Sample records for armament research development

  1. Index to Benet Laboratories Technical Reports - 1988

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-05-01

    EDITING SECTION MAY 1989 US ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH , ~ DEVELOPMENT AND ENGINEERING CENTER CLOSE COMBAT ARMAMENTS CENTER BENET LABORATORIES WATERVLIET, N.Y...Watervliet, NY 12189-4050 I =ONTROLLING OFFICE NAME AND ADoRESS 12. REPORT DATE US Army Armament Research , Develop, & Engr Center April 1988 Close Combat...Watervliet, NY 12189-4050 11. CONTROLLING OFFICE NAME AND ADDRESS 12. REPORT DATE US Army ARDEC May 1989 Close Combat Armaments Center 13. NUMBER OF PAGES

  2. 76 FR 3743 - Science and Technology Reinvention Laboratory Personnel Management Demonstration Project...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-01-20

    ... Demonstration Project, Department of the Army, Army Research, Development and Engineering Command, Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC); Notice #0;#0;Federal Register / Vol. 76 , No. 13... the Army, Army Research, Development and Engineering Command, Armament Research, Development and...

  3. 75 FR 60091 - Science and Technology Reinvention Laboratory Personnel Management Demonstration Project...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-09-29

    ... Engineering Command, Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC); Correction AGENCY: Office... employees at the Army Research, Development and Engineering Command, Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC). Within that notice the descriptors for levels IV and V are incorrect under factor...

  4. Adaptive Mesh Experiments for Hyperbolic Partial Differential Equations

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-02-01

    JOSEPH E. FLAHERTY FEBRUARY 1990 US ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH , ~ DEVELOPMENT AND ENGINEERlING CENTER CLOSE COMBAT ARMAMENTS CENTER BENET LABORATORIES...NY 12189-4050 If. CONTROLLING OFFICE NAME AND ADDRESS 12. REPORT DATE U.S. Army ARDEC February 1990 Close Combat Armaments Center 13. NUMBER OF...Flaherty Department of Computer Science Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, NY 12180-3590 and U.S. Army ARDEC Close Combat Armaments Center Benet

  5. Elimination of Airborne Lead Contamination from Caliber .22 Ammunition.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-06-01

    R191 365 ELIMINATION OF AIRBORNE LEAD CONTAMINATION FROM CALIBER 1/1 Ri ’ 3 5 22 N INITION(U) ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH DE VELOPMENT AM D...E JUNE 1987 U. S. MMW ARKM SRcKH, IDVROPMEff n U COOE US" ARMY EARMLMA CLOSE COMBAT ARMAMENT CENTER - MUNITBONS Et CHEMICAL COMMANDR D RA - A9~laIENT...Command tasked the U.S. Army Armament, Research , Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC) to determine if the sources of lead contamination could be

  6. The Effects of Thermal/Blast Synergism on the Nuclear Vulnerability of a Generic Aircraft Structure.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-01-01

    Army Nateriel Development Technology Center and Readiness Command ATTN: CRDABH-X; CRDABH-S ATTN: DRCDMD-ST P.O. Box 1500 5001 Eisenhower Avenue jd...VULNERBBILITY OF A..(U) ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER ABERDEEN PROVIN. UNCLASSIFIED R J PEARSON ET AL. JAN 84 FARBRL-TR-02540 F/’O 15...ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENIEII BALLISTIC RESEARCH LABORATORY ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, MARYLAND Approved for public relese; distribution

  7. The Effects of Propellant Burn on the Surface Composition of Gun Steel

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-11-01

    ion beam analysis method has been used to characterize the depths and compositions of the outer, sub-micron layers of gun steel surfaces that have...STEEL A. Niiler R. Birkmire S. E. Caldwell November 1981 US ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COMMAND BALLISTIC RESEARCH LABORATORY...1L162618AH80 11. CONTROLLING OFFICE NAME AND ADDRESS US Army Armament Research § Development Command Ballistic Research Laboratory ATTN: DRDAR-BL. APG

  8. Tables of Calculated Transition Probabilities for the A-X System of OH

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-06-01

    June 1981 US ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COMMAND BALLISTIC RESEARCH LABORATORY ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND , MARYLAND Approved for public release...Laboratory ATTN: DRDAR-BLP Aberdeen Proving Ground , MD 21005 1L16112AH43 II. CONTROLLING OFFICE NAME AND ADDRESS 12. REPORT DATE USA Armament Research and...Development Command /I JUNE. 1981 USA Ballistic Research Laboratory 4 ATTN: DRDAR-BL 1/1) S 2P’GE Aberden Provine Ground . MD 21001 56 Pazes 14

  9. Proceedings of the U.S. Army Symposium on Gun Dynamics (4th) Held at Riviera Beach, Florida on 7-9 May 1985. Volume 1 of II VOLS

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-05-01

    Bulman Army Research Office Royal Military College of Science P.O. Box 12211 Land Systems Group Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-2211 Shrivenham...Development Center P.O. Box 210 SMCAR-TSB Cumberland, M 21502 Dover, NJ 078fI1-5001 Tonney hlung Paul L. Fritch Armament Research & Development Center... Box 1201 Edward M. Patton San Jose, CA 95108 Battelle, Pacific Northwest Labs Battelle Road Frak Kiihl Richland, WA 99352 , Armament Research

  10. U.S. Army Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center Grain Evaluation Software to Numerically Predict Linear Burn Regression for Solid Propellant Grain Geometries

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-01

    ENGINEERING CENTER GRAIN EVALUATION SOFTWARE TO NUMERICALLY PREDICT LINEAR BURN REGRESSION FOR SOLID PROPELLANT GRAIN GEOMETRIES Brian...author(s) and should not be construed as an official Department of the Army position, policy, or decision, unless so designated by other documentation...U.S. ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT AND ENGINEERING CENTER GRAIN EVALUATION SOFTWARE TO NUMERICALLY PREDICT LINEAR BURN REGRESSION FOR SOLID

  11. Metastable Intermolecular Composites (MIC) Primers for Small Caliber Cartridges and Cartridge Actuated Devices

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-07-01

    24 iii ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ATF Armaments Technology Facility ATK Alliant Techsystems, Inc. ARDEC Armament Research...Technology Facility ( ATF ) firings there, and was instrumental in producing the primers and loading the cartridges needed for the supplemental...and CADs known as the percussion primer. The novel properties associated with nanostructure materials have resulted in the development of thermite

  12. 78 FR 22527 - Army Science Board Request for Information on Technology and Core Competencies

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-04-16

    ...); Edgewood Chemical Biological Command (ECBC); Natick Soldier Research, Development & Engineering Center...; C4ISR; Night Vision; Chemical/Biological Warfare; and Soldier Systems. The study will focus on...); Armament Research, Development & Engineering Center (ARDEC); Aviation & Missile Research, Development...

  13. Tropic Test of Bradley Fighting Vehicle Systems.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-05-23

    CM-R AMSTE-SG-H AMSTE-PT-MT AMSTE-RM Aberden Proving Ground , MD 21005-5055 Commander U.S. Army Armament Research and Development Command ATTN: AMSMC...Requirements Appendix E -Vision Devices Appendix F - Grounding Circuit Resistance Appendix G - Human Factors Appendix H - Distribution List -" -"" 3...miles of operation o Time-on-Target Baseline Tests o Selected electrical and grounding circuit resistances o Armament Firing (25mm, 7.62mm and TOW) o Fire

  14. Proceedings of the Conference on the Design of Experiments in Army Research Development and Testing (31st) Held at the Madison, Wisconsin on 23-25 October 1986

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-06-01

    LOW SUN ANGLES,’ ....... "’eorgeAnitole, Ronald I. Johnson and Christopher J. Neubert . . . 201 , ~ ~EIBULL TAIL MODELING FOR ESTIMATING CONFIDENCE ON...Richard H. Duncan, Technical Director, and Chief Scientist White Sands Missile Range Paul H. Thrasher, White Bands Missile Range MODELS FOR CONTINGENCY...INDIVIDUAL SAMPLING PLANS TO A COMPARABLE GROUP PLAN Paul A. Roediger, US Army Armament, Munitions and Chemical Command John A. Mardo, US Army Armament

  15. A Tutorial for Performing a Radiographic Examination

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-03-01

    ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS ARDEC U.S. Army Research , Development and Engineering Center ASTM American Society of Testing and Materials c centi-, 1E...Nondestructive testing ODD Object to detector distance ROI Region of interest RDECOM Research Development and Engineering Command RQI...U.S. ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH , DEVELOPMENT AND ENGINEERING CENTER Enterprise and Systems Integration Center Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey

  16. Setback Test Users Manual (U.S. Army Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center’s Method)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-09-01

    Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey. This ARDEC setback test method collapses a planer air gap against an explosive sample in a manner to mimic what could...Research, Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC), Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey setback test collapses a planer air gap against an explosive sample

  17. Structures to Resist the Effects of Accidental Explosions. Volume 1. Introduction

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-12-01

    Biology and Problem Areas in Relating Physical and Biological Parameters, Lovelace Foundation for Medical Education and Research, Albuquerque, New Mexico...ARAED-TR-87033, U.S. Army Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center, Dover, N.J., October, 1987. 42 DISTRIDUTON LIST Commander Annment Researh

  18. The Joint Tactical Aerial Resupply Vehicle Impact on Sustainment Operations

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-06-09

    Artificial Intelligence , Sustainment Operations, Rifle Company, Autonomous Aerial Resupply, Joint Tactical Autonomous Aerial Resupply System 16...Integrations and Development System AI Artificial Intelligence ARCIC Army Capabilities Integration Center ARDEC Armament Research, Development and...semi- autonomous systems, and fully autonomous systems. Autonomy of machines depends on sophisticated software, including Artificial Intelligence

  19. A Method of Evaluating Laplace Transforms with Series of Complete or Incomplete Beta Functions,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-12-01

    DEVELOPMENT COMMAND BALLISTIC RESEARCH LABORATORY ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND , MARYLAND A i ’:-Approved for public rlease; distribution unlimited. c...BLI Aberden Provin Ground 100161102.143 I. CONTROLLING OFFICE NAME AND ADDRESS Q?. REPORT DATE US Army Armament Research & Development Command...December 1982 US Arm), Ballistic Research Laboratory (DRDAR-BL 13. ’NUMBER OF PAGES Aberdeen Proving Ground , NMD 21005 33 14 MC5NiTORING AGENCY NAME

  20. Ammunition Cost Research Study

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1976-06-01

    LIBRARY TECHNICAL REPORT Gerald W. Kalal Patrick J. Gannon COST ANALYSIS DIVISION (DRSAR-CPE) HEADQUARTERS, U.S. ARMY ARMAMENT COMMAND ROCK ISLAND... Kalal trick J. Gannon COST ANALYSIS DIVISION (DRSAR-CPE) HEADQUARTERS, U.S. ARMY ARMAMENT COMMAND ROCK ISLAND, ILLINOIS 61201 I UNCLASSIFIED...4. DESCRIPTIVE NOTES (Type ot report and Inclusive date») Technical Report 8- AU THOR(S> (flral name, middle Initial, laat name) Gerald W. Kalal

  1. A Review of the Soldier’s Equipment Burden

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-12-01

    3 2.2 Participant Demographics ....................................................................................... 3 2.2.1...Australian Defence Force ALICE All-purpose Lightweight Individual Carrying Equipment APC Armoured Personnel Carrier ASLAV Australian Light... Armoured Vehicle ARA Australian Regular Army ARDEC Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center BDE Brigade CBA Combat Body Armour

  2. Detailed Concepts in Performing Oversight on an Army Radiographic Inspection Site

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-03-01

    number of facilities that perform various nondestructive tests , inspections, and evaluations. The U.S. Army Armament Research, Development and...procedures, and documentation in place to conform to nationally recognized standards. This report specifically reviews the radiographic testing ...X-ray Nondestructive testing (NDT) Radiographic testing (RT) Computed tomography (CT) 16. SECURITY

  3. Spectrophotometer-Based Color Measurements

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-24

    public release; distribution is unlimited. AD U.S. ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH , DEVELOPMENT AND ENGINEERING CENTER Weapons and Software Engineering Center...for public release; distribution is unlimited. UNCLASSIFIED i CONTENTS Page Summary 1 Introduction 1 Methods , Assumptions, and Procedures 1...Values for Federal Color Standards 15 Distribution List 25 TABLES 1 Instrument precision 3 2 Method precision and operator variability 4 3

  4. Cooperative Plane Strain Fracture Toughness Tests with C-Shaped Specimens

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-09-01

    LABORATORY WATERVLIET, N. Y. 12189 — AMCMS No. 5397.OM.6350 PRON No. A1-8-P5276-AW-1A APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE; DISTRIBUTION UNLIMITED...6350 PRON No. A1-8-P5276-AW-1A 11. CONTROLLING OFFICE NAME AND ADDRESS 12. US Army Armament Research and Development Commanjd Large Caliber

  5. The Impact of Armor on the Design, Utilization and Survivability of Ground Vehicles: The History of Armor Development and Use

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-09-01

    control functions. Components that are included in this category include the steering column / linkages as well as brakes . D. FIREPOWER COMPONENTS...COMPONENTS: STEERING AND BRAKES ......................48 D. FIREPOWER COMPONENTS: TURRET AND ARMAMENT .............49 E. PROTECTION COMPONENTS: HULL AND...Key Functional Area Propulsion Powertrain (Engine / Transmission) Tracks / Wheels Control Steering Brakes / Suspension Firepower Turret Armament

  6. Test Plan Development for Plastic Ammunition Containers. Volume 1

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-03-15

    1850 Black Canyon Stage¶I Packaging division (SMCAR-AEP) Picatinny Phoenix, Arizona 85027 Arsenal, New Jersey 07806-5000 86. NAME OF FUNDING...packaging containers. The report is presented in two separate volumes. Volume I contains the Final Technical Report and includes the analysis of... Division of the U.S. Army Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center. Mr. Jasper C. Griggs and Mr. D. E. Jones served as technical consultants

  7. Environmental Acceptable Medium Caliber Ammunition Percussion Primers

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-05-01

    the nanoparticles extremely hydrophobic. The alternative treatment of the solution was the addition of ammonium dihydrogen phosphate (ADP) to serve as...Ultrafine Aluminum Nanoparticles," LA-UR-04-2921. 49 ACRONYM LIST ADP Ammonium Dihydrogen Phosphate Al Aluminum ARDEC Armament Research Development and...Nitrocellulose Nd:Yag Neodymium -doped yttrium aluminum garnet NSWC-IH Naval Surface Warfare Center- Indian Head PAD Propellant actuated device PETN

  8. Cost Model/Data Base Catalog Non-DoD/Academic Survey. Volume 1. Project Summary

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-10-30

    presented in two volumes: Volume 1- Project Summary, and L .JD Volume 2- Final Data Base. J Accesion - For NTIS C R A& Disiji( .. . U, L)~ .6I...218 47I I I I I I I I Exhibit 111-3. COMPLETE CATALOG BREAKOUT I MANAGEMENT CONSULTING & RESEARCH, INC. j 111-6 I IE-I Iu 0 HE-4 X C.) E- Ix UI.n 111...College/EDCCAir University Maxwell Air Force Base, AL 36112 2. AD (Armament Division) Department of the Air Force Armament Division/(subdiv code

  9. Vulnerability Science: A Response to a Criticism of the Ballistic Research Laboratory’s Vulnerability Modeling Strategy

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-06-01

    SMCAR-CCB-TL AMXSY-MP, H. Cohen Watervliet, NY 12189-4050 1 Cdr, USATECOM ATTN: AMSTE- TD Commander 3 Cdr, CRDEC, AMCCOM US Army Armament, Munitions ATIN...Laboratory Command Armament RD&E Center ATTN: SLCTO (Marcos Sola) US Army AMCCOM 2800 Powder Mill Road ATTN: SMCAR- TDS (Vic Lindner) Adelphi, MD 20783-1145...ASQNC-ELC-1-T, Myer Center US Army AMCCOM Fort Monmouth, NJ 07703-5000 ATTN: SMCAR- TD (Jim Killen) Picatinny Arsenal, NJ 07806-5000 14 DISTRIBUTION

  10. Phoenix Missile Hypersonic Testbed (PMHT): System Concept Overview

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Jones, Thomas P.

    2007-01-01

    A viewgraph presentation of the Phoenix Missile Hypersonic Testbed (PMHT) is shown. The contents include: 1) Need and Goals; 2) Phoenix Missile Hypersonic Testbed; 3) PMHT Concept; 4) Development Objectives; 5) Possible Research Payloads; 6) Possible Research Program Participants; 7) PMHT Configuration; 8) AIM-54 Internal Hardware Schematic; 9) PMHT Configuration; 10) New Guidance and Armament Section Profiles; 11) Nomenclature; 12) PMHT Stack; 13) Systems Concept; 14) PMHT Preflight Activities; 15) Notional Ground Path; and 16) Sample Theoretical Trajectories.

  11. Final Report of the AMC Committee-Armament. Armament Development Center Concept Plan. Volume 2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1974-12-01

    Considerations 111-22 Section C Operational Considerations 111-26 Section D Community Economic Impact 111-35 Statements Section E Delphi Benefit Analysis 111-37...Cost Analysis 111-3 B Personnel Considerations III-22 C Operational Considerations 111-26 D Community Economic Impact Statements 111-35 E Delphi ...sidered to be minimal. 111-36 S SECTION E. Delphi Benefit Analysis 1. Introduction. The assessment and comparison of the relative benefits of the various

  12. Development of a Hazard Classification Procedure for Inprocess Propellant and Explosive Materials

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-11-01

    Manual of Sensitiveness Tests," Canadian Armament Research and Development Establishment, February 1966. 8-4 Dorough, G. D., et al ., "The SUSAN Test...Materials," RAD 100.10, Final Engineering Report on Production Engineering Project PE-489 (Preliminary), AMCMS Code 4932.05.4289. 8-10 Avramic, L., et al ...Performance Tests for Energetic Materials. 8-14 Leining, R. B.. et al , "Air Launched Missile Motor Behavior," AFRPL-TR-78-54, Technical

  13. Small Caliber Lethality: 5.56mm Performance in Close Quarters Battle. WSTIAC Quarterly, Volume 8, Number 1

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-01-01

    occurs to the target. In the end, “foot- pounds of energy” is misleading, “stopping power” is a myth, and the “ oneshot drop” is a rare possibility...Crane, IN, (NSWC- Crane) and the Army’s Armaments Research , Development, and Engineering Center (ARDEC) at Picatinny Arsenal, NJ, pro- duced...still had differences that could not initially be explained. The IPT was ultimately able to determine a reason for the dif- ferences. The Army Research

  14. Photocopy of drawing (original drawing of Armament & Instrument Inspection ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    Photocopy of drawing (original drawing of Armament & Instrument Inspection and Adjustment Bldg. in possession of MacDill Air Force Base, Civil Engineering, Tampa, Florida; 1941 architectural drawings by Construction Division, Office of the Quartermaster General) ELEVATIONS AND DETAILS - MacDill Air Force Base, Armament & Instrument Inspection & Adjustment Building, 7807 Hanger Loop Drive, Tampa, Hillsborough County, FL

  15. Photocopy of drawing (original drawing of Armament & Instrument Inspection ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    Photocopy of drawing (original drawing of Armament & Instrument Inspection and Adjustment Bldg. in possession of MacDill Air Force Base, Civil Engineering, Tampa, Florida; 1941 architectural drawings by Construction Division, Office of the Quartermaster General) ELEVATIONS AND SECTIONS - MacDill Air Force Base, Armament & Instrument Inspection & Adjustment Building, 7807 Hanger Loop Drive, Tampa, Hillsborough County, FL

  16. Explosive Loading of Metals and Related Topics

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-05-01

    Griffiths, "A U. K. Note on the History of Shaped Charges,• Royal Armament Research and Development Establishment Report, August 1983, presented...1925. 20. R. W. Wood, •optical and Physical Effects of High Explosives,• Proceedings of .the Royal Society (London), Vol. 157A, 1936, pp. 249-261...correctly analyzes geometric configurations in this report such as the Jelly Roll, the Dagwood and similar explosive-metal multilayer arrangements. In

  17. Ultrasonic Imaging and Automated Flaw Detection System

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-03-01

    176 007 !----------------------------- DS 176 500 ------------------------- ! STEPPER MOOC TOR MAP 176 ~ ~ IGR 509------------------- I I28 * 4W...ATTN: SMCAR-CCB-R 2 -R (ELLEN FOGARTY) 1 -RA 1 -RM 1 -RP I -RT TECHNICAL LIBRARY 5 ATTN: SMCAR-CCB-TL TECHNICAL PUBLICATIONS & EDITING UNIT 2 ATTN...WEAPONS CTR ATTN: TECHNICAL LIBRARY CODE X212 DAIILGREN, VA 22448 ’.1 -_ NOTE: PLEASE NOTIFY COMMANDER, ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER, US

  18. An Evaluation of Liquid Explosives for Foxhole Digging

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-04-01

    Silicone dioxide 1.93 - - Other x .76 - - Amonium nitrate - 49 80 Ammonia 9.95 - - Solid Ammonium perchlorate...1978 D D C AUG 24 1978 |j j - Av-’- US ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COMMAND LARGE CALIBER ’ WEAPON SYSTEMS LABORATORY DOVER. NEW...Entered) U& d <L$. UNr.T.ASSTFTFn SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAOEfWfun Palm Etttfd) 20. (Cont’d) After testing, the liquid NM/NE/RDX was

  19. 46th Annual Gun and Missile Systems Conference and Exhibition. Volume 2. Wednesday

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-09-01

    military/systems/munitions/images/ Page 7 Designing for Operational Challenges  Gun hardening – Multiple charges • Angular acceleration variation ...The industrial base overestimated readiness at SDD start – Analysis/models were naive • Impulsive loads — pressure variation — SOM under impulse...Manufacture and Producibility Branch, US Army Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center • Alan Sweet and William Goldberg , Packaging Division

  20. Use of high-speed photography and associated techniques as a measurement tool in the research, development, test, and evaluation of weapons systems and armaments

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Haddleton, Graham P.

    1995-05-01

    Photography's inestimable contribution to science and technology is beyond question. Applied photography, or in this case applied cinematography, is that area of work which assumes an integral part of a research project and where the results of photographic analysis form a major source of information. In military research and development or testing there are various fast events that need to be recorded and analyzed. High speed cameras allow the capture of movement too fast to be recognized by the human eye and provide data that is essential for the analysis of such events.

  1. Photocopy of drawing (original drawing of Armament & Instrument Inspection ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    Photocopy of drawing (original drawing of Armament & Instrument Inspection and Adjustment Bldg. in possession of MacDill Air Force Base, Civil Engineering, Tampa, Florida; 1941 architectural drawings by Construction Division, Office of the Quartermaster General) FIRST FLOOR PLAN, SECTIONS, AND DETAILS - MacDill Air Force Base, Armament & Instrument Inspection & Adjustment Building, 7807 Hanger Loop Drive, Tampa, Hillsborough County, FL

  2. 33 CFR 334.710 - The Narrows and Gulf of Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Headquarters Air Armament Center...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ...″ W (USC&GS Station Tuck 3), within the segment of a circle, three nautical miles in radius, centered... adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Headquarters Air Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. 334.710 Section... Santa Rosa Island, Headquarters Air Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. (a) The restricted area...

  3. 33 CFR 334.710 - The Narrows and Gulf of Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Headquarters Air Armament Center...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ...″ W (USC&GS Station Tuck 3), within the segment of a circle, three nautical miles in radius, centered... adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Headquarters Air Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. 334.710 Section... Santa Rosa Island, Headquarters Air Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. (a) The restricted area...

  4. 33 CFR 334.710 - The Narrows and Gulf of Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Headquarters Air Armament Center...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-07-01

    ...″ W (USC&GS Station Tuck 3), within the segment of a circle, three nautical miles in radius, centered... adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Headquarters Air Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. 334.710 Section... Santa Rosa Island, Headquarters Air Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. (a) The restricted area...

  5. 33 CFR 334.730 - Waters of Santa Rosa Sound and Gulf of Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Armament Center...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-07-01

    ... Gulf of Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. 334.730... Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. (a) The areas—(1) The... CFR part 329, including the waters of Santa Rosa Sound and Gulf of Mexico within a circle one nautical...

  6. 33 CFR 334.730 - Waters of Santa Rosa Sound and Gulf of Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Armament Center...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ... Gulf of Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. 334.730... Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. (a) The areas—(1) The... CFR part 329, including the waters of Santa Rosa Sound and Gulf of Mexico within a circle one nautical...

  7. 33 CFR 334.730 - Waters of Santa Rosa Sound and Gulf of Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Armament Center...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... Gulf of Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. 334.730... Mexico adjacent to Santa Rosa Island, Armament Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. (a) The areas—(1) The... CFR part 329, including the waters of Santa Rosa Sound and Gulf of Mexico within a circle one nautical...

  8. Recursive Gradient Estimation Using Splines for Navigation of Autonomous Vehicles.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-07-01

    AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES C. N. SHEN DTIC " JULY 1985 SEP 1 219 85 V US ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTER LARGE CALIBER WEAPON SYSTEMS LABORATORY I...GRADIENT ESTIMATION USING SPLINES FOR NAVIGATION OF AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES Final S. PERFORMING ORG. REPORT NUMBER 7. AUTHOR(q) 8. CONTRACT OR GRANT NUMBER...which require autonomous vehicles . Essential to these robotic vehicles is an adequate and efficient computer vision system. A potentially more

  9. Fracture of Rolled Homogeneous Steel Armor (Nucleation Threshold Stress).

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-01-01

    AD-AO81 618 ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COMMAND ABERD--ETC F/B 19/4 FRACTURE OF ROLLED HOMOGENEOUS STEEL ARMOR (NUCLEATION THRESHOL--ETC(U...ARBRL-MR-02984A QQ FRACTURE OF ROLLED HOMOGENEOUS STEEL ARMOR (NUCLEATION THRESHOLD STRESS) Gerald L Moss Lynn SeamanLy~ S, ,.DTIC S ELECTED January...nucleation stress, Crack threshold stress, Fracture, Fracture stress, Spallation, Armor, Rolled homogeneous steel armor M~ AS$TRACr (Vita ssf -- ebb

  10. Mobility and Molecular Ions of Dimethyl Methyl Phosphonate, Methyl Salicylate, and Acetone.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-06-01

    MICRCOP REOUIO.ET1HR NICOCOPY BRESOUIO EST CHAR T AD .-..., CHEMICOL f.. SYSTEMS US Army Armament 11..: LABORATORY Research and Development Command _NTR...ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS 10. PROGRAM ELEMENT PROJECT, TASK Commnde, Cemicl Sstes LaoraoryAREA & WORK U NIT’NUMBERS CommNder DARCemia Systems Laborato...Chemical Systems Laboratory, ATTN: DRDAR-CLJ-IR, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland 21010. However, the Defense Technical Information Center and National

  11. Reference Book on NATO Rationalization, Standardization and Interoperability (RSI). Volume 2. Department of Defense Official Directives and Statements of Secretary of Defense, Under Secretary of Defense (R&E), Concerning RSI.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1979-11-01

    operated as an integrated whole in meeting a mission need . h. Major system means that combination of elements that will function together to produce...developed and in production, it is by no means sure that it will fill a military need of another country. We intend to harmonize requirements... means to review national armaments plans and identify opportunities for armaments cooperation. It is expected that NAPR will eventually fold into PAPS

  12. Descriptive Summaries of the Research Development Test & Evaluation Army Appropriation FY 1983. Supporting Data FY 1983, Budget Estimate Submitted to Congress February 1982, Volume I.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-02-01

    AND DOCTRINE COHAND (TRADOC) STUDIES AND ANALYSES .................. 111-394 6.52.01.A AVIATION ENGINEERING FLIGHT ACTIVITY...nerve agents. These projects are designed to: (a) define the link between acetylcholine receptor stimulation and red blood cell changes, (b) study ...a vigorous program of investi- gations In new ceramics and composite materials for armaments ground vehicles and aircraft. One study advanced nuclear

  13. Technical Facilities and Capabilities Assessment Report

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-06-01

    ARMAMENT LABORATORY Air Force Systems Command I United States Air Force I Eglin Air Force Base , Florida Best Available Copy 90 0 8 20 026 NOTICE When...The Air Force Armament Laboratory (AFATL) provides the technology base for future armament systems and supports the other elements of the deputy...color and filter digital images once an image is on the system . The IPL and the RSPL are accessible over the base Ethernet. This allows users to logon to

  14. The Evolution of the Chinese Armaments Industry from 1860 to Present: The Search for Self-Sufficiency

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-06-06

    1 ••!•!• JVl *WF ^J in #^ The Evolution of the Chinese Armaments Industry from 1860 ^-* to Present: The Search for Self -sufficiency CD...Evolution if the Chinese Armaments Industry from 1860 to Present: The Search for Self -sufficiency 12 PERSONAL AUTHOR(S) Major Donald A. Green 13...the abil- for self - ernments from t the end of 20 DISTRIBUTION/AVAILABILITY OF ABSTRACT (3 UNCLASSIFIED/UNLIMITED • SAME AS RPT. O DTK USERS

  15. International Armaments Cooperation: A Case Study of the Modular Standoff Weapons

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-09-01

    members of the Alliance will be in a better position to deal with the problems of removing trade barriers within NATO as a whole in order to create a...costs and responsibll - itles for any or all of the following by two or more nations or organizations: research, development, production, and follow-on...significant barriers remain. As a result of the lack of a coordinated defense posture and the numerical and qualitative gains made by the Warsaw Pact

  16. 50. EAST CORNER OF BUILDING 365 (ARMAMENT TESTING BUILDING) IN ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    50. EAST CORNER OF BUILDING 365 (ARMAMENT TESTING BUILDING) IN BASE SPARES AREA. - Loring Air Force Base, Weapons Storage Area, Northeastern corner of base at northern end of Maine Road, Limestone, Aroostook County, ME

  17. 49. NORTHEAST FRONT ELEVATION OF BUILDING 365 (ARMAMENT TESTING BUILDING) ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    49. NORTHEAST FRONT ELEVATION OF BUILDING 365 (ARMAMENT TESTING BUILDING) IN BASE SPARES AREA. - Loring Air Force Base, Weapons Storage Area, Northeastern corner of base at northern end of Maine Road, Limestone, Aroostook County, ME

  18. Burden sharing or burden shifting Armaments cooperation within NATO

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Smith, R.W.

    1993-01-01

    This study has explored the nature of decision-making under conditions of conflicting political and economic imperatives. The participants want the cooperative program to succeed. They also want to bear the least burden necessary for success by shifting it to others. The concepts of burden sharing and burden shifting have been explored in the context of armaments cooperation through analysis of six armaments cooperation cases. The cases ranged from the NATO Sea Sparrow Missile System to the 155MM Autonomous Precision Guided Missile. Ideal models of burden sharing and burden shifting were developed to aid the analysis. The resultant theoretical framework ofmore » armaments cooperation within the NATO alliance has been used to explain success or lack of success in cooperative programs. Each case study addressed the categories of: Political Environment, Program Inception, Management Structure, and Results. Comparative analysis between programs was facilitated by using similar criteria for success or failure throughout. Each of the hypotheses making up the ideal models for burden sharing and burden shifting were examined considering the individual cases. An assessment of validity was made. Comparative analysis of selected case pairs facilitated isolation of factors that may have contributed to different results. These assessments were combined and formed the basis for the final conclusions on each hypothesis and their respective importance. This study adds to the theoretical understanding of alliance politics by examining in depth these concepts. It also supports future efforts to understand alliance politics by providing a framework for examining and testing deductively derived propositions against experience.« less

  19. P80 SRM low torque flex-seal development - thermal and chemical modeling of molding process

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Descamps, C.; Gautronneau, E.; Rousseau, G.; Daurat, M.

    2009-09-01

    The development of the flex-seal component of the P80 nozzle gave the opportunity to set up new design and manufacturing process methods. Due to the short development lead time required by VEGA program, the usual manufacturing iterative tests work flow, which is usually time consuming, had to be enhanced in order to use a more predictive approach. A newly refined rubber vulcanization description was built up and identified on laboratory samples. This chemical model was implemented in a thermal analysis code. The complete model successfully supports the manufacturing processes. These activities were conducted with the support of ESA/CNES Research & Technologies and DGA (General Delegation for Armament).

  20. Chaotic evolution of arms races

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tomochi, Masaki; Kono, Mitsuo

    1998-12-01

    A new set of model equations is proposed to describe the evolution of the arms race, by extending Richardson's model with special emphases that (1) power dependent defensive reaction or historical enmity could be a motive force to promote armaments, (2) a deterrent would suppress the growth of armaments, and (3) the defense reaction of one nation against the other nation depends nonlinearly on the difference in armaments between two. The set of equations is numerically solved to exhibit stationary, periodic, and chaotic behavior depending on the combinations of parameters involved. The chaotic evolution is realized when the economic situation of each country involved in the arms race is quite different, which is often observed in the real world.

  1. The Effect of Material Strength on Segment Penetration Behavior

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-04-01

    Muenchen GERMANY Royal Armament R&D Establishment ATTN: I. Cullis Fort Halstead Sevenoaks, Kent TN14 7BJ ENGLAND Centre d’Etudes de Gramat ATTN...SOLVE Gerald 46500 Gramat FRANCE 2 Defense Research Establishment Suffield ATTN: C. Weickert D. Mackay Ralston, Alberta, TOJ 2N0 Ralston CANADA Defense

  2. Disarmament and Employment: Background for a Research Programme.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Sabolo, Yves

    1983-01-01

    As background to a series of articles on the effects of disarmament on employment, the author assesses the present importance of armaments industries in the world economy, including the number of people directly or indirectly employed in military equipment production and services. He also discusses employment problems posed by disarmament.…

  3. 51. CONTEXT VIEW LOOKING NORTHWEST OF BUILDING 365 (ARMAMENT TESTING ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    51. CONTEXT VIEW LOOKING NORTHWEST OF BUILDING 365 (ARMAMENT TESTING BUILDING) IN BASE SPARES AREA WITH BUILDING 367 (ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE BUILDING) IN MIDDLE GROUND AND BUILDING 368 (WAREHOUSE) IN BACKGROUND. - Loring Air Force Base, Weapons Storage Area, Northeastern corner of base at northern end of Maine Road, Limestone, Aroostook County, ME

  4. The Role of Civilians in Maintaining Military Equipment. Volume 2,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-12-01

    construction , combat vehicles, communications-electronics, audio-visual and training, general equipment, commodity groups, and weapons/armament...commodity areas are of interest. These five commodity areas are automotive, construction , combat vohicles. communications-electronics, and weapons...assigned DS/GS maintenance missions for automotive, construction , and communications- electronics equipment. None has been assigned weapons/armament missions

  5. Squad Modeling and Simulation for Analysis of Materiel and Personnel Solutions

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-06-01

    Laboratory MORSS Presentations • Virtual Employment Test Bed: Operational Research and Systems Analysis to Test Armaments Designs Early in the...Elizabeth Mezzacappa, PhD Target Behavioral Response Laboratory Presented to the 82nd Military Operations Research Society Symposium June 4-6, 2014...Information Operations and Reports, 1215 Jefferson Davis Highway, Suite 1204, Arlington VA 22202-4302. Respondents should be aware that notwithstanding

  6. A SPICE2 Model for the M732 Analog Timer Integrated Circuit.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-06-01

    I AD-All? 019 ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT C01MAND DOVER-ETC F/ S 1/ I A SPICES MODEL FOR THE M739 ANALOG TIMER INTEGRATED CIRCUIT. (U) I...JUN $I .J P TOBAK UNCLASSIFIED AR ID-20Di S I-AD-E06 3 NL ADI- A SPICE2 MODEL FOR THE M3 ANALOG TIMR INTERNATED CIRCIT, JOHN P. TOMA DTIC JUNE 1992 13...ARrIID-TR-82001 -;AZ/ 4 " 4. TITLE (and Subtitle) S . TYPE OF REPORT & PERIOD COVERED A SPICE2 MODEL FOR THE M732 ANALOG TIMER Final INTEGRATED CIRCUIT

  7. Department of Defense In-House RDT and E Activities Report for Fiscal Year 1990

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-01-01

    equipment systems. Advanced personnel and cargo airdrop system. 1FUNCTIONS/EQUIPMENT!/FACI LITIES Biotechnology lab, materials characterization lab...4 Airworthines. Qualification Test Directorate ..... .................................... 5 Armament Rrsearch . Developaent & Eaguiecring Center...1), exploratory development (6.2), advanced development (6.3), engineering development (6.4), management support (6.5), operational systems support

  8. Technical Meeting Avionics Section Air Armament Division Held at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada on December 1, 2 and 3 1982. Declassified Extended Abstracts.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-01-01

    the FAETS Operational Scenario, followed by the FAETS Description and Operation. FAETS Specifications will be given, as well as the difinition of the...aircraft, expanded basing, new or improved avionics and new or improved armament. Furthermore, explicit quantitative ’ inter- dependence between

  9. 40th Annual Armament Systems: Guns-Ammunition-Rockets-Missiles Conference and Exhibition

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-04-28

    Session: Medium Caliber System Oerlikon Ammunition for New Defense Environment, Mr. Allan N. Buckley, BTECH Oerlikon Contraves Pyrotec AG Multi...Environment Mr. Allan N. Buckley, BTECH Oerlikon Contraves Pyrotec AG Force Protection - Multi Mission Vehicle Armament & Air Burst Munition for...determine homogeneity – Propellant contains ~3% by weight of FS grains to adjust K

  10. An Infrared Solution to a National Priority NASA Ice Detection and Measurement Problem

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Meitzler, Thomas; Bryk, Darryl; Sohn, Euijung; Bienkowski, Mary; Lane, Kimberly; Smith, Gregory; Charbeneau, Michelle; Moss, Thomas; Speece, Robert; Stevenson, Charles; hide

    2007-01-01

    NASA has a serious problem with ice that forms on the cryogenic-filled Space Shuttle External Tank (ET) that could endanger the crew and vehicle. This problem has defied resolution in the past. To find a solution, a cooperative agreement was developed between NASA-Kennedy Space Center (KSC) and the U.S. Army-Tank-Automotive, armaments Research, Development & Engineering Center (TARDEC). This paper describes the need, initial investigation, solution methodology, and some results for a mobile near-IR ice detection and measurement system developed by MDA of Canada and jointly tested by the U.S. Army TARDEC and NASA. Performance results achieved demonstrate that the pre-launch inspection system has the potential to become a critical tool in addressing NASA's ice problem.

  11. United States Air Force Graduate Student Research Program. Program Technical rept. Volume 1.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-12-01

    Notre Dame, IN 46556 (219) 239-5430 xv Paul R. Tanner Degree: B.A., Psychology, 1986 Dept. of Physiology Specialty: Sensory Neurophysiology Meharry...administrative arrangement of the program. It has been a rewarding and enlightening research experience at the Air Force Armament Laboratory at Eglin AFB. Dr... enlighten me on the possibilities of continuing my research effort in the future. 31-3 I. INTRODUCTION: The use of optical technology for communications

  12. Feasibility Computer Applications to Mission-Oriented Training in the Aircraft Armament Systems Specialist Career-Field.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-01-01

    necessary and identify by block number) on-the-job training task proficiency mission-oriented training training management aircraft armament systems...as was the training itself, to determine the feasibility of applying state-of-the-art computer technology to the problems of management and...62 Measures Used in Rank-ordering Functions ........ ........... 63 Computer-Supportable Functions ........ .. 63 Instructional Management

  13. Technology Overview for Advanced Aircraft Armament System Program.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-05-01

    availability of methods or systems for improving stores and armament safety. Of particular importance are aspects of safety involving hazards analysis ...flutter virtually insensitive to inertia and center-of- gravity location of store - Simplifies and reduces analysis and testing required to flutter- clear...status. Nearly every existing reliability analysis and discipline that prom- ised a positive return on reliability performance was drawn out, dusted

  14. Independent Production Cost Estimate: XM1 Tank Main Armament Evaluation

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1977-11-01

    r V. REFERtNCfcS 1. Ammunition Cost Research Study, Gerald W. Kalal and Patrick Gannon, Jun 76, AD-A-029330. 2. Ammunition Cost Research: Medium...Bore Cannon Ammunition, Annexes A-E, Patrick Gannon, Celestino George, Gerald Kalal , Kathleen Keleher, Paul Riedesel, Joseph Robinson, Sep 75, AD-A...016104. 3. Cost Estimating Relationships for Manufacturing Hardware Cost of Gun/Howitzer Cannons, Gerald W. Kalal , Aug 72, AD-75-7163. 4. ARRCOM

  15. Investigating Outfitting Density as a Cost Driver in Submarine Construction

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-09-01

    Outfitting and furnishings, such as offices, medical, stores, berthing , joiner work and paint are allocated 12 to group 600. Group 700 is armament...handling, fire control, steering 600 Outfit and Furnishings Hull fittings, paint, insulation, berthing , offices, storerooms, medical 700 Armament...and is allocated for the service-life of the submarine. The AWE serves as the baseline weight for the Milestone B costing position for projected

  16. Joint Armaments Conference, Exhibition and Firing Demonstration

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-05-20

    10195 - Effects of Barrel Length on Sound Measurement, Bore Pressure, and Bullet Velocity, Dr. Philip Dater, Gemtech · 10186 - MEMS S&A...Systems · 10033 - Selectable Effects Warhead Technology Demonstration, Mr. Eric Volkmann, ATK Untitled Document 2010armament.html[3/29/2016 2:19:07...Propellant for Use in 120mm Tank Training Rounds, Mr. Jim Wedwick, ATK · 10001 - Ageing Effects on Performance of Small and Medium Calibre Ammunition

  17. Guide for the Management of Multinational Programs. A Handbook for Managers Entering the World of International Acquisition. Second Edition

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-05-11

    Labor Stability and Ccupensation Practices . . . . 4-9 Management Styles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-12 Canadian Relationship to The US...Systýem (PAPS) Milestones and Phases ...... _ . . . 3-8 3-4 Phased Armaments Programminq System(PAPS)/ DoD Systems Acquisition Structural Relationship ...sharing o Armaments cooperation o An understanding of the relationship between economics and security. In concert with the above efforts were various allied

  18. Software Requirements for the A-7E Aircraft.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-08-31

    DIWI(a) 14 ASCU SSU-20 (1,2) READ 8 DIWI(a) 15 BITE FAIL SAFE (2) READ 2 DIW3(a) 0 TACAN PARITY VALID (3) READ 2 DIW3(a) 10-14 AGE TEST EQUIPMENT (2...69 2.1.5: Arm am ent Station Control Unit ( ASCU ...times. 69 I Chapter 2 ALSPAUGH, FAULK. BRITTON, PARKER. PARNAS, AND SHORE 3 2.1.5. Armament Station Control Unit ( ASCU ) The Armament Station Control

  19. USAF (United States Air Force) Avionics Master Plan.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-12-01

    is updated annually by MAPG activities to reflect changes in emphasis resulting from new direction, threat developments , and other armament and...many different kinds of functional electronic subsystems, a building block approach to the development of new subsystems can be taken. This approach...technologies targeted for precision all weather weapon delivery. A new program will develop the capability to detect and locate ground moving targets not

  20. The globalization of the arms industry: The next proliferation challenge

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Bitzinger, R.A.

