Sample records for w-2 statement reading

  1. A Preliminary Testability Analysis of the Mil-STD-1862 Architecture.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-08-01

    NEXT Iget address of successor of P (S) and check for write rights tmp2 = read(tmpl,word,M.w) NEXT read(tmp,word,M.w) NEXT Icheck write rights...read(tmp+4,word,M.w) NEXT Icheck write rights read(tmp2+4,word,M.w) NEXT Icheck write rights I IF tmp<l:0> OR tmpl<l:0> OR tmp2<l:0...address of pred (P) read(tmp2,word,M.w) NEXT Icheck access rights read(tmpl+4,word,M.w) NEXT. Icheck access rights IIF tmp<l:0> OR tmpl<l:0> OR

  2. Lyin’ Eyes: Ocular-motor Measures of Reading Reveal Deception

    PubMed Central

    Cook, Anne E.; Hacker, Douglas J.; Webb, Andrea K.; Osher, Dahvyn; Kristjansson, Sean; Woltz, Dan J.; Kircher, John C.

    2013-01-01

    Our goal was to evaluate an alternative to current methods for detecting deception in security screening contexts. We evaluated a new cognitive-based test of deception that measured participants’ ocular-motor responses (pupil responses and reading behaviors) while they read and responded to statements on a computerized questionnaire. In Experiment 1, participants from a university community were randomly assigned to either a “guilty” group that committed one of two mock crimes or an “innocent” group that only learned about the crime. Participants then reported for testing, where they completed the computer-administered questionnaire that addressed their possible involvement in the crimes. Experiment 2 also manipulated participants’ incentive to pass the test and difficulty of statements on the test. In both experiments, guilty participants had increased pupil responses to statements answered deceptively; however, they spent less time fixating on, reading, and re-reading those statements than statements answered truthfully. These ocular-motor measures were optimally weighted in a discrimination function that correctly classified 85% of participants as either guilty or innocent. Findings from Experiment 2 indicated that group discrimination was improved with greater incentives to pass the test and the use of statements with simple syntax. The present findings suggest that two cognitive processes are involved in deception -- vigilance and strategy -- and that these processes are reflected in different ocular-motor measures. The ocular-motor test reported here represents a new approach to detecting deception that may fill an important need in security screening contexts. PMID:22545928

  3. 77 FR 58533 - Notice of Availability of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the W.A. Parish Post...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-09-21

    ....A. Parish Post-Combustion CO 2 Capture and Sequestration Project, Southeastern TX AGENCY: U.S... availability of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the W.A. Parish Post-Combustion Carbon Dioxide.... Parish Post-Combustion CO 2 Capture and Sequestration Project (Parish PCCS Project). NRG's proposed...

  4. The Simple View of Reading: Assessment and Intervention

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Roberts, Jenny A.; Scott, Kathleen A.

    2006-01-01

    The Simple View of Reading (P. B. Gough & W. Tunmer, 1986; W. A. Hoover & P. B. Gough, 1990) provides a 2-component model of reading. Each of these 2 components, decoding and comprehension, is necessary for normal reading to occur. The Simple View of Reading provides a relatively transparent model that can be used by professionals not only to…

  5. 13 CFR 102.2 - Public reading rooms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... Headquarters Reference Library at 409 3rd St., SW., Suite 5000, Washington, DC 20416 where you may read and... adjudicating a case, (2) Official non-privileged policy statements, opinions, or interpretations, (3) Standard....gov/library/. (c) Reading room records created on or after November 1, 1996 are available...

  6. National Athletic Trainers' Association

    MedlinePlus

    ... research statements and publications. Read more HOT TOPICS Reporting Year FAQ November NATA News Legal Digest #2 Convention Statement of Credit Advertisement Do Business with NATA NATA offers extensive advertising, sponsorship and ...

  7. 26 CFR 1.6050W-2 - Electronic furnishing of information statements for payments made in settlement of payment card...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-04-01

    ... for payments made in settlement of payment card and third party network transactions. 1.6050W-2... information statements for payments made in settlement of payment card and third party network transactions... party network transactions to the person to whom it is required to be furnished (recipient) may furnish...

  8. 75 FR 10026 - Proposed Collection; Comment Request for Forms W-2, W-2c, W-2AS, W-2GU, W-2VI, W-3, W-3c, W-3cPR...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-03-04

    ... Wage and Tax Statements), W-3PR (Informe de Comprobantes de Retencion), W-3cPR (Transmission de Comprobantes de Retencion Corregidos), and W-3SS (transmittal of Wage and Tax Staements). OMB Number: 1545-0008... Actions: There are no changes being made to the form at this time. Type of Review: Extension of a...

  9. Does a bishop pray when he prays? And does his brain distinguish between different religions?

    PubMed

    Silveira, Sarita; Bao, Yan; Wang, Lingyan; Pöppel, Ernst; Avram, Mihai; Simmank, Fabian; Zaytseva, Yuliya; Blautzik, Janusch

    2015-12-01

    Does a religion shape belief-related decisions and influence neural processing? We investigated an eminent bishop of the Catholic Church in Germany by using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to assess neural processing while he was responding to short sentences of the Christian Bible, the Islamic Quran, and the Daodejing ascribed to Laozi in Experiment 1. In Experiment 2, continuous praying was further compared to the resting state activity. In contrast to explicit statements of agreeing or not agreeing to different statements from the Bible and the Quran, we found in Experiment 1 no difference in neural activation when the bishop was reading these statements from the two religions. However, compared to reading statements from the Bible, reading statements from the Daodejing resulted in significantly higher activation in the left inferior and middle frontal cortices and the left middle temporal gyrus, although he equally agreed to both statements explicitly. In Experiment 2, no difference during continuous praying and the resting state activity was observed. Our results confirm the difference between explicit and implicit processing, and they suggest that a highly religious person may pray always-or never. On a more general level this observation suggests that ritualized activities might be subliminally represented in resting state activities. © 2015 The Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Wiley Publishing Asia Pty Ltd.

  10. 26 CFR 1.6050W-2 - Electronic furnishing of information statements for payments made in settlement of payment card...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-04-01

    ... statements required by section 6050W(f) electronically on a website instead of in a paper format. The letter... website, downloading the consent document, completing the consent document, and e-mailing the completed consent back to F. The consent document posted on the website uses the same electronic format that F uses...

  11. 26 CFR 1.6050W-2 - Electronic furnishing of information statements for payments made in settlement of payment card...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-04-01

    ... statements required by section 6050W(f) electronically on a website instead of in a paper format. The letter... website, downloading the consent document, completing the consent document, and e-mailing the completed consent back to F. The consent document posted on the website uses the same electronic format that F uses...

  12. 26 CFR 1.6050W-2 - Electronic furnishing of information statements for payments made in settlement of payment card...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-04-01

    ... statements required by section 6050W(f) electronically on a website instead of in a paper format. The letter... website, downloading the consent document, completing the consent document, and e-mailing the completed consent back to F. The consent document posted on the website uses the same electronic format that F uses...

  13. Reading Comprehension to 1970: Its Theoretical and Empirical Bases, and Its Implementation in Secondary Professional Textbooks, Instructional Materials, and Tests.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Harker, William John

    This study was designed: (1) to determine current concepts of reading comprehension deriving from experimental investigations and theoretical statements, and (2) to establish whether these concepts are represented consistently in current secondary professional reading textbooks, instructional materials, and published tests. Current knowledge of…

  14. Minnesota River at Chaska, Minnesota, Flood Control. Final Environmental Impact Statement.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1975-07-01

    and 10 acres of floodplain wetland interspersed with bottouland trees.J IAN is03 ~ UNCLASSIFIED >ZD D W 3 W ~ a " r I n w a s s O ft t f r a S &c u m A...T C L M P IC A? I O W O f! ThU S C A B S ( M an WS. S w r Drainage of about 30 acres ot wetland WOU14 be cmpeted by the Last Claek bypasschanne. ada...Final Statement to CEQ: ii "WJI RO:N:TAL I.WACT STATMM1N2 FLOOD JOXTPOLFO AT M IIIEZOTA. 14INESOTA RIVEP TAbLk OF C::,Er SUMMAY ENVI ROU *rA. 0-AX: I

  15. Reading and understanding financial statements.

    PubMed

    White, Joseph P

    2005-01-01

    Feeling comfortable reading and understanding financial statements is critical to the success of healthcare executives and physicians involved in management. Businesses use three primary financial statements: a balance sheet represents the equation, Assets = Liabilities + Equity; an income statement represents the equation, Revenues - Expenses = Net Income; a statement of cash flows reports all sources and uses of cash during the represented period. The balance sheet expresses financial indicators at one particular moment in time, whereas the income statement and the statement of cash flows show activity that occurred over a stretch of time. Additional information is disclosed in attached footnotes and other supplementary materials. There are two ways to prepare financial statements. Cash-basis accounting recognizes revenue when it is received and expenses when they are paid. Accrual-basis accounting recognizes revenue when it is earned and expenses when they are incurred. Although cash-basis is acceptable, periodically using the accrual method reveals important information about receivables and liabilities that could otherwise remain hidden. Become more engaged with your financial statements by spending time reading them, tracking key performance indicators, and asking accountants and financial advisors questions. This will help you better understand your business and build a successful future.

  16. The Effects of a Peer-Mediated Reading Intervention on Juvenile Offenders' Main Idea Statements about Informational Text

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Wexler, Jade; Reed, Deborah K.; Barton, Erin E.; Mitchell, Marisa; Clancy, Erin

    2018-01-01

    Many youth in the juvenile justice system with or at risk for emotional and behavioral disorders struggle with reading. A multiple-baseline-across-participants single-case research design was used to examine the relationship between a supplemental peer-mediated reading intervention and juvenile offenders' generation of main idea statements about…

  17. Effectiveness of false correction strategy on science reading comprehension

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Ghent, Cynthia Anne

    False-correction reading strategy theoretically prompted college students to activate their prior knowledge when provided false statements linked to a portion of their biology textbook. This strategy is based in elaborative interrogation theory, which suggests that prompting readers to answer interrogatives about text students are reading increases their comprehension of that text. These interrogatives always asked "why" statements pulled from a text, one sentence in length, were "true." True statements in this study based on a text were converted by the experimenter into false statements, one sentence in length. Students were requested to rewrite each statement (n=12) on average every 200 words in a text as they were reading, converting each false statement into a true statement. These students outperformed other students requested to reread the same biology text twice (an established placebo-control strategy). These students, in turn, outperformed still other students reading an unrelated control text taken from the same textbook used only to establish a prior knowledge baseline for all students included in this study. Students participating in this study were enrolled students in an undergraduate introductory general biology course designed for non-majors. A three-group, posttest-only, randomized experimental control-group design was used to prevent pretest activation of students' prior knowledge thus increasing chances of producing evidence of false-correction effectiveness and to begin augmenting potential generalizability to science classrooms. Students' (n=357) general biology knowledge, verbal ability, and attempts to use the false correction strategy were collected and analyzed. Eight of the participants were interviewed by the researcher in a first attempt in this domain to collect data on participants' points of view about the strategy. The results of this study are not yet recommended for use in authentic school settings as further research is indicated.

  18. 13 CFR 102.2 - Public reading rooms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... adjudicating a case, (2) Official non-privileged policy statements, opinions, or interpretations, (3) Standard operating procedures affecting members of the public, (4) Records SBA has released in response to previous...

  19. 13 CFR 102.2 - Public reading rooms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... adjudicating a case, (2) Official non-privileged policy statements, opinions, or interpretations, (3) Standard operating procedures affecting members of the public, (4) Records SBA has released in response to previous...

  20. 13 CFR 102.2 - Public reading rooms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-01-01

    ... adjudicating a case, (2) Official non-privileged policy statements, opinions, or interpretations, (3) Standard operating procedures affecting members of the public, (4) Records SBA has released in response to previous...

  1. 13 CFR 102.2 - Public reading rooms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-01-01

    ... adjudicating a case, (2) Official non-privileged policy statements, opinions, or interpretations, (3) Standard operating procedures affecting members of the public, (4) Records SBA has released in response to previous...

  2. Automated verbal credibility assessment of intentions: The model statement technique and predictive modeling

    PubMed Central

    van der Toolen, Yaloe; Vrij, Aldert; Arntz, Arnoud; Verschuere, Bruno

    2018-01-01

    Summary Recently, verbal credibility assessment has been extended to the detection of deceptive intentions, the use of a model statement, and predictive modeling. The current investigation combines these 3 elements to detect deceptive intentions on a large scale. Participants read a model statement and wrote a truthful or deceptive statement about their planned weekend activities (Experiment 1). With the use of linguistic features for machine learning, more than 80% of the participants were classified correctly. Exploratory analyses suggested that liars included more person and location references than truth‐tellers. Experiment 2 examined whether these findings replicated on independent‐sample data. The classification accuracies remained well above chance level but dropped to 63%. Experiment 2 corroborated the finding that liars' statements are richer in location and person references than truth‐tellers' statements. Together, these findings suggest that liars may over‐prepare their statements. Predictive modeling shows promise as an automated veracity assessment approach but needs validation on independent data. PMID:29861544

  3. Using Elaborative Interrogation To Help Students Overcome Their Inaccurate Science Beliefs.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Woloshyn, Vera E.; And Others

    One hundred and forty students in grades 6 and 7 were asked to process 32 science statements. Half of the statements were consistent with their prior knowledge, whereas the remaining facts were inconsistent with it. Half of the students were instructed to read the sentences for understanding (reading controls). The remaining students were…

  4. The value of believing in free will: encouraging a belief in determinism increases cheating.

    PubMed

    Vohs, Kathleen D; Schooler, Jonathan W

    2008-01-01

    Does moral behavior draw on a belief in free will? Two experiments examined whether inducing participants to believe that human behavior is predetermined would encourage cheating. In Experiment 1, participants read either text that encouraged a belief in determinism (i.e., that portrayed behavior as the consequence of environmental and genetic factors) or neutral text. Exposure to the deterministic message increased cheating on a task in which participants could passively allow a flawed computer program to reveal answers to mathematical problems that they had been instructed to solve themselves. Moreover, increased cheating behavior was mediated by decreased belief in free will. In Experiment 2, participants who read deterministic statements cheated by overpaying themselves for performance on a cognitive task; participants who read statements endorsing free will did not. These findings suggest that the debate over free will has societal, as well as scientific and theoretical, implications.

  5. ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY VERIFICATION REPORT--BAGHOUSE FILTRATION PRODUCTS, W.L. GORE ASSOC., INC.

    EPA Science Inventory

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Air Pollution Control Technology (APCT) Verification Center evaluates the performance of baghouse filtration products used primarily to control PM2.5 emissions. This verification statement summarizes the test results for W.L. Gore & Assoc....

  6. Reexamining Reading Diagnosis: New Trends and Procedures.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Glazer, Susan Mandel, Ed.; And Others

    In an effort to better understand children's reading behavior, this volume offers naturalistic assessments of reading performance in multiple settings and at all levels. The chapters and their authors are as follows: (1) "Reexamining Reading Diagnosis" (Susan Mandel Glazer and Lyndon W. Searfoss); (2) "Reexamining the Role of…

  7. Proceedings of the College Reading Association, Volume 9, Fall 1968.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Ketcham, Clay A., Ed.

    The proceedings of the eleventh annual meeting of the College Reading Association with a theme of "Professional Focus on Reading," consisted of the following papers: (1) "President's Address" (W. H. Cooper); (2) "What Lies Ahead in Primary Reading?" (M. C. Austin); (3) "The Causes and Correction of Verbalism in…

  8. Design Concept for the Advanced Radar Test Bed (ARTB). Volume 2. Appendices.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1994-12-31

    A (Statement of Work) to ARTB Technical Report z~ 0w W W = w Cl) LU)u ui Mi 0.0r- -a ZeC 0 (WY) zj M CU 0=. 3 ""Jo 0 XEOWE 4(06 0 L Scientific ~ ~ C...Analysis from Theory to Software, A. K. Peters Ltd, May 1994) which allow wa.vetes to be se-n as Pvstm implementation tools, rather than mathematical

  9. Final Environmental Impact Statement: F-15E Beddown at Seymour Johnson AFB, North Carolina

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-11-18

    as-- " A~r- c ’-f cau~i-- di -stWrbances-at-the-in stT-a- l -~i ons-were-c Iassfe-s military (60% of the installations), private (44,%), and commercial...CD do . . . . . . . . . W . U.ioV4C ~~~~~~~~~~U -- - -w- w w -w0-Iw -4 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ l w4,4NNf0 t DI O U U ...with other military proposals in eastern North Carolina. The statement indicates the replacement of 72 F-4 aircraft at Seymour l Johnson Air Force Base

  10. Effect of posttraumatic stress on study time in a task measuring four component processes underlying text-level reading.

    PubMed

    Sullivan, Michael P; Griffiths, Gina G; Moore Sohlberg, Mckay

    2014-10-01

    To investigate the effect of combat-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) on 4 components underlying text-level reading comprehension. A group of 17 veterans with PTSD and 17 matched control participants took part. An experimental task required participants to read and study 3-sentence paragraphs describing semantic features associated with real and unreal objects. Each paragraph was followed by true-false statements that assessed knowledge access, text memory, inference, and integration. The results revealed that the PTSD group took significantly longer than the control group to study the paragraphs. Although there was no group difference in test statement accuracy, the PTSD group also took significantly longer to respond to the test statements. Overall, the results provide evidence for the control theory of attention but suggest that more direct measures of task-irrelevant processing during text-level reading are needed. More important, the results begin to lay a foundation for developing not only diagnostic but also intervention strategies.

  11. An Analysis of the Critical Reading Levels of Pre-Service Turkish and Literature Teachers

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Maltepe, Sadet

    2016-01-01

    Problem Statement: Critical reading refers to individuals' thinking about what they read, assessing what they have read, and using their own judgment about what they have read. In order to teach critical reading skills to students, a teacher is expected to have knowledge about text selection, use of appropriate methods, preparation of functional…

  12. Collecting the Data: Monitoring the Mission Statement

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    McGriff, Nancy; Harvey, Carl A., II; Preddy, Leslie B.

    2004-01-01

    Reading motivation, reading promotion, free voluntary reading, or recreational reading is an activity that most library media specialists consider a vital part of the school library media program. According to Dr. Michael Eisenberg, co-founder of the Big6[TM] research model, reading is how one ensures that students are effective and efficient…

  13. How Generalization Inferences Are Constructed in Expository Text Comprehension

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Ritchey, Kristin A.

    2011-01-01

    Three questions regarding adult readers' processing of generalization inferences (conceptually broad statements that subsume several specific statements) are investigated. College students (N=193) read expository texts containing target statements that were consistent, inconsistent, or off-topic in relation to a generalization implied by one…

  14. 18 CFR 1301.2 - Public reading rooms.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-04-01

    ... 18 Conservation of Power and Water Resources 2 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Public reading rooms. 1301.2 Section 1301.2 Conservation of Power and Water Resources TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY PROCEDURES... 400 W. Summit Hill Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-1499, and 1101 Market Street, Chattanooga...

  15. Reading Improvement in the Secondary School.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Dechant, Emerald

    This book, a comprehensive statement about the reading problems of adolescent students, relates the principles of learning and learning theory to the teaching of reading. Using a linguistic orientation, the author guides the teacher through the procedure for developing word recognition skills, comprehension skills, content-area reading skills, and…

  16. Beaver Brook, Keene, New Hampshire. Flood Damage Reduction Project. Detailed Project Report for Water Resources Development.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-02-01

    Project Report/ Environmental Assessment Beaver Brook, Keene, New Hampshire I ~ j~j~i iii ii.. A Flood Damage Reduction AD-A 14 3 376 I 𔃾, W " FEBRUARY...STATEMENT (of tme abestwee enteed to Sleok I0. Of dlfieme W booer IS. SUPPLEMENTARY MOTES 2 volume set: vol 1- Flood Damage Reduction - vol 2- Flood Damage...that are considered reasonably characteristic of the region, excluding extremely rare combinations. 2 ,4INN (0 ( w a 12 7’ PLATE * -..- ~ -- - 7 ’ k 47

  17. Theater Missile Defense Extended Test Range Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement - Eglin Gulf Test Range. Volume 2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1998-07-01

    potential sites including those in the Florida Keys. P-E-0006.02 Biology-Keys 3.3.3.4 The coral reef is not within the region of influence of the...Region 4 P-W-0065 Musselman, David P-W-0021 Orlandi, Robin; Board of Directors of Reef Relief P-W-0014 Percy, George W.; Division of Historical...answer above. P-W-0007.03 Florida Keys- reef 3.3.3.3 Comment noted. P-W-0007.04 Launch emissions 3.1.14.4 3.3.14.4 The balance of the hydrogen

  18. Learning chemistry from text: The effect of decision making

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Pedersen, Jon; J., Ronald; Alice, Bonnstetter; Corkill, J.; Glover, John A.

