Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... range. (4) Examples. The principles of this paragraph (b) are illustrated by the following examples..., marketing, advertising programs and services, (including promotional programs, rebates, and co-op... sold and operating expenses. (4) Examples. The following examples illustrate the principles of this...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
East, Kathy
This document is a step-by-step guide for librarians who wish to host children's authors and illustrators at school and public libraries. Topics include reasons for having an author/illustrator visit; preliminary planning and making proposals; making initial contacts; the program plan, including types of events, examples of successful visits and…
26 CFR 1.501(e)-1 - Cooperative hospital service organizations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... illustrated by the following example. Example. An organization performs industrial engineering services on a...-hospitals), warehousing, billing and collection, food, clinical (including radiology), industrial engineering (including the installation, maintenance and repair of biomedical and similar equipment...
26 CFR 1.501(e)-1 - Cooperative hospital service organizations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... illustrated by the following example. Example. An organization performs industrial engineering services on a...-hospitals), warehousing, billing and collection, food, clinical (including radiology), industrial engineering (including the installation, maintenance and repair of biomedical and similar equipment...
26 CFR 1.501(e)-1 - Cooperative hospital service organizations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... illustrated by the following example. Example. An organization performs industrial engineering services on a...-hospitals), warehousing, billing and collection, food, clinical (including radiology), industrial engineering (including the installation, maintenance and repair of biomedical and similar equipment...
26 CFR 1.501(e)-1 - Cooperative hospital service organizations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... illustrated by the following example. Example. An organization performs industrial engineering services on a...-hospitals), warehousing, billing and collection, food, clinical (including radiology), industrial engineering (including the installation, maintenance and repair of biomedical and similar equipment...
26 CFR 1.501(e)-1 - Cooperative hospital service organizations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... illustrated by the following example. Example. An organization performs industrial engineering services on a...-hospitals), warehousing, billing and collection, food, clinical (including radiology), industrial engineering (including the installation, maintenance and repair of biomedical and similar equipment...
Electric Circuit Theory--Computer Illustrated Text.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Riches, Brian
1990-01-01
Discusses the use of a computer-illustrated text (CIT) with integrated software to teach electric circuit theory to college students. Examples of software use are given, including simple animation, graphical displays, and problem-solving programs. Issues affecting electric circuit theory instruction are also addressed, including mathematical…
[Visual representation of biological structures in teaching material].
Morato, M A; Struchiner, M; Bordoni, E; Ricciardi, R M
1998-01-01
Parameters must be defined for presenting and handling scientific information presented in the form of teaching materials. Through library research and consultations with specialists in the health sciences and in graphic arts and design, this study undertook a comparative description of the first examples of scientific illustrations of anatomy and the evolution of visual representations of knowledge on the cell. The study includes significant examples of illustrations which served as elements of analysis.
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Examples are provided for species of the mosquito tribes Orthopodomyiini, Toxorhynchitini and Uranotaeniini with published illustrations and/or descriptions of the female genitalia and include corresponding literature citations....
USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database
Examples are provided for species of the mosquito tribes Aedeomyiini, Culisetini and Ficalbiini with published illustrations and/or descriptions of the female genitalia and include corresponding literature citations....
26 CFR 48.6420-4 - Meaning of terms.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... “poultry” includes chickens, turkeys, geese, ducks, and pigeons. Thus, a farm includes livestock, dairy... operator of the farm in connection with cultivating the soil, raising or harvesting any agricultural or... illustrated by the following example. Example. Farmer A hired custom operator B to cultivate the soil on A's...
26 CFR 48.6420-4 - Meaning of terms.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... “poultry” includes chickens, turkeys, geese, ducks, and pigeons. Thus, a farm includes livestock, dairy... operator of the farm in connection with cultivating the soil, raising or harvesting any agricultural or... illustrated by the following example. Example. Farmer A hired custom operator B to cultivate the soil on A's...
26 CFR 48.6420-4 - Meaning of terms.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... “poultry” includes chickens, turkeys, geese, ducks, and pigeons. Thus, a farm includes livestock, dairy... operator of the farm in connection with cultivating the soil, raising or harvesting any agricultural or... illustrated by the following example. Example. Farmer A hired custom operator B to cultivate the soil on A's...
Methods for the evaluation of alternative disaster warning systems
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Agnew, C. E.; Anderson, R. J., Jr.; Lanen, W. N.
1977-01-01
For each of the methods identified, a theoretical basis is provided and an illustrative example is described. The example includes sufficient realism and detail to enable an analyst to conduct an evaluation of other systems. The methods discussed in the study include equal capability cost analysis, consumers' surplus, and statistical decision theory.
Using Microcomputers to Teach Non-Linear Equations at Sixth Form Level.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Cheung, Y. L.
1984-01-01
Promotes the use of the microcomputer in mathematics instruction, reviewing approaches to teaching nonlinear equations. Examples of computer diagrams are illustrated and compared to textbook samples. An example of a problem-solving program is included. (ML)
The Use of Bookmarks in Teaching Counseling Ethics
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Warren, Jane; Zavaschi, Guilherme; Covello, Christin; Zakaria, Noor Syamilah
2012-01-01
This article includes a description of the bookmark as a creative arts experiential strategy useful in teaching counseling ethics education. Three bookmark examples illustrate how counselors-in-training utilized bookmarks to conceptualize their counseling ethics understanding. Illustrations and written feedback from the counselors-in-training…
76 FR 52441 - Summary of Benefits and Coverage and the Uniform Glossary
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2011-08-22
... facts label that includes examples to illustrate common benefits scenarios (including pregnancy and... plan or coverage for common benefits scenarios, including pregnancy and serious or chronic medical...
It's, Like, Relative Motion at the Mall
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Robinett, R. W.
2003-03-01
Almost all introductory textbooks, both algebra- and calculus-based, include sections on relative motion and relative velocity, in both one and two dimensions. The most popular examples in discussions of 2-D relative velocity in such texts seem to be the motion of airplanes/blimps flying in the presence of wind or the conceptually identical cases of boats/rafts piloted across rivers/streams, including the effects of currents. These and similar cases are rather removed from the everyday experience of some students, and the use of simple lecture demonstrations to illustrate these concepts can be quite useful. For example, the motion of a simple toy "wind-up" car moving at constant speed across a horizontal tabletop, with a plastic sheet underneath providing the "moving frame of reference," can illustrate many aspects of such problems, including the need to "point" the plane/boat in an appropriate direction, just as illustrated in many textbook figures. On the other hand, it is also useful if students can directly experience concepts for themselves, especially in a kinesthetic manner, but there are seemingly far fewer human-sized lecture demonstrations on this topic. In this paper, we will point out one such example which might well be just a short drive away.
Chemical Principles Exemplified
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Plumb, Robert C.
1970-01-01
This is the first of a new series of brief ancedotes about materials and phenomena which exemplify chemical principles. Examples include (1) the sea-lab experiment illustrating principles of the kinetic theory of gases, (2) snow-making machines illustrating principles of thermodynamics in gas expansions and phase changes, and (3) sunglasses that…
Creating a digital medical illustration.
Culley, Joanna
2016-01-01
This paper covers the steps required to complete a medical illustration in a digital format using Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop. The project example is the surgical procedure for the release of the glenohumeral joint for the condition known as 'frozen shoulder'. The purpose is to demonstrate one method which an artist can use within digital media to create a colour illustration such as the release of the glenohumeral joint. Included is a general overview as how to deal with the administration of a medical illustration commission through the experience of a professional freelance artist.
Points of View: Stories of Psychopathology.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mitchell, James E.
This book is designed to provide students, at differing levels of experience and training, with examples that illustrate the problems individuals have with various psychopathologies. Stories are included to illustrate the key elements of psychopathology for these disorders, and are written from the point of view of both the individual who has the…
Developing Interdisciplinary Units: Strategies and Examples.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
McDonald, Jacqueline; Czerniak, Charlene
1994-01-01
A theme of sharks is used to illustrate the process of developing interdisciplinary units for middle school instruction, including a model for teams of teachers to follow. As activities evolve, a concept map is created to illustrate relationships and integration of ideas and activities for various disciplines. (Contains 10 references.) (MKR)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Vijayashree, M.; Uthayakumar, R.
2017-09-01
Lead time is one of the major limits that affect planning at every stage of the supply chain system. In this paper, we study a continuous review inventory model. This paper investigates the ordering cost reductions are dependent on lead time. This study addressed two-echelon supply chain problem consisting of a single vendor and a single buyer. The main contribution of this study is that the integrated total cost of the single vendor and the single buyer integrated system is analyzed by adopting two different (linear and logarithmic) types ordering cost reductions act dependent on lead time. In both cases, we develop effective solution procedures for finding the optimal solution and then illustrative numerical examples are given to illustrate the results. The solution procedure is to determine the optimal solutions of order quantity, ordering cost, lead time and the number of deliveries from the single vendor and the single buyer in one production run, so that the integrated total cost incurred has the minimum value. Ordering cost reduction is the main aspect of the proposed model. A numerical example is given to validate the model. Numerical example solved by using Matlab software. The mathematical model is solved analytically by minimizing the integrated total cost. Furthermore, the sensitivity analysis is included and the numerical examples are given to illustrate the results. The results obtained in this paper are illustrated with the help of numerical examples. The sensitivity of the proposed model has been checked with respect to the various major parameters of the system. Results reveal that the proposed integrated inventory model is more applicable for the supply chain manufacturing system. For each case, an algorithm procedure of finding the optimal solution is developed. Finally, the graphical representation is presented to illustrate the proposed model and also include the computer flowchart in each model.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... rule in paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section may be illustrated by the following example: Example. M, a... paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section may be illustrated by the following example: Example. M, a duly ordained...)(i) of this section may be illustrated by the following example: Example. M, a duly ordained minister...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Wentworth, Nancy M.; Monroe, Eula Ewing
1995-01-01
Discusses ways teachers can encourage students to construct useful meanings for the fractional unit. Provides three examples of representations of common fractions and illustrates misconceptions in fraction problems. Includes a brief summary of constructivist mathematics education and an example in which a teacher misunderstands a fractional unit.…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Stevens, Jonathan
2017-07-01
Continuing advances in computational chemistry has permitted quantum mechanical calculation to assist in research in green chemistry and to contribute to the greening of chemical practice. Presented here are recent examples illustrating the contribution of computational quantum chemistry to green chemistry, including the possibility of using computation as a green alternative to experiments, but also illustrating contributions to greener catalysis and the search for greener solvents. Examples of applications of computation to ambitious projects for green synthetic chemistry using carbon dioxide are also presented.
Filling temporary underground structures and workings at high-head hydro developments
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Ilyushin, V.F.
1994-12-01
Examples of backfilling temporary underground structures and workings at hydroelectric stations in Russia are cited. Structures backfilled include temporary tunnels and auxiliary workings (shafts, chambers, etc.). Detail drawings illustrate many of the examples. Examples of backfilling at a number of hydropower plants are given; however, the main emphasis is on construction of Nurek Hydroelectric Station. 8 refs., 11 figs.
Strategy Guideline: Quality Management in Existing Homes - Cantilever Floor Example
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Taggart, J.; Sikora, J.; Wiehagen, J.
2011-12-01
This guideline is designed to highlight the QA process that can be applied to any residential building retrofit activity. The cantilevered floor retrofit detailed in this guideline is included only to provide an actual retrofit example to better illustrate the QA activities being presented.
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-07-13
... figurines; warrior figures; animals such as birds, bulls and pigs; tubular figurines; boat models; and human masks. In the Cypro-Archaic period, terra cotta models illustrate a variety of daily activities.... Illustrated examples include the head of a woman decorated with rosettes and a bearded male with spiral...
Choosing estimands in clinical trials with missing data.
Mallinckrodt, Craig; Molenberghs, Geert; Rathmann, Suchitrita
2017-01-01
Recent research has fostered new guidance on preventing and treating missing data. Consensus exists that clear objectives should be defined along with the causal estimands; trial design and conduct should maximize adherence to the protocol specified interventions; and a sensible primary analysis should be used along with plausible sensitivity analyses. Two general categories of estimands are effects of the drug as actually taken (de facto, effectiveness) and effects of the drug if taken as directed (de jure, efficacy). Motivated by examples, we argue that no single estimand is likely to meet the needs of all stakeholders and that each estimand has strengths and limitations. Therefore, stakeholder input should be part of an iterative study development process that includes choosing estimands that are consistent with trial objectives. To this end, an example is used to illustrate the benefit from assessing multiple estimands in the same study. A second example illustrates that maximizing adherence reduces sensitivity to missing data assumptions for de jure estimands but may reduce generalizability of results for de facto estimands if efforts to maximize adherence in the trial are not feasible in clinical practice. A third example illustrates that whether or not data after initiation of rescue medication should be included in the primary analysis depends on the estimand to be tested and the clinical setting. We further discuss the sample size and total exposure to placebo implications of including post-rescue data in the primary analysis. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
An introduction to scriptwriting for video and multimedia.
Guth, J
1995-06-01
The elements of audiovisual productions are explained and illustrated, including words, moving images, still images, graphics, narration, music, landscape sounds, pacing and tilting and font styles. Three different production styles are analysed, and examples of those styles are discussed. Rules for writing spoken words, composing blocks of information, and explaining technical information to a lay audience are also provided. Storyboard and scripting forms and examples are included.
A Pirate's Life: A Model and a Metaphor for Learning.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Solomon, David L.
2002-01-01
Discusses various ways in which context may be interpreted to enhance learning and performance; illustrates domains of learning using a hockey team as an example; and suggests implications for learning, performance, and instructional design. Highlights include an ecological systems model; and examples of individual development, team learning, and…
Mixed Potentials: Experimental Illustrations of an Important Concept in Practical Electrochemistry.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Power, G. P.; Ritchie, I. M.
1983-01-01
Presents a largely experimental approach to the concept of mixed potentials, pointing out the close parallel that exists between equilibrium potentials. Describes several important examples of mixed potentials, providing current-voltage and polarization curves and half reactions as examples. Includes a discussion of corrosion reactions and…
A Unifying Probability Example.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Maruszewski, Richard F., Jr.
2002-01-01
Presents an example from probability and statistics that ties together several topics including the mean and variance of a discrete random variable, the binomial distribution and its particular mean and variance, the sum of independent random variables, the mean and variance of the sum, and the central limit theorem. Uses Excel to illustrate these…
Chesson, Harrell W; Patel, Chirag G; Gift, Thomas L; Bernstein, Kyle T; Aral, Sevgi O
2017-09-01
Racial disparities in the burden of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) have been documented and described for decades. Similarly, methodological issues and limitations in the use of disparity measures to quantify disparities in health have also been well documented. The purpose of this study was to use historic STD surveillance data to illustrate four of the most well-known methodological issues associated with the use of disparity measures. We manually searched STD surveillance reports to find examples of racial/ethnic distributions of reported STDs that illustrate key methodological issues in the use of disparity measures. The disparity measures we calculated included the black-white rate ratio, the Index of Disparity (weighted and unweighted by subgroup population), and the Gini coefficient. The 4 examples we developed included illustrations of potential differences in relative and absolute disparity measures, potential differences in weighted and nonweighted disparity measures, the importance of the reference point when calculating disparities, and differences in disparity measures in the assessment of trends in disparities over time. For example, the gonorrhea rate increased for all minority groups (relative to whites) from 1992 to 1993, yet the Index of Disparity suggested that racial/ethnic disparities had decreased. Although imperfect, disparity measures can be useful to quantify racial/ethnic disparities in STDs, to assess trends in these disparities, and to inform interventions to reduce these disparities. Our study uses reported STD rates to illustrate potential methodological issues with these disparity measures and highlights key considerations when selecting disparity measures for quantifying disparities in STDs.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mackall, D. A.; Ishmael, S. D.; Regenie, V. A.
1983-01-01
Qualification considerations for assuring the safety of a life-critical digital flight control system include four major areas: systems interactions, verification, validation, and configuration control. The AFTI/F-16 design, development, and qualification illustrate these considerations. In this paper, qualification concepts, procedures, and methodologies are discussed and illustrated through specific examples.
Roemer, F W; Hunter, D J; Crema, M D; Kwoh, C K; Ochoa-Albiztegui, E; Guermazi, A
2016-02-01
To introduce the most popular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) osteoarthritis (OA) semi-quantitative (SQ) scoring systems to a broader audience with a focus on the most commonly applied scores, i.e., the MOAKS and WORMS system and illustrate similarities and differences. While the main structure and methodology of each scoring system are publicly available, the core of this overview will be an illustrative imaging atlas section including image examples from multiple OA studies applying MRI in regard to different features assessed, show specific examples of different grades and point out pitfalls and specifics of SQ assessment including artifacts, blinding to time point of acquisition and within-grade evaluation. Similarities and differences between different scoring systems are presented. Technical considerations are followed by a brief description of the most commonly utilized SQ scoring systems including their responsiveness and reliability. The second part is comprised of the atlas section presenting illustrative image examples. Evidence suggests that SQ assessment of OA by expert MRI readers is valid, reliable and responsive, which helps investigators to understand the natural history of this complex disease and to evaluate potential new drugs in OA clinical trials. Researchers have to be aware of the differences and specifics of the different systems to be able to engage in imaging assessment and interpretation of imaging-based data. SQ scoring has enabled us to explain associations of structural tissue damage with clinical manifestations of the disease and with morphological alterations thought to represent disease progression. Copyright © 2015 Osteoarthritis Research Society International. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Roemer, Frank W.; Hunter, David J.; Crema, Michel D.; Kwoh, C. Kent; Ochoa-Albiztegui, Elena; Guermazi, Ali
2015-01-01
Objective To introduce the most popular magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) osteoarthritis (OA) semi-quantitative (SQ) scoring systems to a broader audience with a focus on the most commonly applied scores, i.e. the MOAKS and WORMS system and illustrate similarities and differences. Design While the main structure and methodology of each scoring system are publicly available, the core of this overview will be an illustrative imaging atlas section including image examples from multiple osteoarthritis studies applying MRI in regard to different features assessed, show specific examples of different grades and point out pitfalls and specifics of SQ assessment including artifacts, blinding to time point of acquisition and within-grade evaluation. Results Similarities and differences between different scoring systems are presented. Technical considerations are followed by a brief description of the most commonly utilized SQ scoring systems including their responsiveness and reliability. The second part is comprised of the atlas section presenting illustrative image examples. Conclusions Evidence suggests that SQ assessment of OA by expert MRI readers is valid, reliable and responsive, which helps investigators to understand the natural history of this complex disease and to evaluate potential new drugs in OA clinical trials. Researchers have to be aware of the differences and specifics of the different systems to be able to engage in imaging assessment and interpretation of imaging-based data. SQ scoring has enabled us to explain associations of structural tissue damage with clinical manifestations of the disease and with morphological alterations thought to represent disease progression. PMID:26318656
Designing for fiber composite structural durability in hygrothermomechanical environment
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Chamis, C. C.
1985-01-01
A methodology is described which can be used to design/analyze fiber composite structures subjected to complex hygrothermomechanical environments. This methodology includes composite mechanics and advanced structural analysis methods (finite element). Select examples are described to illustrate the application of the available methodology. The examples include: (1) composite progressive fracture; (2) composite design for high cycle fatigue combined with hot-wet conditions; and (3) general laminate design.
An overview of some monoplanar missile programs
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Spearman, M. L.
1984-01-01
A historical review is presented of some monoplanar missile systems in which the vehicle flight control was similar to that for a conventional aircraft. The review is essentially chronological, beginning prior to World War I, and includes worldwise programs. Illustrative examples of aerodynamic research with monoplanar missiles are presented including some comparisons with cruciform missiles. Some examples of current programs are presented and some particular mission applications for monoplanar systems are discussed.
Space physics education via examples in the undergraduate physics curriculum
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Martin, R.; Holland, D. L.
2011-12-01
The field of space physics is rich with examples of basic physics and analysis techniques, yet it is rarely seen in physics courses or textbooks. As space physicists in an undergraduate physics department we like to use research to inform teaching, and we find that students respond well to examples from magnetospheric science. While we integrate examples into general education courses as well, this talk will focus on physics major courses. Space physics examples are typically selected to illustrate a particular concept or method taught in the course. Four examples will be discussed, from an introductory electricity and magnetism course, a mechanics/nonlinear dynamics course, a computational physics course, and a plasma physics course. Space physics provides examples of many concepts from introductory E&M, including the application of Faraday's law to terrestrial magnetic storm effects and the use of the basic motion of charged particles as a springboard to discussion of the inner magnetosphere and the aurora. In the mechanics and nonlinear dynamics courses, the motion of charged particles in a magnetotail current sheet magnetic field is treated as a Newtonian dynamical system, illustrating the Poincaré surface-of-section technique, the partitioning of phase space, and the KAM theorem. Neural network time series analysis of AE data is used as an example in the computational physics course. Finally, among several examples, current sheet particle dynamics is utilized in the plasma physics course to illustrate the notion of adiabatic/guiding center motion and the breakdown of the adiabatic approximation. We will present short descriptions of our pedagogy and student assignments in this "backdoor" method of space physics education.
TIGER: the universal biosensor
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hofstadler, Steven A.; Sampath, Rangarajan; Blyn, Lawrence B.; Eshoo, Mark W.; Hall, Thomas A.; Jiang, Yun; Drader, Jared J.; Hannis, James C.; Sannes-Lowery, Kristin A.; Cummins, Lendell L.; Libby, Brian; Walcott, Demetrius J.; Schink, Amy; Massire, Christian; Ranken, Raymond; Gutierrez, Jose; Manalili, Sheri; Ivy, Cristina; Melton, Rachael; Levene, Harold; Barrett-Wilt, Greg; Li, Feng; Zapp, Vanessa; White, Neill; Samant, Vivek; McNeil, John A.; Knize, Duane; Robbins, David; Rudnick, Karl; Desai, Anjali; Moradi, Emily; Ecker, David J.
2005-03-01
In this work, we describe a strategy for the detection and characterization of microorganisms associated with a potential biological warfare attack or a natural outbreak of an emerging infectious disease. This approach, termed TIGER (Triangulation Identification for the Genetic Evaluation of Risks), relies on mass spectrometry-derived base composition signatures obtained from PCR amplification of broadly conserved regions of the microbial genome(s) in a sample. The sample can be derived from air filtration devices, clinical samples, or other sources. Core to this approach are "intelligent PCR primers" that target broadly conserved regions of microbial genomes that flank variable regions. This approach requires that high-performance mass measurements be made on PCR products in the 80-140 bp size range in a high-throughput, robust modality. As will be demonstrated, the concept is equally applicable to bacteria and viruses and could be further applied to fungi and protozoa. In addition to describing the fundamental strategy of this approach, several specific examples of TIGER are presented that illustrate the impact this approach could have on the way biological weapons attacks are detected and the way that the etiologies of infectious diseases are determined. The first example illustrates how any bacterial species might be identified, using Bacillus anthracis as the test agent. The second example demonstrates how DNA-genome viruses are identified using five members of Poxviridae family, whose members includes Variola virus, the agent responsible for smallpox. The third example demonstrates how RNA-genome viruses are identified using the Alphaviruses (VEE, WEE, and EEE) as representative examples. These examples illustrate how the TIGER technology can be applied to create a universal identification strategy for all pathogens, including those that infect humans, livestock, and plants.
is shown that the maximum ac efficiency is equal to approximately 70% of the corresponding dc value. An illustrative example, including a proposed design for a rather unconventional transformer, is appended. (Author)
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mertz, Gayle
1988-01-01
Presents two lesson plans for grades 5-9 which are meant to increase student's legal literacy. The first lesson covers contracts and includes a comic strip which illustrates contract law. The second deals with warranties and why they are important. Included are examples of product warranties. (GEA)
26 CFR 1.941-3 - Illustration of principles.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... (CONTINUED) INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED) China Trade Act Corporations § 1.941-3 Illustration of principles. The application of section 941 may be illustrated by the following example: Example. (1) The A Company, a China...
26 CFR 1.941-3 - Illustration of principles.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... (CONTINUED) INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED) China Trade Act Corporations § 1.941-3 Illustration of principles. The application of section 941 may be illustrated by the following example: Example. (1) The A Company, a China...
26 CFR 1.941-3 - Illustration of principles.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... (CONTINUED) INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED) China Trade Act Corporations § 1.941-3 Illustration of principles. The application of section 941 may be illustrated by the following example: Example. (1) The A Company, a China...
26 CFR 1.941-3 - Illustration of principles.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... (CONTINUED) INCOME TAXES China Trade Act Corporations § 1.941-3 Illustration of principles. The application of section 941 may be illustrated by the following example: Example. (1) The A Company, a China Trade...
26 CFR 1.941-3 - Illustration of principles.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... (CONTINUED) INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED) China Trade Act Corporations § 1.941-3 Illustration of principles. The application of section 941 may be illustrated by the following example: Example. (1) The A Company, a China...
26 CFR 1.1244(d)-2 - Increases in basis of section 1244 stock.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... issuance there is for any reason, including the operation of section 1376(a), an increase in the basis of.... Therefore, a loss on stock, the basis of which has been increased subsequent to its issuance, must be... be illustrated by the following example: Example: For $10,000 a corporation issues 100 shares of...
26 CFR 1.963-0 - Repeal of section 963; effective dates.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... after December 31, 1975, then a foreign corporation shall be includible in such election only if— (i) It... (i) of this paragraph from a chain or group election of a United States shareholder for its taxable.... The application of this paragraph may be illustrated by the following example: Example. (a) M is a...
Petroleum accounting principles, procedures, and issues
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Brock, H.R.; Klingstedt, J.P.; Jones, D.M.
1985-01-01
This book begins with the basics and leads one through the complexities of accounting and reporting for the industry. It presents the material one needs as an accountant in the petroleum industry. Examples deal with real problems and issues. It also includes numerous illustrations and examples, as well as sample forms, lease agreements, and industry and governmental regulations.
Neurotoxicants: emerging issues and policy options
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Hulebak, K.L.
1987-03-01
Neurotoxicants are increasingly seen as significant public health hazards, the resolution of which is influenced by science as well as economics, politics, and emotions. Three topical issues are presented to illustrate the application or abuse of scientific data in the political arena and to suggest appropriate responsibilities of scientists beyond the generation of data. The examples include regulation of occupation-related neurotoxic exposure, transfer of neurotoxic pollutants among environmental media, and export of neurotoxic hazards to Third World countries. These examples illustrate the variety of ways in which neurotoxicants impinge on policy questions--from international trade, through ecosystem effects, to personal occupationalmore » health and safety.« less
Using Perilog to Explore "Decision Making at NASA"
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
McGreevy, Michael W.
2005-01-01
Perilog, a context intensive text mining system, is used as a discovery tool to explore topics and concerns in "Decision Making at NASA," chapter 6 of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) Report, Volume I. Two examples illustrate how Perilog can be used to discover highly significant safety-related information in the text without prior knowledge of the contents of the document. A third example illustrates how "if-then" statements found by Perilog can be used in logical analysis of decision making. In addition, in order to serve as a guide for future work, the technical details of preparing a PDF document for input to Perilog are included in an appendix.
19 CFR 10.305 - Value content requirement.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
..., marketing, accounting and legal services, and insurance; (ii) Brokerage charges relating to the importation... examples will illustrate these principles. Notwithstanding these examples, the totality of the facts must... paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section. The following examples will illustrate these principles. Example 1. If...
New marketing mix stresses service.
Collier, D A
1991-01-01
The seven Ps of service management include some nontraditional ingredients to help formulate marketing strategy. Two examples illustrate how competitive advantage can be won or lost based on applying or ignoring the seven Ps.
A summary report on system effectiveness and optimization study
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Williamson, O. L.; Rydberg, A. J.; Dorris, G.
1973-01-01
Report treats optimization and effectiveness separately. Report illustrates example of dynamic programming solution to system optimization. Computer algorithm has been developed to solve effectiveness problem and is included in report.
The use and generation of illustrative examples in computer-based instructional systems
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Selig, William John; Johannes, James D.
1987-01-01
A method is proposed whereby the underlying domain knowledge is represented such that illustrative examples may be generated on demand. This method has the advantage that the generated example can follow changes in the domain in addition to allowing automatic customization of the example to the individual.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Weinberg, Norman L.
1983-01-01
Provides a prospective on electrosynthesis technology for chemical educators and students by discussing electrosynthesis reactions and experiments. Includes tables illustrating some electrochemical products, variables to consider in electrochemical reactions, indirect electrolysis of organic compounds, examples of direct/indirect electrochemical…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Book, Daisy; And Others
1990-01-01
The article describes a six-week cooking program for developmentally disabled adults offered through the county continuing education program. The program utilizes illustrated recipes (an example is included). Significant outcomes and implementation pointers are noted. (DB)
Illustrated Examples of the Effects of Risk Preferences and Expectations on Bargaining Outcomes.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Dickinson, David L.
2003-01-01
Describes bargaining examples that use expected utility theory. Provides example results that are intuitive, shown graphically and algebraically, and offer upper-level student samples that illustrate the usefulness of the expected utility theory. (JEH)
The WWW and Our Digital Heritage--The New Preservation Tasks of the Library Community.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mannerheim, Johan
This paper discusses the role of libraries in the preservation of World Wide Web publications. Topics addressed include: (1) the scope of Web preservation, including examples of projects that illustrate comprehensive and selective approaches; (2) the responsibility of Web preservation, including placing the responsibility on publishers and other…
The Hidden Dimensions of Databases.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Jacso, Peter
1994-01-01
Discusses methods of evaluating commercial online databases and provides examples that illustrate their hidden dimensions. Topics addressed include size, including the number of records or the number of titles; the number of years covered; and the frequency of updates. Comparisons of Readers' Guide Abstracts and Magazine Article Summaries are…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Flannery, Maura C.
1991-01-01
Examples from research that incorporate plants to illustrate biological principles are presented. Topics include dried pea shape, homeotic genes, gene transcription in plants that are touched or wounded, production of grasslands, seaweed defenses, migrating plants, camouflage, and family rivalry. (KR)
Visual Thinking, Algebraic Thinking, and a Full Unit-Circle Diagram.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Shear, Jonathan
1985-01-01
The study of trigonometric functions in terms of the unit circle offer an example of how students can learn algebraic relations and operations while using visually oriented thinking. Illustrations are included. (MNS)
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... examples illustrate the principles of this paragraph (b)(1): Example 1. Company A and Company B, who are... described in this paragraph (b)(4)(iv). (v) Examples. The following examples illustrate the principles of... principles of this paragraph (b)(5). In the examples, assume that Companies P and S are both members of the...
26 CFR 52.4682-1 - Ozone-depleting chemicals.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... the type or size of storage container in which the ODC is held. (iii) Example. The application of this paragraph (b)(1) may be illustrated by the following example: Example. A brings CFC-12, an ODC listed in... manufacturer or importer. (B) Example. The application of this paragraph (b)(2)(i) may be illustrated by the...
Introduction to Forward-Error-Correcting Coding
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Freeman, Jon C.
1996-01-01
This reference publication introduces forward error correcting (FEC) and stresses definitions and basic calculations for use by engineers. The seven chapters include 41 example problems, worked in detail to illustrate points. A glossary of terms is included, as well as an appendix on the Q function. Block and convolutional codes are covered.
Primary Science Curriculum Guide, C. Branching Out.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Victoria Education Dept. (Australia).
Examples of reports from children in grades 4-6 of Education Department of Victoria schools are used to illustrate the suggestions made for teaching the topics included in the science course. Emphasis is given to methods of inter-relating science and other activities, including social studies, mathematics, writing and history. Teachers are…
Prospects for computing airfoil aerodynamics with Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes codes
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Deiwert, G. S.; Bailey, H. E.
1979-01-01
The Reynolds averaged Navier-Stokes equations are solved numerically for a variety of transonic airfoil configurations where viscous phenomena are important. Illustrative examples include flows past sensitive geometries, Reynolds number effects, and buffet phenomena.