    1994-12-31

    The globalization of the arms industry entails a significant shift away from traditional, single-country patterns of weapons production toward internationalization of the development, production, and marketing of arms. While wholly indigenous armaments production may be on the decline, multinational arms production - through collaboration on individual weapon systems and increasingly via interfirm linkages across the international arms industry - appears actually to be expanding. In several instances, in fact, multinational armaments production is increasingly supplementing or even supplanting indigenous or autonomous weapons production or arms imports. The emergence of an increasingly transnational defense technology and industrial base is fundamentally affectingmore » the shape and content of much of the global arms trade. This changing defense market, in turn, will have a profound impact on a number of national security issues concerning the Western industrialized nations. 3 figs., 2 tabs.« less

  1. TRIAD Annual Spring Meeting (49th) Held in Huntsville, Alabama on May 27, 2010

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-05-27

    Northrop Grumman Mission Systems Ms. Mitzi Whittenburg BAE Systems Presentations from the Spring TRIAD will be available to download 1-2 weeks...Ms. Mitzi Whittenburg, C.P.M., BAE Systems, Land & Armaments U.S. Combat Systems (USCS) u Ms. Chireda Gaither, CSC 2:50 pm - 3:00 pm CLOSING...REMARKS u Ms. Diane Dempsey, NDIA TRIAD Co-Chair, Meeting Chair Ms. Mitzi Whittenburg, CPM BAE Systems, Land & Armaments U.S. Combat Systems

  2. Nuclear Testing and National Security,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-01-01

    ests, even though we have promised for years to begin nuclear dis- armament in the particular way represented by a CTB. More rational is the proposition...when Harold Stassen was Eisenhower’s selection to head a special White House group to formulate US dis- armament policy, we have been wrapped up in a...desired "personal incentive not to deny" their negotiated agreements Is perhaps the most ration - al explanation yet advanced. isi .. .. . n mI The

  3. Index to Benet Weapons Laboratory (LCWSL) Technical Reports - 1984.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-07-01

    construed as an official Department of the Army position unless so designated by other authorized documents. The use of trade name(s) and/or manufacture...Apr 84 System Autoloader D.E. Jones (BWL POC) ARLCB-CR-84011 Conceptual Autoloader Design B.D. Goodell Apr 84 Study for Future Armament System M.W... Design for 120mm J.E. Wildman Apr 84 Improved Conventional Armament D.E. Jones System (ICAS) Autoloader (BWL POC) ARLCB-MR-84013 Cadmium Plating vs

  4. The Shock and Vibration Bulletin: Proceedings on the Symposium on ShocK and Vibration (52nd) Held in New Orleans, Louisiana on 26-28 October 1981. Part 2. Invited Papers, Space Shuttle Loads and Dynamics, Space Shuttle Data Systems, Shock Testing, Shock Analysis Space Shuttle Thermal Protection Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-05-01

    discovered during posttest inspection. The unit had experienced 2 As- designed damper, 0.92-1-.14 grams 8 tests for a total of 330 seconds of opera- 3...a Modeling DAMPED STRUCTURE DESIGN USING FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS M. F. Klunmner and M. L. Drake, University of Dayti-n Resatch Institute, Dayton, OH...IN DYNAMICS T. E. Simkins, U.S. Army Armament Research and Development Command, Watervliet, NY Stucturd Dynamics A PROCEDURE FOR DESIGNING OVERDAMPED

  5. Navy’s Advanced Aircraft Armament System Program Concept Objectives

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-10-01

    12-1 00 NAVY’S ADVANCED AIRCRAFT ARMAMENT SYSTEM PROGRAM CONCEPT OBJECTIVES T. M . Leese and J. F. Haney Naval Weapons Center Code 31403 China...STORE FLWNT LIFE RECONFIOURATION ♦ UWMST OMHTH ninoairv M — MANN HUCTHM ^♦■ SILECT ALTERNATE • STORE 0PTI0M ■ REOUCIO CK« W0RKL0A0 • . README...mOVEMENTS INÜTEO FUIWUTY MM AM tTATWM COMPLEX AUTOMATIC LACK OF OIT RESTRICTIVE MLNIRV M FLUWAITV IUCSMVI Figure 1. Carrier aircraft

  6. Fleet/TYCOM Level Survey of Armament Handling Problems - Task One of the Naval Aviation Armament Support Equipment Program Management Study

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1977-06-21

    7. AUTHOR(#) 6. CONTRACT OR GRANT NUMBER(#) PILA /UDERIAN 9. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS 10. PROGRAM ELEMENT. PROJECT, TASK...mechanically complex (i.e. contains an internal combustion engine) and/or comes in direct support of the aircraft is managed and maintained by the AIMD. The...an internal combustion engine. Accordingly, only the Aero 33D/E Trailer, Aero 51B Trailer, 21A/C Bomb Skid, and Aero 47A Weapons Loader are maintained

  7. The Road To The Objective Force. Armaments for the Army Transformation

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2001-06-18

    Vehicle Fire Support Vehicle •TOW 2B Anti-Tank Capability Under Armor •Detection of NBC Hazards Mortar Carrier •Dismounted M121 120mm MRT Initially...engaged from under armor M6 Launchers (x4) Staring Array Thermal Sight Height reduction for air transport Day Camera Target Acq Sight Armament Remote...PM BCT ANTI-TANK GUIDED MISSILE VEHICLE • TOWII • ITAS (Raytheon) - 2 Missiles • IBAS Day Camera • Missile is Remotely Fired Under Armor • M6 Smoke

  8. The arms race and nuclear war

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Barash, D.P.

    Addressing the history, physics, biology, economics, politics, psychology, and ethics of nuclear armaments, the author provides a survey of diverse facets of the nuclear controversy. The study encompasses such key areas as nuclear hardware and technology; the short- and long-term effects of nuclear weapons; strategic doctrine, deterrence and defense policy; the arms race, arms control, and nuclear proliferation; and the economic impact, psychology, and ethics of nuclear armaments. A ''Policy Issues'' section, presenting both the advocate and opponent sides of the debate, is included with each chapter.

  9. Global Issues: Activities and Resources for the High School Teacher. Second Edition.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Switzer, Kenneth A.; And Others

    Increasing student knowledge about other nations and interrelationships with them is the primary goal of this teaching guide. The activities and resources focus on six topics of continuing global importance: (1) trade and economic issues, (2) conflict and armaments, (3) modernization and development, (4) technology and the environment, (5) energy,…

  10. International Cooperation. The Next Generation. Report of the DSMC 1990 - 1991 Military Research Fellows

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-09-01

    Maintaining Goal Congruence International Cooperation-the Next Generation ENDNOTES 1. Wolfgang Flume and David Swa, "British Aerospace-Leading...Program Management Questionnaire Report. Michael G. Krause , DSMC internal document, May 1989- 10. Bonn Seminar on Armaments cooperation, proceedings, w...Appendix K 154 International Cooperation-the Next Generation Dudney, Robert S., "The Electronics Industry Flume, Wolfgang , "Electronics for the Ger- Is

  11. OPERATION WIGWAM. Scientific Director’s Summary Report

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-02-01

    Base, Albuquerque, N. Mex. 1. Objectives Measure air pressures from the deep underwater nuclear explosion at the surface and at altitudes approaching...arrangpd as to take advan- tap of opportunities to obtain the effects of atomic explosives against ground and air tairgett and to acquire sclentific...atomic explosives in air and water; target response to underwater explosives ; and model scaling techniques. 3. Dr. W. 0. Penney of the Armament Research

  12. United States Air Force Summer Faculty Research Program. Management Report. Volume 1

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-12-01

    sensors , measure reaction characteristics of fuel and oxidizer at various inlet velocities and initial conditions. Application of spectroscopy, high... applications in armament systems. False signals caused by cloud, fog, and snow interfere with proper response of the sensors , and efforts to... sensor for this application have not been fully successful (1-18). Presence of dense clouds, fog, or snow will create false signals and will obscure

  13. On Responsibility of Scientists

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Burdyuzha, Vladimir

    The situation of modern world is analised. It is impossible for our Civilization when at least half of the World Scientists are engaged in research intended to solve military problems. Civilization cannot be called reasonable so long as it spends a huge portion of national incomes on armaments. For resolution of our global problems International Scientific Center - Brain Trust of planet must be created, the status of which should be defined and sealed by the UN organization.

  14. Combat Service Support Model Development: BRASS - TRANSLOG - Army 21

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-07-01

    throughout’the system. Transitional problems may address specific hardware and related software , such as the Standard Army Ammunition System ( SAAS ...FILE. 00 Cabat Service Support Model Development .,PASS TRANSLOG -- ARMY 21 0 Contract Number DAAK11-84-D-0004 Task Order #1 DRAFT REPOkT July 1984 D...Armament Systems, Inc. 211 West Bel Air Avenue P.O. Box 158 Aberdeen, MD 21001 8 8 8 2 1 S CORMIT SERVICE SUPPORT MODEL DEVELOPMENT BRASS -- TRANSLOG

  15. Hyperspectral anomaly detection using Sony PlayStation 3

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rosario, Dalton; Romano, João; Sepulveda, Rene

    2009-05-01

    We present a proof-of-principle demonstration using Sony's IBM Cell processor-based PlayStation 3 (PS3) to run-in near real-time-a hyperspectral anomaly detection algorithm (HADA) on real hyperspectral (HS) long-wave infrared imagery. The PS3 console proved to be ideal for doing precisely the kind of heavy computational lifting HS based algorithms require, and the fact that it is a relatively open platform makes programming scientific applications feasible. The PS3 HADA is a unique parallel-random sampling based anomaly detection approach that does not require prior spectra of the clutter background. The PS3 HADA is designed to handle known underlying difficulties (e.g., target shape/scale uncertainties) often ignored in the development of autonomous anomaly detection algorithms. The effort is part of an ongoing cooperative contribution between the Army Research Laboratory and the Army's Armament, Research, Development and Engineering Center, which aims at demonstrating performance of innovative algorithmic approaches for applications requiring autonomous anomaly detection using passive sensors.

  16. United States Air Force Graduate Student Research Program. 1989 Program Technical Report. Volume 2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-12-01

    Patterson Air Force Base) 1. Fred Arnold 4. Jon Longtin 2. Duane Daddis 5. John McCord 3. Robert Gabruk 6. Scott VanDam ARMAMENT LABORATORY (ATL) ( Eglin Air...Report as Dr. Beryl Barber *** Engineering and Services Center 22 Effects of Jet Aircraft Noise on Jon Zern Domestic Goats 23 Contaminant Flux...Pertaining to Ground Water Contamination and Laboratory Quality Control *** Same Report as Dr. Barbara Alvin * School of Aerospace Medicine 93

  17. United States Air Force Graduate Student Research Program for 1990. Program Technical Report. Volume 2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-06-05

    Laboratory Denton , TX 76201 Training Systems (817) 565-3110 xvii NAME / ADDRESS DEGREE, SPECIALTY, LABORATORY ASSIGNED Velma Velazquez Degree: BS Wright...Welter 3. Allen Olheiser 6. Timothy Young ARMAMENT LABORATORY (ATL) ( Eglin Air Force Base) 1. George Boynton 4. Davis Lange 2. Randy G6ve 5. Christopher...settles. If the cesium adsorption coverage is reduced by surface contamination the capability to ionize the plasma is also reduced. This effect would

  18. Land-Based Air Power in Third World Crises

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-07-01

    Doctrine, Research, and Education (CADRE) or the Department of the Air Force . This publication has been reviewed by security and policy review...many of the places in Europe, Africa, and Asia that figure in this work. He is now working as a Historian at Air Force Systems Command’s Armament...achieving a range of policy objectives . At one end of the spectrum there should be available to the decision maker a low -level or limited military response

  19. The Rise of China and Its Effect on Taiwan, Japan, and South Korea: U.S. Policy Choices

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2006-01-13

    PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) Congressional Research Service The Library of Congress 101 Independence Ave SE Washington, DC 20540-7500...8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER 9. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 10. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S ACRONYM(S) 11. SPONSOR...with some alarm. In that sense, globalization and the armaments it has financed has been destabilizing — both Taiwan and Japan have had to adjust

  20. Research Study Towards a MEFFV Electric Armament System

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2004-01-01

    CHPSPerf Inputs Parameter Setting Engine Power (kW) 500 per engine Generator Power (kW) 500/generator Traction Motors Power (kW) 500/side # Battery Pack...Cells in Parallel 2 # Motors in Drive Train 2 Max Power of Traction Motors 200 Minimum Engine Power (kW) 50 Optimum Engine Power (kW) 750 Stop... motors . Other options were examined for the energy storage system. Of particular interest in this regard is the use of the CPA flywheel as the load

  1. Behavior Characteristics of Type I (75/25) Octol during Melt Pouring HE Warhead M250 (Chaparral)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1979-09-01

    COVERED BEHAVIOR CHARACTERISTICS OF TYPE 1 (75/25) "OCTOL DURING MELT POURING HE WARHEAD I M250 (CHAPARRAL) 6. PERFORMING ORG. APrPORT NUMBER 7. AUTHOR...Military Specification, HMX, MIL-H-45444B, Amendment 2, dated 12 July 1977. 4 6. Military Specification, Warhead, Guided Missile, HE, M250 , Loading...CHARACTERISTICS OF TYPE i (75/25) OCTOL DURING MELT POURING HE WARHEAD M250 (CHAPARRAL) HERMAN J. FRIGAND SEPTEMBER 1979 US ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCH AND

  2. Virtual Employment Test Bed Operational Research and Systems Analysis to Test Armaments Designs Early in the Life Cycle

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-06-01

    motion capture data used to determine position and orientation of a Soldier’s head, turret and the M2 machine gun • Controlling and acquiring user/weapon...data from the M2 simulation machine gun • Controlling paintball guns used to fire at the GPK during an experimental run • Sending and receiving TCP...Mounted, Armor/Cavalry, Combat Engineers, Field Artillery Cannon Crewmember, or MP duty assignment – Currently M2 .50 Caliber Machine Gun qualified

  3. JPRS Report, Nuclear Developments

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-04-23

    East countries. Bush once expressed Taishan. the hope of reducing arms sales to the Middle East but has never taken effective measures to weaken the flow...structure containing sand armament will bring enormous effects in strategic envi- 350 meters to 500 meters below the surface and then ronment in Northeast...underestimation of its consequences may have some Kozloduy Nuclear Power Plant which results in radioac- tragic effects on Bulgaria’s population which

  4. The United States, the South Atlantic, and Antarctic: Interests and Challenges

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-06-01

    3) Probability of attack from the South was greatest in 1962. Not since the Navy’s 4th Fleet was based in northern Brazil during the Second World...Brazil’s attack aircraft are not carrier-borne. Brazil possesses a well-developed military armaments industry like Argentina, but its export sector far...release; ,. DECLASSIFICATIONJDOWNGRADING SCHEDULE distribution is unlimited PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER( S ) 5. MONITORING ORGANIZATION REPORT

  5. Monitor for status epilepticus seizures

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Johnson, Mark; Simkins, Thomas

    1994-01-01

    This paper describes the sensor technology and associated electronics of a monitor designed to detect the onset of a seizure disorder called status epilepticus. It is a condition that affects approximately 3-5 percent of those individuals suffering from epilepsy. This form of epilepsy does not follow the typical cycle of start-peak-end. The convulsions continue until medically interrupted and are life threatening. The mortality rate is high without prompt medical treatment at a suitable facility. The paper describes the details of a monitor design that provides an inexpensive solution to the needs of those responsible for the care of individuals afflicted with this disorder. The monitor has been designed as a cooperative research and development effort involving the United States Army Armament Research, Development, and Engineering Center's Benet Laboratories (Benet) and the Cerebral Palsy Center for the Disabled (Center), in association with the Department of Neurology at Albany Medical College (AMC). Benet has delivered a working prototype of the device for field testing, in collaboration with Albany Medical College. The Center has identified several children in need of special monitoring and has agreed to pursue commercialization of the device.

  6. Ammunition Suite for the FCS Multi-role Armament and Ammunition System (MRAAS)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2001-06-20

    Cards Large Scale Gap Test (LSGT) Exploding Foil Initiator ( EFI ) Effort 19 Slow Burning Layer Fast Burning Layer FASTCORE Nitramines ETPEs RDX CL20...Center Burst Charge 48 M80 Grenades With Center Burst Charge ü Trade off performance with size, weight, etc. ü Develop initial space claim for...submunition ü Dynamic Analysis of projectile for different submunitions MRAAS Trades underway • Accomplishments – Initial meetings with TRADOC, Ft Knox and Ft

  7. Development Test 1 Advanced Attack Helicopter Competitive Evaluation Hughes YAH-64 Helicopter

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1976-12-01

    pilot or the copilot/gunner. The gun/rocket firing circuits were armed by selecting either guns or rockets on the armament panel (fig. 36, app B). The...number of 30mm rounds to be fired and gun barrel positions could only be set from the gunner position for DT I testing. Once the systems were armed ...fuselage is of a semimonocoque construction of primarily aluminum alloys. It consists of 10 major bulkheads and frames and 8 major longerons and

  8. The Army’s Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle (AMPV): Background and Issues for Congress

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-01-11

    award a five-year Engineering and Manufacturing Development (EMD) contract in May 2014 worth $458 million to a single contractor for 29 prototypes...had selected BAE Systems Land and Armaments L.P. as the winner of the EMD contract . The initial award is for 52 months, valued at about $382 million...289 vehicles for a total contract value of $1.2 billion. This EMD contract does not include EAB AMPV variants. The AMPV reportedly successfully

  9. OH-13H Gross Weight Increase/XM-1 Armament Kit Performance Test

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1963-06-01

    in hovering performance beyond thai obtained in the Air Force Performance lest of the 0H-I3H, de - scribed in MFFTC-TR...The airspeed schedule used during the climbs was the same as that developed during the OH-!3H performance test de - sci iüed in AFrrC-TR-57-12...siight de - crease in control response was indicated by a small amount of feedback through the unboosted collective stick. Level Flight

  10. M825A1 White Phosphorous Malfunction Investigation Related to the M739/ M739A1 Safing and Arming Module

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-08-01

    AD-A269 205 AD AD-E402 378 Technical Report ARAED-TR-92031 M825A1 WHITE PHOSPHOROUS MALFUNCTION INVESTIGATION RELATED TO THE M739 /M739A1 SAFING AND...Aug 1993 - 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE 5 FUNDING NUMBERS M825A1 WHITE PHOSPHOROUS MALFUNCTION INVESTIGATION RELATED TO THE M739 /M739AI SAFING AND ARMING...LT). An investigation of the data revealed changes in the burster and the M739 /M739A1 safing and arming (S&A) module. The Armaments Research

  11. Sperm competition games: a general model for precopulatory male-male competition.

    PubMed

    Parker, Geoff A; Lessells, Catherine M; Simmons, Leigh W

    2013-01-01

    Reproductive males face a trade-off between expenditure on precopulatory male-male competition--increasing the number of females that they secure as mates--and sperm competition--increasing their fertilization success with those females. Previous sperm allocation models have focused on scramble competition in which males compete by searching for mates and the number of matings rises linearly with precopulatory expenditure. However, recent studies have emphasized contest competition involving precopulatory expenditure on armaments, where winning contests may be highly dependent on marginal increases in relative armament level. Here, we develop a general model of sperm allocation that allows us to examine the effect of all forms of precopulatory competition on sperm allocation patterns. The model predicts that sperm allocation decreases if either the "mate-competition loading,"a, or the number of males competing for each mating, M, increases. Other predictions remain unchanged from previous models: (i) expenditure per ejaculate should increase and then decrease, and (ii) total postcopulatory expenditure should increase, as the level of sperm competition increases. A negative correlation between a and M is biologically plausible, and may buffer deviations from the previous models. There is some support for our predictions from comparative analyses across dung beetle species and frog populations. © 2012 The Author(s). Evolution© 2012 The Society for the Study of Evolution.

  12. Teaching "The Nuclear Predicament."

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Carman, Philip; Kneeshaw, Stephen

    1987-01-01

    Contends that courses on nuclear war must help students examine the political, social, religious, philosophical, economic, and moral assumptions which characterized the dilemma of nuclear armament/disarmament. Describes the upper level undergraduate course taught by the authors. (JDH)

  13. Report of Investigation: The Presence of Biological and Chemical Warfare Materiel at AFMC Bases within the United States

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2000-06-01

    knew nothing of the BW/CW work done on the base in the 40’ s and 50’ s . 461 History of the Armament Development and Test Center, Appendix B, 1 July 1970...technical report has been reviewed and is approved for publication. FOR THE DIRECTOR ALBERT S . TORdGIAN, Lt Col, US Deputy Chief, Deployment and Su...Office of History , Air Force Materiel Command Air Force Systems Command Air Force Special Weapons Center Air Force Weapons Laboratory Air Materiel

  14. 6. INTERIOR DETAIL OF GUN MOUNT ON TERRACE, LOOKING EAST ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    6. INTERIOR DETAIL OF GUN MOUNT ON TERRACE, LOOKING EAST (1992). - Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Area B, Building 22, Armament Laboratory & Gun Range, On flightline between Tenth & Eleventh Streets, Dayton, Montgomery County, OH

  15. Sensor and information fusion for improved hostile fire situational awareness

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Scanlon, Michael V.; Ludwig, William D.

    2010-04-01

    A research-oriented Army Technology Objective (ATO) named Sensor and Information Fusion for Improved Hostile Fire Situational Awareness uniquely focuses on the underpinning technologies to detect and defeat any hostile threat; before, during, and after its occurrence. This is a joint effort led by the Army Research Laboratory, with the Armaments and the Communications and Electronics Research, Development, and Engineering Centers (CERDEC and ARDEC) partners. It addresses distributed sensor fusion and collaborative situational awareness enhancements, focusing on the underpinning technologies to detect/identify potential hostile shooters prior to firing a shot and to detect/classify/locate the firing point of hostile small arms, mortars, rockets, RPGs, and missiles after the first shot. A field experiment conducted addressed not only diverse modality sensor performance and sensor fusion benefits, but gathered useful data to develop and demonstrate the ad hoc networking and dissemination of relevant data and actionable intelligence. Represented at this field experiment were various sensor platforms such as UGS, soldier-worn, manned ground vehicles, UGVs, UAVs, and helicopters. This ATO continues to evaluate applicable technologies to include retro-reflection, UV, IR, visible, glint, LADAR, radar, acoustic, seismic, E-field, narrow-band emission and image processing techniques to detect the threats with very high confidence. Networked fusion of multi-modal data will reduce false alarms and improve actionable intelligence by distributing grid coordinates, detection report features, and imagery of threats.

  16. [The Chinese nuclear test and 'atoms for peace' as a measure for preventing nuclear armament of Japan: the nuclear non-proliferation policy of the United States and the introduction of light water reactors into Japan, 1964-1968].

    PubMed

    Yamazaki, Masakatsu

    2014-07-01

    Japan and the United States signed in 1968 a new atomic energy agreement through which US light-water nuclear reactors, including those of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant of Tokyo Electric Power Company, were to be introduced into Japan. This paper studies the history of negotiations for the 1968 agreement using documents declassified in the 1990s in the US and Japan. After the success of the Chinese nuclear test in October 1964, the United States became seriously concerned about nuclear armament of other countries in Asia including Japan. Expecting that Japan would not have its own nuclear weapons, the US offered to help the country to demonstrate its superiority in some fields of science including peaceful nuclear energy to counter the psychological effect of the Chinese nuclear armament. Driven by his own political agenda, the newly appointed Prime Minister Eisaku Sato responded to the US expectation favorably. When he met in January 1965 with President Johnson, Sato made it clear that Japan would not pursue nuclear weapons. Although the US continued its support after this visit, it nevertheless gave priority to the control of nuclear technology in Japan through the bilateral peaceful nuclear agreement. This paper argues that the 1968 agreement implicitly meant a strategic measure to prevent Japan from going nuclear and also a tactic to persuade Japan to join the Nuclear Non -Proliferation Treaty.

  17. Resource allocation and supervisory control architecture for intelligent behavior generation

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shah, Hitesh K.; Bahl, Vikas; Moore, Kevin L.; Flann, Nicholas S.; Martin, Jason

    2003-09-01

    In earlier research the Center for Self-Organizing and Intelligent Systems (CSOIS) at Utah State University (USU) was funded by the US Army Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command's (TACOM) Intelligent Mobility Program to develop and demonstrate enhanced mobility concepts for unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs). As part of our research, we presented the use of a grammar-based approach to enabling intelligent behaviors in autonomous robotic vehicles. With the growth of the number of available resources on the robot, the variety of the generated behaviors and the need for parallel execution of multiple behaviors to achieve reaction also grew. As continuation of our past efforts, in this paper, we discuss the parallel execution of behaviors and the management of utilized resources. In our approach, available resources are wrapped with a layer (termed services) that synchronizes and serializes access to the underlying resources. The controlling agents (called behavior generating agents) generate behaviors to be executed via these services. The agents are prioritized and then, based on their priority and the availability of requested services, the Control Supervisor decides on a winner for the grant of access to services. Though the architecture is applicable to a variety of autonomous vehicles, we discuss its application on T4, a mid-sized autonomous vehicle developed for security applications.

  18. Spacecraft contamination programs within the Air Force Systems Command Laboratories

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Murad, Edmond

    1990-01-01

    Spacecraft contamination programs exist in five independent AFSC organizations: Geophysics Laboratory (GL), Arnold Engineering and Development Center (AEDC), Rome Air Development Center (RADC/OSCE), Wright Research and Development Center (MLBT), Armament Laboratory (ATL/SAI), and Space Systems Division (SSD/OL-AW). In addition, a sizable program exists at Aerospace Corp. These programs are complementary, each effort addressing a specific area of expertise: GL's effort is aimed at addressing the effects of on-orbit contamination; AEDC's effort is aimed at ground simulation and measurement of optical contamination; RADC's effort addresses the accumulation, measurement, and removal of contamination on large optics; MLBT's effort is aimed at understanding the effect of contamination on materials; ATL's effort is aimed at understanding the effect of plume contamination on systems; SSD's effort is confined to the integration of some contamination experiments sponsored by SSD/CLT; and Aerospace Corp.'s effort is aimed at supporting the needs of the using System Program Offices (SPO) in specific areas, such as contamination during ground handling, ascent phase, laboratory measurements aimed at understanding on-orbit contamination, and mass loss and mass gain in on-orbit operations. These programs are described in some detail, with emphasis on GL's program.

  19. Interior view at top of parachute drying tower showing Lbeams ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    Interior view at top of parachute drying tower showing L-beams and holes for hanging parachutes, and wooden roof construction, facing northeast. - Albrook Air Force Station, Parachute & Armament Building, 200 feet north of Andrews Boulevard, Balboa, Former Panama Canal Zone, CZ

  20. Simulator Sickness in the AH-1S (Cobra) Flight Simulator

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-09-01

    ADJUSTABLE ARMAMENT BOMB LUG (upper rack use only) AFT ATTACHING POINT SWAY GRACE PAD HANS DEBRIS DIRECTOR ~~ CAPTIVE LOCKINGPI FORWARDHARNESS...Qualification training) Training Stage : Qualification Continuation Refresher AAPART (Check Ride) Mission All rights reserved Essex Corporation 1040 Woodcock Road

  1. Biology Teachers and Peace.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Whitney, L. Jack

    1981-01-01

    Suggests that biology teachers can serve an important role in turning humankind from nuclear warfare to peaceful cooperation. Argues that the school should lead the world in teaching about the universal will to live exhibited by all organisms and about the insanity of nuclear armament. (DC)

  2. Slave Labor Camps of the Third Reich.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Stone, Adolf

    1983-01-01

    Describes the ground rules used by Nazi architects in choosing the sites for slave labor camps. While some, like Auschwitz, became extermination camps, others also produced armaments. One camp, Theresienstadt, became a "model" camp to show to reporters and Red Cross representatives. (CS)

  3. Vehicle capture system

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tacke, Kenneth L.

    1998-12-01

    Primex Aerospace Company, under contract with the U.S. Army Armament Research Development & Engineering Center (ARDEC), has developed a portable vehicle capture system for use at vehicle checkpoints. Currently when a vehicle does not stop at a checkpoint, there are three possible reactions: let the vehicle go unchallenged, pursue the vehicle or stop the vehicle with lethal force. This system provides a non-lethal alternative that will stop and contain the vehicle. The system is completely portable with the heaviest component weighing less than 120 pounds. It can be installed with no external electrical power or permanent anchors required. In its standby mode, the system does not impede normal traffic, but on command erects a barrier in less than 1.5 seconds. System tests have been conducted using 5,100 and 8.400 pound vehicles, traveling at speeds up to 45 mph. The system is designed to minimize vehicle damage and occupant injury, typically resulting in deceleration forces of less than 2.5 gs on the vehicle. According to the drivers involved in tests at 45 mph, the stopping forces feel similar to a panic stop with the vehicle brakes locked. The system is completely reusable and be rapidly reset.

  4. Breaking New Ground on War and Peace.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Bock, Paul

    1983-01-01

    The American Catholic Church, which has historically supported America's involvement in wars through the concept of just wars, has broken new ground with its Pastoral Letter on War, Armaments, and Peace, which challenges the morality of present defense policy and nuclear war. Reasons for the change in attitude are discussed. (IS)

  5. 2005 Armaments Technology Seminar and Exhibition

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-06-13

    Carolina Sofer •Catina Crismale •Preparedness •Jason Emmel •Andrea Marcus •James Smith •Tim Phelan •Nikiesha Nicholas •Kathy Wioland •Mary Paczkowski • Jamie ...ASSESS PRI CATEGORY HPTs EFFECTS AGENCY ASSET AGENCY ASSET WHEN AGENCY ASSET 1 3 4 5 6 LAWTON Mayor Coop

  6. 42nd Annual Armament Systems: Gun and Missile Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-04-26

    to compare the various contenders: • FCS • Aero and flight dynamics of rounds • Phit and lethality • Direct and indirect fire capability Defence R&D...each other). • Guidance: Unguided, Command Guidance, Lock on Before Launch, Autonomous (needs Phit analysis). • Fuzing: Proximity – RF or Optical

  7. U.S. - UK - Canada Trilateral Symposium

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-10-02

    e . 4. Procedures for intra-community arms transfers simplified. 5 Retransfer controls disco raged b t m st be. u u u complied with. Li d...IRIS – T • Airbus A310 refueller 10 FUTURE OF TRANSATLANTIC ARMAMENTS COOPERATION 1996 VISION – “I believe that national security – ours and that

  8. Atlas of NATO.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Young, Harry F.

    This atlas provides basic information about the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Formed in response to growing concern for the security of Western Europe after World War II, NATO is a vehicle for Western efforts to reduce East-West tensions and the level of armaments. NATO promotes political and economic collaboration as well as military…

  9. 78 FR 17085 - Amendment of Multiple Restricted Areas; Eglin AFB, FL

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-03-20

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Aviation Administration 14 CFR Part 73 [Docket No. FAA-2013... date: 0901 UTC, May 2, 2013. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Paul Gallant, Airspace Policy and ATC... [Amended] By removing the words ``Using agency. U.S. Air Force, Commander, Air Armament Center, Eglin AFB...

  10. Response to Arend Flick

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    RiCharde, R. Stephen

    2009-01-01

    This article presents the author's response to Arend Flick. The author states that Flick is correct that the issue of rubrics is broader than interrater reliability, though it is the assessment practitioner's primary armament against what the author has heard dubbed "refried bean counting" (insinuating that assessment statistics are not just bean…

  11. A Conceptual Framework for the U.S. Army Tactical Wheeled Vehicle Optimization Model

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-06-01

    Texarkana , TX SDVF Single-Dimensional Value Function TACOM Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command (US Army) TOW Tube-launched, Optically-tracked, Wire...armor add-on. This recapping process takes place at Letterkenny Army Depot, Chambersburg, PA (LEAD), and Red River Army Depot, Texarkana , TX (RRAD

  12. Militarising School: Militarism in the Turkish Educational System (1926-1947)

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Gündüz, Mustafa

    2018-01-01

    With the advent of modern states, a mandatory relationship and interaction emerged between compulsory education, military service, and the practices of citizenship. Producing a loyal citizen required a disciplined, central, and compulsory education. In the nineteenth century when greatness was linked to armament, education was considered a vital…

  13. Aerodynamics of Sounding-Rocket Geometries

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Barrowman, J.

    1982-01-01

    Theoretical aerodynamics program TAD predicts aerodynamic characteristics of vehicles with sounding-rocket configurations. These slender, Axisymmetric finned vehicles have a wide range of aeronautical applications from rockets to high-speed armament. TAD calculates characteristics of separate portions of vehicle, calculates interference between portions, and combines results to form total vehicle solution.

  14. A Comparison of the Polish and Soviet Armaments Decisionmaking Systems.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-01-01

    translated and published under the auspices of the U.S. Air Force, Washington, D.C., 1977, p. 51; Antoni Rogucki, " Teoria potencjalu wojenno-ekonomicznego a...proizvodstvennogo oborudovaniia i sistema amortisatsii" (Managing the Renovation of the Production Equip- ment and Amortization System), Planovoe khoziaistvo, 1979

  15. Automatic panoramic thermal integrated sensor

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Gutin, Mikhail A.; Tsui, Eddy K.; Gutin, Olga N.

    2005-05-01

    Historically, the US Army has recognized the advantages of panoramic imagers with high image resolution: increased area coverage with fewer cameras, instantaneous full horizon detection, location and tracking of multiple targets simultaneously, extended range, and others. The novel ViperViewTM high-resolution panoramic thermal imager is the heart of the Automatic Panoramic Thermal Integrated Sensor (APTIS), being jointly developed by Applied Science Innovative, Inc. (ASI) and the Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC) in support of the Future Combat Systems (FCS) and the Intelligent Munitions Systems (IMS). The APTIS is anticipated to operate as an intelligent node in a wireless network of multifunctional nodes that work together to improve situational awareness (SA) in many defense and offensive operations, as well as serve as a sensor node in tactical Intelligence Surveillance Reconnaissance (ISR). The ViperView is as an aberration-corrected omnidirectional imager with small optics designed to match the resolution of a 640x480 pixels IR camera with improved image quality for longer range target detection, classification, and tracking. The same approach is applicable to panoramic cameras working in the visible spectral range. Other components of the ATPIS sensor suite include ancillary sensors, advanced power management, and wakeup capability. This paper describes the development status of the APTIS system.

  16. Germany's Armed Forces in the Second World War: Manpower, Armaments, and Supply.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Balsamo, Larry T.

    1991-01-01

    Discusses the state of Germany's armed forces in World War II. Describes Germany's progress from inferior weaponry and unprepared military at the beginning of the war to superior weapons and fighting. Stresses heavy German dependence on horse drawn supply. Credits Germany's defeat to human attrition accelerated by Hitler's operational leadership.…

  17. The Coevolution of "Tyrannosaurus" & Its Prey: Could "Tyrannosaurus" Chase down & Kill a "Triceratops" for Lunch?

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    May, S. Randolph

    2014-01-01

    Students will analyze the coevolution of the predator-prey relationships between "Tyrannosaurus rex" and its prey species using analyses of animal speeds from fossilized trackways, prey-animal armaments, adaptive behaviors, bite marks on prey-animal fossils, predator-prey ratios, and scavenger competition. The students will be asked to…

  18. Feasibility of Using Fluorescent Materials in Product Assurance Applications and for Locating Adhesive Bond Fractures

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-03-01

    IN PRODUCT ASSURANCE APPLICATIONS AND FOR LOCATING ADHESIVE BOND FRACTURES CAROLYN A. L. WESTERDAHL J. RICHARD HALL MARCH 1978 US ARMY ARMAMENT...AUTHORfc) Carolyn A. L. Westerdahl J. Richard Hall 8. CONTRACT OR GRANT NUMBERfaJ AMCMS Code 6121.05.I1H8.4 9. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION

  19. Armaments Cooperation in the Pacific Rim: An Evaluation Framework for the Selection of Cooperative Arrangements

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-09-01

    issuance or denial of arms export licenses. (19:21,31:19) COUNTERTRADE - Purchase of goods and services from the buyer country as a condition of the offset...Seller i will increasingly be required to provide creative financing; 6. Barter, countertrade , and buyback deals will become commonplace; 21 7

  20. 2005 40th Annual Armament Systems Guns - Ammunition - Rockets - Missiles Conference and Exhibition. Volume 1: Tuesday

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-04-28

    PM] Abraham Overview, Mr. Robert Daunfeldt, Bofors Defence Summary Overview of an Advanced 2.75 Hypervelocity Weapon, Mr. Larry Bradford , CAT Flight...Substantially Improves 2.75 Rocket Lethality, Safety, Survivability Mr. Larry Bradford , CAT Flight Services, Inc. APKWS Flight Test Results Mr. Larry S

  1. [Children's conditions. Peace should be used for the children's advantage].

    PubMed

    Neertoft, S

    1990-02-28

    It is estimated that about half of the budgets of underdeveloped countries are spent on armaments and repayments of debt. These two essentially unproductive activities cost an average of $500/family in underdeveloped countries each year. At the same time about 8000 children die each day for lack of vaccination. About 7000 children die each day from dehydration as a result of diarrhea and about 6000 children die each day from lung inflammation. The solutions to these health problems are well known and would cost only about what the USSR spends on vodka or what tobacco companies in the US spend on cigarette advertising. It would amount to 10% of the European Economic Community's support to agriculture and about 2% of what developing countries altogether spend on armaments. UNICEF, the UN children's organization, in its 1990 report on the state of the world's children estimates that about 40,000 children die each day worldwide from preventable causes and that many more live undernourished in poor health, physically and mentally unable to sustain the level of capability that they were born with. With military expenditures falling, there is hope that the peace dividend can be diverted to improve the world level of health care. If the debt crisis could be solved, a cut of only 5-10% in military expenditures would produce about $50 billion which could be used in the poorest parts of the world during the next 10 years to cover the most fundamental needs for food, pure drinking water, health care and education.

  2. Masters of defence: biomechanics of stinging nettles

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Jensen, Kaare H.; Knoblauch, Jan

    2017-11-01

    The techniques employed by plants and animals to defend themselves are very varied. Some involve extremely refined armaments. Stinging nettles employ hollow needle-like stinging hairs constructed from silica, the mineral from which we make glass, and they are filled with poison. The hairs are remarkably rigid and rarely break. Yet the tip is so sharp that the slightest touch cuts human skin, and so fragile that it breaks at that touch and releases poison into the wound. How the seemingly antagonist mechanical functions of rigidity and fragility are achieved, however, is unknown. We combine experiments on real and synthetic stingers to elucidate the poison injection mechanism. The design of plant stingers is compared to other natural systems and optimal stinging strategies are discussed. This work was supported by a research Grant (13166) from VILLUM FONDEN.

  3. The Debate Over International Armament Programs: Integrating Current Knowledge and the FSX Case

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-09-01

    Japanese technology which the U.S. could obtain under the technology flowback provisions of the MOU. Of particular interest to the U.S. is the composite...hold promise. However, success at technology flowback will depend heavily on the actions of the United States. The FSX has ushered in a new era. No

  4. Europe’s Future Security Architecture: Building on the Past or a New Edifice?

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-03-27

    existence, the IEPG served as c alking shop for armament officials" from all European NATO member states except Iceland, which has no military or arms... OECD ) and the GATT talks. Every effort should be made in this diplomatic arena but in the end, in the event diplomacy fails, the United States should

  5. The State of the Economy: Resources and Costs for Educational Services.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Burkhead, Jesse

    It is most difficult to believe that the American economy can soon return to the stable growth rates that were enjoyed from 1958 to 1973. Factors that contribute to a slow-growth economy include changes in the age of the average citizen, pressures for larger expenditures for armaments, pricefixing by oligopolies, rising raw materials prices,…

  6. Leveraging International Cooperation Acquisition Opportunities for the Department of Defense

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-09-01

    International Involvement as it relates to Defense Acquisition can be conducted through three types of programs; international armaments cooperation...render them more effective coalition partners and assist with establishing stronger international relations . 58 THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT...illicit manufacture and trafficking of narcotic and psychotropic drugs , money laundering, and precursor chemical diversion and the progressive

  7. Vehicle Characteristics

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-02-14

    g. Material. 5.1.7 Wheel Geometry. a. Camber angle. b. Caster angle. c. Pivot angle. d. Static toe-in. e. Turning angles...the vehicle characteristics to be obtained during testing of wheeled and tracked vehicles and their components. Physical characterization of test...frontal area Characteristic data sheet Power train Suspention Wheel geometry Vehicle clearance angles Armament Gun control systems 16. SECURITY

  8. Aircraft Armament for Air-To-Ground Operations

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1951-11-30

    bomba , Va was set -qual 500 ft./sec.; for guns, V. uas set equal to zero. Actual values of 17-9 as taken fron trajectory Table I are shown for comarison...general- yIly fouind in firing tests corrected for •’y. These values are approximately (6). 9 mile - Bomba 9 midls - Rockets 5 mils - Ouns Release

  9. The Pyramid Liner Concept

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2003-06-01

    Albuquerque, NM, 1992. Dobratz, B. M. LLNL Explosives Handbook; UCRL -5299; Lawrence Livermore Laboratory: Livermore, CA, 1981 Geiger, W.; Honcia, G...L.; Hornig, H. C.; Kury, J. W. Adiabatic Expansion of High Explosive Detonation Products; UCRL -50422; Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory...ARMAMENT LAB AFATL DLJR J FOSTER D LAMBERT EGLIN AFB FL 32542-6810 2 DARPA W SNOWDEN S WAX 3701 N FAIRFAX DR ARLINGTON VA

  10. The Evolution of Air-Sea Battle: How Army Attack/Reconnaissance Aviation Fits into the Joint Concept for Access and Maneuver in the Global Commons

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-05-13

    Storm. 35 Allied planners determined that TLAMs would be ineffective because they could not provide Battle Damage Assessment ( BDA ) and confirm...that the Apache’s armament, capability of flying low enough to evade radar, and ability to confirm BDA provided the best option to destroy the radar

  11. Process Time Refinement for Reusable Launch Vehicle Regeneration Modeling

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-03-01

    predicted to fail, or have failed. 3) Augmenting existing space systems with redundant or additional capability to enhance space system performance or...Canopies, External Tanks/Pods/Pylon Ejectors , Armament Bay Doors, Missile Launchers, Wing and Fuselage Center Line Racks, Bomb Bay Release...Systems Test 04583 Thrust Maintenance Operation 04584 Silo Door Operation 04650 Initial Build-up-Recovery Vehicle (RV) 147 04610 Nondestructive

  12. Improving Land Armaments: Lessons from the Balkans. The U.S. Army Effort (Abbreviated)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2004-09-01

    NATO multinational force deployments ADF Automatic Direction Finder ADOCS Automated Deep Operations Coordination System ; a LAN system for...Management Information Systems TACSAT Tactical Satellite (for communications) Tactical circuit/message switch Automatic telephone switch used to... automatic crypto secured; the Netherlands’ automated tactical radio relay/telephone system that serves all HQs from corps to brigade ZOS Zone of

  13. Tribological and corrosion properties of plasma nitrided and nitrocarburized 42CrMo4 steel

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kusmic, D.; Van Thanh, D.