    Two experiments examined the relative effects of questions requiring decisions, statements providing the decision information to students, questions not requiring decisions, and control procedures on students' memory for chemistry text reading materials. Experiment 1 employed immediate recall. The results of Experiment 1 indicated that students who made and justified decisions about the contents recalled significantly more information than students in any other condition. In addition, students who answered questions that did not require decisions recalled significantly more of the content than students in the control or the statements conditions. No other contrasts reached significance. Experiment 2 employed delayed recall assessed one week after reading. The results confirmed those of Experiment 1. The overall results of the study are discussed in terms of an elaboration perspective on memory.

  19. Reading and the Aged: A Statement of the Problem.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Kingston, Albert J., Jr.

    A review of studies concerning the reading habits of people 65 years old or older shows that females spend more time reading then do males; senior citizens do not suddenly develop new or extensive reading habits; they prefer light romance with no sex, biographies, westerns, and mysteries; intellectual and physical disabilities are not major…

  20. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Resident Research Associateship Program

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-05-01

    Award Number: W81XWH-12-2-0033 TITLE: Army Medical Research & Materiel Command Resident Research Associateship Program PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR...PREPARED FOR: U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public...SUBTITLE NRC/AMRMC Resident Research Associateship Program 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER W81XWH-12-2-0033 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR(S

  1. The Mission Project: Building a Nation of Learners by Advancing America's Community Colleges.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    American Association of Community Colleges, Washington, DC.

    This document describes the American Association of Community Colleges (AACC), its new mission and vision statements, and a recommended set of strategic action areas deemed essential to creating the future described in the mission and vision statements. The proposed AACC mission statement reads: "building a nation of learners by advancing…

  2. Thinking aloud: effects on text comprehension by children with specific language impairment and their peers.

    PubMed

    McClintock, Brenna; Pesco, Diane; Martin-Chang, Sandra

    2014-11-01

    Many lines of evidence now suggest that inferencing plays a substantial role in text comprehension. However, inferencing appears to be difficult for children with language impairments, many of whom are also struggling readers. To assess the effects of a 'think-aloud' procedure on inference generation and narrative text comprehension by children with expressive-receptive specific language impairment (SLI) and age-matched peers with typical language development (TLD). An SLI group (n = 12; mean age = 10;5) and an age-matched TLD group (n = 12) participated in the study. Narrative passages were read silently by participants and simultaneously read aloud by the examiner in two conditions: (1) uninterrupted reading and (2) a think-aloud, in which children verbalized their understanding as the text was read. Following the passages in both conditions, children responded to comprehension questions requiring either literal or inferential information (specifically, 'informational' and 'causal' inferences). The children's comprehension scores were analysed by group, condition and question type. The statements children generated during the think-aloud were also compared by group and examined in relation to children's comprehension scores. The SLI group scored lower than the TLD group on all questions (literal, informational and causal), in both conditions. For both groups, however, comprehension scores on all three types of questions increased when the think-aloud procedure was implemented. During the think-aloud, the SLI group generated a comparable number of literal statements compared with the TLD group, but fewer informational and causal statements. The number of causal statements children made correlated with their scores on the inferential comprehension questions. Children with expressive-receptive SLI showed poorer comprehension of narrative texts than children with TLD, as expected. However, both groups' comprehension improved when participating in the think-aloud condition. While further investigation is warranted, the think-aloud procedure shows promise as a strategy to enhance narrative text comprehension in school-age children with, and without, language impairments. © 2014 Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists.

  3. Teacher Strategies in Shared Reading for Children with Hearing Impairment

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Girgin, Ümit

    2013-01-01

    Problem Statement: Utilization of shared reading practice in hearing impaired children's literacy instruction may yield quite beneficial. However an investigation of Turkish literature revealed no studies regarding application of shared reading within elementary settings for hearing or hearing-impaired children. Furthermore international…

  4. AN ADA NAMELIST PACKAGE

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Klumpp, A. R.

    1994-01-01

    The Ada Namelist Package, developed for the Ada programming language, enables a calling program to read and write FORTRAN-style namelist files. A namelist file consists of any number of assignment statements in any order. Features of the Ada Namelist Package are: the handling of any combination of user-defined types; the ability to read vectors, matrices, and slices of vectors and matrices; the handling of mismatches between variables in the namelist file and those in the programmed list of namelist variables; and the ability to avoid searching the entire input file for each variable. The principle user benefits of this software are the following: the ability to write namelist-readable files, the ability to detect most file errors in the initialization phase, a package organization that reduces the number of instantiated units to a few packages rather than to many subprograms, a reduced number of restrictions, and an increased execution speed. The Ada Namelist reads data from an input file into variables declared within a user program. It then writes data from the user program to an output file, printer, or display. The input file contains a sequence of assignment statements in arbitrary order. The output is in namelist-readable form. There is a one-to-one correspondence between namelist I/O statements executed in the user program and variables read or written. Nevertheless, in the input file, mismatches are allowed between assignment statements in the file and the namelist read procedure statements in the user program. The Ada Namelist Package itself is non-generic. However, it has a group of nested generic packages following the nongeneric opening portion. The opening portion declares a variety of useraccessible constants, variables and subprograms. The subprograms are procedures for initializing namelists for reading, reading and writing strings. The subprograms are also functions for analyzing the content of the current dataset and diagnosing errors. Two nested generic packages follow the opening portion. The first generic package contains procedures that read and write objects of scalar type. The second contains subprograms that read and write one and two-dimensional arrays whose components are of scalar type and whose indices are of either of the two discrete types (integer or enumeration). Subprograms in the second package also read and write vector and matrix slices. The Ada Namelist ASCII text files are available on a 360k 5.25" floppy disk written on an IBM PC/AT running under the PC DOS operating system. The largest subprogram in the package requires 150k of memory. The package was developed using VAX Ada v. 1.5 under DEC VMS v. 4.5. It should be portable to any validated Ada compiler. The software was developed in 1989, and is a copyrighted work with all copyright vested in NASA.

  5. 76 FR 68219 - Notice of Determinations Regarding Eligibility To Apply for Worker Adjustment Assistance and...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-11-03

    ... received a certification of eligibility to apply for trade adjustment assistance benefits and such supply... Fit Industries, LLC, Monroe, NC: August 9, 2010, TA-W-80,472; Tiger Drylac USA, Inc., Reading, PA: September 26, 2010, TA-W-80,473; Reading Powder Coatings, Inc., Reading, PA: September 26, 2010, TA-W-80,484...

  6. 78 FR 30901 - Record of Decision and Wetland/Floodplain Statement of Findings for the W.A. Parish Post...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-05-23

    ... W.A. Parish Plant in Fort Bend County, Texas. A new 80-MW natural gas-fired turbine, currently under... the CO 2 capture facility, the combustion turbine and heat recovery steam generator (CT/HRSG) area... maintenance power sources or by new metered service from a local retail provider. Potential construction...

  7. An evaluation of reading comprehension of expository text in adults with traumatic brain injury.

    PubMed

    Sohlberg, McKay Moore; Griffiths, Gina G; Fickas, Stephen

    2014-05-01

    This project was conducted to obtain information about reading problems of adults with traumatic brain injury (TBI) with mild-to-moderate cognitive impairments and to investigate how these readers respond to reading comprehension strategy prompts integrated into digital versions of text. Participants from 2 groups, adults with TBI (n = 15) and matched controls (n = 15), read 4 different 500-word expository science passages linked to either a strategy prompt condition or a no-strategy prompt condition. The participants' reading comprehension was evaluated using sentence verification and free recall tasks. The TBI and control groups exhibited significant differences on 2 of the 5 reading comprehension measures: paraphrase statements on a sentence verification task and communication units on a free recall task. Unexpected group differences were noted on the participants' prerequisite reading skills. For the within-group comparison, participants showed significantly higher reading comprehension scores on 2 free recall measures: words per communication unit and type-token ratio. There were no significant interactions. The results help to elucidate the nature of reading comprehension in adults with TBI with mild-to-moderate cognitive impairments and endorse further evaluation of reading comprehension strategies as a potential intervention option for these individuals. Future research is needed to better understand how individual differences influence a person's reading and response to intervention.

  8. Independent value of image fusion in unenhanced breast MRI using diffusion-weighted and morphological T2-weighted images for lesion characterization in patients with recently detected BI-RADS 4/5 x-ray mammography findings.

    PubMed

    Bickelhaupt, Sebastian; Tesdorff, Jana; Laun, Frederik Bernd; Kuder, Tristan Anselm; Lederer, Wolfgang; Teiner, Susanne; Maier-Hein, Klaus; Daniel, Heidi; Stieber, Anne; Delorme, Stefan; Schlemmer, Heinz-Peter

    2017-02-01

    The aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy and applicability of solitarily reading fused image series of T2-weighted and high-b-value diffusion-weighted sequences for lesion characterization as compared to sequential or combined image analysis of these unenhanced sequences and to contrast- enhanced breast MRI. This IRB-approved study included 50 female participants with suspicious breast lesions detected in screening X-ray mammograms, all of which provided written informed consent. Prior to biopsy, all women underwent MRI including diffusion-weighted imaging (DWIBS, b = 1500s/mm 2 ). Images were analyzed as follows: prospective image fusion of DWIBS and T2-weighted images (FU), side-by-side analysis of DWIBS and T2-weighted series (CO), combination of the first two methods (CO+FU), and full contrast-enhanced diagnostic protocol (FDP). Diagnostic indices, confidence, and image quality of the protocols were compared by two blinded readers. Reading the CO+FU (accuracy 0.92; NPV 96.1 %; PPV 87.6 %) and the CO series (0.90; 96.1 %; 83.7 %) provided a diagnostic performance similar to the FDP (0.95; 96.1 %; 91.3 %; p > 0.05). FU reading alone significantly reduced the diagnostic accuracy (0.82; 93.3 %; 73.4 %; p = 0.023). MR evaluation of suspicious BI-RADS 4 and 5 lesions detected on mammography by using a non-contrast-enhanced T2-weighted and DWIBS sequence protocol is most accurate if MR images were read using the CO+FU protocol. • Unenhanced breast MRI with additional DWIBS/T2w-image fusion allows reliable lesion characterization. • Abbreviated reading of fused DWIBS/T2w-images alone decreases diagnostic confidence and accuracy. • Reading fused DWIBS/T2w-images as the sole diagnostic method should be avoided.

  9. Know Your Bottom Line: The Control of Your Auxiliaries.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Stumph, Wayne J.

    Designed to help college administrators read and understand accounting statements, this paper provides tips about danger signals that may be evident in financial statements and that may call for speedy action. The first statement examined is a balance sheet; i.e., a summation of all of the possessions and debts of a business or entity, which shows…

  10. Integration of moral values during L2 sentence processing.

    PubMed

    Foucart, Alice; Moreno, Eva; Martin, Clara D; Costa, Albert

    2015-11-01

    This study reports an event-related potential (ERP) experiment examining whether valuation (i.e., one's own values) is integrated incrementally and whether it affects L2 speakers' online interpretation of the sentence. We presented Spanish native speakers and French-Spanish mid-proficiency late L2 speakers with visual sentences containing value-consistent and value-inconsistent statements (e.g., 'Nowadays, paedophilia should be prohibited/tolerated across the world.'). Participants' brain activity was recorded as they were reading the sentences and indicating whether they agreed with the statements or not. Behaviourally, the two groups revealed identical valuation. The ERP analyses showed both a semantic (N400) and an affect-related response (LPP) to value-inconsistent statements in the native group, but only an LPP in the non-native group. These results suggest that valuation is integrated online (presence of LPP) during L2 sentence comprehension but that it does not interfere with semantic processing (absence of N400).

  11. Drug Development Against Viral Diseases (Biological Testing)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-02-01

    Ricketisial 2 Hemonlagic Fevers. Florida: CRtC Press 196; 121-129.Casals 1 ; Tignor (1K. The Nairoviros genus: serological relationship. Ingervirol 1980...Change in Distribution Statement 1 . The U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command has reexamined the need for the limitation assigned to technical...reports written for Contract Number DAMD17-86-C-6042. Request the limited distribution statement for Accession Document Numbers 1 AM I-W and, ’ be

  12. The Effects of Repetitive Reading and PQRS Strategy in the Development of Reading Skill

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Ulu, Hacer; Akyol, Hayati

    2016-01-01

    Problem Statements: It is a fact that there are individual differences in education and it would be wrong to expect every individual to learn at the same speed. Certain individuals have difficulty in some subjects such as reading, writing and mathematics, yet the most common such problem is difficulty in reading. Particularly, the students who…

  13. A Constant Percentage Bandwidth Transform for Acoustic Signal Processing

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-01-01

    t)eJwt d . 27Th (0) Equation 2.9 is not, however, the most general form for short-time Fourier synthesis, but is in fact a particular case of the...form of the analysis integral. F(Wk? t)eJwkt = f(t) * h( t)’ukt (3.4) Fourier transforming both sides of this equation (and invoking the convolution...properties. In what follows, define 38 f(t) - F(w,t) (3.24) to be an equivalent statement to equation 3.1. 3.6.1 Linearity Property If F1 w,t) and F2 (w

  14. Enhancing Targeted Therapy for Myeloproliferative Neoplasms

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-10-01

    Myeloproliferative Neoplasms PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR: Gary W. Reuther CONTRACTING...2. REPORT TYPE Annual 3. DATES COVERED 30 2012-2 2013 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Enhancing Targeted Therapy for Myeloproliferative Neoplasms ...AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 14. ABSTRACT Myeloproliferative neoplasms

  15. 24 CFR 1715.50 - Advertising disclaimers; subdivisions registered and effective with HUD.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-04-01

    ... statement may be set in type of at least six point font. (c) This disclaimer statement need not appear on... at the bottom of the front page. The disclaimer statement shall be set in type of at least ten point font. Obtain the Property Report required by Federal law and read it before signing anything. No...

  16. Silent reading of direct versus indirect speech activates voice-selective areas in the auditory cortex.

    PubMed

    Yao, Bo; Belin, Pascal; Scheepers, Christoph

    2011-10-01

    In human communication, direct speech (e.g., Mary said: "I'm hungry") is perceived to be more vivid than indirect speech (e.g., Mary said [that] she was hungry). However, for silent reading, the representational consequences of this distinction are still unclear. Although many of us share the intuition of an "inner voice," particularly during silent reading of direct speech statements in text, there has been little direct empirical confirmation of this experience so far. Combining fMRI with eye tracking in human volunteers, we show that silent reading of direct versus indirect speech engenders differential brain activation in voice-selective areas of the auditory cortex. This suggests that readers are indeed more likely to engage in perceptual simulations (or spontaneous imagery) of the reported speaker's voice when reading direct speech as opposed to meaning-equivalent indirect speech statements as part of a more vivid representation of the former. Our results may be interpreted in line with embodied cognition and form a starting point for more sophisticated interdisciplinary research on the nature of auditory mental simulation during reading.

  17. Characterizing functional complaints in patients seeking outpatient low-vision services in the United States.

    PubMed

    Brown, Jamie C; Goldstein, Judith E; Chan, Tiffany L; Massof, Robert; Ramulu, Pradeep

    2014-08-01

    To characterize functional complaints of new low-vision rehabilitation patients. Prospective observational study. The Low Vision Rehabilitation Outcomes Study recruited 819 patients between 2008 and 2011 from 28 clinical centers in the United States. New patients referred for low-vision rehabilitation were asked, "What are your chief complaints about your vision?" before their appointment. Full patient statements were transcribed as free text. Two methods assessed whether statements indicated difficulty in each of 13 functional categories: (1) assessment by 2 masked clinicians reading the statement, and (2) a computerized search of the text for specific words or word fragments. Logistic regression models were used to predict the influence of age, gender, and visual acuity on the likelihood of reporting a complaint in each functional category. Prevalence and risk factors for patient concerns within various functional categories. Reading was the most common functional complaint (66.4% of patients). Other functional difficulties expressed by at least 10% of patients included driving (27.8%), using visual assistive equipment (17.5%), mobility (16.3%), performing in-home activities (15.1%), lighting and glare (11.7%), and facial recognition and social interactions (10.3%). Good agreement was noted between the masked clinician graders and the computerized algorithm for categorization of functional complaints (median κ of 0.84 across the 13 categories). Multivariate logistic regression models demonstrated that the likelihood of reading difficulties increased mildly with age (odds ratio, 1.4 per 10-year increment in age; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-1.6), but did not differ with visual acuity (P = 0.09). Additionally, men were more likely to report driving difficulties and difficulties related to lighting, whereas women were more likely to report difficulty with either in-home activities or facial recognition or social interaction (P<0.05 for all). Mobility concerns, defined as walking difficulty and out-of-home activities, showed no relationship to gender, age, or visual acuity. Reading was the most commonly reported difficulty, regardless of the patient's diagnosis. Neither visual acuity nor gender were predictive of reading concerns, although, age showed a small effect. Addressing reading rehabilitation should be a cornerstone of low-vision therapy. Copyright © 2014 American Academy of Ophthalmology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  18. 49 CFR 40.73 - How is the collection process completed?

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ...'s presence. (1) Direct the employee to read and sign the certification statement on Copy 2 (Step 5... the employee refuses to sign the CCF or to provide date of birth, printed name, or telephone numbers... appropriate place. (2) Complete the chain of custody on the CCF (Step 4) by printing your name (note: you may...

  19. Investigating the Mobility of Light Autonoumous Tracked Vehicles Using a High Performance Computing Simulation Capability

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-08-01

    UNCLASSIFIED: Distribution Statement A. Approved for public release. DISCLAIMER: Reference herein to any specific commercial company , product...FunctionBay, S. Korea – NVIDIA – Caterpillar – MSC.Software – Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) 14-16 AUG 2012  Aaron Bartholomew  Makarand Datar...16GB DDR2 Graphics: 4x NVIDIA Tesla C1060 Power supply 1: 1000W Power supply 2: 750W Assembled Quad GPU Machine 14-16 AUG 2012 30

  20. READING AND WRITING, THE REMEDIAL PROGRAM.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Euclid English Demonstration Center, OH.

    THE PAPERS IN THIS COLLECTION EXPLAIN THE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL REMEDIAL PROGRAM IN READING AND WRITING DEVELOPED BY THE EUCLID ENGLISH DEMONSTRATION CENTER, THEY ARE (1) "REMEDIAL CLASSES AND THE TOTAL ENGLISH PROGRAM," BY GEORGE HILLOCKS, (2) "DEFINITION, ORIGIN, AND TREATMENT OF UNDERACHIEVEMENT," BY JANE W. KESSLER, (3)…

  1. Financial Management: Corps of Engineers Equipment Reporting on Financial Statements for FY 2002

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2003-08-20

    U.S. Army Corps of Engineers civil service and uniformed officers responsible for financial reporting of equipment should read this report. It...discusses the management controls that are necessary to support the financial reporting of equipment on financial statements.

  2. 78 FR 15011 - Environmental Impacts Statements; Notice of Availability

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-03-08

    ..., Final EIS, DOE, TX, W.A. Parish Post-Combustion CO 2 Capture and Sequestration Project, Review Period.... 20130055, Final EIS, NPS, IA, Effigy Mounds National Monument Final General Management Plan, Review Period...] BILLING CODE 6560-50-P ...

  3. Evaluation of Reading Habits of Teacher Candidates: Study of Scale Development

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Erkan, Senem Seda Sahenk; Dagal, Asude Balaban; Tezcan, Özlem

    2016-01-01

    The main purpose of this study was to develop a valid and reliable scale for printed and digital competencies ("The Printed and Digital Reading Habits Scale"). The problem statement of this research can be expressed as: "The Printed and Digital Reading Habits Scale: is a valid and reliable scale?" In this study, the scale…

  4. The Investigation of Pre-Service Teachers' Perceptions about Critical Reading Self-Efficacy

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Karabay, Aysegül; Kusdemir Kayiran, Bilge; Isik, Dilek

    2015-01-01

    Problem Statement: Teachers have important roles in teaching critical reading skills that already exist in the curriculum. Teachers themselves should have critical reading skills and be able to identify them so as to be able to teach these skills to their students. Therefore, it becomes necessary to determine the extent to which pre-service…

  5. The written voice: implicit memory effects of voice characteristics following silent reading and auditory presentation.

    PubMed

    Abramson, Marianne

    2007-12-01

    After being familiarized with two voices, either implicit (auditory lexical decision) or explicit memory (auditory recognition) for words from silently read sentences was assessed among 32 men and 32 women volunteers. In the silently read sentences, the sex of speaker was implied in the initial words, e.g., "He said, ..." or "She said...". Tone in question versus statement was also manipulated by appropriate punctuation. Auditory lexical decision priming was found for sex- and tone-consistent items following silent reading, but only up to 5 min. after silent reading. In a second study, similar lexical decision priming was found following listening to the sentences, although these effects remained reliable after a 2-day delay. The effect sizes for lexical decision priming showed that tone-consistency and sex-consistency were strong following both silent reading and listening 5 min. after studying. These results suggest that readers create episodic traces of text from auditory images of silently read sentences as they do during listening.