Integrating Disabled Employees into the Workplace.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Nathanson, Robert B.; Lambert, Jeffrey
1981-01-01
Negative attitudes are one of the biggest barriers to successful integration of disabled employees. Using case-study examples, the authors illustrate seven attitudinal syndromes and their impact on mainstreaming efforts. Attitudes include pity, overprotection, rejection, guilt, and discomfort. (CT)
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Harding, T. E.
Some problems of writing scripts for radio and/or television are discussed, with examples provided to illustrate the rules. Writing both fictional scripts and documentaries are considered. Notes are also included to help the freelance writer who wishes to sell his work. (RH)
Who Was that Masked Man? Biographical Sites on the Web.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Byerly, Greg; Brodie, Carolyn S.
1999-01-01
Identifies some of the best general biographical sites on the Web and offers examples of some categorized biographical sites. Highlights include Web encyclopedias; presidents; women; scientists; children's literature authors and illustrators; popular culture; and classroom applications. (LRW)
Intelligent Information Systems.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Zabezhailo, M. I.; Finn, V. K.
1996-01-01
An Intelligent Information System (IIS) uses data warehouse technology to facilitate the cycle of data and knowledge processing, including input, standardization, storage, representation, retrieval, calculation, and delivery. This article provides an overview of IIS products and artificial intelligence systems, illustrates examples of IIS…
On the Curvature Function: Where Does a Curve Bend the Fastest?
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Chrysafi, Loucas; Gordon, Sheldon
2006-01-01
We examine the behavior of the curvature function associated with most common families of functions and curves, with the focus on establishing where maximum curvature occurs. Many examples are included for student illustrations. (Contains 18 figures.)
The Preparation and Characterization of Materials.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Wold, Aaron
1980-01-01
Presents several examples illustrating different aspects of materials problems, including problems associated with solid-solid reactions, sintering and crystal growth, characterization of materials, preparation and characterization of stoichiometric ferrites and chromites, copper-sulfur systems, growth of single crystals by chemical vapor…
Groupies in multitype random graphs.
Shang, Yilun
2016-01-01
A groupie in a graph is a vertex whose degree is not less than the average degree of its neighbors. Under some mild conditions, we show that the proportion of groupies is very close to 1/2 in multitype random graphs (such as stochastic block models), which include Erdős-Rényi random graphs, random bipartite, and multipartite graphs as special examples. Numerical examples are provided to illustrate the theoretical results.
Designing Virtual Worlds for Use in Mathematics Education: The Example of Experiential Algebra.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Winn, William; Bricken, William
1992-01-01
Discussion of the use of virtual reality (VR) to help students learn highlights the use of VR with elementary algebra. Learning theory is examined, including knowledge construction; knowledge representation is discussed, including the symbol systems of algebra; and spatial algebra is described and illustrated. (34 references) (LRW)
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Hedgley, David R., Jr.
2000-01-01
A user's guide for the computer program SKETCH is presented on this disk. SKETCH solves a popular problem in computer graphics-the removal of hidden lines from images of solid objects. Examples and illustrations are included in the guide. Also included is the SKETCH program, so a user can incorporate the information into a particular software system.
Childhood stressors including physical abuse predict adult cancer risk. Prior research portrays this finding as an indirect mechanism that operates through coping behaviors, including adult smoking, or through increased toxic exposures during childhood. Little is known about pote...
A Study on Contingency Learning in Introductory Physics Concepts
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Scaife, Thomas M.
2010-01-01
Instructors of physics often use examples to illustrate new or complex physical concepts to students. For any particular concept, there are an infinite number of examples, thus presenting instructors with a difficult question whenever they wish to use one in their teaching: which example will most effectively illustrate the concept so that student…
31 CFR Appendix C to Part 212 - Examples of the Lookback Period and Protected Amount
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... Protected Amount C Appendix C to Part 212 Money and Finance: Treasury Regulations Relating to Money and... Lookback Period and Protected Amount The following examples illustrate this definition of lookback period... corresponding date two months earlier. The following examples illustrate the definition of protected amount...
31 CFR Appendix C to Part 212 - Examples of the Lookback Period and Protected Amount
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... Protected Amount C Appendix C to Part 212 Money and Finance: Treasury Regulations Relating to Money and... Lookback Period and Protected Amount The following examples illustrate this definition of lookback period... corresponding date two months earlier. The following examples illustrate the definition of protected amount...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Dewdney, A. K.
1989-01-01
Discussed are three examples of computer graphics including biomorphs, Truchet tilings, and fractal popcorn. The graphics are shown and the basic algorithm using multiple iteration of a particular function or mathematical operation is described. An illustration of a snail shell created by computer graphics is presented. (YP)
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Kranowitz, Carol Stock
1998-01-01
Examines the limits of the teacher's responsibility to help at-risk children in the classroom. Offers three examples of teachers' efforts to try different strategies, modify classroom experience, and establish working relationships with parents to overcome children's learning difficulties. Problems illustrated include parents' refusal to…
Post-16 Biology--Some Model Approaches?
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Lock, Roger
1997-01-01
Outlines alternative approaches to the teaching of difficult concepts in A-level biology which may help student learning by making abstract ideas more concrete and accessible. Examples include models, posters, and poems for illustrating meiosis, mitosis, genetic mutations, and protein synthesis. (DDR)
ISPI's Value Proposition: Two Examples.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Swinney, John
2003-01-01
Describes two experiences that illustrate the value of the International Society for Performance Improvement (ISPI). Highlights include measuring organizational results; identifying opportunities to improve performance; training as part of the solution; the role of ISD (instructional systems design); HPT (human performance technology) issues; and…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Riveire, Janine
1996-01-01
Recommends singing as an instructional strategy for string and other instrument classes. Maintains that singing familiarizes the student with the music and can serve as an illustrative example of musical techniques. Includes a list of tonal objectives found in repertory songs. Briefly reviews several instructional texts. (MJP)
The Promise and Perils of Thought Experiments
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Brown, James Robert
2006-01-01
A number of thought experiments are cited, some well-known, some not. These illustrate the power of thought experiments. Other examples are given that show some of the dangers. As well as examples from the science, some examples of visual reasoning from mathematics are also presented, again with an eye to illustrating their promise and perils.…
The Power of Examples: Illustrative Examples Enhance Conceptual Learning of Declarative Concepts
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rawson, Katherine A.; Thomas, Ruthann C.; Jacoby, Larry L.
2015-01-01
Declarative concepts (i.e., key terms with short definitions of the abstract concepts denoted by those terms) are a common kind of information that students are expected to learn in many domains. A common pedagogical approach for supporting learning of declarative concepts involves presenting students with concrete examples that illustrate how the…
Schroder, P
1997-01-01
The author critiques the way population density is represented in school atlases, focusing on those used in German-speaking countries. After a discussion of the methodological problems underlying such representations, he selects examples from several German atlases to illustrate the transmission of contradictory, misleading, or out-of-date information. He also suggests ways to improve this situation, including better teaching of underlying cartographical issues and the use of a dot system to illustrate population density.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Engel, Brenda S.
Intended for non-experts in evaluative techniques, this monograph presents suggestions and examples for assessing: (1) the child; (2) the classroom; and (3) the program or the school. Illustrative techniques of recordkeeping are presented. Methods of collecting data include documentation and formal records. Techniques to be used during evaluation…
48 CFR 9905.502-60 - Illustrations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
.... For example, the institution may use the number of transactions processed rather than its former... for the same purpose: (1) An educational institution normally allocates special test equipment costs directly to contracts. The costs of general purpose test equipment are normally included in the indirect...
48 CFR 9905.502-60 - Illustrations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
.... For example, the institution may use the number of transactions processed rather than its former... for the same purpose: (1) An educational institution normally allocates special test equipment costs directly to contracts. The costs of general purpose test equipment are normally included in the indirect...
48 CFR 9905.502-60 - Illustrations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
.... For example, the institution may use the number of transactions processed rather than its former... for the same purpose: (1) An educational institution normally allocates special test equipment costs directly to contracts. The costs of general purpose test equipment are normally included in the indirect...
Introducing Children to Economic Reasoning: Some Beginning Lessons.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Schug, Mark C.
1996-01-01
Provides an overview, guidelines, and specific suggestions for introducing economic thinking to elementary school children. Utilizes examples from US history (buffalo hunting, cattle farming) to illustrate economic concepts. Includes an appendix that frames economic concepts as mysteries with clues (and answers) provided. (MJP)
Preliminary orbit determination for lunar satellites.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Lancaster, E. R.
1973-01-01
Methods for the determination of orbits of artificial lunar satellites from earth-based range rate measurements developed by Koskela (1964) and Bateman et al. (1966) are simplified and extended to include range measurements along with range rate measurements. For illustration, a numerical example is presented.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Zeman, Anne; Kelly, Kate
This book is written to answer commonly asked homework questions of fourth, fifth, and sixth graders. Included are facts, charts, definitions, explanations, examples, and illustrations. Topics include ancient number systems; decimal system; math symbols; addition; subtraction; multiplication; division; fractions; estimation; averages; properties;…
AN ADVANCED PLACEMENT COURSE IN ANALYTIC GEOMETRY AND CALCULUS (MATHEMATICS XV X AP).
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
DEROLF, JOHN J.; MIENTKA, WALTER E.
THIS TEXT ON ANALYTIC GEOMETRY AND CALCULUS IS A CORRESPONDENCE COURSE DESIGNED FOR ADVANCED PLACEMENT OF HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN COLLEGE. EACH OF THE 21 LESSONS INCLUDES READING ASSIGNMENTS AND LISTS OF PROBLEMS TO BE WORKED. IN ADDITION, SUPPLEMENTARY EXPLANATIONS AND COMMENTS ARE INCLUDED THAT (1) PROVIDE ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES OF CONCEPTS AND…
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2013-07-19
...); Notice, 78 FR 22928, Example A, for an illustration of how leg orders would be generated and priced. \\10... illustration of the maximum size limit as applied to the generation of leg orders. CBOE proposes that it may...-22930, n. 10-11, and Example C for an illustration of this concept. \\22\\ See proposed CBOE Rule 6.53C(c...
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Knight, Norman F., Jr.; Rankin, Charles C.
2006-01-01
This document summarizes the STructural Analysis of General Shells (STAGS) development effort, STAGS performance for selected demonstration problems, and STAGS application problems illustrating selected advanced features available in the STAGS Version 5.0. Each problem is discussed including selected background information and reference solutions when available. The modeling and solution approach for each problem is described and illustrated. Numerical results are presented and compared with reference solutions, test data, and/or results obtained from mesh refinement studies. These solutions provide an indication of the overall capabilities of the STAGS nonlinear finite element analysis tool and provide users with representative cases, including input files, to explore these capabilities that may then be tailored to other applications.
Visual Basic programs for spreadsheet analysis.
Hunt, Bruce
2005-01-01
A collection of Visual Basic programs, entitled Function.xls, has been written for ground water spreadsheet calculations. This collection includes programs for calculating mathematical functions and for evaluating analytical solutions in ground water hydraulics and contaminant transport. Several spreadsheet examples are given to illustrate their use.
Toxicology and Chemical Safety.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hall, Stephen K.
1983-01-01
Topics addressed in this discussion of toxicology and chemical safety include routes of exposure, dose/response relationships, action of toxic substances, and effects of exposure to chemicals. Specific examples are used to illustrate the principles discussed. Suggests prudence in handling any chemicals, whether or not toxicity is known. (JN)
Redesigning Technology Integration into World Language Education
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rodríguez, Julio C.
2018-01-01
This article describes how a multi-institutional, proficiency-based program engages stakeholders in design thinking to discover and explore solutions to perennial problems in technology integration into world language education (WLE). Examples of replicable activities illustrate the strategies used to fuel innovation efforts, including fostering…
Off into Space: The Pleasures of Jumping out of a Plane.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Dubrovsky, Vladimir; Sharygin, Igor
1992-01-01
Presents illustrated examples that promote problem solving through the student's consideration of a visible predicament from a three-dimensional viewpoint rather than the typical planar perspective. Includes six student exercises involving rays, circles, quadrilaterals, and hexagons, with hints and solutions provided. (JJK)
Teen Pregnancy Prevention. A Legislator's Guide.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Guiden, Mary
This publication presents an overview of adolescent pregnancy, including national and state statistical information; funding sources for teen pregnancy prevention programs; examples of the effects of teen pregnancy prevention on society; illustrations of teenagers' perspectives on the issue; recent developments and initiatives in the arena of teen…
Obsessional Slowness in College Students: Case Studies
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Johnson, Aleta
2014-01-01
Cases of obsessional slowness, a variant of obsessive compulsive disorder, have been documented in case literature regarding relatively low functioning populations. However, obsessional slowness can also present in higher functioning populations, including college and graduate students, as illustrated here by three case examples from a competitive…
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stoutemyer, D. R.
1977-01-01
The computer algebra language MACSYMA enables the programmer to include symbolic physical units in computer calculations, and features automatic detection of dimensionally-inhomogeneous formulas and conversion of inconsistent units in a dimensionally homogeneous formula. Some examples illustrate these features.
The Flipped Classroom in Counselor Education
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Moran, Kristen; Milsom, Amy
2015-01-01
The flipped classroom is proposed as an effective instructional approach in counselor education. An overview of the flipped-classroom approach, including advantages and disadvantages, is provided. A case example illustrates how the flipped classroom can be applied in counselor education. Recommendations for implementing or researching flipped…
A New Paradigm for Assessing the Role of Agriculture in the Climate System and in Climate Change
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Pielke, Roger A., Sr.; Adegoke, Jimmy O.; Chase, Thomas N.; Marshall, Curtis H.; Matsui, Toshihisa; Niyogi, Dev
2007-01-01
This paper discusses the diverse climate forcings that impact agricultural systems, and contrasts the current paradigm of using global models downscaled to agricultural areas (a top-down approach) with a new paradigm that first assesses the vulnerability of agricultural activities to the spectrum of environmental risk including climate (a bottom-up approach). To illustrate the wide spectrum of climate forcings, regional climate forcings are presented including land-use/land-cover change and the influence of aerosols on radiative and biogeochemical fluxes and cloud/precipitation processes, as well as how these effects can be teleconnected globally. Examples are presented of the vulnerability perspective, along with a small survey of the perceived drought impacts in a local area, in which a wide range of impacts for the same precipitation deficits are found. This example illustrates why agricultural assessments of risk to climate change and variability and of other environmental risks should start with a bottom-up perspective.
Typographic Settings for Structured Abstracts.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hartley, James
2000-01-01
Lists some of the major typographic variables involved in structured abstracts (containing sub-headings). Illustrates how typography can affect clarity by presenting seven examples that illustrate the effects of these typographic variables in practice. Concludes with a final example of an effective approach. (SR)
Electronic spectroscopy of diatomic molecules
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Partridge, Harry; Langhoff, Stephen R.; Bauschlicher, Charles W., Jr.
1994-01-01
This article provides an overview of the principal computational approaches and their accuracy for the study of electronic spectroscopy of diatomic molecules. We include a number of examples from our work that illustrate the range of application. We show how full configuration interaction benchmark calculations were instrumental in improving the understanding of the computational requirements for obtaining accurate results for diatomic spectroscopy. With this understanding it is now possible to compute radiative lifetimes accurate to within 10% for systems involving first- and second-row atoms. We consider the determination of the infrared vibrational transition probabilities for the ground states of SiO and NO, based on a globally accurate dipole moment function. We show how we were able to assign the a(sup "5)II state of CO as the upper state in the recently observed emission bands of CO in an Ar matrix. We next discuss the assignment of the photoelectron detachment spectra of NO and the alkali oxide negative ions. We then present several examples illustrating the state-of-the-art in determining radiative lifetimes for valence-valence and valence-Rydberg transitions. We next compare the molecular spectroscopy of the valence isoelectronic B2, Al2, and AlB molecules. The final examples consider systems involving transition metal atoms, which illustrate the difficulty in describing states with different numbers of d electrons.
Determination of stresses in gas-turbine disks subjected to plastic flow and creep
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Millenson, M B; Manson, S S
1948-01-01
A finite-difference method previously presented for computing elastic stresses in rotating disks is extended to include the computation of the disk stresses when plastic flow and creep are considered. A finite-difference method is employed to eliminate numerical integration and to permit nontechnical personnel to make the calculations with a minimum of engineering supervision. Illustrative examples are included to facilitate explanation of the procedure by carrying out the computations on a typical gas-turbine disk through a complete running cycle. The results of the numerical examples presented indicate that plastic flow markedly alters the elastic-stress distribution.
Applications in Robotics and Controls
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Youcef-Toumi, Kamal
2008-06-01
Recent industry trends have set new standards in business dealings and trades. Issues such as time to market, shoter market wondows, product performance, rapid increase of product complexity, costly mistakes, costly late introductions, and customer expectations have changed significantly. These trends have also influenced to a great extend the academic world. Some of these trends will be illustrated through examples which include automated systems, robotics, biotechnollogy, and nanotechnology. The examples will include concepts and prototypes of engineering systems in the macro, micro and nanodomains. The presentation also amphasizes the merging of the traditionally segregated disciplines into one multidisciplinary modeling, design, optimization and control approach.
State of science: human factors and ergonomics in healthcare.
Hignett, Sue; Carayon, Pascale; Buckle, Peter; Catchpole, Ken
2013-01-01
The past decade has seen an increase in the application of human factors and ergonomics (HFE) techniques to healthcare delivery in a broad range of contexts (domains, locations and environments). This paper provides a state of science commentary using four examples of HFE in healthcare to review and discuss analytical and implementation challenges and to identify future issues for HFE. The examples include two domain areas (occupational ergonomics and surgical safety) to illustrate a traditional application of HFE and the area that has probably received the most research attention. The other two examples show how systems and design have been addressed in healthcare with theoretical approaches for organisational and socio-technical systems and design for patient safety. Future opportunities are identified to develop and embed HFE systems thinking in healthcare including new theoretical models and long-term collaborative partnerships. HFE can contribute to systems and design initiatives for both patients and clinicians to improve everyday performance and safety, and help to reduce and control spiralling healthcare costs. There has been an increase in the application of HFE techniques to healthcare delivery in the past 10 years. This paper provides a state of science commentary using four illustrative examples (occupational ergonomics, design for patient safety, surgical safety and organisational and socio-technical systems) to review and discuss analytical and implementation challenges and identify future issues for HFE.
Meso-Mechanics and Meso-Structures: A Matter of Scale
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Chamis, Christos C.; Gotsis, P. K.; Mital, S. K.
1998-01-01
Meso-mechanics and meso-structures are described in terms of the scales at which they are observed and formulated. Select composite examples are presented to illustrate that meso-mechanics and/or meso-structures are meaningful only when they refer to a specific scale in a hierarchical scale observation/simulation. These examples include different types of composite unit cells, woven fabric unit cells, and progressive fracture as a composite enhanced infrastructure made from reinforced concrete. The results from the select examples indicate that meso-mechanics and meso-structures are elusive terms and depend mainly on the investigators' knowledge and available information.
45 CFR 1170.13 - Illustrative examples.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... handicapped persons are not subjected to discrimination on the basis of handicap either by sub-grantees or by... HUMANITIES NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN FEDERALLY ASSISTED PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES Discrimination Prohibited § 1170.13 Illustrative examples. (a) The...
45 CFR 1170.13 - Illustrative examples.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... handicapped persons are not subjected to discrimination on the basis of handicap either by sub-grantees or by... HUMANITIES NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN FEDERALLY ASSISTED PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES Discrimination Prohibited § 1170.13 Illustrative examples. (a) The...
45 CFR 1170.13 - Illustrative examples.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... handicapped persons are not subjected to discrimination on the basis of handicap either by sub-grantees or by... HUMANITIES NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN FEDERALLY ASSISTED PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES Discrimination Prohibited § 1170.13 Illustrative examples. (a) The...
45 CFR 1170.13 - Illustrative examples.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... handicapped persons are not subjected to discrimination on the basis of handicap either by sub-grantees or by... HUMANITIES NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN FEDERALLY ASSISTED PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES Discrimination Prohibited § 1170.13 Illustrative examples. (a) The...
45 CFR 1170.13 - Illustrative examples.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... handicapped persons are not subjected to discrimination on the basis of handicap either by sub-grantees or by... HUMANITIES NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN FEDERALLY ASSISTED PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES Discrimination Prohibited § 1170.13 Illustrative examples. (a) The...
POLO2: a user's guide to multiple Probit Or LOgit analysis
Robert M. Russell; N. E. Savin; Jacqueline L. Robertson
1981-01-01
This guide provides instructions for the use of POLO2, a computer program for multivariate probit or logic analysis of quantal response data. As many as 3000 test subjects may be included in a single analysis. Including the constant term, up to nine explanatory variables may be used. Examples illustrating input, output, and uses of the program's special features...
Transpersonal: The New Educational Psychology.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Roberts, Thomas Bradford
This article lists some of the major ideas and topics of interest in transpersonal psychology and illustrates them with examples of transpersonal education applied to schools. Transpersonal psychology includes psychological aspects of such things as new world views, altered states of consciousness, an impulse toward higher states, self-realization…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Schattschneider, Doris
1991-01-01
Provided are examples from many domains of mathematics that illustrate the Fubini Principle in its discrete version: the value of a summation over a rectangular array is independent of the order of summation. Included are: counting using partitions as in proof by pictures, combinatorial arguments, indirect counting as in the inclusion-exclusion…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
DeGraaf, Richard M.
1978-01-01
There are numerous bird species that will nest only in dead or dying trees. Current forestry practices include clearing forests of these snags, or dead trees. This practice is driving many species out of the forests. An illustrated example of bird succession in and on a tree is given. (MA)
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Miller, J. Dale
The idioms, rated numerically on frequency of occurrence and prevailing usage, are presented with an illustrative example and English translation. An alphabetical listing of the English translations of the Spanish idioms includes reference to page citation and frequency of usage. Appendixes contain a sample evaluation sheet used in the selection…
Neurodevelopmental Treatment (NDT): Therapeutic Intervention and Its Efficacy.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Stern, Francine Martin; Gorga, Delia
1988-01-01
Use of neurodevelopmental treatment, also known as the Bobath method, is discussed, including its history, philosophy, goals, and treatment emphasis with infants and children with movement disorders. Examples of children before and after therapeutic intervention illustrate use of the technique, and controversies in measuring therapy efficacy are…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gino, M. C.; Wise, G.
2003-05-01
The use of historic science illustrations in the classroom offers unique opportunities to meet the National Science Standard that "students should develop understanding of science as a human endeavor, of the nature of scientific knowledge, and of historical perspectives" (Content Standard G, Science Education Standards, 1996, National Academy Press, Washington, DC). The Dudley Observatory has launched an effort to use its outstanding collection of rare astronomy books to meet this challenge. The example featured here is the illustration "Systema Solare et Planetarium" from the book Atlas novus coelestis (1742) by Johann Gabriel Doppelmayr (1671-1750). This illustration is significant in the evolution of astronomy because it is one of the first popular depictions of the solar system picturing the planets in their accurate relative sizes and providing numerical estimates of planetary and solar dimensions and distances. Perhaps at least as important, from the educational viewpoint, it is visually appealing, culturally intriguing and filled with puzzling items that might serve as the basis for inquiry-based learning. For example, why is the page sprinkled with what appear to be appeals to theology ("Ex His Creatorem") and expressions of wonder or even horror ("perceptum horridem")? Why does its map of the world depict California as an island? A structure for using this and other historic illustrations in the classroom might be based on the following general questions: What is the purpose of the illustration? What is included that a modern scientist might leave out, or left out that a modern scientist might include? How accurate are the quantitative results presented? How does the conceptual treatment resemble and differ from modern treatments? Viewing the heavens as an 18th century astronomer wanted his public to see them is an excellent approach to achieving the humanistic and historical perspective that the educational standard seeks.
Saccomani, Maria Pia; Audoly, Stefania; Bellu, Giuseppina; D'Angiò, Leontina
2010-04-01
DAISY (Differential Algebra for Identifiability of SYstems) is a recently developed computer algebra software tool which can be used to automatically check global identifiability of (linear and) nonlinear dynamic models described by differential equations involving polynomial or rational functions. Global identifiability is a fundamental prerequisite for model identification which is important not only for biological or medical systems but also for many physical and engineering systems derived from first principles. Lack of identifiability implies that the parameter estimation techniques may not fail but any obtained numerical estimates will be meaningless. The software does not require understanding of the underlying mathematical principles and can be used by researchers in applied fields with a minimum of mathematical background. We illustrate the DAISY software by checking the a priori global identifiability of two benchmark nonlinear models taken from the literature. The analysis of these two examples includes comparison with other methods and demonstrates how identifiability analysis is simplified by this tool. Thus we illustrate the identifiability analysis of other two examples, by including discussion of some specific aspects related to the role of observability and knowledge of initial conditions in testing identifiability and to the computational complexity of the software. The main focus of this paper is not on the description of the mathematical background of the algorithm, which has been presented elsewhere, but on illustrating its use and on some of its more interesting features. DAISY is available on the web site http://www.dei.unipd.it/ approximately pia/. 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Petro, N. E.
2013-12-01
Scientists often speak to the public about their science and the current state of understanding of their field. While many talks (including those by this author) typically feature static plots, figures, diagrams, and the odd movie/animation/visualization (when technology allows), it is now possible, using the web to guide an audience through the thought process of how a scientist tackles certain questions. The presentation will highlight examples of web tools that effectively illustrate how datasets are used to address questions of lunar science. Why would a scientist use precious time during a talk to interact with data, in real time? Why not just show the results and move on? Through experience it is evident that illustrating how data is analyzed, even in a simple form, engages an audience, and demonstrates the thought process when interacting with data. While it is clear that scientists are unlikely to use such a tool to conduct science, it illustrates how a member of the public can engage with mission data. An example is discussed below. When discussing the geology of the Moon, there is an enormous volume of data that can be used to explain what we know (or think we know) and how we know it. For example, the QuickMap interface (http://www.actgate.com/home/quickmap.htm) enables interaction with a set of data (images, spectral data, topography, radar data) across the entire Moon (http://target.lroc.asu.edu/q3/). This webtool enables a speaker the opportunity (given adequate web connectivity) to talk about features, such as a crater, and show it from multiple perspectives (e.g., plan view, oblique, topographically exaggerated) in a logical flow. The tool enables illustration of topographic profiles, 3-D perspectives, and data overlays. Now, one might ask why doing this demonstration in real time is valuable, over a set of static slides. In some cases static slides are best, and doing any real time demos is unfeasible. However, guiding an engaged audience through the thought process, in real time, also offers the audience the opportunity to interact with both the scientist and the data. When a presenter offers the audience the chance to identify a target to explore, the presentation becomes a two-way dialog and guided discussion, over a lecture with little interaction. The demonstration also allows for questions of what additional data is needed or desired to address a given question. All told, this is a method for illustrating how a scientist (primarily interested in remote sensing) can use an available tool to walk through how a focused science question can be addressed, or how typical analysis are conducted. For example, one can show how, for a small set of craters, the depth-diameter ratio varies as a function of degradation. This leads to the question of why, and hopefully a discussion of the erosion process on the Moon. Additional examples will be discussed and illustrated. Example of Quickmap interface illustrating perspective view of Tycho Crater.
Should industry care for children? Public health advocacy and law in Australia.
Stanley, F; Daube, M
2009-03-01
This paper uses examples to illustrate the challenges to health and law professionals interested in public health interventions to reduce the negative impact of companies making money by selling products that put children and young people at risk. Examples included are folate to prevent neural tube defects, with issues around the food industry attempting to block mandatory fortification of flour with folate; fetal alcohol syndrome and hazardous drinking in young people, with a focus on the actions of the alcohol industry including vendors; smoking and the ways in which the tobacco industry still target children; and childhood obesity, with problems again from the food and drink industries including vendors.
The Flat and Direct Way to R and S Configurations.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Brun, Y.; Leblanc, P.
1983-01-01
Discusses a simple, effective way of teaching S and R configurations for chiral molecules containing asymmetric centers. The method involves converting wedge/spatial representations to Fischer projections and prioritizing groups according to the Cahn-Ingold-Prelog sequence rules. Two examples illustrating the method are included. (JN)
16 CFR 313.6 - Information to be included in privacy notices.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-01-01
... business purposes, such as to process transactions, maintain account(s), respond to court orders and legal... companies, followed by illustrative examples such as retailers, magazine publishers, airlines, and direct...; or (ii) For a consumer who conducts business in person at your office, maintain copies of the notice...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Herron, Terri L.
1998-01-01
Discusses ways to use the Internet as a pedagogical tool in higher education, with illustrations from techniques and resources used in a graduate course in accounting information systems. Examples include use of an online textbook, an Internet-based project, electronic mail, a class Web page, and Internet searching to find course-related…
Organizational Justice as a Framework for Understanding Union-Management Relations in Education
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Poole, Wendy L.
2007-01-01
In this article, I have conceptualized union-management relations using an organizational justice framework. I consider organizational justice theory, including distributive, procedural, interactional, and what I call relational justice perspectives. Utilizing examples from my experience and research, I illustrate and discuss various forms of…
How Neuropsychology Informs Our Understanding of Developmental Disorders
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Pennington, Bruce F.
2009-01-01
This review includes 1) an explanation of what neuropsychology is, 2) a brief history of how developmental cognitive neuroscience emerged from earlier neuropsychological approaches to understanding atypical development, 3) three recent examples that illustrate the benefits of this approach, 4) issues and challenges this approach must face, and 5)…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rzepa, Henry S.
2016-01-01
Three new examples are presented illustrating three-dimensional chemical information searches of the Cambridge structure database (CSD) from which basic core concepts in organic and inorganic chemistry emerge. These include connecting the regiochemistry of aromatic electrophilic substitution with the geometrical properties of hydrogen bonding…
Assessing Competence in Higher Education. Staff and Educational Development Series.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Edwards, Anne, Ed.; Knight, Peter, Ed.
This collection of 12 essays focuses on issues surrounding the assessment of competence in higher education, providing examples to illustrate the competence approach in practice in the United Kingdom. They include: (1) "The Assessment of Competence in Higher Education" (Anne Edwards and Peter Knight); (2) "National Vocational…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Latimer, Colin J.
1983-01-01
Discusses some lesser known examples of atomic phenomena to illustrate to students that the old quantum theory in its simplest (Bohr) form is not an antiquity but can still make an important contribution to understanding such phenomena. Topics include hydrogenic/non-hydrogenic spectra and atoms in strong electric and magnetic fields. (Author/JN)
Applying isozyme analyses in tree-breeding programs
W. T. Adams
1981-01-01
Four examples illustrate the potential for practical use of isozyme analyses in applied breeding programs. These include identifying parent trees and clones, seed sources, and parentage of controlled crosses, and evaluating the effectiveness of different procedures involving open-pollination to produce seed of specific crosses. The improved ability to assess the true...
Asking the Right Questions: Techniques for Collaboration and School Change. 2nd Edition.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Holcomb, Edie L.