    2017-02-01

    This article deals with tribological and corrosion resistance comparison of plasma nitrided and nitrocarburized 42CrMo4 steel used for breech mechanism in the armament production. Increasing of materials demands (like wear resistance, surface hardness, running-in properties and corrosion resistance) used for armament production and in other industrial application leads in the field of surface treatment. Experimental steel samples were plasma nitrided under different nitriding gas ratio at 500 °C for 15h and nitrocarburized for 45 min at temperature 590°C and consequently post-oxidized for 10 min at 430°C. Individual 42CrMo4 steel samples were subsequently metallographically evaluated and characterized by hardness and microhardness measuring. The wear test “ball on disc” was realized for measuring of adhesive wear and coefficient of friction during unlubricated sliding. NSS corrosion tests were realized for corrosion resistance evaluation and expressed by corroded area and calculated corrosion rate. The corrosion resistance evaluation is by the surface corrosion-free surfaces evaluation supplemented using the laser confocal microscopy. Due to different surface treatment and plasma nitriding conditions, there are wear resistance and corrosion resistance differences evident between the plasma nitrided steel samples as well.

  14. USAF Development Of Optical Correlation Missile Guidance

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kaehr, Ronald; Spector, Marvin

    1980-12-01

    In 1965, the Advanced Development Program (ADP)-679A of the Avionics Laboratory initiated development of guidance systems for stand-off tactical missiles. Employing project engineering support from the Aeronautical Systems Division, WPAFB, the Avionics Laboratory funded multiple terminal guidance concepts and related midcourse navigation technology. Optical correlation techniques which utilize prestored reference information for autonomous target acquisition offered the best near-term opportunity for meeting mission goals. From among the systems studied and flight tested, Aimpoint* optical area guidance provided the best and most consistent performance. Funded development by the Air Force ended in 1974 with a MK-84 guided bomb drop test demonstration at White Sands Missile Range and the subsequent transfer of the tactical missile guidance development charter to the Air Force Armament Laboratory, Eglin AFB. A historical review of optical correlation development within the Avionics Laboratory is presented. Evolution of the Aimpoint system is specifically addressed. Finally, a brief discussion of trends in scene matching technology is presented.

  15. Overview of Probabilistic Methods for SAE G-11 Meeting for Reliability and Uncertainty Quantification for DoD TACOM Initiative with SAE G-11 Division

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Singhal, Surendra N.

    2003-01-01

    The SAE G-11 RMSL Division and Probabilistic Methods Committee meeting during October 6-8 at the Best Western Sterling Inn, Sterling Heights (Detroit), Michigan is co-sponsored by US Army Tank-automotive & Armaments Command (TACOM). The meeting will provide an industry/government/academia forum to review RMSL technology; reliability and probabilistic technology; reliability-based design methods; software reliability; and maintainability standards. With over 100 members including members with national/international standing, the mission of the G-11's Probabilistic Methods Committee is to "enable/facilitate rapid deployment of probabilistic technology to enhance the competitiveness of our industries by better, faster, greener, smarter, affordable and reliable product development."

  16. Report of Defense Science Board Task Force on Industry-to-Industry International Armaments Cooperation. Phase II. Japan

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-06-01

    TEMPERATURE MAT’LS IMAGE RECOGNITION ROCKET PROPULSION SPEECH RECOGNITION/TRANSLATION COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE PRODUCTION TECHNOLOGY...planning, intelligence exchange, and logistics. While not called out in the Guidelines, any further standardization in equipments and interoperability...COST AND TIME THAN DEVELCPING THEM -ESTABLISHMENT OF PRODUCTIVE LONG-TERM BUSINESS RELATIONSH IPS WITH JAPANESE COMPAN IES * PROBLEM -POSSIBILITY OF

  17. High Thermal Conductivity Carbon Nanomaterials for Improved Thermal Management in Armament Composites

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-03-01

    polymer matrices. In addition to improving mechanical and electrical properties, these forms of carbon typically demonstrate high intrinsic thermal...conductivities, a property that could be useful in improving the thermal dissipation performance of polymer matrix composites. In this study, carbon...nanotubes, carbon nanofibers and graphene have been added to polymers and polymer matrix composites in order to study the effect on the thermal

  18. Test Area C-74 Complex Final Range Environmental Assessment at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-08-21

    LAWS, REGULATIONS, AND POLICIES ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ACHP Advisory Council on Historic Preservation ACM asbestos -containing materials...agencies must comply. Air Armament Center Plan 32-3; January 2004; Asbestos Management Plan; This plan establishes procedures for the Eglin AFB...facility asbestos management program. It contains the policies and procedures used in controlling the health hazards created by asbestos containing

  19. Proceedings of the Air Power Symposium on the Role of Airpower in Low Intensity Conflict (9th) Held at Maxwell AFB, Alabama on 11-13 March 1985. Appendix 3. Symposium Papers,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-05-01

    and internal security problems which represent the comtemporary disease. Nicaragua, under Somoza, was one such example. The Somoza family...he was assigned to the Armament * Division, Eglin APB, Florida. He completed a Master’s Degree in Business * Administration in 1983 and then

  20. Hungry Tiger Eager To Grow

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-06-01

    armaments/nuclear-forces. Kile, Shannon N ., Vitaly Fedchenko, Bharath Gopalaswamy, and Hans M. Kristensen. “World Nuclear Forces.” In SIPRI Yearbook...68 Kile, Shannon N ., Vitaly Fedchenko, Hans M. Kristensen, and Phillip Schell. “World Nuclear Forces.” In SIPRI Yearbook 2012, edited by...Postgraduate School Monterey, CA 93943-5000 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER 9. SPONSORING /MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) N /A 10

  1. The Strategy of Defense: A Critical Examination of Global Conflict. A Secondary Level Curriculum for Social Studies.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    National Council for Better Education, Alexandria, VA.

    The purpose of this guide is to encourage a rational understanding of the problems associated with nuclear armaments and to present a constructive approach to finding a solution. Each unit is introduced with a review of new terms, after which the topic is summarized and then is concluded with a vocabulary review and unit examination. Unit 1…

  2. Collaborative Point Paper on Active Protection Systems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2006-10-01

    for the Hunter VHP CIED Program. Also, General Dynamics Armament and Technical Products (GDATP), Burlington, VT is contracted by the Marine Corps...the incoming threat at a relatively long distance. Specific details about the composition and mechanism of this explosive interceptor device are...relatively thin shell of ballistic steel and composite armor, also known as hybrid armor, designed to provide optimal protection from specific threats

  3. Japan at the Crossroads Armaments and Independence.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-12-01

    response to geo-strategic pressures which led to the enunciation of the "Three Principles" policy. I shall investigate whether actual Japanese transfers...the Meiji restoration in 1868. It will investigate historical Japanese responses 12 in the defense industrial field, to external and internal...determine whether there are any traditional response patterns common throughout each of these three periods that might be useful to understanding and

  4. The Barrel of the Gun and the Barrel of Oil in North-South Equation. Working Paper Number Five.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Mazrui, Ali A.

    Current trends in armaments and militarism in the third world countries must be assessed against a background of imperialism and in relation to the tendency to use nuclear power for peaceful ends and oil power for militaristic ends. Discussion of these factors with relation to China, India, and the Arab countries requires examination of…

  5. Molecular basis of the remarkable species selectivity of an insecticidal sodium channel toxin from the African spider Augacephalus ezendami

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Herzig, Volker; Ikonomopoulou, Maria; Smith, Jennifer J.; Dziemborowicz, Sławomir; Gilchrist, John; Kuhn-Nentwig, Lucia; Rezende, Fernanda Oliveira; Moreira, Luciano Andrade; Nicholson, Graham M.; Bosmans, Frank; King, Glenn F.

    2016-07-01

    The inexorable decline in the armament of registered chemical insecticides has stimulated research into environmentally-friendly alternatives. Insecticidal spider-venom peptides are promising candidates for bioinsecticide development but it is challenging to find peptides that are specific for targeted pests. In the present study, we isolated an insecticidal peptide (Ae1a) from venom of the African spider Augacephalus ezendami (family Theraphosidae). Injection of Ae1a into sheep blowflies (Lucilia cuprina) induced rapid but reversible paralysis. In striking contrast, Ae1a was lethal to closely related fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) but induced no adverse effects in the recalcitrant lepidopteran pest Helicoverpa armigera. Electrophysiological experiments revealed that Ae1a potently inhibits the voltage-gated sodium channel BgNaV1 from the German cockroach Blattella germanica by shifting the threshold for channel activation to more depolarized potentials. In contrast, Ae1a failed to significantly affect sodium currents in dorsal unpaired median neurons from the American cockroach Periplaneta americana. We show that Ae1a interacts with the domain II voltage sensor and that sensitivity to the toxin is conferred by natural sequence variations in the S1-S2 loop of domain II. The phyletic specificity of Ae1a provides crucial information for development of sodium channel insecticides that target key insect pests without harming beneficial species.

  6. Understanding Alignment of Trust Behaviors and Their Effect on Organizational Trust at the Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command Life Cycle Management Command (TACOM LCMC)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-03-20

    Covey, 2006); and lead to increased perceived effectiveness and job satisfaction ( Shockley - Zalabak , Morreale, & Hackman, 2010). Trust has multiple... Shockley - Zalabak et. al. (2010) further refined the Mishra model by adding identification (defined as the connection between the organization and...effectiveness, job satisfaction ( Shockley - Zalabak , Morreale, & Hackman, 2010), more open communication, information sharing, conflict management

  7. Armaments Coproduction at a Crossroads. U.S. Policy Options After the Cold War.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-04-01

    Copro: $200 million ($132 million R&D; $68 million production) P Technology flowback : - -12 ECPs from NATO, I adopted by U.S. (rotary pump for...and future competition in the global defense marketplace. 0 Standard provisions for royalty-free technology flowback of all design changes...modifications, and improvements. -Some benefits in technology flowback reported by General Dynamics in learning Swiss digital system checkout techniques with

  8. An Interpolation Approach to Optimal Trajectory Planning for Helicopter Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-06-01

    Armament Data Line DOF Degree of Freedom PS Pseudospectral LGL Legendre -Gauss-Lobatto quadrature nodes ODE Ordinary Differential Equation xiv...low order polynomials patched together in such away so that the resulting trajectory has several continuous derivatives at all points. In [7], Murray...claims that splines are ideal for optimal control problems because each segment of the spline’s piecewise polynomials approximate the trajectory

  9. Defense AT&L (Volume 35, Number 2, March-April 2006)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2006-04-01

    assignments give participants supervisory experience as they fill vacant su- pervisory positions. A tour of duty at a field activity may broaden the...individuals to gain experience in another career field , another organization, or another commodity within the local commuting area. The Acquisition Support...Department of the Army. He has a wealth of operational field experience serving as the program executive office representative for Armaments and Global

  10. Comparative Strategy: An International Journal. Volume 13. Number 1. January-March 1994

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1994-03-01

    of armaments to the year 2(X)0. On this point, he noted that after...difficult situation in the defense complex, Fedosov identified the economic crisis, and also the clumsy actions on the part of the government in the areas of ...world and the dissolution of the "bipolarity" in international relations; Conference Summary * the inevitable reintegration of parts of the former USSR on

  11. Improving the Parametric Method of Cost Estimating Relationships of Naval Ships

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-06-01

    tool since the total cost of the ship is broken down into smaller parts as defined by the WBS. The Navy currently uses the Expanded Ship Work Breakdown...Includes boilers , reactors, turbines, gears, shafting, propellers, steam piping, lube oil piping, and radiation 300 Electric Plant Includes ship...spaces, ladders, storerooms, laundry, and workshops 700 Armament Includes guns, missile launchers, ammunition handling and stowage, torpedo tubes , depth

  12. Annual Historical Review.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-01-01

    8217. ’. .4,. .. *4*’. 5.4* 4 4.. .4- *44 =1. 44* 4 .4 %SS 4- MAJOR GENERAL FRED HISSONG, JR. Commanding General US Army Armament, Munitions and Chemical...Command 4, 44 44. 3 4’ ~ 4~\\S~4~5........................ . . - AMCCOM Deputy Commanding Generals vii. % % TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter p% i! COMMAND...Handling for Brake and Clutch Repair V 54 Steam Cleaners V 54 Tool Improvement Program Suggestions V 54-. Test Stand Automotive Generator , Alternator

  13. Esmeraldas-Class Corvettes,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-04-25

    The series of ships, named after all the provinces of Ecuador , include: --CA 11 ESMERALDAS, laid down 27 September 1979, launched 11 October 1980... LOJA , laid down 25 March 1981, launched 27 February 1982; fitting out at CNR Ancona. The building program, on schedule so far, calls for the entire class...built and are still building in 16 units for foreign navies (Libya, Ecuador , Iraq) with four possible armament alternatives. In particular, they

  14. A Hypermedia Training Module for the Navy’s P-3C Armament System

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-07-01

    procedures. Both aural , and visual cues are used throughout the program as necessary to alert the learner to specific items requiring his attention... learner the opportunity for a great deal of interactivity and feedback. The project is divided into five chapters including an introduction, review of the...literature, methodology, program description, and summary and conclusions. The literature review concentrates on the foliowing topics: adult learners

  15. Performance-Based Logistics, Contractor Logistics Support, and Stryker

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-06-15

    automotive , armament, missile, communications, special devices, and ground equipment repair. The essential maintenance task for the FMC is to maintain...technologies and welding techniques into their production processes. Finally, GDLS’s use of progressive management techniques and supply chain information...C4ISR, MEP) per the NMC criteria in the -10 manual, the contractors system only focuses on the platform or automotive status. Thus a vehicle “up” for

  16. 2007 Armaments Technology Seminar and Exhibition - Joint Munitions and Lethality Life Cycle Management Command

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-06-13

    MTOP APS LOS-KE TBX Ceramic Barrel Novel Energetic Materials for the Future Force Multimode HPM and Laser Induced Plasma Channel Technology T Force...in one item • Enhanced incendiary device • Replacement of environmentally unfriendly materials • Insensitive munitions compliance 12 Pyrotechnics...simulators • Pocket sized hand held signals • Replacement of environmentally unfriendly materials • Improve pyrotechnic characteristics with nanotechnologies

  17. Joint Armaments Conference, Exhibition and Firing Demonstration. Volume 1. Monday - Tuesday

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-05-20

    Grenade Launchers in China, Ms. Juanjuan Yang, China R&D Academy of Machinery · 10055 - K11, Dual- Barrel Air-Burst Weapon, Dr. In Woo Kim...an Advanced Lightweight Material , Mr. Christopher Still, ATK · 10170 - Case Weight Variation Reduction and Subsequent Ballistic Dispersion...10195 - Effects of Barrel Length on Sound Measurement, Bore Pressure, and Bullet Velocity, Dr. Philip Dater, Gemtech · 10186 - MEMS S&A

  18. Trends in Terrorism: 2006

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2006-07-21

    documented are attacks aimed at damaging tourism (e.g. Bali , Luxor) and those disrupting transportation infrastructure (Madrid, London, and plots foiled in...policy focus are (1) attacks that aim to cause economic damage such as attacks on transportation infrastructure, tourism , and oil installations, (2) the...and the allies. Building the group’s own armaments industry is cited as a revised goal as well. See “Papers Reveal Weakening Terror Group,” by Rowan

  19. The Effectiveness of the Army and Navy Munitions Board during the Interwar Period

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-06-13

    96  Comparison between the United States and the United Kingdom................................ 98  Comparison between the United States and Nazi ...industrial mobilization of Nazi Germany and the U.K. throughout the pre-war period and World War II. Specifically, the comparison will look at the...industrial mobilization of Nazi Germany in World War II, including armament production, industrial capabilities, the usage of raw materials, and labor

  20. What’s So Important About Energetics? Everything

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-04-01

    shall be subject to a penalty for failing to comply with a collection of information if it does not display a currently valid OMB control number. 1...AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for public release; distribution unlimited 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 14. ABSTRACT 15. SUBJECT TERMS 16. SECURITY...ayashi, who stated: "However firm and stout pillboxes you may build on the beach , they will be destroyed by bombardment of main armament of the

  1. Flies and flowers in Darwin's race.

    PubMed

    Pauw, Anton; Stofberg, Jaco; Waterman, Richard J

    2009-01-01

    The idea of coevolution originated with Darwin's proposal that long-proboscid pollinators and long-tubed flowers might be engaged in reciprocal selection, but this has not been demonstrated. Here we test key aspects of Darwin's hypothesis of reciprocal selection in an experiment with naturally interacting populations of extremely long-proboscid flies (Moegistorhynchus longirostris: Nemestinidae) and long-tubed irises (Lapeirousia anceps: Iridaceae). We show that the benefit derived by both the fly (volume of nectar consumed) and the plant (number pollen grains received) depends on the relative length of their interacting organs. Each trait is shown to act both as agent and target in directional reciprocal selection, potentially leading to a race. This understanding of how fitness in both species varies in relation to the balance of their armament allows us to make tentative predictions about the nature of selection across multiple communities. We find that in each community a core group of long-tubed plant species might together be involved in diffuse coevolution with the fly. In poorly matched populations, the imbalance in armament is too great to allow reciprocal selection to act, and these species might instead experience one-sided selection that leads to convergence with the core species. Reciprocal selection drives the evolution of the community, then, additional species become attached to the network of interacting mutualists by convergence.

  2. Test Area C-62 Final Range Environmental Assessment at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-06-05

    requirements to submit with EPCRA reports. Federal agencies must comply. Air Armament Center Plan 32-3; January 2004; Asbestos Management Plan; This...plan establishes procedures for the Eglin Air Force Base (AFB) facility asbestos management program. It contains the policies and procedures used in...controlling the health hazards created by asbestos containing materials (ACM), and the procedures used in ACM removal required to protect the health

  3. International Naval Technology Transfer: Lessons Learned from the Spanish and Chilean Shipbuilding Experience

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-04-30

    immediately following (Alvarez-Maldonado Muela, 1997, pp. 37–43; Molas -Gallart, 1995, pp. 46–47). Instead, Spain turned to Germany for technical...capability and training the production work force (Castillo Masete, 1990, p. 118; Molas - Gallart, 1990, pp. 353–354). After the death of Franco in...created to coordinate armament procurement and budgeting, allowing for the creation of a uniform defense industrial policy ( Molas -Gallart, 1995, pp

  4. United States Military Posture for FY 1989.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-01-01

    LIC) can erode a climate of force structure needs modern equipment to meet the peace and stability in the world at large, frustrate co - threat...a Egypt Sraemaet -~Saudi Arabia Oa ni Dahalak a owvt marimet-N patrol aircraft US Carrier Rattio Group,_rcraft j Aircrft ca rorper t ’ . Surfce co ...security and interoperability of NATO. Defense Co - economic stabilization and growth. In FY 1988 operation in Armaments organizations are also being

  5. All the Missiles Work: Technological Dislocations and Military Innovation: A Case Study in US Air Force Air-to-Air Armament, Post-World War II through Operation Rolling Thunder

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-01-01

    technological momentum attempted to reconcile two of the disparate perspectives???social constructivism and technological determinism . The theory of...perspectives—social constructivism and technological determinism . The theory of technological dislocations advanced by this thesis is a refinement of...constructivism to technological determinism is unidirectional.114 His theory therefore tends to focus historical analysis on characterizing the

  6. Future Fleet Project. What Can We Afford

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-12-21

    like ships based on an LCS hull with improved armor and armament. These twenty ships would be preceded by eight transitional LCS THE JOHNS HOPKINS...large aviation-ship hull for Navy sea-control/power-projection air wings and for Marine Corps vertical-raid/assault-air wings, reconfigurable...or antisubmarine warfare (ASW) within a common hull type that can self-defend in peacetime but aggregate to fight offensively in wartime • Tactical

  7. Verification of Disarmament or Limitation of Armaments: Instruments, Negotiations, Proposals

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-05-01

    explosions and may complicate the process of detection. An even greater difficulty faced by seismologists is the ambient background of seismic "noise...suspected event would be a complex operation. It would consist of surveys of the area of the presumed nuclear explosion in order to measure ambient ...Draft Resolution to the OAS General Assembly, June 1991 and OAS Resolution "Cooperacion para la seguridad en el hemisferio. Limitacion de la

  8. Cold Regions Logistic Supportability Testing of Armament and Individual Weapons

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-10-07

    CHECKLIST 1. Have test data been collected, recorded, and presented in accordance with this TOP? YES NO Comment : 2. Have all data collected been reviewed...for correctness and completeness? YES NO Comment : 3. Were the facilities, test equipment, instrumentation, and support accommodations adequate to...test results compromised in any way due to test performance procedures? YES NO . Comment : 6. Were the test results compromised in any way due to test

  9. Structure Limits for a 30mm Annular Piston.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-05-01

    block at the rear, ending the cycle. III. STRESS ANALYSIS PROCEDURE tress data was generated using the SAAS -II finite element computer code. Applied...Plastics Avenue Rockford, IL 61125 Pittsfield, MA 01201-3698 1 Veritay Technology, Inc. 1 General Electric Company ATTN: E.B. Fisher Armament Systems... VALUATION Slit:ET/CHANGE 01- ADDRESS -hi s laboratoryN undertakes a continuing effort to improve the quality of the( re-ports it publishe,4. Yfour comments

  10. Soviet Military Power

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-04-01

    Australia and New Zealand force of SS-18s and SS-19s, their plans to reload preserves peace and stability in a region that is ICBM silos, and the extensive...Defense Ministry announced that the USSR was beginning to deploy a new generation of nuclear-armed, air-launched and sea-launched cruise missiles. The...increasingly ambitious Soviet procurement and deployment of ma- jor categories of new armaments. The success that the Soviets have achieved in both

  11. West Europe Report

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-04-11

    The biggest change has ■ been that the headquarters of the European Command was moved from France to Belgium when de Gaulle pulled France out.: NATO...1980 through 1984, the payments of the GRD amounted to 45 percent of the total expenditures of the EMD, of which about 1.2 billion Swiss francs , or...70 percent (55 percent to private industry and 13 percent to state armaments plants), were spent domestically and 500 million Swiss francs abroad

  12. The Air Force Handbook 2007

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-01-01

    sPEcIfIcATIOns Weight 51,000 lb. (22,950 kg ) Range 800 miles (695 nautical miles) Armament One 30 mm GAU-8/A seven-barrel Gatling gun with over 1,150...battlefield air and space profession- als who bring unequaled accuracy, responsiveness, flexibility, and persistence to the Joint warfight. LOSS Of...approximately $12.4 billion. This loss of buying power reduced Air Force Program content by an additional $10 billion per year. Base Realignment

  13. 2005 40th Annual Armament Systems: Guns - Ammunition - Rockets - Missiles Conference and Exhibition. Volume 2: Wednesday

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-04-28

    Aerosol Plasma Warhead, Mr. Allen H. Stults, US Army RDECOM-AMRDEC Next Generation Adaptable RF Seekers for Precision Munitions, Dr. Cory Myers, BAE Systems...AMRDEC Lunch Session: Missiles & Rockets (Continued) Missile System Lethality Enhancement Through the Use of Pulsed Power and Plasma Conduction Mr. Allen...45 pounds – Performance: 15 miles maximum, in 65 seconds – Guidance: GPS/INS (in-flight updates) + Laser seeker (optional terminal guidance

  14. Physics of Fission and Fusion for the Diagnostics and Monitoring of the Deadliest Illness of Mankind

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Saxena, Arjun

    2015-03-01

    The physics of fission and fusion has been well known for the past several decades. It has been used primarily for destructive purposes (e. g., nuclear armaments) with both processes. However for peaceful purposes, e. g., generation of energy, only fission has been used, but not yet fusion. It is also well known that the deadliest illness of mankind is the group of illnesses called mental illnesses. A large segment of the world population is afflicted by them causing more loss of human lives, destruction of families, businesses and overall economy than all the other illnesses combined. Despite outstanding advancements in medical research and huge investments, unfortunately no diagnostic techniques have yet been found which can characterize the patient's mental illness. Consequently, no quantitative monitoring techniques are available to evaluate the efficacy of the various medicines used to treat the patients, and to develop them in the pharmaceutical labs. The purpose of this paper is to apply the constructive aspects of fission and fusion to identify the missing links in the diagnosis and treatment of mental illnesses. Each patient is a unique human being, not a disease or a group of symptoms. This makes it even more difficult to treat the patients suffering from mental illnes

  15. Jprs Report, Near East & South Asia.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-11-16

    in Algiers. Of course, we could always resort to saying, "It was not us; it was the others." But that would be childish , because whoever the others...family lives as the majority of Algerians, whether it be the family’s housing or the schooling of their children. I mention these details because there...of defense. Henceforth it will be necessary to see to areas other than armament, such as the construction of barracks and housing for personnel

  16. Revised RB 100-9: A Guide to the Formulation and Selection of Feasible Tactical Courses of Action.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-04-23

    Department of Defense ATTN: M. Minnemam U.S. Army Armament Rsch Dev & Cmd ATTN: K . Hinman ATTN: DRDAR-LCN-E ATTN: Strategic & Space Sys (OS) ATTN: F...B2590D. Is. K EY WORDS (Cmnthme an rever. side it aaeceety OWd IdentIfy by Week munst) Tactical Course of Action Defensive Operations Integrated... 12 CHAPTER 2. STEPS LOADING TO FORMULATION OF COURSES OF ACTION ..........13 Section I. Introduction

  17. The Coast Artillery Journal. Volume 86, Number 2, March-April 1943

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1943-04-01

    enemy suc- ceeded in pushing back the Soviet units. In the ensuing street fighting one of our batteries, shifting from place to place, kept up a...Eldrisco Apartments, Pacific Avenue and Broderick Street , San Francisco, California. "Charles G. Sage, Colonel, 200th Coast Artillery, United States...duced numbers for the armament manned." Colonel Sage was born at Sparks, Kansas. His wife, Mrs. Dorothy H. Sage, lives at 333 South Tin Street , Deming

  18. Summary of the Defense Science Board 1978 Summer Study on ’Achieving Improved NATO Effectiveness Through Armaments Collaboration’ Held 31 July-11 August 1978, Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1978-12-01

    of air-to-air missiles. There are acknowledged difficulties with the concept which is still in embrionic stages: (1) Should a "family" be defined...dealing only with the IEPG. But it is far from clear whether this would be effective or put far too much strain on an embrionic institution. Extra-NATO

  19. The Acquisition Cost-Estimating Workforce. Census and Characteristics

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-01-01

    Abbreviations AAC Air Armament Center ACAT acquisition category ACEIT Automated Cost Estimating Integrated Tools AF Air Force AFB Air Force Base AFCAA Air...3 3 4 Automated Cost Estimating Integrated Tools ( ACEIT ) 0 1 12 6 Tecolotea training 0 0 10 5 Other 3 13 24 18 No training 18 4 29 18 Total 100 100...other sources, including AFIT, ACEIT ,9 or the contracting agency that employed them. The remain- ing 29 percent reported having received no training

  20. Reducing chlorinated solvent emissions from three vapor degreasers: 1990 summer intern project conducted at Alliant Techsystems, Inc., New Brighton, Minnesota

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Hymes, C.

    1990-12-31

    Alliant Techsystems manufactures aluminum and steel components for armaments, under defense contract, at building 502 in Arden Hills, MN. As part of the manufacturing process, six vapor degreasers are used to remove oil and other soils from the components. The focus of this study was to identify the causes of solvent loss from three of the degreasers, and suggest options for reducing those losses.

  1. Special Operations Forces Aviation on a Shoestring Budget: An Effectiveness Analysis of Light and Medium Fixed Wing Aircraft

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-12-01

    C2 Command and Control CAIG Cost Analysis Improvement Group CAS Close Air Support CASA Construcciones Aeronáuticas SA CLS Contract...Commercially Available Off-the-Shelf Commercially available off-the shelf (COTS) is defined as any item of supply (including construction material...uses are found for old weapons that were constructed for use in industrial war against soldiers and heavy armament. 6. The sides are mostly non

  2. JPRS Report West Europe.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-09-20

    accommodate shipwreck victims when necessary. The combat system of the new patrol vessels was built by Selenia Elsag and is based on a Pegasus "optronic...Selenia Elsag at the firm’s offices. It is also planned to take the crew (divided into groups of equal size) on board during the 6 months before the...Armament: two 30-mm Bredas; two 7.62 mm Elec- tronics: one Selenia Elsag Pegasus fire-control center; two GEM navigational radars JPRS-WER-88-052 20

  3. Precision Strike 2009 Summer Forum: Affordable Precision Munitions-The Reliable Choice for Modern Battle

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-06-10

    Sponsored by: General Dynamics-OTS) 0800 SUMMER FORUM WELCOME: Andy McHugh —Chairman of the Board, Precision Strike Association 0810...Andy McHugh , Chairman of the Board, PSA ArmAments technology Fire Power Forum committee PSA Programs Chair: Ginny Sniegon PSA Programs Vice-Chair...Business For G-20 Meeting: Russia’s Strategic Resource Grab • BY DANIEL MCGROARTY Posted 4/1/2009 • Metals conglomerate Norilsk Nickel owns the United

  4. Oncolytic Viruses: Therapeutics With an Identity Crisis.

    PubMed

    Breitbach, Caroline J; Lichty, Brian D; Bell, John C

    2016-07-01

    Oncolytic viruses (OV) are replicating viral therapeutics for the treatment of cancer and have been in laboratory development for about twenty years. Recently, the FDA approved Imlygic, a herpes virus based therapeutic for the treatment of melanoma and thus OVs have entered a new era where they are a weapon in the armament of the oncologist. OVs are unique therapeutics with multiple mechanisms of therapeutic activity. The exact path for their development and eventual uptake by pharmaceutical companies is somewhat clouded by an uncertain identity. Are they vaccines, tumour lysing therapeutics, inducers of innate immunity, gene therapy vectors, anti-vascular agents or all of the above? Should they be developed as stand-alone loco-regional therapeutics, systemically delivered tumour hunters or immune modulators best tested as combination therapeutics? We summarize data here supporting the idea, depending upon the virus, that OVs can be any or all of these things. Pursuing a "one-size fits all" approach is counter-productive to their clinical development and instead as a field we should build on the strengths of individual virus platforms. Copyright © 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

  5. Intelligent behavior generator for autonomous mobile robots using planning-based AI decision making and supervisory control logic

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shah, Hitesh K.; Bahl, Vikas; Martin, Jason; Flann, Nicholas S.; Moore, Kevin L.

    2002-07-01

    In earlier research the Center for Self-Organizing and Intelligent Systems (CSOIS) at Utah State University (USU) have been funded by the US Army Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command's (TACOM) Intelligent Mobility Program to develop and demonstrate enhanced mobility concepts for unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs). One among the several out growths of this work has been the development of a grammar-based approach to intelligent behavior generation for commanding autonomous robotic vehicles. In this paper we describe the use of this grammar for enabling autonomous behaviors. A supervisory task controller (STC) sequences high-level action commands (taken from the grammar) to be executed by the robot. It takes as input a set of goals and a partial (static) map of the environment and produces, from the grammar, a flexible script (or sequence) of the high-level commands that are to be executed by the robot. The sequence is derived by a planning function that uses a graph-based heuristic search (A* -algorithm). Each action command has specific exit conditions that are evaluated by the STC following each task completion or interruption (in the case of disturbances or new operator requests). Depending on the system's state at task completion or interruption (including updated environmental and robot sensor information), the STC invokes a reactive response. This can include sequencing the pending tasks or initiating a re-planning event, if necessary. Though applicable to a wide variety of autonomous robots, an application of this approach is demonstrated via simulations of ODIS, an omni-directional inspection system developed for security applications.

  6. SPIRALE: early warning optical space demonstrator

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Galindo, D.; Carucci, A.

    2004-11-01

    Thanks to its global coverage, its peacetime capabilities and its availability, ballistic missiles Early Warning (EW) space systems are identified as a key node of a global missile defence system. Since the Gulf war in 1991, several feasibility studies of such an Early Warning system have been conducted in France. The main conclusions are first that the most appropriate concept is to use infra-red (IR) sensors on geo- stationary orbit satellites and second that the required satellite performances are achievable and accessible to European industries, even if technological developments are necessary. Besides that, it was recommended to prepare the development of the EW operational system, by demonstrating its achievable performances on the basis of collected background images and available target IR signatures. This is the objective of the "EW optical space demonstrator", also named SPIRALE (this a French acronym which stands for "Preparatory IR Program for EW"). A contract has been awarded early 2004, by DGA/SPOTI (French Armament Procurement Agency), to EADS Astrium France, with a significant participation of Alcatel Space, to perform this demonstration.

  7. AMCCOM (Army Armament, Munitions and Chemical Command) Management Study of Procurement Work Directive (PWD) Processing Costs

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-05-23

    Unclass) 12. PERSONAL AUTHOR(S) % Priest, Jolene J., McIllece, Raymond P. I 13a. TYPE OF REPORT 13b. TIME COVERED 14. DATE OF REPORT (Year, Month...and identify by block number) FIELD GROUP SUB-GROUP Procurement (u), Procurement Work Directive (PWD) (u), Administrative Lead Time (ALT) (u...Procurement Administra-( A A o e e e time Lead Time (PALf) (u) "p 19. ABSTRACT (Continue on reverse if necessary and identify by block number) The practice of

  8. The Influence of International Law Upon Military Operation on Urbanized Terrain (MOUT) During Romanian Revolution, December 1989

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2001-01-01

    The Use of Military Force in Combating Urban Crime Using British Royal Marines in Northern Ireland as a Model .” MMS Thesis. Quantico, VA: USMC...to capture armaments and to destabilize command and control functions. Solid intelligence networks were required to operate efficiently in the urban ...Force in Combating Urban Crime Using British Royal Marines in Northern Ireland as a Model .” MMS Thesis. Quantico, VA: USMC Command and Staff College

  9. Proceedings of Symposium on the Interaction of Non-Nuclear Munitions with Structures (2nd), Held at Panama City Beach, Florida on April 15-18, 1985

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-04-01

    Engineering & Services Laboratory Tyndall AFB, Florida Armament Laboratory Eglin AFB, Floida Weapons Laboratory Kirtland AFB, New Mexico The symposium was...Theodor Krauthammer and Mehul Parikh University of New Mexico University of Minnesota EXPERIMENTAL EVALUATION OF 182 SIMULATION OF REAL WEAPON-EFFECTS IN 56...REVETMENT EFFECTS MULTIPLE-DRIVER SHOCK TUBES Firooz A. Allahdadi and James M. Carson G. Hoffmann, Ernat-Mach-Institut, WEST GERMANY New Mexico

  10. Nuclear threat: can Europe build a common defense

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Buis, G.

    1981-03-01

    With declining credibility of American protection and continuing divisiveness among western European nations, controversy surrounds the acquisition of a nuclear force which could supply the ways and means of self-defense or just increase the military threat and cost. Defense depends on displaying a powerful, diversified, and credible nuclear armament. The author feels that Britain must be excluded from this force and problems between France and Germany and smaller countries settled before a common nuclear arms system can be set up. (DCK)

  11. Analytical Methods for Determining Nitroguanidine in Soil and Water

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-11-01

    Westerdahl 1986, Manning and Maskar- inec 1987) eluted with a mobile phase that is pre- Table 2. Summary of high-performance liquid chromatographic methods...mg/L Ogle and Westerdahl (1986) 3 mL/min dominantly water. Nitroguanidine is not well re- saved using a Hewlett Packard 9114B disk drive. tained on...the ex- Ogle, E.E. and R.P. Westerdahl (1986) On-line tracts are filtered through 0.45-pm membranes. monitors for water pollutants. USA Armament Re

  12. Compounding Elastomers for Use in Armament Applications

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1977-02-01

    Identlly by block number) A commercial masterbatch of a phosphonitrilic polymer proved to be much easier to mill-mix than the gum elastomer itself...1 and 2, respectively. The PNF200 masterbatch was much easier to work with than was the polymer itself. However, incorporation of 10 pphr of...Eiry- masterbatch 6 6 6 Stabilizer I form from 2 2 2 Graphite 1 Firestone 5 5 5 SE-33 —’ 5 5 5 Vul-Cup R o.u O.U 0.4 HI Sll 233 5 10

  13. Human Behaviour Representation in Constructive Modelling (Representation du comportement humain dans des modelisations creatives)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-09-01

    involved in R&T activities. RTO reports both to the Military Committee of NATO and to the Conference of National Armament Directors. It comprises a...4 11.5.3 Project Description 11-5 Chapter 12 – Technical Evaluation Report 12-1 12.1 Executive Summary 12-1 12.2 Introduction 12-2 12.3...modelling human factors has been slow over the past decade, other forums have been reporting a number of theoretical and applied papers on human behaviour

  14. Set Up for Failure: The Use of US Security Force Assistance to Prepare Foreign Security Forces for Traditional Combat Operations

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-05-17

    Do the SFA lessons drawn from the unconventional warfare focus of the post-9-11 paradigm hold true across the spectrum of conflict, or are there...relevance. Do the SFA lessons drawn from the unconventional warfare focus of the post-9-11 paradigm hold true across the spectrum of conflict, or...traditional warfare is fought changes from epoch to epoch as technology, armament, and other factors change, but certain immutable principles hold true

  15. The Third World Arms Market in the 1980’s: Implications for U. S. Policy.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-06-02

    transfer of modern armaments has gone beyond6 the bounds of ordinary laisse - faire economics. This study is best remembered for its early recognition of... styles , and 8 relationships" in arms transfers. As in the Adelphi study, arms transfers are tabulated numerically rather than in dollar terms. Country...or sells the services of DOD personnel such as training or management advice. 19 91. ILI ’a.UK E.B. Rex The Third World Arms Market 92. As written

  16. Proceedings of the Seminar on U.S.-Italian Armaments Cooperation Held in Washington, DC on 25-27 June 1979,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1979-01-01

    briefed several of the NATO allies including Italy, FRG, and Franch on the Copperhead system. Last year we conducted some testing of Copperhead...delivery in May 1981. The ini- tial production contract will be a sole-source type with Food Machinery Corporation. The competitive procurement procedures... Food Machinery Corporation. The first prototype vehicle was received on December 1, 1978, and after DT/OT testing, a production decision will be made in

  17. 2005 40th Annual Armament Systems: Guns - Ammunition - Rockets - Missiles Conference and Exhibition. Volume 3: Wednesday

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2005-04-28

    Lessons Learned, Mr. David F. Fair, US Army ARDEC Propellant Replacement for the 105-mm M67 Propelling Charge, Ms. Adriana L. Eng, US Army ARDEC Lead...Application of Lessons Learned Mr. David F. Fair, US Army ARDEC Propellant Replacement for the 105-mm Artillery Propelling Charge Ms. Adriana L. Eng...high voltage power supply (several kV and kA ) • Solid state Switching device • Appropriate dimensions en properties of: • Exploding foil • Flyer

  18. Cost as a Factor in Soviet Weapons Decisionmaking

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-10-01

    theme in general. (See the discussions in Military Thought, Makeyev’s article in Morskoy sbornik, and the book by V’yunenko, Makeyev , and Skugarev...sudokorpussostroyenii, S udostroyeniye, Leningrad, 1982. Makeyev , B., "Nekotoryye vzglyady na teoriyu vooruzheniya VMF" ["Some Views on the Theory of Armaments of...osnovnyye printsipi," Morskoy sbornik, No. 5, 1966, pp. 28-32. V’yunenko, N.P., B.N. Makeyev , and V.D. Skugarev, Voyenno-Morskoy Flot." Rol’, perspektivy

  19. Advantages from Mixed Storage of Ammunition

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-07-01

    A^dN^MM ADy^->6y 7<^ TECHNICAL REPORT ARBRL-TR-02506 ADVANTAGES FROM MIXED STORAGE OF AMMUNITION Ona R. Lyman July 1983 US ARMY ARMAMENT...that "weigh out." Benefits can be derived from mixing an ammunition that "weighs out" with ammunition that "cubes out." In principle, it is...accessible. Below is listed a step-by-step procedure for determining benefits to be derived. Step 1. Select a munition that "weighs out" and note if more

  20. Predictive Software Cost Model Study. Volume II. Software Package Detailed Data.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-06-01

    will not be limited to: a. ASN-91 NWDS Computer b. Armament System Control Unit ( ASCU ) c. AN/ASN-90 IMS 6. CONFIGURATION CONTROL. OFP/OTP...planned approach. 3. Detailed analysis and study; impacts on hardware, manuals, data, AGE , etc; alternatives with pros and cons; cost estimates; ECP...WAIT UNTIL RESOURCE REQUEST FOR * : HAG TAPE HAS BEEN FULFILLED )MTS 0 RI * Ae* NESDIIRCE MAG TAPE (SHORT FORM)I:TST IN I" . TEST " AG TAPE RESOURCE

  1. Translations on USSR Military Affairs, Number 1303

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1977-09-27

    descendents of the Katyusha launcher of World War II — would be subsequently installed here. At present armament consists of only the two 57mm L/80...Sciences: "It Was the 5th Year of War ..."] [Excerpts] The eighth volume has been published of the history of World War II (Footnote) (The History of... World War II, 1939-1945. In 12 volumes. Chairman of the main editorial commission: D. F. Ustinov. Volume eight: The Collapse of the Fascist Bloc’s

  2. Editorial

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Keinonen, Junani

    Samuel Taylor Coleridge, British poet at the end of the 18th century, gave us a characterization of a scientist. “The first man of science was he who looked into a thing, not to learn whether it furnished him food, or shelter, or weapons, or tools, or armaments, or playwiths but who sought to know it for the gratification of knowing.” After those days the new generations of scientists have got different, less idealistic guidelines for their work. According to the Finnish science policy, Finland's economic, social and cultural development is based on knowledge and skills. It is generally accepted in our country that the consistent promotion of a national innovation system during the past ten years, has laid the foundation for the growth of knowledge and skills and their extensive utilization for the benefit of the individual and the community. The importance of benefits will be stated in the current change of the law about universities.