  6. Proceedings of the 2nd Interservice/Industry Training Equipment Conference Held in Salt Lake City, Utah, November 18 through November 20, 1980.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-01-01

    public rokcxa.o and mW*e i .l Ndtibto isulmtd /I TRIIGEUPETCOFRNEAD- DOD DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT Approved for public release; distribution unlimited...GOVERNMENT RIGHTS IN DATA STATEMENT Reproduction of this publication in whole or in p,.rt is permited for any purpose of the United States Government...Singer-Link Publicity Chairman R. Stirland, Evans & Sutherland NSIA Committee Executive Col P. J. Cole (Ret), NSIA NSIA Training Group Chairman P. A

  7. 504-510 N. Peshtigo Ct. November 2016, Lindsay Light Radiological Survey

    EPA Pesticide Factsheets

    Initial gamma readings collected after the removal of asphalt and a layer of granitepavers ranged from 4,700 and 14,300 cpm unshielded. Subsequent readings conducted w/ a shieldedprobe mainly ranged from a min of 2,000 cpm to a max of 4,000cpm shielded

  8. Sociolinguistics: The Essential Readings. Linguistics: The Essential Readings.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Paulston, Christina Bratt, Ed.; Tucker, G. Richard, Ed.

    This collection of papers includes the following: (1) "A Brief History of American Sociolinguistics 1949-1989" (Roger W. Shuy); (2) "Reflections on the Origins of Sociolinguistics in Europe" (Louis-Jean Calvet); (3) "Models of the Interaction of Language and Social Life" (Dell Hymes); (4) "I Came to Sing:…

  9. Testing of Candidate Rigid Heatshield Materials at LHMEL for the Entry, Descent, and Landing Technology Development Project

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Sepka, Steven; Gasch, Matthew; Beck, Robin A.; White, Susan

    2012-01-01

    The material testing results described in this paper were part of a material development program of vendor-supplied, proposed heat shield materials. The goal of this program was to develop low density, rigid material systems with an appreciable weight savings over phenolic-impregnated carbon ablator (PICA) while improving material response performance. New technologies, such as PICA-like materials in honeycomb or materials with variable density through-the-thickness were tested. The material testing took place at the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base Laser Hardened Materials Laboratory (LHMEL) using a 10.6 micron CO2 laser operating with the test articles immersed in a nitrogen-gas environment at 1 atmosphere pressure. Test measurements included thermocouple readings of in-depth temperatures, pyrometer readings of surface temperatures, weight scale readings of mass loss, and sectioned-sample readings of char depth. Two laser exposures were applied. The first exposure was at an irradiance of 450 W/cm2 for 50 or 60 seconds to simulate an aerocapture maneuver. The second laser exposure was at an irradiance of 115 W/cm2 for 100 seconds to simulate a planetary entry. Results from Rounds 1 and 2 of these screening tests are summarized.

  10. CORRIGENDUM: Editorial note

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rae, A. I. M.

    2002-07-01

    The first sentence of this comment should read as follows: It has been drawn to our attention that a comment published in our January issue [1] contains the statement that `the functions {1, sin2 α, cos 2α}...are clearly linearly independent...'. References [1]Figueroa-Navarro C 2002 A comment on Gluskin's note on J D Jackson's Classical Electrodynamics Eur. J. Phys. 23 L1-3

  11. Computer-based rhythm diagnosis and its possible influence on nonexpert electrocardiogram readers.

    PubMed

    Hakacova, Nina; Trägårdh-Johansson, Elin; Wagner, Galen S; Maynard, Charles; Pahlm, Olle

    2012-01-01

    Systems providing computer-based analysis of the resting electrocardiogram (ECG) seek to improve the quality of health care by providing accurate and timely automatic diagnosis of, for example, cardiac rhythm to clinicians. The accuracy of these diagnoses, however, remains questionable. We tested the hypothesis that (a) 2 independent automated ECG systems have better accuracy in rhythm diagnosis than nonexpert clinicians and (b) both systems provide correct diagnostic suggestions in a large percentage of cases where the diagnosis of nonexpert clinicians is incorrect. Five hundred ECGs were manually analyzed by 2 senior experts, 3 nonexpert clinicians, and automatically by 2 automated systems. The accuracy of the nonexpert rhythm statements was compared with the accuracy of each system statement. The proportion of rhythm statements when the clinician's diagnoses were incorrect and the systems instead provided correct diagnosis was assessed. A total of 420 sinus rhythms and 156 rhythm disturbances were recognized by expert reading. Significance of the difference in accuracy between nonexperts and systems was P = .45 for system A and P = .11 for system B. The percentage of correct automated diagnoses in cases when the clinician was incorrect was 28% ± 10% for system A and 25% ± 11% for system B (P = .09). The rhythm diagnoses of automated systems did not reach better average accuracy than those of nonexpert readings. The computer diagnosis of rhythm can be incorrect in cases where the clinicians fail in reaching the correct ECG diagnosis. Copyright © 2012. Published by Elsevier Inc.

  12. What Is Evidence-Based Reading Instruction? A Position Statement of the International Reading Association.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    International Reading Association, Newark, DE.

    Low achievement in literacy correlates with high rates of school dropout, poverty, and underemployment. The far-reaching effects of literacy achievement have heightened the interest of educators and noneducators alike in the teaching of reading. As the goal is pursued of providing literacy instruction that is most likely to lead to high rates of…

  13. The Development of Accepted Performance Items to Demonstrate Competence in Literary Braille

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Lewis, Sandra; D'Andrea, Frances Mary; Rosenblum, L. Penny

    2012-01-01

    Introduction: This research attempted to establish the content validity of several performance statements that are associated with basic knowledge, production, and reading of braille by beginning teachers. Methods: University instructors (n = 21) and new teachers of students with visual impairments (n = 20) who had taught at least 2 braille…

  14. Conflicting but close: Readers' integration of information sources as a function of their disagreement.

    PubMed

    Saux, Gaston; Britt, Anne; Le Bigot, Ludovic; Vibert, Nicolas; Burin, Debora; Rouet, Jean-François

    2017-01-01

    According to the documents model framework (Britt, Perfetti, Sandak, & Rouet, 1999), readers' detection of contradictions within texts increases their integration of source-content links (i.e., who says what). This study examines whether conflict may also strengthen the relationship between the respective sources. In two experiments, participants read brief news reports containing two critical statements attributed to different sources. In half of the reports, the statements were consistent with each other, whereas in the other half they were discrepant. Participants were tested for source memory and source integration in an immediate item-recognition task (Experiment 1) and a cued recall task (Experiments 1 and 2). In both experiments, discrepancies increased readers' memory for sources. We found that discrepant sources enhanced retrieval of the other source compared to consistent sources (using a delayed recall measure; Experiments 1 and 2). However, discrepant sources failed to prime the other source as evidenced in an online recognition measure (Experiment 1). We argue that discrepancies promoted the construction of links between sources, but that integration did not take place during reading.

  15. Understanding financial statements.

    PubMed

    Tarantino, D P

    2001-01-01

    In his premier column for The Physician Executive, David Tarantino takes a look at those critical "financials" that can make or break a business. If you're considering a career move, you need to know the financial condition of future employers. Learn how to read the statements and glean valuable information from the numbers.

  16. Western Australian High School Students' Attitudes towards Biotechnology Processes

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Dawson, Vaille; Schibeci, Renato

    2003-01-01

    This study reports on the attitudes towards biotechnology of 905, 15-16 year-old students from 11 Western Australian schools. Students were asked to read 15 statements about biotechnology processes and to draw a line to separate what they considered "acceptable" statements from those they considered "unacceptable". Overall, the…

  17. Adaptive Reading and Writing Instruction in iSTART and W-Pal

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Johnson, Amy M.; McCarthy, Kathryn S.; Kopp, Kristopher J.; Perret, Cecile A.; McNamara, Danielle S.

    2017-01-01

    Intelligent tutoring systems for ill-defined domains, such as reading and writing, are critically needed, yet uncommon. Two such systems, the Interactive Strategy Training for Active Reading and Thinking (iSTART) and Writing Pal (W-Pal) use natural language processing (NLP) to assess learners' written (i.e., typed) responses and provide immediate,…

  18. Disposal and Reuse of England Air Force Base, Louisiana, Final Environmental Impact Statement.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-11-01

    norvegicus), house mouse ( Mus musculus ), and raccoon (Procyon lotor). Raptors observed foraging in the grassy areas include the red-tailed hawk...m CC cZ 2jCL W u~.0 U)< ( 0 C) (n CD 0.. Cc < .C - OEr-L C o_ p 0Cc 0 m r0 C C0 D- ~ 0 0000 E c r c< MU Lw -Z0W0 6i0( .0~ 00 CO cCV 0 2 < N...Proposed Action, By Phase ....................... 2-11 2.2-4 Projected Flight Operations - Proposed Action .......................... 2-12 2.2-5 Reuse

  19. Calculus Problem Solving Behavior of Mathematic Education Students

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Rizal, M.; Mansyur, J.

    2017-04-01

    The purpose of this study is to obtain a description of the problem-solving behaviour of mathematics education students. The attainment of the purpose consisted of several stages: (1) to gain the subject from the mathematic education of first semester students, each of them who has a high, medium, and low competence of mathematic case. (2) To give two mathematical problems with different characteristics. The first problem (M1), the statement does not lead to a resolution. The second problem (M2), a statement leads to problem-solving. (3) To explore the behaviour of problem-solving based on the step of Polya (Rizal, 2011) by way of thinking aloud and in-depth interviews. The obtained data are analysed as suggested by Miles and Huberman (1994) but at first, time triangulation is done or data’s credibility by providing equivalent problem contexts and at different times. The results show that the behavioral problem solvers (mathematic education students) who are capable of high mathematic competency (ST). In understanding M1, ST is more likely to pay attention to an image first, read the texts piecemeal and repeatedly, then as a whole and more focus to the sentences that contain equations, numbers or symbols. As a result, not all information can be received well. When understanding the M2, ST can link the information from a problem that is stored in the working memory to the information on the long-term memory. ST makes planning to the solution of M1 and M2 by using a formula based on similar experiences which have been ever received before. Another case when implementing the troubleshooting plans, ST complete the M1 according to the plan, but not all can be resolved correctly. In contrast to the implementation of the solving plan of M2, ST can solve the problem according to plan quickly and correctly. According to the solving result of M1 and M2, ST conducts by reading the job based on an algorithm and reasonability. Furthermore, when SS and SR understand the problem of M1 and M2 similar to the ST’s, but both of the problem solvers read the questions with not complete so that they cannot pay attention to the questions of the problems. SS and SR create and execute M2 plan same as ST, but for M1, SS and SR cannot do it, but only active on reading the statement of the problem. On the checking of the M2 task, SS and SR retrace the task according to the used formula.

  20. A Review of Vapor Extraction Technology for Contaminated Soil Remediation

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-05-01

    NUMBER DATE DTIC ACCESSION 23 MAY 94 NOTICE 1 . REPORT IDENTIFYING INFORMATION I. PU yurmiWin av W A. ORIGINATING anENCY m of ftm...NUMBER W 6 to8 8t. N00123-89-G-0531 2. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT MTIr" 1 . Aswa AD Nuntw. ŕPPROVED FOR PUPLIC t•ELSASE; 2. ,elumtom ust,. DIST, Ri?-"jTO...8217 ,10" ’J’) ZL DTIC Form 50 PREVIOUS EDITIONS ARE OBSOLETE DEC 91 ,/ / 1 . - ’ < > i•" 1 A REVIEW OF VAPOR EXTRACTION TECHNOLOGY FOR CONTAMINATED SOIL

  1. An XML-Based Mission Command Language for Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2003-06-01

    P. XML: How To Program . Prentice Hall, Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, 2001 Digital Signature Activity Statement, W3C www.w3.org/Signature...languages because it does not directly specify how information is to be presented, but rather defines the structure (and thus semantics) of the...command and control (C2) aspects of using XML to increase the utility of AUVs. XML programming will be addressed. Current mine warfare doctrine will be

  2. Generalize aerodynamic coefficient table storage, checkout and interpolation for aircraft simulation

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Neuman, F.; Warner, N.

    1973-01-01

    The set of programs described has been used for rapidly introducing, checking out and very efficiently using aerodynamic tables in complex aircraft simulations on the IBM 360. The preprocessor program reads in tables with different names and dimensions and stores then on disc storage according to the specified dimensions. The tables are read in from IBM cards in a format which is convenient to reduce the data from the original graphs. During table processing, new auxiliary tables are generated which are required for table cataloging and for efficient interpolation. In addition, DIMENSION statements for the tables as well as READ statements are punched so that they may be used in other programs for readout of the data from disc without chance of programming errors. A quick data checking graphical output for all tables is provided in a separate program.

  3. Phonemic Awareness and the Teaching of Reading. A Position Statement from the Board of Directors of the International Reading Association.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    International Reading Association, Newark, DE.

    This position paper considers the complex relation between phonemic awareness and reading. The paper seeks to define phonemic awareness (although there is no single definition), stating that it is typically described as an insight about oral language and in particular about the segmentation of sounds that are used in speech communication. It also…

  4. Effects of Single-Gender Education on the Reading Achievement of Third through Fifth Grade Boys

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Brown, Michael Shane

    2013-01-01

    It is said repeatedly, boys can't read. However, the statement should be boys "can" read they just don't. Understanding there is a need for action is the first step educators must take in helping boys emerge as confident and successful readers. Single-gender classrooms can be successful tools when seeking new ways in which to engage boys…

  5. 8 CFR 103.9 - Availability of decisions and interpretive material under the Freedom of Information Act.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... the public. (d) Statements of policy, interpretations, manuals, instructions to staff. Statements of policy, interpretations, and those manuals and instructions to staff (or portions thereof), affecting the... accompanying index of any material which is issued on or after July 4, 1967. (e) Public reading rooms. The...

  6. Rights of Postsecondary Readers and Learners

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Greenbaum, JoAnne; Angus, Kathryn Bartle

    2018-01-01

    A position statement on the rights of adult readers and learners was adopted by the CRLA board in 2002 and published with a theoretical rationale in ["Journal of College Reading and Learning"] "JCRL," Spring 2003. The statement was a guideline for educators seeking to improve the quality of adult education. In 2016, at the…

  7. Using Elaborative Interrogation Enhanced Worked Examples to Improve Chemistry Problem Solving

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Pease, Rebecca Simpson

    2012-01-01

    Elaborative interrogation, which prompts students to answer why-questions placed strategically within informational text, has been shown to increase learning comprehension through reading. In this study, elaborative interrogation why-questions requested readers to explain why paraphrased statements taken from a reading were "true."…

  8. Noninvasive Detection of AR-FL/AR-V7 as a Predictive Biomarker for Therapeutic Resistance in Men with Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-10-01

    AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-15-2-0052 TITLE: Noninvasive Detection of AR -FL/ AR -V7 as a Predictive Biomarker for Therapeutic Resistance in Men with...DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Distribution Statement A: unlimited distribution The views, opinions and/or findings contained in this report are those of the...COVERED 30 Sep 2015 - 29 Sep 2016 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Noninvasive Detection of AR -FL/ AR -V7 as a Predictive Biomarker for Therapeutic Resistance in

  9. DNA sequencing up to 1300 bases in two hours by capillary electrophoresis with mixed replaceable linear polyacrylamide solutions.

    PubMed

    Zhou, H; Miller, A W; Sosic, Z; Buchholz, B; Barron, A E; Kotler, L; Karger, B L

    2000-03-01

    This paper presents results on ultralong read DNA sequencing with relatively short separation times using capillary electrophoresis with replaceable polymer matrixes. In previous work, the effectiveness of mixed replaceable solutions of linear polyacrylamide (LPA) was demonstrated, and 1000 bases were routinely obtained in less than 1 h. Substantially longer read lengths have now been achieved by a combination of improved formulation of LPA mixtures, optimization of temperature and electric field, adjustment of the sequencing reaction, and refinement of the base-caller. The average molar masses of LPA used as DNA separation matrixes were measured by gel permeation chromatography and multiangle laser light scattering. Newly formulated matrixes comprising 0.5% (w/w) 270 kDa and 2% (w/w) 10 or 17 MDa LPA raised the optimum column temperature from 60 to 70 degrees C, increasing the selectivity for large DNA fragments, while maintaining high selectivity for small fragments as well. This improved resolution was further enhanced by reducing the electric field strength from 200 to 125 V/cm. In addition, because sequencing accuracy beyond 1000 bases was diminished by the low signal from G-terminated fragments when the standard reaction protocol for a commercial dye primer kit was used, the amount of these fragments was doubled. Augmenting the base-calling expert system with rules specific for low peak resolution also had a significant effect, contributing slightly less than half of the total increase in read length. With full optimization, this read length reached up to 1300 bases (average 1250) with 98.5% accuracy in 2 h for a single-stranded M13 template.

  10. 49 CFR 580.7 - Disclosure of odometer information for leased motor vehicles.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... applicable State law. (b) In connection with the transfer of ownership of the leased motor vehicle, the...; (2) The current odometer reading (not to include tenths of miles); (3) The date of the statement; (4) The lessee's name and current address; (5) The lessor's name and current address; (6) The identity of...

  11. Northern Illinois University Abstracts of Graduate Studies on the Community (Junior) College, 1969-1970.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Northern Illinois Univ., De Kalb. Community Coll. Services.

    This is a summary of 30 recent graduate studies in terms of (1) problem statement, (2) procedure description, and (3) significant findings. Most of the studies deal with the junior college student, and include reading achievement levels and scholastic performance, achievement and retention effects of course load requirements, and attitudes toward…

  12. 31 CFR 515.803 - Customs procedures; merchandise specified in § 515.204.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ... its face the number of the license pursuant to which it is filed. The original copy of the specific..., shall bear plainly on its face the following statement: “This document is presented under the provisions... 20220, with an endorsement thereon reading: This document has been accepted pursuant to § 515.808(c) (2...

  13. 31 CFR 515.803 - Customs procedures; merchandise specified in § 515.204.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-07-01

    ... its face the number of the license pursuant to which it is filed. The original copy of the specific..., shall bear plainly on its face the following statement: “This document is presented under the provisions... 20220, with an endorsement thereon reading: This document has been accepted pursuant to § 515.808(c) (2...

  14. 31 CFR 515.803 - Customs procedures; merchandise specified in § 515.204.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... its face the number of the license pursuant to which it is filed. The original copy of the specific..., shall bear plainly on its face the following statement: “This document is presented under the provisions... 20220, with an endorsement thereon reading: This document has been accepted pursuant to § 515.808(c) (2...

  15. 31 CFR 515.803 - Customs procedures; merchandise specified in § 515.204.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-07-01

    ... its face the number of the license pursuant to which it is filed. The original copy of the specific..., shall bear plainly on its face the following statement: “This document is presented under the provisions... 20220, with an endorsement thereon reading: This document has been accepted pursuant to § 515.808(c) (2...

  16. 31 CFR 515.803 - Customs procedures; merchandise specified in § 515.204.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... its face the number of the license pursuant to which it is filed. The original copy of the specific..., shall bear plainly on its face the following statement: “This document is presented under the provisions... 20220, with an endorsement thereon reading: This document has been accepted pursuant to § 515.808(c) (2...

  17. Reading and understanding employee benefit plan financial statements.

    PubMed

    Lee, David C; Van Sertima, Michael A

    2004-03-01

    If your employee benefit plan has more than 100 participants, chances are you've had to work your way through the audited financial statements you're required to include with your Form 5500 filing. These statements contain a wealth of information about the financial health of your plan, and understanding them is an important fiduciary responsibility. To strengthen your grasp of financial statements, this article gives an overview that will make a plan's financial statements more informative, explains their basic structure and provides information on some of the more arcane aspects (such as actuarial tables). While this article focuses on Taft-Hartley (multiemployer) plans, much of it applies to other types of employee benefit plans.

  18. 14818A Lance Missile Number 4587, Round Number 390 APL, 22 September 1983.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-09-22

    CLASS. (of *1,1. repe) US Army Electronics Research and Development Cmd Adeiphi, MD 20783 UNCLASSIFIED I[Ck. DCASFICATION/ODOWNGRADING IS. OISTRIBUT10ON...STATEMENT (of dhii Repoil 17. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (olth bsrn.bocl ente,.d i Block S.If efl .,i~ lai, Xope Approved for public release; distribution...W 0-.O w a. z zA z 0 .z0 . -4 4NA w0 o o ?o ?II nf "pvos r- 0 -t 17. .4 o Dmn a L1 .J N0 f 4 .oyp A-nN 01 , ;< jOiZ 0 , -r -r 43, a. A If co 6n Ox -0AJ

  19. Energy Factsheets: 1, 3-24.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    League of Women Voters of the U.S., Washington, DC.