This work provides school change leaders with tools, techniques, tips, examples, illustrations, and stories about promoting school change. Tools provided include histograms, surveys, run charts, weighted voting, force-field analysis, decision matrices, and many others. Chapter 1, "Introduction," applies a matrix for asking questions…
How to Write an Article for Publication.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Berger, Allen
The suggestions for writing for publication given in this paper include writing with honesty, thinking clearly, considering the potential audience, sharing the article with friends, revising the article, and sending the article to the appropriate journal. Empathy for the difficulty of writing is given and illustrated with examples from Eric…
Comparing School Accountability in England and Its East Asian Sources of "Borrowing"
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
You, Yun
2017-01-01
Education reforms in England are increasingly justified by borrowing "best practices" of high-performing East Asian societies, including Hong Kong, Singapore and Shanghai. However, taking the reforms of school accountability as an illustrative example, this article argues that there are serious variations between England and its East…
Art is for All; Arts and Crafts for Less Able Children.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Lindsay, Zaidee
Art activities for educationally subnormal children are presented in the areas of painting, carving, printing, paper construction, mosaics, collages, paper and wire sculpture, embroidery, and a puppet theatre. Seventy-two illustrations provide examples of students' work for each area; suggestions for teachers are included. (RD)
Object Lessons: Thinking about Material Culture
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Burkhart, Anne
2006-01-01
This article describes why art educators might consider studying material forms from everyday life, presents suggestions for exploring them in an art classroom, and includes an example to illustrate teaching about an object of material culture. The author presents reasons for studying material culture in the art classroom and offers suggestions…
Tackling Production Techniques: Telling Tales with Transparencies.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Martin, Ron
1986-01-01
This lesson introduces students to procedures for creating both hand-drawn and machine-made transparencies and requires each of them to create one example to illustrate the same story. Detailed plans include performance objectives, materials needed, instructions for presenting the lesson, a sample student task card, and suggestions for evaluating…
Seven Keys to Successful Study.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Edwards, Peter
Written for secondary, technical, and technical and further education (TAFE) students, this book aims to make learning easier and more enjoyable by showing students how to use a series of basic study skills called "keys." The book offers an explanation, examples, graphic illustrations, and activities for each skill. Chapters include: (1)…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Stover, Mark
This book explains through descriptive narrative, illustrative examples, and practical suggestions how today's information specialists can navigate in the new "wired" organizations. The emphasis is on practical, useful, relevant advice. The following ten chapters are included: (1) "Communicating Online: The Heart of the Wired Organization"…
Sociodrama: Group Creative Problem Solving in Action.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Riley, John F.
1990-01-01
Sociodrama is presented as a structured, yet flexible, method of encouraging the use of creative thinking to examine a difficult problem. An example illustrates the steps involved in putting sociodrama into action. Production techniques useful in sociodrama include the soliloquy, double, role reversal, magic shop, unity of opposites, and audience…
17 CFR 229.1103 - (Item 1103) Transaction summary and risk factors.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... if doing so will aid understanding. Consider using diagrams to illustrate the relationships among the parties, the structure of the securities offered (including, for example, the flow of funds or any... securities may be issued. (v) Identify the distribution frequency on the securities. (vi) Summarize the flow...
17 CFR 229.1103 - (Item 1103) Transaction summary and risk factors.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... if doing so will aid understanding. Consider using diagrams to illustrate the relationships among the parties, the structure of the securities offered (including, for example, the flow of funds or any... securities may be issued. (v) Identify the distribution frequency on the securities. (vi) Summarize the flow...
17 CFR 229.1103 - (Item 1103) Transaction summary and risk factors.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... if doing so will aid understanding. Consider using diagrams to illustrate the relationships among the parties, the structure of the securities offered (including, for example, the flow of funds or any... securities may be issued. (v) Identify the distribution frequency on the securities. (vi) Summarize the flow...
Voices of Queer Youth in Urban Schools: Possibilities and Limitations
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Blackburn, Mollie V.; McCready, Lance T.
2009-01-01
This article reviews scholarship that represents urban students who self-identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or questioning. It draws on empirical examples to illustrate prominent themes across this scholarship, including the homophobia they experience, the impact it has on their academic performance, and the activism it…
Keller, Adrienne; Bauerle, Jennifer A
2009-01-01
Logic models are a ubiquitous tool for specifying the tactics--including implementation and evaluation--of interventions in the public health, health and social behaviors arenas. Similarly, social norms interventions are a common strategy, particularly in college settings, to address hazardous drinking and other dangerous or asocial behaviors. This paper illustrates an extension of logic models to include strategic as well as tactical components, using a specific example developed for social norms interventions. Placing the evaluation of projects within the context of this kind of logic model addresses issues related to the lack of a research design to evaluate effectiveness.
Towards a Culturally Situated Reader Response Theory
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Brooks, Wanda; Browne, Susan
2012-01-01
This article describes a theory of how culture enables literary interpretations of texts. We begin with a brief overview of the reader response field. From there, we introduce the theory and provide illustrative participant data examples. These data examples illustrate the four cultural positions middle grade students in our research assumed when…
Design for inadvertent damage in composite laminates
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Singhal, Surendra N.; Chamis, Christos C.
1992-01-01
Simplified predictive methods and models to computationally simulate durability and damage in polymer matrix composite materials/structures are described. The models include (1) progressive fracture, (2) progressively damaged structural behavior, (3) progressive fracture in aggressive environments, (4) stress concentrations, and (5) impact resistance. Several examples are included to illustrate applications of the models and to identify significant parameters and sensitivities. Comparisons with limited experimental data are made.
Building stones can be of geoheritage significance
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Brocx, Margaret; Semeniuk, Vic
2017-04-01
Building stones have generally been assigned values according to their cultural, aesthetic, and rarity significance, amongst other criteria, but they also may have geoheritage significance. This is akin to the geoheritage significance ascribed to minerals and fossils housed as ex situ specimens in museums. We proffer the notion that building stones can be of geoheritage value particularly where they comprise permanent buildings, they illustrate significant windows into the history of the Earth, and they can be visited as an ex situ museum locality (e.g., the "Blue Granite" of Iceland) for education as part of building-stone tours. For some rocks the quarries that supplied the building stone are no longer in existence and hence the building stones provide the only record of that type of material; for other rocks, the building stone may illustrate features in the lithology no longer present in the quarry itself (e.g., rare and large xenoliths). Building stones are particularly significant as they are often polished and manifest structures, fabrics, and textures not evident in outcrop. We illustrate here examples of building stone of geoheritage significance using Australian and International examples. Australian designated stones could include the "Sydney Sandstone" or "Victorian Bluestone". For international examples, there is the famous "Carrara Marble" in Italy and the widely known "Portland Limestone" from southern England, the latter having been utilized for St Pauls Cathedral in London and the UN building in New York City.
NASA's supercomputing experience
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Bailey, F. Ron
1990-01-01
A brief overview of NASA's recent experience in supercomputing is presented from two perspectives: early systems development and advanced supercomputing applications. NASA's role in supercomputing systems development is illustrated by discussion of activities carried out by the Numerical Aerodynamical Simulation Program. Current capabilities in advanced technology applications are illustrated with examples in turbulence physics, aerodynamics, aerothermodynamics, chemistry, and structural mechanics. Capabilities in science applications are illustrated by examples in astrophysics and atmospheric modeling. Future directions and NASA's new High Performance Computing Program are briefly discussed.
A Study of Visualization for Mathematics Education
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Daugherty, Sarah C.
2008-01-01
Graphical representations such as figures, illustrations, and diagrams play a critical role in mathematics and they are equally important in mathematics education. However, graphical representations in mathematics textbooks are static, Le. they are used to illustrate only a specific example or a limited set. of examples. By using computer software to visualize mathematical principles, virtually there is no limit to the number of specific cases and examples that can be demonstrated. However, we have not seen widespread adoption of visualization software in mathematics education. There are currently a number of software packages that provide visualization of mathematics for research and also software packages specifically developed for mathematics education. We conducted a survey of mathematics visualization software packages, summarized their features and user bases, and analyzed their limitations. In this survey, we focused on evaluating the software packages for their use with mathematical subjects adopted by institutions of secondary education in the United States (middle schools and high schools), including algebra, geometry, trigonometry, and calculus. We found that cost, complexity, and lack of flexibility are the major factors that hinder the widespread use of mathematics visualization software in education.
Meta-Analysis in Higher Education: An Illustrative Example Using Hierarchical Linear Modeling
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Denson, Nida; Seltzer, Michael H.
2011-01-01
The purpose of this article is to provide higher education researchers with an illustrative example of meta-analysis utilizing hierarchical linear modeling (HLM). This article demonstrates the step-by-step process of meta-analysis using a recently-published study examining the effects of curricular and co-curricular diversity activities on racial…
26 CFR 1.482-1 - Allocation of income and deductions among taxpayers.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... determining the comparability of two transactions include— (A) Research and development; (B) Product design... illustrates the principles of this paragraph (d)(4)(ii)(C). Example. Couture, a U.S. apparel design....482-8 provides examples illustrating the application of the best method rule. Finally, § 1.482-9...
26 CFR 1.482-1 - Allocation of income and deductions among taxpayers.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... determining the comparability of two transactions include— (A) Research and development; (B) Product design... illustrates the principles of this paragraph (d)(4)(ii)(C). Example. Couture, a U.S. apparel design....482-8 provides examples illustrating the application of the best method rule. Finally, § 1.482-9...
26 CFR 1.482-1 - Allocation of income and deductions among taxpayers.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... determining the comparability of two transactions include— (A) Research and development; (B) Product design... illustrates the principles of this paragraph (d)(4)(ii)(C). Example. Couture, a U.S. apparel design....482-8 provides examples illustrating the application of the best method rule. Finally, § 1.482-9...
26 CFR 1.482-1 - Allocation of income and deductions among taxpayers.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... determining the comparability of two transactions include— (A) Research and development; (B) Product design... illustrates the principles of this paragraph (d)(4)(ii)(C). Example. Couture, a U.S. apparel design....482-8 provides examples illustrating the application of the best method rule. Finally, § 1.482-9...
A component-based software environment for visualizing large macromolecular assemblies.
Sanner, Michel F
2005-03-01
The interactive visualization of large biological assemblies poses a number of challenging problems, including the development of multiresolution representations and new interaction methods for navigating and analyzing these complex systems. An additional challenge is the development of flexible software environments that will facilitate the integration and interoperation of computational models and techniques from a wide variety of scientific disciplines. In this paper, we present a component-based software development strategy centered on the high-level, object-oriented, interpretive programming language: Python. We present several software components, discuss their integration, and describe some of their features that are relevant to the visualization of large molecular assemblies. Several examples are given to illustrate the interoperation of these software components and the integration of structural data from a variety of experimental sources. These examples illustrate how combining visual programming with component-based software development facilitates the rapid prototyping of novel visualization tools.
Volume illustration of muscle from diffusion tensor images.
Chen, Wei; Yan, Zhicheng; Zhang, Song; Crow, John Allen; Ebert, David S; McLaughlin, Ronald M; Mullins, Katie B; Cooper, Robert; Ding, Zi'ang; Liao, Jun
2009-01-01
Medical illustration has demonstrated its effectiveness to depict salient anatomical features while hiding the irrelevant details. Current solutions are ineffective for visualizing fibrous structures such as muscle, because typical datasets (CT or MRI) do not contain directional details. In this paper, we introduce a new muscle illustration approach that leverages diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data and example-based texture synthesis techniques. Beginning with a volumetric diffusion tensor image, we reformulate it into a scalar field and an auxiliary guidance vector field to represent the structure and orientation of a muscle bundle. A muscle mask derived from the input diffusion tensor image is used to classify the muscle structure. The guidance vector field is further refined to remove noise and clarify structure. To simulate the internal appearance of the muscle, we propose a new two-dimensional example based solid texture synthesis algorithm that builds a solid texture constrained by the guidance vector field. Illustrating the constructed scalar field and solid texture efficiently highlights the global appearance of the muscle as well as the local shape and structure of the muscle fibers in an illustrative fashion. We have applied the proposed approach to five example datasets (four pig hearts and a pig leg), demonstrating plausible illustration and expressiveness.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Seay, Jeffrey R.; Eden, Mario R.
2008-01-01
This paper introduces, via case study example, the benefit of including risk assessment methodology and inherently safer design practices into the curriculum for chemical engineering students. This work illustrates how these tools can be applied during the earliest stages of conceptual process design. The impacts of decisions made during…
Youth Civic Development: Theorizing a Domain with Evidence from Different Cultural Contexts
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Flanagan, Constance A.; Martinez, M. Loreto; Cumsille, Patricio; Ngomane, Tsakani
2011-01-01
The authors use examples of youth civic engagement from Chile, South Africa, Central/Eastern Europe, and the United States--and also emphasize diversities among youth from different subgroups within countries--to illustrate common elements of the civic domain of youth development. These include the primacy of collective activity for forming…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Alonzo, Julie; Tindal, Gerald
2011-01-01
This technical document provides guidance to educators on the creation and interpretation of survey instruments, particularly as they relate to an analysis of program implementation. Illustrative examples are drawn from a survey of educators related to the use of the easyCBM learning system. This document includes specific sections on…
Innovation in the Community College.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
O'Banion, Terry
An analysis is provided of the innovations that have marked the community college movement during the 1980s, including speculations about their effect on postsecondary education in the 1990s. The authors of the 13 chapters of the book were directed to cite examples of innovative practices from a range of community colleges to illustrate their…
Graphing Online Searches with Lotus 1-2-3.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Persson, Olle
1986-01-01
This article illustrates how Lotus 1-2-3 software can be used to create graphs using downloaded online searches as raw material, notes most commands applied, and outlines three required steps: downloading, importing the downloading file into the worksheet, and making graphs. An example in bibliometrics and sample graphs are included. (EJS)
Integrable Seven-Point Discrete Equations and Second-Order Evolution Chains
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Adler, V. E.
2018-04-01
We consider differential-difference equations defining continuous symmetries for discrete equations on a triangular lattice. We show that a certain combination of continuous flows can be represented as a secondorder scalar evolution chain. We illustrate the general construction with a set of examples including an analogue of the elliptic Yamilov chain.
The Need for and Possibility of a Christian Forgiveness Education in Schools
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
van der Walt, Johannes; de Muynck, Bram; Broer, Nico; Wolhuter, Charl; Potgieter, Ferdinand
2018-01-01
Individuals and communities occasionally need asking and giving forgiveness. Because the process of forgiving is not always well understood, it has become necessary to consider including forgiveness education in school pedagogy and in formal school programs such as Citizenship Education. This possibility is illustrated with examples from South…
Reconstruction of flux coordinates from discretized magnetic field maps
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Predebon, I.; Momo, B.; Suzuki, Y.; Auriemma, F.
2018-04-01
We provide a simple method to build a straight field-line coordinate system from discretized (Poincaré) magnetic field maps. The method is suitable for any plasma domain with nested flux surfaces, including magnetic islands. Illustrative examples are shown for tokamak, heliotron, and reversed-field-pinch plasmas with m = 1 islands.
Two different approaches for a control law of single gimbal control moment gyros
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Schiehlen, W. O.
1972-01-01
In the field of momentum exchange attitude control systems, single gimbal control moment gyros (SGCMG) are of increasing interest. A gimbal angle approach and a gimbal rate approach are presented for the SGCMG control law including the singularity avoidance. Both approaches are compared and some illustrative examples are given.
Conducting Survey Research via the Internet.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rice, Margaret L.; Wright, Vivian H.; Cofield, Jay; Stokes, Suzanne P.; Wilson, Elizabeth K.
This guide to creating a survey to be administered on the Internet used Microsoft Access as the database program for the illustration. Forty-four steps in constructing the survey, including the Common Gateway Interface that moves the data collected in e-mails directly to the database, are outlined. The example developed by researchers at the…
A summary and evaluation of semi-empirical methods for the prediction of helicopter rotor noise
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Pegg, R. J.
1979-01-01
Existing prediction techniques are compiled and described. The descriptions include input and output parameter lists, required equations and graphs, and the range of validity for each part of the prediction procedures. Examples are provided illustrating the analysis procedure and the degree of agreement with experimental results.
Educating about Sustainability while Enhancing Calculus
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Pfaff, Thomas J.
2011-01-01
We give an overview of why it is important to include sustainability in mathematics classes and provide specific examples of how to do this for a calculus class. We illustrate that when students use "Excel" to fit curves to real data, fundamentally important questions about sustainability become calculus questions about those curves. (Contains 5…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Phillips, Kristin D.; Klein-Tasman, Bonita P.
2009-01-01
The refinement of the Williams syndrome phenotype has frequently included the study of behavioral and temperamental features common to individuals with this disorder. Within this line of research, the importance of evaluating incidence of psychopathology has been increasingly recognized, with studies consistently identifying an increased risk for…
Group Work in Science Classrooms
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
McGregor, Debbie; Tolmie, Andrew
2009-01-01
This article considers how students might work together in small groups, from two to eight, in either a primary or secondary science classroom. The nature of group work can vary widely and could include, for example, a pair carrying out an illustrative experiment, a trio or quad debating climate change, or six or seven rehearsing how they will…
Verbal Playfulness as a Rapport-Building Strategy in Conversation among Chinese Female Friends.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Kuo, Sai-hua
This study investigated verbal play, including teasing and self-mocking in a naturally occurring conversation, among four Chinese female friends. The study illustrates how these speakers engage in teasing activities and then discusses the implications and significance of verbal play. Examples are taken from a casual, playful conversation…
Faraday's Investigation of Electromagnetic Induction. Experiment No. 21.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Devons, Samuel
This paper focuses on Michael Faraday's experimental research in electricity in the 1830's. Historical notes related to his work are included as well as experiments, his objectives, and illustrations of equipment for the experiments. Examples from his diary are given so that students can attempt to emulate his honest and systematic manner of…
ALMA from the Users' Perspective
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Johnson, Kelsey
2010-05-01
After decades of dreaming and preparation, the call for early science with ALMA is just around the corner. The goal of this talk is to illustrate the process of preparing and carrying out a research program with ALMA. This presentation will step through the user interface for proposal preparation, proposal review, project tracking, data acquisition, and post-processing. Examples of the software tools, including the simulator and spectral line catalog, will be included.
Squeezed states, time-energy uncertainty relation, and Feynman's rest of the universe
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Han, D.; Kim, Y. S.; Noz, Marilyn E.
1992-01-01
Two illustrative examples are given for Feynman's rest of the universe. The first example is the two-mode squeezed state of light where no measurement is taken for one of the modes. The second example is the relativistic quark model where no measurement is possible for the time-like separation fo quarks confined in a hadron. It is possible to illustrate these examples using the covariant oscillator formalism. It is shown that the lack of symmetry between the position-momentum and time-energy uncertainty relations leads to an increase in entropy when the system is different Lorentz frames.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gregory, K. J.; Benito, G.; Downs, P. W.
2008-06-01
Significant developments have been achieved in applicable and applied fluvial geomorphology as shown in publications of the last three decades, analyzed as the basis for using results of studies of environmental change as a basis for management. The range of types of publications and of activities are more pertinent to river channel management as a result of concern with sustainability, global climate change, environmental ethics, ecosystem health concepts and public participation. Possible applications, with particular reference to river channel changes, include those concerned with form and process, assessment of channel change, urbanization, channelization, extractive industries, impact of engineering works, historical changes in land use, and restoration with specific examples illustrated in Table 1. In order to achieve general significance for fluvial geomorphology, more theory and extension by modelling methods is needed, and examples related to morphology and process characteristics, integrated approaches, and changes of the fluvial system are collected in Table 2. The ways in which potential applications are communicated to decision-makers range from applicable outputs including publications ranging from review papers, book chapters, and books, to applied outputs which include interdisciplinary problem solving, educational outreach, and direct involvement, with examples summarized in Table 3. On the basis of results gained from investigations covering periods longer than continuous records, a protocol embracing palaeohydrological inputs for application to river channel management is illustrated and developed as a synopsis version (Table 4), demonstrating how conclusions from geomorphological research can be expressed in a format which can be considered by managers.
Hunt, Brian R; Ott, Edward
2015-09-01
In this paper, we propose, discuss, and illustrate a computationally feasible definition of chaos which can be applied very generally to situations that are commonly encountered, including attractors, repellers, and non-periodically forced systems. This definition is based on an entropy-like quantity, which we call "expansion entropy," and we define chaos as occurring when this quantity is positive. We relate and compare expansion entropy to the well-known concept of topological entropy to which it is equivalent under appropriate conditions. We also present example illustrations, discuss computational implementations, and point out issues arising from attempts at giving definitions of chaos that are not entropy-based.
Transmission overhaul and replacement predictions using Weibull and renewel theory
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Savage, M.; Lewicki, D. G.
1989-01-01
A method to estimate the frequency of transmission overhauls is presented. This method is based on the two-parameter Weibull statistical distribution for component life. A second method is presented to estimate the number of replacement components needed to support the transmission overhaul pattern. The second method is based on renewal theory. Confidence statistics are applied with both methods to improve the statistical estimate of sample behavior. A transmission example is also presented to illustrate the use of the methods. Transmission overhaul frequency and component replacement calculations are included in the example.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Pradhan, Sanjay
This paper presents a framework for evaluating the level and composition of public expenditures, illustrated by sectoral and country examples. The paper illustrates how this framework can be applied to analyzing broad allocations of spending within and across sectors, drawing upon some key findings and country examples from major sectors (health,…
CADDIS Volume 3. Examples and Applications: Analytical Examples
Examples illustrating the use of statistical analysis to support different types of evidence, stream temperature, temperature inferred from macroinverterbate, macroinvertebrate responses, zinc concentrations, observed trait characteristics.
Brownian dynamics simulation of rigid particles of arbitrary shape in external fields.
Fernandes, Miguel X; de la Torre, José García
2002-12-01
We have developed a Brownian dynamics simulation algorithm to generate Brownian trajectories of an isolated, rigid particle of arbitrary shape in the presence of electric fields or any other external agents. Starting from the generalized diffusion tensor, which can be calculated with the existing HYDRO software, the new program BROWNRIG (including a case-specific subprogram for the external agent) carries out a simulation that is analyzed later to extract the observable dynamic properties. We provide a variety of examples of utilization of this method, which serve as tests of its performance, and also illustrate its applicability. Examples include free diffusion, transport in an electric field, and diffusion in a restricting environment.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 12 Banks and Banking 1 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Examples. 41.2 Section 41.2 Banks and Banking... Examples. The examples in this part are not exclusive. Compliance with an example, to the extent applicable, constitutes compliance with this part. Examples in a paragraph illustrate only the issue described in the...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 12 Banks and Banking 5 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Examples. 571.2 Section 571.2 Banks and Banking... Examples. The examples in this part are not exclusive. Compliance with an example, to the extent applicable, constitutes compliance with this part. Examples in a paragraph illustrate only the issue described in the...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-01-01
... 12 Banks and Banking 6 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false Examples. 717.2 Section 717.2 Banks and Banking... Provisions § 717.2 Examples. The examples in this part are not exclusive. Compliance with an example, to the extent applicable, constitutes compliance with this part. Examples in a paragraph illustrate only the...
48 CFR 9904.401-60 - Illustrations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... Section 9904.401-60 Federal Acquisition Regulations System COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD, OFFICE OF FEDERAL PROCUREMENT POLICY, OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET PROCUREMENT PRACTICES AND COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS 9904.401-60 Illustrations. (a) The following examples are illustrative...
48 CFR 9904.409-60 - Illustrations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... Section 9904.409-60 Federal Acquisition Regulations System COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD, OFFICE OF FEDERAL PROCUREMENT POLICY, OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET PROCUREMENT PRACTICES AND COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS COST ACCOUNTING STANDARDS 9904.409-60 Illustrations. The following examples are illustrative of...
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Strachan, Rebecca; Aljabali, Sanaa
2015-01-01
Digital technologies are being increasingly used in wider society including in educational settings. There are many examples that illustrate how universities embed technology enhanced learning within their educational provision. However there has been less research and evaluation of how these and other readily available technology based resources…
Acoustics Division recent accomplishments and research plans
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Clark, L. R.; Morgan, H. G.
1986-01-01
The research program currently being implemented by the Acoustics Division of NASA Langley Research Center is described. The scope, focus, and thrusts of the research are discussed and illustrated for each technical area by examples of recent technical accomplishments. Included is a list of publications for the last two calendar years. The organization, staff, and facilities are also briefly described.
Using the Overhead Projector as a Light Source for Physics Demonstrations
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mak, Se-Yuen
2006-01-01
This article illustrates how the overhead projector can be used as a light source in some peculiar ways for physics demonstrations. Five examples are included: (1) Study of chromatic aberration; (2) Making giant Newton's rings; (3) Comparison of the rate of heat absorption by different surfaces; (4) Demonstration of greenhouse effect; and (5)…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
de Villers-Sidani, Marie-Eva, Comp.; And Others
This vocabulary list consists of 84 commonly used terms and expressions pertaining to the sale of store merchandise. The vocabulary items are listed alphabetically in English, with the French equivalent given opposite the English. In many cases, explanatory notes and examples illustrating the use of individual items are included. An alphabetical…
Advancements in medicine from aerospace research
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Wooten, F. T.
1972-01-01
A program designed to find second applications for space technology in the medical field is described. Illustrative examples and clinical test results are included for prosthetic urethral devices, ear oximeter for monitoring leukemia patients, devices for measuring low level CO effects on automobile drivers, radiation dosimeter probe for detecting radiation levels in cancerous areas, and electromyographic muscle trainer.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Eddy, William F.; Mockus, Audris
1994-01-01
Describes animation algorithms for creating smooth functions of time- and space-varying phenomenon. The incidence of the disease mumps from 1968-88 in the United States is used to demonstrate the algorithms. Figures that illustrate the findings are included. (14 references) (KRN)
An Economic Analysis of a Change in an Excise Tax
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Barron, John M.; Blanchard, Kelly Hunt; Umbeck, John R.
2004-01-01
The authors present an example of the effect a change in the excise tax can have on retail gasoline prices. The findings provide support for standard economic theory, as well as provide a vehicle for illustrating some of the subtleties of the analysis, including the implicit assumptions regarding the implications for the buying and selling prices…
Flammarion, Nicolas Camille (1842-1925)
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Murdin, P.
2000-11-01
French astronomer and geophysicist, born in Montigny-le-Roy, observed double stars, and planets from his observatory at Juvisy, south of Paris. Very well-known for his popularization of astronomy, including many lavishly illustrated books (for example L'Astronomie Populaire) and a journal L'Astronomie, still published. It was Flammarion who, as shown by Arthur Beer and Bruno Weber, drew, sometime...
Non-traditional Oxidants in Preparative Coordination Chemistry
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kukushkin, Vadim Yu; Kukushkin, Yurii N.
1986-10-01
The application of nitrosonium and arenediazonium salts, carbenium, silver(I), and mercury(II) ions, protic acids, and amine oxides as oxidants in preparative coordination chemistry is examined. Specific examples illustrate which problems in the field of the synthesis and reactions of coordination compounds can be solved with the aid of these oxidants. The bibliography includes 158 references.
Travaux Neuchatelois de linguistique (Neuchatel Working Papers in Linguistics).
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Neuchatel Univ. (Switzerland). Inst. de Linguistique.
This collection of working papers in linguistics includes four works. "Autour de la racine indo-europeenne 'pet-' ('voler') (pour servir a l'histoire des faits latins)" ("Concerning the Indo-European Root 'Pet-' ('To Fly') (To Serve as an Example of Latin Facts)" by Claude Sandoz looks at the Latin manifestations of the root and illustrates the…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Earhart, James; Zamora, Irina
2015-01-01
This pilot study describes the development and initial implementation of a treatment program that uses relationship-based techniques as a basis for promoting characteristics important in learning and emotional regulation. A case example has been included as an illustration of the theoretical framework of this intervention, along with preliminary…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Soler, Janet; Miller, Linda
2003-01-01
Focuses upon the way visions for early childhood are expressed through curricula in England, New Zealand, and Reggio Emilia in Italy. Includes curricular examples illustrating how growing pressure from vocational and instrumental influences affect progressive and socioculturally inspired early childhood curricula. Reveals how curricula and…
Welcome to Our World: Bridging Youth Development Research in Nonprofit and Academic Communities
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Bialeschki, M. Deborah; Conn, Michael
2011-01-01
This commentary discusses the emergence of youth development research and evaluation in the nonprofit arena over the past 10 to 15 years. Included in this discussion is the establishment of the context for youth development research in nonprofits, a brief description of key examples of research from three youth nonprofits that illustrate the…
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Carnes, Brian; Kennon, Stephen Ray
2017-05-01
This document is the main user guide for the Sierra/Percept capabilities including the mesh_adapt and mesh_transfer tools. Basic capabilities for uniform mesh refinement (UMR) and mesh transfers are discussed. Examples are used to provide illustration. Future versions of this manual will include more advanced features such as geometry and mesh smoothing. Additionally, all the options for the mesh_adapt code will be described in detail. Capabilities for local adaptivity in the context of offline adaptivity will also be included. This page intentionally left blank.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Short, J.A.
1982-01-01
Up to 1/4 of a total drilling budget can be spent on fishing failures and downhole remedial operations. The book presented is aimed at cutting these costs. Specific examples of operations are included throughout the book to illustrate conditions in field situations. The author also discusses background conditions causing the problems and possible solutions, along with preventive measures. Also included are chapters on types of fishing tools, fishing procedures and operations, casing failures and repairs. (JMT)
Design procedures for fiber composite box beams
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Chamis, Cristos C.; Murthy, Pappu L. N.
1989-01-01
Step-by-step procedures are described which can be used for the preliminary design of fiber composite box beams subjected to combined loadings. These procedures include a collection of approximate closed-form equations so that all the required calculations can be performed using pocket calculators. Included is an illustrative example of a tapered cantilever box beam subjected to combined loads. The box beam is designed to satisfy strength, displacement, buckling, and frequency requirements.
Design Procedures for Fiber Composite Box Beams
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Chamis, Christos C.; Murthy, Pappu L. N.
1988-01-01
Step-by-step procedures are described which can be used for the preliminary design of fiber composite box beams subjected to combined loadings. These procedures include a collection of approximate closed-form equations so that all the required calculations can be performed using pocket calculators. Included is an illustrated example of a tapered cantilever box beam subjected to combined loads. The box beam is designed to satisfy strength, displacement, buckling, and frequency requirements.
An Example of an INPRO Assessment of an INS in the Area of Waste Management
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Allan, C.; Busurin, Y.; Depisch, F.
2006-07-01
Following a resolution of the General Conference of the IAEA in the year 2000 the International Project on Innovative Nuclear Reactors and Fuel Cycles, referred to as INPRO, was initiated. INPRO has defined requirements organized in a hierarchy of Basic Principles, User Requirements and Criteria (consisting of an indicator and an acceptance limit) to be met by innovative nuclear reactor systems (INS) in six areas, namely: economics, safety, waste management, environment, proliferation resistance, and infrastructure. If an INS meets all requirements in all areas it represents a sustainable system for the supply of energy, capable of making a significant contributionmore » to meeting the energy needs of the 21. century. Draft manuals have been developed, for each INPRO area, to provide guidance for performing an assessment of whether an INS meets the INPRO requirements in a given area. The manuals set out the information that needs to be assembled to perform an assessment and provide guidance on selecting the acceptance limits and, for a given INS, for determining the value of the indicators for comparison with the associated acceptance limits. Each manual also includes an example of a specific assessment to illustrate the guidance. This paper discusses the example presented in the manual for performing an INPRO assessment in the area of waste management. The example, chosen solely for the purpose of illustrating the INPRO methodology, describes an assessment of an INS based on the DUPIC fuel cycle. It is assumed that uranium is mined, milled, converted, enriched, and fabricated into LWR fuel in Canada. The LWR fuel is assumed to be leased to a utility in the USA. The spent LWR fuel is assumed to be returned to Canada where it is processed into CANDU DUPIC fuel, which is then burned in CANDU reactors. The assessment steps and the results are presented in detail in the paper. The example illustrates an assessment performed for an INS at an early stage of development. (authors)« less
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 26 Internal Revenue 8 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Examples. 1.826-7 Section 1.826-7 Internal....826-7 Examples. The application of section 826 may be illustrated by the following examples: Example 1... percent of 8 exceeds 25 percent of 0), may remain in such account beyond the taxable year 1968. Example 2...