  3. Second Amman Declaration on Population and Development in the Arab World.

    PubMed

    1992-01-01

    Many demographic changes have occurred in the Arab region. Population increased from 132 million in 1974 to 237 million in 1992. In preparation for the International Conference on Population and Development in 1994, the Arab Population Conference was held in April 1993. This document summarizes the Arab conference proceedings: preamble, general principles, objectives, and recommendations for human development, the environment, population distribution and urbanization, international migration, women in development, maternal and child health and family planning, IEC, nongovernmental development programs, special topics, structural adjustment and population policies, research, and international cooperation. Arab countries were convinced that clear, comprehensive population policies were needed and should be integrated into development programs. Population policies must be based on the achievement of a satisfactory quality of life and integrity for the family as the basic unit of society. Women should be enabled to perform their full role as citizens. Children have a right to a happy, healthy, and secure life. Population is interconnected with development and should not be treated in isolation. The population problems of those in Israeli occupied territory should be addressed with consideration for the demographic pressure from occupational authorities. Arab states should provide family planning services as a basic human right of couples. Environmental concerns must be considered within development strategies. Reforms need to be made to correct imbalances between economic and social conditions and population problems. Arab countries must be involved in restructuring the world economy with the aim of balancing North and South trade. Rescheduling of debt servicing must be achieved. The industrialized countries must "curb excessive consumerism and reduce huge expenditures on armaments." Individual country population policy should be constructed within a pan-Arab framework and an integrated development policy. There should be respect for individual human dignity and rights and the promotion of democracy, collective activity, and individual initiative.

  4. A Proposed Uniaxial Compression Test for High Strength Ceramics

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-09-01

    is lost and catastrophic collapse ensues. The origin of the microcracks may be microplasticity in the form of twinning, 2 or existing flaws such as...Redstone Arsenal, AL 35898-5241 1 ATTN: AIR-O3PAF 1 ATTN: AMSMI-RD-CS-R/Doc 1 AIR-5164J, LT COL J. Sebolka 1 AMSMI-RLM 1 SEA -OSM, Dr. Alex Kaznoff I... SEA -O5MB, LCDR W. M. Elger Commander, U.S. Armament, Munitions and Chemical 1 SEA -05R 25, C. Zanis Command, Dover, NJ 07801 2 ATTN: Technical Library

  5. The Accuracy of Tank Main Armaments.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-04-07

    width (m) 1.4,3.2 hull height, width (m) 0.5,1.0043,1.1233,0.357,0.0, rr,o’ffrP&PY The program produces the following hit probabilities: a) Phit -0.52 for...hull defllade b) Phit =0.74 for ully exposed c) Phit -0.94 for the standard NATO target. The calculation of subsequent round hit probabilities is a more...hit probabilities: a) Phit =0.66 for hull defilade b) Phit =0.86 for fully exposed c) Phit =0.98 for the standard NATO target. Moving Firer Versus

  6. NATO Defense Posture in an Environment of Strategic Parity and Precision Weaponry

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1976-12-30

    PERORING *14 REPORT WUMU . AUTSOrw CONTRACT OR GRANT N0694Ea) RBERT KENNEDY S. RVOR OROANIZATPOWN AME AND ADOA9*S 16. PORN £tflT."POJICT* TA91 Strategic...armament technologies of the lat decade and their applications in both the latter stages of the Vetnam conflict and the October 1973 Arab -Israel War have...PGM’s played in the latter stges of the Vietnam conflict and during the 1973 Arab -Israeli War. In May 1972 the Tranh Hoa bridge in North Vietnam was

  7. Interactive Visualization of Network Dynamics (Visualisation interactive de la dynamique des reseaux)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-06-01

    la prise de décision du commandement militaire, aux opérations de santé et de sûreté publique...comporter la dénomination « STO », « RTO » ou « AGARD » selon le cas, suivi du numéro de série. Des informations analogues, telles que le titre est la date...Bibliothécaire des ressources du savoir Secretariat General of Defence 061353 Bucharest R et D pour la défense Canada National Armaments

  8. Legacy in the Sand: The United States Army Armament, Munitions and Chemical Command in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-12-21

    extended to Mr. Slattery for taking time from his busy schedule to obtain oral interviews from important Rock ;sland Arsenal personnel concerning the...November 1990’s Strategies a ctics notes, "... Saddam missed a critical bit of information: Ethiopia wasn’t in the oil business . Saddam raised a dagger-an...the 82nd Airborne Division to their defensive positions in Saudi Arabia. Before the nation, President Busi declared that the invasion of Kuwait was

  9. Aircraft/Stores Compatibility Symposium Proceedings (4th) Held at Fort Walton Beach, Florida on 12-14 October 1977. Volume 1

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1977-10-01

    16th June, 1975. Panorama , BBC TV. 5) R.H. Ellis Air Defence of the West - a view from NATC’S central (Genl.) region. 15th Anglo-American Aero...monitor the studies which are undertaken, MoD formed a Thermal Effects on Aircraft Conventional Armament, Stores and Equipment (TEACASE) Working Group. The...Suitable body dimension (ft) k - Thermal conductivity of the fluid The Prantl No. (Pr) is given by: Pr C where 3 a Viscosity of the fluid Cp = Specific

  10. Brazil--On the Road to Greatness.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-05-01

    plenty of brain power, technology and initiative in that country, and the defense rndu--trv has its share. The export mar! et is benefittinq alo...are the sales of weapons by Brazil’s armaments industry., a]~re-4d y ihe wor1d’s si xth-largest. to ar-ms.- hungry Third World nations. In 198?, arms...Nation Under Econumic Siege." MacLeans, November 21, 1983. 2). Pang, Eul-Soo, and Jarnagin, Laura . "Br>i 1 n Democracy and the Foreign Debt." Current H

  11. Armaments for the Army of the Future (Army XXI Through Army After Next). An International Symposium & Exhibition

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1998-06-01

    concentrate on the planned firing of a 155 mm ETC gun at the Kirkcudbright ballistic performance well in excess of that possible from Electromagnetic...The~ thrat APFSDS Demonstration 40mm C-1-W.S al I 500m API--SDS set-\\ ice round I.mvc 1,111 rropý211mlt Z7 10d APFSDS stretch round I 1-od Taruct I...CTWS Benefits of Ownership Product performance Product maturity All’ordability Integration benel"its System approach Benefits to CTAI CLIstomas/Partners

  12. An Illustrative Case Study for Twentieth Century Defense Planners: The Technology and Politics of United States Coastal Defense, 1880-1898.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-04-24

    plunging fire on the armored decks of attacking ships. Some inventors and technicians would propose increased use of submarine mines and torpedoes for...and mines , see "The Defense of Our Sea-Ports," Harper’s Weekly 71 (November 1885): 928-930 and the "Endicott Report," p. 97; for the Navy’s role, see...urgently re- quired, the character and kind of defenses best adapted for each, with reference to armament [and] the utilization of torpedoes, mines

  13. Increasing the Kill Effectiveness of High Energy Laser (HEL) Combat System

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-03-01

    mm Machine Gun These versatile craft are Chinese imports. Some vessels have been configured without missiles in order to carry the larger MLRS...Displacement: 28.16 tons Armament: (2) 533 mm Torpedo Tubes Length: 21.12 m (1) 12.7 machine gun Beam: 5.77 m Draft: 0.87 m Speed: 20.6 m/s...m (2) Nasr ASM Draft: 0.67 m (2) 12.7 mm machine gun Speed: 26.7 m/s The original, low-observable torpedo boat, IPS-16 was imported from

  14. Department of the Navy Justification of Estimates for Fiscal Year 1985. Submitted to Congress February 1984. Procurement, Aircraft Procurement, Navy

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-02-01

    for tactical air power projection. The F/A-18 will replace aging F-4 and A-7 aircraft. The total programed procurement of F/A-18 aircraft is 1,377...inner zone anti-submarine .arfars helicopter which is needed to modernize aging CV assets. P-3C (Patrol) ORION (Dollars in Millions) FY 1985 FY 1986...tE MAVERICK modification. By modifying the Armament Station Control Unit ( ASCU ), procuring single rail launchers (iAU-117) and interfacing MAVERICT

  15. Microstructures and Mechanical Responses of Powder Metallurgy Noncombustive Magnesium Extruded Alloy by Rapid Solidification Process in Mass Production

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-05-01

    Equal-Channel Angular Pressing for the Processing of Ultra-Fine Grained Materials. Scripta Mater. 1996 , 35, 143–146. 6. Saito, Y.; Tsuji, N...Mg-Al-Rare Earth Alloys. J. Alloy. Compd. 1996 , 232, 264–268. 20. Šplíchal, K.; Jurkech, L. Comparison of Oxidation of Cast and Sintered... PETERSON CODE 28 9500 MACARTHUR BLVD WEST BETHESDA MD 20817-5700 1 AIR FORCE ARMAMENT LAB AFATL DLJW W COOK EGLIN AFB FL 32542 1 BRIGGS

  16. Security of Small States, Problems of the States of the South Asian Region and Bangladesh’s Options for Security,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-03-10

    Ocean and the Pacific, such as, Sri Lanka, South Yemen, Malaysia and Egypt (not a small state but vulnerable) because of their strategic locations...400,000 Comoros 178 Djibouti 350 Ethiopia 2,960 Indonesia 20,000 Iran 20,000 Kenya 70,000 Kuwait 81,000 Madagascar 21 ,500 Malaysia 1,170,000 Maldives...step, Pakistan and India must freeze their conventional armaments at current levels. They should 79 ! F6 initiate talks to reduce conventional forces. The

  17. International Infantry and Joint Services Small Arms Systems Section Symposium, Exhibition and Firing Demonstration. Held in Atlantic City, NJ on 13-16 May 2002. Volume 2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2002-05-13

    Atlantic Council NATO Army Armaments Group 30mm x 173 Ammunition Family by Allan Buckley & Pierre H. Freymond, Oerlikon Contraves Pyrotec AG Thursday, 16 May...actual weapon w/o adding weight • Compatible with LASER-activated battle simulators (MILES) 5.56mm FX - NDIA 2002.PPT (15.05.02) (11) FX® Marking...construction and design – Packaging inspection – Interfaces – Weight – Final protective finish – Endurance at ambient – Rough handling – Workmanship

  18. Engineering HIV-Specific Immunity with Chimeric Antigen Receptors.

    PubMed

    Kitchen, Scott G; Zack, Jerome A

    2016-12-01

    HIV remains a highly important public health and clinical issue despite many recent advances in attempting to develop a cure, which has remained elusive for most people infected with HIV. HIV disease can be controlled with pharmacologic therapies; however, these treatments are expensive, may have severe side effects, and are not curative. Consequently, an improved means to control or eliminate HIV replication is needed. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) play a critical role in controlling viral replication and are an important part in the ability of the immune response to eradicate most viral infections. There are considerable efforts to enhance CTL responses in HIV-infected individuals in hopes of providing the immune response with armaments to more effectively control viral replication. In this review, we discuss some of these efforts and focus on the development of a gene therapy-based approach to engineer hematopoietic stem cells with an HIV-1-specific chimeric antigen receptor, which seeks to provide an inexhaustible source of HIV-1-specific immune cells that are MHC unrestricted and superior to natural antiviral T cell responses. These efforts provide the basis for further development of T cell functional enhancement to target and treat chronic HIV infection in hopes of eradicating the virus from the body.

  19. Glossary on the environmental impact of a nuclear war. Technical note

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Verstraete, M.M.

    1986-02-01

    The glossary defines a number of words, expressions, and acronyms used in the description of the impact of nuclear war on the environment, and associated issues. Selected additional words related to the problems of armaments, disarmament, and nuclear war in general were also added for convenience, although terms and expressions specifically related to the medical aspects of the problem were not included. The glossary is an enlarged and updated version of the glossary that was published as part of the SCOPE-Enuwar study on the same subject, and published by Wiley (Pittock et al., 1986).

  20. Minutes of the Explosives Safety Seminar (22nd) Held in Anaheim, California on 26-28 August 1986. Volume 1

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1986-08-01

    105 Paul D. Smith and Theodore R. Crawford BL.AST VENTING FROM A (UIBICLE 119 Y. Kivity and S. Fellur PRESSURE/TEMPERATURE DECAY IN I11 EXPLOSION...EFFECTIVENESS OF TH 5-1300 CUBICLES ADDED TO EXISTING 201 BUILDINGS Paul M. LaHoudc DESKTOP COWffRS AND EXPLOSIVE SAFU 239 John M.Ftrritto OPTIMAL DESIGN OF...EXPLOSIVES saFwlY ON READINESS - THE 799 PRICE OF SAFETY " BG Paul L. Greenberg N) NAVAL ARMAMENT DEW FUR THE ROYAL MUMALIAN NAVY 805 Comm -W k-wroughs

  1. Human target acquisition performance

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Teaney, Brian P.; Du Bosq, Todd W.; Reynolds, Joseph P.; Thompson, Roger; Aghera, Sameer; Moyer, Steven K.; Flug, Eric; Espinola, Richard; Hixson, Jonathan

    2012-06-01

    The battlefield has shifted from armored vehicles to armed insurgents. Target acquisition (identification, recognition, and detection) range performance involving humans as targets is vital for modern warfare. The acquisition and neutralization of armed insurgents while at the same time minimizing fratricide and civilian casualties is a mounting concern. U.S. Army RDECOM CERDEC NVESD has conducted many experiments involving human targets for infrared and reflective band sensors. The target sets include human activities, hand-held objects, uniforms & armament, and other tactically relevant targets. This paper will define a set of standard task difficulty values for identification and recognition associated with human target acquisition performance.

  2. The Dürrenmatt's ``Physicists'' as a Tool in Understanding the Ethics of Science

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kapor, Darko

    2007-04-01

    Part of the course of the History of Physics taught by the author is dedicated to the ethics of science, in particular to moral responsibility of the scientist towards society. In order to make the subject more interesting to the students, the first step is reading the play ``Physicists'' by Friedrich Dürrenmatt (1962). The students are then asked to relate some of the events connected to the nuclear studies before and during the World War II and armaments race with some situations in the play or the author's theses related to it.

  3. Report on the formal specification and partial verification of the VIPER microprocessor

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Brock, Bishop; Hunt, Warren A., Jr.

    1991-01-01

    The formal specification and partial verification of the VIPER microprocessor is reviewed. The VIPER microprocessor was designed by RSRE, Malvern, England, for safety critical computing applications (e.g., aircraft, reactor control, medical instruments, armaments). The VIPER was carefully specified and partially verified in an attempt to provide a microprocessor with completely predictable operating characteristics. The specification of VIPER is divided into several levels of abstraction, from a gate-level description up to an instruction execution model. Although the consistency between certain levels was demonstrated with mechanically-assisted mathematical proof, the formal verification of VIPER was never completed.

  4. Nitramine Propellant Erosivity - III.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-12-01

    Commanld c r AFTN. I. Busut t i I US A rmy M i ,, i I (ommiiad W ., Awst in ATTN: R ( IUN1I -YI. R . Mont 1,ol11v rv Red st ollAc enaIAl~~ .iIington .1 .Sant...A-D-A96 878 ARMY ARMAMENT RESEARCHRAN4D EVELOPMENTUCOMMAND ABERO--ETC F/G 19/1 NITRAM INE PROPELLANT EROSII TY_ II.( ) DEC 80 R GEENE, B GROLLMAN, A...NIILER A RYE UNCLASSIFIED ARBRL - R -02278 SBIE D-E430 574 N11hEEE~EEn~hh~~E EohEEEohhEE... LEVEL TECHNICAL REPORT ARBRL-TR-02278 NITRAMINE PROPELLANT

  5. All the Missiles Work Technological Dislocations and Military Innovation: A Case Study in US Air Force Air-to-Air Armament, Post-World War II through Operation Rolling Thunder

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-06-01

    Scientific Way of Warfare, 136. Bousquet also cited Paul Edwards‘ critique of Westmoreland‘s speech: it ―epitomizes the ‗vision of a closed world, a chaotic...Technology Drive History? The Dilemma of Technological Determinism, eds. Merritt Roe Smith and Leo Marx (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1994), ―The belief...Books, 1990), 29. 68 Quoted in Merritt Roe Smith, ―Introduction,‖ in Does Technology Drive History, 29. 69 Merritt Roe Smith and Leo Marx

  6. Body-borne IED detection: NATO DAT#10 BELCOAST 09 demonstration results

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Alexander, Naomi; Gómez, Ignacio; Ortega, Isabel; Fiore, Franco; Coman, Cristian

    2010-04-01

    Belgium leads the tenth initiative in the CNAD Programme of Work for the Defense Against Terrorism (PoW DAT), dealing with Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP). The BELCOAST 09 event, comprising a series of technology demonstrations, was organized to tackle the need for an event that brings together the operational, armaments and technological communities in the field of CIP. A counter terrorism scenario has been created: Terrorist with body-borne IED approaching the entrance of an installation, and a millimeter-wave imager's ability to detect IEDs has been demonstrated. The results of this scenario-based demonstration are presented in this paper.

  7. Modeling, simulation, and concept design for hybrid-electric medium-size military trucks

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rizzoni, Giorgio; Josephson, John R.; Soliman, Ahmed; Hubert, Christopher; Cantemir, Codrin-Gruie; Dembski, Nicholas; Pisu, Pierluigi; Mikesell, David; Serrao, Lorenzo; Russell, James; Carroll, Mark

    2005-05-01

    A large scale design space exploration can provide valuable insight into vehicle design tradeoffs being considered for the U.S. Army"s FMTV (Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles). Through a grant from TACOM (Tank-automotive and Armaments Command), researchers have generated detailed road, surface, and grade conditions representative of the performance criteria of this medium-sized truck and constructed a virtual powertrain simulator for both conventional and hybrid variants. The simulator incorporates the latest technology among vehicle design options, including scalable ultracapacitor and NiMH battery packs as well as a variety of generator and traction motor configurations. An energy management control strategy has also been developed to provide efficiency and performance. A design space exploration for the family of vehicles involves running a large number of simulations with systematically varied vehicle design parameters, where each variant is paced through several different mission profiles and multiple attributes of performance are measured. The resulting designs are filtered to remove dominated designs, exposing the multi-criterial surface of optimality (Pareto optimal designs), and revealing the design tradeoffs as they impact vehicle performance and economy. The results are not yet definitive because ride and drivability measures were not included, and work is not finished on fine-tuning the modeled dynamics of some powertrain components. However, the work so far completed demonstrates the effectiveness of the approach to design space exploration, and the results to date suggest the powertrain configuration best suited to the FMTV mission.

  8. Mid-sized omnidirectional robot with hydraulic drive and steering

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wood, Carl G.; Perry, Trent; Cook, Douglas; Maxfield, Russell; Davidson, Morgan E.

    2003-09-01

    Through funding from the US Army-Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command's (TACOM) Intelligent Mobility Program, Utah State University's (USU) Center for Self-Organizing and Intelligent Systems (CSOIS) has developed the T-series of omni-directional robots based on the USU omni-directional vehicle (ODV) technology. The ODV provides independent computer control of steering and drive in a single wheel assembly. By putting multiple omni-directional (OD) wheels on a chassis, a vehicle is capable of uncoupled translational and rotational motion. Previous robots in the series, the T1, T2, T3, ODIS, ODIS-T, and ODIS-S have all used OD wheels based on electric motors. The T4 weighs approximately 1400 lbs and features a 4-wheel drive wheel configuration. Each wheel assembly consists of a hydraulic drive motor and a hydraulic steering motor. A gasoline engine is used to power both the hydraulic and electrical systems. The paper presents an overview of the mechanical design of the vehicle as well as potential uses of this technology in fielded systems.

  9. Chart Venture Partners' perspective on dual-use CBRNE technologies

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Van Nice, C. S.; Gardner, P. J.

    2008-04-01

    Chart Venture Partners' (CVP) approach to investing in Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and Explosives (CBRNE) detection technologies can be best understood in the context of the unique partnership between the firm's two founding institutions. CVP was founded as a partnership between the Chart Group, a New York-based merchant banking and venture capital boutique, and InSitech Incorporated, a 501(c)(3) non-profit commercial partnership intermediary for the U.S. Army's Armament Research Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC) at Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey. The partnership between Chart Group and Insitech has yielded a new investment model. Unlike most venture funds, CVP operates with a singular focus on early-stage defense and security technologies, with the important caveat that everything we invest in must also have dual-use application in large-scale commercial markets. CVP believes that early-stage CBRNE companies require five qualities to be viable investment candidates and successful start-up companies: Great Science, Strong IP Positions, Recognized Scientific Champions, Identified Dual-Use Market Pull, and "Real World" Technical Performance Data. When earlystage CBRNE companies decide to seek venture capital and pursue higher growth dual-use business models, we often find that certain issues arise that are not always fully contemplated at the outset, and that can create gaps between what the start-up companies are offering to investors and what those investors are seeking from their potential portfolio companies. These same issues can have significant positive or negative impact on shareholder value over time, depending on how they are managed. Specifically, startups should consider carefully their strategies related to business development, market positioning, government funding, and investment syndicate formation.

  10. US Navy Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Capabilities, Risks, Possible Missions, and Modules to Support Future USMC Operating Concepts

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-07-29

    squad Armament: M60 7 .62mm machine gun , MK19 40mm, M2 .50 caL machine gun 61 "Spartan Scout Unmanned Surface Vehicle (USV)," Defense Industry...1) RQ-8B Fire Scout helicopter (VTUAV) a) EO/IR/LD sensor and datalink relay 2) MH-60R/S helicopters a) GAU 16/19 machine gun b) AGM-114 Hellfire...60Rhelicopter car1ies the a .50 caliber OAU 16/A machine gun , a crew-served, recoil operated, belt-fed, air cooled, percussion fired weapon, with a rate of fire

  11. The Armys M-1 Abrams, M-2/M-3 Bradley, and M-1126 Stryker: Background and Issues for Congress

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-04-05

    smoothbore gun 1 x coaxial mounted 7.62 mm M-240 machine gun 1 x roof mounted 12.7 mm M-2 HB machine gun 1 x roof mounted 7.62 mm M-240 machine gun 12...Bradley Fighting Vehicle Table 2. Selected Basic Characteristics— M2 /3-A2 Armament 1 x turret mounted M-242 25mm “Bushmaster” chain gun 2 x turret...mounted TOW anti-tank missiles 1 x coaxial mounted 7.62 mm M-240C machine gun 8 x turret mounted smoke grenade launchers Crew M-2: 3 crew, 6

  12. What Hydra can teach us about chemical ecology -how a simple, soft organism survives in a hostile aqueous environment.

    PubMed

    Rachamim, Tamar; Sher, Daniel

    2012-01-01

    Hydra and its fellow cnidarians - sea anemones, corals and jellyfish - are simple, mostly sessile animals that depend on bioactive chemicals for survival. In this review, we briefly describe what is known about the chemical armament of Hydra, and detail future research directions where Hydra can help illuminate major questions in chemical ecology, pharmacology, developmental biology and evolution. Focusing on two groups of putative toxins from Hydra - phospholipase A2s and proteins containing ShK and zinc metalloprotease domains, we ask: how do different venom components act together during prey paralysis? How is a venom arsenal created and how does it evolve? How is the chemical arsenal delivered to its target? To what extent does a chemical and biotic coupling exist between an organism and its environment? We propose a model whereby in Hydra and other cnidarians, bioactive compounds are secreted both as localized point sources (nematocyte discharges) and across extensive body surfaces, likely combining to create complex "chemical landscapes". We speculate that these cnidarian-derived chemical landscapes may affect the surrounding community on scales from microns to, in the case of coral reefs, hundreds of kilometers.

  13. Acute radiation sickness amelioration analysis. Technical report, 20 July 1990-19 July 1993

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Robinson, S.I.; Feister, A.J.; Bareis, D.L.

    1994-05-01

    Three tasks were conducted under the Acute Radiation Sickness Amelioration Analysis in support of the Defense Nuclear Agency (DNA) and NATO Army Armaments Group (NAAG) Project Group 29 (PG-29) on drugs for the prevention of radiation-induced nausea and vomiting: (1) documents were collected and entered into a data base, (2) data reviews and analyses were performed, and (3) PG-29 and Triservice meetings involving anti-emetic drug development were supported and documented. Approximately 2000 documents were collected, with 1424 complete bibliographic citations entered into a WordPerfect 5.1 data base. Eight reviews and analyses addressing different aspects of the safety and efficacy ofmore » the candidate anti-emetic drugs ondansetron and granistron were prepared. Support was provided for seven international PG-29 meetings and two U.S. Triservice meetings in which the efforts of PG-29 were discussed. These tasks have enabled the DNA and PG-29 to make good progress toward the goal of recommending a serotonin type-3 (5-HT3) receptor antagonist anti-emetic drug for use in military personnel.« less

  14. Nuclear almanac: confronting the atom in war and peace

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Dennis, J.

    1984-01-01

    The MIT Faculty Coalition for Disarmament prepared this almanac for those who wish to find in a single volume of factual account of the discovery, development, and use of nuclear energy - as well as a critical evaluation of policy issues raised by nuclear armaments and nuclear power. It is their hope that, with this knowledge readily accessible, public opinion will be better informed and public policy more responsible and wise. In an introductory essay, Henry S. Commager, distinguished historian at Amherst College challenges us to put the interests of all peoples ahead of national loyalties. Another introductory essay bymore » Nan Randall, consultant to the Office of Technology Assessment, in Charlottesville: a fictional account, pictures the effects on an old and beautiful city fortunate enough to escape the warheads in a large-scale nuclear war. Twenty-six separate chapters are then included under 9 separate Parts: the Story of Nuclear Weapons; Nuclear Weapons Effects; Nuclear War; Nuclear Warheads; Consequences; International Issues; Nuclear Energy; Action; and Background. A separate abstract was prepared for each of the 26 chapters.« less

  15. Evaluation and Improvement of the Defense Central Index of Investigations (DCII) - An Evaluation and Analysis Program for the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-11-22

    occupations was that 20% of the explosive ordnance disposal specialists(55D) did not have a DIS dossier. Those in the other PSSP occupations showed...each have top secret eligibility ranging from: 61" (55D) to 24., (12 7). Finally, 29S of the explosive ordinance disposal specialists (55D) have no t...462XO Aircraft Armament Systems 1.5 71.8 .2 1.8 24.7 463XO Nuclear Weapons 1.9 75.8 .0 .9 21.4 464X0 Explosive Ordnance Disposal 2.7 63.0 .1 .9 33.3 545X1

  16. Boeing B–29 Superfortress at the Aircraft Engine Research Laboratory

    NASA Image and Video Library

    1944-07-21

    A Boeing B–29 Superfortress at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) Aircraft Engine Research Laboratory in Cleveland, Ohio. The B–29 was the Army Air Forces’ deadliest weapon during the latter portion of World War II. The aircraft was significantly larger than previous bombers but could fly faster and higher. The B–29 was intended to soar above anti-aircraft fire and make pinpoint drops onto strategic targets. The bomber was forced to carry 20,000 pounds more armament than it was designed for. The extra weight pushed the B–29’s four powerful Wright R–3350 engines to their operating limits. The over-heating of the engines proved to be a dangerous problem. The military asked the NACA to tackle the issue. Full-scale engine tests on a R–3350 engine in the Prop House demonstrated that a NACA-designed impeller increased the flow rate of the fuel injection system. Altitude Wind Tunnel studies of the engine led to the reshaping of cowling inlet and outlet to improve airflow and reduce drag. Single-cylinder studies on valve failures were resolved by a slight extension of the cylinder head, and the Engine Research Building researchers combated uneven heating with a new fuel injection system. The modifications were then tried out on an actual B–29. The bomber arrived in Cleveland on June 22, 1944. The new injection impeller, ducted head baffles and instrumentation were installed on the bomber’s two left wing engines. Eleven test flights were flown over the next month with military pilots at the helm. Overall the flight tests corroborated the wind tunnel and test stand studies.

  17. Condoms and conflict: AIDS and the military.

    PubMed

    Winsbury, R

    1992-11-01

    Worldwide, many thousands of soldiers are infected with HIV. Their actual or potential presence within the ranks of military forces may generate anxiety among military leaders and general personnel. Troops may be concerned over the risk of being infected with HIV through emergency front-line blood transfusions. Leaders and politicians worry about HIV in the military for more political and cultural reasons, including the potential fallout of being accused of sending troops to spread AIDS on foreign peace-keeping missions. US chiefs of staff have even accused HIV+ servicemen of being comparatively unstable, and that they constitute a security risk, especially where control over nuclear armaments is concerned. These concerns fuel the U.S. military argument for expelling homosexuals from service. Over 13,000 troops identified as homosexual were expelled from the Navy over the period 1982-91. $27 million were spent in 1990 to replace identified gay soldiers. HIV is prevalent to varying degrees in virtually every army in the world. AIDS has decimated some African armies. 1 sub-Saharan country has lost so many pilots to AIDS that it has reportedly recruited soldiers from Yugoslavia to compensate for the loss. Uganda's army may have a 20% prevalence of HIV. War is the harbinger of AIDS; as populations are displaced during war, servicemen turn to prostitutes for sex, and women sell sex to provide their families. Wartime rapes spread HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases. While the military may contribute to the spread of HIV, it also has the capacity to help prevent transmission. Mandatory HIV-antibody testing is many armies may help research and practical efforts to monitor and control HIV prevalence and incidence in populations. Additional steps may be and have been taken by military forces to educate the public and promote and develop AIDS control programs.

  18. IKKβ Regulates VEGF Expression and Is a Potential Therapeutic Target for Ovarian Cancer as an Antiangiogenic Treatment.

    PubMed

    Kinose, Yasuto; Sawada, Kenjiro; Makino, Hiroshi; Ogura, Tomonori; Mizuno, Tomoko; Suzuki, Noriko; Fujikawa, Tomoyuki; Morii, Eiichi; Nakamura, Koji; Sawada, Ikuko; Toda, Aska; Hashimoto, Kae; Isobe, Aki; Mabuchi, Seiji; Ohta, Tsuyoshi; Itai, Akiko; Morishige, Ken-ichirou; Kurachi, Hirohisa; Kimura, Tadashi

    2015-04-01

    The prolongation of progression-free survival (PFS) in patients with advanced ovarian cancer by antiangiogenic therapy has been shown in several clinical trials. However, although an anti-VEGF antibody (bevacizumab) is the only option currently available, its efficacy is limited and it is not cost effective for use in all patients. Therefore, the development of a novel antiangiogenic drug, especially composed of small-molecule compounds, could be a powerful armament for ovarian cancer treatment. As NF-κB signaling has the potential to regulate VEGF expression, we determined to identify whether VEGF expression is associated with NF-κB activation and to investigate the possibility of a novel IKKβ inhibitor, IMD-0354 (IMMD Inc.), as an antiangiogenic drug. Tissue microarrays from 94 ovarian cancer tissues were constructed and immunohistochemical analyses performed. We revealed that IKK phosphorylation is an independent prognostic factor (PFS: 26.1 vs. 49.8 months, P = 0.011), and is positively correlated with high VEGF expression. In in vitro analyses, IMD-0354 robustly inhibited adhesive and invasive activities of ovarian cancer cells without impairing cell viabilities. IMD-0354 significantly suppressed VEGF production from cancer cells, which led to the inhibition of angiogenesis. In a xenograft model, the treatment of IMD-0354 significantly inhibited peritoneal dissemination with a marked reduction of intratumoral blood vessel formation followed by the inhibition of VEGF expression from cancer cells. IMD-0354 is a stable small-molecule drug and has already been administered safely to humans in other trials. Antiangiogenic therapy targeting IKKβ is a potential future option to treat ovarian cancer. ©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.

  19. Joint stars phased array radar antenna

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Shnitkin, Harold

    1994-10-01

    The Joint STARS phased array radar system is capable of performing long range airborne surveillance and was used during the Persian Gulf war on two E8-A aircraft to fly many around-the-clock missions to monitor the Kuwait and Iraq battlefield from a safe distance behind the front lines. This paper is a follow-on to previous publications on the subject of the Joint STARS antenna and deals mainly with mission performance and technical aspects not previously covered. Radar data of troop movements and armament installations will be presented, a brief review of the antenna design is given, followed by technical discussions concerning the three-port interferometry, gain and sidelobe design approach, cost control, range test implementation and future improvements.

  20. A long view of global plutonium management

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Wagner, R.L. Jr.

    1995-10-01

    Dealing with the large and growing world inventories of fissile materials from all sources is a major part of the long term challenge of limiting the danger from nuclear weapons. Providing clean, safe nuclear power may also be needed to prevent conditions from arising which could lead to large scale nuclear weapon (re)armament. ADTT technologies might reconcile the seeming dilemma of providing nuclear power while maintaining a very low world inventory of nuclear materials which can be used in weapons. This vision for ADTT should be tested in a variety of ways, including comparisons with competing approaches and with othermore » objectives. Such testing is one part of constructing a path for a decades-long, worldwide implementation campaign for ADTT.« less

  1. Arterial baroreceptors in the management of systemic hypertension

    PubMed Central

    Kougias, Panagiotis; Weakley, Sarah M.; Yao, Qizhi; Lin, Peter H.; Chen, Changyi

    2010-01-01

    Summary Hypertension is a multifactorial disease associated with significant morbidity. Increased sympathetic nervous system activity has been noted as an important etiologic factor and is, in part, regulated by afferent input arising from arterial and cardiopulmonary baroreceptors, activation of which causes inhibition of sympathetic output. It was thought for many years that baroreceptors control only short-term blood pressure changes, a conclusion stemming from observations in sinoaortic denervation (SAD) animal models and the phenomenon of rapid baroreceptor resetting, also seen in animal models. Newer observations, however, indicate that SAD is rather imperfect and resetting is rarely complete. Recent studies reveal that baroreceptors control sympathetic output on a more long-term basis and participate in fluid volume regulation by the kidney, and thus have the potential to adjust blood pressure chronically. Importantly, these findings are consistent with studies and observations in humans. Meanwhile, a model of electrical stimulation of the carotid sinus has been developed and successfully tested in animals. Following these encouraging results human trials to evaluate the clinical application of electrical carotid sinus manipulation in the treatment of systemic hypertension have commenced, and results so far indicate that this represents an exciting potential tool in the clinician’s armament against chronic arterial hypertension. PMID:20037502

  2. Stephen Jay Gould and the Value of Neutrality of Science During the Cold War.

    PubMed

    Sheldon, Myrna

    2016-12-01

    Stephen Jay Gould was a paleontologist and scientific celebrity at the close of the twentieth century, most famous for his popular writings on evolution and his role in the American creationist controversies of that era. In the early 1980s, Gould was drawn into the "nuclear winter" episode through his friendship with Carl Sagan, an astronomer and popular science celebrity. Sagan helped develop the theory of nuclear winter and subsequently used the theory as evidence to petition the United States government to scale back its nuclear armament. The theory of nuclear winter claimed that even a small nuclear exchange could result in a atmospheric blackening akin to the extinction event of the late Cretaceous. Gould was not a climate scientist but he testified before the U.S. House of Representatives as an expert on historical extinction events. Gould's insistence on the value-neutrality of nuclear winter reveals much about the moral politics of science in late Cold War America. Coming at the heels of leftist scientific activism of the 1980s, the nuclear winter episode demonstrates how value-neutrality emerged the salient feature of scientific involvement in American politics in this period. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  3. [The Essen-based steel producer Alfred Krupp (1812-1887) as a reader of the flora and fauna of the Gulf of Naples. A look at the relationship of Anton Dohrn (1840-1909) to the house Krupp].

    PubMed

    Müller, Irmgard

    2015-01-01

    A unfavourable notice written by industrial magnate Alfred Krupp (1812-1887) has been discovered on the posterior cover sheet of the first volume of the monumental series Fauna und Flora des Golfes von Neapel, edited by the Zoological Station at Naples (1880) Krupp's handwritten statement affords the opportunity to discuss in more detail the intricate relationship between the founder of the first marine biology station, Anton Dohrn (1840-1909), and the owner of the greatest steel factory in Europe, the Krupp-family at Essen. Although Anton Dohrn did not know about Krupp's disapproving comment he had a fine unerring instinct for the mentality of his negotiating partner, whose way of thinking rather aimed at the practical success and completion of armament factory, preventing thus a the serious rapprochement between the two personalities. Even when the Krupp-heir, Friedrich Alfred Krupp, later devoted to questions about marine biology in his new built house at Capri, and was willing to support the Zoological Station with high sponsoring, Anton Dohrn maintained a reserved attitude towards the Krupp's offer to support the marine research financially. Likewise, he remained unimpressed, when the steel magnate was shook by the smear campaign in Capri that ultimately led to Krupp's death in November 1902.

  4. The prevention of thalassemia.

    PubMed

    Cao, Antonio; Kan, Yuet Wai

    2013-02-01

    The thalassemias are among the most common inherited diseases worldwide, affecting individuals originating from the Mediterranean area, Middle East, Transcaucasia, Central Asia, Indian subcontinent, and Southeast Asia. As the diseases require long-term care, prevention of the homozygous state constitutes a major armament in the management. This article discusses the major prevention programs that are set up in many countries in Europe, Asia, and Australia, often drawing from the experience in Sardinia. These comprehensive programs involve carrier detections, molecular diagnostics, genetic counseling, and prenatal diagnosis. Variability of clinical severity can be attributable to interactions with α-thalassemia and mutations that increase fetal productions. Special methods that are currently quite expensive and not widely applicable are preimplantation and preconception diagnosis. The recent successful studies of fetal DNA in maternal plasma may allow future prenatal diagnosis that is noninvasive for the fetus.

  5. The Prevention of Thalassemia

    PubMed Central

    Cao, Antonio; Kan, Yuet Wai

    2013-01-01

    The thalassemias are among the most common inherited diseases worldwide, affecting individuals originating from the Mediterranean area, Middle East, Transcaucasia, Central Asia, Indian subcontinent, and Southeast Asia. As the diseases require long-term care, prevention of the homozygous state constitutes a major armament in the management. This article discusses the major prevention programs that are set up in many countries in Europe, Asia, and Australia, often drawing from the experience in Sardinia. These comprehensive programs involve carrier detections, molecular diagnostics, genetic counseling, and prenatal diagnosis. Variability of clinical severity can be attributable to interactions with α-thalassemia and mutations that increase fetal productions. Special methods taht are currently quite expensive and not widely applicable are preimplantation and preconception diagnosis. The recent successful studies of fetal DNA in maternal plasma may allow future prenatal diagnosis that is noninvasive for the fetus. PMID:23378598

  6. An overview of antifungal peptides derived from insect.

    PubMed

    Faruck, Mohammad Omer; Yusof, Faridah; Chowdhury, Silvia

    2016-06-01

    Fungi are not classified as plants or animals. They resemble plants in many ways but do not produce chlorophyll or make their own food photosynthetically like plants. Fungi are useful for the production of beer, bread, medicine, etc. More complex than viruses or bacteria; fungi can be destructive human pathogens responsible for various diseases in humans. Most people have a strong natural immunity against fungal infection. However, fungi can cause diseases when this immunity breaks down. In the last few years, fungal infection has increased strikingly and has been accompanied by a rise in the number of deaths of cancer patients, transplant recipients, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients owing to fungal infections. The growth rate of fungi is very slow and quite difficult to identify. A series of molecules with antifungal activity against different strains of fungi have been found in insects, which can be of great importance to tackle human diseases. Insects secrete such compounds, which can be peptides, as a part of their immune defense reactions. Active antifungal peptides developed by insects to rapidly eliminate infectious pathogens are considered a component of the defense munitions. This review focuses on naturally occurring antifungal peptides from insects and their challenges to be used as armaments against human diseases. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  7. Biological treatment of TNT-contaminated soil. 1: Anaerobic cometabolic reduction and interaction of TNT and metabolites with soil components

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Daun, G.; Lenke, H.; Knackmuss, H.J.

    1998-07-01

    The explosive 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), found as a major contaminant at armament plants from the two world wars, is reduced by a variety of microorganisms when electron donors such as glucose are added. This study shows that the cometabolic reduction of TNT to 2,4,6-triaminotoluene by an undefined anaerobic consortium increased considerably with increasing TNT concentrations and decreased with decreasing concentrations and feeding rates of glucose. The interactions of TNT and its reduction products with montmorillonitic clay and humic acids were investigated in abiotic adsorption experiments and during the microbial reduction of TNT. The results indicate that reduction products of TNT particularlymore » hydroxylaminodinitrotoluenes and 2,4,6-triaminotoluene bind irreversibly to soil components, which would prevent or prolong mineralization of the contaminants. Irreversible binding also hinders a further spread of the contaminants through soil or leaching into the groundwater.« less

  8. Traumatic Brain Injury Incidence, Clinical Overview, and Policies in the US Military Health System Since 2000.

    PubMed

    Swanson, Thomas M; Isaacson, Brad M; Cyborski, Cherina M; French, Louis M; Tsao, Jack W; Pasquina, Paul F

    Exposure to explosive armaments during Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom contributed to approximately 14% of the 352 612 traumatic brain injury (TBI) diagnoses in the US military between 2000 and 2016. The US Department of Defense issued guidelines in 2009 to (1) standardize TBI diagnostic criteria; (2) classify TBI according to mechanism and severity; (3) categorize TBI symptoms as somatic, psychological, or cognitive; and (4) systematize types of care given during the acute and rehabilitation stages of TBI treatment. Polytrauma and associated psychological and neurologic conditions may create barriers to optimal rehabilitation from TBI. Given the completion of recent combat operations and the transition of TBI patients into long-term care within the US Department of Veterans Affairs system, a review of the literature concerning TBI is timely. Long-term follow-up care for patients who have sustained TBI will remain a critical issue for the US military.

  9. Nitric oxide nanoparticles

    PubMed Central

    Schairer, David O.; Martinez, Luis R.; Blecher, Karin; Chouake, Jason S.; Nacharaju, Parimala; Gialanella, Philip; Friedman, Joel M.; Nosanchuk, Joshua D.; Friedman, Adam J.