    This is a series of fact sheets, each two pages long, presenting information, reading suggestions, and discussion questions on energy topics. The first fact sheet relates energy to the environmental problems. It provides a short background statement, remarks from notable experts, and a short list of reading material. The other fact sheets are on…

  20. God Bless You, Mrs. Liddy.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Otto, Wayne

    1994-01-01

    Discusses the hyperbole surrounding statements and testimonials about the effectiveness of phonics instruction. Suggests that reading is more than sounding out words one at a time and that most children figure it out for themselves with little or no help. Suggests that reading is also more than a psycholinguistic guessing game. (RS)

  1. Constructing a Life Philosophy: An Examination of Alternatives. Opposing Viewpoints Series.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Bender, David L., Ed.

    Fourteen brief reading selections from philosophical statements of ancient and modern writers are presented with brief introductions, questions, and individual and group exercises. The purpose of the collection is to stimulate students toward philosophical, thought and discussion based on alternatives. Readings are drawn from: 1) Plato's, Parable…

  2. The Case for Environmental Education. A Collection of Readings in Environmental Awareness.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Office of Education (DHEW), Washington, DC.

    Embodied in this collection of readings in environmental awareness are excerpts, statements, testimony, and personal philosophies presented by national leaders concerned with our environment. Major items include: "Environmental Literacy" by Richard Nixon from his introduction to the First Annual Report of the Council on Environmental Quality,…

  3. Entry Skills to Reading Using Classroom Management Strategies: A Position Statement.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Speiss, Madeleine; Olivero, James

    The development of an entry skills behavior package designed as lessons to prepare the culturally divergent children of the Southwestern United States for beginning reading instruction in existing school programs is described. The series of 135 discrete lessons teaches auditory discrimination, associative vocabulary, listening comprehension,…

  4. Children's Inferential Comprehension of Pragmatic Causal Relations in Reading.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Morgan, Argiro Louchis

    A study investigated the separate and combined effects of the syntactic organization of the sentence, the contextual framework in which a message is embedded, and the readers' past experiences on children's inferential reading comprehension of pragmatic cause/effect statements. The subjects, 144 fourth grade students, were asked to specify the…

  5. Current State of Military Hybrid Vehicle Development

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-01-01

    programme were: • EP-50 parallel hybrid light armoured vehicle (LAV-III) and a refuse hauler • advanced hybrid electric drive (AHED) 8 × 8, 20 ton...Qingnian, W., Liang, C. and Weihua, W. (2003) ‘Energy management strategy and parametric design for hybrid electric military vehicle’, SAE Paper No...herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the US Government or the DoA, and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes. 2 Unclassified. Distribution Statement A. Approved for public release.

  6. 75 FR 54419 - Environmental Impact Statement: Queens County, NY

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-09-07

    ... published in the Federal Register on March 12, 2004. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeffrey W. Kolb... NEPA Class II Categorical Exclusion. Issued on August 25, 2010. Jeffrey W. Kolb, Division Administrator...

  7. Prostate Cancer Biorepository Network (PCBN)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-01

    Award Number: W81XWH-14-2-0183 TITLE: Prostate Cancer Biorepository Network (PCBN) PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR: Colm Morrissey CONTRACTING...1. REPORT DATE October 2017 2. REPORT TYPE Annual 3. DATES COVERED 09/30/2016 - 09/29/2017 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Prostate Cancer Biorepository...DISTRIBUTION / AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 14. ABSTRACT The Genitourinary Cancer

  8. Laboratory Animal Care Training Manual for Instructors and Students.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    California Univ., San Francisco. Animal Care Facility.

    This manual presents item-by-item, step-by-step procedures for the student being trained as a technician in laboratory animal care. Statements are preceeded by a box for the student to check when he has read each statement. The first 16 lessons cover: orientation; identifying, handling, and determining the sex of rodents and rabbits, cats and…

  9. Criteria Utilized by College-Educated Women to Select Newspaper Science News.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Dunwoody, Sharon

    In an attempt to identify criteria used by readers to select science news, a homogeneous group of women in the Philadelphia area was asked to indicate which of 48 science-news statements they would be interested in reading in their newspapers. The statements were condensed from stories selected from Philadelphia newspapers over a…

  10. 77 FR 38173 - Child Labor Regulations, Orders and Statements of Interpretation

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-06-27

    ... DEPARTMENT OF LABOR Wage and Hour Division 29 CFR Part 570 Child Labor Regulations, Orders and Statements of Interpretation CFR Correction 0 In Title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations, Parts 500 to 899, revised as of July 1, 2011, on page 302, the section heading for Sec. 570.65 is corrected to read...

  11. 75 FR 35124 - New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT); Environmental Impact Statement: Monroe...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-06-21

    ... published in the Federal Register on January 14, 2005. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeffrey W. Kolb... on: June 10, 2010. Jeffrey W. Kolb, Division Administrator, Federal Highway Administration, Albany...

  12. Changes in Pulse Character and Mental Status are Late Responses to Central Hypovolemia

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-06-01

    central hypovolemia 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR(S) Ryan K. L., Batchinsky A. I., McManus J . G...Sauaia A, Moore FA, Moore EE, Moser KS, Brennan R, Read RA, Pons PT. Epidemiology of trauma deaths: a reassessment. J Trauma. 1995;38:185–193. 2... J Trauma. 1996;40:S165–S169. 4. Champion H, Sacco W, Carnazzo A, Copes W, Fouty W: Trauma score. Crit Care Med. 1981;9:672–676. 5. Meredith W

  13. California "Right-to-Read" Invervention Model. Final Report.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    McElligott, Joseph P., Jr.

    A summer research project in the teaching of reading to inner-city children through the utilization of Catholic school personnel as volunteer workers is described. Chapter 1 describes the origin and development of the project--a statement of its purpose, a proposal requesting Federal aid, establishment of criteria for selecting students, plans for…

  14. Teaching beyond "Once Upon a Time."

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Ballentine, Darcy; Hill, Lisa

    2000-01-01

    Argues that the purpose of teaching students to read includes challenging children to take up books that contain "dangerous truths." Discusses two such books: "Forged by Fire" by Sharon Draper and "The Watsons Go to Birmingham--1963" by Christopher Paul Curtis. Includes children's statements regarding why they insist on being able to read good…

  15. Using Pictures to Assist in Comprehension and Recall.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Rich, Rebecca Z.; Blake, Sylvia

    1994-01-01

    This article describes a picture drawing strategy to enhance the comprehension of fourth- and fifth-grade students with language and reading problems. Students used adhesive notes to draw pictures of main ideas as they read aloud or listened. Students learned the strategy rapidly and were able to use the pictures to generate summary statements.…

  16. 75 FR 1655 - Biweekly Notice Applications and Amendments to Facility Operating Licenses Involving No...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-01-12

    ... environmental impact statement or environmental assessment need be prepared for these amendments. If the... (ADAMS) Public Electronic Reading Room on the internet at the NRC Web site, http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm... Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code, Section XI as the source of...

  17. An Examination of the Effects of Argument Mapping on Students' Memory and Comprehension Performance

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Dwyer, Christopher P.; Hogan, Michael J.; Stewart, Ian

    2013-01-01

    Argument mapping (AM) is a method of visually diagramming arguments to allow for easy comprehension of core statements and relations. A series of three experiments compared argument map reading and construction with hierarchical outlining, text summarisation, and text reading as learning methods by examining subsequent memory and comprehension…

  18. Reading Social wMaps.w

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Clements, Millard

    1982-01-01

    What should social studies teachers be trying to teach students how to do? Every culture provides its members with social "maps" that explain how things are--e.g., school materials, advertisements. Teaching students how to read these social "maps" should be the central task for social studies education. (RM)

  19. 75 FR 5371 - Environmental Impact Statement: Cumberland, Harnett and Wake Counties, NC

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-02-02

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Federal Highway Administration Environmental Impact Statement... of Intent. SUMMARY: The FHWA is issuing this notice to advise the public that an environmental impact... INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Clarence W. Coleman, P.E., Director of Preconstruction and Environment, Federal...

  20. [Statements before the Subcommittee on Elementary, Secondary, and Vocational Education, Committee on Education and Labor, U.S. House of Representatives.].

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Molina, John C.; Ridge, Elton W.

    This document consists of two statements, one made by John Molina, Director of the Office of Bilingual Education, and the other by Elton W. Ridge, Project Manager of the Lau-Bilingual programs. The statement by Molina discusses the scope and the goals of ESEA Title VII programs and what has been accomplished. Statistics are presented on the number…

  1. Vulnerable users: deceptive robotics

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Collins, Emily C.

    2017-07-01

    The Principles of Robotics were outlined by the EPSRC in 2010. They are aimed at regulating robots in the real world. This paper represents a response to principle number four which reads: "Robots are manufactured artefacts. They should not be designed in a deceptive way to exploit vulnerable users; instead their machine nature should be transparent". The following critique questions the principle's validity by asking whether it is correct as a statement about the nature of robots, and the relationship between robots and people. To achieve this, the principle is broken down into the following two main component statements: (1) "Robots should not be designed in a deceptive way to exploit vulnerable users", and, (2) "Machine nature should be transparent". It is argued that both of the component statements that make up this principle are fundamentally flawed because of the undefined nature of the critical terms: "deceptive", "vulnerable", and "machine nature", and that as such the principle as a whole is misleading.

  2. Reporting of conflicts of interest in oral presentations at medical conferences: a delegate-based prospective observational study

    PubMed Central

    Grey, Andrew; Avenell, Alison; Dalbeth, Nicola; Stewart, Fiona; Bolland, Mark J

    2017-01-01

    Objective To assess the prevalence, location, presentation and consistency of conflict of interest statements in oral presentations at medical conferences Design Prospective, delegate-based observational study Sample 201 oral presentations at 5 medical conferences in 2016 Main outcome measures Presence of a conflict of interest statement, its location within the presentation and its duration of display. Concordance between conflict of interest disclosures in oral presentations and written abstracts or meeting speaker information Results Conflict of interest statements were present in 143/201 (71%) presentations (range for conferences 26%–100%). 118 of the 141 evaluable statements (84%) were reported on a specific slide. Slides containing conflict of interest statements were displayed for a median (IQR) 2 s (1–5), range for conferences 1.25–7.5 s. Duration of display was shorter when the slide contained only the conflict of interest statement, 2 s (1–3.5), than when it contained other information, 8 s (3–17), but was not affected by type of presentation or whether a conflict of interest was disclosed. When a conflict of interest was disclosed, 27/84 (32%) presenters discussed an aspect of it. Discordance between the presence of a conflict of interest disclosure in the oral presentation and written formats occurred for 22% of presentations. Conclusion In oral presentations at the medical conferences we assessed, conflict of interest statements were often missing, displayed too briefly to be read and understood, or not discussed/explained by the presenter. They were sometimes discordant with statements in the corresponding written formats. Conference delegates’ ability to assess the objectivity and quality of the information in oral presentations may therefore have been diminished. PMID:28939580

  3. Evaluation of light intensity output of QTH and LED curing devices in various governmental health institutions.

    PubMed

    Al Shaafi, Mm; Maawadh, Am; Al Qahtani, Mq

    2011-01-01

    The purpose of this study was to evaluate the light intensity output of quartz-tungsten-halogen (QTH) and light emitting diode (LED) curing devices located at governmental health institutions in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.Eight governmental institutions were involved in the study. The total number of evaluated curing devices was 210 (120 were QTH and 90 were LED). The reading of the light intensity output for each curing unit was achieved using a digital spectrometer; (Model USB4000 Spectrometer, Ocean Optics Inc, Dunedin, FL, USA). The reading procedure was performed by a single investigator; any recording of light intensity below 300 mW/cm2 was considered unsatisfactory.The result found that the recorded mean values of light intensity output for QTH and LED devices were 260 mW/cm2 and 598 mW/cm2, respectively. The percentage of QTH devices and LED devices considered unsatisfactory was 67.5% and 15.6%, respectively. Overall, the regular assessment of light curing devices using light meters is recommended to assure adequate output for clinical use.

  4. Understanding the delayed-keyword effect on metacomprehension accuracy.

    PubMed

    Thiede, Keith W; Dunlosky, John; Griffin, Thomas D; Wiley, Jennifer

    2005-11-01

    The typical finding from research on metacomprehension is that accuracy is quite low. However, recent studies have shown robust accuracy improvements when judgments follow certain generation tasks (summarizing or keyword listing) but only when these tasks are performed at a delay rather than immediately after reading (K. W. Thiede & M. C. M. Anderson, 2003; K. W. Thiede, M. C. M. Anderson, & D. Therriault, 2003). The delayed and immediate conditions in these studies confounded the delay between reading and generation tasks with other task lags, including the lag between multiple generation tasks and the lag between generation tasks and judgments. The first 2 experiments disentangle these confounded manipulations and provide clear evidence that the delay between reading and keyword generation is the only lag critical to improving metacomprehension accuracy. The 3rd and 4th experiments show that not all delayed tasks produce improvements and suggest that delayed generative tasks provide necessary diagnostic cues about comprehension for improving metacomprehension accuracy.

  5. A Nonpharmacologic Method for Enhancing Sleep in PTSD

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-10-01

    are taken solely under appropriate medical supervision, this criterion is not considered to be met. SEDATIVE/ HYPNOTIC/ANX CANNABIS STIMULANTS...OF “1” OR “3.” Etiological substances/ medications include: alcohol (I/W); caffeine (I/W); cannabis (I/W); opioids (I/W); sedatives, hypnotics, or...U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public Release

  6. Development of a decision aid for the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia: A four stage method using a Delphi consensus study.

    PubMed

    Lamers, Romy E D; Cuypers, Maarten; Garvelink, Mirjam M; de Vries, Marieke; Bosch, J L H Ruud; Kil, Paul J M

    2016-07-01

    To develop a web-based decision aid (DA) for the treatment of lower urinary tract symptoms due to benign prostatic hyperplasia (LUTS/BPH). From February-September 2014 we performed a four-stage development method: 1: Two-round Delphi consensus method among urologists, 2: Identifying patients' needs and expectations, 3: Development of DA content and structure, 4: Usability testing with LUTS/BPH patients. 1 (N=15): Dutch urologists reached consensus on 61% of the statements concerning users' criteria, decision options, structure, and medical content. 2 (N=24): Consensus was reached in 69% on statements concerning the need for improvement of information provision, the need for DA development and that the DA should clarify patients' preferences. 3: DA development based on results from stage 1 and stage 2. 4 (N=10): Pros of the DA were clear information provision, systematic design and easy to read and re-read. A LUTS/BPH DA containing VCEs(**) was developed in cooperation with urologists and patients following a structured 4 stage method and was stated to be well accepted. This method can be adopted for the development of DAs to support other medical decision issues. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

  7. "Why do you want your child to have braces?" Investigating the motivations of Hispanic/Latino and white parents.

    PubMed

    Davis, Blake B; Bayirli, Burcu; Ramsay, Douglas S; Turpin, David L; Paige, Andrew; Riedy, Christine A

    2015-11-01

    Many psychological, social, and cultural factors influence parents' motivation to seek orthodontic care for their children. In this study, we used Q methodology to identify and categorize shared motives and determine whether cultural differences exist between Hispanic/Latino (H/L) and non-Hispanic/Latino, white (W) parents. The fundamental question posed to the parents was "Why do you want your child to have braces?" Q methodology involves 3 stages. (1) Interviews of H/L (n = 5) and W (n = 5) parents generated 35 statements that represented different motives to seek orthodontic care. (2) In the Q sort, 70 new parents (22 H/L, 48 W) ranked statements in order of relative importance using a forced distribution grid. (3) Factor analysis was performed separately for the H/L and W groups to uncover cultural differences. Four motivational profiles were described for both the H/L and W parents based on the significant factors identified in each group. More H/L parents (18 of 22 parents) than W parents (22 of 48 parents) were characterized by 1 of their group's 4 profiles. Comparisons of the motivational profiles across the groups showed 4 global themes: well-timed treatment that prevents future dental problems, parental responsibility, perceived benefits, and perceived need instilled by the dentist. Four global themes captured the motives of most parents seeking orthodontic treatment for their children. Understanding these global themes can help clinicians frame their treatment discussions with parents. Copyright © 2015 American Association of Orthodontists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  8. Brain correlates of discourse processing: An fMRI investigation of irony and conventional metaphor comprehension

    PubMed Central

    Eviatar, Zohar; Just, Marcel Adam

    2006-01-01

    Higher levels of discourse processing evoke patterns of cognition and brain activation that extend beyond the literal comprehension of sentences. We used fMRI to examine brain activation patterns while 16 healthy participants read brief three-sentence stories that concluded with either a literal, metaphoric, or ironic sentence. The fMRI images acquired during the reading of the critical sentence revealed a selective response of the brain to the two types of nonliteral utterances. Metaphoric utterances resulted in significantly higher levels of activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus and in bilateral inferior temporal cortex than the literal and ironic utterances. Ironic statements resulted in significantly higher activation levels than literal statements in the right superior and middle temporal gyri, with metaphoric statements resulting in intermediate levels in these regions. The findings show differential hemispheric sensitivity to these aspects of figurative language, and are relevant to models of the functional cortical architecture of language processing in connected discourse. PMID:16806316

  9. Misleading Health Consumers Through Violations of Communicative Norms: A Case Study of Online Diabetes Education.

    PubMed

    Powell, Derek; Keil, Martin; Brenner, Dru; Lim, Liliana; Markman, Ellen M

    2018-05-01

    Communication is a cooperative endeavor that goes well beyond decoding sentences' literal meaning. Listeners actively construe the meaning of utterances from both their literal meanings and the pragmatic principles that govern communication. When communicators make pragmatically infelicitous statements, the effects can be similar to paltering-misleading speech that evokes false inferences from true statements. The American Diabetes Association's (ADA's) "Diabetes Myths" website provides a real-world case study in such misleading communications. Calling something a myth implies that it is clearly false. Instead, the ADA's "myths" are false only because of some technicality or uncharitable reading. We compared participants' baseline knowledge of diabetes with that of participants who read either the ADA's myths or the myths rewritten as questions that do not presuppose the statement is false. As predicted, exposure to the ADA's "myths," but not to the rephrased questions, reduced basic knowledge of diabetes. Our findings underscore the need to consider psycholinguistic principles in mass communications.

  10. What happened (and what didn’t): Discourse constraints on encoding of plausible alternatives

    PubMed Central

    Fraundorf, Scott H.; Benjamin, Aaron S.; Watson, Duane G.

    2013-01-01

    Three experiments investigated how font emphasis influences reading and remembering discourse. Although past work suggests that contrastive pitch contours benefit memory by promoting encoding of salient alternatives, it is unclear both whether this effect generalizes to other forms of linguistic prominence and how the set of alternatives is constrained. Participants read discourses in which some true propositions had salient alternatives (e.g., British scientists found the endangered monkey when the discourse also mentioned French scientists) and completed a recognition memory test. In Experiments 1 and 2, font emphasis in the initial presentation increased participants’ ability to later reject false statements about salient alternatives but not about unmentioned items (e.g., Portuguese scientists). In Experiment 3, font emphasis helped reject false statements about plausible alternatives, but not about less plausible alternatives that were nevertheless established in the discourse. These results suggest readers encode a narrow set of only those alternatives plausible in the particular discourse. They also indicate that multiple manipulations of linguistic prominence, not just prosody, can lead to consideration of alternatives. PMID:24014934

  11. The Role of Illustrations during Children's Reading

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Feathers, Karen M.; Arya, Poonam

    2012-01-01

    Young children notice and make use of illustrations in picture books as they read independently as evidenced by statements such as this one from Sarah's retelling of "The Wolf's Chicken Stew": "He couldn't catch him; so he did like this (child folds arms across chest) against the tree". Scholars in the field of children's literature have long…

  12. Reliability and Validity of Eye Movement Measures of Children's Reading

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Foster, Tori E.; Ardoin, Scott P.; Binder, Katherine S.

    2018-01-01

    Although strong claims have been made regarding the educational utility of eye tracking, such statements seem somewhat unfounded in the absence of clear evidence regarding the technical adequacy of eye movement (EM) data. Past studies have yielded direct and indirect evidence concerning the utility of EMs as measures of reading, but recent…

  13. Censorship Now: Revisiting "The Students' Right to Read." A Policy Research Brief

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    National Council of Teachers of English, 2014

    2014-01-01

    "The Students' Right to Read," published in 1961, revised in 1981, and reaffirmed by the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) Executive Committee in 2012, responds to censorship or attempts to restrict or deny students access to materials deemed objectionable by some individual or group. Despite this position statement and the…

  14. Solid state Ku-band spacecraft transmitters

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Wisseman, W. R.; Tserng, H. Q.; Coleman, D. J.; Doerbeck, F. H.

    1977-01-01

    A transmitter is considered that consists of GaAs IMPATT and Read diodes operating in a microstrip circuit environment to provide amplification with a minimum of 63 db small signal gain and a minimum compressed gain at 5 W output of 57 db. Reported are Schottky-Read diode design and fabrication, microstrip and circulator optimization, preamplifier development, power amplifier development, dc-to-dc converter design, and integration of the breadboard transmitter modules. A four-stage power amplifier in cascade with a three-stage preamplifier had an overall gain of 56.5 db at 13.5 GHz with a power output of 4.5 W. A single-stage Read amplifier delivered 5.9 W with 4 db gain at 22% efficiency.