Random learning units using WIRIS quizzes in Moodle
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Mora, Ángel; Mérida, Enrique; Eixarch, Ramon
2011-09-01
Moodle is an extended learning management system for developing learning units, including mathematically-based subjects. A wide variety of material can be developed in Moodle which contains facilities for forums, questionnaires, lessons, tasks, wikis, glossaries and chats. Therefore, the Moodle platform provides a meeting point for those working in a mathematics course. Mathematics requires special materials and activities: The material must include mathematical objects and the activities included in the virtual course must be able to do mathematical computations. WIRIS is a powerful software for educational environments. It has libraries for calculus, algebra, geometry and much more. In this article, examples showing the use of WIRIS in numerical methods and examples of using a new tool, WIRIS quizzes, are illustrated. By enhancing Moodle with WIRIS, we can add random learning questions to modules. Moodle has a simpler version of this capability, but WIRIS extends the method in which the random material is presented to the students. Random objects can appear in a question, in a variable of a question, in a plot or in the definition of a mathematical object. This article illustrates material prepared for numerical methods using a WIRIS library integrated in WIRIS quizzes. As a result, WIRIS in Moodle can be considered as a global solution for mathematics education.
48 CFR 25.504 - Evaluation Examples.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 1 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Evaluation Examples. 25... PROGRAMS FOREIGN ACQUISITION Evaluating Foreign Offers-Supply Contracts 25.504 Evaluation Examples. The following examples illustrate the application of the evaluation procedures in 25.502 and 25.503. The...
48 CFR 225.504 - Evaluation examples.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2010-10-01 2010-10-01 false Evaluation examples. 225.504 Section 225.504 Federal Acquisition Regulations System DEFENSE ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM... 225.504 Evaluation examples. For examples that illustrate the evaluation procedures in 225.502(c)(ii...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... TAXES (CONTINUED) Regulated Investment Companies and Real Estate Investment Trusts § 1.851-5 Examples. The provisions of section 851 may be illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. Investment...: Percent Cash 5 Government securities 10 Securities of regulated investment companies 20 Securities of...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... TAXES (CONTINUED) Regulated Investment Companies and Real Estate Investment Trusts § 1.851-5 Examples. The provisions of section 851 may be illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. Investment...: Percent Cash 5 Government securities 10 Securities of regulated investment companies 20 Securities of...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... TAXES (CONTINUED) Regulated Investment Companies and Real Estate Investment Trusts § 1.851-5 Examples. The provisions of section 851 may be illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. Investment...: Percent Cash 5 Government securities 10 Securities of regulated investment companies 20 Securities of...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... TAXES (CONTINUED) Regulated Investment Companies and Real Estate Investment Trusts § 1.851-5 Examples. The provisions of section 851 may be illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. Investment...: Percent Cash 5 Government securities 10 Securities of regulated investment companies 20 Securities of...
48 CFR 225.504 - Evaluation examples.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... 48 Federal Acquisition Regulations System 3 2011-10-01 2011-10-01 false Evaluation examples. 225..., DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRAMS FOREIGN ACQUISITION Evaluating Foreign Offers-Supply Contracts 225.504 Evaluation examples. For examples that illustrate the evaluation procedures in 225.502(c)(ii...
Epigenetics and Psychoneuroimmunology: Mechanisms and Models
Mathews, Herbert L.; Janusek, Linda Witek
2010-01-01
In this Introduction to the Named Series “Epigenetics, Brain, Behavior, and Immunity” an overview of epigenetics is provided with a consideration of the nature of epigenetic regulation including DNA methylation, histone modification and chromatin remodeling. Illustrative examples of recent scientific developments are highlighted to demonstrate the influence of epigenetics in areas of research relevant to those who investigate phenomena within the scientific discipline of psychoneuroimmunology. These examples are presented in order to provide a perspective on how epigenetic analysis will add insight into the molecular processes that connect the brain with behavior, neuroendocrine responsivity and immune outcome. PMID:20832468
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wang, Dongling; Xiao, Aiguo; Li, Xueyang
2013-02-01
Based on W-transformation, some parametric symplectic partitioned Runge-Kutta (PRK) methods depending on a real parameter α are developed. For α=0, the corresponding methods become the usual PRK methods, including Radau IA-IA¯ and Lobatto IIIA-IIIB methods as examples. For any α≠0, the corresponding methods are symplectic and there exists a value α∗ such that energy is preserved in the numerical solution at each step. The existence of the parameter and the order of the numerical methods are discussed. Some numerical examples are presented to illustrate these results.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Bailey, F. R.; Kutler, Paul
1988-01-01
Discussed are the capabilities of NASA's Numerical Aerodynamic Simulation (NAS) Program and its application as an advanced supercomputing system for computational fluid dynamics (CFD) research. First, the paper describes the NAS computational system, called the NAS Processing System Network, and the advanced computational capabilities it offers as a consequence of carrying out the NAS pathfinder objective. Second, it presents examples of pioneering CFD research accomplished during NAS's first operational year. Examples are included which illustrate CFD applications for predicting fluid phenomena, complementing and supplementing experimentation, and aiding in design. Finally, pacing elements and future directions for CFD and NAS are discussed.
45 CFR 80.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 80.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will illustrate... provide that group with more adequate service. (Secs. 601, 602, Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252 (42... Welfare DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES GENERAL ADMINISTRATION NONDISCRIMINATION UNDER PROGRAMS...
Robert R. Alexander; Carleton B. Edminster
1977-01-01
Topics discussed include: (1) cutting methods, (2) stand structure goals, which involve choosing a residual stocking level, selecting a maximum tree size, and establishing a diameter distribution using the "q" technique, and (3) harvesting and removal of trees. Examples illustrate how to determine realistic stand structures for the initial entry for...
Practical solution of plastic deformation problems in elastic-plastic range
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Mendelson, A; Manson, S
1957-01-01
A practical method for solving plastic deformation problems in the elastic-plastic range is presented. The method is one of successive approximations and is illustrated by four examples which include a flat plate with temperature distribution across the width, a thin shell with axial temperature distribution, a solid cylinder with radial temperature distribution, and a rotating disk with radial temperature distribution.
Estimating Cone and Seed Production and Monitoring Pest Damage in Southern Pine Seed Orchards
Carl W. Fatzinger; H. David Muse; Thomas Miller; Helen T. Bhattacharyya
1988-01-01
Field sampling procedures and computer programs are described for monitoring seed production and pest damage in southern pine seed orchards. The system estimates total orchard yields of female strobili and seeds, quantifies pest damage, determines times of year when losses occur, and produces life tables for female strobili. An example is included to illustrate the...
Making Grammar Explicit in the Classroom: An Illustration Using the Spanish Subjunctive.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Kilroe, Patricia
1988-01-01
It is proposed that explicit explanations of grammar concepts in the first language can be useful in teaching the related structures in a second language. The example used is that of the subjunctive mood, taught first in English and then in Spanish. Specific procedures for presenting the concept in English are outlined, including a set of…
An Improved Measure of Cognitive Salience in Free Listing Tasks: A Marshallese Example
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Robbins, Michael C.; Nolan, Justin M.; Chen, Diana
2017-01-01
A new free-list measure of cognitive salience, B', is presented, which includes both list position and list frequency. It surpasses other extant measures by being normed to vary between a maximum of 1 and a minimum of 0, thereby making it useful for comparisons irrespective of list length or number of respondents. An illustration of its…
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Mouchet, Amaury, E-mail: mouchet@phys.univ-tours.fr
The Noether theorem connecting symmetries and conservation laws can be applied directly in a Hamiltonian framework without using any intermediate Lagrangian formulation. This requires a careful discussion about the invariance of the boundary conditions under a canonical transformation and this paper proposes to address this issue. Then, the unified treatment of Hamiltonian systems offered by Noether’s approach is illustrated on several examples, including classical field theory and quantum dynamics.
Theoretical study of air forces on an oscillating or steady thin wing in a supersonic main stream
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Garrick, I E; Rubinow, S I
1947-01-01
A theoretical study, based on the linearized equations of motion for small disturbance, is made of the air forces on wings of general plan forms moving forward at a constant supersonic speed. The boundary problem is set up for both the harmonically oscillating and the steady conditions. Two types of boundary conditions are distinguished, which are designated "purely supersonic" and "mixed supersonic." the method is illustrated by applications to a number of examples for both the steady and the oscillating conditions. The purely supersonic case involves independence of action of the upper and lower surfaces of the airfoil and present analysis is mainly concerned with this case. A discussion is first given of the fundamental or elementary solution corresponding to a moving source. The solutions for the velocity potential are then synthesized by means of integration of the fundamental solution for the moving source. The method is illustrated by applications to a number of examples for both the steady and the oscillating cases and for various plan forms, including swept wings and rectangular and triangular plan forms. The special results of a number of authors are shown to be included in the analysis.
Screening tests: a review with examples
Niebo, Ron; Utell, Mark J.
2014-01-01
Screening tests are widely used in medicine to assess the likelihood that members of a defined population have a particular disease. This article presents an overview of such tests including the definitions of key technical (sensitivity and specificity) and population characteristics necessary to assess the benefits and limitations of such tests. Several examples are used to illustrate calculations, including the characteristics of low dose computed tomography as a lung cancer screen, choice of an optimal PSA cutoff and selection of the population to undergo mammography. The importance of careful consideration of the consequences of both false positives and negatives is highlighted. Receiver operating characteristic curves are explained as is the need to carefully select the population group to be tested. PMID:25264934
The European Radiobiology Archives (ERA)--content, structure and use illustrated by an example.
Gerber, G B; Wick, R R; Kellerer, A M; Hopewell, J W; Di Majo, V; Dudoignon, N; Gössner, W; Stather, J
2006-01-01
The European Radiobiology Archives (ERA), supported by the European Commission and the European Late Effect Project Group (EULEP), together with the US National Radiobiology Archives (NRA) and the Japanese Radiobiology Archives (JRA) have collected all information still available on long-term animal experiments, including some selected human studies. The archives consist of a database in Microsoft Access, a website, databases of references and information on the use of the database. At present, the archives contain a description of the exposure conditions, animal strains, etc. from approximately 350,000 individuals; data on survival and pathology are available from approximately 200,000 individuals. Care has been taken to render pathological diagnoses compatible among different studies and to allow the lumping of pathological diagnoses into more general classes. 'Forms' in Access with an underlying computer code facilitate the use of the database. This paper describes the structure and content of the archives and illustrates an example for a possible analysis of such data.
A review of supernumerary and absent limbs and digits of the upper limb.
Klaassen, Zachary; Choi, Monica; Musselman, Ruth; Eapen, Deborah; Tubbs, R Shane; Loukas, Marios
2012-03-01
For years people have been enamored by anomalies of the human limbs, particularly supernumerary and absent limbs and digits. Historically, there are a number of examples of such anomalies, including royal families of ancient Chaldea, tribes from Arabia, and examples from across nineteenth century Europe. The development of the upper limbs in a growing embryo is still being elucidated with the recent advent of homeobox genes, but researchers agree that upper limbs develop between stages 12-23 through a complex embryological process. Maternal thalidomide intake during limb development is known to cause limb reduction and subsequent amelia or phocomelia. Additionally, a number of clinical reports have illustrated different limb anomaly cases, with each situation unique in phenotype and developmental abnormality. Supernumerary and absent limbs and digits are not unique to humans, and a number of animal cases have also been reported. This review of the literature illustrates the historical, anatomical, and clinical aspects of supernumerary and absent limbs and digits for the upper limb.
Challenges and Opportunities in Mining Neuroscience Data
Akil, Huda; Martone, Maryann E.; Van Essen, David C.
2011-01-01
Understanding the brain requires a broad range of approaches and methods from the domains of biology, psychology, chemistry, physics, and mathematics. The fundamental challenge is to decipher the “neural choreography” associated with complex behaviors and functions, including thoughts, memories, actions, and emotions. This demands the acquisition and integration of vast amounts of data of many types, at multiple scales in time and in space. Here, we discuss the need for neuroinformatics approaches to accelerate progress, using several illustrative examples. The nascent field of ‘connectomics’ aims to comprehensively describe neuronal connectivity at either a macroscopic level (long-distance pathways for the entire brain) or a microscopic level (axons, dendrites, synapses in a small brain region). The Neuroscience Information Framework encompasses all of neuroscience and facilitates integration of existing knowledge and databases of many types. These examples illustrate the opportunities and challenges of data mining across multiple tiers of neuroscience information and underscore the need for cultural and infrastructure changes if neuroinformatics is to fulfill its potential to advance our understanding of the brain. PMID:21311009
Groundwater studies in arid areas in Egypt using LANDSAT satellite images
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Elshazly, E. M.; Abdelhady, M. A.; Elshazly, M. M.
1977-01-01
Various features are interpreted which have strong bearing on groundwater in the arid environment. These include the nature of geological and lithologic units, structural lineaments, present and old drainage systems, distribution and form of water pools, geomorphologic units, weathering surfaces and other weathering phenomena, desert soils, sand dunes and dune sand accumulations, growths of natural vegetation and agriculture, and salt crusts and other expressions of salinization. There are many impressive examples which illustrate the significance of satellite image interpretation on the regional conditions of groundwater which could be traced and interconnected over several tens or even several hundreds of kilometers. This is especially true in the northern Western Desert of Egypt where ground water issuing from deep strata comes to the surface along ENE-WSW and ESE-WNW fault lines and fracture systems. Another striking example is illustrated by the occurrence of fresh to brackish groundwater on the Mediterranean Sea Coastal Zone of the Western Desert where the groundwater is found in the form of lenses floating on the saline sea water.
Interpreting and Integrating Clinical and Anatomic Pathology Results.
Ramaiah, Lila; Hinrichs, Mary Jane; Skuba, Elizabeth V; Iverson, William O; Ennulat, Daniela
2017-01-01
The continuing education course on integrating clinical and anatomical pathology data was designed to communicate the importance of using a weight of evidence approach to interpret safety findings in toxicology studies. This approach is necessary, as neither clinical nor anatomic pathology data can be relied upon in isolation to fully understand the relationship between study findings and the test article. Basic principles for correlating anatomic pathology and clinical pathology findings and for integrating these with other study end points were reviewed. To highlight these relationships, a series of case examples, presented jointly by a clinical pathologist and an anatomic pathologist, were used to illustrate the collaborative effort required between clinical and anatomical pathologists. In addition, the diagnostic utility of traditional liver biomarkers was discussed using results from a meta-analysis of rat hepatobiliary marker and histopathology data. This discussion also included examples of traditional and novel liver and renal biomarker data implementation in nonclinical toxicology studies to illustrate the relationship between discrete changes in biochemistry and tissue morphology.
45 CFR 611.5 - Illustrative applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... NONDISCRIMINATION IN FEDERALLY-ASSISTED PROGRAMS OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION-EFFECTUATION OF TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 611.5 Illustrative applications. The following examples will illustrate the... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title...
45 CFR 611.5 - Illustrative applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... NONDISCRIMINATION IN FEDERALLY-ASSISTED PROGRAMS OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION-EFFECTUATION OF TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 611.5 Illustrative applications. The following examples will illustrate the... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title...
45 CFR 611.5 - Illustrative applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... NONDISCRIMINATION IN FEDERALLY-ASSISTED PROGRAMS OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION-EFFECTUATION OF TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 611.5 Illustrative applications. The following examples will illustrate the... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title...
45 CFR 611.5 - Illustrative applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... NONDISCRIMINATION IN FEDERALLY-ASSISTED PROGRAMS OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION-EFFECTUATION OF TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 611.5 Illustrative applications. The following examples will illustrate the... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title...
45 CFR 611.5 - Illustrative applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... NONDISCRIMINATION IN FEDERALLY-ASSISTED PROGRAMS OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION-EFFECTUATION OF TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 611.5 Illustrative applications. The following examples will illustrate the... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title...
26 CFR 1.482-8 - Examples of the best method rule.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... illustrate the comparative analysis required to apply this rule. As with all of the examples in these... case. Example 10. Cost of services plus method preferred to other methods. (i) FP designs and...
26 CFR 1.482-8 - Examples of the best method rule.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... illustrate the comparative analysis required to apply this rule. As with all of the examples in these... case. Example 10. Cost of services plus method preferred to other methods. (i) FP designs and...
26 CFR 1.482-8 - Examples of the best method rule.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... illustrate the comparative analysis required to apply this rule. As with all of the examples in these... case. Example 10. Cost of services plus method preferred to other methods. (i) FP designs and...
26 CFR 1.482-8 - Examples of the best method rule.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... illustrate the comparative analysis required to apply this rule. As with all of the examples in these... case. Example 10. Cost of services plus method preferred to other methods. (i) FP designs and...
Simple Perturbation Example for Quantum Chemistry.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Goodfriend, P. L.
1985-01-01
Presents a simple example that illustrates various aspects of the Rayleigh-Schrodinger perturbation theory. The example is a particularly good one because it is straightforward and can be compared with both the exact solution and with experimental data. (JN)
45 CFR 80.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... RECEIVING FEDERAL ASSISTANCE THROUGH THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES EFFECTUATION OF TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 80.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will illustrate... prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by Title VI of the...
45 CFR 80.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-10-01
... RECEIVING FEDERAL ASSISTANCE THROUGH THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES EFFECTUATION OF TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 80.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will illustrate... prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by Title VI of the...
45 CFR 80.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... RECEIVING FEDERAL ASSISTANCE THROUGH THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES EFFECTUATION OF TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 80.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will illustrate... prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by Title VI of the...
45 CFR 80.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... RECEIVING FEDERAL ASSISTANCE THROUGH THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES EFFECTUATION OF TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 80.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will illustrate... prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by Title VI of the...
Bayesian Methods for the Physical Sciences. Learning from Examples in Astronomy and Physics.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Andreon, Stefano; Weaver, Brian
2015-05-01
Chapter 1: This chapter presents some basic steps for performing a good statistical analysis, all summarized in about one page. Chapter 2: This short chapter introduces the basics of probability theory inan intuitive fashion using simple examples. It also illustrates, again with examples, how to propagate errors and the difference between marginal and profile likelihoods. Chapter 3: This chapter introduces the computational tools and methods that we use for sampling from the posterior distribution. Since all numerical computations, and Bayesian ones are no exception, may end in errors, we also provide a few tips to check that the numerical computation is sampling from the posterior distribution. Chapter 4: Many of the concepts of building, running, and summarizing the resultsof a Bayesian analysis are described with this step-by-step guide using a basic (Gaussian) model. The chapter also introduces examples using Poisson and Binomial likelihoods, and how to combine repeated independent measurements. Chapter 5: All statistical analyses make assumptions, and Bayesian analyses are no exception. This chapter emphasizes that results depend on data and priors (assumptions). We illustrate this concept with examples where the prior plays greatly different roles, from major to negligible. We also provide some advice on how to look for information useful for sculpting the prior. Chapter 6: In this chapter we consider examples for which we want to estimate more than a single parameter. These common problems include estimating location and spread. We also consider examples that require the modeling of two populations (one we are interested in and a nuisance population) or averaging incompatible measurements. We also introduce quite complex examples dealing with upper limits and with a larger-than-expected scatter. Chapter 7: Rarely is a sample randomly selected from the population we wish to study. Often, samples are affected by selection effects, e.g., easier-to-collect events or objects are over-represented in samples and difficult-to-collect are under-represented if not missing altogether. In this chapter we show how to account for non-random data collection to infer the properties of the population from the studied sample. Chapter 8: In this chapter we introduce regression models, i.e., how to fit (regress) one, or more quantities, against each other through a functional relationship and estimate any unknown parameters that dictate this relationship. Questions of interest include: how to deal with samples affected by selection effects? How does a rich data structure influence the fitted parameters? And what about non-linear multiple-predictor fits, upper/lower limits, measurements errors of different amplitudes and an intrinsic variety in the studied populations or an extra source of variability? A number of examples illustrate how to answer these questions and how to predict the value of an unavailable quantity by exploiting the existence of a trend with another, available, quantity. Chapter 9: This chapter provides some advice on how the careful scientist should perform model checking and sensitivity analysis, i.e., how to answer the following questions: is the considered model at odds with the current available data (the fitted data), for example because it is over-simplified compared to some specific complexity pointed out by the data? Furthermore, are the data informative about the quantity being measured or are results sensibly dependent on details of the fitted model? And, finally, what about if assumptions are uncertain? A number of examples illustrate how to answer these questions. Chapter 10: This chapter compares the performance of Bayesian methods against simple, non-Bayesian alternatives, such as maximum likelihood, minimal chi square, ordinary and weighted least square, bivariate correlated errors and intrinsic scatter, and robust estimates of location and scale. Performances are evaluated in terms of quality of the prediction, accuracy of the estimates, and fairness and noisiness of the quoted errors. We also focus on three failures of maximum likelihood methods occurring with small samples, with mixtures, and with regressions with errors in the predictor quantity.
Solar photovoltaics for development applications
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Shepperd, L.W.; Richards, E.H.
1993-08-01
This document introduces photovoltaic technology to individuals and groups specializing in development activities. Examples of actual installations illustrate the many services supplied by photovoltaic systems in development applications, including water pumping, lighting, health care, refrigeration, communications, and a variety of productive uses. The various aspects of the technology are explored to help potential users evaluate whether photovoltaics can assist them in achieving their organizational goals. Basic system design, financing techniques, and the importance of infrastructure are included, along with additional sources of information and major US photovoltaic system suppliers.
Dollars from Sense: The Economic Benefits of Renewable Energy
DOE R&D Accomplishments Database
1997-09-01
This document illustrates direct economic benefits, including job creation, of renewable energy technologies. Examples of electricity generation from biomass, wind power, photovoltaics, solar thermal energy, and geothermal energy are given, with emphasis on the impact of individual projects on the state and local community. Employment numbers at existing facilities are provided, including total national employment for each renewable industry where available. Renewable energy technologies offer economic advantages because they are more labor-intensive than conventional generation technologies, and they use primarily indigenous resources.
26 CFR 1.1250-3 - Exceptions and limitations.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... following examples: Example 1. (i) Green transfers section 1250 property on March 1, 1968, to a corporation... subparagraph may be illustrated by the following example: Example: (a) Green owns property consisting of land and a fully equipped factory building thereon. The property is condemned and proceeds of $100,000 are...
26 CFR 301.7602-2 - Third party contacts.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... ADMINISTRATION PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION Discovery of Liability and Enforcement of Title Examination and... 7602(c). (ii) Examples. The following examples illustrate this paragraph (c)(1): Example 1. An IRS... initiated by the employee and so meets the first element. Example 2. An IRS employee wants to hire an...
26 CFR 1.512(b)-1 - Modifications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
...(b) shall be determined by all the facts and circumstances of each case. For example, if a payment... total rents if such rents exceed 10 percent of the total rents from all the property leased. For example... illustrated by the following example: Example. A, an exempt organization, owns a printing factory which...
26 CFR 53.4958-4 - Excess benefit transaction.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... meaning of paragraph (a)(2)(ii)(B) of this section) are taken into account. For example, in determining... a significant business purpose or exempt purpose of its own. (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate when economic benefits are provided indirectly under the rules of this paragraph (a)(2): Example 1...
26 CFR 53.4958-4 - Excess benefit transaction.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... meaning of paragraph (a)(2)(ii)(B) of this section) are taken into account. For example, in determining... a significant business purpose or exempt purpose of its own. (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate when economic benefits are provided indirectly under the rules of this paragraph (a)(2): Example 1...
26 CFR 1.512(b)-1 - Modifications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
...(b) shall be determined by all the facts and circumstances of each case. For example, if a payment... total rents if such rents exceed 10 percent of the total rents from all the property leased. For example... illustrated by the following example: Example. A, an exempt organization, owns a printing factory which...
26 CFR 301.7602-2 - Third party contacts.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... ADMINISTRATION PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION Discovery of Liability and Enforcement of Title Examination and... 7602(c). (ii) Examples. The following examples illustrate this paragraph (c)(1): Example 1. An IRS... initiated by the employee and so meets the first element. Example 2. An IRS employee wants to hire an...
26 CFR 301.7602-2 - Third party contacts.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... ADMINISTRATION PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION Discovery of Liability and Enforcement of Title Examination and... 7602(c). (ii) Examples. The following examples illustrate this paragraph (c)(1): Example 1. An IRS... initiated by the employee and so meets the first element. Example 2. An IRS employee wants to hire an...
26 CFR 301.7602-2 - Third party contacts.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... ADMINISTRATION PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION Discovery of Liability and Enforcement of Title Examination and... 7602(c). (ii) Examples. The following examples illustrate this paragraph (c)(1): Example 1. An IRS... initiated by the employee and so meets the first element. Example 2. An IRS employee wants to hire an...
26 CFR 301.7602-2 - Third party contacts.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... ADMINISTRATION PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION Discovery of Liability and Enforcement of Title Examination and... 7602(c). (ii) Examples. The following examples illustrate this paragraph (c)(1): Example 1. An IRS... initiated by the employee and so meets the first element. Example 2. An IRS employee wants to hire an...
26 CFR 1.512(b)-1 - Modifications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
...(b) shall be determined by all the facts and circumstances of each case. For example, if a payment... total rents if such rents exceed 10 percent of the total rents from all the property leased. For example... illustrated by the following example: Example. A, an exempt organization, owns a printing factory which...
26 CFR 53.4958-4 - Excess benefit transaction.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... meaning of paragraph (a)(2)(ii)(B) of this section) are taken into account. For example, in determining... a significant business purpose or exempt purpose of its own. (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate when economic benefits are provided indirectly under the rules of this paragraph (a)(2): Example 1...
26 CFR 1.512(b)-1 - Modifications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
...(b) shall be determined by all the facts and circumstances of each case. For example, if a payment... total rents if such rents exceed 10 percent of the total rents from all the property leased. For example... illustrated by the following example: Example. A, an exempt organization, owns a printing factory which...
26 CFR 1.512(b)-1 - Modifications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
...(b) shall be determined by all the facts and circumstances of each case. For example, if a payment... total rents if such rents exceed 10 percent of the total rents from all the property leased. For example... illustrated by the following example: Example. A, an exempt organization, owns a printing factory which...
26 CFR 53.4958-4 - Excess benefit transaction.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... meaning of paragraph (a)(2)(ii)(B) of this section) are taken into account. For example, in determining... a significant business purpose or exempt purpose of its own. (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate when economic benefits are provided indirectly under the rules of this paragraph (a)(2): Example 1...
26 CFR 53.4958-4 - Excess benefit transaction.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... meaning of paragraph (a)(2)(ii)(B) of this section) are taken into account. For example, in determining... a significant business purpose or exempt purpose of its own. (iv) Examples. The following examples illustrate when economic benefits are provided indirectly under the rules of this paragraph (a)(2): Example 1...
Dilution of Precision as a Geometry Metric for Swarm Relative Localization
2017-11-01
algorithm 2.2 Intuitive DOP Illustration Before proceeding with a quantitative definition of DOP, an intuitive example will be given to illustrate the...in Fig. 11 4.2.2 Constant DOP Example Compare the results of the previous simulation to those shown in Figs. 13 and 14. Instead of only scaling...ARL-TR-8200 ● NOV 2017 US Army Research Laboratory Dilution of Precision as a Geometry Metric for Swarm Relative Localization
Design procedures for fiber composite structural components - Rods, beams, and beam columns
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Chamis, C. C.
1984-01-01
Step by step procedures are described which are used to design structural components (rods, columns, and beam columns) subjected to steady state mechanical loads and hydrothermal environments. Illustrative examples are presented for structural components designed for static tensile and compressive loads, and fatigue as well as for moisture and temperature effects. Each example is set up as a sample design illustrating the detailed steps that are used to design similar components.
Design procedures for fiber composite structural components: Rods, columns and beam columns
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Chamis, C. C.
1983-01-01
Step by step procedures are described which are used to design structural components (rods, columns, and beam columns) subjected to steady state mechanical loads and hydrothermal environments. Illustrative examples are presented for structural components designed for static tensile and compressive loads, and fatigue as well as for moisture and temperature effects. Each example is set up as a sample design illustrating the detailed steps that are used to design similar components.
Algebraic integrability: a survey.
Vanhaecke, Pol
2008-03-28
We give a concise introduction to the notion of algebraic integrability. Our exposition is based on examples and phenomena, rather than on detailed proofs of abstract theorems. We mainly focus on algebraic integrability in the sense of Adler-van Moerbeke, where the fibres of the momentum map are affine parts of Abelian varieties; as it turns out, most examples from classical mechanics are of this form. Two criteria are given for such systems (Kowalevski-Painlevé and Lyapunov) and each is illustrated in one example. We show in the case of a relatively simple example how one proves algebraic integrability, starting from the differential equations for the integrable vector field. For Hamiltonian systems that are algebraically integrable in the generalized sense, two examples are given, which illustrate the non-compact analogues of Abelian varieties which typically appear in such systems.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... 26 Internal Revenue 14 2011-04-01 2010-04-01 true Examples. 20.2013-6 Section 20.2013-6 Internal...; ESTATES OF DECEDENTS DYING AFTER AUGUST 16, 1954 Credits Against Tax § 20.2013-6 Examples. The application of §§ 20.2013-1 to 20.2013-5 may be further illustrated by the following examples: Example (1). (a) A...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 26 Internal Revenue 14 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Examples. 20.2013-6 Section 20.2013-6 Internal...; ESTATES OF DECEDENTS DYING AFTER AUGUST 16, 1954 Credits Against Tax § 20.2013-6 Examples. The application of §§ 20.2013-1 to 20.2013-5 may be further illustrated by the following examples: Example (1). (a) A...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 26 Internal Revenue 8 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Examples. 1.663(c)-5 Section 1.663(c)-5 Internal... TAXES Estates and Trusts Which May Accumulate Income Or Which Distribute Corpus § 1.663(c)-5 Examples. Section 663(c) may be illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. (i) A single trust was created in...
77 FR 62121 - Guides for the Use of Environmental Marketing Claims
Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
2012-10-11
... example in the Source Reduction section (16 CFR 260.17, Example 1) and retains the guidance on Refillable... marketers can substantiate all reasonable interpretations of these claims.'' \\5\\ A new example illustrates... CFR 260.4(b). \\6\\ 16 CFR 260.4, Example 3. The Commission has moved many of the original examples to...
Review of finite fields: Applications to discrete Fourier, transforms and Reed-Solomon coding
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Wong, J. S. L.; Truong, T. K.; Benjauthrit, B.; Mulhall, B. D. L.; Reed, I. S.
1977-01-01
An attempt is made to provide a step-by-step approach to the subject of finite fields. Rigorous proofs and highly theoretical materials are avoided. The simple concepts of groups, rings, and fields are discussed and developed more or less heuristically. Examples are used liberally to illustrate the meaning of definitions and theories. Applications include discrete Fourier transforms and Reed-Solomon coding.
Practical optimal flight control system design for helicopter aircraft. Volume 1: Technical Report
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Hofmann, L. G.; Riedel, S. A.; Mcruer, D.
1980-01-01
A method by which modern and classical theory techniques may be integrated in a synergistic fashion and used in the design of practical flight control systems is presented. A general procedure is developed, and several illustrative examples are included. Emphasis is placed not only on the synthesis of the design, but on the assessment of the results as well.
Lyapunov stability and its application to systems of ordinary differential equations
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Kennedy, E. W.
1979-01-01
An outline and a brief introduction to some of the concepts and implications of Lyapunov stability theory are presented. Various aspects of the theory are illustrated by the inclusion of eight examples, including the Cartesian coordinate equations of the two-body problem, linear and nonlinear (Van der Pol's equation) oscillatory systems, and the linearized Kustaanheimo-Stiefel element equations for the unperturbed two-body problem.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ehrmann, Stephen C.; Milam, John H., Jr.
2003-01-01
This volume describes for educators how to create simple models of the full costs of educational innovations, including the costs for time devoted to the activity, space needed for the activity, etc. Examples come from educational uses of technology in higher education in the United States and China. Real case studies illustrate the method in use:…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
West, Alfred W.
This is the third in a series of documents developed by the National Training and Operational Technology Center describing operational control procedures for the activated sludge process used in wastewater treatment. This document deals with the calculation procedures associated with a step-feed process. Illustrations and examples are included to…
The influence of handling qualities on safety and survivability
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Anderson, S. B.