    2012-01-01

    Nitric oxide (NO) is a critical component of host defense against invading pathogens; however, its therapeutic utility is limited due to a lack of practical delivery systems. Recently, a NO-releasing nanoparticulate platform (NO-np) was shown to have in vitro broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity and in vivo pre-clinical efficacy in a dermal abscess model. To extend these findings, both topical (TP) and intralesional (IL) NO-np administration was evaluated in a MRSA intramuscular murine abscess model and compared with vancomycin. All treatment arms accelerated abscess clearance clinically, histologically, and by microbiological assays on both days 4 and 7 following infection. However, abscesses treated with NO-np via either route demonstrated a more substantial, statistically significant decrease in bacterial survival based on colony forming unit assays and histologically revealed less inflammatory cell infiltration and preserved muscular architecture. These data suggest that the NO-np may be an effective addition to our armament for deep soft tissue infections. PMID:22286699

  10. Pre-Consolidation Supply Demand Patterns of NARF North Island and Local Customers of the Naval Supply Center, San Diego.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-09-01

    DGSC Gen-ral Consumables 9H 20 ? ISO Army FAP) Armament Supplies 1 91 16,533 ?-1SO Oden ALC) Consumables I SU 24 USA? Consumables 9J 8,931 FMSO...3. 5424, 545 1 Iso ? 10 7 5115. 33 9 4c182 54l1q,3 C ’S So &Z lit:57 13. .339 54, 1 103 7~ t7 Si 4 ~ C 5.5 .3.97 70 5 541 2 14) V ’’-1 749 g 7I 3 63...182 3584 043o.l0 CC 72 -�l. ISO 513d ., d S0 I~il" i. 3.0 it T Z6.6 4.0 Isis 5 5vO3 .3. S t t,. . 43 23 Z.9d :j, b 0:.4565 12 &Vic3. )a: . 21! f 71

  11. Sexual Selection and the differences between the sexes in Mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx).

    PubMed

    Setchell, Joanna M

    2016-01-01

    Sexual selection has become a major focus in evolutionary and behavioral ecology. It is also a popular research topic in primatology. I use studies of mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx), a classic example of extravagant armaments and ornaments in animals, to exemplify how a long-term, multidisciplinary approach that integrates field observations with laboratory methods can contribute to on-going theoretical debates in the field of sexual selection. I begin with a brief summary of the main concepts of sexual selection theory and the differences between the sexes. I then introduce mandrills and the study population and review mandrill life history, the ontogeny of sex differences, and maternal effects. Next, I focus on male-male competition and female choice, followed by the less well-studied questions of female-female competition and male choice. This review shows how different reproductive priorities lead to very different life histories and divergent adaptations in males and females. It demonstrates how broadening traditional perspectives on sexual selection beyond the ostentatious results of intense sexual selection on males leads to an understanding of more subtle and cryptic forms of competition and choice in both sexes and opens many productive avenues in the study of primate reproductive strategies. These include the potential for studies of postcopulatory selection, female intrasexual competition, and male choice. These studies of mandrills provide comparison and, I hope, inspiration for studies of both other polygynandrous species and species with mating systems less traditionally associated with sexual selection. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

  12. Sexually selected lip colour indicates male group-holding status in the mating season in a multi-level primate society

    PubMed Central

    Grueter, Cyril C.; Zhu, Pingfen; Allen, William L.; Higham, James P.; Ren, Baoping; Li, Ming

    2015-01-01

    Sexual selection typically produces ornaments in response to mate choice, and armaments in response to male–male competition. Unusually among mammals, many primates exhibit colour signals that may be related to one or both processes. Here, we document for the first time correlates of facial coloration in one of the more brightly coloured primates, the black-and-white snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus bieti). Snub-nosed monkeys have a one-male unit (OMU) based social organization, but these units aggregate semi-permanently into larger bands. This form of mating system causes many males to become associated with bachelor groups. We quantified redness of the prominent lower lip in 15 males (eight bachelors, seven OMU holders) in a group at Xiangguqing, China. Using mixed models, our results show that lip redness increases with age. More interestingly, there is a significant effect of the interaction of group-holding status and mating season on redness; that is, lip colour of OMU males undergoes reddening in the mating season, whereas the lips of subadult and juvenile bachelor males become paler at that time of year. These results indicate that lip coloration is a badge of (group-holding) status during the mating season, with non-adults undergoing facial differentiation, perhaps to avoid the costs of reproductive competition. Future research should investigate whether lip coloration is a product of male–male competition, and/or female mate choice. PMID:27019735

  13. Testosterone and reproductive effort in male primates

    PubMed Central

    Muller, Martin N.

    2016-01-01

    Considerable evidence suggests that the steroid hormone testosterone mediates major life-history trade-offs in vertebrates, promoting mating effort at the expense of parenting effort or survival. Observations from a range of wild primates support the “Challenge Hypothesis,” which posits that variation in male testosterone is more closely associated with aggressive mating competition than with reproductive physiology. In both seasonally and non-seasonally breeding species, males increase testosterone production primarily when competing for fecund females. In species where males compete to maintain long-term access to females, testosterone increases when males are threatened with losing access to females, rather than during mating periods. And when male status is linked to mating success, and dependent on aggression, high-ranking males normally maintain higher testosterone levels than subordinates, particularly when dominance hierarchies are unstable. Trade-offs between parenting effort and mating effort appear to be weak in most primates, because direct investment in the form of infant transport and provisioning is rare. Instead, infant protection is the primary form of paternal investment in the order. Testosterone does not inhibit this form of investment, which relies on male aggression. Testosterone has a wide range of effects in primates that plausibly function to support male competitive behavior. These include psychological effects related to dominance striving, analgesic effects, and effects on the development and maintenance of the armaments and adornments that males employ in mating competition. PMID:27616559

  14. Testosterone and reproductive effort in male primates.

    PubMed

    Muller, Martin N

    2017-05-01

    Considerable evidence suggests that the steroid hormone testosterone mediates major life-history trade-offs in vertebrates, promoting mating effort at the expense of parenting effort or survival. Observations from a range of wild primates support the "Challenge Hypothesis," which posits that variation in male testosterone is more closely associated with aggressive mating competition than with reproductive physiology. In both seasonally and non-seasonally breeding species, males increase testosterone production primarily when competing for fecund females. In species where males compete to maintain long-term access to females, testosterone increases when males are threatened with losing access to females, rather than during mating periods. And when male status is linked to mating success, and dependent on aggression, high-ranking males normally maintain higher testosterone levels than subordinates, particularly when dominance hierarchies are unstable. Trade-offs between parenting effort and mating effort appear to be weak in most primates, because direct investment in the form of infant transport and provisioning is rare. Instead, infant protection is the primary form of paternal investment in the order. Testosterone does not inhibit this form of investment, which relies on male aggression. Testosterone has a wide range of effects in primates that plausibly function to support male competitive behavior. These include psychological effects related to dominance striving, analgesic effects, and effects on the development and maintenance of the armaments and adornments that males employ in mating competition. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  15. Integrated transcriptomics and metabolomics decipher differences in the resistance of pedunculate oak to the herbivore Tortrix viridana L.

    PubMed Central

    2013-01-01

    Background The interaction between insect pests and their host plants is a never-ending race of evolutionary adaption. Plants have developed an armament against insect herbivore attacks, and attackers continuously learn how to address it. Using a combined transcriptomic and metabolomic approach, we investigated the molecular and biochemical differences between Quercus robur L. trees that resisted (defined as resistant oak type) or were susceptible (defined as susceptible oak type) to infestation by the major oak pest, Tortrix viridana L. Results Next generation RNA sequencing revealed hundreds of genes that exhibited constitutive and/or inducible differential expression in the resistant oak compared to the susceptible oak. Distinct differences were found in the transcript levels and the metabolic content with regard to tannins, flavonoids, and terpenoids, which are compounds involved in the defence against insect pests. The results of our transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses are in agreement with those of a previous study in which we showed that female moths prefer susceptible oaks due to their specific profile of herbivore-induced volatiles. These data therefore define two oak genotypes that clearly differ on the transcriptomic and metabolomic levels, as reflected by their specific defensive compound profiles. Conclusions We conclude that the resistant oak type seem to prefer a strategy of constitutive defence responses in contrast to more induced defence responses of the susceptible oaks triggered by feeding. These results pave the way for the development of biomarkers for an early determination of potentially green oak leaf roller-resistant genotypes in natural pedunculate oak populations in Europe. PMID:24160444

  16. Nitric oxide nanoparticles: pre-clinical utility as a therapeutic for intramuscular abscesses.

    PubMed

    Schairer, David; Martinez, Luis R; Blecher, Karin; Chouake, Jason; Nacharaju, Parimala; Gialanella, Philip; Friedman, Joel M; Nosanchuk, Joshua D; Friedman, Adam

    2012-01-01

    Nitric oxide (NO) is a critical component of host defense against invading pathogens; however, its therapeutic utility is limited due to a lack of practical delivery systems. Recently, a NO-releasing nanoparticulate platform (NO-np) was shown to have in vitro broad-spectrum antimicrobial activity and in vivo pre-clinical efficacy in a dermal abscess model. To extend these findings, both topical (TP) and intralesional (IL) NO-np administration was evaluated in a MRSA intramuscular murine abscess model and compared with vancomycin. All treatment arms accelerated abscess clearance clinically, histologically, and by microbiological assays on both days 4 and 7 following infection. However, abscesses treated with NO-np via either route demonstrated a more substantial, statistically significant decrease in bacterial survival based on colony forming unit assays and histologically revealed less inflammatory cell infiltration and preserved muscular architecture. These data suggest that the NO-np may be an effective addition to our armament for deep soft tissue infections.

  17. Traumatic Brain Injury Incidence, Clinical Overview, and Policies in the US Military Health System Since 2000

    PubMed Central

    Isaacson, Brad M.; Cyborski, Cherina M.; French, Louis M.; Tsao, Jack W.; Pasquina, Paul F.

    2017-01-01

    Exposure to explosive armaments during Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom contributed to approximately 14% of the 352 612 traumatic brain injury (TBI) diagnoses in the US military between 2000 and 2016. The US Department of Defense issued guidelines in 2009 to (1) standardize TBI diagnostic criteria; (2) classify TBI according to mechanism and severity; (3) categorize TBI symptoms as somatic, psychological, or cognitive; and (4) systematize types of care given during the acute and rehabilitation stages of TBI treatment. Polytrauma and associated psychological and neurologic conditions may create barriers to optimal rehabilitation from TBI. Given the completion of recent combat operations and the transition of TBI patients into long-term care within the US Department of Veterans Affairs system, a review of the literature concerning TBI is timely. Long-term follow-up care for patients who have sustained TBI will remain a critical issue for the US military. PMID:28135424

  18. MMS Observation of Magnetic Reconnection in the Turbulent Magnetosheath

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Vörös, Z.; Yordanova, E.; Varsani, A.; Genestreti, K. J.; Khotyaintsev, Yu. V.; Li, W.; Graham, D. B.; Norgren, C.; Nakamura, R.; Narita, Y.; Plaschke, F.; Magnes, W.; Baumjohann, W.; Fischer, D.; Vaivads, A.; Eriksson, E.; Lindqvist, P.-A.; Marklund, G.; Ergun, R. E.; Leitner, M.; Leubner, M. P.; Strangeway, R. J.; Le Contel, O.; Pollock, C.; Giles, B. J.; Torbert, R. B.; Burch, J. L.; Avanov, L. A.; Dorelli, J. C.; Gershman, D. J.; Paterson, W. R.; Lavraud, B.; Saito, Y.

    2017-11-01

    In this paper we use the full armament of the MMS (Magnetospheric Multiscale) spacecraft to study magnetic reconnection in the turbulent magnetosheath downstream of a quasi-parallel bow shock. Contrarily to the magnetopause and magnetotail cases, only a few observations of reconnection in the magnetosheath have been reported. The case study in this paper presents, for the first time, both fluid-scale and kinetic-scale signatures of an ongoing reconnection in the turbulent magnetosheath. The spacecraft are crossing the reconnection inflow and outflow regions and the ion diffusion region (IDR). Inside the reconnection outflows D shape ion distributions are observed. Inside the IDR mixing of ion populations, crescent-like velocity distributions and ion accelerations are observed. One of the spacecraft skims the outer region of the electron diffusion region, where parallel electric fields, energy dissipation/conversion, electron pressure tensor agyrotropy, electron temperature anisotropy, and electron accelerations are observed. Some of the difficulties of the observations of magnetic reconnection in turbulent plasma are also outlined.

  19. Contemporary best practice in the evaluation and management of stuttering priapism.

    PubMed

    Kousournas, Georgios; Muneer, Asif; Ralph, David; Zacharakis, Evangelos

    2017-01-01

    Stuttering priapism is rare and under-investigated clinical entity. Although it shares similarities with ischaemic priapism, by definition, stuttering priapism has distinct characteristics that advocate for a different management in the clinical setting. Therefore, the management of stuttering priapism aims primarily to prevent recurrence rather than the resolution of spontaneous attacks. A multimodal approach and the individualization of each case are essential because of the diversity of the condition and the plethora of proposed therapeutic strategies. Understanding the underlying pathophysiology and familiarity with contemporary, past and emerging future agents and therapeutic options are required in order to provide an optimal solution for each patient. In addition, patient counselling and the option to combine therapeutic strategies and challenge second-line therapies are essential weapons in the armament of the urologist. Although further clinical trials and studies are mandatory in order to obtain solid data and provide recommendations, all therapeutic options are analysed, with specific interest in the potential advantages and disadvantages. A structured evaluation procedure is also described.

  20. Dietary intake of a plant phospholipid/lipid conjugate reduces lung cancer growth and tumor angiogenesis.

    PubMed

    Shuman Moss, Laurie A; Jensen-Taubman, Sandra; Rubinstein, Danielle; Viole, Gary; Stetler-Stevenson, William G

    2014-07-01

    It is well recognized that early detection and cancer prevention are significant armaments in the 'war against cancer'. Changes in lifestyle and diet have significant impact on the global incidence of cancer. For over 30 years, many investigators have studied the concept of chemoprevention. More recently, with the demonstration that antiangiogenic activity reduces tumor growth, the concept of angioprevention has emerged as a novel strategy in the deterrence of cancer development (carcinogenesis). In this study, we utilized a fast growing, highly aggressive murine Lewis lung cancer model to examine the in vivo antitumor effects of a novel, dietary supplement, known as plant phospholipid/lipid conjugate (pPLC). Our goal was to determine if pPLC possessed direct antitumor activity with relatively little toxicity that could be developed as a chemoprevention therapy. We used pPLC directly in this in vivo model due to the lack of aqueous solubility of this novel formulation, which precludes in vitro experimentation. pPLC contains known antioxidants, ferulic acid and lipoic acid, as well as soy sterols, formulated in a unique aqueous-insoluble matrix. The pPLC dietary supplement was shown to suppress in vivo growth of this tumor model by 30%. We also demonstrated a significant decrease in tumor angiogenesis accompanied by increased apoptosis and present preliminary evidence of enhanced expression of the hypoxia-related genes pentraxin-3 and metallothionein-3, by 24.9-fold and 10.9-fold, respectively, compared with vehicle control. These findings lead us to propose using this plant phosolipid/lipid conjugate as a dietary supplement that may be useful in cancer prevention. Published by Oxford University Press 2014.

  1. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Kring, C.T.; Varma, V.K.; Jatko, W.B.

    The US Army and Team Crusader (United Defense, Lockheed Martin Armament Systems, etc.) are developing the next generation howitzer, the Crusader. The development program includes an advanced, self-propelled liquid propellant howitzer and a companion resupply vehicle. The resupply vehicle is intended to rendezvous with the howitzer near the battlefront and replenish ammunition, fuel, and other material. The Army has recommended that Crusader incorporate new and innovative technologies to improve performance and safety. One conceptual design proposes a robotic resupply boom on the resupply vehicle to upload supplies to the howitzer. The resupply boom would normally be retracted inside the resupplymore » vehicle during transit. When the two vehicles are within range of the resupply boom, the boom would be extended to a receiving port on the howitzer. In order to reduce exposure to small arms fire or nuclear, biological, and chemical hazards, the crew would remain inside the resupply vehicle during the resupply operation. The process of extending the boom and linking with the receiving port is called docking. A boom operator would be designated to maneuver the boom into contact with the receiving port using a mechanical joystick. The docking operation depends greatly upon the skill of the boom operator to manipulate the boom into docking position. Computer simulations at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration have shown that computer-assisted or autonomous docking can improve the ability of the operator to dock safely and quickly. This document describes the present status of the Crusader Autonomous Docking System (CADS) implemented at Oak Ridge National laboratory (ORNL). The purpose of the CADS project is to determine the feasibility and performance limitations of vision systems to satisfy the autonomous docking requirements for Crusader and conduct a demonstration under controlled conditions.« less

  2. TAD- THEORETICAL AERODYNAMICS PROGRAM

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Barrowman, J.

    1994-01-01

    This theoretical aerodynamics program, TAD, was developed to predict the aerodynamic characteristics of vehicles with sounding rocket configurations. These slender, axisymmetric finned vehicle configurations have a wide range of aeronautical applications from rockets to high speed armament. Over a given range of Mach numbers, TAD will compute the normal force coefficient derivative, the center-of-pressure, the roll forcing moment coefficient derivative, the roll damping moment coefficient derivative, and the pitch damping moment coefficient derivative of a sounding rocket configured vehicle. The vehicle may consist of a sharp pointed nose of cone or tangent ogive shape, up to nine other body divisions of conical shoulder, conical boattail, or circular cylinder shape, and fins of trapezoid planform shape with constant cross section and either three or four fins per fin set. The characteristics computed by TAD have been shown to be accurate to within ten percent of experimental data in the supersonic region. The TAD program calculates the characteristics of separate portions of the vehicle, calculates the interference between separate portions of the vehicle, and then combines the results to form a total vehicle solution. Also, TAD can be used to calculate the characteristics of the body or fins separately as an aid in the design process. Input to the TAD program consists of simple descriptions of the body and fin geometries and the Mach range of interest. Output includes the aerodynamic characteristics of the total vehicle, or user-selected portions, at specified points over the mach range. The TAD program is written in FORTRAN IV for batch execution and has been implemented on an IBM 360 computer with a central memory requirement of approximately 123K of 8 bit bytes. The TAD program was originally developed in 1967 and last updated in 1972.

  3. Energy Engineering Analysis (EEA) program for Red River Army Depot, Texas. Executive summary. Final report

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    NONE

    The objectives of this Energy Engineering Analysis (EEA) for RRAD were three fold: Develop a systematic plan of projects which will result in reducing energy consumption. Consider renewable energy sources with the objective of establishing an orderly procedure for reducing use of non-renewable energy sources. Determine the feasibility of Total Energy (TE), Selective Energy (SE), and Central Heating Plant (CHP) concepts using alternative fuels. In essence, an assessment of the entire energy picture at RRAD was undertaken. This report is a summary of that effort. RRAD was originally built during 1941 and 1942 as a reserve ordnance depot for themore » Army. Since then, the missions and activities at RRAD have broadened to the point that it is now one of the largest Army depots in the continental United States. Located just west of Texarkana, Texas, RRAD encompasses an area of approximately 19,886 acres. The primary missions at RRAD are general supply and maintenance of vital Army equipment and ordnance material. The supply activities constitute the stocking, distribution, storage and supply of general Army supplies for the central region of the United States. Supply of vehicles, ammunition and guided missiles from RRAD encompasses a much larger region. The maintenance and repair functions at RRAD consists of the overhaul, modification, conversion and repair of automotive equipment and combat vehicles, missile systems and components, armament, and ammunition. Approximately 5500 people are currently employed at RRAD to carry out its mission.« less

  4. Thermal infrared panoramic imaging sensor

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Gutin, Mikhail; Tsui, Eddy K.; Gutin, Olga; Wang, Xu-Ming; Gutin, Alexey

    2006-05-01

    Panoramic cameras offer true real-time, 360-degree coverage of the surrounding area, valuable for a variety of defense and security applications, including force protection, asset protection, asset control, security including port security, perimeter security, video surveillance, border control, airport security, coastguard operations, search and rescue, intrusion detection, and many others. Automatic detection, location, and tracking of targets outside protected area ensures maximum protection and at the same time reduces the workload on personnel, increases reliability and confidence of target detection, and enables both man-in-the-loop and fully automated system operation. Thermal imaging provides the benefits of all-weather, 24-hour day/night operation with no downtime. In addition, thermal signatures of different target types facilitate better classification, beyond the limits set by camera's spatial resolution. The useful range of catadioptric panoramic cameras is affected by their limited resolution. In many existing systems the resolution is optics-limited. Reflectors customarily used in catadioptric imagers introduce aberrations that may become significant at large camera apertures, such as required in low-light and thermal imaging. Advantages of panoramic imagers with high image resolution include increased area coverage with fewer cameras, instantaneous full horizon detection, location and tracking of multiple targets simultaneously, extended range, and others. The Automatic Panoramic Thermal Integrated Sensor (APTIS), being jointly developed by Applied Science Innovative, Inc. (ASI) and the Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC) combines the strengths of improved, high-resolution panoramic optics with thermal imaging in the 8 - 14 micron spectral range, leveraged by intelligent video processing for automated detection, location, and tracking of moving targets. The work in progress supports the Future Combat Systems (FCS) and the Intelligent Munitions Systems (IMS). The APTIS is anticipated to operate as an intelligent node in a wireless network of multifunctional nodes that work together to serve in a wide range of applications of homeland security, as well as serve the Army in tasks of improved situational awareness (SA) in defense and offensive operations, and as a sensor node in tactical Intelligence Surveillance Reconnaissance (ISR). The novel ViperView TM high-resolution panoramic thermal imager is the heart of the APTIS system. It features an aberration-corrected omnidirectional imager with small optics designed to match the resolution of a 640x480 pixels IR camera with improved image quality for longer range target detection, classification, and tracking. The same approach is applicable to panoramic cameras working in the visible spectral range. Other components of the ATPIS system include network communications, advanced power management, and wakeup capability. Recent developments include image processing, optical design being expanded into the visible spectral range, and wireless communications design. This paper describes the development status of the APTIS system.

  5. Armament Imbalances: Match and Mismatch in Plant-Pollinator Traits of Highly Specialized Long-Spurred Orchids

    PubMed Central

    Moré, Marcela; Amorim, Felipe W.; Benitez-Vieyra, Santiago; Medina, A. Martin; Sazima, Marlies; Cocucci, Andrea A.

    2012-01-01

    Background Some species of long-spurred orchids achieve pollination by a close association with long-tongued hawkmoths. Among them, several Habenaria species present specialized mechanisms, where pollination success depends on the attachment of pollinaria onto the heads of hawkmoths with very long proboscises. However, in the Neotropical region such moths are less abundant than their shorter-tongued relatives and are also prone to population fluctuations. Both factors may give rise to differences in pollinator-mediated selection on floral traits through time and space. Methodology/Principal Findings We characterized hawkmoth assemblages and estimated phenotypic selection gradients on orchid spur lengths in populations of three South American Habenaria species. We examined the match between hawkmoth proboscis and flower spur lengths to determine whether pollinators may act as selective agents on flower morphology. We found significant directional selection on spur length only in Habenaria gourlieana, where most pollinators had proboscises longer than the mean of orchid spur length. Conclusions/Significance Phenotypic selection is dependent on the mutual match between pollinator and flower morphologies. However, our findings indicate that pollinator-mediated selection may vary through time and space according to local variations in pollinator assemblages. PMID:22848645

  6. A trade-off between precopulatory and postcopulatory trait investment in male cetaceans.

    PubMed

    Dines, James P; Mesnick, Sarah L; Ralls, Katherine; May-Collado, Laura; Agnarsson, Ingi; Dean, Matthew D

    2015-06-01

    Mating with multiple partners is common across species, and understanding how individual males secure fertilization in the face of competition remains a fundamental goal of evolutionary biology. Game theory stipulates that males have a fixed budget for reproduction that can lead to a trade-off between investment in precopulatory traits such as body size, armaments, and ornaments, and postcopulatory traits such as testis size and spermatogenic efficiency. Recent theoretical and empirical studies have shown that if males can monopolize access to multiple females, they will invest disproportionately in precopulatory traits and less in postcopulatory traits. Using phylogenetically controlled comparative methods, we demonstrate that across 58 cetacean species with the most prominent sexual dimorphism in size, shape, teeth, tusks, and singing invest significantly less in relative testes mass. In support of theoretical predictions, these species tend to show evidence of male contests, suggesting there is opportunity for winners to monopolize access to multiple females. Our approach provides a robust dataset with which to make predictions about male mating strategies for the many cetacean species for which adequate behavioral observations do not exist. © 2015 The Author(s). Evolution © 2015 The Society for the Study of Evolution.

  7. Influencing Factors of the Initiation Point in the Parachute-Bomb Dynamic Detonation System

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Qizhong, Li; Ye, Wang; Zhongqi, Wang; Chunhua, Bai

    2017-12-01

    The parachute system has been widely applied in modern armament design, especially for the fuel-air explosives. Because detonation of fuel-air explosives occurs during flight, it is necessary to investigate the influences of the initiation point to ensure successful dynamic detonation. In fact, the initiating position exist the falling area in the fuels, due to the error of influencing factors. In this paper, the major influencing factors of initiation point were explored with airdrop and the regularity between initiation point area and factors were obtained. Based on the regularity, the volume equation of initiation point area was established to predict the range of initiation point in the fuel. The analysis results showed that the initiation point appeared area, scattered on account of the error of attitude angle, secondary initiation charge velocity, and delay time. The attitude angle was the major influencing factors on a horizontal axis. On the contrary, secondary initiation charge velocity and delay time were the major influencing factors on a horizontal axis. Overall, the geometries of initiation point area were sector coupled with the errors of the attitude angle, secondary initiation charge velocity, and delay time.

  8. Convergence, recurrence and diversification of complex sperm traits in diving beetles (Dytiscidae)

    PubMed Central

    Higginson, Dawn M.; Miller, Kelly B.; Segraves, Kari A.; Pitnick, Scott

    2013-01-01

    Sperm display remarkable morphological diversity among even closely related species, a pattern that is widely attributed to postcopulatory sexual selection. Surprisingly few studies have used phylogenetic analyses to discern the details of evolutionary diversification in ornaments and armaments subject to sexual selection, and the origins of novel sperm traits and their subsequent modification are particularly poorly understood. Here we investigate sperm evolution in diving beetles (Dytiscidae), revealing dramatic diversification in flagellum length, head shape, presence of sperm heteromorphism, and the presence/type of sperm conjugation, an unusual trait where two or more sperm unite for motility or transport. Sperm conjugation was found to be the ancestral condition in diving beetles, with subsequent diversification into three forms, each exhibiting varying degrees of evolutionary loss, convergence and recurrence. Sperm head shape, but not length or heteromorphism, was found to evolve in a significantly correlated manner with conjugation, consistent with the different mechanisms of head alignment and binding required for the different forms of conjugation. Our study reveals that sperm morphological evolution is channeled along particular evolutionary pathways (i.e., conjugate form), yet subject to considerable diversification within those pathways through modification in sperm length, head shape and heteromorphism. PMID:22519797

  9. Anatomical variations within the deep posterior compartment of the leg and important clinical consequences.

    PubMed

    Hislop, M; Tierney, P

    2004-09-01

    The management of musculoskeletal conditions makes up a large part of a sports medicine practitioner's practice. A thorough knowledge of anatomy is an essential component of the armament necessary to decipher the large number of potential conditions that may confront these practitioners. To cloud the issue further, anatomical variations may be present, such as supernumerary muscles, thickened fascial bands or variant courses of nerves and blood vessels, which can themselves manifest as acute or chronic conditions that lead to significant morbidity or limitation of activity. There are a number of contentious areas within the literature surrounding the anatomy of the leg, particularly involving the deep posterior compartment. Conditions such as chronic exertional compartment syndrome, tibial periostitis (shin splints), peripheral nerve entrapment and tarsal tunnel syndrome may all be affected by subtle anatomical variations. This paper primarily focuses on the deep posterior compartment of the leg and uses the gross dissection of cadaveric specimens to describe definitively the anatomy of the deep posterior compartment. Variant fascial attachments of flexor digitorum longus are documented and potential clinical sequelae such as chronic exertional compartment syndrome and tarsal tunnel syndrome are discussed.

  10. Public perspectives on nuclear security. US national security surveys, 1993--1997

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Herron, K.G.; Jenkins-Smith, H.C.

    This is the third report in a series of studies to examine how US attitudes about nuclear security are evolving in the post-Cold War era and to identify trends in public perceptions and preferences relevant to the evolution of US nuclear security policy. It presents findings from three surveys: a nationwide telephone survey of randomly selected members of the US general public; a written survey of randomly selected members of American Men and Women of Science; and a written survey of randomly selected state legislators from all fifty US states. Key areas of investigation included nuclear security, cooperation between USmore » and Russian scientists about nuclear issues, vulnerabilities of critical US infrastructures and responsibilities for their protection, and broad areas of US national science policy. While international and US national security were seen to be slowly improving, the primary nuclear threat to the US was perceived to have shifted from Russia to China. Support was found for nuclear arms control measures, including mutual reductions in stockpiles. However, respondents were pessimistic about eliminating nuclear armaments, and nuclear deterrence continued to be highly values. Participants favored decreasing funding f/or developing and testing new nuclear weapons, but supported increased investments in nuclear weapons infrastructure. Strong concerns were expressed about nuclear proliferation and the potential for nuclear terrorism. Support was evident for US scientific cooperation with Russia to strengthen security of Russian nuclear assets. Elite and general public perceptions of external and domestic nuclear weapons risks and external and domestic nuclear weapons benefits were statistically significantly related to nuclear weapons policy options and investment preferences. Demographic variables and individual belief systems were systematically related both to risk and benefit perceptions and to policy and spending preferences.« less

  11. Distributed control systems with incomplete and uncertain information

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Tang, Jingpeng

    Scientific and engineering advances in wireless communication, sensors, propulsion, and other areas are rapidly making it possible to develop unmanned air vehicles (UAVs) with sophisticated capabilities. UAVs have come to the forefront as tools for airborne reconnaissance to search for, detect, and destroy enemy targets in relatively complex environments. They potentially reduce risk to human life, are cost effective, and are superior to manned aircraft for certain types of missions. It is desirable for UAVs to have a high level of intelligent autonomy to carry out mission tasks with little external supervision and control. This raises important issues involving tradeoffs between centralized control and the associated potential to optimize mission plans, and decentralized control with great robustness and the potential to adapt to changing conditions. UAV capabilities have been extended several ways through armament (e.g., Hellfire missiles on Predator UAVs), increased endurance and altitude (e.g., Global Hawk), and greater autonomy. Some known barriers to full-scale implementation of UAVs are increased communication and control requirements as well as increased platform and system complexity. One of the key problems is how UAV systems can handle incomplete and uncertain information in dynamic environments. Especially when the system is composed of heterogeneous and distributed UAVs, the overall system complexity is increased under such conditions. Presented through the use of published papers, this dissertation lays the groundwork for the study of methodologies for handling incomplete and uncertain information for distributed control systems. An agent-based simulation framework is built to investigate mathematical approaches (optimization) and emergent intelligence approaches. The first paper provides a mathematical approach for systems of UAVs to handle incomplete and uncertain information. The second paper describes an emergent intelligence approach for UAVs, again in handling incomplete and uncertain information. The third paper combines mathematical and emergent intelligence approaches.

  12. Hi-G electronic gated camera for precision trajectory analysis

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Snyder, Donald R.; Payne, Scott; Keller, Ed; Longo, Salvatore; Caudle, Dennis E.; Walker, Dennis C.; Sartor, Mark A.; Keeler, Joe E.; Kerr, David A.; Fail, R. Wallace; Gannon, Jim; Carrol, Ernie; Jamison, Todd A.

    1997-12-01

    It is extremely difficult and expensive to determine the flight attitude and aimpoint of small maneuvering miniature air vehicles from ground based fixed or tracking photography. Telemetry alone cannot provide sufficient information bandwidth on 'what' the ground tracking is seeing and consequently 'why' it did or did not function properly. Additionally, it is anticipated that 'smart' and 'brilliant' guided vehicles now in development will require a high resolution imaging support system to determine which target and which part of a ground feature is being used for navigation or targeting. Other requirements include support of sub-component separation from developmental supersonic vehicles, where the clean separation from the container is not determinable from ground based film systems and film cameras do not survive vehicle breakup and impact. Hence, the requirement is to develop and demonstrate an imaging support system for development/testing that can provide the flight vehicle developer/analyst with imagery (combined with miniature telemetry sources) sufficient to recreate the trajectory, terminal navigation, and flight termination events. This project is a development and demonstration of a real-time, launch-rated, shuttered, electronic imager, transmitter, and analysis system. This effort demonstrated boresighted imagery from inside small flight vehicles for post flight analysis of trajectory, and capture of ground imagery during random triggered vehicle functions. The initial studies for this capability have been accomplished by the Experimental Dynamics Section of the Air Force Wright Laboratory, Armament Directorate, Eglin AFB, Florida, and the Telemetry Support Branch of the Army Material Research and Development Center at Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey. It has been determined that at 1/10,000 of a second exposure time, new ultra-miniature CCD sensors have sufficient sensitivity to image key ground target features without blur, thereby providing data for trajectory, timing, and advanced sensor development. This system will be used for ground tracking data reduction in support of small air vehicle and munition testing. It will provide a means of integrating the imagery and telemetry data from the item with ground based photographic support. The technique we have designed will exploit off-the-shelf software and analysis components. A differential GPS survey instrument will establish a photogrammetric calibration grid throughout the range and reference targets along the flight path. Images from the on-board sensor will be used to calibrate the ortho- rectification model in the analysis software. The projectile images will be transmitted and recorded on several tape recorders to insure complete capture of each video field. The images will be combined with a non-linear video editor into a time-correlated record. Each correlated video field will be written to video disk. The files will be converted to DMA compatible format and then analyzed for determination of the projectile altitude, attitude and position in space. The resulting data file will be used to create a photomosaic of the ground the projectile flew over and the targets it saw. The data will be then transformed to a trajectory file and used to generate a graphic overlay that will merge digital photo data of the range with actual images captured. The plan is to superimpose the flight path of the projectile, the path of the weapons aimpoint, and annotation of each internal sequence event. With tools used to produce state-of-the-art computer graphics, we now think it will be possible to reconstruct the test event from the viewpoint of the warhead, the target, and a 'God's-Eye' view looking over the shoulder of the projectile.

  13. Toxic Emissions from a Military Test Site in the Territory of Sardinia, Italy

    PubMed Central

    Cristaldi, Mauro; Foschi, Cristiano; Szpunar, Germana; Brini, Carlo; Marinelli, Fiorenzo; Triolo, Lucio

    2013-01-01

    This work assesses the environmental impact from chemical emissions due to military tests and routine activities in the area occupied by the Italian Inter-force Test Range (PISQ), located at Salto di Quirra, Sardinia, Italy. After reviewing the military activities carried out at PISQ, such as rocket launching, blasting and armament destruction, projectile and mortar fire impact, the associated pollution is evaluated. Chemical analyses were performed by means of Scanning Electronic Microscopy and Energy Dispersion Spectrometry on biotic and abiotic matrices. Residues of Rb, Tl, W, Ti and Al were found in matrices collected in the PISQ areas and environs. A review of experimental data on air, water, soil, milk, forage and animal tissues obtained by various Public Agencies of Sardinia proved that toxic element residues often exceeded the legal limits. PM10 and PM2.5 air concentrations also exceeded the legal limits after military blasting. Cd and Pb contents in the liver and kidneys of sheep living in farms at PISQ and in control farms that were located more than 20 km away from PISQ were higher than the legal limits. This work was performed to investigate concentration of xenobiotics in ecosystems emitted from PISQ activities. This assessment could be useful to focus future epidemiological studies carried out in PISQ and its neighbouring areas. PMID:23603867

  14. Arms and alliance in Japanese public opinion

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Umemoto, T.

    1985-01-01

    This thesis analyzes the transformation of Japanese public opinion concerning the nation's security posture during the past decade. Until the early 1970s, the peculiar strength of a neutralist-pacifist outlook among the Japanese people, which arose in large part from the absence of a serious external threat severely encumbered Tokyo's defense efforts in the context of the alliance with the United States. In particular, such state of domestic opinion gave rise to what the author has elected to call the institutionalized constraints - limitations deriving from constitutional interpretation, the Three Non-Nuclear Principles, and the Three Principles on Weapons Exports - onmore » the scope of such endeavors. It moreover prepared the condition for the Government's adoption of restrictive military buildup policies in the National Defense Program Outline. Over the past decade, however, as Japan's security environment has deteriorated with the growth of the putative Soviet threat, and as the United States and China have come to expect greater Japanese defense efforts, the climate of opinion within Japan has gradually shifted in favor of a security posture based on the Mutual Security Treaty (MST) and the Self-Defense Forces (SDFs). Opinion polls have come to indicate solid popular approval of maintenance of armament and participation in alliance.« less

  15. Family feuds: social competition and sexual conflict in complex societies

    PubMed Central

    Rubenstein, Dustin R.

    2012-01-01

    Darwin was initially puzzled by the processes that led to ornamentation in males—what he termed sexual selection—and those that led to extreme cooperation and altruism in complex animal societies—what was later termed kin selection. Here, I explore the relationships between sexual and kin selection theory by examining how social competition for reproductive opportunities—particularly in females—and sexual conflict over mating partners are inherent and critical parts of complex altruistic societies. I argue that (i) patterns of reproductive sharing within complex societies can drive levels of social competition and reproductive conflict not only in males but also in females living in social groups, and ultimately the evolution of female traits such as ornaments and armaments; (ii) mating conflict over female choice of sexual partners can influence kin structure within groups and drive the evolution of complex societies; and (iii) patterns of reproductive sharing and conflict among females may also drive the evolution of complex societies by influencing kin structure within groups. Ultimately, complex societies exhibiting altruistic behaviour appear to have only arisen in taxa where social competition over reproductive opportunities and sexual conflict over mating partners were low. Once such societies evolved, there were important selective feedbacks on traits used to regulate and mediate intra-sexual competition over reproductive opportunities, particularly in females. PMID:22777018

  16. Sexual and social competition: broadening perspectives by defining female roles.

    PubMed

    Rubenstein, Dustin R

    2012-08-19

    Males figured more prominently than females in Darwin's view of sexual selection. He considered female choice of secondary importance to male-male competition as a mechanism to explain the evolution of male ornaments and armaments. Fisher later demonstrated the importance of female choice in driving male trait evolution, but his ideas were largely ignored for decades. As sexual selection came to embrace the notions of parent-offspring and sexual conflict, and experimental tests of female choice showed promise, females began to feature more prominently in the framework of sexual selection theory. Recent debate over this theory has centred around the role of females, not only over the question of choice, but also over female-female competition. Whereas some have called for expanding the sexual selection framework to encompass all forms of female-female competition, others have called for subsuming sexual selection within a broader framework of social selection, or replacing it altogether. Still others have argued for linking sexual selection more clearly to other evolutionary theories such as kin selection. Rather than simply debating terminology, we must take a broader view of the general processes that lead to trait evolution in both sexes by clearly defining the roles that females play in the process, and by focusing on intra- and inter-sexual interactions in males and females.

  17. Evaluation of Analgesic Activity of Papaver libanoticum Extract in Mice: Involvement of Opioids Receptors

    PubMed Central

    El-Mallah, Ahmed; Aboul-Ela, Maha; Ellakany, Abdalla

    2017-01-01

    Papaver libanoticum is an endemic plant to Lebanese region (family Papaveraceae) that has not been investigated before. The present study aimed to explore the analgesic activity of dried ethanolic extract of Papaver libanoticum (PLE) using tail flick, hot plate, and acetic acid induced writhing models in mice. The involvement of opioid receptors in the analgesic mechanism was investigated using naloxone antagonism. Results demonstrated that PLE exhibited a potent dose dependent analgesic activity in all tested models for analgesia. The analgesic effect involved activation of opioid receptors in the central nervous system, where both spinal and supraspinal components might be involved. The time course for analgesia revealed maximum activity after three hours in both tail flick and hot plate methods, which was prolonged to 24 hours. Metabolites of PLE could be responsible for activation of opioid receptors. The EC50 of PLE was 79 and 50 mg/kg in tail flick and hot plate tests, respectively. The total coverage of analgesia by PLE was double that of morphine in both tests. In conclusion, PLE proved to have opioid agonistic activity with a novel feature of slow and prolonged effect. The present study could add a potential tool in the armaments of opioid drugs as a natural potent analgesic and for treatment of opioid withdrawal syndrome. PMID:28280516

  18. Evaluation of Analgesic Activity of Papaver libanoticum Extract in Mice: Involvement of Opioids Receptors.

    PubMed

    Hijazi, Mohamad Ali; El-Mallah, Ahmed; Aboul-Ela, Maha; Ellakany, Abdalla

    2017-01-01

    Papaver libanoticum is an endemic plant to Lebanese region (family Papaveraceae) that has not been investigated before. The present study aimed to explore the analgesic activity of dried ethanolic extract of Papaver libanoticum (PLE) using tail flick, hot plate, and acetic acid induced writhing models in mice. The involvement of opioid receptors in the analgesic mechanism was investigated using naloxone antagonism. Results demonstrated that PLE exhibited a potent dose dependent analgesic activity in all tested models for analgesia. The analgesic effect involved activation of opioid receptors in the central nervous system, where both spinal and supraspinal components might be involved. The time course for analgesia revealed maximum activity after three hours in both tail flick and hot plate methods, which was prolonged to 24 hours. Metabolites of PLE could be responsible for activation of opioid receptors. The EC50 of PLE was 79 and 50 mg/kg in tail flick and hot plate tests, respectively. The total coverage of analgesia by PLE was double that of morphine in both tests. In conclusion, PLE proved to have opioid agonistic activity with a novel feature of slow and prolonged effect. The present study could add a potential tool in the armaments of opioid drugs as a natural potent analgesic and for treatment of opioid withdrawal syndrome.