  15. Development of a method to relate the moisture content of a building material to its water activity.

    PubMed

    Macher, J M; Mendell, M J; Chen, W; Kumagai, K

    2017-05-01

    Subjective indicators of building dampness consistently have been linked to health, but they are, at best, semi-quantitative, and objective and quantitative assessments of dampness are also needed to study dampness-related health effects. Investigators can readily and non-destructively measure the "moisture content" (MC) of building materials with hand-held moisture meters. However, MC does not indicate the amount of the water in a material that is available to microorganisms for growth, that is, the "water activity" (A w ). Unfortunately, A w has not been readily measurable in the field and is not relatable to MC unless previously determined experimentally, because for the same moisture meter reading, A w can differ across materials as well as during moisture adsorption vs desorption. To determine the A w s that correspond to MC levels, stable air relative humidities were generated in a glove box above saturated, aqueous salt solutions, and the A w of gypsum board and the relative humidity of the chamber air were tracked until they reached equilibrium. Strong correlations were observed between meter readings and gravimetrically determined MC (r=.91-1.00), among readings with three moisture meters (r=.87-.98), and between meter readings and gypsum board A w (r=.77-.99). © 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

  16. The effect of intensive speech rate and intonation therapy on intelligibility in Parkinson's disease.

    PubMed

    Martens, Heidi; Van Nuffelen, Gwen; Dekens, Tomas; Hernández-Díaz Huici, Maria; Kairuz Hernández-Díaz, Hector Arturo; De Letter, Miet; De Bodt, Marc

    2015-01-01

    Most studies on treatment of prosody in individuals with dysarthria due to Parkinson's disease are based on intensive treatment of loudness. The present study investigates the effect of intensive treatment of speech rate and intonation on the intelligibility of individuals with dysarthria due to Parkinson's disease. A one group pretest-posttest design was used to compare intelligibility, speech rate, and intonation before and after treatment. Participants included eleven Dutch-speaking individuals with predominantly moderate dysarthria due to Parkinson's disease, who received five one-hour treatment sessions per week during three weeks. Treatment focused on lowering speech rate and magnifying the phrase final intonation contrast between statements and questions. Intelligibility was perceptually assessed using a standardized sentence intelligibility test. Speech rate was automatically assessed during the sentence intelligibility test as well as during a passage reading task and a storytelling task. Intonation was perceptually assessed using a sentence reading task and a sentence repetition task, and also acoustically analyzed in terms of maximum fundamental frequency. After treatment, there was a significant improvement of sentence intelligibility (effect size .83), a significant increase of pause frequency during the passage reading task, a significant improvement of correct listener identification of statements and questions, and a significant increase of the maximum fundamental frequency in the final syllable of questions during both intonation tasks. The findings suggest that participants were more intelligible and more able to manipulate pause frequency and statement-question intonation after treatment. However, the relationship between the change in intelligibility on the one hand and the changes in speech rate and intonation on the other hand is not yet fully understood. Results are nuanced in the light of the operated research design. The reader will be able to: (1) describe the effect of intensive speech rate and intonation treatment on intelligibility of speakers with dysarthria due to PD, (2) describe the effect of intensive speech rate treatment on rate manipulation by speakers with dysarthria due to PD, and (3) describe the effect of intensive intonation treatment on manipulation of the phrase final intonation contrast between statements and questions by speakers with dysarthria due to PD. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  17. STS 51-L Memorial Montage designed by Bill Corey of TGS

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    1986-01-01

    The STS 51-L Memorial Montage designed by Bill Corey of TGS Technology. The montage contains portraits of each of the STS 51-L crewmembers, a view of the Challenger at liftoff, the mission patch and a statement which reads 'They slipped the surly bonds of earth to touch the face of God'. At the end of the statement is a bird flying.

  18. Physical Security Modeling for the Shipboard Nuclear Weapons Security Program,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-04-01

    I AOA1IR 396 NAVAL SURFACE WEAPONS CENTER SILVER SPRING MO F/G 15/3 PHYSICAL SECURITY MODELING FOR THE SHIPROARD NUCLEAR WEAPONS SE--ETEEU) APR A2 E ...WEAPONS SECURITY )PROGRAM 0% BY E . G. JACOUES D. L BARTUSEK R. W. MONROE M. S. SCHWARTZ WEAPONS SYSTEMS DEPARTMENT 1 APRIL 1982 A4pm lvW for p uic r...ASSIPICATIO N O F Tb IS PAGE t’W "mu Dat e E DLeT R)....... t READ W~STRUCTIoNs’ REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE BEFORE COMPLETNG FORM4 . REPiQRT NUM1e[i ja. VT

  19. Monitoring item and source information: evidence for a negative generation effect in source memory.

    PubMed

    Jurica, P J; Shimamura, A P

    1999-07-01

    Item memory and source memory were assessed in a task that simulated a social conversation. Participants generated answers to questions or read statements presented by one of three sources (faces on a computer screen). Positive generation effects were observed for item memory. That is, participants remembered topics of conversation better if they were asked questions about the topics than if they simply read statements about topics. However, a negative generation effect occurred for source memory. That is, remembering the source of some information was disrupted if participants were required to answer questions pertaining to that information. These findings support the notion that item and source memory are mediated, as least in part, by different processes during encoding.

  20. The hidden impact of conspiracy theories: perceived and actual influence of theories surrounding the death of Princess Diana.

    PubMed

    Douglas, Karen M; Sutton, Robbie M

    2008-04-01

    The authors examined the perceived and actual impact of exposure to conspiracy theories surrounding the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1997. One group of undergraduate students rated their agreement and their classmates' perceived agreement with several statements about Diana's death. A second group of students from the same undergraduate population read material containing popular conspiracy theories about Diana's death before rating their own and others' agreement with the same statements and perceived retrospective attitudes (i.e., what they thought their own and others' attitudes were before reading the material). Results revealed that whereas participants in the second group accurately estimated others' attitude changes, they underestimated the extent to which their own attitudes were influenced.

  1. Controlling electric and magnetic currents in artificial spin ice (Presentation Recording)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Branford, Will R.

    2015-09-01

    I will discuss the collective properties of arrays of single domain nanomagnets called Artificial Spin Ice.1 The shape of each nanomagnet controls the magnetic anisotropy and the elements are closely spaced so dipolar interactions are important. The honeycomb lattice geometry prevents the satisfaction of all dipole interactions. Here I will show direct magnetic imaging studies of magnetic charge flow.2 The magnetic charge is carried by transverse domain walls and the chirality of the domain wall is found to control the direction of propagation.3,4 Injection of domain walls within the arrays with local fields is also explored.5 References 1 Branford, W. R., Ladak, S., Read, D. E., Zeissler, K. and Cohen, L. F. Emerging Chirality in Artificial Spin Ice. Science 335, 1597-1600, (2012). 2 Ladak, S., Read, D. E., Perkins, G. K., Cohen, L. F. and Branford, W. R. Direct observation of magnetic monopole defects in an artificial spin-ice system. Nature Physics 6, 359-363, (2010). 3 Burn, D. M., Chadha, M., Walton, S. K. and Branford, W. R. Dynamic interaction between domain walls and nanowire vertices. Phys. Rev. B 90, 144414, (2014). 4 Zeissler, K., Walton, S. K., Ladak, S., Read, D. E., Tyliszczak, T., Cohen, L. F. and Branford, W. R. The non-random walk of chiral magnetic charge carriers in artificial spin ice. Sci Rep-Uk 3, 1252, (2013). 5 Pushp, A., Phung, T., Rettner, C., Hughes, B. P., Yang, S. H., Thomas, L. and Parkin, S. S. P. Domain wall trajectory determined by its fractional topological edge defects. Nature Physics 9, 505-511, (2013).

  2. Empirical and Hierarchical Bayes Competitors of Preliminary Test Estimators in Two Sample Problems.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-09-01

    wy.; 7 -J-.j V JF. ~LLU4II UnLclassified AIVW,,I.. REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE READ INSTRUCTIONS IIE*ONE CMP1LE’rIN; F’ORM I EP’) RT NUMBER GOVT...V2, I +)," P - - ("., "’-’ ?12, (24.5) V f " * .,(., ...... *%*)*v,"*,, ., + .(, -; ( . . D 1 =v +0 rt ’??2v2-t 1 (4 .7R ) % We now write G’ as (;I I...forimt. R - (ek(,F) / F) ( , , W ) Consider for exam plec the sit . ’mat .ion w hen o - 0 I.e., I? has the Improper prior /1 2(r) - r’ - I. Now w

  3. Software Reporting Metrics. Revision 2.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-11-01

    MITRE Corporation and ESD. Some of the data has been obtained from Dr. Barry Boehm’s Software Engineering Economics (Ref. 1). Thanks are also given to...data level control management " SP = structured programming Barry W. Boehm, Software Engineering Economics, &©1981, p. 122. Reprinted by permission of...investigated and implemented in future prototypes. 43 REFERENCES For further reading: " 1. Boehm, Barry W. Software Engineering Economics; Englewood

  4. An Analysis of Student Outcomes Using Audio Tapes to Supplement Reading in the Level One Course of the Intermediate Science Curriculum Study.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Gates, Richard Wade

    Analyzed was the effectiveness of audio tapes used as a supplement to reading the Intermediate Science Curriculum Study (ISCS) first level materials. The instruments used on a pretest and posttest basis to compare the growth as a result of using audio tapes were: (1) Prouse Subject Preference Survey, (2) Test on Understanding Science, Form W, (3)…

  5. The Effects of Intertextual Reading Approach on the Development of Creative Writing Skills

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Akdal, Deniz; Sahin, Ayfer

    2014-01-01

    Problem Statement: The aim of the first five years of primary school is to teach and help the students develop basic skills as stated in the Primary School Language Program and Guide. Creative thinking and intertextual reading are among these skills, and it is important to give these to the students during language courses. Purpose of Study: The…

  6. 78 FR 27937 - Environmental Impact Statement; Feral Swine Damage Management

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-05-13

    ... ;D=APHIS-2013- 0031 or in our reading room, which is located in room 1141 of the USDA South Building, 14th Street and Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC. Normal reading room hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p... expand at a much faster rate than local governments and APHIS have been able to address them. We believe...

  7. Reading and Engaging Sources: What Students' Use of Sources Reveals about Advanced Reading Skills

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Jamieson, Sandra

    2013-01-01

    A comparison of published statements about the source-use skills of sophomores in the 1990s and those revealed by the more recent Citation Project study of researched writing suggests that many of the assumptions driving pedagogy, policy, and curricula need to be revised and that faculty working across the disciplines should work with students on…

  8. PVAMU/XULA/BCM Summer Prostate Cancer Research Program

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-10-01

    2. KEYWORDS: HBCU, students, training, research , seminars 3. ACCOMPLISHMENTS Major goals and accomplishments Major Task 1 Advertising and...AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-15-1-0677 TITLE: PVAMU/XULA/BCM Summer Prostate Cancer Research Program PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR: Nancy L. Weigel...Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited

  9. Interorganizational Collaborative Capacity: Development of a Database to Refine Instrumentation and Explore Patterns

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-11-24

    ADDRESS(ES) 10. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S ACRONYM(S) 11. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S REPORT NUMBER(S) 12. DISTRIBUTION/AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for public...for current usage. It now reads: “My organization has committed adequate budget and resources to interorganizational collaboration.” This statement ...Mean Item Standard Deviation My organization commits adequate human and financial resources to training with other organizations. 1 3.3 1.4 My

  10. Environmental Impact Statement for BOMARC Missile Site, McGuire AFB, New Jersey. Volume 2. Public Hearings, Comments, and Consultation Letters. Appendices 2-1 through 2-6

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-05-22

    mwwOr kh" I amb m . i COh NO oO*Mm WII Mdhssosm t eu Sm MONLd ispom. "INOW N awo o d td ,1 0 e sk owasomm do ya Cmis Me ThmtU .111Nw dosd ckwfy W4...9We sb bbD Pf - ue my. ai misyss m k -dm ad IRS vr b 1s man cmm ato blb, Wman sinrn as m Air Fam. IOW Vow W k" atss adh do asmm wEwie miad go mo a my...rteutes end energy(lea"se) hus " td thse draft g5 su ta l lePuot ttesnt fur thu SUMibsile ine. saftre Alt r#_u le. Ste Jersey. end ma he. 0440e atuu Ce% bo I

  11. A Multireader Exploratory Evaluation of Individual Pulse Sequence Cancer Detection on Prostate Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).

    PubMed

    Gaur, Sonia; Harmon, Stephanie; Gupta, Rajan T; Margolis, Daniel J; Lay, Nathan; Mehralivand, Sherif; Merino, Maria J; Wood, Bradford J; Pinto, Peter A; Shih, Joanna H; Choyke, Peter L; Turkbey, Baris

    2018-04-25

    To determine independent contribution of each prostate multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) sequence to cancer detection when read in isolation. Prostate mpMRI at 3-Tesla with endorectal coil from 45 patients (n = 30 prostatectomy cases, n = 15 controls with negative magnetic resonance imaging [MRI] or biopsy) were retrospectively interpreted. Sequences (T2-weighted [T2W] MRI, diffusion-weighted imaging [DWI], and dynamic contrast-enhanced [DCE] MRI; N = 135) were separately distributed to three radiologists at different institutions. Readers evaluated each sequence blinded to other mpMRI sequences. Findings were correlated to whole-mount pathology. Cancer detection sensitivity, positive predictive value for whole prostate (WP), transition zone, and peripheral zone were evaluated per sequence by reader, with reader concordance measured by index of specific agreement. Cancer detection rates (CDRs) were calculated for combinations of independently read sequences. 44 patients were evaluable (cases median prostate-specific antigen 6.83 [ range 1.95-51.13] ng/mL, age 62 [45-71] years; controls prostate-specific antigen 6.85 [2.4-10.87] ng/mL, age 65.5 [47-71] years). Readers had highest sensitivity on DWI (59%) vs T2W MRI (48%) and DCE (23%) in WP. DWI-only positivity (DWI+/T2W-/DCE-) achieved highest CDR in WP (38%), compared to T2W-only (CDR 24%) and DCE-only (CDR 8%). DWI+/T2W+/DCE- achieved CDR 80%, an added benefit of 56.4% from T2W-only and of 42% from DWI-only (P < .0001). All three sequences interpreted independently positive gave highest CDR of 90%. Reader agreement was moderate (index of specific agreement: T2W = 54%, DWI = 58%, DCE = 33%). When prostate mpMRI sequences are interpreted independently by multiple observers, DWI achieves highest sensitivity and CDR in transition zone and peripheral zone. T2W and DCE MRI both add value to detection; mpMRI achieves highest detection sensitivity when all three mpMRI sequences are positive. Published by Elsevier Inc.

  12. Attentive Reading With Constrained Summarization Adapted to Address Written Discourse in People With Mild Aphasia.

    PubMed

    Obermeyer, Jessica A; Edmonds, Lisa A

    2018-03-01

    The purpose of this study was to examine the preliminary efficacy of Attentive Reading and Constrained Summarization-Written (ARCS-W) in people with mild aphasia. ARCS-W adapts an existing treatment, ARCS (Rogalski & Edmonds, 2008), to address discourse level writing in mild aphasia. ARCS-W focuses on the cognitive and linguistic skills required for discourse production. This study was a within-subject pre-postdesign. Three people with mild aphasia participated. ARCS-W integrates attentive reading or listening with constrained summarization of discourse level material in spoken and written modalities. Outcomes included macro- (main concepts) and microlinguistic (correct information units, complete utterances) discourse measures, confrontation naming, aphasia severity, and functional communication. All 3 participants demonstrated some generalization to untrained spoken and written discourse at the word, sentence, and text levels. Reduced aphasia severity and/or increased functional communication and confrontation naming were also observed in some participants. The findings of this study provide preliminary evidence of the efficacy of ARCS-W to improve spoken and written discourse in mild aphasia. Different generalization patterns suggest different mechanisms of improvement. Further research and replication are required to better understand how ARCS-W can impact discourse abilities.

  13. Final Environmental Impact Statement for Oil Refinery, Georgetown, South Carolina. Volume 2.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-09-01

    at gauging and pumping stations. _adio and telephone communication exists between gaugers and pumping stations or vessels. 2. Describe secondary...thickness gauging . 4. Internal heatingO coil leakage is controlled by one or more of the following control factors: (a) M onitoring the steam return...behavior of sediment and oil emulsions. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 47(2):671-677. Beam, H.W., South Carolina Coastal Council. [Letter to J.E. Jenkins

  14. St. Johns AAFB, St. Johns, Antigua. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A through F.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1970-07-13

    l t w i f k p t t o r tR (brtbiw Smeutnta. 00 ~ US R F C"hn"Cfbs a /0. R 0 DOCUMENT IDENTIFICATION Appme forpublic s.I~mq DISRIIII)TON STATEMENT...stations using similar reporting practices. HO3URLY OBSERVATIONS are defined as those record or record-special observations recorded at scheduled hourly...have limited use and may be misleading. 2. The second set of tables for each of the above presents the extreme dal nmts ty individual year wA month for

  15. Legislative Environmental Impact Statement. M-X Closely Spaced Basing

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-10-18

    Improvement Area, Plainview, Texas, Hale County, Austin: Espey, Houston, and Associates. Thordarson , W., R. A. Young, and I. 1. Winograd, 1967...34 Cu:ural Resources Report No. 21. USDA Forest Service, Southwestern3 IRegion, Albuquerque. Winograd, I. 1., and W. Thordarson , 1975. "Hydrologic ana Hydroci

  16. Reporting of conflicts of interest in oral presentations at medical conferences: a delegate-based prospective observational study.

    PubMed

    Grey, Andrew; Avenell, Alison; Dalbeth, Nicola; Stewart, Fiona; Bolland, Mark J

    2017-09-21

    To assess the prevalence, location, presentation and consistency of conflict of interest statements in oral presentations at medical conferences DESIGN: Prospective, delegate-based observational study SAMPLE: 201 oral presentations at 5 medical conferences in 2016 MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Presence of a conflict of interest statement, its location within the presentation and its duration of display. Concordance between conflict of interest disclosures in oral presentations and written abstracts or meeting speaker information RESULTS: Conflict of interest statements were present in 143/201 (71%) presentations (range for conferences 26%-100%). 118 of the 141 evaluable statements (84%) were reported on a specific slide. Slides containing conflict of interest statements were displayed for a median (IQR) 2 s (1-5), range for conferences 1.25-7.5 s. Duration of display was shorter when the slide contained only the conflict of interest statement, 2 s (1-3.5), than when it contained other information, 8 s (3-17), but was not affected by type of presentation or whether a conflict of interest was disclosed. When a conflict of interest was disclosed, 27/84 (32%) presenters discussed an aspect of it. Discordance between the presence of a conflict of interest disclosure in the oral presentation and written formats occurred for 22% of presentations. In oral presentations at the medical conferences we assessed, conflict of interest statements were often missing, displayed too briefly to be read and understood, or not discussed/explained by the presenter. They were sometimes discordant with statements in the corresponding written formats. Conference delegates' ability to assess the objectivity and quality of the information in oral presentations may therefore have been diminished. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.

  17. Changing Conceptions of Reading: Literacy Learning Instruction. Seventh Yearbook of the American Reading Forum.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Lumpkin, Donavon, Ed.; And Others

    Articles in this yearbook contribute to a broad perspective of changing concepts of reading, each focusing attention on an area of major factors exercising current impact on reading and on the education of reading teachers. The articles and their authors are as follows: "Learning from Text" (T. Estes); "Untying the Gordian Knot" (W. Blanton and G.…

  18. Living Language through Creative Reading; Proceedings of the Annual Reading Conference (4th, Indiana State University, Terre Haute, June 13-14, 1974).

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Waterman, David C., Ed.; Gibbs, Vanita M., Ed.