1977-01-01
The relationship of handling qualities to safety and survivability of military aircraft is examined which includes the following: (1) a brief discussion of the philosophy used in the military specifications for treatment of degraded handling qualities, (2) an examination of several example handling qualities problem areas which influence safety and survivability; and (3) a movie illustrating the potential dangers of inadequate handling qualities features.
Interdisciplinary glossary — particle accelerators and medicine
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Dmitrieva, V. V.; Dyubkov, V. S.; Nikitaev, V. G.; Ulin, S. E.
2016-02-01
A general concept of a new interdisciplinary glossary, which includes particle accelerator terminology used in medicine, as well as relevant medical concepts, is presented. Its structure and usage rules are described. An example, illustrating the quickly searching technique of relevant information in this Glossary, is considered. A website address, where one can get an access to the Glossary, is specified. Glossary can be refined and supplemented.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Spitulnik, Michele Wisnudel
Science education reforms advocate inquiry as a way to build explanations and make informed decisions. Based on this call this dissertation (1) defines flexible scientific understanding by elaborating on content, inquiry and epistemic understandings; (2) describes an inquiry based unit that integrates dynamic modeling software; (3) examines students' understandings as they construct models; and (4) identifies instructional strategies that support inquiry and model building. A curriculum unit was designed to engage students in inquiry by identifying problems and constructing models to represent, explain and predict phenomena. Ninth grade students in a public mid-western high school worked in teams of 2-3 to ask questions, find information and reflect on the purposes of models. Data sources including classroom video, observations, interviews, student models and handouts were used to formulate cases that examine how two groups construct understanding. A teacher case study identifies the teaching strategies that support understanding. Categories within content, inquiry and epistemic understandings were used to analyze student understandings and teaching supports. The findings demonstrate that students can build flexible understanding by constructing models. Students built: (1) content understanding by identifying key ideas and building relationships and explanations of phenomena; (2) inquiry understanding by defining problems, constructing models and developing positions; and (3) epistemic understanding by describing the purposes of models as generalizing phenomena, testing hypotheses and making predictions. However, students demonstrated difficulty in using evidence to defend scientific arguments. Strategies that support flexible understanding were also identified. Content supports include: setting expectations for explanations; using examples to illustrate explanations; modeling questions; and providing feedback that prompts detailed explanations. Supports for inquiry are setting expectations for data gathering; using examples that illustrate model building; modeling the development of an argument; and providing feedback to promote coherent models. Epistemic supports include: using examples to illustrate purposes and assumptions within models, and providing feedback as students evaluate their models. The dissertation demonstrates that teaching strategies impact student understanding but are challenging to implement. When strategies are not used, students do not necessarily construct desired outcomes such as, using evidence to support arguments.
Bulgren, Janis; Deshler, Donald D; Lenz, B Keith
2007-01-01
The understanding and use of historical concepts specified in national history standards pose many challenges to students. These challenges include both the acquisition of content knowledge and the use of that knowledge in ways that require higher order thinking. All students, including adolescents with learning disabilities (LD), are expected to understand and use concepts of history to pass high-stakes assessments and to participate meaningfully in a democratic society. This article describes Content Enhancement Routines (CERs) to illustrate instructional planning, teaching, and assessing for higher order thinking with examples from an American history unit. Research on the individual components of Content Enhancement Routines will be illustrated with data from 1 of the routines. The potential use of integrated sets of materials and procedures across grade levels and content areas will be discussed.
An experimental study of nonlinear dynamic system identification
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Stry, Greselda I.; Mook, D. Joseph
1990-01-01
A technique for robust identification of nonlinear dynamic systems is developed and illustrated using both simulations and analog experiments. The technique is based on the Minimum Model Error optimal estimation approach. A detailed literature review is included in which fundamental differences between the current approach and previous work is described. The most significant feature of the current work is the ability to identify nonlinear dynamic systems without prior assumptions regarding the form of the nonlinearities, in constrast to existing nonlinear identification approaches which usually require detailed assumptions of the nonlinearities. The example illustrations indicate that the method is robust with respect to prior ignorance of the model, and with respect to measurement noise, measurement frequency, and measurement record length.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Ryan, R. S.; Bullock, T.; Holland, W. B.; Kross, D. A.; Kiefling, L. A.
1981-01-01
The achievement of an optimized design from the system standpoint under the low cost, high risk constraints of the present day environment was analyzed. Space Shuttle illustrates the requirement for an analysis approach that considers all major disciplines (coupling between structures control, propulsion, thermal, aeroelastic, and performance), simultaneously. The Space Shuttle and certain payloads, Space Telescope and Spacelab, are examined. The requirements for system analysis approaches and criteria, including dynamic modeling requirements, test requirements, control requirements, and the resulting design verification approaches are illustrated. A survey of the problem, potential approaches available as solutions, implications for future systems, and projected technology development areas are addressed.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Rustay, R. C.; Gajjar, J. T.; Rankin, R. W.; Wentz, R. C.; Wooding, R.
1982-01-01
Listings of source programs and some illustrative examples of various ASCII data base files are presented. The listings are grouped into the following categories: main programs, subroutine programs, illustrative ASCII data base files. Within each category files are listed alphabetically.
But What Does It Look Like? Illustrations of Disciplinary Literacy Teaching in Two Content Areas
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rainey, Emily C.; Maher, Bridget L.; Coupland, David; Franchi, Rod; Moje, Elizabeth Birr
2018-01-01
In this piece, the authors offer two illustrations of central features of disciplinary literacy teaching. One illustration describes an episode of history literacy teaching, and the other describes an episode of physics literacy teaching. Both examples show how teachers may support students' development of disciplinary inquiry, disciplinary…
Matjasko, Jennifer L; Cawley, John H; Baker-Goering, Madeleine M; Yokum, David V
2016-05-01
Behavioral economics provides an empirically informed perspective on how individuals make decisions, including the important realization that even subtle features of the environment can have meaningful impacts on behavior. This commentary provides examples from the literature and recent government initiatives that incorporate concepts from behavioral economics in order to improve health, decision making, and government efficiency. The examples highlight the potential for behavioral economics to improve the effectiveness of public health policy at low cost. Although incorporating insights from behavioral economics into public health policy has the potential to improve population health, its integration into government public health programs and policies requires careful design and continual evaluation of such interventions. Limitations and drawbacks of the approach are discussed. Copyright © 2016 American Journal of Preventive Medicine. All rights reserved.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Reiterer, Alexander; Egly, Uwe; Vicovac, Tanja; Mai, Enrico; Moafipoor, Shahram; Grejner-Brzezinska, Dorota A.; Toth, Charles K.
2010-12-01
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is one of the key technologies in many of today's novel applications. It is used to add knowledge and reasoning to systems. This paper illustrates a review of AI methods including examples of their practical application in Geodesy like data analysis, deformation analysis, navigation, network adjustment, and optimization of complex measurement procedures. We focus on three examples, namely, a geo-risk assessment system supported by a knowledge-base, an intelligent dead reckoning personal navigator, and evolutionary strategies for the determination of Earth gravity field parameters. Some of the authors are members of IAG Sub-Commission 4.2 - Working Group 4.2.3, which has the main goal to study and report on the application of AI in Engineering Geodesy.
Astronomy-inspired Atomic and Molecular Physics
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Rau, A. R. P.
2002-02-01
Aimed at senior undergraduate and first-year graduate students in departments of physics and astronomy, this textbook gives a systematic treatment of atomic and molecular structure and spectra, together with the effect of weak and strong external electromagnetic fields. Topics chosen are those of interest in astronomy and indeed many were inspired by specific astronomical contexts. Examples include the negative ion of hydrogen and the effects of strong magnetic fields such as those occurring on certain white dwarfs and neutron stars. Adiabatic and non-adiabatic handling of electron correlations and application to processes such as dielectronic recombination are included. Astronomical examples are provided throughout as well as end-of-the chapter problems and exercises. Over seventy illustrative diagrams complete this unique and comprehensive volume. Link: http://www.wkap.nl/prod/b/1-4020-0467-2
Mistry, Rashmita S; White, Elizabeth S; Chow, Kirby A; Griffin, Katherine M; Nenadal, Lindsey
2016-01-01
Mixed methods research approaches are gaining traction across various social science disciplines, including among developmental scientists. In this chapter, we discuss the utility of a mixed methods research approach in examining issues related to equity and justice. We incorporate a brief overview of quantitative and qualitative monomethod research approaches in our larger discussion of the advantages, procedures, and considerations of employing a mixed methods design to advance developmental science from an equity and justice perspective. To better illustrate the theoretical and practical significance of a mixed methods research approach, we include examples of research conducted on children and adolescents' conceptions of economic inequality as one example of developmental science research with an equity and justice frame. © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Dynamic optimization of chemical processes using ant colony framework.
Rajesh, J; Gupta, K; Kusumakar, H S; Jayaraman, V K; Kulkarni, B D
2001-11-01
Ant colony framework is illustrated by considering dynamic optimization of six important bench marking examples. This new computational tool is simple to implement and can tackle problems with state as well as terminal constraints in a straightforward fashion. It requires fewer grid points to reach the global optimum at relatively very low computational effort. The examples with varying degree of complexities, analyzed here, illustrate its potential for solving a large class of process optimization problems in chemical engineering.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... or other similar arrangement. (vi) Research, development, or experimentation. (vii) Engineering or... participant. (8) Examples. The application of this section is illustrated by the following examples. No... conclusion in any example. For purposes of Examples 1 through 14, assume that Company P and its subsidiaries...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... or other similar arrangement. (vi) Research, development, or experimentation. (vii) Engineering or... participant. (8) Examples. The application of this section is illustrated by the following examples. No... conclusion in any example. For purposes of Examples 1 through 14, assume that Company P and its subsidiaries...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... or other similar arrangement. (vi) Research, development, or experimentation. (vii) Engineering or... participant. (8) Examples. The application of this section is illustrated by the following examples. No... conclusion in any example. For purposes of Examples 1 through 14, assume that Company P and its subsidiaries...
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... or other similar arrangement. (vi) Research, development, or experimentation. (vii) Engineering or... participant. (8) Examples. The application of this section is illustrated by the following examples. No... conclusion in any example. For purposes of Examples 1 through 14, assume that Company P and its subsidiaries...
29 CFR 4.131 - Furnishing services involving more than use of labor.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
...) Some examples of covered contracts illustrating these principles may be helpful. One such example is a... through the use of service employees, the contract remains subject to the Act. (c) Another example of the... furnishing of such services is the principal purpose of the contracts. For example, property removal or...
29 CFR 4.131 - Furnishing services involving more than use of labor.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
...) Some examples of covered contracts illustrating these principles may be helpful. One such example is a... through the use of service employees, the contract remains subject to the Act. (c) Another example of the... furnishing of such services is the principal purpose of the contracts. For example, property removal or...
Modeling High-Impact Weather and Climate: Lessons From a Tropical Cyclone Perspective
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Done, James; Holland, Greg; Bruyere, Cindy
2013-10-19
Although the societal impact of a weather event increases with the rarity of the event, our current ability to assess extreme events and their impacts is limited by not only rarity but also by current model fidelity and a lack of understanding of the underlying physical processes. This challenge is driving fresh approaches to assess high-impact weather and climate. Recent lessons learned in modeling high-impact weather and climate are presented using the case of tropical cyclones as an illustrative example. Through examples using the Nested Regional Climate Model to dynamically downscale large-scale climate data the need to treat bias inmore » the driving data is illustrated. Domain size, location, and resolution are also shown to be critical and should be guided by the need to: include relevant regional climate physical processes; resolve key impact parameters; and to accurately simulate the response to changes in external forcing. The notion of sufficient model resolution is introduced together with the added value in combining dynamical and statistical assessments to fill out the parent distribution of high-impact parameters. Finally, through the example of a tropical cyclone damage index, direct impact assessments are resented as powerful tools that distill complex datasets into concise statements on likely impact, and as highly effective communication devices.« less
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... 26 Internal Revenue 14 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Examples. 7.465-5 Section 7.465-5 Internal... INCOME TAX REGULATIONS UNDER THE TAX REFORM ACT OF 1976 § 7.465-5 Examples. The provisions of § 7.465-1 and § 7.465-2 may be illustrated by the following examples: Example (1). J and K, as equal partners...
26 CFR 1.112-1 - Combat zone compensation of members of the Armed Forces.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
.... Example 2. The facts are the same as in Example 1 except that the incubation period of the disease is one...) Examples of combat zone compensation. The rules of this section are illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. On January 5, outside of a combat zone, an enlisted member received basic pay for active duty...
26 CFR 1.112-1 - Combat zone compensation of members of the Armed Forces.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
.... Example 2. The facts are the same as in Example 1 except that the incubation period of the disease is one...) Examples of combat zone compensation. The rules of this section are illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. On January 5, outside of a combat zone, an enlisted member received basic pay for active duty...
26 CFR 1.112-1 - Combat zone compensation of members of the Armed Forces.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
.... Example 2. The facts are the same as in Example 1 except that the incubation period of the disease is one...) Examples of combat zone compensation. The rules of this section are illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. On January 5, outside of a combat zone, an enlisted member received basic pay for active duty...
26 CFR 1.112-1 - Combat zone compensation of members of the Armed Forces.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
.... Example 2. The facts are the same as in Example 1 except that the incubation period of the disease is one...) Examples of combat zone compensation. The rules of this section are illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. On January 5, outside of a combat zone, an enlisted member received basic pay for active duty...
26 CFR 1.112-1 - Combat zone compensation of members of the Armed Forces.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
.... Example 2. The facts are the same as in Example 1 except that the incubation period of the disease is one...) Examples of combat zone compensation. The rules of this section are illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. On January 5, outside of a combat zone, an enlisted member received basic pay for active duty...
Qualitative case study data analysis: an example from practice.
Houghton, Catherine; Murphy, Kathy; Shaw, David; Casey, Dympna
2015-05-01
To illustrate an approach to data analysis in qualitative case study methodology. There is often little detail in case study research about how data were analysed. However, it is important that comprehensive analysis procedures are used because there are often large sets of data from multiple sources of evidence. Furthermore, the ability to describe in detail how the analysis was conducted ensures rigour in reporting qualitative research. The research example used is a multiple case study that explored the role of the clinical skills laboratory in preparing students for the real world of practice. Data analysis was conducted using a framework guided by the four stages of analysis outlined by Morse ( 1994 ): comprehending, synthesising, theorising and recontextualising. The specific strategies for analysis in these stages centred on the work of Miles and Huberman ( 1994 ), which has been successfully used in case study research. The data were managed using NVivo software. Literature examining qualitative data analysis was reviewed and strategies illustrated by the case study example provided. Discussion Each stage of the analysis framework is described with illustration from the research example for the purpose of highlighting the benefits of a systematic approach to handling large data sets from multiple sources. By providing an example of how each stage of the analysis was conducted, it is hoped that researchers will be able to consider the benefits of such an approach to their own case study analysis. This paper illustrates specific strategies that can be employed when conducting data analysis in case study research and other qualitative research designs.
Jahn, Beate; Theurl, Engelbert; Siebert, Uwe; Pfeiffer, Karl-Peter
2010-01-01
In most decision-analytic models in health care, it is assumed that there is treatment without delay and availability of all required resources. Therefore, waiting times caused by limited resources and their impact on treatment effects and costs often remain unconsidered. Queuing theory enables mathematical analysis and the derivation of several performance measures of queuing systems. Nevertheless, an analytical approach with closed formulas is not always possible. Therefore, simulation techniques are used to evaluate systems that include queuing or waiting, for example, discrete event simulation. To include queuing in decision-analytic models requires a basic knowledge of queuing theory and of the underlying interrelationships. This tutorial introduces queuing theory. Analysts and decision-makers get an understanding of queue characteristics, modeling features, and its strength. Conceptual issues are covered, but the emphasis is on practical issues like modeling the arrival of patients. The treatment of coronary artery disease with percutaneous coronary intervention including stent placement serves as an illustrative queuing example. Discrete event simulation is applied to explicitly model resource capacities, to incorporate waiting lines and queues in the decision-analytic modeling example.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Sarquis, Jerry L.; Sarquis, Arlyne M.
2005-01-01
A number of chemical concepts can be easily illustrated in a more friendly way to children by using toys as teaching tools in the classroom. Some of the examples illustrated are shrinking toys, drinking birds and hand boiler.
The history and illustration of anatomy in the Middle Ages.
Gurunluoglu, Raffi; Gurunluoglu, Aslin; Williams, Susan A; Cavdar, Safiye
2013-11-01
This article reviews the influence of key figures on the pictorial representation of anatomy and the evolution of anatomical illustration during the Middle Ages until the time of the Renaissance, based on medical history books, journals and ancient medical books. During the early period in the Middle Ages, most illustrations were traditional drawings of emblematic nature, oftentimes unrealistic, not only because the precise knowledge of anatomy was lacking but also because the objective was to elucidate certain principles for teaching purposes. Five figure-series that came down to us through ancient manuscripts and textbooks represent the best examples of such traditional illustrations. With the advent of human dissection in the 13th and 14th centuries, a significant transformation in the depiction of anatomy began to project the practice of human dissection, as we see in the works of Mondino de Luzzi, Henri de Mondeville and Guido de Vigevano. After the invention of book printing in the second half of the 15th century, the reproduction of books was commonly practised and the woodcut made multiplication of pictures easier. Peter of Abano, Hieronymous Brunschwig, Johannes de Ketham, Johannes Peyligk, Gregory Reisch, Magnus Hundt, Laurentius Phryesen and many more included several anatomical illustrations in their treatises that demonstrated the development of anatomical illustration during the later Middle Ages.
García-Arieta, Alfredo
2014-12-18
The aim of the present paper is to illustrate the impact that excipients may have on the bioavailability of drugs and to review existing US-FDA, WHO and EMA regulatory guidelines on this topic. The first examples illustrate that small amounts of sorbitol (7, 50 or 60mg) affect the bioavailability of risperidone, a class I drug, oral solution, in contrast to what is stated in the US-FDA guidance. Another example suggests, in contrast to what is stated in the US-FDA BCS biowaivers guideline, that a small amount of sodium lauryl sulphate (SLS) (3.64mg) affects the bioavailability of risperidone tablets, although the reference product also includes SLS in an amount within the normal range for that type of dosage form. These factors are considered sufficient to ensure that excipients do not affect bioavailability according to the WHO guideline. The alternative criterion, defined in the WHO guideline and used in the FIP BCS biowaivers monographs, that asserts that excipients present in generic products of the ICH countries do not affect bioavailability if used in normal amounts, is shown to be incorrect with an example of alendronate (a class III drug) tablets, where 4mg of SLS increases bioavailability more than 5-fold, although a generic product in the USA contains SLS. Finally, another example illustrates that a 2mg difference in SLS may affect bioavailability of a generic product of a class II drug, even if SLS is contained in the comparator product, and in all cases its amount was within the normal range. Therefore, waivers of in vivo bioequivalence studies (e.g., BCS biowaivers, waivers of certain dosage forms in solution at the time of administration and variations in the excipient composition) should be assessed more cautiously. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Using Framework Analysis in nursing research: a worked example.
Ward, Deborah J; Furber, Christine; Tierney, Stephanie; Swallow, Veronica
2013-11-01
To demonstrate Framework Analysis using a worked example and to illustrate how criticisms of qualitative data analysis including issues of clarity and transparency can be addressed. Critics of the analysis of qualitative data sometimes cite lack of clarity and transparency about analytical procedures; this can deter nurse researchers from undertaking qualitative studies. Framework Analysis is flexible, systematic, and rigorous, offering clarity, transparency, an audit trail, an option for theme-based and case-based analysis and for readily retrievable data. This paper offers further explanation of the process undertaken which is illustrated with a worked example. Data were collected from 31 nursing students in 2009 using semi-structured interviews. The data collected are not reported directly here but used as a worked example for the five steps of Framework Analysis. Suggestions are provided to guide researchers through essential steps in undertaking Framework Analysis. The benefits and limitations of Framework Analysis are discussed. Nurses increasingly use qualitative research methods and need to use an analysis approach that offers transparency and rigour which Framework Analysis can provide. Nurse researchers may find the detailed critique of Framework Analysis presented in this paper a useful resource when designing and conducting qualitative studies. Qualitative data analysis presents challenges in relation to the volume and complexity of data obtained and the need to present an 'audit trail' for those using the research findings. Framework Analysis is an appropriate, rigorous and systematic method for undertaking qualitative analysis. © 2013 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Ross, E W; Taub, I A; Doona, C J; Feeherry, F E; Kustin, K
2005-03-15
Knowledge of the mathematical properties of the quasi-chemical model [Taub, Feeherry, Ross, Kustin, Doona, 2003. A quasi-chemical kinetics model for the growth and death of Staphylococcus aureus in intermediate moisture bread. J. Food Sci. 68 (8), 2530-2537], which is used to characterize and predict microbial growth-death kinetics in foods, is important for its applications in predictive microbiology. The model consists of a system of four ordinary differential equations (ODEs), which govern the temporal dependence of the bacterial life cycle (the lag, exponential growth, stationary, and death phases, respectively). The ODE system derives from a hypothetical four-step reaction scheme that postulates the activity of a critical intermediate as an antagonist to growth (perhaps through a quorum sensing biomechanism). The general behavior of the solutions to the ODEs is illustrated by several examples. In instances when explicit mathematical solutions to these ODEs are not obtainable, mathematical approximations are used to find solutions that are helpful in evaluating growth in the early stages and again near the end of the process. Useful solutions for the ODE system are also obtained in the case where the rate of antagonist formation is small. The examples and the approximate solutions provide guidance in the parameter estimation that must be done when fitting the model to data. The general behavior of the solutions is illustrated by examples, and the MATLAB programs with worked examples are included in the appendices for use by predictive microbiologists for data collected independently.
The parser generator as a general purpose tool
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Noonan, R. E.; Collins, W. R.
1985-01-01
The parser generator has proven to be an extremely useful, general purpose tool. It can be used effectively by programmers having only a knowledge of grammars and no training at all in the theory of formal parsing. Some of the application areas for which a table-driven parser can be used include interactive, query languages, menu systems, translators, and programming support tools. Each of these is illustrated by an example grammar.
The supervisor as gender analyst: feminist perspectives on group supervision and training.
Schoenholtz-Read, J
1996-10-01
Supervision and training groups have advantages over dyadic supervision and training that include factors to promote group learning and interaction within a sociocultural context. This article focuses on the gender aspects of group supervision and training. It provides a review of feminist theoretical developments and presents their application to group supervision and training in the form of eight guidelines that are illustrated by clinical examples.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ferjencík, Ján; Slavkovská, Miriam; Kresila, Juraj
2015-01-01
The paper reports on the adaptation of a D-KEFS test battery for Slovakia. Drawing on concrete examples, it describes and illustrates the key issues relating to the transfer of test items from one socio-cultural environment to another. The standardisation sample of the population of Slovak pupils in the fourth year of primary school included 250…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rook, Michael M.
2018-01-01
The author presents a three-step process for selecting participants for any study of a social phenomenon that occurs between people in locations and at times that are difficult to observe. The process is described with illustrative examples from a previous study of help giving in a community of learners. This paper includes a rationale for…
On the general constraints in single qubit quantum process tomography
Bhandari, Ramesh; Peters, Nicholas A.
2016-05-18
In this study, we briefly review single-qubit quantum process tomography for trace-preserving and nontrace-preserving processes, and derive explicit forms of the general constraints for fitting experimental data. These forms provide additional insight into the structure of the process matrix. We illustrate this with several examples, including a discussion of qubit leakage error models and the intuition which can be gained from their process matrices.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Nonneoplastic Musculoskeletal Pathologies in the Pelvis.
Alapati, Sindhura; Wadhwa, Vibhor; Komarraju, Aparna; Guidry, Carey; Pandey, Tarun
2017-06-01
Musculoskeletal pathologies in the pelvis encompass a wide variety of lesions including femoroacetabular impingement, athletic pubalgia, ischiofemoral impingement, and apophyseal avulsion injuries. Magnetic resonance imaging is the noninvasive imaging modality of choice for the diagnosis and management of these lesions. In this article, the authors discuss the nonneoplastic musculoskeletal lesions in the pelvis, with illustrations and relevant case examples. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) Cybersecurity Risk Management Strategy for Alert Originators
2014-03-01
formerly known as the Commercial Mobile Alert Service ( CMAS ) RDT&E program, is a collaborative partnership that includes the cellular industry, the...Examples illustrate a STRIDE analysis of the generic mission 1 The CMAS Alerting Pipeline Taxonomy describes in detail a hierarchical classification...SEI-2013-SR-018 | 1 1 Introduction The Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) service, formerly known as the Commercial Mobile Alert Service ( CMAS ), is a
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Daftardar-Gejji, Varsha; Jafari, Hossein
2005-01-01
Adomian decomposition method has been employed to obtain solutions of a system of fractional differential equations. Convergence of the method has been discussed with some illustrative examples. In particular, for the initial value problem: where A=[aij] is a real square matrix, the solution turns out to be , where E([alpha]1,...,[alpha]n),1 denotes multivariate Mittag-Leffler function defined for matrix arguments and Ai is the matrix having ith row as [ai1...ain], and all other entries are zero. Fractional oscillation and Bagley-Torvik equations are solved as illustrative examples.
Hydroclimatic variability and predictability: a survey of recent research
Koster, Randal D.; Betts, Alan K.; Dirmeyer, Paul A.; ...
2017-07-25
Recent research in large-scale hydroclimatic variability is surveyed, focusing on five topics: (i) variability in general, (ii) droughts, (iii) floods, (iv) land–atmosphere coupling, and (v) hydroclimatic prediction. Moreover, each surveyed topic is supplemented by illustrative examples of recent research, as presented at a 2016 symposium honoring the career of Professor Eric Wood. Altogether, the recent literature and the illustrative examples clearly show that current research into hydroclimatic variability is strong, vibrant, and multifaceted.
Hydroclimatic variability and predictability: a survey of recent research
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Koster, Randal D.; Betts, Alan K.; Dirmeyer, Paul A.
Recent research in large-scale hydroclimatic variability is surveyed, focusing on five topics: (i) variability in general, (ii) droughts, (iii) floods, (iv) land–atmosphere coupling, and (v) hydroclimatic prediction. Moreover, each surveyed topic is supplemented by illustrative examples of recent research, as presented at a 2016 symposium honoring the career of Professor Eric Wood. Altogether, the recent literature and the illustrative examples clearly show that current research into hydroclimatic variability is strong, vibrant, and multifaceted.
Sheong, Fu Kit; Chen, Wen-Jie; Zhang, Jing-Xuan; Li, Yang; Lin, Zhenyang
2017-02-14
In this article, we have presented a computational analysis on the structure and bonding of [Pd 2 Sn 18 ] 4- and illustrated that it serves as an interesting example of OMO-UMO mutual delocalisation with two identical [PdE 9 ] 2- fragments. We have also illustrated the alternative roles that could be played by an [ME 9 ] 2- /[E 9 ] 2- fragment, a simple L-type donor and a lone-pair acceptor.
29 CFR 778.205 - Premiums for weekend and holiday work-example.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... 29 Labor 3 2010-07-01 2010-07-01 false Premiums for weekend and holiday work-example. 778.205....205 Premiums for weekend and holiday work—example. The application of section 7(e)(6) may be illustrated by the following example: Suppose an agreement of employment calls for the payment of $7.50 an...
Camus, Melinda S; Flatland, Bente; Freeman, Kathleen P; Cruz Cardona, Janice A
2015-12-01
The purpose of this document is to educate providers of veterinary laboratory diagnostic testing in any setting about comparative testing. These guidelines will define, explain, and illustrate the importance of a multi-faceted laboratory quality management program which includes comparative testing. The guidelines will provide suggestions for implementation of such testing, including which samples should be tested, frequency of testing, and recommendations for result interpretation. Examples and a list of vendors and manufacturers supplying control materials and services to veterinary laboratories are also included. © 2015 American Society for Veterinary Clinical Pathology.
Understanding poisson regression.
Hayat, Matthew J; Higgins, Melinda
2014-04-01
Nurse investigators often collect study data in the form of counts. Traditional methods of data analysis have historically approached analysis of count data either as if the count data were continuous and normally distributed or with dichotomization of the counts into the categories of occurred or did not occur. These outdated methods for analyzing count data have been replaced with more appropriate statistical methods that make use of the Poisson probability distribution, which is useful for analyzing count data. The purpose of this article is to provide an overview of the Poisson distribution and its use in Poisson regression. Assumption violations for the standard Poisson regression model are addressed with alternative approaches, including addition of an overdispersion parameter or negative binomial regression. An illustrative example is presented with an application from the ENSPIRE study, and regression modeling of comorbidity data is included for illustrative purposes. Copyright 2014, SLACK Incorporated.
Implications of climate change (global warming) for the healthcare system.
Raffa, R B; Eltoukhy, N S; Raffa, K F
2012-10-01
Temperature-sensitive pathogenic species and their vectors and hosts are emerging in previously colder regions as a consequence of several factors, including global warming. As a result, an increasing number of people will be exposed to pathogens against which they have not previously needed defences. We illustrate this with a specific example of recent emergence of Cryptococcus gattii infections in more temperate climates. The outbreaks in more temperate climates of the highly virulent--but usually tropically restricted--C. gattii is illustrative of an anticipated growing challenge for the healthcare system. There is a need for preparedness by healthcare professionals in anticipation and for management of such outbreaks, including other infections whose recent increased prevalence in temperate climates can be at least partly associated with global warming. (Re)emergence of temperature-sensitive pathogenic species in more temperate climates will present new challenges for healthcare systems. Preparation for outbreaks should precede their occurrence. © 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Space station integrated wall design and penetration damage control
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Coronado, A. R.; Gibbins, M. N.; Wright, M. A.; Stern, P. H.
1987-01-01
The analysis code BUMPER executes a numerical solution to the problem of calculating the probability of no penetration (PNP) of a spacecraft subject to man-made orbital debris or meteoroid impact. The codes were developed on a DEC VAX 11/780 computer that uses the Virtual Memory System (VMS) operating system, which is written in FORTRAN 77 with no VAX extensions. To help illustrate the steps involved, a single sample analysis is performed. The example used is the space station reference configuration. The finite element model (FEM) of this configuration is relatively complex but demonstrates many BUMPER features. The computer tools and guidelines are described for constructing a FEM for the space station under consideration. The methods used to analyze the sensitivity of PNP to variations in design, are described. Ways are suggested for developing contour plots of the sensitivity study data. Additional BUMPER analysis examples are provided, including FEMs, command inputs, and data outputs. The mathematical theory used as the basis for the code is described, and illustrates the data flow within the analysis.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Wales, D. J., E-mail: dw34@cam.ac.uk
This perspective focuses on conceptual and computational aspects of the potential energy landscape framework. It has two objectives: first to summarise some key developments of the approach and second to illustrate how such techniques can be applied using a specific example that exploits knowledge of pathways. Recent developments in theory and simulation within the landscape framework are first outlined, including methods for structure prediction, analysis of global thermodynamic properties, and treatment of rare event dynamics. We then develop a connection between the kinetic transition network treatment of dynamics and a potential of mean force defined by a reaction coordinate. Themore » effect of projection from the full configuration space to low dimensionality is illustrated for an atomic cluster. In this example, where a relatively successful structural order parameter is available, the principal change in cluster morphology is reproduced, but some details are not faithfully represented. In contrast, a profile based on configurations that correspond to the discrete path defined geometrically retains all the barriers and minima. This comparison provides insight into the physical origins of “friction” effects in low-dimensionality descriptions of dynamics based upon a reaction coordinate.« less
Fuzzy tree automata and syntactic pattern recognition.