  19. An application of characteristic function in order to predict reliability and lifetime of aeronautical hardware

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Żurek, Józef; Kaleta, Ryszard; Zieja, Mariusz

    2016-06-01

    The forecasting of reliability and life of aeronautical hardware requires recognition of many and various destructive processes that deteriorate the health/maintenance status thereof. The aging of technical components of aircraft as an armament system proves of outstanding significance to reliability and safety of the whole system. The aging process is usually induced by many and various factors, just to mention mechanical, biological, climatic, or chemical ones. The aging is an irreversible process and considerably affects (i.e. reduces) reliability and lifetime of aeronautical equipment. Application of the characteristic function of the aging process is suggested to predict reliability and lifetime of aeronautical hardware. An increment in values of diagnostic parameters is introduced to formulate then, using the characteristic function and after some rearrangements, the partial differential equation. An analytical dependence for the characteristic function of the aging process is a solution to this equation. With the inverse transformation applied, the density function of the aging of aeronautical hardware is found. Having found the density function, one can determine the aeronautical equipment's reliability and lifetime. The in-service collected or the life tests delivered data are used to attain this goal. Coefficients in this relationship are found using the likelihood function.

  20. An application of characteristic function in order to predict reliability and lifetime of aeronautical hardware

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Żurek, Józef; Kaleta, Ryszard; Zieja, Mariusz

    2016-06-08

    The forecasting of reliability and life of aeronautical hardware requires recognition of many and various destructive processes that deteriorate the health/maintenance status thereof. The aging of technical components of aircraft as an armament system proves of outstanding significance to reliability and safety of the whole system. The aging process is usually induced by many and various factors, just to mention mechanical, biological, climatic, or chemical ones. The aging is an irreversible process and considerably affects (i.e. reduces) reliability and lifetime of aeronautical equipment. Application of the characteristic function of the aging process is suggested to predict reliability and lifetime ofmore » aeronautical hardware. An increment in values of diagnostic parameters is introduced to formulate then, using the characteristic function and after some rearrangements, the partial differential equation. An analytical dependence for the characteristic function of the aging process is a solution to this equation. With the inverse transformation applied, the density function of the aging of aeronautical hardware is found. Having found the density function, one can determine the aeronautical equipment’s reliability and lifetime. The in-service collected or the life tests delivered data are used to attain this goal. Coefficients in this relationship are found using the likelihood function.« less

  1. The relevance of coagulation factor X protection of adenoviruses in human sera

    PubMed Central

    Duffy, M R; Doszpoly, A; Turner, G; Nicklin, S A; Baker, A H

    2016-01-01

    Intravenous delivery of adenoviruses is the optimal route for many gene therapy applications. Once in the blood, coagulation factor X (FX) binds to the adenovirus capsid and protects the virion from natural antibody and classical complement-mediated neutralisation in mice. However, to date, no studies have examined the relevance of this FX/viral immune protective mechanism in human samples. In this study, we assessed the effects of blocking FX on adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) activity in the presence of human serum. FX prevented human IgM binding directly to the virus. In individual human sera samples (n=25), approximately half of those screened inhibited adenovirus transduction only when the Ad5–FX interaction was blocked, demonstrating that FX protected the virus from neutralising components in a large proportion of human sera. In contrast, the remainder of sera tested had no inhibitory effects on Ad5 transduction and FX armament was not required for effective gene transfer. In human sera in which FX had a protective role, Ad5 induced lower levels of complement activation in the presence of FX. We therefore demonstrate for the first time the importance of Ad–FX protection in human samples and highlight subject variability and species-specific differences as key considerations for adenoviral gene therapy. PMID:27014840

  2. Family feuds: social competition and sexual conflict in complex societies.

    PubMed

    Rubenstein, Dustin R

    2012-08-19

    Darwin was initially puzzled by the processes that led to ornamentation in males-what he termed sexual selection-and those that led to extreme cooperation and altruism in complex animal societies-what was later termed kin selection. Here, I explore the relationships between sexual and kin selection theory by examining how social competition for reproductive opportunities-particularly in females-and sexual conflict over mating partners are inherent and critical parts of complex altruistic societies. I argue that (i) patterns of reproductive sharing within complex societies can drive levels of social competition and reproductive conflict not only in males but also in females living in social groups, and ultimately the evolution of female traits such as ornaments and armaments; (ii) mating conflict over female choice of sexual partners can influence kin structure within groups and drive the evolution of complex societies; and (iii) patterns of reproductive sharing and conflict among females may also drive the evolution of complex societies by influencing kin structure within groups. Ultimately, complex societies exhibiting altruistic behaviour appear to have only arisen in taxa where social competition over reproductive opportunities and sexual conflict over mating partners were low. Once such societies evolved, there were important selective feedbacks on traits used to regulate and mediate intra-sexual competition over reproductive opportunities, particularly in females.

  3. Population density and structure drive differential investment in pre- and postmating sexual traits in frogs.

    PubMed

    Lüpold, Stefan; Jin, Long; Liao, Wen Bo

    2017-06-01

    Sexual selection theory predicts a trade-off between premating (ornaments and armaments) and postmating (testes and ejaculates) sexual traits, assuming that growing and maintaining these traits is costly and that total reproductive investments are limited. The number of males in competition, the reproductive gains from investing in premating sexual traits, and the level of sperm competition are all predicted to influence how males allocate their finite resources to these traits. Yet, empirical examination of these predictions is currently scarce. Here, we studied relative expenditure on pre- and postmating sexual traits among frog species varying in their population density, operational sex ratio, and the number of competing males for each clutch of eggs. We found that the intensifying struggle to monopolize fertilizations as more and more males clasp the same female to fertilize her eggs shifts male reproductive investment toward sperm production and away from male weaponry. This shift, which is mediated by population density and the associated level of male-male competition, likely also explains the trade-off between pre- and postmating sexual traits in our much broader sample of anuran species. Our results highlight the power of such a multilevel approach in resolving the evolution of traits and allocation trade-offs. © 2017 The Author(s). Evolution © 2017 The Society for the Study of Evolution.

  4. Change detection in satellite images

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Thonnessen, U.; Hofele, G.; Middelmann, W.

    2005-05-01

    Change detection plays an important role in different military areas as strategic reconnaissance, verification of armament and disarmament control and damage assessment. It is the process of identifying differences in the state of an object or phenomenon by observing it at different times. The availability of spaceborne reconnaissance systems with high spatial resolution, multi spectral capabilities, and short revisit times offer new perspectives for change detection. Before performing any kind of change detection it is necessary to separate changes of interest from changes caused by differences in data acquisition parameters. In these cases it is necessary to perform a pre-processing to correct the data or to normalize it. Image registration and, corresponding to this task, the ortho-rectification of the image data is a further prerequisite for change detection. If feasible, a 1-to-1 geometric correspondence should be aspired for. Change detection on an iconic level with a succeeding interpretation of the changes by the observer is often proposed; nevertheless an automatic knowledge-based analysis delivering the interpretation of the changes on a semantic level should be the aim of the future. We present first results of change detection on a structural level concerning urban areas. After pre-processing, the images are segmented in areas of interest and structural analysis is applied to these regions to extract descriptions of urban infrastructure like buildings, roads and tanks of refineries. These descriptions are matched to detect changes and similarities.

  5. The trap of sex in social insects: from the female to the male perspective.

    PubMed

    Beani, Laura; Dessì-Fulgheri, Francesco; Cappa, Federico; Toth, Amy

    2014-10-01

    The phenotype of male Hymenoptera and the peculiar role of males has been neglected and greatly understudied, given the spectacular cooperative behavior of female social insects. In social insects there has been considerable progress in understanding the molecular mechanisms behind haplodiploid sex determination but, beyond that, very little is known concerning the neural, endocrine, and genetic correlates of sexual selection in males. An opportunity is being missed: the male phenotype in Hymenoptera is a natural experiment to compare the drives of natural versus sexual selection. In contrast to females, males do not work, they usually display far from the nest to gain mates, compete among rivals in nuptial flights or for a symbolic territory at leks, and engage in direct or ritualized conflicts. By comparing the available data on male paper wasps with studies on other social Hymenoptera, we summarize what we currently know about the physical, hormonal, neural and behavioral traits in a model system appropriate to examine current paradigms on sexual selection. Here we review male behavior in social Hymenoptera beyond sex stereotypes: the subtle role of "drones" in the colony, the lack of armaments and ornaments, the explosive mating crowds, the "endurance" race, the cognitive bases of the "choosy" male and his immune defense. Social insect males are not just simple-minded mating machines, they are shaped, constrained and perhaps trapped by sexual selection. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  6. Crew awareness as key to optimizing habitability standards onboard naval platforms: A 'back-to-basics' approach.

    PubMed

    Neelakantan, Anand; Ilankumaran, Mookkiah; Ray, Sougat

    2017-10-01

    A healthy habitable environment onboard warships is vital to operational fleet efficiency and fit sea-warrier force. Unique man-machine-armament interface issues and consequent constraints on habitability necessitate a multi-disciplinary approach toward optimizing habitability standards. Study of the basic 'human factor', including crew awareness on what determines shipboard habitability, and its association with habitation specifications is an essential step in such an approach. The aim of this study was to assess crew awareness on shipboard habitability and the association between awareness and maintenance of optimal habitability as per specifications. A cross-sectional descriptive study was carried out among 552 naval personnel onboard warships in Mumbai. Data on crew awareness on habitability was collected using a standardized questionnaire, and correlated with basic habitability requirement specifications. Data was analyzed using Microsoft Excel, Epi-info, and SPSS version 17. Awareness level on basic habitability aspects was very good in 65.3% of crew. Area-specific awareness was maximum with respect to living area (95.3%). Knowledge levels on waste management were among the lowest (65.2%) in the category of aspect-wise awareness. Statistically significant association was found between awareness levels and habitability standards (OR = 7.27). The new benchmarks set in the form of high crew awareness levels on basic shipboard habitability specifications and its significant association with standards needs to be sustained. It entails re-iteration of healthy habitation essentials into training; and holds the key to a fit fighting force.

  7. Optoelectronics applications in multimedia shooting training systems: SPARTAN

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Glogowski, Tomasz; Hlosta, Pawel; Stepniak, Slawomir; Swiderski, Waldemar

    2017-10-01

    Multimedia shooting training systems are increasingly being used in the training of security staff and uniformed services. An advanced practicing-training system SPARTAN for simulation of small arms shooting has been designed and manufactured by Autocomp Management Ltd. and Military Institute of Armament Technology for the Polish Ministry of National Defence. SPARTAN is a stationary device designed to teach, monitor and evaluate the targeting of small arms and to prepare soldiers for: • firing the live ammunition at open ranges for combat targets and silhouettes • detection, classification and engagement of real targets upon different terrains, weather conditions and periods during the day • team work as a squad during the mission by using different types of arms • suitable reactions in untypical scenarios. Placed in any room the training set consists of: • the projection system that generates realistic 3D imaging of the battlefield (such as combat shooting range) in high-resolution • system that tracks weapons aiming points • sound system which delivers realistic mapping of acoustic surroundings • operator station with which the training is conducted and controlled • central processing unit based on PC computers equipped with specialist software realizing individual system functions • units of smart weapons equipped with radio communication modules, injection laser diodes and pneumatic reloading system. The system make possible training by firing in dynamic scenarios, using combat weapons and live ammunition against visible targets moving on a screen. The use of infrared camera for detecting the position of impact of a projectile.

  8. Accelerating axon growth to overcome limitations in functional recovery after peripheral nerve injury.

    PubMed

    Gordon, Tessa; Chan, K Ming; Sulaiman, Olawale A R; Udina, Esther; Amirjani, Nasim; Brushart, Thomas M

    2009-10-01

    Injured peripheral nerves regenerate at very slow rates. Therefore, proximal injury sites such as the brachial plexus still present major challenges, and the outcomes of conventional treatments remain poor. This is in part attributable to a progressive decline in the Schwann cells' ability to provide a supportive milieu for the growth cone to extend and to find the appropriate target. These challenges are compounded by the often considerable delay of regeneration across the site of nerve laceration. Recently, low-frequency electrical stimulation (as brief as an hour) has shown promise, as it significantly accelerated regeneration in animal models through speeding of axon growth across the injury site. To test whether this might be a useful clinical tool, we carried out a randomized controlled trial in patients who had experienced substantial axonal loss in the median nerve owing to severe compression in the carpal tunnel. To further elucidate the potential mechanisms, we applied rolipram, a cyclic adenosine monophosphate agonist, to rats after axotomy of the femoral nerve. We demonstrated that effects similar to those observed in animal studies could also be attained in humans. The mechanisms of action of electrical stimulation likely operate through up-regulation of neurotrophic factors and cyclic adenosine monophosphate. Indeed, the application of rolipram significantly accelerated nerve regeneration. With new mechanistic insights into the influencing factors of peripheral nerve regeneration, the novel treatments described above could form part of an armament of synergistic therapies that could make a meaningful difference to patients with peripheral nerve injuries.

  9. An insight into the sialome of Glossina morsitans morsitans

    PubMed Central

    2010-01-01

    Background Blood feeding evolved independently in worms, arthropods and mammals. Among the adaptations to this peculiar diet, these animals developed an armament of salivary molecules that disarm their host's anti-bleeding defenses (hemostasis), inflammatory and immune reactions. Recent sialotranscriptome analyses (from the Greek sialo = saliva) of blood feeding insects and ticks have revealed that the saliva contains hundreds of polypeptides, many unique to their genus or family. Adult tsetse flies feed exclusively on vertebrate blood and are important vectors of human and animal diseases. Thus far, only limited information exists regarding the Glossina sialome, or any other fly belonging to the Hippoboscidae. Results As part of the effort to sequence the genome of Glossina morsitans morsitans, several organ specific, high quality normalized cDNA libraries have been constructed, from which over 20,000 ESTs from an adult salivary gland library were sequenced. These ESTs have been assembled using previously described ESTs from the fat body and midgut libraries of the same fly, thus totaling 62,251 ESTs, which have been assembled into 16,743 clusters (8,506 of which had one or more EST from the salivary gland library). Coding sequences were obtained for 2,509 novel proteins, 1,792 of which had at least one EST expressed in the salivary glands. Despite library normalization, 59 transcripts were overrepresented in the salivary library indicating high levels of expression. This work presents a detailed analysis of the salivary protein families identified. Protein expression was confirmed by 2D gel electrophoresis, enzymatic digestion and mass spectrometry. Concurrently, an initial attempt to determine the immunogenic properties of selected salivary proteins was undertaken. Conclusions The sialome of G. m. morsitans contains over 250 proteins that are possibly associated with blood feeding. This set includes alleles of previously described gene products, reveals new evidence that several salivary proteins are multigenic and identifies at least seven new polypeptide families unique to Glossina. Most of these proteins have no known function and thus, provide a discovery platform for the identification of novel pharmacologically active compounds, innovative vector-based vaccine targets, and immunological markers of vector exposure. PMID:20353571

  10. The First Telescope in the Korean History I. Translation of Jeong's Report

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ahn, Sang-Hyeon

    2009-06-01

    In 1631 A.D. Jeong Duwon, an ambassador of the Joseon dynasty was sent to the Ming dynasty. There he met João Rodrigues, a Jesuit missionary, in Dengzhou of Shandong peninsula. The missionary gave the ambassador a number of results of latest European innovations. A detailed description on this event was written in `Jeong's official report regarding a message from an European country' () which is an important literature work to understand the event. Since the document was written in classical Chinese, we make a comprehensive translation to Korean with detailed notes. According to the report, the items that Rodrigues presented include four books written in Chinese that describe European discoveries about the world, a report on the tribute of new cannons manufactured by Portuguese in Macao, a telescope, a flintlock, a Foliot-type mechanical clock, a world atlas drawn by Matteo Ricci, an astronomical planisphere, and a sun-dial. We discuss the meaning of each item in the Korean history of science and technology. In particular, Jeong's introduction is an important event in the history of Korean astronomy, because the telescope he brought was the first one to be introduced in Korean history. Even though king Injo and his associates of the Joseon dynasty were well aware of the value as military armaments of new technologies such as telescopes, cannons, and flintlocks, they were not able to quickly adopt such technologies to defend against the military threat of Jurchen. We revisit the reason in view of the general history of science and technology of east-Asian countries in the 17th century.

  11. LIBS spectra of multi-component Al, Fe, Cu alloys and composite materials used for selected elements of armament and munition

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ostrowski, R.; Skrzeczanowski, W.; Rycyk, A.; CzyŻ, K.; Sarzyński, A.; Strzelec, M.; Jach, K.; Świerczyński, R.

    2017-10-01

    Spectral investigations in the UV-VIS range of selected Al, Cu, and Fe alloys and composite materials were performed using LIBS technique. The investigated objects were typical rifle cartridges, mortars, rocket launchers and samples of different type steel, Cu and Al alloys, as well as composite materials of special chemical composition. Two Nd:YAG lasers were applied: a short 4 ns, 60 mJ Brio Quantel/BigSky laser (1064 nm) and a long pulse 200/400 (up to 1000) µs ({ 2/4 up to 10 J) laser (1064 nm) constructed at the Institute of Optoelectronics MUT. This spectrochemical analysis was possible for Al, Cu, and Fe alloys objects for both lasers, and in case of composites only if the samples were irradiated by short laser pulse since in the experiment with the long pulse, all composite materials spectra, in general, were very similar to each other - they imitated a grey/black body spectra. For metal alloys in experiments with a short laser pulse only atomic spectra were observed while for long microsecond laser pulses molecular transitions have been registered for Al alloys. Electron temperatures of plasma created on different materials for short and long laser pulses were found on the base of Boltzmann plots. Temperatures are clearly higher for plasmas generated with a short laser pulse which results from much higher laser power density on the sample surface for short pulse and not from fluence which is 20-40 times larger for long pulse.

  12. Hierarchical prisoner’s dilemma in hierarchical game for resource competition

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Fujimoto, Yuma; Sagawa, Takahiro; Kaneko, Kunihiko

    2017-07-01

    Dilemmas in cooperation are one of the major concerns in game theory. In a public goods game, each individual cooperates by paying a cost or defecting without paying it, and receives a reward from the group out of the collected cost. Thus, defecting is beneficial for each individual, while cooperation is beneficial for the group. Now, groups (say, countries) consisting of individuals also play games. To study such a multi-level game, we introduce a hierarchical game in which multiple groups compete for limited resources by utilizing the collected cost in each group, where the power to appropriate resources increases with the population of the group. Analyzing this hierarchical game, we found a hierarchical prisoner’s dilemma, in which groups choose the defecting policy (say, armament) as a Nash strategy to optimize each group’s benefit, while cooperation optimizes the total benefit. On the other hand, for each individual, refusing to pay the cost (say, tax) is a Nash strategy, which turns out to be a cooperation policy for the group, thus leading to a hierarchical dilemma. Here the group reward increases with the group size. However, we find that there exists an optimal group size that maximizes the individual payoff. Furthermore, when the population asymmetry between two groups is large, the smaller group will choose a cooperation policy (say, disarmament) to avoid excessive response from the larger group, and the prisoner’s dilemma between the groups is resolved. Accordingly, the relevance of this hierarchical game on policy selection in society and the optimal size of human or animal groups are discussed.

  13. The devil lies in the details: how variations in polysaccharide fine-structure impact the physiology and evolution of gut microbes

    PubMed Central

    Martens, Eric C.; Kelly, Amelia G.; Tauzin, Alexandra S.; Brumer, Harry

    2014-01-01

    The critical importance of gastrointestinal microbes to digestion of dietary fiber in humans and other mammals has been appreciated for decades. Symbiotic microorganisms expand mammalian digestive physiology by providing an armament of diverse polysaccharide degrading enzymes, which are largely absent in mammalian genomes. By out-sourcing this aspect of digestive physiology to our gut microbes, we maximize our ability to adapt to different carbohydrate nutrients on time scales as short as several hours, due to the ability of the gut microbial community to rapidly alter its physiology from meal-to-meal. Because of their ability to pick up new traits by lateral gene transfer, our gut microbes also enable adaption over time periods as long as centuries and millennia by adjusting their gene content to reflect cultural dietary trends. Despite a vast amount of sequence-based insight into the metabolic potential of gut microbes, the specific mechanisms by which symbiotic gut microorganisms recognize and attack complex carbohydrates remain largely undefined. Here, we review the recent literature on this topic and posit that numerous, subtle variations in polysaccharides diversify the spectrum of available nutrient niches, each of which may be best filled by a subset of microorganisms that possess the corresponding proteins to recognize and degrade different carbohydrates. Understanding these relationships at precise mechanistic levels will be essential to obtain a complete understanding of the forces shaping gut microbial ecology and genomic evolution, as well as devising strategies to intentionally manipulate the composition and physiology of the gut microbial community to improve health. PMID:25026064

  14. The devil lies in the details: how variations in polysaccharide fine-structure impact the physiology and evolution of gut microbes.

    PubMed

    Martens, Eric C; Kelly, Amelia G; Tauzin, Alexandra S; Brumer, Harry

    2014-11-25

    The critical importance of gastrointestinal microbes to digestion of dietary fiber in humans and other mammals has been appreciated for decades. Symbiotic microorganisms expand mammalian digestive physiology by providing an armament of diverse polysaccharide-degrading enzymes, which are largely absent in mammalian genomes. By out-sourcing this aspect of digestive physiology to our gut microbes, we maximize our ability to adapt to different carbohydrate nutrients on timescales as short as several hours due to the ability of the gut microbial community to rapidly alter its physiology from meal to meal. Because of their ability to pick up new traits by lateral gene transfer, our gut microbes also enable adaption over time periods as long as centuries and millennia by adjusting their gene content to reflect cultural dietary trends. Despite a vast amount of sequence-based insight into the metabolic potential of gut microbes, the specific mechanisms by which symbiotic gut microorganisms recognize and attack complex carbohydrates remain largely undefined. Here, we review the recent literature on this topic and posit that numerous, subtle variations in polysaccharides diversify the spectrum of available nutrient niches, each of which may be best filled by a subset of microorganisms that possess the corresponding proteins to recognize and degrade different carbohydrates. Understanding these relationships at precise mechanistic levels will be essential to obtain a complete understanding of the forces shaping gut microbial ecology and genomic evolution, as well as devising strategies to intentionally manipulate the composition and physiology of the gut microbial community to improve health. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  15. Sexual selection predicts brain structure in dragon lizards.

    PubMed

    Hoops, D; Ullmann, J F P; Janke, A L; Vidal-Garcia, M; Stait-Gardner, T; Dwihapsari, Y; Merkling, T; Price, W S; Endler, J A; Whiting, M J; Keogh, J S

    2017-02-01

    Phenotypic traits such as ornaments and armaments are generally shaped by sexual selection, which often favours larger and more elaborate males compared to females. But can sexual selection also influence the brain? Previous studies in vertebrates report contradictory results with no consistent pattern between variation in brain structure and the strength of sexual selection. We hypothesize that sexual selection will act in a consistent way on two vertebrate brain regions that directly regulate sexual behaviour: the medial preoptic nucleus (MPON) and the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMN). The MPON regulates male reproductive behaviour whereas the VMN regulates female reproductive behaviour and is also involved in male aggression. To test our hypothesis, we used high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging combined with traditional histology of brains in 14 dragon lizard species of the genus Ctenophorus that vary in the strength of precopulatory sexual selection. Males belonging to species that experience greater sexual selection had a larger MPON and a smaller VMN. Conversely, females did not show any patterns of variation in these brain regions. As the volumes of both these regions also correlated with brain volume (BV) in our models, we tested whether they show the same pattern of evolution in response to changes in BV and found that the do. Therefore, we show that the primary brain nuclei underlying reproductive behaviour in vertebrates can evolve in a mosaic fashion, differently between males and females, likely in response to sexual selection, and that these same regions are simultaneously evolving in concert in relation to overall brain size. © 2016 European Society For Evolutionary Biology. Journal of Evolutionary Biology © 2016 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.

  16. Arms race between weevil rostrum length and camellia pericarp thickness: Geographical cline and theory.

    PubMed

    Iseki, Naoyuki; Sasaki, Akira; Toju, Hirokazu

    2011-09-21

    The geographical cline of the coevolving traits of weevil rostrum (mouthpart) length and camellia pericarp (fruit coat) thickness provides an opportunity to test the arms race theory of defense (pericarp thickness) and countermeasure (rostrum length) between antagonistically interacting species. By extending the previous model for the coevolution of quantitative traits to introduce nonlinear costs for exaggerated traits, the generation overlap, and density-dependent regulation in the host, we studied the evolutionarily stable (ES) pericarp thickness in the Japanese camellia (Camellia japonica) and the ES rostrum length in the camellia-weevil (Curculio camelliae). The joint monomorphic ES system has a robust outcome with nonlinear costs, and we analyzed how the traits of both species at evolutionary equilibrium depend on demographic parameters. If camellia demographic parameters vary latitudinally, data collected over the geographical scale of rostrum length and pericarp thickness should lie on an approximately linear curve with the slope less than that of the equiprobability line A/B of boring success, where A and B are coefficients for the logistic regression of boring success to pericarp thickness and rostrum length, respectively. This is a robust prediction as long as the cost of rostrum length is nonlinear (accelerating). As a result, boring success should be lower in populations with longer rostrum length, as reported in the weevil-camellia system (Toju, H., and Sota, T., 2006a. Imbalance of predator and prey armament: Geographic clines in phenotypic interface and natural selection. American Naturalist 167, 105-117). The nonlinearity (exponent) for the cost of rostrum length estimated from the geographical cline data for the weevil-camellia system was 2.2, suggesting nonlinearity between quadratic and cubic forms. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  17. Bank erosion of navigation canals in the western and central Gulf of Mexico

    USGS Publications Warehouse

    Thatcher, Cindy A.; Hartley, Stephen B.; Wilson, Scott A.

    2011-01-01

    Erosion of navigation canal banks is a direct cause of land loss, but there has been little quantitative analysis to determine why certain major canals exhibit faster widening rates (indicative of erosion) than others in the coastal zones of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. We hypothesize that navigation canals exhibit varying rates of erosion based on soil properties of the embankment substrate, vegetation type, geologic region (derived from digital versions of state geologic maps), and the presence or absence of canal bank armaments (that is, rock rip-rap, concrete bulkheads, or other shoreline protection structures). The first objective of this project was to map the shoreline position and substrate along both banks of the navigation canals, which were digitized from 3 different time periods of aerial photography spanning the years of 1978/79 to 2005/06. The second objective was to quantify the erosion rates of the navigation canals in the study area and to determine whether differences in erosion rates are related to embankment substrate, vegetation type, geologic region, or soil type. To measure changes in shoreline position over time, transects spaced at 50-m (164-ft) intervals were intersected with shorelines from all three time periods, and an annual rate of change was calculated for each transect. Mean annual rates of shoreline change ranged from 1.75 m/year (5.74 ft/year) on the west side of the Atchafalaya River, La., where there was shoreline advancement or canal narrowing, to -3.29 m/year (-10.79 ft/year) on the south side of the Theodore Ship Channel, Ala., where there was shoreline retreat or erosion. Statistical analysis indicated that there were significant differences in shoreline retreat rates according to geologic region and marsh vegetation type, and a weak relationship with soil organic content. This information can be used to better estimate future land loss rates associated with navigation canals and to prioritize the location of restoration and erosion mitigation efforts. Combining all canals together, our results also showed that canal erosion rates have slowed in recent years, with an average canal widening rate of -0.99 m/year (-3.25 ft/year) for the 1996/98-2005/06 time period compared to -1.71 m/year (-5.61 ft/year) for the earlier 1978/79-1996/98 time period. Future research could focus on obtaining detailed vessel traffic information for individual canals, which is likely a factor that influences canal bank erosion rates.

  18. AB028. Current status of pharmacotherapy for erectile dysfunction

    PubMed Central

    Adaikan, P Ganesan

    2016-01-01

    The advent of phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) inhibition as oral therapy has significantly revolutionized both clinical and basic research in the area of erectile dysfunction (ED). Much of this progress is due to a better understanding in the last three decades of the various pathophysiological and cellular mechanisms contributing to ED. Apart from the three available PDE5 inhibitors viz., sildenafil, tadalafil and vardenafil globally at the turn of this century, four other PDE inhibitors have joined the armament in recent time; these include avanafil, lodenafil, mirodenafil and udenafil. All seven PDE inhibitors are effective therapies for the treatment of ED in men. There is no significant difference among them with respect to efficacy, safety profile and tolerability. As such, good safety profiles have widened the horizon in patient choice, selectivity and efficacy. With the ease of oral administration and better patient compliance, other measures of the past, including intracavernosal injections and non-pharmacological treatments have been relegated to second-line therapy for most patients with ED. But, PDE inhibitors as first-line oral therapies are effective in about 75% of male patients diagnosed with ED. Intracavernous injection (IC) therapy with PGE1 (alprostadil) for about 10% patient-usage in general is a well-known effective and well tolerated treatment for men with ED. It is also recommended as a second line therapy for ED along with urethral and topical PGE1. Transurethral PGE1 is less effective compared to IC PGE1. Also the transurethral dosage options are 125 to 1,000 µg, while the IC dosage options are 5 to 40 µg. The topical PGE1 (300 µg in 100 mg of the cream) is also less effective compared to IC PGE1. Topical cream is not approved in many countries as yet. Other existing vasoactive agents such as papaverine, and alpha adrenergic blockers and their combinations and the ever increasing number of other agents in the pipeline including nitric oxide donors, guanylate cyclase activators, potassium channel openers and Rho-kinase inhibitors with the potential to overcome some limitations of the existing measures offer significant promise of clinical application in refractory and resistant cases. The TriMix preparations usually contain PGE1, papaverine and phentolamine in formulation compounded in pharmacies. Several clinical studies have also tested the efficacy of yohimbine, L-arginine, cyclic adenosine monophosphate activators, melanocortin-stimulating hormone analogs, endothelin antagonists in addition to vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and calcitonin gene related peptide with variable success rates. Trazodone, a serotonin antagonist and reuptake inhibitor was shown to improve premature ejaculation and erectile function in psychogenic cases of ED. Cloning of inducible nitric oxide synthase has opened a new era in the use of gene therapy for ED and the day for stem cells therapy and autologous penile tissue implants is not too far. Thus, ongoing research worldwide will continue to define new roles for various modalities targeted at specific sites in the erectile pathway and these advances will ultimately enable the clinicians to make the most appropriate therapeutic or other selections for individual patients including possible permanent reversal of organic ED.

  19. Anti-nuclear liberals and the bomb: A comparative history of Kampf dem Atomtod and the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy, 1957-1963

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Thiede, B.

    The premises of Kampf dem Atomtod (KdA) and Citizens for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE) were based on nineteenth century traditions of liberal peace advocacy. Both groups gained substantial public support for their goals to prevent the nuclear armament of the Bundeswehr and to stop nuclear testing. Both organizations won well-educated middle-class and mostly white supporter. The dissertation examines the role of women: whether housewife or doctor, women stressed their special concerns as mothers. Both KdA and SANE had troubled relations with the labor movement. Their leaders hoped to gain government leaders' respect by winning a respectable, non-Communist constituency andmore » claiming their goals were reasonable ones. Government officials attacked KdA and SANE as dupes of Moscow. Many supporters left the organizations because of their strict anti-Communism. Local groups accused their leaders of lacking initative. KdA and SANE's leaders wasted time and energy rehashing issues and postponing decisions. After a period of providing initiatives and ideas local committees disintegrated. Both organizations considered education their paramount goal but their arguments primarily reached the converted, who often preferred more political action. KdA and SANE's leaders instead chose to support respectable projects based on humanitarian ideals. Since these projects offered little in the way of concrete action agendas, supporters defected to more active organizations or slipped into apathy. Neither organization achieved its national goals. Both governments generally denied them access to the policymaking process, ignored them as irrelavant, or attacked them as Communist sympathizers. While SANE and KdA were heard by those concerned by nuclear policy, and while members of SANE's National Board did help muster support for the Partial Test Ban Treaty, both organizations failed to make liberal peace values productive in the nuclear decisionmaking process.« less

  20. Reactive Transport of the Uranyl Ion in Soils, Sediments, and Groundwater Systems

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Zachara, John M.; Ilton, Eugene S.; Liu, Chongxuan

    2013-05-16

    Uranium is a ubiquitous trace component in rocks ranging from 1.2 to 1.3 µg g-1 in sedimentary rocks, 2.2 to 15 µg g-1 in granites, and 20 to 120 µg g-1 in phosphates (Langmuir, 1997; Plant et al., 1999). Uranium (U) is released to natural waters in dilute concentrations (generally < 10-7 mole L-1) from the weathering of these sources, with water concentrations in uraniferous geologic terrains, such as the southwestern U.S. (USGS, 2011), being higher (~ 10-6.5 mol L-1). Elevated water-borne concentrations are associated with the weathering of natural ore bodies [~10-6 mol L-1; e.g, (Payne and Airey, 2006)],more » the extraction and mining of U for armaments (Jiang and Aschner, 2009; WHO, 2001) and nuclear fuels [10-6 to 10-3 mol L-1; (Abdelouas et al., 1999)], and the disposal of waste solids and liquids from nuclear fuels reprocessing and arms production [~ 10-6 to 10-2 mol L-1; e.g., (Wan et al., 2009; Zachara et al., 2007)]. The form of U present in natural waters at high concentration is generally the uranyl ion [e.g., UO22+] which is quite soluble. Groundwater in many parts of the world contains dissolved U originating from natural and anthropogenic sources (ATSDR, 2011; EFSA, 2009). Low levels of dissolved U in drinking water are considered a health concern, causing renal and other effects (Kurttio et al., 2002; Kurttio et al., 2005; Limson Zamora et al., 1998; Nriagu et al., 2012; Raymond-Whish et al., 2007; Selden et al., 2009). The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has established a regulatory drinking water standard of 30 µg L-1 (1.26 x 10-7 mol L-1) or 30 pCi L-1, whichever is exceeded first. The World Health Organization has recommended an even lower drinking water standard of 15 µg L-1 [6.3 x 10-8 mol L-1; (WHO, 2005)]. Human exposure to U through drinking water is expected to rise as world-wide reliance on groundwater sources increase (ESS, 2010).« less

  1. Total aortic arch replacement with the frozen elephant trunk technique: 10-year follow-up single-centre experience.

    PubMed

    Ius, Fabio; Fleissner, Felix; Pichlmaier, Maximilian; Karck, Matthias; Martens, Andreas; Haverich, Axel; Shrestha, Malakh

    2013-11-01

    Since August 2001, the frozen elephant trunk (FET) technique has been used at our institution to treat degenerative or dissecting aneurysms involving the aortic arch and descending aorta as a potential 'single-stage' procedure. The aim of this study was to review our FET experience and to present the 10-year results. Between August 2001 and January 2012, 131 patients underwent FET implant with three different prostheses: the custom-made Chavan-Haverich (n = 66), the Jotec E-vita (n = 30) and the Vascutek Thoraflex (n = 35) prostheses. Concomitant procedures included aortic valve-sparing operations (David, n = 17) and aortic root replacement (Bentall, n = 25). Patient records and the first postoperative and last available computer tomography (CT) were retrospectively reviewed. Incidence of rethoracotomy for bleeding, stroke, spinal cord injury, prolonged ventilatory support (>96 h) and acute renal failure requiring dialysis were 18, 11, 1, 41 and 16%, respectively. In-hospital mortality was 15%. The mean follow-up was 42 ± 37 (range 1-134 months). At 1, 5 and 10 years, survivals were 82 ± 3, 72 ± 5 and 58 ± 8%, respectively. Freedoms from distal aortic operation were 81 ± 4, 67 ± 5 and 43 ± 13%, respectively. Thirty-six patients underwent 40 distal aortic operations, either open surgical (n = 22, 55%) or endovascular (n = 18, 45%). Chronic aortic dissection was identified as an independent risk factor for distal aortic operation (odds ratio = 3.8; 95% confidence interval 1.5-9.3; P = 0.004). At last CT control, false-lumen thrombosis rates up to 93% were achieved around the stent graft. An FET concept adds to the armament of the surgeon in the treatment of complex and diverse aortic arch pathologies. The preoperative patient risk profile explains the postoperative morbidity and in-hospital mortality. The FET can potentially be still a 'one-stage' procedure in selected patients. However, the extension of FET to patients with extensive aortic aneurysms has led to an increase in second-stage procedures.

  2. "Platelet-associated regulatory system (PARS)" with particular reference to female reproduction.

    PubMed

    Bódis, József; Papp, Szilárd; Vermes, István; Sulyok, Endre; Tamás, Péter; Farkas, Bálint; Zámbó, Katalin; Hatzipetros, Ioannis; Kovács, Gábor L

    2014-01-01

    Blood platelets play an essential role in hemostasis, thrombosis and coagulation of blood. Beyond these classic functions their involvement in inflammatory, neoplastic and immune processes was also investigated. It is well known, that platelets have an armament of soluble molecules, factors, mediators, chemokines, cytokines and neurotransmitters in their granules, and have multiple adhesion molecules and receptors on their surface. Selected relevant literature and own views and experiences as clinical observations have been used. Considering that platelets are indispensable in numerous homeostatic endocrine functions, it is reasonable to suppose that a platelet-associated regulatory system (PARS) may exist; internal or external triggers and/or stimuli may complement and connect regulatory pathways aimed towards target tissues and/or cells. The signal (PAF, or other tissue/cell specific factors) comes from the stimulated (by the e.g., hypophyseal hormones, bacteria, external factors, etc.) organs or cells, and activates platelets. Platelet activation means their aggregation, sludge formation, furthermore the release of the for-mentioned biologically very powerful factors, which can locally amplify and deepen the tissue specific cell reactions. If this process is impaired or inhibited for any reason, the specifically stimulated organ shows hypofunction. When PARS is upregulated, organ hyperfunction may occur that culminate in severe diseases. Based on clinical and experimental evidences we propose that platelets modulate the function of hypothalamo-hypophyseal-ovarian system. Specifically, hypothalamic GnRH releases FSH from the anterior pituitary, which induces and stimulates follicular and oocyte maturation and steroid hormone secretion in the ovary. At the same time follicular cells enhance PAF production. Through these pathways activated platelets are accumulated in the follicular vessels surrounding the follicle and due to its released soluble molecules (factors, mediators, chemokines, cytokines, neurotransmitters) locally increase oocyte maturation and hormone secretion. Therefore we suggest that platelets are not only a small participant but may be the conductor or active mediator of this complex regulatory system which has several unrevealed mechanisms. In other words platelets are corpuscular messengers, or are more than a member of the family providing hemostasis.

  3. Norwegian monitoring (1990-2015) of the marine environment around the sunken nuclear submarine Komsomolets.

    PubMed

    Gwynn, Justin P; Heldal, Hilde Elise; Flo, Janita K; Sværen, Ingrid; Gäfvert, Torbjörn; Haanes, Hallvard; Føyn, Lars; Rudjord, Anne Liv

    2018-02-01

    Norway has monitored the marine environment around the sunken Russian nuclear submarine Komsomolets since 1990. This study presents an overview of 25 years of Norwegian monitoring data (1990-2015). Komsomolets sank in 1989 at a depth of 1680 m in the Norwegian Sea while carrying two nuclear torpedoes in its armament. Subsequent Soviet and Russian expeditions to Komsomolets have shown that releases from the reactor have occurred and that the submarine has suffered considerable damage to its hulls. Norwegian monitoring detected 134 Cs in surface sediments around Komsomolets in 1993 and 1994 and elevated activity concentrations of 137 Cs in bottom seawater between 1991 and 1993. Since then and up to 2015, no increased activity concentrations of radionuclides above values typical for the Norwegian Sea have been observed in any environmental sample collected by Norwegian monitoring. In 2013 and 2015, Norwegian monitoring was carried out using an acoustic transponder on the sampling gear that allowed samples to be collected at precise locations, ∼20 m from the hull of Komsomolets. The observed 238 Pu/ 239,240 Pu activity ratios and 240 Pu/ 239 Pu atom ratios in surface sediments sampled close to Komsomolets in 2013 did not indicate any releases of Pu isotopes from reactor or the torpedo warheads. Rather, these values probably reflect the overprinting of global fallout ratios with fluxes of these Pu isotopes from long-range transport of authorised discharges from nuclear reprocessing facilities in Northern Europe. However, due to the depth at which Komsomolets lies, the collection of seawater and sediment samples in the immediate area around the submarine using traditional sampling techniques from surface vessels is not possible, even with the use of acoustic transponders. Further monitoring is required in order to have a clear understanding of the current status of Komsomolets as a potential source of radioactive contamination to the Norwegian marine environment. Such monitoring should involve the use of ROVs or submersibles in order to obtain samples next to and within the different compartments of the submarine. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  4. Dermal glands in freshwater mites Limnesia undulata (O.F. Müller, 1776) and Limnesia fulgida (C.L. Koch, 1836) (Acariformes, Limnesiidae).

    PubMed

    Shatrov, Andrew B; Soldatenko, Elena V

    2016-07-01

    Dermal glands in the water mites Limnesia undulata (O.F. Müller, 1776) and Limnesia fulgida (C.L. Koch, 1836) and their secretion were studied by means of light microscopical, transmission electron microscopical (TEM) and scanning electron microscopical (SEM) methods. These mites possess two types of dermal glands - the 'common' dermal glands in a number of 14 pairs and one pair of the so-called 'idiosomal' dermal glands. The common dermal glands are bi-lobed organs and consist of high prismatic secretory cells directed to the gland mouth and mostly replacing the intra-alveolar lumen. The cells contain numerous cisterns of rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and specifically organized Golgi bodies (GB) producing electron-dense elongated secretory granules. These granules are released from the cells via apocrine secretion and come to the gland mouth, where they are sometimes accompanied by secretory cell cytoplasm. The final secretion may show a fibrous character. The idiosomal glands are sac-like organs stretched along the ventral body wall in posterior direction from the gland orifice corresponding to the epimeroglandularia 4. The secretory epithelium leaves a large intra-alveolar lumen filled with an electron-dense secretory material. Golgi bodies are organized identically with those in the common glands, which indicates the general homology of these two types of dermal glands. The glands' orifices are organized similarly in all glands and possess an internal funnel-shaped sclerite with muscle armament, an internal valve, medial epicuticular flaps and an external circular cuticular ring. All glandularia, except for E4 and V1, are accompanied with a long and thin sensitive seta. During fixation, secretion of the common dermal glands is extruded to the exterior in the form of large amounts of convoluted tube-like structures. In the living organisms, being secreted in mass from the glands, this secretion acquires the form of long rigid mostly hollow un-branched threads comparable with the similar silken threads of other water arthropods. The function of the idiosomal glands secretion still remains unknown. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  5. 7 CFR 959.48 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 959.48 Section 959.48... Regulating Handling Research and Development § 959.48 Research and development. The committee, with the... research, and development projects designed to assist, improve, or promote the marketing, distribution...

  6. 7 CFR 956.50 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Research and development. 956.50 Section 956.50... WALLA VALLEY OF SOUTHEAST WASHINGTON AND NORTHEAST OREGON Research and Development § 956.50 Research and... establishment of production research, marketing research and development, and marketing promotion projects...