    These proceedings are published primarily for the purpose of helping teachers to improve their reading instruction. The contents include "Official Program"; "I Wish Children Literature" by Lee Bennett Hopkins, which discusses the importance of providing children with good reading materials; "Black English and Reading" by Ronald W. Bruton, which…

  19. Children’s and Adults’ Conceptualization and Evaluation of Lying and Truth-telling

    PubMed Central

    Xu, Fen; Luo, Yang C.; Fu, Genyue; Lee, Kang

    2010-01-01

    The present study examined children’s and adults’ categorization and moral judgment of truthful and untruthful statements. 7-, 9-and 11-year-old Chinese children and college students read stories in which story characters made truthful or untruthful statements and were asked to classify and evaluate the statements. The statements varied in terms of whether the speaker intended to help or harm a listener and whether the statement was made in a setting that called for informational accuracy or politeness. Results showed that the communicative intent and setting factors jointly influence children’s categorization of lying and truth-telling, which extends an earlier finding (Lee & Ross, 1997) to childhood. Also, we found that children’s and adults’ moral judgments of lying and truth-telling were influenced by the communicative intent but not the setting factor. The present results were discussed in terms of Sweetser’s (1987) folkloristic model of lying. PMID:20936049

  20. Nutrition for healthy term infants, six to 24 months: An overview

    PubMed Central

    Critch, Jeffrey N

    2014-01-01

    Nutrition for Healthy Term Infants is a joint statement by Health Canada, the Canadian Paediatric Society, Dietitians of Canada and the Breastfeeding Committee for Canada. It was republished in September 2012, with recommendations on infant feeding from birth to six months of age. The statement was most recently updated in April 2014, with recommendations for feeding older infants and young children from six to 24 months of age. The present practice point outlines the statement development process and principles of feeding, with specific recommendations for clinicians. Health professionals who counsel families on nutrition in infants and young children are advised to read the statement in its entirety because discussion in the longer document expands on and clarifies advice summarized in the principles and recommendations given here. The complete statement is available on Health Canada’s website: www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/nutrition/infant-nourisson/index-eng.php. PMID:25587235

  1. 40 CFR 1042.135 - Labeling.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-07-01

    ... label. (e) For engines requiring ULSD, create a separate label with the statement: “ULTRA LOW SULFUR... power (in kW), and power density (in kW/L) as needed to determine the emission standards for the engine family. You may specify displacement, maximum engine power, or power density as a range consistent with...

  2. The Role of Necroptosis in the Pathophysiology of Bone Marrow Failure

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-03-01

    AD_________________ Award Number: W81XWH-13-1-0045 TITLE: The Role of Necroptosis in the...YYYY) -2014 2. REPORT TYPE Annual report 3. DATES COVERED (From - To) 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE The Role of Necroptosis in the Pathophysiology of...12. DISTRIBUTION / AVAILABILITY STATEMENT 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 14. ABSTRACT We proposed that: 1) persistent spontaneous necroptosis in a

  3. Manic thinking: independent effects of thought speed and thought content on mood.

    PubMed

    Pronin, Emily; Wegner, Daniel M

    2006-09-01

    This experiment found that the speed of thought affects mood. Thought speed was manipulated via participants' paced reading of statements designed to induce either an elated or a depressed mood. Participants not only experienced more positive mood in response to elation than in response to depression statements, but also experienced an independent increase in positive mood when they had been thinking fast rather than slow--for both elation and depression statements. This effect of thought speed extended beyond mood to other experiences often associated with mania (i.e., feelings of power, feelings of creativity, a heightened sense of energy, and inflated self-esteem or grandiosity).

  4. Investigating the Relationships between a Reading Test and Can-Do Statements of Performance on Reading Tasks

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Liu, Hsin-min

    2014-01-01

    One of the fundamental problems in language testing is the lack of adequate generalizability between what a test is measuring and what fulfills the learners' real world language use needs. It is important to recognize that no matter how precise a test measures a construct, if the way that a construct is defined and the way that test tasks are…

  5. Vascular Plaque Determination for Stroke Risk Assessment

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-01

    20 -10 0 10 20 30 Po w er (d B ) Figure 2 ROI placement within adventitial regions for normal subjects. Image is 4 cm deep with a 2 cm...PREPARED FOR: U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public...S) U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 11. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S REPORT NUMBER(S) 12. DISTRIBUTION

  6. Fishing Impact Statement Honesty Act of 2011

    THOMAS, 112th Congress

    Sen. Brown, Scott P. [R-MA

    2011-01-31

    Senate - 01/31/2011 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. (All Actions) Tracker: This bill has the status IntroducedHere are the steps for Status of Legislation:

  7. Reading and Literacy Initiatives. Hearing on Examining Proposal To Improve the Reading and Literacy Skills of Children and Families, Focusing on S.1596 and H.R.2614, Bills To Provide for Reading Excellence by Improving In-Service Instructional Practices for Teachers Who Teach Reading, To Stimulate the Development of More High-Quality Family Literacy Programs, To Support Extended Learning-Time Opportunities for Children, and To Ensure That Children Can Read Well and Independently not Later than Third Grade of the Committee on Labor and Human Resources. United States Senate. One Hundred Fifth Congress, Second Session.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources.

    The U.S. Senate conducted a hearing consisting of two panels: the first panel discussed overcoming reading difficulties with a primary focus on children and the second panel focused on reading and literacy outreach activities that are ongoing in the U.S. After opening statements of the Hon. James M. Jeffords, the Hon. Edward M. Kennedy, and the…

  8. Gibbs paradox of entropy of mixing experimental facts. Its rejection, and the theoretical consequences

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

    Lin, Shu-Kun

    1996-12-31

    Gibbs paradox statement of entropy of mixing has been regarded as the theoretical foundation of statistical mechanics, quantum theory and biophysics. However, all the relevant chemical experimental observations and logical analyses indicate that the Gibbs paradox statement is false. I prove that this statement is wrong: Gibbs paradox statement implies that entropy decreases with the increase in symmetry (as represented by a symmetry number {sigma}; see any statistical mechanics textbook). From group theory any system has at least a symmetry number {sigma}=1 which is the identity operation for a strictly asymmetric system. It follows that the entropy of a systemmore » is equal to, or less than, zero. However, from either von Neumann-Shannon entropy formula (S(w) =-{Sigma}{sup {omega}} in p{sub 1}) or the Boltzmann entropy formula (S = in w) and the original definition, entropy is non-negative. Therefore, this statement is false. It should not be a surprise that for the first time, many outstanding problems such as the validity of Pauling`s resonance theory, the explanation of second order phase transition phenomena, the biophysical problem of protein folding and the related hydrophobic effect, etc., can be solved. Empirical principles such as Pauli principle (and Hund`s rule) and HSAB principle, etc., can also be given a theoretical explanation.« less

  9. A Preliminary Study of Reducing the Cost of Blast Shelter for Critical Workers

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-08-01

    ArD-A2’ 3 •’ ORNL -5953 UNIONA Preliminary Study CARBJCEof Reducing the Cost of Blast Shelter for Critical Workers C. V. Chester D. W. Holladay ~s...DOCUMENTATION PAGE READ INSTRUCTIONS BEFORE COMPLETING FORM Ŗ. REPORT NUMBER 2. GOVT ACCESSION NO. 3. RECIPIENT’S CATALOG NUMBER ORNL (5958 .).4 ’I L...WORKERS 6. PERFORMING ORG. REPORT NUMBER ORNL /n5958 7. AUTHOR(a) 8. CONTRACT OR GRANT NUMBER(e) C. V. CHESTER, D. W. HOLLADAY FEMA EMW E 0.739 9

  10. Translational read-through of a nonsense mutation causing Bartter syndrome.

    PubMed

    Cho, Hee Yeon; Lee, Beom Hee; Cheong, Hae Il

    2013-06-01

    Bartter syndrome (BS) is classified into 5 genotypes according to underlying mutant genes and BS III is caused by loss-of-function mutations in the CLCNKB gene encoding for basolateral ClC-Kb. BS III is the most common genotype in Korean patients with BS and W610X is the most common CLCNKB mutation in Korean BS III. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the CLCNKB W610X mutation can be rescued in vitro using aminoglycoside antibiotics, which are known to induce translational read-through of a nonsense mutation. The CLCNKB cDNA was cloned into a eukaryotic expression vector and the W610X nonsense mutation was generated by site-directed mutagenesis. Cultured polarized MDCK cells were transfected with the vectors, and the read-through was induced using an aminoglycoside derivative, G418. Cellular expression of the target protein was monitored via immunohistochemistry. While cells transfected with the mutant CLCNKB failed to express ClC-Kb, G418 treatment of the cells induced the full-length protein expression, which was localized to the basolateral plasma membranes. It is demonstrated that the W610X mutation in CLCNKB can be a good candidate for trial of translational read-through induction as a therapeutic modality.

  11. The development and testing of a brief ('gist-based') supplementary colorectal cancer screening information leaflet.

    PubMed

    Smith, Samuel G; Wolf, Michael S; Obichere, Austin; Raine, Rosalind; Wardle, Jane; von Wagner, Christian

    2013-12-01

    To design and user-test a 'gist-based' colorectal cancer screening information leaflet, which promotes comprehension of the screening offer. Twenty-eight individuals approaching screening age were recruited from organisations in deprived areas of England. Using a between-subjects design, we tested iterations of a newly-designed gist-based information leaflet. Participants read the leaflet and answered 8 'true' or 'false' comprehension statements. For the leaflet to be considered fit-for-purpose, all statements had to be answered correctly by at least 80% of participants in each round. Alterations were made if this threshold was not met and additional rounds of testing were undertaken. At round 1, answers to 2/8 statements did not meet the threshold. After changes, answers in round 2 did not reach the threshold for 1/8 statements. In round 3, all answers were adequate and the leaflet was deemed fit-for-purpose. Qualitative data offered solutions such as language and layout changes which led to improved comprehension of the leaflet. User-testing substantially improved the design and subsequent comprehensibility of a theory-driven gist-based colorectal cancer screening information leaflet. This leaflet will be evaluated as part of a large national randomised controlled trial designed to reduce socioeconomic inequalities in colorectal cancer screening participation. Copyright © 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.. All rights reserved.

  12. Different Oils and Health Benefit Statements Affect Physicochemical Properties, Consumer Liking, Emotion, and Purchase Intent: A Case of Sponge Cake.

    PubMed

    Poonnakasem, Naratip; Pujols, Kairy Dharali; Chaiwanichsiri, Saiwarun; Laohasongkram, Kalaya; Prinyawiwatkul, Witoon

    2016-01-01

    Effects of different oils on physicochemical properties, consumer liking, emotion, and purchase intent of sponge cakes were evaluated. Three healthy oils (extra virgin coconut oil, EVCO; extra virgin olive oil, EVOO; rice bran oil, RBO) compared with butter (the control), were used at 20% (w/w, wheat flour basis) in sponge cake formulations. Five positive (calm, good, happy, pleased, satisfied) and 3 negative (guilty, unsafe, worried) emotion terms, selected from the EsSense Profile(®) with slight modification using an online (N = 234) check-all-that-apply questionnaire, were used for consumer testing. Consumers (N = 148) evaluated acceptability of 9 sensory attributes on a 9-point hedonic scale, 8 emotion responses on a 5-point rating scale, and purchase intent on a binomial scale. Overall liking, emotion, and purchase intent were evaluated before compared with after health benefit statement of oils had been given to consumers. Overall liking and positive emotion (except calm) scores of sponge cake made with EVCO were higher than those made with EVOO and RBO. Specific volume, expansion ratio, and moisture content of control, EVCO, and EVOO were not significantly different, but higher than RBO sponge cake. JAR results showed that sponge cake made with RBO had the least softness that was reflected by the highest hardness (6.61 to 9.69 compared with. 12.76N). Oil (EVCO/EVOO/RBO) health benefit statement provided to consumer significantly increased overall liking, positive emotion, and purchase intent scores while decreased negative emotion scores. Overall liking and pleased emotion were critical attributes influencing purchase intent (odds ratio = 2.06 to 3.75), whereas calm and happy became not critical after health benefit statement had been given. © 2015 Institute of Food Technologists®

  13. Filter Effectiveness Evaluation

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-08-01

    Bramer U.S. Army TARDEC Force Projection Technologies Warren, Michigan Contract No. W56HZV-09- C -0100 (WD17-Task 7) UNCLASSIFIED...No. W56HZV-09- C -0100 (WD17-Task 7) SwRI® Project No. 08.14734.17.290 UNCLASSIFIED: Distribution Statement A. Approved for public release...W56HZV-09- C -0100 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR(S) Canant, Philip A.; Bessee, Gary B.; Hutzler, Scott A. 5d. PROJECT

  14. Fabrication and Properties of Multilayer Structures

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-09-01

    according to both the high x-ray count and a Read camera pattern which showed only the 111 8 SiC reflection in a tight ± 30 distribution about the substrate...structural rearrangement. X-ray analysis of the deposited films at the composition of Pd2 Si using a Read camera indicated strong texturing. The...Phys. 35, 547 (1964). 11. C.A. Neubauer and J.R. Randen, Proc. IEEE 52, 1234 (1964). 12. W.A. Tiller, "Fabrication and Properties of Multilayer

  15. Acute Heroin Abstinence in Man. 1. Changes in Behavior and Sleep

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-01-01

    classic withdrawal syndrome described for stateside heroin users [ 1, 2]. This setting thus provided a good experimental model to evaluate heroin withdrawal...reading, etc. Playing guitar quietly, watching television, looking around, reading, looking at books and listening to tapes were all scored as quiet...the classical picture of withdrawal [ 1, 21. This has been reported in other epidemiological studies of heroin use in 352 wE Ci CC 3 0 R Y S uJ -J C m-J

  16. 10 CFR 820.36 - Filing, form, and service of documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-01-01

    ... representative. The signature constitutes a representation by the signer that he has read the pleading, letter or other document, that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief, the statements made therein...

  17. 10 CFR 820.36 - Filing, form, and service of documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-01-01

    ... representative. The signature constitutes a representation by the signer that he has read the pleading, letter or other document, that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief, the statements made therein...

  18. 10 CFR 820.36 - Filing, form, and service of documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-01-01

    ... representative. The signature constitutes a representation by the signer that he has read the pleading, letter or other document, that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief, the statements made therein...

  19. 10 CFR 820.36 - Filing, form, and service of documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-01-01

    ... representative. The signature constitutes a representation by the signer that he has read the pleading, letter or other document, that to the best of his knowledge, information and belief, the statements made therein...

  20. CDC Vital Signs: Preventing Melanoma

    MedlinePlus

    ... not use the device. Include warning statements in marketing materials about the risk of using the device. ... MB] en Español [PDF – 1.16 MB] CDC Digital Press Kit Read the MMWR Science Clips Language: ...

  1. Prostate Cancer Clinical Consortium Clinical Research Site: Targeted Therapies

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-01

    AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-14-2-0159 TITLE: Prostate Cancer Clinical Consortium Clinical Research Site: Targeted Therapies PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR...Annual PREPARED FOR: U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for...AND SUBTITLE Prostate Cancer Clinical Consortium Clinical Research Site: Targeted Therapies 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT

  2. Cardio-Pulmonary Response to Shock.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-02-01

    Maryland 21701 ( Contract No. DANID17-78-C-8026 Harvard Medical School 25 Shattuck St. D Boston, Massachusetts 02115 E L - C T E APR 16 1W84 Approved for...Controlling Offce) IS. SECURITY CLASS. (of this repot) ISa. DECL ASSIFICATION/DOWNGRADING SCHEDULE IS. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of AdU Repoft) Approved...Circulating Negative Inotropes 1. Depressed left ventricular function following pulmonary embolism 2. Thromboxane mediation of cardio-pulmonary effects

  3. Electronic Principles Inventory Sheppard Technical Training Center, AFPT 90-EPI-485.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-06-01

    properly applied, OSR data can be a powerful tool in the design of training content, Generally speaking, OSR task statements can sometimes be difficult... designing blocks specific to the various specialties. Other than the differences noted in the Missile Systems Analyst and Biomedical Equipment personnel...m 4-jj K i I Li u 0 2I L- DC A U --SI De O) ZW :𔃾 )m-4 14~ =i0. 40o 0 w w L4- 1-0. 454 01 Z.I 4 mz c xx 1 Z4.. C, * L CX "*4. 0 4 I..j CL z 49 I. I

  4. Read-Write-Codes: An Erasure Resilient Encoding System for Flexible Reading and Writing in Storage Networks

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Mense, Mario; Schindelhauer, Christian

    We introduce the Read-Write-Coding-System (RWC) - a very flexible class of linear block codes that generate efficient and flexible erasure codes for storage networks. In particular, given a message x of k symbols and a codeword y of n symbols, an RW code defines additional parameters k ≤ r,w ≤ n that offer enhanced possibilities to adjust the fault-tolerance capability of the code. More precisely, an RWC provides linear left(n,k,dright)-codes that have (a) minimum distance d = n - r + 1 for any two codewords, and (b) for each codeword there exists a codeword for each other message with distance of at most w. Furthermore, depending on the values r,w and the code alphabet, different block codes such as parity codes (e.g. RAID 4/5) or Reed-Solomon (RS) codes (if r = k and thus, w = n) can be generated. In storage networks in which I/O accesses are very costly and redundancy is crucial, this flexibility has considerable advantages as r and w can optimally be adapted to read or write intensive applications; only w symbols must be updated if the message x changes completely, what is different from other codes which always need to rewrite y completely as x changes. In this paper, we first state a tight lower bound and basic conditions for all RW codes. Furthermore, we introduce special RW codes in which all mentioned parameters are adjustable even online, that is, those RW codes are adaptive to changing demands. At last, we point out some useful properties regarding safety and security of the stored data.

  5. Closing the Achievement Gap by Improving Reading Instruction. Hearing before the Committee on Education and the Workforce. House of Representatives, One Hundred Seventh Congress, First Session (Orlando, Florida, November 13, 2001).

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

    A field hearing of the United States House of Representatives' Committee on Education and the Workforce, entitled "Closing the Achievement Gap by Improving Reading Instruction," was held at Lancaster Elementary School in Orlando, Florida, on November 13, 2001. The hearing begins with welcoming statements by the committee chairman and one…

  6. Readability Levels of Representative Navy Job Reading for Nonrated Personnel.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-10-01

    stowed in spaces free of moisture that the effect is not noticeable and at moderate temperatures. by the victim and that he "passes out" without...Training Analysis and Evaluation Group October 1982 GOVERNMENT RIGHTS IN DATA STATEMENT Reproduction of this publication in whole or in part is permitted...Appreciation is expressed to the following personnel for their assistance in procuring reading materials: CDR William Losa, Chief of Naval Education and

  7. 12 CFR 223.54 - What advertisements and statements are prohibited by section 23B?

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... 12 Banks and Banking 3 2010-01-01 2010-01-01 false What advertisements and statements are prohibited by section 23B? 223.54 Section 223.54 Banks and Banking FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM (CONTINUED) BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM TRANSACTIONS BETWEEN MEMBER BANKS AND THEIR AFFILIATES (REGULATION W) General Provisions of Section 23B §...

  8. What We Know about Adolescents' Out-of-School Literacies, What We Need to Learn, and Why Studying Them Is Important: An Interview with Michael W. Smith

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Smith, Michael W.; Moore, David W.

    2012-01-01

    Michael W. Smith, a professor in Temple University's College of Education, focuses his research on how experienced readers read and talk about texts as well as what motivates adolescents' reading and writing in and out of school. He sees the recent research on adolescents' out-of-school literacies as a challenge to literacy educators to look at…

  9. Lehigh River Basin, Trexler Lake, Jordan Creek, Pennsylvania. Final Environmental Impact Statement.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1973-01-01

    InI w-.ater table elevations in the project arra . A lmg in lnn( uti lization from prim-arily private ag-ricultural and] res ident iil.rr’ to nubli c...AND ADDRESS 10. PROGRAM ELEMENT, PROJECT , TASK U.S. Army Engineer District Philadelphia AREA & WORK UNIT NUMBERS 2nd & Chestnut Sts. / I Philadelphia...Administrative ( ) Legislative 2. Description of Action. The Trexler project is located in Lehigh County in southeastern Pennsylvania. The dfm site is

  10. Speedy Alchemy.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Deininger, Rolf A.; Berger, Carl F., Jr.

    1983-01-01

    Provides instructions for interfacing a pH meter directly to an Apple II microcomputer without an analog-to-digital converter. Includes program listing (with enough remark statements to make it self-documenting) in Integer Basic to display the pH readings. (Author/JN)

  11. Social Behavior in Medulloblastoma: Functional Analysis of Tumor-Supporting Glial Cells

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-07-01

    AD_________________ Award Number: W81XWH-11-1-0557 TITLE: Social behavior in Medulloblastoma ... Medulloblastoma : Functional Analysis of Tumor-Supporting 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER Glial Cells 5b. GRANT NUMBER W81XWH-11-1-0557 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT...AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 14. ABSTRACT Medulloblastoma is the

  12. Further Clarifying the Competition-Performance Relation: Reply to D. W. Johnson et al. (2012)

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Murayama, Kou; Elliot, Andrew J.

