr, all at 90% C.L. The corresponding upper limits on the relative strengths for …
Morphological Evolution Of Single-Crystal Ultrathin Solid Films,
2010
Western Kentucky University
Morphological Evolution Of Single-Crystal Ultrathin Solid Films, Mikhail Khenner
Mathematics Faculty Publications
An introduction to mathematical modeling of ultrathin solid films and the role of such modeling in nanotechnologies: Educational/Research presentation for senior physics majors
A Grazing Incidence X-Ray Streak Camera For Ultrafast, Single-Shot Measurements,
2010
Santa Clara University
A Grazing Incidence X-Ray Streak Camera For Ultrafast, Single-Shot Measurements, J. Feng, K. Engelhorn, B. I. Cho, H. J. Lee, M. Greaves, Christopher P. Weber, R. W. Falcone, H. A. Padmore, P. A. Heimann
Physics
An ultrafast x-ray streak camera has been realized using a grazing incidence reflection photocathode. X-rays are incident on a gold photocathode at a grazing angle of 20° and photoemitted electrons are focused by a large aperture magnetic solenoid lens. The streak camera has high quantum efficiency, 600 fs temporal resolution, and 6 mm imaging length in the spectral direction. Its single shot capability eliminates temporal smearing due to sweep jitter, and allows recording of the ultrafast dynamics of samples that undergo nonreversible changes.