  7. 7 CFR 930.48 - Research, market development and promotion.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research, market development and promotion. 930.48... Order Regulating Handling Research, Market Development and Promotion § 930.48 Research, market... establishment of production and processing research, market research and development, and/or promotional...

  8. 7 CFR 947.47 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 947.47 Section 947.47... Research and Development § 947.47 Research and development. The committee, with the approval of the Secretary, may provide for the establishment of marketing research and development projects designed to...

  9. 7 CFR 947.47 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Research and development. 947.47 Section 947.47... Research and Development § 947.47 Research and development. The committee, with the approval of the Secretary, may provide for the establishment of marketing research and development projects designed to...

  10. 7 CFR 981.41 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 981.41 Section 981.41... Regulating Handling Research § 981.41 Research and development. (a) General. The Board, with the approval of... research, marketing research and development projects, and marketing promotion including paid advertising...

  11. 7 CFR 927.47 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Research and development. 927.47 Section 927.47... WASHINGTON Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 927.47 Research and development. The Fresh... provide for the establishment of production and post-harvest research, or marketing research and...

  12. 48 CFR 31.205-48 - Research and development costs.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Research and development... Organizations 31.205-48 Research and development costs. Research and development, as used in this subsection... grant for research and development effort, the excess is unallowable under any other Government contract...

  13. 48 CFR 31.205-48 - Research and development costs.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Research and development... Organizations 31.205-48 Research and development costs. Research and development, as used in this subsection... grant for research and development effort, the excess is unallowable under any other Government contract...

  14. Alternative Fuels Data Center: Hydrogen Research and Development

    Science.gov Websites

    Research and Development to someone by E-mail Share Alternative Fuels Data Center: Hydrogen Research and Development on Facebook Tweet about Alternative Fuels Data Center: Hydrogen Research and Development on Twitter Bookmark Alternative Fuels Data Center: Hydrogen Research and Development on Google

  15. Programs for developing the pipeline of early-career geriatric mental health researchers: outcomes and implications for other fields.

    PubMed

    Bartels, Stephen J; Lebowitz, Barry D; Reynolds, Charles F; Bruce, Martha L; Halpain, Maureen; Faison, Warachal E; Kirwin, Paul D

    2010-01-01

    This report summarizes the findings and recommendations of an expert consensus workgroup that addressed the endangered pipeline of geriatric mental health (GMH) researchers. The workgroup was convened at the Summit on Challenges in Recruitment, Retention, and Career Development in Geriatric Mental Health Research in late 2007. Major identified challenges included attracting and developing early-career investigators into the field of GMH research; a shortfall of geriatric clinical providers and researchers; a disproportionate lack of minority researchers; inadequate mentoring and career development resources; and the loss of promising researchers during the vulnerable period of transition from research training to independent research funding. The field of GMH research has been at the forefront of developing successful programs that address these issues while spanning the spectrum of research career development. These programs serve as a model for other fields and disciplines. Core elements of these multicomponent programs include summer internships to foster early interest in GMH research (Summer Training on Aging Research Topics-Mental Health Program), research sponsorships aimed at recruitment into the field of geriatric psychiatry (Stepping Stones), research training institutes for early career development (Summer Research Institute in Geriatric Psychiatry), mentored intensive programs on developing and obtaining a first research grant (Advanced Research Institute in Geriatric Psychiatry), targeted development of minority researchers (Institute for Research Minority Training on Mental Health and Aging), and a Web-based clearinghouse of mentoring seminars and resources (MedEdMentoring.org). This report discusses implications of and principles for disseminating these programs, including examples of replications in fields besides GMH research.

  16. 7 CFR 955.50 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Research and development. 955.50 Section 955.50... Research and Development § 955.50 Research and development. (a) The committee, with the approval of the Secretary, may establish or provide for the establishment of production research, marketing research and...

  17. Setting a research question, aim and objective.

    PubMed

    Doody, Owen; Bailey, Maria E

    2016-03-01

    To describe the development of a research question, aim and objective. The first steps of any study are developing the research question, aim and objective. Subsequent steps develop from these and they govern the researchers' choice of population, setting, data to be collected and time period for the study. Clear, succinctly posed research questions, aims and objectives are essential if studies are to be successful. Researchers developing their research questions, aims and objectives generally experience difficulties. They are often overwhelmed trying to convert what they see as a relevant issue from practice into research. This necessitates engaging with the relevant published literature and knowledgeable people. This paper identifies the issues to be considered when developing a research question, aim and objective. Understanding these considerations will enable researchers to effectively present their research question, aim and objective. To conduct successful studies, researchers should develop clear research questions, aims and objectives.

  18. Establishment of research-oriented hospital: an important way for translational medicine development in China.

    PubMed

    Li, Meina; Zhang, Lulu

    2015-01-01

    Globally, one of the major trends is the development of translational medicine. The traditional hospital structure could not meet the demands of translational medicine development any longer and to explore a novel hospital structure is imperative. Following the times, China proposed and implemented a development strategy for a first-class modern research-oriented hospital. To establish a research-oriented hospital has become an important strategy to guide the scientific development of high-quality medical institutions and to advance translational medicine development. To facilitate translational medicine by developing research-oriented hospital, the Chinese Research Hospital Association (CRHA) has been established, which provides service of medicine, talents cultivation, scientific research and clinical teaching and covers areas of theoretical research, academic exchange, translational medicine, talents training and practice guiding. On the whole, research-oriented hospital facilitated translational medicine by developing interdisciplinary platform, training core competencies in clinical and translational research, providing financial support of translational research, and hosting journals on translational medicine, etc.

  19. 7 CFR 915.45 - Production research, marketing research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2012-01-01 2012-01-01 false Production research, marketing research and... AGRICULTURE AVOCADOS GROWN IN SOUTH FLORIDA Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 915.45 Production research, marketing research and development. The committee may, with the approval of the...

  20. 7 CFR 915.45 - Production research, marketing research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Production research, marketing research and... AGRICULTURE AVOCADOS GROWN IN SOUTH FLORIDA Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 915.45 Production research, marketing research and development. The committee may, with the approval of the...

  1. 7 CFR 915.45 - Production research, marketing research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2014-01-01 2014-01-01 false Production research, marketing research and... AGRICULTURE AVOCADOS GROWN IN SOUTH FLORIDA Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 915.45 Production research, marketing research and development. The committee may, with the approval of the...

  2. 7 CFR 915.45 - Production research, marketing research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Production research, marketing research and... AGRICULTURE AVOCADOS GROWN IN SOUTH FLORIDA Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 915.45 Production research, marketing research and development. The committee may, with the approval of the...

  3. 7 CFR 915.45 - Production research, marketing research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Production research, marketing research and... AGRICULTURE AVOCADOS GROWN IN SOUTH FLORIDA Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 915.45 Production research, marketing research and development. The committee may, with the approval of the...

  4. 7 CFR 906.37 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Research and development. 906.37 Section 906.37... LOWER RIO GRANDE VALLEY IN TEXAS Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 906.37 Research... establishment of marketing research and development projects, including paid advertising, designed to assist...

  5. 7 CFR 948.35 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Research and development. 948.35 Section 948.35... Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 948.35 Research and development. The committee, with the approval of the Secretary, may provide for the establishment of marketing research and...

  6. 7 CFR 959.48 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Research and development. 959.48 Section 959.48... Regulating Handling Research and Development § 959.48 Research and development. The committee, with the approval of the Secretary, may establish or provide for the establishment of production research, marketing...

  7. Research and development of optical measurement techniques for aerospace propulsion research: A NASA Lewis Research Center perspective

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Lesco, Daniel J.

    1991-01-01

    The applied research effort required to develop new nonintrusive measurement techniques capable of obtaining the data required by aerospace propulsion researchers and of operating in the harsh environments encountered in research and test facilities is discussed and illustrated through several ongoing projects at NASA's Lewis Research Center. Factors including length of development time, funding levels, and collaborative support from fluid-thermal researchers are cited. Progress in developing new instrumentation via a multi-path approach, including NASA research, grant, and government-sponsored research through mechanisms like the Small Business Innovative Research program, is also described.

  8. Challenges of Research and Human Capital Development in Nigeria

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Chikwe, Christian K.; Ogidi, Reuben C.; Nwachukwu, K.

    2015-01-01

    The paper discussed the challenges of research and human capital development in Nigeria. Research and human capital development are critical to the development of any nation. Research facilitates human capital development. A high rating in human capital development indices places a country among the leading countries of the world. The paper…

  9. 7 CFR 948.35 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 948.35 Section 948.35... Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 948.35 Research and development. The committee... development projects designed to assist, improve, or promote the marketing, distribution, and consumption of...

  10. 7 CFR 925.45 - Production research and market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Production research and market research and... AGRICULTURE GRAPES GROWN IN A DESIGNATED AREA OF SOUTHEASTERN CALIFORNIA Research and Market Development § 925.45 Production research and market research and development. The committee, with the approval of the...

  11. 7 CFR 917.39 - Production research, market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2012-01-01 2012-01-01 false Production research, market research and development... AGRICULTURE FRESH PEARS AND PEACHES GROWN IN CALIFORNIA Order Regulating Handling Research § 917.39 Production research, market research and development. The committees, with the approval of the Secretary, may...

  12. 7 CFR 925.45 - Production research and market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2012-01-01 2012-01-01 false Production research and market research and... AGRICULTURE GRAPES GROWN IN A DESIGNATED AREA OF SOUTHEASTERN CALIFORNIA Research and Market Development § 925.45 Production research and market research and development. The committee, with the approval of the...

  13. 7 CFR 917.39 - Production research, market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Production research, market research and development... AGRICULTURE FRESH PEARS AND PEACHES GROWN IN CALIFORNIA Order Regulating Handling Research § 917.39 Production research, market research and development. The committees, with the approval of the Secretary, may...

  14. 7 CFR 925.45 - Production research and market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Production research and market research and... AGRICULTURE GRAPES GROWN IN A DESIGNATED AREA OF SOUTHEASTERN CALIFORNIA Research and Market Development § 925.45 Production research and market research and development. The committee, with the approval of the...

  15. 7 CFR 925.45 - Production research and market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Production research and market research and... AGRICULTURE GRAPES GROWN IN A DESIGNATED AREA OF SOUTHEASTERN CALIFORNIA Research and Market Development § 925.45 Production research and market research and development. The committee, with the approval of the...

  16. 7 CFR 917.39 - Production research, market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2014-01-01 2014-01-01 false Production research, market research and development... AGRICULTURE FRESH PEARS AND PEACHES GROWN IN CALIFORNIA Order Regulating Handling Research § 917.39 Production research, market research and development. The committees, with the approval of the Secretary, may...

  17. 7 CFR 925.45 - Production research and market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2014-01-01 2014-01-01 false Production research and market research and... AGRICULTURE GRAPES GROWN IN A DESIGNATED AREA OF SOUTHEASTERN CALIFORNIA Research and Market Development § 925.45 Production research and market research and development. The committee, with the approval of the...

  18. 7 CFR 917.39 - Production research, market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Production research, market research and development... AGRICULTURE FRESH PEARS AND PEACHES GROWN IN CALIFORNIA Order Regulating Handling Research § 917.39 Production research, market research and development. The committees, with the approval of the Secretary, may...

  19. 7 CFR 917.39 - Production research, market research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Production research, market research and development... AGRICULTURE FRESH PEARS AND PEACHES GROWN IN CALIFORNIA Order Regulating Handling Research § 917.39 Production research, market research and development. The committees, with the approval of the Secretary, may...

  20. Development of Mathematics Learning Strategy Module, Based on Higher Order Thinking Skill (Hots) To Improve Mathematic Communication And Self Efficacy On Students Mathematics Department

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Andriani, Ade; Dewi, Izwita; Halomoan, Budi

    2018-03-01

    In general, this research is conducted to improve the quality of lectures on mathematics learning strategy in Mathematics Department. The specific objective of this research is to develop learning instrument of mathematics learning strategy based on Higher Order Thinking Skill (HOTS) that can be used to improve mathematical communication and self efficacy of mathematics education students. The type of research is development research (Research & Development), where this research aims to develop a new product or improve the product that has been made. This development research refers to the four-D Model, which consists of four stages: defining, designing, developing, and disseminating. The instrument of this research is the validation sheet and the student response sheet of the instrument.

  1. Towards Sustainable Research Capacity Development and Research Ownership for Academic Institutes in Developing Countries: The Malawian Research Support Centre Model

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Gomo, Exnevia; Kalilani, Linda; Mwapasa, Victor; Trigu, Chifundo; Phiri, Kamija; Schmidt, Joann; van Hensbroek, Michael Boele

    2011-01-01

    In lesser-developed African countries, the lack of institutionalised support for research, combined with limited career opportunities and poor remuneration, have contributed to weak research infrastructure and capacity, and a continuing brain drain to developed countries. Malawi's Research Support Centre (RSC) model is novel in that it provides a…

  2. Peer Assisted Study Sessions for Research Trainees

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Cusick, Anne; Camer, Danielle; Stamenkovic, Alexander; Zaccagnini, Melissa

    2015-01-01

    Research training should facilitate effective researcher role development. While researcher roles require the performance of specialised knowledge and skill, they also require development of personal research identities within social contexts. Interaction with research peers can provide opportunities for reflective role development. Ad-hoc…

  3. 7 CFR 927.47 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 927.47 Section 927.47... WASHINGTON Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 927.47 Research and development. The Fresh... development projects designed to assist, improve, or promote the marketing, distribution, and consumption of...

  4. 27 CFR 25.196 - Removals for research, development or testing.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-04-01

    ... beer removed for research, development, or testing in daily records under § 25.292 and on the Brewer's... 27 Alcohol, Tobacco Products and Firearms 1 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Removals for research... Analysis, Research, Development Or Testing § 25.196 Removals for research, development or testing. (a) A...

  5. 27 CFR 25.196 - Removals for research, development or testing.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-04-01

    ... beer removed for research, development, or testing in daily records under § 25.292 and on the Brewer's... 27 Alcohol, Tobacco Products and Firearms 1 2011-04-01 2011-04-01 false Removals for research... Analysis, Research, Development Or Testing § 25.196 Removals for research, development or testing. (a) A...

  6. The Association of Polar Early Career Scientists (APECS): A Model for the Professional Development of Scientists (Invited)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Baeseman, J. L.; Apecs Leadership Team

    2010-12-01

    Efforts like the International Polar Year 2007-2008 (IPY) have helped to increase research efforts as well as enhancing the integration of education and outreach into research projects and developing the next generation of researchers. One of the major legacies of the IPY was the creation of the Association of Polar Early Career Scientists (APECS), which was developed in 2006 by young researchers and focuses on helping each other develop the skills needed for successful careers in research by working with senior mentors. APECS is an international and interdisciplinary organization of over 2000 early career researchers and educators with interests in the Polar Regions and the wider cryosphere from 45 countries. APECS aims to stimulate interdisciplinary and international research collaborations, and develop effective future leaders in polar research, education and outreach. This is achieved by - Facilitating international and interdisciplinary networking opportunities to share ideas and experiences and to develop new research directions and collaborations, - Providing opportunities for professional career development for both academic and alternative research professions, and - Promoting education and outreach as an integral component of polar research and to stimulate future generations of polar researchers. Since its inception, APECS has strived to develop a strong network of partnerships with senior international organizations and scientific bodies to provide career development opportunities for young researchers. These partnerships have led to early-career representation on science planning bodies at an international level, the mandate of early career researchers serving as co-chairs at science conferences, the development of a mentorship program, field schools and techniques workshops, mentor panel discussions at conferences and increased funding for young researchers to attend conferences. APECS has also worked with an international teachers network to develop “Polar Science and Global Climate: An International Resource Guide for Teachers and Researchers” which includes tips and tricks for scientists in communicating their research effectively. Because of its international membership, APECS used the internet as an effective tool to develop skills through a career development webinar series, literature discussion forum, and a virtual poster session where researchers can continue to present their research long after a conference poster session ends. These programs not only serve as ways for young researchers to develop their research, they also serve to provide leadership training to the many individuals who plan these activities and creates a strong sense of community across disciplinary and national boarders. The tools APECS has developed can be used to train the next generation of researchers in any field. But perhaps what is more important are the lessons learned from nurturing the organization to create a strong community of early career and senior researchers helping and motivating each other to improve and stay connected to research careers. This presentation will demonstrate how a young researcher driven effort can become an important and crucial component of any field of research on both the national and international level.

  7. 7 CFR 929.45 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Research and development. 929.45 Section 929.45... LONG ISLAND IN THE STATE OF NEW YORK Order Regulating Handling Research § 929.45 Research and... establishment of production research, marketing research, and market development projects, including paid...

  8. 32 CFR 555.6 - Authority.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... OF ENGINEERS, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, LABORATORY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT AND TESTS, WORK FOR OTHERS § 555.6 Authority. The following delegations of authority to perform research and development and tests apply. (a) Major Corps of Engineers Research and Development Laboratories. The major Corps of...

  9. 77 FR 29848 - Order of Succession for the Office of Policy Development and Research

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-05-18

    ... Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research is not available to exercise the powers or perform... officials within the Office of Policy Development and Research are hereby designated to exercise the powers... Policy Development and Research AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and...

  10. 77 FR 64952 - Proposed Information Collection; Comment Request; State Government Research and Development (R&D...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-10-24

    ... Government Research and Development (R&D) Survey AGENCY: U.S. Census Bureau. ACTION: Notice. SUMMARY: The... and Development Survey (SGRD) to measure research and development supported and performed by state... legislative mandate, the NSF sponsored surveys of research and development since 1953, including since 2006...

  11. Critical Issues in Research Design in Action Research in an SME Development Context

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    McGrath, Helen; O'Toole, Thomas

    2012-01-01

    Purpose: The main aim of this paper is to develop guidelines on the critical issues to consider in research design in an action research (AR) environment for SME network capability development. Design/methodology/approach: The issues in research design for AR studies are developed from the authors' experience in running learning sets but, in…

  12. 75 FR 55360 - Networking and Information Technology Research and Development (NITRD) Program: Draft NITRD 2010...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-09-10

    ... NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION Networking and Information Technology Research and Development (NITRD... Information Technology Research and Development (NITRD). ACTION: Notice, request for public comment. FOR..., the National Coordination Office for Networking and Information Technology Research and Development...

  13. 77 FR 42298 - Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-07-18

    ... DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Biomass Research and Development...: Notice of Solicitation of Nominations for Appointment as a Member of the Biomass Research and Development... Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee (Technical Advisory Committee). DATES: The...

  14. 75 FR 74026 - Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-11-30

    ... DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee AGENCY.... SUMMARY: This notice announces an open meeting of the Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory... participation. This notice announces the meeting of the Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory...

  15. 48 CFR 235.070-1 - Indemnification under research and development contracts.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... research and development contracts. 235.070-1 Section 235.070-1 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM, DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE SPECIAL CATEGORIES OF CONTRACTING RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING 235.070-1 Indemnification under research and development contracts. (a...

  16. Developing a research and development strategy for primary care.

    PubMed Central

    Harris, A

    1993-01-01

    General practice research has been a minority activity and underfunded in the past. The creation of the purchaser and provider split, the introduction of medical audit, and the new research and development strategy for the NHS provide an opportunity to focus research on the health needs of the population. FHSAs, with the regional health authority, should develop a local strategy for research and development and appoint a lead officer, who may be the medical adviser. When negotiating contracts FHSAs need to back up their arguments with research evidence. NHS development research should cover quality, distribution, accessibility, outcome, and effectiveness. FHSAs should play a part in disseminating knowledge in the interests of achieving an effective and high quality service. GPs should be encouraged to participate in research by relaxing the regulations of compulsory hours of patient service and by creating a practice development allowance. Images p191-a PMID:8443486

  17. Strengthening research capacity through the medical education partnership initiative: the Mozambique experience

    PubMed Central

    2013-01-01

    Background Since Mozambique’s independence, the major emphasis of its higher educational institutions has been on didactic education. Because of fiscal and human resource constraints, basic and applied research activities have been relatively modest in scope, and priorities have often been set primarily by external collaborators. These factors have compromised the scope and the relevance of locally conducted research and have limited the impact of Mozambique’s universities as major catalysts for national development. Case description We developed a multi-institutional partnership to undertake a comprehensive analysis of the research environment at Mozambique’s major public universities to identify factors that have served as barriers to the development of a robust research enterprise. Based on this analysis, we developed a multifaceted plan to reduce the impact of these barriers and to enhance research capacity within Mozambique. Interventions On the basis of our needs assessment, we have implemented a number of major initiatives within participating institutions to facilitate basic and applied research activities. These have included specialized training programmes, a reorganization of the research administration infrastructure, the development of multiple collaborative research projects that have emphasized local research priorities and a substantial investment in bioinformatics. We have established a research support centre that provides grant development and management services to Mozambique’s public universities and have developed an independent Institutional Review Board for the review of research involving human research subjects. Multiple research projects involving both communicable and non-communicable diseases have been developed and substantial external research support has been obtained to undertake these projects. A sizable investment in biomedical informatics has enhanced both connectivity and access to digital reference material. Active engagement with relevant entities within the Government of Mozambique has aligned institutional development with national priorities. Conclusions Although multiple challenges remain, over the past 3 years significant progress has been made towards establishing conditions within which a broad range of basic, translational and clinical and public health research can be undertaken. Ongoing development of this research enterprise will enhance capacity to address critical locally relevant research questions and will leverage resources to accelerate the development of Mozambique’s national universities. PMID:24304706

  18. The West African Health Organization's experience in improving the health research environment in the ECOWAS region.

    PubMed

    Aidam, Jude; Sombié, Issiaka

    2016-04-20

    The West African Health Organization (WAHO) implemented a research development program in West Africa during 2009-2013 using the Knowledge for Better Health Research Capacity Development Framework, developed by Pang et al. (Bull World Health Organ 81(11):815-820, 2003), on strategies used to improve the research environment. The framework has the following components: stewardship, financing, sustainable resourcing and research utilization. This paper describes how WAHO implemented this research development program in the West African region to help improve the research environment and lessons learnt. This is a retrospective review of the regional research development program using a triangulation of activity reports, an independent evaluation and the authors' experiences with stakeholders. This program was designed to address gaps along the components of the framework and to improve partnership. The activities, results and challenges are summarised for each component of the framework. The independent evaluation was conducted using over 180 semi-structured interviews of key stakeholders in the West African region and activity reports. WAHO and major stakeholders validated these findings during a regional meeting. All 15 ECOWAS countries benefited from this regional research development program. WAHO provided technical and financial support to eight countries to develop their policies, priorities and plans for research development to improve their research governance. WAHO, along with other technical and financial partners, organised many capacity-strengthening trainings in health systems research methodology, resource mobilization, ethical oversight and on HRWeb, a research information management platform. WAHO helped launch a regional network of health research institutions to improve collaboration between regional participating institutions. Further, WAHO developed strategic research partnerships and mobilised additional funding to support the program. The program supported 24 health research projects. High staff turnover, weak institutional capacities and ineffective collaboration were some of the challenges encountered during program activity implementation. The regional collaborative approach to health research development using this framework was effective given the challenges in the West African region. The achievements particularly with improved research partnerships and funding helped strengthen local health research environments. This highlights WAHO's role and the common experiences in the West African region in improving health research.

  19. 7 CFR 993.37 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 993.37 Section 993.37... CALIFORNIA Order Regulating Handling Prune Marketing Committee § 993.37 Research and development. The... research and development projects designed to assist, improve, or promote the marketing, distribution, and...

  20. 7 CFR 929.45 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 929.45 Section 929.45... development. (a) The committee, with the approval of the Secretary, may establish or provide for the establishment of production research, marketing research, and market development projects, including paid...

  1. 40 CFR 270.65 - Research, development, and demonstration permits.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... 40 Protection of Environment 28 2012-07-01 2012-07-01 false Research, development, and... Special Forms of Permits § 270.65 Research, development, and demonstration permits. (a) The Administrator may issue a research, development, and demonstration permit for any hazardous waste treatment facility...

  2. 40 CFR 270.65 - Research, development, and demonstration permits.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ... 40 Protection of Environment 28 2013-07-01 2013-07-01 false Research, development, and... Special Forms of Permits § 270.65 Research, development, and demonstration permits. (a) The Administrator may issue a research, development, and demonstration permit for any hazardous waste treatment facility...

  3. 78 FR 46331 - Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-07-31

    ... DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee AGENCY: Energy... Energy is soliciting nominations for candidates to fill vacancies on the Biomass Research and Development... INFORMATION: The Biomass Research and Development Act of 2000 (Biomass Act) [Pub. L. 106-224] requires...

  4. 48 CFR 35.004 - Publicizing requirements and expanding research and development sources.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... and expanding research and development sources. 35.004 Section 35.004 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION SPECIAL CATEGORIES OF CONTRACTING RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING 35.004 Publicizing requirements and expanding research and development sources. (a) In order to...

  5. 7 CFR 993.37 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... CALIFORNIA Order Regulating Handling Prune Marketing Committee § 993.37 Research and development. The... research and development projects designed to assist, improve, or promote the marketing, distribution, and... 7 Agriculture 8 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Research and development. 993.37 Section 993.37...

  6. 77 FR 14462 - Research, Engineering and Development Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-03-09

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Aviation Administration Research, Engineering and Development....S.C. App. 2), notice is hereby given of a meeting of the FAA Research, Engineering and Development.... Name: Research, Engineering & Development Advisory Committee. Time and Date: April 18, 2012--9:30 a.m...

  7. 75 FR 48411 - Research, Engineering and Development Advisory Committee; Notice of Meeting

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-08-10

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Aviation Administration Research, Engineering and Development.... 2), notice is hereby given of a meeting of the FAA Research, Engineering and Development (R, E&D) Advisory Committee. Name: Research, Engineering & Development Advisory Committee. Time and Date: September...

  8. 76 FR 44648 - Research, Engineering and Development Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-07-26

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Aviation Administration Research, Engineering and Development....S.C. App. 2), notice is hereby given of a meeting of the FAA Research, Engineering and Development.... Name: Research, Engineering & Development Advisory Committee. Time and Date: September 21, 2011--9 a.m...

  9. 78 FR 16357 - Research, Engineering and Development Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-03-14

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Aviation Administration Research, Engineering and Development... hereby given of a meeting of the FAA Research, Engineering and Development (R,E&D) Advisory Committee. Name: Research, Engineering & Development Advisory Committee. Time and Date: April 24--8:30 a.m. to 4...

  10. 48 CFR 335.071 - Special determinations and findings affecting research and development contracting.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... findings affecting research and development contracting. 335.071 Section 335.071 Federal Acquisition Regulations System HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES SPECIAL CATEGORIES OF CONTRACTING RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING 335.071 Special determinations and findings affecting research and development contracting. OPDIV...

  11. Redefining Professional Development. Newsletter

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Center for Comprehensive School Reform and Improvement, 2006

    2006-01-01

    The research on effective professional development is consistent across many studies. Researchers Willis Hawley and Linda Valli (Westchester Institute for Human Services Research, n.d.), in their synthesis of the professional development literature, find that high-quality teacher development is as follows: (1) Informed by research on teaching and…

  12. 78 FR 51713 - Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program, Scientific Advisory Board; Notice of...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-08-21

    ... DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Office of the Secretary Strategic Environmental Research and Development... Environmental Research and Development Program, Scientific Advisory Board (SAB). This notice is published in... meeting is to review new start research and development projects requesting Strategic Environmental...

  13. Harnessing collaboration to build nursing research capacity: a research team journey.

    PubMed

    Priest, Helena; Segrott, Jeremy; Green, Barbara; Rout, Amelia

    2007-08-01

    This paper discusses a qualitative evaluation study, designed to explore nursing lecturers' research capability development through their engagement as co-researchers in a larger case study project (referred to as the 'main project'). It explores the justification for supporting research capacity development using this collaborative approach, the process and experience of undertaking collaborative research, and the effectiveness of this model of collaboration in developing new researchers. The paper also makes connections between the process of undertaking the research (designed to offer opportunities for inexperienced researchers to be involved) and the main project findings (which explored the ways in which academic schools develop research capacity). We first set the main project in its wider context and map key issues relating to research capacity development and collaboration in the literature, before outlining how we involved neophyte and 'midiphyte' researchers. The evaluative study, which is the focus of this paper, discusses the experiences of the neophyte researchers, and explores the synergies between the main project's key findings and the process of undertaking it. We conclude with some principles for using collaboration to build research capacity, visualised through a conceptual model. While this project was located within two universities in the UK, the development of research skills amongst nurses is likely to have broad international relevance. NB1 References to 'nursing', 'nursing research', and 'nursing education' are taken throughout to apply equally to midwifery, midwifery research, and midwifery education. NB2 For the purpose of this project, neophyte researchers are defined as staff needing formal training in research and involvement in others' research, and 'midiphyte' researchers as those with some training but needing support to develop research ideas.

  14. Employing Design and Development Research (DDR): Approaches in the Design and Development of Online Arabic Vocabulary Learning Games Prototype

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Sahrir, Muhammad Sabri; Alias, Nor Aziah; Ismail, Zawawi; Osman, Nurulhuda

    2012-01-01

    The design and development research, first proposed by Brown and Collins in the 1990s, is currently among the well-known methods in educational research to test theory and validate its practicality. The method is also known as developmental research, design research, design-based research, formative research and design-cased and possesses…

  15. Strengthening research governance for sustainable research: experiences from three Zimbabwean universities.

    PubMed

    Mashaah, Thokozile; Hakim, James; Chidzonga, Midion; Kangwende, Rugare A; Naik, Yogeshkumar; Federspiel, Nancy; Fiorillo, Suzanne; Scott, Jim; Gomo, Exnevia

    2014-08-01

    A robust research system requires a robust governance framework. As part of the Medical Education Partnership Initiative, three Zimbabwean universities partnered with two U.S. universities in a project to strengthen research governance in the Zimbabwean universities. The project aimed at (1) developing research policies, (2) strengthening central research management offices, (3) developing a research administration curriculum, and (4) enhancing awareness about the role and relevance of research administration in other universities and research institutions in Zimbabwe. Through the efforts of the partners, a generic research policy was developed and successfully adapted by the institutions. A curriculum was drafted, and module development experts are helping to finalize the curriculum to meet university requirements for accreditation of training research administrators. The Association of Research Managers of Zimbabwe was established to promote information sharing and professionalize research administration. The consortium approach enabled rapid and smooth development and adoption of research policies in the institutions. It also helped researchers and managers accept research administration as an essential structure and function. The experiences and lessons learned are reported here to benefit other institutions and consortia.

  16. Strengthening Research Governance for Sustainable Research: Experiences from Three Zimbabwean Universities

    PubMed Central

    Mashaah, Thokozile; Hakim, James; Chidzonga, Midion; Kangwende, Rugare A.; Naik, Yogeshkumar; Federspiel, Nancy; Fiorillo, Suzanne; Scott, Jim; Gomo, Exnevia

    2014-01-01

    A robust research system requires a robust governance framework. As part of the Medical Education Partnership Initiative, three Zimbabwean universities partnered with two US universities in a project to strengthen research governance in the Zimbabwean universities. The project aimed at (1) developing research policies; (2) strengthening central research management offices; (3) developing a research administration curriculum; and (4) enhancing awareness about the role and relevance of research administration in other universities and research institutions in Zimbabwe. Through the efforts of the partners, a generic research policy was developed and successfully adapted by the institutions. A curriculum was drafted, and module development experts are helping to finalize the curriculum to meet university requirements for accreditation of training research administrators. The Association of Research Managers of Zimbabwe was established to promote information sharing and professionalize research administration. The consortium approach enabled rapid and smooth development and adoption of research policies in the institutions. It also helped researchers and managers accept research administration as an essential structure and function. The experiences and lessons learned are reported here to benefit other institutions and consortia. PMID:25072583

  17. Human Research Program Science Management: Overview of Research and Development Activities

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Charles, John B.

    2007-01-01

    An overview of research and development activities of NASA's Human Research Science Management Program is presented. The topics include: 1) Human Research Program Goals; 2) Elements and Projects within HRP; 3) Development and Maintenance of Priorities; 4) Acquisition and Evaluation of Research and Technology Proposals; and 5) Annual Reviews

  18. Report of the Research Secretariat on Social Services and Community Development.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    National Council of La Raza, Washington, DC.

    The Research Secretariat on Social Services and Community Development was one of the five Hispanic research task forces funded by the Ford Foundation to determine Hispanic research priorities. Its three major purposes were the following: (1) to develop an Hispanic research and policy agenda which recommends research activities and prioritizes…

  19. MIT Lincoln Laboratory Annual Report 2010

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2010-01-01

    Research and Development Center (FFRDC) and a DoD Research and Development Laboratory. The Laboratory conducts research and development pertinent to...year, the Laboratory restruc- tured three divisions to focus research and development in areas that are increasingly important to the nation...the Director 3 Collaborations with MIT campus continue to grow, leveraging the strengths of researchers at both the Laboratory and campus. The

  20. Use of health information technology to advance evidence-based care: lessons from the VA QUERI program.

    PubMed

    Hynes, Denise M; Weddle, Timothy; Smith, Nina; Whittier, Erika; Atkins, David; Francis, Joseph

    2010-01-01

    As the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Health Services Research and Development Service's Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI) has progressed, health information technology (HIT) has occupied a crucial role in implementation research projects. We evaluated the role of HIT in VA QUERI implementation research, including HIT use and development, the contributions implementation research has made to HIT development, and HIT-related barriers and facilitators to implementation research. Key informants from nine disease-specific QUERI Centers. Documentation analysis of 86 implementation project abstracts followed up by semi-structured interviews with key informants from each of the nine QUERI centers. We used qualitative and descriptive analyses. We found: (1) HIT provided data and information to facilitate implementation research, (2) implementation research helped to further HIT development in a variety of uses including the development of clinical decision support systems (23 of 86 implementation research projects), and (3) common HIT barriers to implementation research existed but could be overcome by collaborations with clinical and administrative leadership. Our review of the implementation research progress in the VA revealed interdependency on an HIT infrastructure and research-based development. Collaboration with multiple stakeholders is a key factor in successful use and development of HIT in implementation research efforts and in advancing evidence-based practice.

  1. Development of the Learning Health System Researcher Core Competencies.

    PubMed

    Forrest, Christopher B; Chesley, Francis D; Tregear, Michelle L; Mistry, Kamila B

    2017-08-04

    To develop core competencies for learning health system (LHS) researchers to guide the development of training programs. Data were obtained from literature review, expert interviews, a modified Delphi process, and consensus development meetings. The competencies were developed from August to December 2016 using qualitative methods. The literature review formed the basis for the initial draft of a competency domain framework. Key informant semi-structured interviews, a modified Delphi survey, and three expert panel (n = 19 members) consensus development meetings produced the final set of competencies. The iterative development process yielded seven competency domains: (1) systems science; (2) research questions and standards of scientific evidence; (3) research methods; (4) informatics; (5) ethics of research and implementation in health systems; (6) improvement and implementation science; and (7) engagement, leadership, and research management. A total of 33 core competencies were prioritized across these seven domains. The real-world milieu of LHS research, the embeddedness of the researcher within the health system, and engagement of stakeholders are distinguishing characteristics of this emerging field. The LHS researcher core competencies can be used to guide the development of learning objectives, evaluation methods, and curricula for training programs. © Health Research and Educational Trust.

  2. Driving towards an improved research and development culture.

    PubMed

    McNicholl, Mary P; Coates, Vivien; Dunne, Kathleen

    2008-04-01

    This study examined the research and development culture and capacity within one NHS Trust in Northern Ireland. Strengths and challenges were identified and opportunities for further research and development expansion were sought. This is a two-stage project incorporating a baseline survey (n = 379) followed by consultation with key stakeholders across the Trust (n = 11). In the survey, over half of the respondents (n = 194) stated they had participated in a research project and a significant number (n = 313) read health care journals. Identification of barriers to research resulted in findings similar to other published work. Staff responded positively about using research in practice (n = 328) and that practice should be influenced by research (n = 312). Nurse Managers indicated support for research and development activity. The study provides a starting point from which to develop a positive research and development culture within this Trust. After establishing a baseline of research and development activity across a large acute Trust, the strengths and weaknesses of such activity were identified with a view to informing a strategy to develop this aspect of professional activity. A change in an organizational culture cannot be made without full support of both the clinicians and their managers.

  3. [Diagnosis of the productive capacity of the IMSS regarding health technologies].

    PubMed

    Figueroa-Lara, Alejandro; López-Fernández, Fátima Itzel; López-Domínguez, Adriana; Fajardo-Dolci, German

    To quantify the production capacity and performance in research and technological developments of the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS). We identified and analyzed information of the legislation, human and financial resources, and infrastructure addressed for research and technological development of IMSS. We analyzed whether the information on the legal framework contained key features to boost research and technological development. Information on the human, financial, and infrastructure resources were obtained from official sources. The research productivity was identified by a bibliometric analysis in 2014; productivity in technological developments was identified by intellectual products. The legal framework of the IMSS has several areas for improvement to boost research and technological development, especially the guidelines for technology transfer. The IMSS has 438 researchers, 39 research units, and a budget of US$ 37.4 million for research and technological development. The rate of articles published per 10 researchers was 4.8; while rate patients was 1.8. The IMSS has a great potential to translate research into technological developments, it is only necessary to make some changes to the legal framework.

  4. 7 CFR 984.46 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 984.46 Section 984.46... Regulating Handling Administrative Body § 984.46 Research and development. The Board, with the approval of... research and development projects, and marketing promotion, including paid advertising, designed to assist...

  5. 7 CFR 924.45 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 924.45 Section 924.45... and development. The committee, with the approval of the Secretary, may establish or provide for the establishment of production research, and marketing research and development projects designed to assist...

  6. 75 FR 14243 - Research, Engineering And Development Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-03-24

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Aviation Administration Research, Engineering And Development....S.C. App. 2), notice is hereby given of a meeting of the FAA Research, Engineering and Development...: Research, Engineering & Development Advisory Committee. Time and Date: April 21, 2010--9 a.m. to 5 p.m...

  7. 77 FR 54648 - Research, Engineering and Development Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-09-05

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Aviation Administration Research, Engineering and Development....S.C. App. 2), notice is hereby given of a meeting of the FAA Research, Engineering and Development...: Research, Engineering & Development Advisory Committee. TIME AND DATE: September 26, 2012--9 a.m. to 4 p.m...

  8. Key Considerations in Organizing and Structuring University Research

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Nguyen, T. L. Huong; Meek, Vincent Lynn

    2015-01-01

    University research capacity building has now become an increasingly important task in both developed and less developed countries. In this capacity building endeavour, research late-developer universities in particular need to develop a sound research organizational structure. However, what elements are needed in organizing and structuring…

  9. 48 CFR 46.308 - Cost-reimbursement research and development contracts.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... research and development contracts. 46.308 Section 46.308 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL... research and development contracts. The contracting officer shall insert the clause at 52.246-8, Inspection of Research and Development—Cost-Reimbursement, in solicitations and contracts for research and...

  10. 7 CFR 905.54 - Marketing, research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Marketing, research and development. 905.54 Section... Marketing, research and development. The committee may, with the approval of the Secretary, establish, or provide for the establishment of, projects including production research, marketing research and...

  11. 75 FR 3542 - Rehabilitation Research and Development Service Scientific Merit Review Board; Notice of Meeting

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-01-21

    ... unwarranted invasion of personal privacy. Disclosure would also reveal research proposals and research... DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS Rehabilitation Research and Development Service Scientific Merit... (Federal Advisory Committee Act) that the Rehabilitation Research and Development Service Scientific Merit...

  12. 48 CFR 46.308 - Cost-reimbursement research and development contracts.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... research and development contracts. 46.308 Section 46.308 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL... research and development contracts. The contracting officer shall insert the clause at 52.246-8, Inspection of Research and Development—Cost-Reimbursement, in solicitations and contracts for research and...

  13. A new approach to health research in Canada's North.

    PubMed

    Chatwood, Susan; Young, Kue

    2010-01-01

    Over the past four years, despite low resource allocations to the North, northern residents and community organizations have taken significant initiatives towards the development of health research. In this commentary, we present a model for the development of northern health research based on our experiences in establishing the Institute for Circumpolar Health Research (ICHR) in the Northwest Territories. It is hoped that the lessons we have learned will inform decision-makers and encourage them to make strategic investments to support further health research capacity and institutional development within the North. Factors that have enabled the development of a health research institute in the North include leadership, a vision for health research, and the engagement of key partners and stakeholders. Challenges arise in the development of appropriate governance and policy for health research. There is an urgency to target resources to support the development of policies and governance for health research in northern jurisdictions. Both academic and community-based research need to be strengthened.

  14. [Tadeusz Tucholski (1898-1940). A contribution to the scientific biography].

    PubMed

    Tucholska-Załuska, Hanna

    2014-01-01

    Assistant professor Tadeusz Tucholski Ph.D., murdered in Katyń, was one of the most outstanding representatives of the younger generation of Polish physical chemist scholars of the interwar period. He published over 30 scientific papers in the field of physical and chemical properties of explosions, kinetics and catalysis and also toxicology and forensics. Thesere searches were partly performed at the University of Poznań, in the period 1926-1939, at the Faculty of Medicine of the Department of Physics where Tucholski was employed as a senior assistant and was the closest associate of professor S. Kalandyk, partly at the Department of Forensic Medicine headed by professor S. Horoszkiewicz in the chemical-toxicological laboratory which Tucholski ranin the years 1931-1939, partly at the Warsaw University of Technology in the Department of Explosives Technology of the Faculty of Chemistry headed by professor T. Urbański, where he had been lecturing "On the latest theories of explosives" since 1937 and in 1934-35 in Cambridge, as a teaching fellow of the National Culture Fund, in Colloid Science Laboratory headed by professor E.K. Rideal. In 1903 Tucholski moved with his parents to Zabaykalye, in 1911--to Brazil. He returned to Poland in 1920, joined the Polish Army and with the 14th Polish Medium Regiment fought on the fronts of the Polish-Bolshevik War. He was drafted to the School of Pyrotechnics Foremen at Corps District Command number VII (Poznań). After graduating, Tucholski remained on active duty as a professional pyrotechnic: from 1921 to 1929 he was appointed the head of the Laboratory of Chemical and Pyrotechnic Ammunition Workshop No. 2 in Poznań and as an inspector of magazines of explosives. In 1927 he was transferred to the reserves, in 1932 after having graduated from the Officer Cadet School in Jarocin, Tucholski was appointed a second lieutenant in the Army Reserve, and later moved from the officers infantry corpsto the army ordnance corps. As part of his specialty, he constantly cooperated with the army. In the years 1937-1939,Tucholski was a technical adviser to the Ministry of Military Affairs and from August 1939--an independent researcher at the Institute of Armament Technology. He took part in the works of the Explosives Commission of the Military Technical Society. Tadeusz Tucholski was a self-taught man. He passed his A-level examsin course of his military service in October 1923 and began studying chemistry at the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences of the University of Poznań. He obtained his Master's degree in 1927, the rank and the degree of Ph.D. in the field of chemical sciences and physics in 1930. In 1936, he became the Associate Professor of physical chemistry of explosives at the Faculty of Chemistry at the University of Technology in Warsaw. Tucholski invented the method of the differential thermal analysis. He is the author of the widely used differential calorimeter which records the-processes of conversion of explosives during heating, presently known as the Differential Scanning Calorimeter.