    2012-01-01

    In their commentary, D. W. Johnson, Johnson, and Roseth (2012) provided some laudatory statements about our article, but they also expressed a number of concerns. The concerns focus on the following issues: types and definitions of competition, our choice of control group, the nature of performance-approach and performance-avoidance goals, the…

  13. First Firing of a 100-kW Nested-Channel Hall Thruster

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-09-01

    Technical Paper 3. DATES COVERED (From - To) September 2013- December 2013 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE First Firing of a 100-kW Nested-Channel Hall Thruster 5a...STATEMENT A: Approved for public release; distribution unlimited. 1 First Firing of a 100-kW Nested-channel Hall Thruster IEPC-2013-394...converting electrical power to directed kinetic power I. Introduction ESTING the channels of Hall thrusters has proven to be a viable method to increase

  14. Investigation of Plasma Processes in Electronic Transition Lasers

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-05-30

    Faraday Trans. II (in press) " H . Helvajian and C. Wittig, Appl. Phys. Lett. 38, 731 (1981). "W. L. Nighan, Appl. Phys. Lett. 36, 173 (1980). "D...Press. New York. Helvajian . H .. and Wittig. W. (1981). Appl. Phys. Lett. 38. 731-733. Horiguchi. H .. Chang. R. S. F.. and Setser. D. W, (1981). J...release; distribution unlimited 17. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (ot th» mbttraci •nfrtd In Block 30, H dllltrani ttom Rmporl) 18. SUPPLEMENTARY

  15. Equal Educational Choices for Parents. Hearing before the Committee on Education and the Workforce. House of Representatives, One Hundred Seventh Congress, Second Session (April 16, 2002).

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

    This hearing presents information to help lay the groundwork for legislative action on expanded parental choice in education. After an opening statement by John Boehner, Chairman, Committee on Education and the Workforce, U.S. House of Representatives, there are statements by: Lawrence W. Reed, President Mackinac Center for Public Policy, Midland,…

  16. MILSBILLS: Military Standard Billing System

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-01-01

    disbursing offices and w’ose adjustments will be included in their Statement of Interfund 1,ansactions. c. Ensuring that there are adequate controls over...adjustments will be included in their Statement of Interfund Transactions. c. Ensuring that there are adequate controls over interfund related...by the DSAA. 3 iAutomatic adjustments may be withheld from specific customers if there is a pattern of abuse of this authority. When such a pattern

  17. Reading & Accountability: Improving 21st Century Schools. Hearing before the Committee on Education and the Workforce. House of Representatives, One Hundred Seventh Congress, First Session (Marietta, Georgia, February 20, 2001).

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

    A hearing, held in Marietta, Georgia, on February 20, 2001, before the Committee on Education and the Workforce, House of Representatives, 107th Congress, dealt with reading and accountability and improving 21st century schools. These proceedings of the hearing contain the following: Statement of Congressman Bob Barr, 7th District of Georgia, U.S.…

  18. Theoretical Methods in the Calculation of the Bremsstrahlung Recoil Force in a Nonequilibrium Beam-Plasma System.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-05-01

    THIS PAGE (When Date Entered) READ INSTRUCTIONSREPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE BEFORE COMPLETING FORM I . REPORT NUMBER 2. GOVT ACCESSION NO. 3. RECIPIENT’S...Approved for public release; distribution unlimited. I . DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of the abetrect entered In Block 20, it different from Report) II...SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES HDL Project: A10225 ’,’ I ..- DRCMSCode: 61110191A0011 ", *.. -- ". DA Project: 1L161101A91A It. KEY WORDS (Cotlinue on reverse side It

  19. User-Elicited Tactical Information Requirements with Implications for Symbology and Graphic Portrayal Standards

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-04-01

    a detailed account of the methodology used for information elicitation and organization. Chapter 3 describes the study results in terms of clus- ters...European Setting)., ’The scenario (see Appendix A-2) contained the following elements: (1) an account of the events ledding up to the present tactical...As I read these statements I’d like you to think about the appli- cation of these principles to graphic portrayal. For example, the first two

  20. Improving Balance in TBI Using a Low-Cost Customized Virtual Reality Rehabilitation Tool

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-01

    AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-14-2-0150 TITLE: Improving Balance in TBI Using a Low- Cost Customized Virtual Reality Rehabilitation Tool PRINCIPAL...PREPARED FOR: U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public ...DOCUMENTATION PAGE Form Approved OMB No. 0704-0188 Public reporting burden for this collection of information is estimated to average 1 hour per

  1. Processing of Written Irony in Autism Spectrum Disorder: An Eye-Movement Study.

    PubMed

    Au-Yeung, Sheena K; Kaakinen, Johanna K; Liversedge, Simon P; Benson, Valerie

    2015-12-01

    Previous research has suggested that individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) have difficulties understanding others communicative intent and with using contextual information to correctly interpret irony. We recorded the eye movements of typically developing (TD) adults ASD adults when they read statements that could either be interpreted as ironic or non-ironic depending on the context of the passage. Participants with ASD performed as well as TD controls in their comprehension accuracy for speaker's statements in both ironic and non-ironic conditions. Eye movement data showed that for both participant groups, total reading times were longer for the critical region containing the speaker's statement and a subsequent sentence restating the context in the ironic condition compared to the non-ironic condition. The results suggest that more effortful processing is required in both ASD and TD participants for ironic compared with literal non-ironic statements, and that individuals with ASD were able to use contextual information to infer a non-literal interpretation of ironic text. Individuals with ASD, however, spent more time overall than TD controls rereading the passages, to a similar degree across both ironic and non-ironic conditions, suggesting that they either take longer to construct a coherent discourse representation of the text, or that they take longer to make the decision that their representation of the text is reasonable based on their knowledge of the world. © 2015 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

  2. 49 CFR 511.14 - Form and filing of documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... constitutes a representation by the signer that the signer has read it; that to the best of the signer's knowledge, information and belief, the statements made in it are true; and that it is not filed for purposes...

  3. 49 CFR 511.14 - Form and filing of documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... constitutes a representation by the signer that the signer has read it; that to the best of the signer's knowledge, information and belief, the statements made in it are true; and that it is not filed for purposes...

  4. 49 CFR 511.14 - Form and filing of documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... constitutes a representation by the signer that the signer has read it; that to the best of the signer's knowledge, information and belief, the statements made in it are true; and that it is not filed for purposes...

  5. 49 CFR 511.14 - Form and filing of documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... constitutes a representation by the signer that the signer has read it; that to the best of the signer's knowledge, information and belief, the statements made in it are true; and that it is not filed for purposes...

  6. 49 CFR 511.14 - Form and filing of documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... constitutes a representation by the signer that the signer has read it; that to the best of the signer's knowledge, information and belief, the statements made in it are true; and that it is not filed for purposes...

  7. Presidential Signing Statements Act of 2009

    THOMAS, 111th Congress

    Sen. Specter, Arlen [R-PA

    2009-04-23

    Senate - 04/23/2009 Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. (text of measure as introduced: CR S4677-4678) (All Actions) Tracker: This bill has the status IntroducedHere are the steps for Status of Legislation:

  8. 32 CFR 299.3 - Policy.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... does not originate final orders, opinions, statements of policy, interpretations, staff manuals, or... Cryptologic Museum (NCM), which serves as the NSA/CSS FOIA reading room, and made available through the... available in hard copy in the museum library and on the Internet. ...

  9. 32 CFR 299.3 - Policy.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-07-01

    ... does not originate final orders, opinions, statements of policy, interpretations, staff manuals, or... Cryptologic Museum (NCM), which serves as the NSA/CSS FOIA reading room, and made available through the... available in hard copy in the museum library and on the Internet. ...

  10. 32 CFR 299.3 - Policy.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-07-01

    ... does not originate final orders, opinions, statements of policy, interpretations, staff manuals, or... Cryptologic Museum (NCM), which serves as the NSA/CSS FOIA reading room, and made available through the... available in hard copy in the museum library and on the Internet. ...

  11. 32 CFR 299.3 - Policy.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ... does not originate final orders, opinions, statements of policy, interpretations, staff manuals, or... Cryptologic Museum (NCM), which serves as the NSA/CSS FOIA reading room, and made available through the... available in hard copy in the museum library and on the Internet. ...

  12. 32 CFR 299.3 - Policy.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... does not originate final orders, opinions, statements of policy, interpretations, staff manuals, or... Cryptologic Museum (NCM), which serves as the NSA/CSS FOIA reading room, and made available through the... available in hard copy in the museum library and on the Internet. ...

  13. Geophysical Investigation of the Raton Basin.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-05-01

    17. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of the abetrect entered in Block 20, If different from Report) LYNN E . WOLAVER J Dean for Research and IS. SUPPLEMENTARY...NOTES i Professional Development APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE: IAW AFR 7 .,# R . - E 0. TECHNOLOGY (ATC) 2 2 JUN 1982 WRiGHT-PATTRSON AFB, OH 45433 19...which are dominated by thick grey I to black strata, predominate to the north. In fact, this shale which 4 ’d E N w ERa NEW MEXICO 0 SANTA FE 0

  14. Recreational Boat Harbor, Cedar River, Michigan. Revisions to General Design Memorandum Number 1 and Environmental Impact Statement. Supplement Number 1.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-08-01

    MANITOWOCS 0 2uEG V!CINILOALIT MAAPDSN 1 SCALLE OF WILES LIGHT; BAN0SEA I PAN OCLANDLIIITY MAP DwREPT O#~ A.85D INDEX TO DRAWINGS OfDPT ONOR2 STA...W, - STANOR[I CORPS Of ENGINEERS BRASS CA B T IN CIEBNE ROUTlE M 35 FAST UIP EAST END OF BRIDGE OVER CEDAR RIVER STAMIPED SIA 52.54 E9G6 FlERAI1ON

  15. Monterey Peninsula Water Supply Project Supplemental Draft Environmental Impact Report/Statement. Volume 2. Monterey Peninsula Water Management District

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-08-01

    0 (Malacothrix saxatilis var. arachnoidea) j 88089 9-79 9. Vcetation and Terestrial W TABLE 9-6 (Continued) sit,2 Taa Status’ NLP CAC SCIC CHU NSC...construction, the parking site could become a park and ride facdy. Alternatively, the contractor could lease existing unused parking space from private...moie oe Residential - mutti~family Trans’int lodgng - motels, hotels I Schools, libraries, churches, hospitals. Actively used open spaces

  16. Crystal structure and confirmation of the alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase activity of the YFL030w yeast protein.

    PubMed

    Meyer, Philippe; Liger, Dominique; Leulliot, Nicolas; Quevillon-Cheruel, Sophie; Zhou, Cong-Zhao; Borel, Franck; Ferrer, Jean-Luc; Poupon, Anne; Janin, Joël; van Tilbeurgh, Herman

    2005-12-01

    We have determined the three-dimensional crystal structure of the protein encoded by the open reading frame YFL030w from Saccharomyces cerevisiae to a resolution of 2.6 A using single wavelength anomalous diffraction. YFL030w is a 385 amino-acid protein with sequence similarity to the aminotransferase family. The structure of the protein reveals a homodimer adopting the fold-type I of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent aminotransferases. The PLP co-factor is covalently bound to the active site in the crystal structure. The protein shows close structural resemblance with the human alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.44), an enzyme involved in the hereditary kidney stone disease primary hyperoxaluria type 1. In this paper we show that YFL030w codes for an alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase, highly specific for its amino donor and acceptor substrates.

  17. Transcriptome analysis of seed dormancy after rinsing and chilling in ornamental peaches (Prunus persica (L.) Batsch).

    PubMed

    Kanjana, Worarad; Suzuki, Tomohiro; Ishii, Kazuo; Kozaki, Toshinori; Iigo, Masayuki; Yamane, Kenji

    2016-08-08

    Ornamental peaches cv. 'Yaguchi' (Prunus persica (L.) Batsch) can be propagated via seeds. The establishment of efficient seed treatments for early germination and seedling growth is required to shorten nursery and breeding periods. It is important, therefore, to identify potential candidate genes responsible for the effects of rinsing and chilling on seed germination. We hypothesized that longer rinsing combined with chilling of seeds can alter the genes expression in related to dormancy and then raise the germination rate in the peach. To date, most molecular studies in peaches have involved structural genomics, and few transcriptome studies of seed germination have been conducted. In this study, we investigated the function of key seed dormancy-related genes using next-generation sequencing to profile the transcriptomes involved in seed dormancy in peaches. De novo assembly and analysis of the transcriptome identified differentially expressed and unique genes present in this fruit. De novo RNA-sequencing of peach was performed using the Illumina Miseq 2000 system. Paired-end sequence from mRNAs generated high quality sequence reads (9,049,964, 10,026,362 and 10,101,918 reads) from 'Yaguchi' peach seeds before rinsed (BR) and after rinsed for 2 or 7 days with a chilling period of 4 weeks (termed 2D4W and 7D4W), respectively. The germination rate of 7D4W was significantly higher than that of 2D4W. In total, we obtained 51,366 unique sequences. Differential expression analysis identified 7752, 8469 and 506 differentially expressed genes from BR vs 2D4W, BR vs 7D4W and 2D4W vs 7D4W libraries respectively, filtered based on p-value and an adjusted false discovery rate of less than 0.05. This study identified genes associated with the rinsing and chilling process that included those associated with phytohormones, the stress response and transcription factors. 7D4W treatment downregulated genes involved in ABA synthesis, catabolism and signaling pathways, which eventually suppressed abscisic acid activity and consequently promoted germination and seedling growth. Stress response genes were also downregulated by the 7D4W treatment, suggesting that this treatment released seeds from endodormancy. Transcription factors were upregulated by the BR and 2D4W treatment, suggesting that they play important roles in maintaining seed dormancy. This work indicated that longer rinsing combined with chilling affects gene expression and germination rate, and identified potential candidate genes responsible for dormancy progression in seeds of 'Yaguchi' peach. The results could be used to develop breeding programs and will aid future functional genomic research in peaches and other fruit trees.

  18. A comparison of capillary and rotational viscometry of aqueous solutions of hypromellose.

    PubMed

    Sklubalová, Z; Zatloukal, Z

    2007-10-01

    A comparison of capillary and rotational viscometry of gentle pseudoplastic solutions of hypromellose (HPMC 4000) by using only single-point value of viscosity is difficult. Single-point comparison becomes topical in consequence to the pharmacopoeial requirement that the apparent viscosity of 2% hypromellose solution should be read at the shear rate of approximately 10 s(-1). This communication is focused on the estimation of the suitable shear rate, D eta, at which the apparent viscosity read using the rotational viscometer is numerically equal to the dynamic viscosity read using a capillary viscometer. For the solutions of HPMC in concentrations up to 2% w/v, the non-linear regression equations generated showed the influencing of the D eta value by the dynamic viscosity and/or by the originally derived linear velocity of the solution flowing through the capillary viscometer tube. To compare the apparent viscosity read using the rotational viscometer with the dynamic viscosity read using capillary viscometer, the exact estimation of the shear rate D eta at which both viscosities are numerically equal is essential since it is markedly affected by the concentration of HPMC solution.

  19. Cryogenic low noise and low dissipation multiplexing electronics, using HEMT+SiGe ASICs, for the readout of high impedance sensors: New version

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    de la Broïse, Xavier; Lugiez, Francis; Bounab, Ayoub; Le Coguie, Alain

    2015-07-01

    High Electron Mobility Transistors (HEMTs), optimized by CNRS/LPN laboratory for ultra-low noise at very low temperature, have demonstrated their capacity to be used in place of Si JFETs when working temperatures below 100 K are required. We associated them with specific SiGe ASICs that we developed, to implement a complete readout channel able to read highly segmented high impedance detectors within a framework of very low thermal dissipation. Our electronics is dimensioned to read 4096 detection channels, of typically 1 MΩ impedance, and performs 32:1 multiplexing and amplifying, dissipating only 6 mW at 2.5 K and 100 mW at 15 K thanks to high impedance commuting of input stage, with a typical noise of 1 nV/√Hz at 1 kHz.

  20. Environmental Impact Statement. Proposed Closure of Los Angeles AFB, California and Relocation of Space Systems Division. Appendix F. Public Comments

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-11-01

    ALLY. COPIESOF Mif soam o~ am 17 OF IL me AND C01101. so STROM.I SWO 1340 MR 17 VAROU O0110308 C2OIS. INCLDO A COS1 OF A Sa Is PSWASS AN CON ~SLDAWR...55145 TO GTSoi. .1W AX m s . CON SNINI NT SAWS I ca55 m"= Dmu 1wim IMP STANTS IsCT am IL 539 PROM CALINOSNIA. VON CZRPLA FFS. 4 IP S 45 PRECU? T IL 3...LOGISTICAL 4*41.011 "AT CUITTCASLY. 22 TWO CON ? NT P.Ilf 95415 CRE553TIN ISS . 11 ALSO VAS 11 K ADP5LAS Too TOWD 1351 TW110 SLDWN AN 2I RETE FEES 1W PT

  1. Assessment of Conflicts of Interest in Robotic Surgical Studies: Validating Author's Declarations With the Open Payments Database.

    PubMed

    Patel, Sunil V; Yu, David; Elsolh, Basheer; Goldacre, Ben M; Nash, Garrett M

    2017-07-11

    Accurate conflict of interest (COI) statements are important, as a known COI may invalidate study results due to the potential risk of bias. To determine the accuracy of self-declared COI statements in robotic studies and identify risk factors for undeclared payments. Robotic surgery studies were identified through EMBASE and MEDLINE and included if published in 2015 and had at least one American author. Undeclared COI were determined by comparing the author's declared COI with industry reported payments found in the "Open Payments" database for 2013 and 2014. Undeclared payments and discrepancies in the COI statement were determined. Risk factors were assessed for an association with undeclared payments at the author and study level. A total of 458 studies (2253 authors) were included. Approximately, 240 (52%) studies had 1 or more author receive undeclared payments and included 183 where "no COI" was explicitly declared, and 57 with no declaration statement present. Moreover, 21% of studies and 18% of authors with a COI declared it so in a COI statement. Studies that had undeclared payments from Intuitive were more likely to recommend robotic surgery compared with those that declared funding (odds ratio 4.29, 95% confidence interval 2.55-7.21). We found that it was common for payments from Intuitive to be undeclared in robotic surgery articles. Mechanisms for accountability in COI reporting need to be put into place by journals to achieve appropriate transparency to those reading the journal article.

  2. Review and Oversight of the 1998 Reading Results of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)--The Nation's Report Card. Hearing before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations of the Committee on Education and the Workforce. United States House of Representatives, One Hundred Sixth Congress, First Session.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

    This document presents the transcript (and written statements) of a congressional hearing on the potential politicization of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) and the trustworthiness of the scores that the states received during the 1998 reading assessment. It addresses whether Vice President Al Gore's "release" of…

  3. The Journal of Suggestive-Accelerative Learning and Teaching.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Schuster, Donald, Ed.

    1978-01-01

    The following articles are included in these proceedings: (1) "Teaching Remedial Reading with SALT," by Jean Taylor; (2) "Commentary to the 'Cinematographic Report,'" by Joseph Goldin; (3) "Interpretations of the Lozanov Method," by W. Jane Bancroft; (4) "Is a Little SALT a Dangerous Thing?" by Owen L.…

  4. Reading level of privacy policies on Internet health Web sites.

    PubMed

    Graber, Mark A; D'Alessandro, Donna M; Johnson-West, Jill

    2002-07-01

    Most individuals would like to maintain the privacy of their medical information on the World Wide Web (WWW). In response, commercial interests and other sites post privacy policies that are designed to inform users of how their information will be used. However, it is not known if these statements are comprehensible to most WWW users. The purpose of this study was to determine the reading level of privacy statements on Internet health Web sites and to determine whether these statements can inform users of their rights. This was a descriptive study. Eighty Internet health sites were examined and the readability of their privacy policies was determined. The selected sample included the top 25 Internet health sites as well as other sites that a user might encounter while researching a common problem such as high blood pressure. Sixty percent of the sites were commercial (.com), 17.5% were organizations (.org), 8.8% were from the United Kingdom (.uk), 3.8% were United States governmental (.gov), and 2.5% were educational (.edu). The readability level of the privacy policies was calculated using the Flesch, the Fry, and the SMOG readability levels. Of the 80 Internet health Web sites studied, 30% (including 23% of the commercial Web sites) had no privacy policy posted. The average readability level of the remaining sites required 2 years of college level education to comprehend, and no Web site had a privacy policy that was comprehensible by most English-speaking individuals in the United States. The privacy policies of health Web sites are not easily understood by most individuals in the United States and do not serve to inform users of their rights. Possible remedies include rewriting policies to make them comprehensible and protecting online health information by using legal statutes or standardized insignias indicating compliance with a set of privacy standards (eg, "Health on the Net" [HON] http://www.hon.ch).

  5. 77 FR 3500 - Reading Powder Coatings, Inc., Including On-Site Leased Workers From Berks and Beyond Employment...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-01-24

    ... DEPARTMENT OF LABOR Employment and Training Administration [TA-W-80,473] Reading Powder Coatings, Inc., Including On-Site Leased Workers From Berks and Beyond Employment Services and Gage Personnel Reading, PA; Amended Certification Regarding Eligibility To Apply for Worker Adjustment Assistance and Alternative Trade Adjustment Assistance In...

  6. The Contribution of Naming Speed to the Simple View of Reading

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Johnston, Timothy C.; Kirby, John R.