Lee, E T
1982-04-01
An approach of representing patterns by trees and processing these trees by fuzzy tree automata is described. Fuzzy tree automata are defined and investigated. The results include that the class of fuzzy root-to-frontier recognizable ¿-trees is closed under intersection, union, and complementation. Thus, the class of fuzzy root-to-frontier recognizable ¿-trees forms a Boolean algebra. Fuzzy tree automata are applied to processing fuzzy tree representation of patterns based on syntactic pattern recognition. The grade of acceptance is defined and investigated. Quantitative measures of ``approximate isosceles triangle,'' ``approximate elongated isosceles triangle,'' ``approximate rectangle,'' and ``approximate cross'' are defined and used in the illustrative examples of this approach. By using these quantitative measures, a house, a house with high roof, and a church are also presented as illustrative examples. In addition, three fuzzy tree automata are constructed which have the capability of processing the fuzzy tree representations of ``fuzzy houses,'' ``houses with high roofs,'' and ``fuzzy churches,'' respectively. The results may have useful applications in pattern recognition, image processing, artificial intelligence, pattern database design and processing, image science, and pictorial information systems.
A class of high resolution explicit and implicit shock-capturing methods
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Yee, H. C.
1989-01-01
An attempt is made to give a unified and generalized formulation of a class of high resolution, explicit and implicit shock capturing methods, and to illustrate their versatility in various steady and unsteady complex shock wave computations. Included is a systematic review of the basic design principle of the various related numerical methods. Special emphasis is on the construction of the basis nonlinear, spatially second and third order schemes for nonlinear scalar hyperbolic conservation laws and the methods of extending these nonlinear scalar schemes to nonlinear systems via the approximate Riemann solvers and the flux vector splitting approaches. Generalization of these methods to efficiently include equilibrium real gases and large systems of nonequilibrium flows are discussed. Some issues concerning the applicability of these methods that were designed for homogeneous hyperbolic conservation laws to problems containing stiff source terms and shock waves are also included. The performance of some of these schemes is illustrated by numerical examples for 1-, 2- and 3-dimensional gas dynamics problems.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hassouni, Khaled
2013-09-01
In this paper we present two examples that illustrate two different contexts of the interplay between plasma-surface interaction process and discharge physics and gas phase chemistry in hydrocarbon discharges. In the first example we address the case of diamond deposition processes and illustrate how a detailed investigation of the discharge physics, collisional processes and transport phenomena in the plasma phase make possible to accurately predict the key local-parameters, i.e., species density at the growing substrate, as function of the macroscopic process parameters, thus allowing for a precise control of diamond deposition process. In the second example, we illustrate how the interaction between a rare gas pristine discharge and carbon (graphite) electrode induce a dramatic change on the discharge nature, i.e., composition, ionization kinetics, charge equilibrium, etc., through molecular growth and clustering processes, solid particle formation and dusty plasma generation. Work done in collaboration with Alix Gicquel, Francois Silva, Armelle Michau, Guillaume Lombardi, Xavier Bonnin, Xavier Duten, CNRS, Universite Paris 13.
[On some misused terms in entomological publications].
Hilje, Luko
2011-09-01
A glossary is presented, despite being a non-exhaustive one, which includes a little more than one hundred terms frequently misused in entomological publications. They are organized in accordance to their degree of acceptance by the Real Academia Española. Each one is accompanied by its correct alternative (sometimes with a brief justification of the suggested term), and its proper use is illustrated with an example. Moreover, in addition to idiomatic mistakes themselves, a brief list of rather common conceptual mistakes is included, which correct use is explained.
A Toolbox for Imaging Stellar Surfaces
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Young, John
2018-04-01
In this talk I will review the available algorithms for synthesis imaging at visible and infrared wavelengths, including both gray and polychromatic methods. I will explain state-of-the-art approaches to constraining the ill-posed image reconstruction problem, and selecting an appropriate regularisation function and strength of regularisation. The reconstruction biases that can follow from non-optimal choices will be discussed, including their potential impact on the physical interpretation of the results. This discussion will be illustrated with example stellar surface imaging results from real VLTI and COAST datasets.
Crash Certification by Analysis - Are We There Yet?
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Jackson, Karen E.; Fasanella, Edwin L.; Lyle, Karen H.
2006-01-01
This paper addresses the issue of crash certification by analysis. This broad topic encompasses many ancillary issues including model validation procedures, uncertainty in test data and analysis models, probabilistic techniques for test-analysis correlation, verification of the mathematical formulation, and establishment of appropriate qualification requirements. This paper will focus on certification requirements for crashworthiness of military helicopters; capabilities of the current analysis codes used for crash modeling and simulation, including some examples of simulations from the literature to illustrate the current approach to model validation; and future directions needed to achieve "crash certification by analysis."
Illustrating MastCam Capabilities with a Terrestrial Scene
2011-11-28
This set of views illustrates capabilities of the Mast Camera MastCam instrument on NASA Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity rover, using a scene on Earth as an example of what MastCam two cameras can see from different distances.
On the application of multilevel modeling in environmental and ecological studies
Qian, Song S.; Cuffney, Thomas F.; Alameddine, Ibrahim; McMahon, Gerard; Reckhow, Kenneth H.
2010-01-01
This paper illustrates the advantages of a multilevel/hierarchical approach for predictive modeling, including flexibility of model formulation, explicitly accounting for hierarchical structure in the data, and the ability to predict the outcome of new cases. As a generalization of the classical approach, the multilevel modeling approach explicitly models the hierarchical structure in the data by considering both the within- and between-group variances leading to a partial pooling of data across all levels in the hierarchy. The modeling framework provides means for incorporating variables at different spatiotemporal scales. The examples used in this paper illustrate the iterative process of model fitting and evaluation, a process that can lead to improved understanding of the system being studied.
Williams, David R; Donnell, Andrew F; Kammler, David C; Ward, Sarah A; Taylor, Levin
2016-11-04
Studies describe formation of the lithium enolate of N-(4-methoxybenzyloxy)azetidin-2-one (1) and characterization of representative aldol reactions with aldehydes and ketones. Diastereoselectivity features the production of anti-aldol adducts from α,β-unsaturated ketones and α-branched aliphatic aldehydes. The stereoselectivity is rationalized via closed, six-membered transition-state arrangements leading to the formation of Felkin-Anh and anti-Felkin products. Examples illustrate the direct incorporation of monocyclic β-lactams into a variety of molecular architectures. The utility of 1 as an enolate synthon of homoglycine (β-alanine) is illustrated by the efficient synthesis of novel β-amino acid derivatives, including complex 4-hydroxy-2-pyridinones.
Molecular plant breeding: methodology and achievements.
Varshney, Rajeev K; Hoisington, Dave A; Nayak, Spurthi N; Graner, Andreas
2009-01-01
The progress made in DNA marker technology has been remarkable and exciting in recent years. DNA markers have proved valuable tools in various analyses in plant breeding, for example, early generation selection, enrichment of complex F(1)s, choice of donor parent in backcrossing, recovery of recurrent parent genotype in backcrossing, linkage block analysis and selection. Other main areas of applications of molecular markers in plant breeding include germplasm characterization/fingerprinting, determining seed purity, systematic sampling of germplasm, and phylogenetic analysis. Molecular markers, thus, have proved powerful tools in replacing the bioassays and there are now many examples available to show the efficacy of such markers. We have illustrated some basic concepts and methodology of applying molecular markers for enhancing the selection efficiency in plant breeding. Some successful examples of product developments of molecular breeding have also been presented.
Projector Center. What Is Biotechnology?
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Belzer, Bill; Case, Christine L.
1990-01-01
Presented is a menu designed to illustrate some classical examples of fermentation. This may be used to discuss biotechnology from a technological perspective. Other examples of biotechnology used in the foods industry are described. (CW)
26 CFR 1.801-5 - Total reserves.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... TAXES (CONTINUED) Life Insurance Companies § 1.801-5 Total reserves. (a) Total reserves defined. For... the reserve is claimed. For example, during the taxable year 1958 a life insurance company sells life... insurance company may be illustrated by the following example: Example. The books of Y, an insurance company...
26 CFR 1.801-5 - Total reserves.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... TAXES Life Insurance Companies § 1.801-5 Total reserves. (a) Total reserves defined. For purposes of... claimed. For example, during the taxable year 1958 a life insurance company sells life insurance and... insurance company may be illustrated by the following example: Example. The books of Y, an insurance company...
26 CFR 1.801-5 - Total reserves.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... TAXES (CONTINUED) Life Insurance Companies § 1.801-5 Total reserves. (a) Total reserves defined. For... the reserve is claimed. For example, during the taxable year 1958 a life insurance company sells life... insurance company may be illustrated by the following example: Example. The books of Y, an insurance company...
26 CFR 1.801-5 - Total reserves.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-04-01
... TAXES (CONTINUED) Life Insurance Companies § 1.801-5 Total reserves. (a) Total reserves defined. For... the reserve is claimed. For example, during the taxable year 1958 a life insurance company sells life... insurance company may be illustrated by the following example: Example. The books of Y, an insurance company...
26 CFR 1.801-5 - Total reserves.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-04-01
... TAXES (CONTINUED) Life Insurance Companies § 1.801-5 Total reserves. (a) Total reserves defined. For... the reserve is claimed. For example, during the taxable year 1958 a life insurance company sells life... insurance company may be illustrated by the following example: Example. The books of Y, an insurance company...
Harnessing and Guiding the Power of Policy: Examples from One State's Experiences
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Swanson, Julie Dingle; Lord, E. Wayne
2013-01-01
This article links research and practice through discussion of policy's conceptual aspects illustrated through real-world examples. Gifted education policy essentials, identification, curriculum and services, personnel preparation, and program management, assessment, and evaluation are described. Examples from studies of one state help the reader…
Optimal Information Processing in Biochemical Networks
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wiggins, Chris
2012-02-01
A variety of experimental results over the past decades provide examples of near-optimal information processing in biological networks, including in biochemical and transcriptional regulatory networks. Computing information-theoretic quantities requires first choosing or computing the joint probability distribution describing multiple nodes in such a network --- for example, representing the probability distribution of finding an integer copy number of each of two interacting reactants or gene products while respecting the `intrinsic' small copy number noise constraining information transmission at the scale of the cell. I'll given an overview of some recent analytic and numerical work facilitating calculation of such joint distributions and the associated information, which in turn makes possible numerical optimization of information flow in models of noisy regulatory and biochemical networks. Illustrating cases include quantification of form-function relations, ideal design of regulatory cascades, and response to oscillatory driving.
A global regulatory science agenda for vaccines.
Elmgren, Lindsay; Li, Xuguang; Wilson, Carolyn; Ball, Robert; Wang, Junzhi; Cichutek, Klaus; Pfleiderer, Michael; Kato, Atsushi; Cavaleri, Marco; Southern, James; Jivapaisarnpong, Teeranart; Minor, Philip; Griffiths, Elwyn; Sohn, Yeowon; Wood, David
2013-04-18
The Decade of Vaccines Collaboration and development of the Global Vaccine Action Plan provides a catalyst and unique opportunity for regulators worldwide to develop and propose a global regulatory science agenda for vaccines. Regulatory oversight is critical to allow access to vaccines that are safe, effective, and of assured quality. Methods used by regulators need to constantly evolve so that scientific and technological advances are applied to address challenges such as new products and technologies, and also to provide an increased understanding of benefits and risks of existing products. Regulatory science builds on high-quality basic research, and encompasses at least two broad categories. First, there is laboratory-based regulatory science. Illustrative examples include development of correlates of immunity; or correlates of safety; or of improved product characterization and potency assays. Included in such science would be tools to standardize assays used for regulatory purposes. Second, there is science to develop regulatory processes. Illustrative examples include adaptive clinical trial designs; or tools to analyze the benefit-risk decision-making process of regulators; or novel pharmacovigilance methodologies. Included in such science would be initiatives to standardize regulatory processes (e.g., definitions of terms for adverse events [AEs] following immunization). The aim of a global regulatory science agenda is to transform current national efforts, mainly by well-resourced regulatory agencies, into a coordinated action plan to support global immunization goals. This article provides examples of how regulatory science has, in the past, contributed to improved access to vaccines, and identifies gaps that could be addressed through a global regulatory science agenda. The article also identifies challenges to implementing a regulatory science agenda and proposes strategies and actions to fill these gaps. A global regulatory science agenda will enable regulators, academics, and other stakeholders to converge around transformative actions for innovation in the regulatory process to support global immunization goals. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-04-01
... inventories may report the gain on the installment method under section 453. (5) Examples. The following examples illustrate installment method reporting under this section: Example (1). In 1980, A, a calendar... principal is ordinary income to A. Example (2). C sells Whiteacre to D for a selling price of $160,000...
Where There Are No Rules or Systems to Guide Us: Argument from Example in a Hermeneutic Rhetoric
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Arthos, John
2003-01-01
Many rhetoricians treat argument from example as a kind of induction, an illustration of a general principle. Although this is one function of example, consistent with Aristotle's statements about the paradeigma and "The New Rhetoric's" "argumentation by example," it camouflages the practice of exemplary proof that has contributed to our richest…
Materials in the economy; material flows, scarcity, and the environment
Wagner, Lorie A.
2002-01-01
The importance of materials to the economy of the United States is described, including the levels of consumption and uses of materials. The paths (or flows) that materials take from extraction, through processing, to consumer products, and then final disposition are illustrated. Scarcity and environmental issues as they relate to the flow of materials are discussed. Examples for the three main themes of the report (material flows, scarcity, and the environment) are presented.
NASA CR-2120 - Summary of nondestructive testing theory and practice
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Meister, R. P.
1974-01-01
This is a familiarization report of nondestructive testing (ndt) prepared by staff of the Battelle Columbus Laboratories on a NASA contract. There is a short introduction, a chapter on applicability of ndt which is illustrated with examples of typical defects and includes tables comparing the characteristics, interrelationships, and costs of the different techniques. There are chapters dealing with penetrants, magnetic particle radiography, ultrasonics, and eddy currents. New techniques are described.
Injuries to Pregnant Occupants in Automotive Crashes
Klinich, Kathleen DeSantis; Schneider, Lawrence W.; Moore, Jamie L.; Pearlman, Mark D.
1998-01-01
Injuries unique to pregnant occupants involved in motor-vehicle crashes include placental abruption, uterine rupture or laceration, and direct fetal injury. The mechanisms and characteristics of these injuries are discussed using examples from a literature review and from recent investigations of crashes involving pregnant occupants. In addition, a review of the relationship between the pregnant driver and automotive restraints and the steering wheel illustrates how injury potential may differ from the non-pregnant occupant.
An introduction to kernel-based learning algorithms.
Müller, K R; Mika, S; Rätsch, G; Tsuda, K; Schölkopf, B
2001-01-01
This paper provides an introduction to support vector machines, kernel Fisher discriminant analysis, and kernel principal component analysis, as examples for successful kernel-based learning methods. We first give a short background about Vapnik-Chervonenkis theory and kernel feature spaces and then proceed to kernel based learning in supervised and unsupervised scenarios including practical and algorithmic considerations. We illustrate the usefulness of kernel algorithms by discussing applications such as optical character recognition and DNA analysis.
Advanced Environmental Monitoring Technologies
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Jan, Darrell
2004-01-01
Viewgraphs on Advanced Environmental Monitoring Technologies are presented. The topics include: 1) Monitoring & Controlling the Environment; 2) Illustrative Example: Canary 3) Ground-based Commercial Technology; 4) High Capability & Low Mass/Power + Autonomy = Key to Future SpaceFlight; 5) Current Practice: in Flight; 6) Current Practice: Post Flight; 7) Miniature Mass Spectrometer for Planetary Exploration and Long Duration Human Flight; 8) Hardware and Data Acquisition System; 9) 16S rDNA Phylogenetic Tree; and 10) Preview of Porter.
Toward natural selection in virtual reality.
Sherstyuk, Andrei; Vincent, Dale; Treskunov, Anton
2010-01-01
Here we describe a vision of VR games that combine the best features of gaming and VR: large, persistent worlds experienced in photorealistic settings with full immersion. For example, Figure 1 illustrates a hypothetical immersive VR game that could be developed using current technologies, including real-time, cinematic-quality graphics; a panoramic head-mounted display (HMD); and wide-area tracking. We also examine the gap between available VR and gaming technologies, and offer solutions for bridging it.
Cyber Technology for Materials and Structures in Aeronautics and Aerospace
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Pipes, R. Byron
1999-01-01
This report summarizes efforts undertaken during the 1998-99 program year and includes a survey of the field of computational mechanics, a discussion of biomimetics and intelligent simulation, a survey of the field of biomimetics, an illustration of biomimetics and computational mechanics through the example of the high performance composite tensile structure. In addition, the preliminary results of a state-of-the art survey of composite materials technology is presented.
Selecting the process variables for filament winding
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Calius, E.; Springer, G. S.
1986-01-01
A model is described which can be used to determine the appropriate values of the process variables for filament winding cylinders. The process variables which can be selected by the model include the winding speed, fiber tension, initial resin degree of cure, and the temperatures applied during winding, curing, and post-curing. The effects of these process variables on the properties of the cylinder during and after manufacture are illustrated by a numerical example.
Teaching old spacecraft new tricks
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Farquhar, Robert; Dunham, David
1988-01-01
The technique of sending existing space probes on extended mission by altering their orbital paths with gravity-assist maneuvers and relatively brief rocket firings is examined. The use of the technique to convert the International Sun-Earth Explorer 3 mission into the International Cometary Explorer mission is discussed. Other examples are considered, including the extension of the Giotto mission and the retargeting of the Sakigake spacecraft. The original and altered trajectories of these three missions are illustrated.
Development of risk-based decision methodology for facility design.
DOT National Transportation Integrated Search
2014-06-01
This report develops a methodology for CDOT to use in the risk analysis of various types of facilities and provides : illustrative examples for the use of the proposed framework. An overview of the current practices and applications to : illustrate t...
Time-of-travel study in the Sebasticook River basin, Maine
Parker, Gene W.
1981-01-01
Time of travel was determined for four reaches of the Sebasticook River, two on the East Branch Sebasticook River and two on the main stem of the Sebasticook River. Reach A included 7.8 miles of the East Branch Sebasticook River from Dexter to Corinna, Maine. Reach B included 8 miles of the East Branch Sebasticook River from Newport to its mouth, and one mile of the Sebasticook River to Peltoma bridge near Pittsfield, Maine. Reach C included 3.5 miles of the Sebasticook River from Hartland to West Palmyra, Maine. Reach D included 31.4 miles of the Sebasticook River from Pittsfield to Winslow, Maine. Using a 20-percent solution of rhodamine WT, three dye tracer study runs were made in each reach. Water samples were collected at 11 sites in the study area. The samples were then analyzed for dye concentrations. Time-of-travel data for each subreach are depicted in a series of illustrations and summarized in tabular form. Examples are given to illustrate the use of the data presented. (USGS)
NASTRAN pre and postprocessors using low-cost interactive graphics
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Herness, E. D.; Kriloff, H. Z.
1975-01-01
A design for a NASTRAN preprocessor is given to illustrate a typical preprocessor. Several displays of NASTRAN models illustrate the preprocessor's capabilities. A design of a NASTRAN postprocessor is presented along with an example of displays generated by that NASTRAN processor.
Model Comparison of Nonlinear Structural Equation Models with Fixed Covariates.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Lee, Sik-Yum; Song, Xin-Yuan
2003-01-01
Proposed a new nonlinear structural equation model with fixed covariates to deal with some complicated substantive theory and developed a Bayesian path sampling procedure for model comparison. Illustrated the approach with an illustrative example using data from an international study. (SLD)
26 CFR 1.1374-6 - Credits and credit carryforwards.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... liability described in section 38(c)(1). The tentative minimum tax described in section 55(b) is determined... 55(b)(2). (c) Examples. The rules of this section are illustrated by the following examples. Example... rules applying to C corporations. Any other credits or credit carryforwards, such as foreign tax credits...
Estimation in SEM: A Concrete Example
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ferron, John M.; Hess, Melinda R.
2007-01-01
A concrete example is used to illustrate maximum likelihood estimation of a structural equation model with two unknown parameters. The fitting function is found for the example, as are the vector of first-order partial derivatives, the matrix of second-order partial derivatives, and the estimates obtained from each iteration of the Newton-Raphson…
Volume versus value maximization illustrated for Douglas-fir with thinning
Kurt H. Riitters; J. Douglas Brodie; Chiang Kao
1982-01-01
Economic and physical criteria for selecting even-aged rotation lengths are reviewed with examples of their optimizations. To demonstrate the trade-off between physical volume, economic return, and stand diameter, examples of thinning regimes for maximizing volume, forest rent, and soil expectation are compared with an example of maximizing volume without thinning. The...
Passive and active adaptive management: Approaches and an example
Williams, B.K.
2011-01-01
Adaptive management is a framework for resource conservation that promotes iterative learning-based decision making. Yet there remains considerable confusion about what adaptive management entails, and how to actually make resource decisions adaptively. A key but somewhat ambiguous distinction in adaptive management is between active and passive forms of adaptive decision making. The objective of this paper is to illustrate some approaches to active and passive adaptive management with a simple example involving the drawdown of water impoundments on a wildlife refuge. The approaches are illustrated for the drawdown example, and contrasted in terms of objectives, costs, and potential learning rates. Some key challenges to the actual practice of AM are discussed, and tradeoffs between implementation costs and long-term benefits are highlighted. ?? 2010 Elsevier Ltd.
Biboum, Rosa N.; Keita, Bineta; Franger, Sylvain; Njiki, Charles P. Nanseu; Zhang, Guangjin; Zhang, Jie; Liu, Tianbo; Mbomekalle, Israel-Martyr; Nadjo, Louis
2010-01-01
Green-chemistry type procedures were used to synthesize Pd0 nanostructures encapsulated by a vanadium-substituted Wells-Dawson-type polyoxometalate (Pd0@POM). The cyclic voltammogram run with the Pd0@POM-modified glassy carbon electrode shows well-defined waves, associated with Pd0 nanostructures and the VV/VIV redox couple. The Pd0@POM-modified electrode displayed remarkably reproducible cyclic voltammetry patterns. The hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) was selected as an illustrative example to test the electrocatalytic behavior of the electrode. The kinetic parameters of the HER show the high efficiency of the Pd0@POM-modified electrode. This is the first example of electrochemical characterization of a modified electrode based on a vanado-tungstic POM and Pd0 nanostructures.
Expert system for web based collaborative CAE
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hou, Liang; Lin, Zusheng
2006-11-01
An expert system for web based collaborative CAE was developed based on knowledge engineering, relational database and commercial FEA (Finite element analysis) software. The architecture of the system was illustrated. In this system, the experts' experiences, theories and typical examples and other related knowledge, which will be used in the stage of pre-process in FEA, were categorized into analysis process and object knowledge. Then, the integrated knowledge model based on object-oriented method and rule based method was described. The integrated reasoning process based on CBR (case based reasoning) and rule based reasoning was presented. Finally, the analysis process of this expert system in web based CAE application was illustrated, and an analysis example of a machine tool's column was illustrated to prove the validity of the system.
Davidson, Natalie R; Godfrey, Keith R; Alquaddoomi, Faisal; Nola, David; DiStefano, Joseph J
2017-05-01
We describe and illustrate use of DISTING, a novel web application for computing alternative structurally identifiable linear compartmental models that are input-output indistinguishable from a postulated linear compartmental model. Several computer packages are available for analysing the structural identifiability of such models, but DISTING is the first to be made available for assessing indistinguishability. The computational algorithms embedded in DISTING are based on advanced versions of established geometric and algebraic properties of linear compartmental models, embedded in a user-friendly graphic model user interface. Novel computational tools greatly speed up the overall procedure. These include algorithms for Jacobian matrix reduction, submatrix rank reduction, and parallelization of candidate rank computations in symbolic matrix analysis. The application of DISTING to three postulated models with respectively two, three and four compartments is given. The 2-compartment example is used to illustrate the indistinguishability problem; the original (unidentifiable) model is found to have two structurally identifiable models that are indistinguishable from it. The 3-compartment example has three structurally identifiable indistinguishable models. It is found from DISTING that the four-compartment example has five structurally identifiable models indistinguishable from the original postulated model. This example shows that care is needed when dealing with models that have two or more compartments which are neither perturbed nor observed, because the numbering of these compartments may be arbitrary. DISTING is universally and freely available via the Internet. It is easy to use and circumvents tedious and complicated algebraic analysis previously done by hand. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Tufte, Edward R.
This book presents over 400 illustrations of complex data that show how the dimensionality and density of portrayals can be enhanced. Practical advice on how to explain complex materials by visual means is given, and examples illustrate the fundamental principles of information display. Design strategies presented are exemplified in maps, the…
The Model-Building Process in Introductory College Geography: An Illustrative Example
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Cadwallader, Martin
1978-01-01
Illustrates the five elements of conceptual models by developing a model of consumer behavior in choosing among alternative supermarkets. The elements are: identifying the problem, constructing a conceptual model, translating it into a symbolic model, operationalizing the model, and testing. (Author/AV)
Instruction for Web Searching: An Empirical Study.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Colaric, Susan M.
2003-01-01
Discussion of problems that users have with Web searching focuses on a study of undergraduates that investigated three instructional methods (instruction by example, conceptual models without illustrations, and conceptual models with illustrations) to determine differences in knowledge acquisition related to three types of knowledge (declarative,…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Gellert, Shepard D.; Wilson, Grace
1977-01-01
This paper reviews experimental psychology goal research and its implications for the therapist doing contract therapy. Clinical examples of various levels of contracts give illustrations, and a technique, the therapeutic double bind, as a form of contract, is detailed. A case study is presented to illustrate the use of the theory. Three…
Towards A Topological Framework for Integrating Semantic Information Sources
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Joslyn, Cliff A.; Hogan, Emilie A.; Robinson, Michael
2014-09-07
In this position paper we argue for the role that topological modeling principles can play in providing a framework for sensor integration. While used successfully in standard (quantitative) sensors, we are developing this methodology in new directions to make it appropriate specifically for semantic information sources, including keyterms, ontology terms, and other general Boolean, categorical, ordinal, and partially-ordered data types. We illustrate the basics of the methodology in an extended use case/example, and discuss path forward.
A metadata-driven approach to data repository design.
Harvey, Matthew J; McLean, Andrew; Rzepa, Henry S
2017-01-01
The design and use of a metadata-driven data repository for research data management is described. Metadata is collected automatically during the submission process whenever possible and is registered with DataCite in accordance with their current metadata schema, in exchange for a persistent digital object identifier. Two examples of data preview are illustrated, including the demonstration of a method for integration with commercial software that confers rich domain-specific data analytics without introducing customisation into the repository itself.
Modeling procedures for handling qualities evaluation of flexible aircraft
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Govindaraj, K. S.; Eulrich, B. J.; Chalk, C. R.
1981-01-01
This paper presents simplified modeling procedures to evaluate the impact of flexible modes and the unsteady aerodynamic effects on the handling qualities of Supersonic Cruise Aircraft (SCR). The modeling procedures involve obtaining reduced order transfer function models of SCR vehicles, including the important flexible mode responses and unsteady aerodynamic effects, and conversion of the transfer function models to time domain equations for use in simulations. The use of the modeling procedures is illustrated by a simple example.
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Johnson, F. D.
1981-01-01
The term Government Transfer Services is used in reference to any of the organized streams of public resources that flow into private economic activity. This includes such activities as offshore leasing, Social Security, and NASA technology transfer services. This paper describes a performance measure, empirical results, a theory, and a control model for such services. These are illustrated by a specific example (NASA). An agenda for developing this service control method is also presented.
Technology Interdependency Roadmaps for Space Operations
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Krishen, Kumar
1995-01-01
The requirements for Space Technology are outlined in terms of NASA Strategic Plan. The national emphasis on economic revitalization is described along with the environmental changes needed for the new direction. Space Technology Interdependency (STI) is elaborated in terms of its impact on national priority on science, education, and economy. Some suggested approaches to strengthening STI are outlined. Finally, examples of Technology Roadmaps for Space Operations area are included to illustrate the value of STI for national cohesiveness and economic revitalization.
On the Addition of EM Field Propagation and Coupling Effects in the BLT Equation. Revision
2004-06-08
which collectively are referred to as high power electromagnetic ( HPEM ) fields, could be inadvertent, like the environment produced by a search...either case, the effects of these HPEM fields may include system upset, and in some cases, permanent damage. Figure 1 illustrates a simple example of...an electrical system excited by an external HPEM source. This energy source can provide either a narrow-band pulsed EM field, or a fast transient
Function Package for Computing Quantum Resource Measures
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Huang, Zhiming
2018-05-01
In this paper, we present a function package for to calculate quantum resource measures and dynamics of open systems. Our package includes common operators and operator lists, frequently-used functions for computing quantum entanglement, quantum correlation, quantum coherence, quantum Fisher information and dynamics in noisy environments. We briefly explain the functions of the package and illustrate how to use the package with several typical examples. We expect that this package is a useful tool for future research and education.
Calculation of the aerodynamic loading of swept and unswept flexible wings of arbitrary stiffness
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Diederich, Franklin W
1950-01-01
A method is presented for calculating the aerodynamic loading, the divergence speed, and certain stability derivatives of swept and unswept wings and tail surfaces of arbitrary stiffness. Provision is made for using either stiffness curves and root rotation constants or structural influence coefficients in the analysis. Computing forms, tables of numerical constants required in the analysis, and an illustrative example are included to facilitate calculations by means of the method.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lin, Runliang; Liu, Xiaojun; Zeng, Yunbo
2014-10-01
In this paper, we will present some of our results on the soliton hierarchy with self-consistent sources (SHSCSs). The Kadomtsev-Petviashvili (KP) hierarchy will be used as an illustrative example to show the method to construct the SHSCSs. Some properties of the KP hierarchy with self-consistent sources will also be given, such as the dressing approach, the Wronskian solutions (including soliton solutions), its bilinear identities and the tau function.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Poon, Thomas; Mundy, Bradford P.; Shattuck, Thomas W.
2002-02-01
A brief account of the Michael reaction is provided, illustrating its versatility as a topic in undergraduate chemistry courses. Included is a short biography of the reaction's namesake, examples of its use in organic synthesis, and its unique role in the defense mechanism of the bacterium Micromonospora echinospora. A computational rationale for the selectivity of 1,4 versus 1,2 addition of nucleophiles to a,b-unsaturated carbonyls is discussed and links to animations suitable for an introductory organic chemistry course are provided.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Youssef, Nabil L.; Elgendi, S. G.
2014-03-01
The book “Handbook of Finsler geometry” has been included with a CD containing an elegant Maple package, FINSLER, for calculations in Finsler geometry. Using this package, an example concerning a Finsler generalization of Einstein’s vacuum field equations was treated. In this example, the calculation of the components of the hv-curvature of Cartan connection leads to wrong expressions. On the other hand, the FINSLER package works only in dimension four. We introduce a new Finsler package in which we fix the two problems and solve them. Moreover, we extend this package to compute not only the geometric objects associated with Cartan connection but also those associated with Berwald, Chern and Hashiguchi connections in any dimension. These improvements have been illustrated by a concrete example. Furthermore, the problem of simplifying tensor expressions is treated. This paper is intended to make calculations in Finsler geometry more easier and simpler.
Instructional Simulation Integrates Research, Education, and Practice.