  15. The Case for Research in Pure Physics in Developing Countries

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mweene, H. V.

    Science and technology are the keys to modern economic development. But, it has often been argued that poor countries cannot really afford to support research, or that they should at most devote their efforts to applied science only. The scientific knowledge necessary for development would then be partly or wholly obtained from other countries. In this paper, the case will be argued that developing countries cannot afford to leave research, both pure and applied, to the developed countries and that the only way the developing world is going to solve its problems is through development driven by their own research activities. With reference to physics, the importance of research by researchers in poor countries is explained. Lastly, it is outlined how the logistics of doing research under the difficult conditions prevailing in poor countries can be managed.

  16. Defining Health Research for Development: The perspective of stakeholders from an international health research partnership in Ghana and Tanzania.

    PubMed

    Ward, Claire Leonie; Shaw, David; Anane-Sarpong, Evelyn; Sankoh, Osman; Tanner, Marcel; Elger, Bernice

    2017-05-03

    The study uses a qualitative empirical method to define Health Research for Development. This project explores the perspectives of stakeholders in an international health research partnership operating in Ghana and Tanzania. We conducted 52 key informant interviews with major stakeholders in an international multicenter partnership between GlaxoSmithKline (GSK, Vaccine Developer) and the global health nonprofit organisation PATH and its Malaria Vaccine Initiative program (PATH/MVI, Funder-Development Partner), (RTS, S) (NCT00866619). The respondents included teams from four clinical research centres (two centres in Ghana and two in Tanzania) and various collaborating partners. This paper analyses responses to the question: What is Health Research for Development? Based on the stakeholders' experience the respondents offered many ways of defining Health Research for Development. The responses fell into four broad themes: i) Equitable Partnerships; ii) System Sustainability; iii) Addressing Local Health Targets, and iv) Regional Commitment to Benefit Sharing. Through defining Health Research for Development six key learning points were generated from the four result themes: 1) Ensure there is local research leadership working with the collaborative partnership, and local healthcare system, to align the project agenda and activities with local research and health priorities; 2) Know the country-specific context - map the social, health, legislative and political setting; 3) Define an explicit development component and plan of action in a research project; 4) Address the barriers and opportunities to sustain system capacity. 5) Support decentralised health system decision-making to facilitate the translation pathway; 6) Govern, monitor and evaluate the development components of health research partnerships. Overall, equity and unity between partners are required to deliver health research for development. © 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

  17. 7 CFR 906.37 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 906.37 Section 906.37... LOWER RIO GRANDE VALLEY IN TEXAS Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 906.37 Research and development. The committee, with the approval of the Secretary, may establish or provide for the...

  18. 7 CFR 958.47 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2011-01-01 2011-01-01 false Research and development. 958.47 Section 958.47... DESIGNATED COUNTIES IN IDAHO, AND MALHEUR COUNTY, OREGON Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 958.47 Research and development. (a) The committee with the approval of the Secretary, may establish...

  19. 48 CFR 216.104-70 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Research and development... Contract Types § 216.104-70 Research and development. Follow the procedures at PGI 216.104-70 for selecting the appropriate research and development contract type. [71 FR 39007, July 11, 2006] ...

  20. 48 CFR 216.104-70 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2012-10-01 2012-10-01 false Research and development... Contract Types § 216.104-70 Research and development. Follow the procedures at PGI 216.104-70 for selecting the appropriate research and development contract type. [71 FR 39007, July 11, 2006] ...

  1. 7 CFR 958.47 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2013-01-01 2013-01-01 false Research and development. 958.47 Section 958.47... DESIGNATED COUNTIES IN IDAHO, AND MALHEUR COUNTY, OREGON Order Regulating Handling Research and Development § 958.47 Research and development. (a) The committee with the approval of the Secretary, may establish...

  2. 48 CFR 216.104-70 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Research and development... Contract Types § 216.104-70 Research and development. Follow the procedures at PGI 216.104-70 for selecting the appropriate research and development contract type. [71 FR 39007, July 11, 2006] ...

  3. 78 FR 18680 - Rehabilitation Research and Development Scientific Merit Review Board, Notice of Meeting

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-03-27

    ... DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS Rehabilitation Research and Development Scientific Merit Review... Service, and the Chief Research and Development Officer on the scientific and technical merit, the mission... Committee Act, 5 U.S.C. App. 2, that a meeting of the Rehabilitation Research and Development Service...

  4. ILLINOIS VOCATIONAL EDUCATION OCCUPATIONAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT COORDINATING UNIT FINAL REPORT.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    BURGENER, V.E.

    AN OCCUPATIONAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT UNIT WAS CREATED TO PROVIDE ASSISTANCE IN A STATEWIDE PROGRAM OF VOCATIONAL RESEARCH TO DEVELOP RESEARCH PERSONNEL, TO EVALUATE EXPERIMENTAL CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTIONAL PROCEDURES, TO DEVELOP AN OVERVIEW OF SURVEY PROCEDURES RELATED TO OCCUPATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES AND TRAINING NEEDS, TO REFINE THE OPERATING…

  5. 48 CFR 52.249-9 - Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development).

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... Research and Development). 52.249-9 Section 52.249-9 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL... Provisions and Clauses 52.249-9 Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development). As prescribed in 49.504(b), insert the following clause: Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development) (APR 1984) (a)(1) The...

  6. 48 CFR 52.249-9 - Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development).

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... Research and Development). 52.249-9 Section 52.249-9 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL... Provisions and Clauses 52.249-9 Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development). As prescribed in 49.504(b), insert the following clause: Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development) (APR 1984) (a)(1) The...

  7. 48 CFR 52.249-9 - Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development).

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... Research and Development). 52.249-9 Section 52.249-9 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL... Provisions and Clauses 52.249-9 Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development). As prescribed in 49.504(b), insert the following clause: Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development) (APR 1984) (a)(1) The...

  8. 48 CFR 52.249-9 - Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development).

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... Research and Development). 52.249-9 Section 52.249-9 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL... Provisions and Clauses 52.249-9 Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development). As prescribed in 49.504(b), insert the following clause: Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development) (APR 1984) (a)(1) The...

  9. 48 CFR 52.249-9 - Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development).

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... Research and Development). 52.249-9 Section 52.249-9 Federal Acquisition Regulations System FEDERAL... Provisions and Clauses 52.249-9 Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development). As prescribed in 49.504(b), insert the following clause: Default (Fixed-Price Research and Development) (APR 1984) (a)(1) The...

  10. 76 FR 12404 - Research, Engineering and Development Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-03-07

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Aviation Administration Research, Engineering and Development....S.C. App. 2), notice is hereby given of a meeting of the FAA Research, Engineering and Development...: Research, Engineering & Development Advisory Committee. Time and Date: April 20, 2011--9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m...

  11. Evaluation in a Research and Development Context.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Cooley, William W.

    Educational research and development (R&D) has often been characterized as a neat, linear sequence of discrete steps, moving from research through development to evaluation and dissemination. Although the inadequacies of such linear models of educational research and development have been pointed out previously, these models have been so much…

  12. 78 FR 70102 - Clinical Science Research and Development Service Cooperative Studies; Scientific Evaluation...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-11-22

    ... DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS Clinical Science Research and Development Service Cooperative... notice under the Federal Advisory Committee Act, 5 U.S.C. App. 2, that the Clinical Science Research and... Development Officer through the Director of the Clinical Science Research and Development Service on the...

  13. 17 CFR 256.188 - Research, development, or demonstration expenditures.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-04-01

    ... 17 Commodity and Securities Exchanges 3 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Research, development, or... COMPANIES, PUBLIC UTILITY HOLDING COMPANY ACT OF 1935 4. Deferred Debits § 256.188 Research, development, or... of all expenditures for research, development or demonstration undertaken by or sponsored through the...

  14. 7 CFR 930.48 - Research, market development and promotion.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 8 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Research, market development and promotion. 930.48... Order Regulating Handling Research, Market Development and Promotion § 930.48 Research, market development and promotion. The Board, with the approval of the Secretary, may establish or provide for the...

  15. Fetal Research

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hansen, John T.; Sladek, John R.

    1989-11-01

    This article reviews some of the significant contributions of fetal research and fetal tissue research over the past 20 years. The benefits of fetal research include the development of vaccines, advances in prenatal diagnosis, detection of malformations, assessment of safe and effective medications, and the development of in utero surgical therapies. Fetal tissue research benefits vaccine development, assessment of risk factors and toxicity levels in drug production, development of cell lines, and provides a source of fetal cells for ongoing transplantation trials. Together, fetal research and fetal tissue research offer tremendous potential for the treatment of the fetus, neonate, and adult.

  16. Liver Biopsy

    MedlinePlus

    ... Funding Current Funding Opportunities Research Programs & Contacts Human Subjects Research Funding Process Research Training & Career Development Funded ... Funding Current Funding Opportunities Research Programs & Contacts Human Subjects Research Funding Process Research Training & Career Development Funded ...

  17. Action Research and Collaborative Research: Their Specific Contributions to Professional Development

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Savoie-Zajc, Lorraine; Descamps-Bednarz, Nadine

    2007-01-01

    The increasing complexity of the teaching profession calls for engaged professionals in their professional development. This article claims that participative types of research contribute differently to professional development. Its intent is to explore the different contributions action research and collaborative research bring. One action…

  18. On Adaptive Extended Compatibility Changing Type of Product Design Strategy

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Wenwen, Jiang; Zhibin, Xie

    The article uses research ways of Enterprise localization and enterprise's development course to research strategy of company's product design and development. It announces at different stages for development, different kinds of enterprises will adopt product design and development policies of different modes. It also announces close causality between development course of company and central technology and product. The result indicated enterprises in leading position in market, technology and brand adopt pioneer strategy type of product research and development. These enterprise relying on the large-scale leading enterprise offering a complete set service adopts the passively duplicating type tactic of product research and development. Some enterprise in part of advantage in technology, market, management or brand adopt following up strategy of product research and development. The enterprises with relative advantage position adopt the strategy of technology applied taking optimizing services as centre in product research and development in fields of brand culture and market service.

  19. Developing Education Research Competencies in Mathematics Teachers through TRAIL: Teacher-Researcher Alliance for Investigating Learning

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Koichu, Boris; Pinto, Alon

    2018-01-01

    This theoretical article explores an issue of developing education research competencies in mathematics teachers through their involvement in mathematics education research. We first argue that the development of education research competencies is beneficial for the teachers' professional growth. We then identify opportunities for mathematics…

  20. The Challenges of Developing Research Resources for Leading Vietnamese Universities

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Nguyen, Thi Lan Huong

    2013-01-01

    This paper examines the challenges of developing research resources for leading Vietnamese universities. The first part of the paper presents the background to the study, including literature review on the challenges to research resources development, and describes the research questions and research methods. The next part provides empirical…

  1. 75 FR 40036 - Rehabilitation Research and Development Service Scientific Merit Review Board; Notice of Meeting

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-07-13

    .... Disclosure would also reveal research proposals and research underway which could lead to the loss of these... DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS Rehabilitation Research and Development Service Scientific Merit... (Federal Advisory Committee Act) that the Rehabilitation Research and Development Service Scientific Merit...

  2. 48 CFR 3035.017 - Federally Funded Research and Development Centers.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... CONTRACTING RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING Scope of Part 3035.017 Federally Funded Research and... use of Federally Funded Research and Development Centers (FFRDCs) in (FAR) 48 CFR 35.017. [71 FR 25771... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 7 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Federally Funded Research...

  3. 48 CFR 1335.017 - Federal funded research and development centers.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... OF COMMERCE SPECIAL CATEGORIES OF CONTRACTING RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING 1335.017 Federal funded research and development centers. ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 5 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Federal funded research...

  4. Basic science research and education: a priority for training and capacity building in developing countries.

    PubMed

    Deckelbaum, Richard J; Ntambi, James M; Wolgemuth, Debra J

    2011-09-01

    This article provides evidence that basic science research and education should be key priorities for global health training, capacity building, and practice. Currently, there are tremendous gaps between strong science education and research in developed countries (the North) as compared to developing countries (the South). In addition, science research and education appear as low priorities in many developing countries. The need to stress basic science research beyond the typical investment of infectious disease basic service and research laboratories in developing areas is significant in terms of the benefits, not only to education, but also for economic strengthening and development of human resources. There are some indications that appreciation of basic science research education and training is increasing, but this still needs to be applied more rigorously and strengthened systematically in developing countries. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  5. Providing ethical guidance for collaborative research in developing countries

    PubMed Central

    Morris, Nina

    2015-01-01

    Experience has shown that the application of ethical guidelines developed for research in developed countries to research in developing countries can be, and often is, impractical and raises a number of contentious issues. Various attempts have been made to provide guidelines more appropriate to the developing world context; however, to date these efforts have been dominated by the fields of bioscience, medical research and nutrition. There is very little advice available for those seeking to undertake collaborative social science or natural science research in developing countries and what is there tends to be held within disparate sources. Charting the development of a set of ethics documentation for future use by the Ecosystem Services for Poverty Alleviation (ESPA) programme research community, this paper outlines past and present attitudes towards ethics procedures amongst this community and suggests ways in which ethics procedures might be made more relevant and user-friendly to researchers working in this area. PMID:26640509

  6. 24. PHOTOCOPY OF PLAN DRAWING. Quartermaster Research and Development Laboratory, ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    24. PHOTOCOPY OF PLAN DRAWING. Quartermaster Research and Development Laboratory, Natick, Mass, Climatic Building, First Floor Plan, Architectural. Drawing No. 35-07-01, Sheet 2 of 72, 1952, updated to 1985. (Source: NRDEC). - Natick Research & Development Laboratories, Climatic Chambers Building, U.S. Army Natick Research, Development & Engineering Center (NRDEC), Natick, Middlesex County, MA

  7. 76 FR 6197 - Health Services Research and Development Service Merit Review Board; Notice of Meeting

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-02-03

    ... Patient Response to Care; HSR 3-Informatics and Research Methods Development; HSR 4-Mental and Behavioral... DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS Health Services Research and Development Service Merit Review Board... Advisory Committee Act) that a meeting of the Health Services Research and Development Service Merit Review...

  8. 76 FR 53938 - Order of Succession for the Office of Policy Development and Research

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-08-30

    ... Office of Policy Development and Research AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research, HUD. ACTION: Notice of order of succession. SUMMARY: In this notice, the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research designates the Order of Succession for the Office of the...

  9. 7 CFR 400.712 - Research and development reimbursement, maintenance reimbursement, and user fees.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... 7 Agriculture 6 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Research and development reimbursement, maintenance... Submission of Policies, Provisions of Policies and Rates of Premium § 400.712 Research and development... submission may be eligible for a one-time payment of research and development costs and reimbursement of...

  10. Academic and Educational Development: Research, Evaluation and Changing Practice in Higher Education. Staff and Educational Development Series.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Macdonald, Ranald; Wisdom, James

    This practice-oriented book brings together research and evaluation approaches and supporting case studies from educational researchers and teachers. The emphasis is on changing practice in higher education and the research that underpins desirable development. Following an introduction, chapter 1 presents Educational Development Changing Practice…

  11. 25. PHOTOCOPY OF PLAN DRAWING. Quartermaster Research and Development Laboratory, ...

    Library of Congress Historic Buildings Survey, Historic Engineering Record, Historic Landscapes Survey

    25. PHOTOCOPY OF PLAN DRAWING. Quartermaster Research and Development Laboratory, Natick, Mass. Climatic Building, First Floor Plan, Refrigeration and Engineering. Drawing No. 35-07-01, Sheet 52 of 72, 1952. (Source: NRDEC). - Natick Research & Development Laboratories, Climatic Chambers Building, U.S. Army Natick Research, Development & Engineering Center (NRDEC), Natick, Middlesex County, MA

  12. 48 CFR 31.205-48 - Research and development costs.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Research and development... Organizations 31.205-48 Research and development costs. Research and development, as used in this subsection, means the type of technical effort described in 31.205-18 but sponsored by a grant or required in the...

  13. A Needs Assessment Informs Development of a Participatory Research Faculty Development Workshop

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Salsberg, Jon; Seller, Robbyn; Shea, Laura; Macaulay, Ann C.

    2012-01-01

    University-based researchers are finding they need a new set of skills to collaborate meaningfully with non-academic research partners, and to compete for funding opportunities that require community and end-user partnerships. This article describes a needs assessment conducted to develop a participatory research faculty development workshop at…

  14. 77 FR 31368 - Guidance on Meetings With Industry and Investigators on the Research and Development of Tobacco...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-05-25

    ... the Research and Development of Tobacco Products'' to the Center for Tobacco Products, Food and Drug...] Guidance on Meetings With Industry and Investigators on the Research and Development of Tobacco Products... and Investigators on the Research and Development of Tobacco Products.'' This guidance describes FDA's...

  15. Ethics in international health research: a perspective from the developing world.

    PubMed Central

    Bhutta, Zulfiqar Ahmed

    2002-01-01

    Health research plays a pivotal role in addressing inequities in health and human development, but to achieve these objectives the research must be based on sound scientific and ethical principles. Although it is accepted that ethics play a central role in health research in developing countries, much of the recent debate has focused on controversies surrounding internationally sponsored research and has taken place largely without adequate participation of the developing countries. The relationship between ethical guidelines and regulations, and indigenously sponsored and public health research has not been adequately explored. For example, while the fundamental principles of ethical health research, such as community participation, informed consent, and shared benefits and burdens, remain sacrosanct other issues, such as standards of care and prior agreements, merit greater public debate within developing countries. In particular, the relationship of existing ethical guidelines to epidemiological and public health research merits further exploration. In order to support health research in developing countries that is both relevant and meaningful, the focus must be on developing health research that promotes equity and on developing local capacity in bioethics. Only through such proactive measures can we address the emerging ethical dilemmas and challenges that globalization and the genomics revolution will bring in their wake. PMID:11953789

  16. Integration of Staff Development and Research: Description of the Staff Development Project in Progress for the School Year 1975-1976. Technical Report #62.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Speidel, Gisela E.

    This report from the Kamehameha Early Education Program (KEEP) describes the 1975-76 KEEP staff development program, which was designed to integrate staff development and research. Specific purposes of the program were: (1) to develop the abilities of the teaching staff in teaching, consultation, and research; (2) to conduct pilot research in…

  17. Research and Development Strategies in the Semiconductor Industry

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Bowling, Allen

    2003-03-01

    In the 21st Century semiconductor industry, there is a critical balance between internally funded semiconductor research and development (R) and externally funded R. External R may include jointly-funded research collaborations/partnerships with other device manufacturers, jointly-funded consortia-based R, and individually-funded research programs at universities and other contract research locations. Each of these approaches has merits and each has costs. There is a critical balance between keeping the internal research and development pipeline filled and keeping it from being overspent. To meet both competitive schedule and cost goals, a semiconductor device manufacturer must decide on a model for selection of internal versus external R. Today, one of the most critical decisions is whether or not to do semiconductor research and development on 300 mm silicon wafers. Equipment suppliers are doing first development on 300 mm equipment. So, for the device manufacturer, there is a balance between the cost of doing development on 300 mm wafers and the development time schedule driven by equipment availability. In the face of these cost and schedule elements, device manufacturers are looking to consortia such as SEMATECH, SRC, and SRC MARCO for early development and screening of new materials and device structure approaches. This also causes much more close development collaboration between device manufacturer and equipment supplier. Many device manufacturers are also making use of direct contract research with universities and other contract-research organizations, such as IMEC, LETI, and other government-funded research organizations around the world. To get the most out of these external research interactions, the company must develop a strategy for management and technology integration of external R.

  18. Research-tool patents: issues for health in the developing world.

    PubMed Central

    Barton, John H.

    2002-01-01

    The patent system is now reaching into the tools of medical research, including gene sequences themselves. Many of the new patents can potentially preempt large areas of medical research and lay down legal barriers to the development of a broad category of products. Researchers must therefore consider redesigning their research to avoid use of patented techniques, or expending the effort to obtain licences from those who hold the patents. Even if total licence fees can be kept low, there are enormous negotiation costs, and one "hold-out" may be enough to lead to project cancellation. This is making it more difficult to conduct research within the developed world, and poses important questions for the future of medical research for the benefit of the developing world. Probably the most important implication for health in the developing world is the possible general slowing down and complication of medical research. To the extent that these patents do slow down research, they weaken the contribution of the global research community to the creation and application of medical technology for the benefit of developing nations. The patents may also complicate the granting of concessional prices to developing nations - for pharmaceutical firms that seek to offer a concessional price may have to negotiate arrangements with research-tool firms, which may lose royalties as a result. Three kinds of response are plausible. One is to develop a broad or global licence to permit the patented technologies to be used for important applications in the developing world. The second is to change technical patent law doctrines. Such changes could be implemented in developed and developing nations and could be quite helpful while remaining consistent with TRIPS. The third is to negotiate specific licence arrangements, under which specific research tools are used on an agreed basis for specific applications. These negotiations are difficult and expensive, requiring both scientific and legal skills. But they will be an unavoidable part of international medical research. PMID:11953790

  19. Funding of pilot projects in Latin America: a tool for capacity building in occupational health research.

    PubMed

    Felknor, Sarah A; Delclos, George L; Gimeno, David; Wesseling, Ineke; Monge, Patricia; Chavez, Jorge; Quintana, Leonardo; Schulze, Lawrence J H

    2006-01-01

    There is a global need for trained researchers who can address the increasing burden of illness and injury and prepare future generations of researchers. Developing countries have a special need for practical, action-oriented interventions to address workplace problems, based on identification of needs and priorities, development of locally available solutions, and consideration of the sociopolitical context of work and how best to translate research findings into policies. Effective translation and application of research products from industrialized nations to developing countries is essential, but differences in the contexts and local realities of other nations limit extrapolating such research. Funding pilot research projects in developing countries is an effective, practical, and useful tool for training new investigators in research techniques and developing collaborative relationships among countries.

  20. Building research capital to facilitate research.

    PubMed

    Green, Gill; Rein, Melanie

    2013-04-04

    The National Institute for Health Research, Research Design Service (NIHR RDS) was set up to increase the number and proportion of high quality applications for funding for applied and patient focused health and social care research. Access to specialist expertise and collaboration between researchers and health practitioners at the proposal development stage is crucial for high quality applied health research. In this essay we develop the concept of 'research capital' to describe the wide range of resources and expertise required to develop fundable research projects. It highlights the key role the RDS plays supporting researchers to broker relationships to access the requisite 'research capital'.

  1. Life Cycle Impact Assessment Research Developments and Needs

    EPA Science Inventory

    Life Cycle Impact Assessment (LCIA) developments are explained along with key publications which record discussions which comprised ISO 14042 and SETAC document development, UNEP SETAC Life Cycle Initiative research, and research from public and private research institutions. It ...

  2. Instructional Developer as Content Specialist: Three Case Studies Utilizing the Instructional Development-Operations Research Model.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Faust, Stephen M.

    1980-01-01

    Presents a 3-phase model (content research, specification, delivery) for instructional development-operations research and describes its application in developing courses in zoology, geology, and paleontology. (MER)

  3. Institutional research and development, FY 1987

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Struble, G.L.; Lawler, G.M.; Crawford, R.B.

    The Institutional Research and Development program at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory fosters exploratory work to advance science and technology, disciplinary research to develop innovative solutions to problems in various scientific fields, and long-term interdisciplinary research in support of defense and energy missions. This annual report describes research funded under this program for FY87. (DWL)

  4. Intentionality and Developing Researcher Competence on a UK Master's Course: An Ecological Perspective on Research Education

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Stelma, Juup; Fay, Richard

    2014-01-01

    This paper presents an ecological perspective on the developing researcher competence of participants in the research education component of a professionally oriented master's course. There is a particular focus on the intentionality (as in "purpose") of the participants' research education activity. The data used to develop the…

  5. Research on Child and Adolescent Development and Public Policy in Latin America

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Narea, Marigen

    2016-01-01

    This commentary discusses the implication of child and adolescent development research for public policy in Latin America. As illustrated by the articles in this special issue, even though the research of child and adolescent development in Latin America is making significant progress, still more research is needed. Developmental research in the…

  6. Research Fellowships Program of the National Center for Health Services Research and Development. Policies and Guidelines for Applicants.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Health Services and Mental Health Administration (DHEW), Bethesda, MD.

    The National Center for Health Services Research and Development supports individual research training in an institutional setting for the development of competence in research techniques relevant to the organization, delivery, quality, financing, utilization, and evaluation of health delivery systems. The evolution of health services science…

  7. Professional development workshops for physics education research

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sayre, Eleanor C.; Franklin, Scott V.; Kustusch, Mary Bridget

    2017-01-01

    Physics education research holds the promise of satisfying expectations of both scholarship, which is increasing at teaching-centric institutions, and teaching effectiveness, a concern at all institutions. Additionally, junior physics education researchers seek more diverse training in research methods and theories. Emerging education researchers need support as they develop their research programs and expand their theoretical and methodological expertise, and they benefit from the guidance of knowledgable peers and near-peers. Our two-part professional development model combines intensive in-person workshops with long-term remote activities. During a two-week in-person workshop, emerging and established education researchers work closely together to develop research questions, learn appropriate analytic techniques, and collect a corpus of data appropriate to their research questions. Afterwards, they meet biweekly in a distributed, mentored research group to share analyses and develop their ideas into publishable papers. In this talk, we discuss this model for professional development and show results from one three-year implementation in the IMPRESS program at the Rochester Institute of Technology. Partially funded by the PERTG of the AAPT.

  8. The International Development Research Centre: A Guide for the Canadian University Research Community = Le Centre de recherches pour le developpement international: guide a l'intention des scientifiques des universites Canadiennes.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Tillman, George; Wasilewski, Ania, Ed.

    Written in both English and French this is a manual for the Canadian research community. It describes the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and its operations. The main objective of the IDRC is to assist scientists in developing countries to identify and conduct research into long term practical solutions to development problems.…

  9. Developing the Developers: Supporting and Researching the Learning of Professional Development Facilitators

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Perry, Emily; Boylan, Mark

    2018-01-01

    Research on teacher professional development is extensive but there are fewer studies about the practitioners who facilitate professional development. Here we report on a pilot programme for professional development facilitators rooted in a cycle of action research. Informed by a categorisation of professional knowledge and skills of facilitators,…

  10. 7 CFR 929.45 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... establishment of production research, marketing research, and market development projects, including paid... 7 Agriculture 8 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Research and development. 929.45 Section 929.45 Agriculture Regulations of the Department of Agriculture (Continued) AGRICULTURAL MARKETING SERVICE (Marketing...

  11. 76 FR 36102 - Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-06-21

    ... DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Biomass Research and Development... vacancies on the Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee (Technical Advisory Committee... 20585; (202) 586-7766; E-mail: [email protected] . SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Biomass Research...

  12. Effectiveness of Training Model Capacity Building for Entrepreneurship Women Based Empowerment Community

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Idawati; Mahmud, Alimuddin; Dirawan, Gufran Darma

    2016-01-01

    The purpose of this research was to determine the effectiveness of a training model for capacity building of women entrepreneurship community-based. Research type approach Research and Development Model, which refers to the model of development research that developed by Romiszowki (1996) combined with a model of development Sugiono (2011) it was…

  13. 40 CFR 80.380 - What are the requirements for obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-07-01

    ... obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development or testing purposes? 80.380 Section 80... obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development or testing purposes? Any person may request an exemption from the provisions of this subpart for gasoline used for research, development or...

  14. 40 CFR 80.380 - What are the requirements for obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ... obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development or testing purposes? 80.380 Section 80... obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development or testing purposes? Any person may request an exemption from the provisions of this subpart for gasoline used for research, development or...

  15. 40 CFR 80.380 - What are the requirements for obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development or testing purposes? 80.380 Section 80... obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development or testing purposes? Any person may request an exemption from the provisions of this subpart for gasoline used for research, development or...

  16. 77 FR 29847 - Redelegation of Authority for the Office of Policy Development and Research

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-05-18

    ... Redelegation of Authority for the Office of Policy Development and Research; Order of Succession for the Office of Policy Development and Research; Notice #0;#0;Federal Register / Vol. 77 , No. 97 / Friday, May 18...] Redelegation of Authority for the Office of Policy Development and Research AGENCY: Office of the Assistant...

  17. Alternative Fuels Data Center: Research and Development of Electricity as a

    Science.gov Websites

    Vehicle Fuel Research and Development of Electricity as a Vehicle Fuel to someone by E-mail Share Alternative Fuels Data Center: Research and Development of Electricity as a Vehicle Fuel on Facebook Tweet about Alternative Fuels Data Center: Research and Development of Electricity as a Vehicle

  18. Developing Mathematics Problems Based on PISA Level of Change and Relationships Content

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Ahyan, Shahibul; Zulkardi; Darmawijoyo

    2014-01-01

    This research aims to produce mathematics problems based on PISA level with valid and practical content of change and relationships and has potential effect for Junior High School students. A development research method developed by Akker, Gravemeijer, McKenney and Nieveen is used this research. This development research consists of three stages;…

  19. Critical Practitioners, Developing Researchers: The Story of Practitioner Research in the Lifelong Learning Sector

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Hillier, Yvonne

    2010-01-01

    This article examines the growth of practitioner research in England through the creation of the Learning and Skills Research Network (LSRN) and identifies its effect on subsequent developments in what is generally known as the Lifelong Learning Sector (LLS). It offers an analysis of this development as a case study in developing practitioner…

  20. 45 CFR Appendix E to Part 74 - Principles for Determining Costs Applicable to Research and Development Under Grants and...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals E Appendix E to Part 74 Public Welfare... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals i. purpose and scope A. Objectives. This appendix provides principles for determining the costs applicable to research and development work...

  1. 45 CFR Appendix E to Part 74 - Principles for Determining Costs Applicable to Research and Development Under Grants and...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals E Appendix E to Part 74 Public Welfare... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals i. purpose and scope A. Objectives. This appendix provides principles for determining the costs applicable to research and development work...

  2. 45 CFR Appendix E to Part 74 - Principles for Determining Costs Applicable to Research and Development Under Grants and...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals E Appendix E to Part 74 Public Welfare... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals i. purpose and scope A. Objectives. This appendix provides principles for determining the costs applicable to research and development work...

  3. 45 CFR Appendix E to Part 74 - Principles for Determining Costs Applicable to Research and Development Under Grants and...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals E Appendix E to Part 74 Public Welfare... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals i. purpose and scope A. Objectives. This appendix provides principles for determining the costs applicable to research and development work...

  4. 45 CFR Appendix E to Part 74 - Principles for Determining Costs Applicable to Research and Development Under Grants and...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals E Appendix E to Part 74 Public Welfare... Research and Development Under Grants and Contracts With Hospitals i. purpose and scope A. Objectives. This appendix provides principles for determining the costs applicable to research and development work...

  5. 40 CFR 80.1000 - What are the requirements for obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development or testing purposes? 80.1000 Section 80... obtaining an exemption for gasoline used for research, development or testing purposes? Gasoline used for research, development or testing purposes is exempt from the requirements of this subpart if it is exempted...

  6. How does investment in research training affect the development of research networks and collaborations?

    PubMed

    Paina, Ligia; Ssengooba, Freddie; Waswa, Douglas; M'imunya, James M; Bennett, Sara

    2013-05-20

    Whether and how research training programs contribute to research network development is underexplored. The Fogarty International Center (FIC) has supported overseas research training programs for over two decades. FIC programs could provide an entry point in the development of research networks and collaborations. We examine whether FIC's investment in research training contributed to the development of networks and collaborations in two countries with longstanding FIC investments - Uganda and Kenya - and the factors which facilitated this process. As part of two case studies at Uganda's Makerere University and Kenya's University of Nairobi, we conducted 53 semi-structured in-depth interviews and nine focus group discussions. To expand on our case study findings, we conducted a focused bibliometric analysis on two purposively selected topic areas to examine scientific productivity and used online network illustration tools to examine the resulting network structures. FIC support made important contributions to network development. Respondents from both Uganda and Kenya confirmed that FIC programs consistently provided trainees with networking skills and exposure to research collaborations, primarily within the institutions implementing FIC programs. In both countries, networks struggled with inclusiveness, particularly in HIV/AIDS research. Ugandan respondents perceived their networks to be more cohesive than Kenyan respondents did. Network cohesiveness was positively correlated with the magnitude and longevity of FIC's programs. Support from FIC grants to local and regional research network development and networking opportunities, such as conferences, was rare. Synergies between FIC programs and research grants helped to solidify and maintain research collaborations. Networks developed where FIC's programs focused on a particular institution, there was a critical mass of trainees with similar interests, and investments for network development were available from early implementation. Networks were less likely to emerge where FIC efforts were thinly scattered across multiple institutions. The availability of complementary research grants created opportunities for researchers to collaborate in grant writing, research implementation, and publications. FIC experiences in Uganda and Kenya showcase the important role of research training programs in creating and sustaining research networks. FIC programs should consider including support to research networks more systematically in their capacity development agenda.

  7. General practices as emergent research organizations: a qualitative study into organizational development.

    PubMed

    Macfarlane, Fraser; Shaw, Sara; Greenhalgh, Trisha; Carter, Yvonne H

    2005-06-01

    An increasing proportion of research in primary care is locally undertaken in designated research practices. Capacity building to support high quality research at these grass roots is urgently needed and is a government priority. There is little previously published research on the process by which GP practices develop as research organizations or on their specific support needs at organizational level. Using in-depth qualitative interviews with 28 key informants in 11 research practices across the UK, we explored their historical accounts of the development of research activity. We analysed the data with reference to contemporary theories of organizational development. Participants identified a number of key events and processes, which allowed us to produce a five-phase model of practice development in relation to research activity (creative energy, concrete planning, transformation/differentiation, consolidation and collaboration). Movement between these phases was not linear or continuous, but showed emergent and adaptive properties in which specific triggers and set-backs were often critical. This developmental model challenges previous categorical taxonomies of research practices. It forms a theory-driven framework for providing appropriate support at the grass roots of primary care research, based on the practice's phase of development and the nature of external triggers and potential setbacks. Our findings have important implications for the strategic development of practice-based research in the UK, and could serve as a model for the wider international community.

  8. Undergraduate students' development of social, cultural, and human capital in a networked research experience

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Thompson, Jennifer Jo; Conaway, Evan; Dolan, Erin L.

    2016-12-01

    Recent calls for reform in undergraduate biology education have emphasized integrating research experiences into the learning experiences of all undergraduates. Contemporary science research increasingly demands collaboration across disciplines and institutions to investigate complex research questions, providing new contexts and models for involving undergraduates in research. In this study, we examined the experiences of undergraduates participating in a multi-institution and interdisciplinary biology research network. Unlike the traditional apprenticeship model of research, in which a student participates in research under the guidance of a single faculty member, students participating in networked research have the opportunity to develop relationships with additional faculty and students working in other areas of the project, at their own and at other institutions. We examined how students in this network develop social ties and to what extent a networked research experience affords opportunities for students to develop social, cultural, and human capital. Most studies of undergraduate involvement in science research have focused on documenting student outcomes rather than elucidating how students gain access to research experiences or how elements of research participation lead to desired student outcomes. By taking a qualitative approach framed by capital theories, we have identified ways that undergraduates utilize and further develop various forms of capital important for success in science research. In our study of the first 16 months of a biology research network, we found that undergraduates drew upon a combination of human, cultural, and social capital to gain access to the network. Within their immediate research groups, students built multidimensional social ties with faculty, peers, and others, yielding social capital that can be drawn upon for information, resources, and support. They reported developing cultural capital in the form of learning to think and work like a scientist—a scientific habitus. They reported developing human capital in the forms of technical, analytical, and communication skills in scientific research. Most of the students had little, direct interaction with network members in other research groups and thus developed little cross-institutional capital. The exception to this trend was at one institution that housed three research groups. Because proximity facilitated shared activities, students across research groups at this institution developed cross-lab ties with faculty and peers through which they developed social, cultural, and human capital. An important long-term concern is whether the capital students have developed will help them access opportunities in science beyond the network. At this point, many undergraduates have had limited opportunities to actually draw on capital beyond the network. Nevertheless, a number of students demonstrated awareness that they had developed resources that they could use in other scientific contexts.

  9. 48 CFR 235.017 - Federally Funded Research and Development Centers.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... and Development Centers. 235.017 Section 235.017 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING 235.017 Federally Funded Research and Development Centers. (a) Policy. (2) No DoD... Funded Research and Development Center (FFRDC) if a member of its board of directors or trustees...

  10. 48 CFR 235.017 - Federally Funded Research and Development Centers.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... and Development Centers. 235.017 Section 235.017 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING 235.017 Federally Funded Research and Development Centers. (a) Policy. (2) No DoD... Funded Research and Development Center (FFRDC) if a member of its board of directors or trustees...

  11. 48 CFR 235.017 - Federally Funded Research and Development Centers.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... and Development Centers. 235.017 Section 235.017 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING 235.017 Federally Funded Research and Development Centers. (a) Policy. (2) No DoD... Funded Research and Development Center (FFRDC) if a member of its board of directors or trustees...

  12. 48 CFR 235.017 - Federally Funded Research and Development Centers.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... and Development Centers. 235.017 Section 235.017 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING 235.017 Federally Funded Research and Development Centers. (a) Policy. (2) No DoD... Funded Research and Development Center (FFRDC) if a member of its board of directors or trustees...

  13. 48 CFR 235.017 - Federally Funded Research and Development Centers.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... and Development Centers. 235.017 Section 235.017 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE... DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTING 235.017 Federally Funded Research and Development Centers. (a) Policy. (2) No DoD... Funded Research and Development Center (FFRDC) if a member of its board of directors or trustees...

  14. Laboratory Directed Research and Development FY-10 Annual Report

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Dena Tomchak

    2011-03-01

    The FY 2010 Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) Annual Report is a compendium of the diverse research performed to develop and ensure the INL's technical capabilities can support the future DOE missions and national research priorities. LDRD is essential to the INL -- it provides a means for the laboratory to pursue novel scientific and engineering research in areas that are deemed too basic or risky for programmatic investments. This research enhances technical capabilities at the laboratory, providing scientific and engineering staff with opportunities for skill building and partnership development.

  15. Ongoing research in occupational health and environmental epidemiology in developing countries

    DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Levy, B.S.; Kjellstrom, T.; Forget, G.

    Research in occupational health and environmental epidemiology can play an important role in furthering our understanding of occupational and environmental health problems. Research guides us in the recognition, management, and prevention of health problems. However, in developing countries, where rates of occupational and environmental illnesses and injuries are higher and where these problems are often more severe than in developed countries, research capabilities are less developed. In mid-1990, a project was undertaken to (a) document ongoing research in occupational health and environmental epidemiology in developing countries, (b) facilitate the exchange of information among researchers in this field, (c) stimulate research,more » and (d) avoid unnecessary duplication among researchers in this field. A questionnaire was mailed, the purpose of which was to learn the current status of research in developing countries and to develop a directory of such ongoing research. The questionnaire was sent to 1,528 individuals. Of the 500 research projects identified, 77% were investigating chemical hazards; 26%, physical hazards; 10%, biological hazards; 10%, psychosocial hazards (some projects addressed multiple hazards). The chemical hazards studied most frequently were dusts, pesticides, and lead. The greatest number of research projects were identified in China, India, Brazil, Korea, and Thailand. Most projects were descriptive or cross-sectional epidemiologic studies or industrial hygiene or exposure-assessment studies. The World Health Organization has published a directory of the specific research projects that were identified in this survey.« less

  16. 78 FR 64932 - Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-10-30

    ... DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee AGENCY: Energy... announces an open meeting of the Biomass Research and Development Technical Advisory Committee under Section... allow for public participation. This notice announces the meeting of the Biomass Research and...

  17. 7 CFR 924.45 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... establishment of production research, and marketing research and development projects designed to assist... 7 Agriculture 8 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Research and development. 924.45 Section 924.45 Agriculture Regulations of the Department of Agriculture (Continued) AGRICULTURAL MARKETING SERVICE (Marketing...

  18. 7 CFR 984.46 - Research and development.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... the Secretary, may establish or provide for the establishment of production research, marketing research and development projects, and marketing promotion, including paid advertising, designed to assist... 7 Agriculture 8 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Research and development. 984.46 Section 984.46...

  19. 75 FR 4573 - Government-Owned Inventions; Availability for Licensing

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-01-28

    ... clever new method developed by National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) researchers... of Federally funded research and development. Foreign patent applications are filed on selected... of Invention: Researchers at the National Institutes of Health have recently developed a novel method...

  20. Assessing research activity and capacity of community-based organizations: development and pilot testing of an instrument.

    PubMed

    Humphries, Debbie L; Carroll-Scott, Amy; Mitchell, Leif; Tian, Terry; Choudhury, Shonali; Fiellin, David A

    2014-01-01

    Although awareness of the importance of the research capacity of community-based organizations (CBOs) is growing, a uniform framework of the research capacity domains within CBOs has not yet been developed. To develop a framework and instrument (the Community REsearch Activity assessment Tool [CREAT]) for assessing the research activity and capacity of CBOs that incorporates awareness of the different data collection and analysis priorities of CBOs. We conducted a review of existing tools for assessing research capacity to identify key capacity domains. Instrument items were developed through an iterative process with CBO representatives and community researchers. The CREAT was then pilot tested with 30 CBOs. The four primary domains of the CREAT framework include 1) organizational support for research, 2) generalizable experiences, 3) research specific experiences, and 4) funding. Organizations reported a high prevalence of activities in the research-specific experiences domain, including conducting literature reviews (70%), use of research terminology (83%), and primary data collection (100%). Respondents see research findings as important to improve program and service delivery, and to seek funds for new programs and services. Funders, board members, and policymakers are the most important dissemination audiences. The work reported herein advances the field of CBO research capacity by developing a systematic framework for assessing research activity and capacity relevant to the work of CBOs, and by developing and piloting an instrument to assess activity in these domains.

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