Teasdale, Thomas A; Mapes, Sheryl A; Henley, Omolara; Lindsey, Jeanene; Dillard, Della
2016-01-01
Instructional simulation is widely used in clinical education. Examples include the use of inanimate models meant to imitate humans, standardized patients who are actors portraying patients with certain conditions, and role-play where learners experience the disease through props and circumstances. These modalities are briefly described, and then case examples are provided of simulation curricula in use that integrate research findings and clinical practice expertise to guide development and implementation steps. The cases illustrate how formative and summative feedback from two legs of the "three-legged stool" can be potent integrating forces in development of simulation curricula. In these examples, the educational outputs benefit from purposeful inclusion of research and practice inputs. Costs are outlined for instructor and learner time commitments, space considerations, and expendables. The authors' data and experience suggest that instructional simulation that is supported by a solid scientific base and clinical expertise is appreciated by teachers and learners.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Luo, Yang; Lin, Yuewu
2017-01-01
Illustration is always used as an example to make the written text or the utterance more clear in general. In Winarski's opinion (1997), one picture equals thousands of words. That is to say, illustrations are capable to express the meaning of unfamiliar language or a great deal of information in the reading material by vivid pictures, tables,…
26 CFR 25.7520-3T - Limitation on the application of section 7520 (temporary).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... section are illustrated by the following example: Example. Terminal illness. The donor transfers property... age 75 but has been diagnosed with an incurable illness and has at least a 50 percent probability of...
26 CFR 25.7520-3T - Limitation on the application of section 7520 (temporary).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... section are illustrated by the following example: Example. Terminal illness. The donor transfers property... age 75 but has been diagnosed with an incurable illness and has at least a 50 percent probability of...
Wang, Bokai; Wu, Pan; Kwan, Brian; Tu, Xin M; Feng, Changyong
2018-04-25
Simpson's paradox is very prevalent in many areas. It characterizes the inconsistency between the conditional and marginal interpretations of the data. In this paper, we illustrate through some examples how the Simpson's paradox can happen in continuous, categorical, and time-to-event data.
Delamination Modeling of Composites for Improved Crash Analysis
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Fleming, David C.
1999-01-01
Finite element crash modeling of composite structures is limited by the inability of current commercial crash codes to accurately model delamination growth. Efforts are made to implement and assess delamination modeling techniques using a current finite element crash code, MSC/DYTRAN. Three methods are evaluated, including a straightforward method based on monitoring forces in elements or constraints representing an interface; a cohesive fracture model proposed in the literature; and the virtual crack closure technique commonly used in fracture mechanics. Results are compared with dynamic double cantilever beam test data from the literature. Examples show that it is possible to accurately model delamination propagation in this case. However, the computational demands required for accurate solution are great and reliable property data may not be available to support general crash modeling efforts. Additional examples are modeled including an impact-loaded beam, damage initiation in laminated crushing specimens, and a scaled aircraft subfloor structures in which composite sandwich structures are used as energy-absorbing elements. These examples illustrate some of the difficulties in modeling delamination as part of a finite element crash analysis.
Resource Materials for Nanoscale Science and Technology Education
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Lisensky, George
2006-12-01
Nanotechnology and advanced materials examples can be used to explore science and engineering concepts, exhibiting the "wow" and potential of nanotechnology, introducing prospective scientists to key ideas, and educating a citizenry capable of making well-informed technology-driven decisions. For example, material syntheses an atomic layer at a time have already revolutionized lighting and display technologies and dramatically expanded hard drive storage capacities. Resource materials include kits, models, and demonstrations that explain scanning probe microscopy, x-ray diffraction, information storage, energy and light, carbon nanotubes, and solid-state structures. An online Video Lab Manual, where movies show each step of the experiment, illustrates more than a dozen laboratory experiments involving nanoscale science and technology. Examples that are useful at a variety of levels when instructors provide the context include preparation of self-assembled monolayers, liquid crystals, colloidal gold, ferrofluid nanoparticles, nickel nanowires, solar cells, electrochromic thin films, organic light emitting diodes, and quantum dots. These resources have been developed, refined and class tested at institutions working with the Materials Research Science and Engineering Center on Nanostructured Interfaces at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (http://mrsec.wisc.edu/nano).
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Liland, Kristian Hovde; Snipen, Lars
When a series of Bernoulli trials occur within a fixed time frame or limited space, it is often interesting to assess if the successful outcomes have occurred completely at random, or if they tend to group together. One example, in genetics, is detecting grouping of genes within a genome. Approximations of the distribution of successes are possible, but they become inaccurate for small sample sizes. In this article, we describe the exact distribution of time between random, non-overlapping successes in discrete time of fixed length. A complete description of the probability mass function, the cumulative distribution function, mean, variance and recurrence relation is included. We propose an associated test for the over-representation of short distances and illustrate the methodology through relevant examples. The theory is implemented in an R package including probability mass, cumulative distribution, quantile function, random number generator, simulation functions, and functions for testing.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Bogdanov, Bogdan; Smith, Richard D.
This review offers a broad overview of recent FTICR applications and technological developments in the field of proteomics, directed to a variety of people with different expertise and interests. Both the ''bottom-up'' (peptide level) and ''top-down'' (intact protein level) approaches will be covered and various related aspects will be discussed and illustrated with examples that are among the best available references in the literature. ''Bottom-up topics include peptide fragmentation, the AMT approach and DREAMS technology, quantitative proteomics, post-translational modifications, and special FTICR software focused on peptide and protein identification. Topics in the ''top-down'' part include various aspects of high-mass measurements,more » protein tandem mass spectrometry, protein confirmations, protein-protein complexes, as well as some esoteric applications that may become more practical in the coming years. Finally, examples of integrating both approaches and medical proteomics applications using FTICR will be provided, closing with an outlook of what may be coming our way sooner than later.« less
Growth and Development of Three-Dimensional Plant Form.
Whitewoods, Christopher D; Coen, Enrico
2017-09-11
Plants can generate a spectacular array of complex shapes, many of which exhibit elaborate curvature in three dimensions, illustrated for example by orchid flowers and pitcher-plant traps. All of these structures arise through differential growth. Recent findings provide fresh mechanistic insights into how regional cell behaviours may lead to tissue deformations, including anisotropies and curvatures, which shape growing volumes and sheets of cells. Here were review our current understanding of how genes, growth, mechanics, and evolution interact to generate diverse structures. We illustrate problems and approaches with the complex three-dimensional trap of the bladderwort, Utricularia gibba, to show how a multidisciplinary approach can be extended to new model systems to understand how diverse plant shapes can develop and evolve. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Responding to the Consequences of Climate Change
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Hildebrand, Peter H.
2011-01-01
The talk addresses the scientific consensus concerning climate change, and outlines the many paths that are open to mitigate climate change and its effects on human activities. Diverse aspects of the changing water cycle on Earth are used to illustrate the reality climate change. These include melting snowpack, glaciers, and sea ice; changes in runoff; rising sea level; moving ecosystems, an more. Human forcing of climate change is then explained, including: greenhouse gasses, atmospheric aerosols, and changes in land use. Natural forcing effects are briefly discussed, including volcanoes and changes in the solar cycle. Returning to Earth's water cycle, the effects of climate-induced changes in water resources is presented. Examples include wildfires, floods and droughts, changes in the production and availability of food, and human social reactions to these effects. The lk then passes to a discussion of common human reactions to these forecasts of climate change effects, with a summary of recent research on the subject, plus several recent historical examples of large-scale changes in human behavior that affect the climate and ecosystems. Finally, in the face for needed action on climate, the many options for mitigation of climate change and adaptation to its effects are presented, with examples of the ability to take affordable, and profitable action at most all levels, from the local, through national.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Bachman, C. H.
1988-01-01
Presents examples to show the ubiquitous nature of geometry. Illustrates the relationship between the perimeter and area of two-dimensional objects and between the area and volume of three-dimensional objects. Provides examples of distribution systems, optimum shapes, structural strength, biological heat engines, man's size, and reflection and…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Bowes, David R.
2014-01-01
Video clips are an excellent way to enhance lecture material. Television commercials are a source of video examples that should not be overlooked and they are readily available on the internet. They are familiar, short, self-contained, constantly being created, and often funny. This paper describes several examples of television commercials that…
Constrained Principal Component Analysis: Various Applications.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hunter, Michael; Takane, Yoshio
2002-01-01
Provides example applications of constrained principal component analysis (CPCA) that illustrate the method on a variety of contexts common to psychological research. Two new analyses, decompositions into finer components and fitting higher order structures, are presented, followed by an illustration of CPCA on contingency tables and the CPCA of…
Use of Time-Series, ARIMA Designs to Assess Program Efficacy.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Braden, Jeffery P.; And Others
1990-01-01
Illustrates use of time-series designs for determining efficacy of interventions with fictitious data describing drug-abuse prevention program. Discusses problems and procedures associated with time-series data analysis using Auto Regressive Integrated Moving Averages (ARIMA) models. Example illustrates application of ARIMA analysis for…
INPRO Assessment of an INS in the Area of Safety of Fuel Cycle Installations
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Raj, B.; Busurin, Y.; Depisch, F.
2006-07-01
INPRO has defined requirements organized in a hierarchy of Basic Principles, User Requirements and Criteria (consisting of an indicator and an acceptance limit) to be met by innovative nuclear reactor systems (INS) in six areas, namely: economics, safety, waste management, environment, proliferation resistance, and infrastructure. If an INS meets all requirements in all areas it represents a sustainable system for the supply of energy, capable of making a significant contribution to meeting the energy needs of the 21. century. Draft manuals have been developed, for each INPRO area, to provide guidance for performing an assessment of whether an INS meetsmore » the INPRO requirements in a given area. The manuals set out the information that needs to be assembled to perform an assessment and provide guidance on selecting the acceptance limits and, for a given INS, for determining the value of the indicators for comparison with the associated acceptance limits. Each manual also includes an example of a specific assessment to illustrate the guidance. This paper discusses the manual for performing an INPRO assessment in the area of safety of fuel cycle installations. The example, chosen solely for the purpose of illustrating the INPRO methodology, describes an assessment of an MOX fuel fabrication plant based on sol-gel technology and illustrates an assessment performed for an INS at an early stage of development. The safety issues and the assessment steps are presented in detail in the paper. (authors)« less
Evaluation of the Child with Short Stature.
Mehlman, Charles T; Ain, Michael C
2015-10-01
Orthopedic surgeons frequently encounter short statured patients. A systematic approach is needed for proper evaluation of these children. The differential diagnosis includes both proportionate and disproportionate short stature types. A proper history and physical examination and judicious use of plain film radiography will establish the diagnosis in most cases. In addition to the orthopedic surgeon, most of these patients will also be evaluated by other specialists, including endocrinologists and geneticists. This article provides an overview of the evaluation of the child with short stature and offers several illustrative examples. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Metal band drives in spacecraft mechanisms
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Maus, Daryl
1993-01-01
Transmitting and changing the characteristics of force and stroke is a requirement in nearly all mechanisms. Examples include changing linear to rotary motion, providing a 90 deg change in direction, and amplifying stroke or force. Requirements for size, weight, efficiency and reliability create unique problems in spacecraft mechanisms. Flexible metal band and cam drive systems provide powerful solutions to these problems. Band drives, rack and pinion gears, and bell cranks are compared for effectiveness. Band drive issues are discussed including materials, bend radius, fabrication, attachment and reliability. Numerous mechanisms are shown which illustrate practical applications of band drives.
The Need for Flexibility in Conservation Practices: Exotic Species as an Example
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Prévot-Julliard, Anne-Caroline; Clavel, Joanne; Teillac-Deschamps, Pauline; Julliard, Romain
2011-03-01
To garner support for biodiversity from the World's human population, conservation biologists need an open-minded, integrated conservation strategy. We suggest that this strategy should include efforts to (1) preserve existing high quality, diverse ecosystems, (2) remediate impaired systems, (3) balance the needs of people and ecological resources, and (4) engender appreciation of nature and its services. We refer to these four key tenets as reservation, restoration, reconciliation, and reconnection. We illustrate these concepts by presenting the debate surrounding the management of exotic species from an unusual perspective, the benefits of exotic species. By this example we hope to encourage an integrated approach to conservation in which management strategies can be flexible, adjusting to society's needs and the overall goals of conservation.
Gender disparities in health care.
Kent, Jennifer A; Patel, Vinisha; Varela, Natalie A
2012-01-01
The existence of disparities in delivery of health care has been the subject of increased empirical study in recent years. Some studies have suggested that disparities between men and women exist in the diagnoses and treatment of health conditions, and as a result measures have been taken to identify these differences. This article uses several examples to illustrate health care gender bias in medicine. These examples include surgery, peripheral artery disease, cardiovascular disease, critical care, and cardiovascular risk factors. Additionally, we discuss reasons why these issues still occur, trends in health care that may address these issues, and the need for acknowledgement of the current system's inequities in order to provide unbiased care for women in the future. © 2012 Mount Sinai School of Medicine.
The role of fracture mechanics in the design of fuel tanks in space vehicles
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Denton, S. J.; Liu, C. K.
1976-01-01
With special reference to design of fuel tanks in space vehicles, the principles of fracture mechanics are reviewed. An approximate but extremely simple relationship is derived among the operating stress level, the length of crack, and the number of cycles of failure. Any one of the variables can be computed approximately from the knowledge of the other two, if the loading schedule (mission of the tank) is not greatly altered. Two sample examples illustrating the procedures of determining the allowable safe operating stress corresponding to a set of assumed loading schedule are included. The selection of sample examples is limited by the relatively meager available data on the candidate material for various stress ratios in the cycling.
Differential theory of learning for efficient neural network pattern recognition
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hampshire, John B., II; Vijaya Kumar, Bhagavatula
1993-09-01
We describe a new theory of differential learning by which a broad family of pattern classifiers (including many well-known neural network paradigms) can learn stochastic concepts efficiently. We describe the relationship between a classifier's ability to generate well to unseen test examples and the efficiency of the strategy by which it learns. We list a series of proofs that differential learning is efficient in its information and computational resource requirements, whereas traditional probabilistic learning strategies are not. The proofs are illustrated by a simple example that lends itself to closed-form analysis. We conclude with an optical character recognition task for which three different types of differentially generated classifiers generalize significantly better than their probabilistically generated counterparts.
Differential theory of learning for efficient neural network pattern recognition
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hampshire, John B., II; Vijaya Kumar, Bhagavatula
1993-08-01
We describe a new theory of differential learning by which a broad family of pattern classifiers (including many well-known neural network paradigms) can learn stochastic concepts efficiently. We describe the relationship between a classifier's ability to generalize well to unseen test examples and the efficiency of the strategy by which it learns. We list a series of proofs that differential learning is efficient in its information and computational resource requirements, whereas traditional probabilistic learning strategies are not. The proofs are illustrated by a simple example that lends itself to closed-form analysis. We conclude with an optical character recognition task for which three different types of differentially generated classifiers generalize significantly better than their probabilistically generated counterparts.
Central Limit Theorem for Exponentially Quasi-local Statistics of Spin Models on Cayley Graphs
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Reddy, Tulasi Ram; Vadlamani, Sreekar; Yogeshwaran, D.
2018-04-01
Central limit theorems for linear statistics of lattice random fields (including spin models) are usually proven under suitable mixing conditions or quasi-associativity. Many interesting examples of spin models do not satisfy mixing conditions, and on the other hand, it does not seem easy to show central limit theorem for local statistics via quasi-associativity. In this work, we prove general central limit theorems for local statistics and exponentially quasi-local statistics of spin models on discrete Cayley graphs with polynomial growth. Further, we supplement these results by proving similar central limit theorems for random fields on discrete Cayley graphs taking values in a countable space, but under the stronger assumptions of α -mixing (for local statistics) and exponential α -mixing (for exponentially quasi-local statistics). All our central limit theorems assume a suitable variance lower bound like many others in the literature. We illustrate our general central limit theorem with specific examples of lattice spin models and statistics arising in computational topology, statistical physics and random networks. Examples of clustering spin models include quasi-associated spin models with fast decaying covariances like the off-critical Ising model, level sets of Gaussian random fields with fast decaying covariances like the massive Gaussian free field and determinantal point processes with fast decaying kernels. Examples of local statistics include intrinsic volumes, face counts, component counts of random cubical complexes while exponentially quasi-local statistics include nearest neighbour distances in spin models and Betti numbers of sub-critical random cubical complexes.
Introduction to Sample Plan Package for Farms
An example of a completed and self-certified Tier I Qualified Facility SPCC Plan using the template found in Appendix G of the SPCC rule (40 CFR part 112). This example illustrates how to develop an SPCC Plan using a farm scenario.
48 CFR 22.1003-5 - Some examples of contracts covered.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... CFR 4.130 for additional examples): (a) Motor pool operation, parking, taxicab, and ambulance services...) Certain specialized services requiring specific skills, such as drafting, illustrating, graphic arts..., engines, electrical motors, vehicles, and electronic, office and related business and construction...
Quantum tomography for collider physics: illustrations with lepton-pair production
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Martens, John C.; Ralston, John P.; Takaki, J. D. Tapia
2018-01-01
Quantum tomography is a method to experimentally extract all that is observable about a quantum mechanical system. We introduce quantum tomography to collider physics with the illustration of the angular distribution of lepton pairs. The tomographic method bypasses much of the field-theoretic formalism to concentrate on what can be observed with experimental data. We provide a practical, experimentally driven guide to model-independent analysis using density matrices at every step. Comparison with traditional methods of analyzing angular correlations of inclusive reactions finds many advantages in the tomographic method, which include manifest Lorentz covariance, direct incorporation of positivity constraints, exhaustively complete polarization information, and new invariants free from frame conventions. For example, experimental data can determine the entanglement entropy of the production process. We give reproducible numerical examples and provide a supplemental standalone computer code that implements the procedure. We also highlight a property of complex positivity that guarantees in a least-squares type fit that a local minimum of a χ 2 statistic will be a global minimum: There are no isolated local minima. This property with an automated implementation of positivity promises to mitigate issues relating to multiple minima and convention dependence that have been problematic in previous work on angular distributions.
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Hamers, Adrian S.
2018-05-01
We extend the formalism of a previous paper to include the effects of flybys and instantaneous perturbations such as supernovae on the long-term secular evolution of hierarchical multiple systems with an arbitrary number of bodies and hierarchy, provided that the system is composed of nested binary orbits. To model secular encounters, we expand the Hamiltonian in terms of the ratio of the separation of the perturber with respect to the barycentre of the multiple system, to the separation of the widest orbit. Subsequently, we integrate over the perturber orbit numerically or analytically. We verify our method for secular encounters and illustrate it with an example. Furthermore, we describe a method to compute instantaneous orbital changes to multiple systems, such as asymmetric supernovae and impulsive encounters. The secular code, with implementation of the extensions described in this paper, is publicly available within AMUSE, and we provide a number of simple example scripts to illustrate its usage for secular and impulsive encounters and asymmetric supernovae. The extensions presented in this paper are a next step towards efficiently modelling the evolution of complex multiple systems embedded in star clusters.
Reaching Reluctant Students: Insights from Torey Hayden.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Marlowe, Mike
1999-01-01
Illustrates principles of reaching students who fight or avoid adults by using examples drawn from the writings of Torey Hayden. Presents ten concepts that can serve as guidelines for building relationships with resistant children, and gives excerpts from Hayden's works to illustrate each concept. Demonstrates how books provide teachers with…
Using Personal Narratives to Incorporate Diversity into the Basic Communication Course.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Rozema, Hazel
Arguing that first-person narratives can illustrate communication theories and concepts found throughout basic communication course texts and can serve as first-person examples of the effects of racism and stereotyping, this paper summarizes two "powerful and engaging" texts that illustrate the standpoint of African-Americans in the…
CAI--Socratic Dialogue and Laboratory Simulation in Pathology. Technical Report Number Three.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hellerstein, Earl E.; And Others
The report describes work accomplished in the development of instructional materials for second-year medical students taking a histopathology laboratory course. The objectives and methods are described and several examples of techniques are illustrated with short segments of dialogue. These segments also illustrate the branching characteristics of…
Actionable Postcolonial Theory in Education. Postcolonial Studies in Education
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Andreotti, Vanessa
2011-01-01
"Actionable Postcolonial Theory in Education" illustrates how postcolonial theory can be put to work in education. It offers an accessible and handy overview and comparison of postcolonial theory and other theoretical debates related to critiques of Western ethnocentrism and hegemony. It also offers examples that illustrate how a discursive strand…
34 CFR 100.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR
2012-07-01
... TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 100.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title..., recreational, or other facilities of the grantee or other recipient. (b) In a research, training, demonstration...
34 CFR 100.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-07-01
... TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 100.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title..., recreational, or other facilities of the grantee or other recipient. (b) In a research, training, demonstration...
34 CFR 100.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-07-01
... TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 100.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title..., recreational, or other facilities of the grantee or other recipient. (b) In a research, training, demonstration...
45 CFR 1110.5 - Illustrative applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-10-01
... following examples will illustrate the application of the foregoing provisions to some of the activities for... prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title VI of the Act and this part, as a condition of the receipt of Federal financial assistance.) (a) In a research...
45 CFR 1110.5 - Illustrative applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-10-01
... following examples will illustrate the application of the foregoing provisions to some of the activities for... prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title VI of the Act and this part, as a condition of the receipt of Federal financial assistance.) (a) In a research...
45 CFR 1110.5 - Illustrative applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR
2013-10-01
... following examples will illustrate the application of the foregoing provisions to some of the activities for... prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title VI of the Act and this part, as a condition of the receipt of Federal financial assistance.) (a) In a research...
45 CFR 1110.5 - Illustrative applications.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-10-01
... following examples will illustrate the application of the foregoing provisions to some of the activities for... prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title VI of the Act and this part, as a condition of the receipt of Federal financial assistance.) (a) In a research...
34 CFR 100.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-07-01
... TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 100.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title..., recreational, or other facilities of the grantee or other recipient. (b) In a research, training, demonstration...
34 CFR 100.5 - Illustrative application.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR
2014-07-01
... TITLE VI OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 § 100.5 Illustrative application. The following examples will... discrimination prohibited is discrimination on the ground of race, color, or national origin prohibited by title..., recreational, or other facilities of the grantee or other recipient. (b) In a research, training, demonstration...
26 CFR 1.892-2T - Foreign government defined (temporary regulations).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... income from its intended use by the exertion of influence or control through means explicitly or... that perform or performed governmental or social services; (ii) The funds that comprise the trust are... or social services. (2) Illustrations. The following examples illustrate the application of paragraph...
26 CFR 1.892-2T - Foreign government defined (temporary regulations).
Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR
2011-04-01
... income from its intended use by the exertion of influence or control through means explicitly or... that perform or performed governmental or social services; (ii) The funds that comprise the trust are... or social services. (2) Illustrations. The following examples illustrate the application of paragraph...
Improvisational Acting Exercises and Their Potential Use in Family Counseling
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ruby, James R.; Ruby, Nanci Carol
2009-01-01
Expressive therapy interventions are a useful resource for counselors working with a wide range of presenting issues. This article illustrates a series of improvisational acting exercises that can be used within a family counseling context. Clear directions for specific exercises are provided, along with illustrative case examples.
Allium To Zircon: Mathematics and Nature.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Harrell, Marvin E.; Fosnaugh, Linda S.
1997-01-01
Discusses how nature can illustrate mathematical structures and concepts in the classroom. For example, the upper surface of a typical leaf structure illustrates the notion of tessellating with polygons. Also lists classroom applications and hands-on activities such as growing crystals to investigate the natural forms of polyhedra and measuring…
LDPC Codes with Minimum Distance Proportional to Block Size
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Divsalar, Dariush; Jones, Christopher; Dolinar, Samuel; Thorpe, Jeremy
2009-01-01
Low-density parity-check (LDPC) codes characterized by minimum Hamming distances proportional to block sizes have been demonstrated. Like the codes mentioned in the immediately preceding article, the present codes are error-correcting codes suitable for use in a variety of wireless data-communication systems that include noisy channels. The previously mentioned codes have low decoding thresholds and reasonably low error floors. However, the minimum Hamming distances of those codes do not grow linearly with code-block sizes. Codes that have this minimum-distance property exhibit very low error floors. Examples of such codes include regular LDPC codes with variable degrees of at least 3. Unfortunately, the decoding thresholds of regular LDPC codes are high. Hence, there is a need for LDPC codes characterized by both low decoding thresholds and, in order to obtain acceptably low error floors, minimum Hamming distances that are proportional to code-block sizes. The present codes were developed to satisfy this need. The minimum Hamming distances of the present codes have been shown, through consideration of ensemble-average weight enumerators, to be proportional to code block sizes. As in the cases of irregular ensembles, the properties of these codes are sensitive to the proportion of degree-2 variable nodes. A code having too few such nodes tends to have an iterative decoding threshold that is far from the capacity threshold. A code having too many such nodes tends not to exhibit a minimum distance that is proportional to block size. Results of computational simulations have shown that the decoding thresholds of codes of the present type are lower than those of regular LDPC codes. Included in the simulations were a few examples from a family of codes characterized by rates ranging from low to high and by thresholds that adhere closely to their respective channel capacity thresholds; the simulation results from these examples showed that the codes in question have low error floors as well as low decoding thresholds. As an example, the illustration shows the protograph (which represents the blueprint for overall construction) of one proposed code family for code rates greater than or equal to 1.2. Any size LDPC code can be obtained by copying the protograph structure N times, then permuting the edges. The illustration also provides Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) hardware performance simulations for this code family. In addition, the illustration provides minimum signal-to-noise ratios (Eb/No) in decibels (decoding thresholds) to achieve zero error rates as the code block size goes to infinity for various code rates. In comparison with the codes mentioned in the preceding article, these codes have slightly higher decoding thresholds.
Hickey, John M; Sahni, Neha; Toth, Ronald T; Kumru, Ozan S; Joshi, Sangeeta B; Middaugh, C Russell; Volkin, David B
2016-10-01
Liquid chromatographic methods, combined with mass spectrometry, offer exciting and important opportunities to better characterize complex vaccine antigens including recombinant proteins, virus-like particles, inactivated viruses, polysaccharides, and protein-polysaccharide conjugates. The current abilities and limitations of these physicochemical methods to complement traditional in vitro and in vivo vaccine potency assays are explored in this review through the use of illustrative case studies. Various applications of these state-of-the art techniques are illustrated that include the analysis of influenza vaccines (inactivated whole virus and recombinant hemagglutinin), virus-like particle vaccines (human papillomavirus and hepatitis B), and polysaccharide linked to protein carrier vaccines (pneumococcal). Examples of utilizing these analytical methods to characterize vaccine antigens in the presence of adjuvants, which are often included to boost immune responses as part of the final vaccine dosage form, are also presented. Some of the challenges of using chromatographic and LC-MS as physicochemical assays to routinely test complex vaccine antigens are also discussed. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Managing Water-Food-Energy Futures in the Canadian Prairies
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Wheater, H. S.; Hassanzadeh, E.; Nazemi, A.; Elshorbagy, A. A.
2016-12-01
The water-food-energy nexus is a convenient phrase to highlight competing societal uses for water and the need for cross-sectoral policy integration, but this can lead to oversimplification of the multiple dimensions of water (and energy) management. In practice, water managers must balance (and prioritize) demands for water for many uses, including environmental flows, and reservoir operation often involves managing conflicting demands, for example to maximize retention for supply, reduce storage to facilitate flood control, and constrain water levels and releases for habitat protection. Agriculture and water quality are also inextricably linked: irrigated agriculture requires appropriate water quality for product quality and certification, but agriculture can be a major source of nutrient pollution, with impacts on human and ecosystem health, drinking water treatment and amenity. And energy-water interactions include energy production (hydropower and cooling water for thermal power generation) and energy consumption (e.g. for pumping and water and wastewater treatment). These dependencies are illustrated for the Canadian prairies, and a risk-based approach to the management of climate change is presented. Trade-offs between economic benefits of hydropower and irrigation are illustrated for alternative climate futures, including implications for freshwater habitats. The results illustrate that inter-sector interactions vary as a function of climate and its variability, and that there is a need for policy to manage inter-sector allocations as a function of economic risk.
Abhinav, Kumar; Yeh, Fang-Cheng; Mansouri, Alireza; Zadeh, Gelareh; Fernandez-Miranda, Juan C.
2015-01-01
Conventional white matter (WM) imaging approaches, such as diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), have been used to preoperatively identify the location of affected WM tracts in patients with intracranial tumors in order to maximize the extent of resection and potentially reduce postoperative morbidity. DTI, however, has limitations that include its inability to resolve multiple crossing fibers and its susceptibility to partial volume effects. Therefore, recent focus has shifted to more advanced WM imaging techniques such as high-definition fiber tractography (HDFT). In this paper, we illustrate the application of HDFT, which in our preliminary experience has enabled accurate depiction of perilesional tracts in a 3-dimensional manner in multiple anatomical compartments including edematous zones around high-grade gliomas. This has facilitated accurate surgical planning. This is illustrated by using case examples of patients with glioblastoma multiforme. We also discuss future directions in the role of these techniques in surgery for gliomas. PMID:26117712
Transvection Arising from Transgene Interactions in Zebrafish.
Keefe, Matthew D; Bonkowsky, Joshua L
2017-02-01
There has been a rapid expansion in use of transgenic technologies in zebrafish. We report a novel example of transinteractions of genetic elements, or transvection. This interaction led to a novel expression pattern and illustrates a precautionary example regarding use of transgenes in zebrafish.
Computer code for off-design performance analysis of radial-inflow turbines with rotor blade sweep
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Meitner, P. L.; Glassman, A. J.
1983-01-01
The analysis procedure of an existing computer program was extended to include rotor blade sweep, to model the flow more accurately at the rotor exit, and to provide more detail to the loss model. The modeling changes are described and all analysis equations and procedures are presented. Program input and output are described and are illustrated by an example problem. Results obtained from this program and from a previous program are compared with experimental data.
Fractional Brownian motion and long term clinical trial recruitment
Zhang, Qiang; Lai, Dejian
2015-01-01
Prediction of recruitment in clinical trials has been a challenging task. Many methods have been studied, including models based on Poisson process and its large sample approximation by Brownian motion (BM), however, when the independent incremental structure is violated for BM model, we could use fractional Brownian motion to model and approximate the underlying Poisson processes with random rates. In this paper, fractional Brownian motion (FBM) is considered for such conditions and compared to BM model with illustrated examples from different trials and simulations. PMID:26347306
Microcanonical Szilárd engines beyond the quasistatic regime
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Acconcia, Thiago V.; Bonança, Marcus V. S.
2017-12-01
We discuss the possibility of extracting energy from a single thermal bath using microcanonical Szilárd engines operating in finite time. This extends previous works on the topic which are restricted to the quasistatic regime. The feedback protocol is implemented based on linear response predictions of the excess work. It is claimed that the underlying mechanism leading to energy extraction does not violate Liouville's theorem and preserves ergodicity throughout the cycle. We illustrate our results with several examples including an exactly solvable model.
Microcanonical Szilárd engines beyond the quasistatic regime.
Acconcia, Thiago V; Bonança, Marcus V S
2017-12-01
We discuss the possibility of extracting energy from a single thermal bath using microcanonical Szilárd engines operating in finite time. This extends previous works on the topic which are restricted to the quasistatic regime. The feedback protocol is implemented based on linear response predictions of the excess work. It is claimed that the underlying mechanism leading to energy extraction does not violate Liouville's theorem and preserves ergodicity throughout the cycle. We illustrate our results with several examples including an exactly solvable model.
Advances in Experiment Design for High Performance Aircraft
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Morelli, Engene A.
1998-01-01
A general overview and summary of recent advances in experiment design for high performance aircraft is presented, along with results from flight tests. General theoretical background is included, with some discussion of various approaches to maneuver design. Flight test examples from the F-18 High Alpha Research Vehicle (HARV) are used to illustrate applications of the theory. Input forms are compared using Cramer-Rao bounds for the standard errors of estimated model parameters. Directions for future research in experiment design for high performance aircraft are identified.
Hamilton's Equations with Euler Parameters for Rigid Body Dynamics Modeling. Chapter 3
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Shivarama, Ravishankar; Fahrenthold, Eric P.
2004-01-01
A combination of Euler parameter kinematics and Hamiltonian mechanics provides a rigid body dynamics model well suited for use in strongly nonlinear problems involving arbitrarily large rotations. The model is unconstrained, free of singularities, includes a general potential energy function and a minimum set of momentum variables, and takes an explicit state space form convenient for numerical implementation. The general formulation may be specialized to address particular applications, as illustrated in several three dimensional example problems.
2015-05-01
This material is based upon work funded and supported by the Department of Defense under Contract No. FA8721-05- C -0003 with Carnegie Mellon...SoS), each of us summons a slightly different im- age. Some current examples of SoS contexts illustrate the various meanings that we apply to the term...vehicles, including ships, aircraft , and ground vehicles, are considered platforms in the DoD context. The concept of “platform architecture” in this
User systems guidelines for software projects
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Abrahamson, L.
1986-04-01
This manual presents guidelines for software standards which were developed so that software project-development teams and management involved in approving the software could have a generalized view of all phases in the software production procedure and the steps involved in completing each phase. Guidelines are presented for six phases of software development: project definition, building a user interface, designing software, writing code, testing code, and preparing software documentation. The discussions for each phase include examples illustrating the recommended guidelines. 45 refs. (DWL)
Wheels within Wheels: Hamiltonian Dynamics as a Hierarchy of Action Variables
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Perkins, Rory J.; Bellan, Paul M.
2010-09-17
In systems where one coordinate undergoes periodic oscillation, the net displacement in any other coordinate over a single period is shown to be given by differentiation of the action integral associated with the oscillating coordinate. This result is then used to demonstrate that the action integral acts as a Hamiltonian for slow coordinates providing time is scaled to the 'tick time' of the oscillating coordinate. Numerous examples, including charged particle drifts and relativistic motion, are supplied to illustrate the varied application of these results.
Fractional Brownian motion and long term clinical trial recruitment.
Zhang, Qiang; Lai, Dejian
2011-05-01
Prediction of recruitment in clinical trials has been a challenging task. Many methods have been studied, including models based on Poisson process and its large sample approximation by Brownian motion (BM), however, when the independent incremental structure is violated for BM model, we could use fractional Brownian motion to model and approximate the underlying Poisson processes with random rates. In this paper, fractional Brownian motion (FBM) is considered for such conditions and compared to BM model with illustrated examples from different trials and simulations.
Hierarchically Parallelized Constrained Nonlinear Solvers with Automated Substructuring
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Padovan, Joe; Kwang, Abel
1994-01-01
This paper develops a parallelizable multilevel multiple constrained nonlinear equation solver. The substructuring process is automated to yield appropriately balanced partitioning of each succeeding level. Due to the generality of the procedure,_sequential, as well as partially and fully parallel environments can be handled. This includes both single and multiprocessor assignment per individual partition. Several benchmark examples are presented. These illustrate the robustness of the procedure as well as its capability to yield significant reductions in memory utilization and calculational effort due both to updating and inversion.
Accommodating complexity and human behaviors in decision analysis.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Backus, George A.; Siirola, John Daniel; Schoenwald, David Alan
2007-11-01
This is the final report for a LDRD effort to address human behavior in decision support systems. One sister LDRD effort reports the extension of this work to include actual human choices and additional simulation analyses. Another provides the background for this effort and the programmatic directions for future work. This specific effort considered the feasibility of five aspects of model development required for analysis viability. To avoid the use of classified information, healthcare decisions and the system embedding them became the illustrative example for assessment.
The use of geologic and seismologic information to reduce earthquake Hazards in California
Kockelman, W.J.; Campbell, C.C.
1984-01-01
Five examples illustrate how geologic and seismologic information can be used to reduce the effects of earthquakes Included are procedures for anticipating damage to critical facilities, preparing, adopting, or implementing seismic safety studies, plans, and programs, retrofitting highway bridges, regulating development in areas subject to fault-rupture, and strengthening or removing unreinforced masonry buildings. The collective effect of these procedures is to improve the public safety, health, and welfare of individuals and their communities. ?? 1984 Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
On-board processing architectures for satellite B-ISDN services
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Inukai, Thomas; Shyy, Dong-Jye; Faris, Faris
1991-01-01
Onboard baseband processing architectures for future satellite broadband integrated services digital networks (B-ISDN's) are addressed. To assess the feasibility of implementing satellite B-ISDN services, critical design issues, such as B-ISDN traffic characteristics, transmission link design, and a trade-off between onboard circuit and fast packet switching, are analyzed. Examples of the two types of switching mechanisms and potential onboard network control functions are presented. A sample network architecture is also included to illustrate a potential onboard processing system.
On-board processing satellite network architectures for broadband ISDN
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Inukai, Thomas; Faris, Faris; Shyy, Dong-Jye
1992-01-01
Onboard baseband processing architectures for future satellite broadband integrated services digital networks (B-ISDN's) are addressed. To assess the feasibility of implementing satellite B-ISDN services, critical design issues, such as B-ISDN traffic characteristics, transmission link design, and a trade-off between onboard circuit and fast packet switching, are analyzed. Examples of the two types of switching mechanisms and potential onboard network control functions are presented. A sample network architecture is also included to illustrate a potential onboard processing system.
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Krogh, B.; Chow, J.H.; Javid, H.S.
1983-05-01
A multi-stage formulation of the problem of scheduling generation, load shedding and short term transmission capacity for the alleviation of a viability emergency is presented. The formulation includes generation rate of change constraints, a linear network solution, and a model of the short term thermal overload capacity of transmission lines. The concept of rotating transmission line overloads for emergency state control is developed. The ideas are illustrated by a numerical example.
Digital holographic microscopy for toxicity testing and cell culture quality control
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Kemper, Björn
2018-02-01
For the example of digital holographic microscopy (DHM), it is illustrated how label-free biophysical parameter sets can be extracted from quantitative phase images of adherent and suspended cells, and how the retrieved data can be applied for in-vitro toxicity testing and cell culture quality assessment. This includes results from the quantification of the reactions of cells to toxic substances as well as data from sophisticated monitoring of cell alterations that are related to changes of cell culture conditions.
Application of Theodorsen's Theory to Propeller Design
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Crigler, John L
1948-01-01
A theoretical analysis is presented for obtaining by use of Theodorsen's propeller theory the load distribution along a propeller radius to give the optimum propeller efficiency for any design condition.The efficiencies realized by designing for the optimum load distribution are given in graphs, and the optimum efficiency for any design condition may be read directly from the graph without any laborious calculations. Examples are included to illustrate the method of obtaining the optimum load distributions for both single-rotating and dual-rotating propellers.
Application of Theodorsen's theory to propeller design
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Crigler, John L
1949-01-01
A theoretical analysis is presented for obtaining, by use of Theodorsen's propeller theory, the load distribution along a propeller radius to give the optimum propeller efficiency for any design condition. The efficiencies realized by designing for the optimum load distribution are given in graphs, and the optimum efficiency for any design condition may be read directly from the graph without any laborious calculations. Examples are included to illustrate the method of obtaining the optimum load distributions for both single-rotating and dual-rotating propellers.
2006-09-01
such products as MS Word, MS Excel, MS PowerPoint, Adobe Acrobat, Adobe FrameMaker , Claris FileMaker, Adobe PhotoShop and Adobe Illustrator, it is easy...Adobe FrameMaker , etc. Information can be exported out in the same formats as above plus HTML, MS PowerPoint, and MS Outlook. DOORS is very user...including Postscript, RTF (for PowerPoint), HTML, Interleaf, SVG, FrameMaker , HP LaserJet, HPGL, and EPS. Examples of such charts produced by DOORS
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Choo, Y. K.; Staiger, P. J.
1982-01-01
The code was designed to analyze performance at valves-wide-open design flow. The code can model conventional steam cycles as well as cycles that include such special features as process steam extraction and induction and feedwater heating by external heat sources. Convenience features and extensions to the special features were incorporated into the PRESTO code. The features are described, and detailed examples illustrating the use of both the original and the special features are given.
On the Exploitation of Sensitivity Derivatives for Improving Sampling Methods
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Cao, Yanzhao; Hussaini, M. Yousuff; Zang, Thomas A.
2003-01-01
Many application codes, such as finite-element structural analyses and computational fluid dynamics codes, are capable of producing many sensitivity derivatives at a small fraction of the cost of the underlying analysis. This paper describes a simple variance reduction method that exploits such inexpensive sensitivity derivatives to increase the accuracy of sampling methods. Three examples, including a finite-element structural analysis of an aircraft wing, are provided that illustrate an order of magnitude improvement in accuracy for both Monte Carlo and stratified sampling schemes.
Monograph on the use of the multivariate Gram Charlier series Type A
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)
Hatayodom, T.; Heydt, G.
1978-01-01
The Gram-Charlier series in an infinite series expansion for a probability density function (pdf) in which terms of the series are Hermite polynomials. There are several Gram-Charlier series - the best known is Type A. The Gram-Charlier series, Type A (GCA) exists for both univariate and multivariate random variables. This monograph introduces the multivariate GCA and illustrates its use through several examples. A brief bibliography and discussion of Hermite polynomials is also included. 9 figures, 2 tables.
Digital computer programs for generating oblique orthographic projections and contour plots
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Giles, G. L.
1975-01-01
User and programer documentation is presented for two programs for automatic plotting of digital data. One of the programs generates oblique orthographic projections of three-dimensional numerical models and the other program generates contour plots of data distributed in an arbitrary planar region. A general description of the computational algorithms, user instructions, and complete listings of the programs is given. Several plots are included to illustrate various program options, and a single example is described to facilitate learning the use of the programs.
The study of molecular spectroscopy by ab initio methods
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Bauschlicher, Charles W., Jr.; Langhoff, Stephen R.
1991-01-01
This review illustrates the potential of theory for solving spectroscopic problems. The accuracy of approximate techniques for including electron correlation have been calibrated by comparison with full configuration-interaction calculations. Examples of the application of ab initio calculations to vibrational, rotational, and electronic spectroscopy are given. It is shown that the state-averaged, complete active space self-consistent field, multireference configuration-interaction procedure provides a good approach for treating several electronic states accurately in a common molecular orbital basis.
Computational Materials: Modeling and Simulation of Nanostructured Materials and Systems
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Gates, Thomas S.; Hinkley, Jeffrey A.
2003-01-01
The paper provides details on the structure and implementation of the Computational Materials program at the NASA Langley Research Center. Examples are given that illustrate the suggested approaches to predicting the behavior and influencing the design of nanostructured materials such as high-performance polymers, composites, and nanotube-reinforced polymers. Primary simulation and measurement methods applicable to multi-scale modeling are outlined. Key challenges including verification and validation of models are highlighted and discussed within the context of NASA's broad mission objectives.
On Leighton's comparison theorem
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Ghatasheh, Ahmed; Weikard, Rudi
2017-06-01
We give a simple proof of a fairly flexible comparison theorem for equations of the type -(p (u‧ + su)) ‧ + rp (u‧ + su) + qu = 0 on a finite interval where 1 / p, r, s, and q are real and integrable. Flexibility is provided by two functions which may be chosen freely (within limits) according to the situation at hand. We illustrate this by presenting some examples and special cases which include Schrödinger equations with distributional potentials as well as Jacobi difference equations.
Phillips, M
2001-01-01
This paper explores how hypnotic principles can be systematically incorporated into the standard EMDR protocol to enhance various ego strength capacities during EMDR treatment. Expanding these skill areas can widen the therapeutic window of possibility for clients with a variety of complex clinical issues, including posttraumatic, dissociative or personality disorders, anxiety symptoms, and depressive difficulties. Clinical case examples are used to illustrate ways of integrating hypnotic principles within a proposed EMDR protocol to promote ego strengthening and facilitate therapeutic change.
EOS radiometer concepts for soil moisture remote sensing
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Carr, J.
1986-01-01
Preliminary work with aperture synthesis concepts for EOS is reported. The effects of nonvanishing bandwidths on image reconstruction in aperture synthesis system was studied. It is found that nonvanishing bandwidths introduce errors in off-axis pixels when naive Fourier processing is used. The net effect is for bandwidth to limit sensor field-of-view. To quantify this effect a computer program was written which is documented. Example runs are included which illustrate the resultant radiometric errors and effective fields-of-view for a plausible simple sensor.
Numerical integration of asymptotic solutions of ordinary differential equations
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Thurston, Gaylen A.
1989-01-01
Classical asymptotic analysis of ordinary differential equations derives approximate solutions that are numerically stable. However, the analysis also leads to tedious expansions in powers of the relevant parameter for a particular problem. The expansions are replaced with integrals that can be evaluated by numerical integration. The resulting numerical solutions retain the linear independence that is the main advantage of asymptotic solutions. Examples, including the Falkner-Skan equation from laminar boundary layer theory, illustrate the method of asymptotic analysis with numerical integration.
Stability and Hopf bifurcation for a delayed SLBRS computer virus model.
Zhang, Zizhen; Yang, Huizhong
2014-01-01
By incorporating the time delay due to the period that computers use antivirus software to clean the virus into the SLBRS model a delayed SLBRS computer virus model is proposed in this paper. The dynamical behaviors which include local stability and Hopf bifurcation are investigated by regarding the delay as bifurcating parameter. Specially, direction and stability of the Hopf bifurcation are derived by applying the normal form method and center manifold theory. Finally, an illustrative example is also presented to testify our analytical results.
Examples and Case Studies for the 2012 Chemical Data Reporting
This document presents examples and case studies to help you in reporting for 2012 Chemical Data Reporting (CDR), formerly known as Inventory Update Reporting (IUR).EPA designed these examples to illustrate the new reporting requirements, which were published as part of the CDR Rule (published August 16, 2011), and to address general reporting issues from the 2006 IUR.
Using a Sequence of Number Pairs as an Example in Teaching Mathematics
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Mauch, Elizabeth; Shi, Yixun
2005-01-01
A sequence of number pairs can be used to generate many interesting examples in teaching mathematics subjects at various levels. It is often used in elementary or middle school mathematics classes to illustrate the concept of "patterns." In this paper the authors present a few interesting ways of using this sequence to form examples for high…
Global teaching of global seismology
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Stein, S.; Wysession, M.
2005-12-01
Our recent textbook, Introduction to Seismology, Earthquakes, & Earth Structure (Blackwell, 2003) is used in many countries. Part of the reason for this may be our deliberate attempt to write the book for an international audience. This effort appears in several ways. We stress seismology's long tradition of global data interchange. Our brief discussions of the science's history illustrate the contributions of scientists around the world. Perhaps most importantly, our discussions of earthquakes, tectonics, and seismic hazards take a global view. Many examples are from North America, whereas others are from other areas. Our view is that non-North American students should be exposed to North American examples that are type examples, and that North American students should be similarly exposed to examples elsewhere. For example, we illustrate how the Euler vector geometry changes a plate boundary from spreading, to strike-slip, to convergence using both the Pacific-North America boundary from the Gulf of California to Alaska and the Eurasia-Africa boundary from the Azores to the Mediterranean. We illustrate diffuse plate boundary zones using western North America, the Andes, the Himalayas, the Mediterranean, and the East Africa Rift. The subduction zone discussions examine Japan, Tonga, and Chile. We discuss significant earthquakes both in the U.S. and elsewhere, and explore hazard mitigation issues in different contexts. Both comments from foreign colleagues and our experience lecturing overseas indicate that this approach works well. Beyond the specifics of our text, we believe that such a global approach is facilitated by the international traditions of the earth sciences and the world youth culture that gives students worldwide common culture. For example, a video of the scene in New Madrid, Missouri that arose from a nonsensical earthquake prediction in 1990 elicits similar responses from American and European students.
Dissemination and implementation: INQRI's potential impact.
Titler, Marita G; Wilson, Deleise S; Resnick, Barbara; Shever, Leah L
2013-04-01
Application of research evidence in care delivery improves patient outcomes. Large gaps still exist, however, between recommended care and that used in practice. To increase the understanding of implementation studies, and dissemination of research findings, we present the perspective of investigators from seven Interdisciplinary Nursing Quality Research Initiative (INQRI)-funded studies. To describe implementation strategies, challenges, and lessons learned from conducting 5 INQRI-funded implementation studies, and present 2 case examples of other INQRI studies to illustrate dissemination strategies. Potential impact of study findings are set forth. Qualitative descriptive methods were used for the implementation studies. Case examples were set forth by investigators using reflection questions. Four of the 5 implementation studies focused on clinical topics and 1 on professional development of nurse managers, 4 were multisite studies. Common implementation strategies used across studies addressed education, ongoing interaction with sites, use of implementation tools, and visibility of the projects on the study units. Major challenges were the Institutional Review Board approval process and the short length of time allocated for implementation. Successes and lessons learned included creating excitement about research, packaging of study tools and resources for use by other organizations, and understanding the importance of context when conducting this type of research. Case examples revealed that study findings have been disseminated to study sites and to the health care community through publications and presentations. The potential impact of all 7 studies is far reaching. This study captures several nuanced perspectives from 5 Principal Investigators, who were completing INQRI-funded implementation studies. These nuanced perspectives are important lessons for other scientists embarking on implementation studies. The INQRI case examples illustrate important dissemination strategies and impact of findings on quality of care.
Johnson, Victoria A; Ronan, Kevin R; Johnston, David M; Peace, Robin
2016-11-01
A main weakness in the evaluation of disaster education programs for children is evaluators' propensity to judge program effectiveness based on changes in children's knowledge. Few studies have articulated an explicit program theory of how children's education would achieve desired outcomes and impacts related to disaster risk reduction in households and communities. This article describes the advantages of constructing program theory models for the purpose of evaluating disaster education programs for children. Following a review of some potential frameworks for program theory development, including the logic model, the program theory matrix, and the stage step model, the article provides working examples of these frameworks. The first example is the development of a program theory matrix used in an evaluation of ShakeOut, an earthquake drill practiced in two Washington State school districts. The model illustrates a theory of action; specifically, the effectiveness of school earthquake drills in preventing injuries and deaths during disasters. The second example is the development of a stage step model used for a process evaluation of What's the Plan Stan?, a voluntary teaching resource distributed to all New Zealand primary schools for curricular integration of disaster education. The model illustrates a theory of use; specifically, expanding the reach of disaster education for children through increased promotion of the resource. The process of developing the program theory models for the purpose of evaluation planning is discussed, as well as the advantages and shortcomings of the theory-based approaches. © 2015 Society for Risk Analysis.
Ciencia en Nepantla: the journey of Nepantler@s in science learning and teaching
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aguilar-Valdez, Jean R.; LópezLeiva, Carlos A.; Roberts-Harris, Deborah; Torres-Velásquez, Diane; Lobo, Gilberto; Westby, Carol
2013-12-01
This paper presents a new approach to science education that takes a path through sociocultural theory and into the ideas of Gloria Anzaldúa. We apply Anzaldúan theory to science education by illustrating it in action through various examples which explore the multidimensionality of teaching science with Latin@ students in various contexts including dual language settings. We present what it is to journey through transformation using examples from educators at various levels of science within the world of teaching science with Latin@ students in the U.S. Our examples illustrate how Latin@ students cross many cultural borders in Spanish, English, Latin@ home culture, school culture, and the world of scientific dialogue and content, and in doing so, go through tensions and transformations between dominant and non-dominant worlds, which should be acknowledged and better understood through Anzaldúan theory. Fundamentally, we present a transformative notion of Latin@ science learning as "living on the bridges" of many dialogic and cultural practices, and having to negotiate these in-between spaces, or " nepantla" (Anzaldúa and Keating in Interviews, Psychology Press, London, 2000), where Latin@ students must contend with the fragmented and sometimes painful struggle of living in racialized reality amidst the demands of a dominant culture, and where transformation and healing are possible through the path of conocimiento. We advocate for teachers to become science teacher nepantler@s, who guide their students through nepantla, and into a new mestiz@ consciousness of science education.
When (Not If) Evaluation Flexibility Is Desirable: Examples from the CPHPE Initiative.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Hembroff, Larry; Perlstadt, Harry; Henry, Rebecca C.; Hogan, Andrew J.; Weissert, Carol S.; Bland, Carole J.; Harris, Dona L.; Knott, Jack H.; Starnaman, Sandra M.
1999-01-01
Two examples from the cluster evaluation of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation's Community Partnership for Health Professions Education illustrate why flexibility in evaluation design and activities is essential to collaborate with program directors and be responsive to program needs. (SLD)
Why Downside Beta Is Better: An Educational Example
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Chong, James T.; Jennings, William P.; Phillips, G. Michael
2013-01-01
An educational example is presented that is an effective teaching illustration to help students understand the difference between traditional CAPM beta and downside (or down-market) beta and why downside beta is a superior measure for use in personal financial planning investment policy statements.
Bridging the gap between science and decision making.
von Winterfeldt, Detlof
2013-08-20
All decisions, whether they are personal, public, or business-related, are based on the decision maker's beliefs and values. Science can and should help decision makers by shaping their beliefs. Unfortunately, science is not easily accessible to decision makers, and scientists often do not understand decision makers' information needs. This article presents a framework for bridging the gap between science and decision making and illustrates it with two examples. The first example is a personal health decision. It shows how a formal representation of the beliefs and values can reflect scientific inputs by a physician to combine with the values held by the decision maker to inform a medical choice. The second example is a public policy decision about managing a potential environmental hazard. It illustrates how controversial beliefs can be reflected as uncertainties and informed by science to make better decisions. Both examples use decision analysis to bridge science and decisions. The conclusions suggest that this can be a helpful process that requires skills in both science and decision making.
Bridging the gap between science and decision making
von Winterfeldt, Detlof
2013-01-01
All decisions, whether they are personal, public, or business-related, are based on the decision maker’s beliefs and values. Science can and should help decision makers by shaping their beliefs. Unfortunately, science is not easily accessible to decision makers, and scientists often do not understand decision makers’ information needs. This article presents a framework for bridging the gap between science and decision making and illustrates it with two examples. The first example is a personal health decision. It shows how a formal representation of the beliefs and values can reflect scientific inputs by a physician to combine with the values held by the decision maker to inform a medical choice. The second example is a public policy decision about managing a potential environmental hazard. It illustrates how controversial beliefs can be reflected as uncertainties and informed by science to make better decisions. Both examples use decision analysis to bridge science and decisions. The conclusions suggest that this can be a helpful process that requires skills in both science and decision making. PMID:23940310
Teaching, Technology, and the Art of the Deal
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Schieberl, Jeffrey; Rainey, Michael; Palmer, Lynda
2014-01-01
This paper illustrates a teaching innovation that took a traditional role playing exercise based on a case study and added some nuances that amplified the learning experience. The example illustrated in this paper was a didactic negotiation exercise intended to teach simple, basic negotiation principles like zone of possible agreement (ZOPA),…
The Sender-Receiver Model and the Targeting Process.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Larson, Mark A.
The goal of this paper is to describe how one classroom teacher uses the Sender-Receiver Communications Model to illustrate for students in a lively and memorable way the process of "targeting your audience" with medium and message. Students are used as examples of Receivers, or target audience, illustrating the potential range of…
This report develops a broad framework, or taxonomy, for identifying and organizing the socio-economic impacts of sewer infrastructure projects. It focuses on a green project in Cincinnati, Ohio that has adopted broader economic goals. The report then uses this example to illustr...
"Slowing" Mechanical Waves with a Consumer-Type High-Speed Digital Camera
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Ng, Pun-hon; Chan, Kin-lok
2015-01-01
In most secondary physics textbooks, waves are first introduced with examples of mechanical waves because they can be illustrated by drawings and photographs. However, these illustrations are static and cannot reflect the dynamic nature of waves. Although many mechanical waves (e.g. water waves and vibrating strings) can be easily shown using…
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
Murphy, P. J.
Three examples of genetics and evolution simulation concerning Mendelian inheritance, genetic mapping, and natural selection are used to illustrate the use of simulations in modeling scientific/natural processes. First described is the HERED series, which illustrates such phenomena as incomplete dominance, multiple alleles, lethal alleles,…
Adult Education in Development. Methods and Approaches from Changing Societies.
ERIC Educational Resources Information Center
McGivney, Veronica; Murray, Frances
The case studies described in this book provide examples of initiatives illustrating the role of adult education in development and its contribution to the process of change in developing countries. The book is organized in five sections. Case studies in Part 1, "Health Education," illustrate the links between primary health care and…
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Majidi, Carmel; O'Reilly, Oliver M.; Williams, John A.
2012-05-01
Using variational methods, we establish conditions for the nonlinear stability of adhesive states between an elastica and a rigid halfspace. The treatment produces coupled criteria for adhesion and buckling instabilities by exploiting classical techniques from Legendre and Jacobi. Three examples that arise in a broad range of engineered systems, from microelectronics to biologically inspired fiber array adhesion, are used to illuminate the stability criteria. The first example illustrates buckling instabilities in adhered rods, while the second shows the instability of a peeling process and the third illustrates the stability of a shear-induced adhesion. The latter examples can also be used to explain how microfiber array adhesives can be activated by shearing and deactivated by peeling. The nonlinear stability criteria developed in this paper are also compared to other treatments.
Modeling Social Influence via Combined Centralized and Distributed Planning Control
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Vaccaro, James; Guest, Clark
2010-01-01
Real world events are driven by a mixture of both centralized and distributed control of individual agents based on their situational context and internal make up. For example, some people have partial allegiances to multiple, contradictory authorities, as well as to their own goals and principles. This can create a cognitive dissonance that can be exploited by an appropriately directed psychological influence operation (PSYOP). An Autonomous Dynamic Planning and Execution (ADP&E) approach is proposed for modeling both the unperturbed context as well as its reaction to various PSYOP interventions. As an illustrative example, the unrest surrounding the Iranian elections in the summer of 2009 is described in terms applicable to an ADP&E modeling approach. Aspects of the ADP&E modeling process are discussed to illustrate its application and advantages for this example.
Ernest W. Beck: 1991 Association of Medical Illustrators Lifetime Achievement Award.
Sadler, L L
1992-01-01
On August 15, 1991, the Association of Medical Illustrators bestowed its highest honor, the Lifetime Achievement Award, on Ernest W. Beck. Ernie has been a pioneer in the profession, who has selflessly contributed his time and energy toward the advancement of the AMI. Ernie serves as an inspiration and example for the young illustrators today who seek to find their way in the profession, maintaining the highest level of professional conduct and ethical business practice. It is altogether fitting and proper that the Association of Medical Illustrators has recognized Ernie's unselfish contributions to its success.
Closed-loop suppression of chaos in nonlinear driven oscillators
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Aguirre, L. A.; Billings, S. A.
1995-05-01
This paper discusses the suppression of chaos in nonlinear driven oscillators via the addition of a periodic perturbation. Given a system originally undergoing chaotic motions, it is desired that such a system be driven to some periodic orbit. This can be achieved by the addition of a weak periodic signal to the oscillator input. This is usually accomplished in open loop, but this procedure presents some difficulties which are discussed in the paper. To ensure that this is attained despite uncertainties and possible disturbances on the system, a procedure is suggested to perform control in closed loop. In addition, it is illustrated how a model, estimated from input/output data, can be used in the design. Numerical examples which use the Duffing-Ueda and modified van der Pol oscillators are included to illustrate some of the properties of the new approach.
Optical character recognition: an illustrated guide to the frontier
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Nagy, George; Nartker, Thomas A.; Rice, Stephen V.
1999-12-01
We offer a perspective on the performance of current OCR systems by illustrating and explaining actual OCR errors made by three commercial devices. After discussing briefly the character recognition abilities of humans and computers, we present illustrated examples of recognition errors. The top level of our taxonomy of the causes of errors consists of Imaging Defects, Similar Symbols, Punctuation, and Typography. The analysis of a series of 'snippets' from this perspective provides insight into the strengths and weaknesses of current systems, and perhaps a road map to future progress. The examples were drawn from the large-scale tests conducted by the authors at the Information Science Research Institute of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. By way of conclusion, we point to possible approaches for improving the accuracy of today's systems. The talk is based on our eponymous monograph, recently published in The Kluwer International Series in Engineering and Computer Science, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999.
Shewchuk, Richard; O'Connor, Stephen J
2002-01-01
This article describes a process that can be used for eliciting and systematically organizing perceptions held by key stakeholders. An example using a limited sample of older Medicare recipients is developed to illustrate how this approach can be used. Internally, a nominal group technique (NGT) meeting was conducted to identify an array of health care issues that were perceived as important by this group. These perceptions were then used as stimuli to develop an unforced card sort task. Data from the card sorts were analyzed using multidimensional scaling and hierarchical cluster analysis to demonstrate how qualitative input of participants can be organized. The results of these analyses are described to illustrate an example of an interpretive framework that might be used when seeking input from relevant constituents. Suggestions for how this process might be extended to health care planning/marketing efforts are provided.
26 CFR 1.865-2 - Loss with respect to stock.
Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR
2010-04-01
... paragraph (b)(1) may be illustrated by the following examples: Example 1. (i) P, a domestic corporation, is... domestic corporation, owns all of the stock of N1, which owns all of the stock of N2, which owns all of the... paragraph (a)(1) of this section. Example 3. (i) P, a domestic corporation, owns all of the stock of N1...
Observational evidence and strength of evidence domains: case examples
2014-01-01
Background Systematic reviews of healthcare interventions most often focus on randomized controlled trials (RCTs). However, certain circumstances warrant consideration of observational evidence, and such studies are increasingly being included as evidence in systematic reviews. Methods To illustrate the use of observational evidence, we present case examples of systematic reviews in which observational evidence was considered as well as case examples of individual observational studies, and how they demonstrate various strength of evidence domains in accordance with current Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Evidence-based Practice Center (EPC) methods guidance. Results In the presented examples, observational evidence is used when RCTs are infeasible or raise ethical concerns, lack generalizability, or provide insufficient data. Individual study case examples highlight how observational evidence may fulfill required strength of evidence domains, such as study limitations (reduced risk of selection, detection, performance, and attrition); directness; consistency; precision; and reporting bias (publication, selective outcome reporting, and selective analysis reporting), as well as additional domains of dose-response association, plausible confounding that would decrease the observed effect, and strength of association (magnitude of effect). Conclusions The cases highlighted in this paper demonstrate how observational studies may provide moderate to (rarely) high strength evidence in systematic reviews. PMID:24758494
Le Châtelier reciprocal relations and the mechanical analog
NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
Gilmore, Robert
1983-08-01
Le Châtelier's principle is discussed carefully in terms of two sets of simple thermodynamic examples. The principle is then formulated quantitatively for general thermodynamic systems. The formulation is in terms of a perturbation-response matrix, the Le Châtelier matrix [L]. Le Châtelier's principle is contained in the diagonal elements of this matrix, all of which exceed one. These matrix elements describe the response of a system to a perturbation of either its extensive or intensive variables. These response ratios are inverses of each other. The Le Châtelier matrix is symmetric, so that a new set of thermodynamic reciprocal relations is derived. This quantitative formulation is illustrated by a single simple example which includes the original examples and shows the reciprocities among them. The assumptions underlying this new quantitative formulation of Le Châtelier's principle are general and applicable to a wide variety of nonthermodynamic systems. Le Châtelier's principle is formulated quantitatively for mechanical systems in static equilibrium, and mechanical examples of this formulation are given.
Balcazar, Hector; Perez-Lizaur, Ana Bertha; Izeta, Ericka Escalante; Villanueva, Maria Angeles
2016-01-01
This article takes a historical perspective combining 3 illustrative examples of the origins of the community health worker (CHW) model in Mexico, as a community-based participatory strategy. Three examples were identified from the sparse literature about CHWs in Mexico emphasizing their key roles and functions in various community settings. The CHW models illustrate what is known of training-development and planning, implementation, and evaluation of the CHWs model in different settings addressing cardiovascular disease and risk factors. The potential exists for integrating CHW projects to expand the health promotion model with new emphasis on municipality and regional participation.
NASTRAN as an analytical research tool for composite mechanics and composite structures
NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
Chamis, C. C.; Sinclair, J. H.; Sullivan, T. L.
1976-01-01
Selected examples are described in which NASTRAN is used as an analysis research tool for composite mechanics and for composite structural components. The examples were selected to illustrate the importance of using NASTRAN as an analysis tool in this rapidly advancing field.