    2006-01-01

    The purpose of this study was to investigate whether naming speed makes a contribution to the prediction of reading comprehension, after taking into account the product of word decoding and listening comprehension (i.e., the Simple View of Reading; [Gough, P.B. & Tunmer, W.E. (1986). "Remedial and Special Education 7," 6-10]), and…

  7. Legacy Clinical Data from the Mission Connect Mild TBI Translational Research Consortium

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-01

    mTBI) Translational Research Consortium was to improve the diagnosis and treatment of mTBI. We enrolled a total of 88 mTBI patients and 73 orthopedic ...AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-16-2-0026 TITLE: Legacy Clinical Data from the Mission Connect Mild TBI Translational Research Consortium PRINCIPAL...Annual PREPARED FOR: U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for

  8. 77 FR 1976 - Release of Waybill Data

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-01-12

    ... DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Surface Transportation Board Release of Waybill Data AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board, DOT. ACTION: Release of Waybill Data; Correction. SUMMARY: This document corrects a notice... certain data from the Board's 2009 Carload Waybill Sample.'' The statement should read ``[t]he Surface...

  9. Advancing Science through Mining Libraries, Ontologies, and Communities*

    PubMed Central

    Evans, James A.; Rzhetsky, Andrey

    2011-01-01

    Life scientists today cannot hope to read everything relevant to their research. Emerging text-mining tools can help by identifying topics and distilling statements from books and articles with increased accuracy. Researchers often organize these statements into ontologies, consistent systems of reality claims. Like scientific thinking and interchange, however, text-mined information (even when accurately captured) is complex, redundant, sometimes incoherent, and often contradictory: it is rooted in a mixture of only partially consistent ontologies. We review work that models scientific reason and suggest how computational reasoning across ontologies and the broader distribution of textual statements can assess the certainty of statements and the process by which statements become certain. With the emergence of digitized data regarding networks of scientific authorship, institutions, and resources, we explore the possibility of accounting for social dependences and cultural biases in reasoning models. Computational reasoning is starting to fill out ontologies and flag internal inconsistencies in several areas of bioscience. In the not too distant future, scientists may be able to use statements and rich models of the processes that produced them to identify underexplored areas, resurrect forgotten findings and ideas, deconvolute the spaghetti of underlying ontologies, and synthesize novel knowledge and hypotheses. PMID:21566119

  10. The W22 genome: a foundation for maize functional genomics and transposon biology

    USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database

    The maize W22 inbred has served as a platform for maize genetics since the mid twentieth century. To streamline maize genome analyses, we have sequenced and de novo assembled a W22 reference genome using small-read sequencing technologies. We show that significant structural heterogeneity exists in ...

  11. Application of Advanced Multi-Core Processor Technologies to Oceanographic Research

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2013-09-30

    STM32 NXP LPC series No Proprietary Microchip PIC32/DSPIC No > 500 mW; < 5 W ARM Cortex TI OMAP TI Sitara Broadcom BCM2835 Varies FPGA...1 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT A. Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. Application of Advanced Multi-Core Processor Technologies...state-of-the-art information processing architectures. OBJECTIVES Next-generation processor architectures (multi-core, multi-threaded) hold the

  12. Biodiesel Test Plan

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-07-01

    Biodiesel Test Plan Distribution Statement A: Approved for Public Release; distribution is unlimited. July 2014 Report No. CG-D-07-14...Appendix C) Biodiesel Test Plan ii UNCLAS//Public | CG-926 R&DC | G. W. Johnson, et al. Public | July 2014 N O T I C E This...Development Center 1 Chelsea Street New London, CT 06320 Biodiesel Test Plan iii UNCLAS//Public | CG-926 R&DC | G. W. Johnson, et al

  13. Advanced Machining Toolpath for Low Distortion

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-02-28

    Minneapolis, MN (952) 832-5515 for the U.S. Army - Aviation Development Directorate Contract No: W911W6-16-P-0044 Contractor : Third Wave...Systems, Inc. Contractor Address: 6475 City West Parkway Minneapolis, MN 55344 Distribution Statement A. Approved for public release: distribution...to such data must promptly notify the above named Contractor . The views, opinions, and findings contained in this report are those of the author

  14. Spectral Characterization of RDX, ETN, PETN, TATP, HMTD, HMX, and C-4 in the Mid-Infrared Region

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-04-01

    Samuels Joseph A. Domanico Joseph May Ronald W. Miles, Jr. Augustus W. Fountain III RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY DIRECTORATE April 2014 Approved for public ...position unless so designated by other authorizing documents. REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE Form Approved OMB No. 0704-0188 Public reporting...AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES *Science Applications International Corporation

  15. User Centered System Design. Part 2. Collected Papers from the UCSD HMI Project.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-03-01

    31 David Owen >CONSTRUCTIVE INTERACTION: A METHOD FOR STUDYING USER-COMPUTER-USER INTERACTION,~4 Claire O’MWaiey. Stephrn W. Drape, &mW4(fey S. Riley...improving intelligibility. __________ Display of a 1mg. musher Allows user to see a Slow to read, slow to of MCM Item: law percestage of the display, ua...Display of a saw musher Essy to red, quick to If number of alterna- of Ase im ms: display, only a small tiwes is large, multiple percentage of the sads

  16. A Consensus-Based Interpretation of the Benchmark Evidence from South American Trials: Treatment of Intracranial Pressure Trial.

    PubMed

    Chesnut, Randall M; Bleck, Thomas P; Citerio, Giuseppe; Classen, Jan; Cooper, D James; Coplin, William M; Diringer, Michael N; Grände, Per-Olof; Hemphill, J Claude; Hutchinson, Peter J; Le Roux, Peter; Mayer, Stephan A; Menon, David K; Myburgh, John A; Okonkwo, David O; Robertson, Claudia S; Sahuquillo, Juan; Stocchetti, Nino; Sung, Gene; Temkin, Nancy; Vespa, Paul M; Videtta, Walter; Yonas, Howard

    2015-11-15

    Widely-varying published and presented analyses of the Benchmark Evidence From South American Trials: Treatment of Intracranial Pressure (BEST TRIP) randomized controlled trial of intracranial pressure (ICP) monitoring have suggested denying trial generalizability, questioning the need for ICP monitoring in severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI), re-assessing current clinical approaches to monitored ICP, and initiating a general ICP-monitoring moratorium. In response to this dissonance, 23 clinically-active, international opinion leaders in acute-care sTBI management met to draft a consensus statement to interpret this study. A Delphi method-based approach employed iterative pre-meeting polling to codify the group's general opinions, followed by an in-person meeting wherein individual statements were refined. Statements required an agreement threshold of more than 70% by blinded voting for approval. Seven precisely-worded statements resulted, with agreement levels of 83% to 100%. These statements, which should be read in toto to properly reflect the group's consensus positions, conclude that the BEST TRIP trial: 1) studied protocols, not ICP-monitoring per se; 2) applies only to those protocols and specific study groups and should not be generalized to other treatment approaches or patient groups; 3) strongly calls for further research on ICP interpretation and use; 4) should be applied cautiously to regions with much different treatment milieu; 5) did not investigate the utility of treating monitored ICP in the specific patient group with established intracranial hypertension; 6) should not change the practice of those currently monitoring ICP; and 7) provided a protocol, used in non-monitored study patients, that should be considered when treating without ICP monitoring. Consideration of these statements can clarify study interpretation.

  17. Diet-induced changes in iron and n-3 fatty acid status and associations with cognitive performance in 8-11-year-old Danish children: secondary analyses of the Optimal Well-Being, Development and Health for Danish Children through a Healthy New Nordic Diet School Meal Study.

    PubMed

    Sørensen, Louise Bergmann; Damsgaard, Camilla Trab; Dalskov, Stine-Mathilde; Petersen, Rikke Agnete; Egelund, Niels; Dyssegaard, Camilla Brørup; Stark, Ken D; Andersen, Rikke; Tetens, Inge; Astrup, Arne; Michaelsen, Kim Fleisher; Lauritzen, Lotte

    2015-11-28

    Fe and n-3 long-chain PUFA (n-3 LCPUFA) have both been associated with cognition, but evidence remains inconclusive in well-nourished school-aged children. In the Optimal Well-Being, Development and Health for Danish Children through a Healthy New Nordic Diet (OPUS) School Meal Study, the 3-month intervention increased reading performance, inattention, impulsivity and dietary intake of fish and Fe. This study investigated whether the intervention influenced n-3 LCPUFA and Fe status and, if so, explored how these changes correlated with the changes in cognitive performance. The study was a cluster-randomised cross-over trial comparing school meals with packed lunch (control). At baseline and after each treatment, we measured serum ferritin, whole-blood n-3 LCPUFA and Hb, and performance in reading, mathematics and d2-test of attention. Data were analysed using mixed models (n 726) and principal component analysis of test performances (n 644), which showed two main patterns: 'school performance' and 'reading comprehension'. The latter indicated that children with good reading comprehension were also more inattentive and impulsive (i.e. higher d2-test error%). The intervention improved 'school performance' (P=0·015), 'reading comprehension' (P=0·043) and EPA+DHA status 0·21 (95% CI 0·15, 0·27) w/w % (P<0·001), but it did not affect serum ferritin or Hb. At baseline, having small Fe stores was associated with poorer 'school performance' in girls, but with better 'reading comprehension' in both boys and girls. Both baseline EPA+DHA status and the intervention-induced increase in EPA+DHA status was positively associated with 'school performance', suggesting that n-3 LCPUFA could potentially explain approximately 20 % of the intervention effect. These exploratory associations indicate that increased fish intake might explain some of the increase in reading performance and inattention in the study.

  18. COPPERHEAD Operational Performance Evaluation (COPE): Computer Program User and Analyst Manual.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-03-01

    I - ft N C * % S C.󈧬 4 ft - 2 4 4 0. 44 ft 2 -J 𔃾- OIl . ft...C CDD)( A - 4 I < 4- 0 C) C LUV ) I < C)(. I -L =L I - >C) =~ LU;- CU "-. I -7 CiWC n Li u <E m C) mw. vi tl <LU ~J 0- C-W CI- CD C)0 Li0 ( 0 C-j C- Li w...creating a new TAPL II; when PREPMS is modifying an 14-1 Initlaii..-eand uperl f i 1,- oil TAPE 11 ,L ,, Ittempt to read Print "Creation Run" Pj_, N P C

  19. Application of Compressive Sensing to Digital Holography

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-05-01

    WITH ASSIGNED DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT. // Signature// // Signature// DAVID J. RABB BRIAN D. EWERT, Chief Program Manager...Signature// TRACY W. JOHNSTON, Chief Multispectral Sensing and Detection Division Sensors Directorate This report is published in

  20. Reading and School Achievement--Cognitive and Affective Influences; Selected Readings from the 8th Annual Spring Reading Conference at Rutgers University.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Kling, Martin, Ed.

    This conference report contains the following papers: "Ability versus Knowledge in Testing Educational Achievement" and "Knowledge vs. Ability in Achievement Testing," by Robert L. Ebel; "A Four-Domain Taxonomy for Classifying Educational Tasks and Objectives," by Bruce W. Tuckman; "On the Social Psychology of the Self-Fulfilling Prophecy: Further…

  1. Assessing and Evaluating Department of Defense Efforts to Inform, Influence, and Persuade: An Annotated Reading List

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-01-01

    reading, but the read- ings in this section may be given a lower priority. Paul W. Farris, Neil T. Bendle, Phillip E. Pfeifer, and David J. Reibstein...inform, influence, and persuade. Chip Heath and Dan Heath , Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die, New York: Random House, 2007. This

  2. Achievement Error Differences of Students with Reading versus Math Disorders

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Avitia, Maria; DeBiase, Emily; Pagirsky, Matthew; Root, Melissa M.; Howell, Meiko; Pan, Xingyu; Knupp, Tawnya; Liu, Xiaochen

    2017-01-01

    The purpose of this study was to understand and compare the types of errors students with a specific learning disability in reading and/or writing (SLD-R/W) and those with a specific learning disability in math (SLD-M) made in the areas of reading, writing, language, and mathematics. Clinical samples were selected from the norming population of…

  3. Student Perceptions of Hawaiian Values in Business Communication

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    de Pillis, Emmeline; Kim, Bryan; Thomas, Chris Allen; Kaulukukui, Guy

    2015-01-01

    Students attending a Native Hawaiian-serving institution read statements from two hypothetical job candidates. The passages had equivalent meaning, but one incorporated Hawaiian leadership values (HLV) without identifying them as such. Participants judged the HLV candidate to have lower credibility, rationality, and effectiveness, and preferred…

  4. 31 CFR 500.517 - Access to safe deposit boxes under certain conditions.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... hereby required to be filed. All reports made pursuant to this section shall bear on their face or have securely attached to them a statement reading, “this report is filed pursuant to 31 CFR 500.517”. [15 FR...

  5. Describe yourself to improve your autobiographical memory: A study in Alzheimer's disease.

    PubMed

    El Haj, Mohamad; Antoine, Pascal

    2017-03-01

    This study investigated whether retrieval of information related to conceptual self (i.e., self-images that encompass general factual and evaluative knowledge of one's identity) would improve autobiographical memory in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Participants with AD and controls were asked to retrieve autobiographical memories after providing statements to the question "Who am I? and after a control condition consisting of reading a general text. Autobiographical recall was analyzed with respect to specificity (general vs specific event), context recall (information describing the "when, where, and who" as well as affective states), and reliving (the subjective experience of recall). AD participants showed higher specificity, context recall and reliving after the "Who am I?" statements than after the text reading, and controls showed higher context recall after the former than after the latter condition. These findings highlight the relationship between self and autobiographical memory in AD and demonstrate how retrieval of information related to conceptual self may influence autobiographical memory in the disease. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  6. Multibeam Observations of Mine Burial Near Clearwater, FL, Including Comparisons to Predictions of Wave-Induced Burial

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-01-01

    IEEE JOURNAL OF OCEANIC ENGINEERING. VOL. 32. NO. 1. JANUARY 2007 103 Multibeam Observations of Mine Burial Near Clearwater, FL, Including...DISTRIBUTION/AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited 20090522023 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES IEEE Journal of Oceanic ...Z39.18 104 IEEE JOURNAL OF OCEANIC ENGINEERING. VOL. 32, NO. 1. JANUARY 2007 depth (m) 28°00’ N 27°58’ N 83°04’ W 83°02’ W 83°00’ W Fig. 1. Location

  7. Effects of Meso-Scale and Small-Scale Interactions on Global Climate. Volume I. Orographic Effects on Global Climate

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1975-02-28

    STATEMENT (ol Ih, »b.tfet »nftod in Block 30. II d/ ffa ,en( Irom Report) It. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 19. KEY WORDS (Conllnue on rev«., «ij» (/ nee» fry...given by 3-29 a^M—. K^^M^^M— ■ - - ■ ■■■■ ’■^-•—- P?B«BWWI^WW™’W"W,SIW!«W5F«^IIW»! BPP ^!^^ ..’ i •’ SSS-R-75-2556 Res(T0) L(T" - WC

  8. Air Force Academy Aeronautics Digest - Fall 1979.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-04-01

    Distribution Unlimited I7. DISTRISIUTION STATEMENT (*I the abstracte mI..d In Bloo * 25. it dfsruemi RossJ14w 1S. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES IS. KEY WORDS (Coeme n...SEARCH ALGORITHM ---- G. D. Huffman FLOW QUALITY IMPROVEMENTS IN THE USAFA TRISONIC TUNNEL 140 ----M. W . Davis, S. E. Icardi, R. W . Gallington, and J. A...times from brake 4 USAFA-TR-80- 7 tn N w ~~4 4 A - V;0 1 4( * en I4L4 ’I o 94 QN II U C,44 1; Goz !5 I • -4 !0 -44. USAFA-TR-80-7 release on the runway

  9. Memorial Day 2007 - U.S. Department of Defense Official Website

    Science.gov Websites

    Multimedia / Photos Videos Publications Bloggers DoD Websites Vietnam War Memorial. Photo by Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Molly Burgess Presidential Proclamation - George W. Bush On Memorial Day, Americans their lives for our country and our freedom. Read More Slideshow: Memorial Day Parade See below

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

    De Geronimo, G.; Fried, J.; Rehak, P.

    We present an application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) for high-resolution x-ray spectrometers (XRS). The ASIC reads out signals from pixelated silicon drift detectors (SDDs). The pixel does not have an integrated field effect transistor (FET); rather, readout is accomplished by wire-bonding the anodes to the inputs of the ASIC. The ASIC dissipates 32 mW, and offers 16 channels of low-noise charge amplification, high-order shaping with baseline stabilization, discrimination, a novel pile-up rejector, and peak detection with an analog memory. The readout is sparse and based on custom low-power tristatable low-voltage differential signaling (LPT-LVDS). A unit of 64 SDD pixels, read outmore » by four ASICs, covers an area of 12.8 cm{sup 2} and dissipates with the sensor biased about 15 mW/cm{sup 2}. As a tile-based system, the 64-pixel units cover a large detection area. Our preliminary measurements at -44 C show a FWHM of 145 eV at the 5.9 keV peak of a {sup 55}Fe source, and less than 80 eV on a test-pulse line at 200 eV.« less

  11. Quick-low-density parity check and dynamic threshold voltage optimization in 1X nm triple-level cell NAND flash memory with comprehensive analysis of endurance, retention-time, and temperature variation

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Doi, Masafumi; Tokutomi, Tsukasa; Hachiya, Shogo; Kobayashi, Atsuro; Tanakamaru, Shuhei; Ning, Sheyang; Ogura Iwasaki, Tomoko; Takeuchi, Ken

    2016-08-01

    NAND flash memory’s reliability degrades with increasing endurance, retention-time and/or temperature. After a comprehensive evaluation of 1X nm triple-level cell (TLC) NAND flash, two highly reliable techniques are proposed. The first proposal, quick low-density parity check (Quick-LDPC), requires only one cell read in order to accurately estimate a bit-error rate (BER) that includes the effects of temperature, write and erase (W/E) cycles and retention-time. As a result, 83% read latency reduction is achieved compared to conventional AEP-LDPC. Also, W/E cycling is extended by 100% compared with conventional Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem (BCH) error-correcting code (ECC). The second proposal, dynamic threshold voltage optimization (DVO) has two parts, adaptive V Ref shift (AVS) and V TH space control (VSC). AVS reduces read error and latency by adaptively optimizing the reference voltage (V Ref) based on temperature, W/E cycles and retention-time. AVS stores the optimal V Ref’s in a table in order to enable one cell read. VSC further improves AVS by optimizing the voltage margins between V TH states. DVO reduces BER by 80%.

  12. Early Diagnosis and Intervention Strategies for Post-Traumatic Heterotopic Ossification in Severely Injured Extremities

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-12-01

    the study for the presence or absence of ectopic bone formation at the indicated time points post injury (Table 1.). 8 Table 1. Incidence of HO...1 Award Number: W81XWH-12-2-0119 TITLE: Early Diagnosis and Intervention Strategies for Post -Traumatic Heterotopic Ossification in Severely...2016 TYPE OF REPORT: Final PREPARED FOR: U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT

  13. Draft Environmental Impact Report and Environmental Impact Statement. Syar Industries, Inc. Mining Use Permit Application, Reclamation Plan, and Section 404 Permit Application

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-07-01

    with Special Reference to Warm Springs Creek. Appendix B in: Stewart, S.B., and D.W. Pri, Notes on the Mihilakawna Porno of Dry CreeL Mimeo suppl...34The Ethnography of the Dry Creek Porno ." Report of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 2. Ibid. 3. Ibid. 4. Bill Cox, Departnent of Fish and Game...trend, and the western Porno languages subsequently developed here.1 2 The development of these western languages coincident with the recent ethnographic

  14. Pilgrims sailing the Titanic: plausibility effects on memory for misinformation.

    PubMed

    Hinze, Scott R; Slaten, Daniel G; Horton, William S; Jenkins, Ryan; Rapp, David N

    2014-02-01

    People rely on information they read even when it is inaccurate (Marsh, Meade, & Roediger, Journal of Memory and Language 49:519-536, 2003), but how ubiquitous is this phenomenon? In two experiments, we investigated whether this tendency to encode and rely on inaccuracies from text might be influenced by the plausibility of misinformation. In Experiment 1, we presented stories containing inaccurate plausible statements (e.g., "The Pilgrims' ship was the Godspeed"), inaccurate implausible statements (e.g., . . . the Titanic), or accurate statements (e.g., . . . the Mayflower). On a subsequent test of general knowledge, participants relied significantly less on implausible than on plausible inaccuracies from the texts but continued to rely on accurate information. In Experiment 2, we replicated these results with the addition of a think-aloud procedure to elicit information about readers' noticing and evaluative processes for plausible and implausible misinformation. Participants indicated more skepticism and less acceptance of implausible than of plausible inaccuracies. In contrast, they often failed to notice, completely ignored, and at times even explicitly accepted the misinformation provided by plausible lures. These results offer insight into the conditions under which reliance on inaccurate information occurs and suggest potential mechanisms that may underlie reported misinformation effects.

  15. LOGMARS (Logistics Applications of Automated Marking and Reading Symbols) Clearinghouse. Applications Directory.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-09-01

    iD- A1t62 3 ? LOOM S (LOGISTICS APPLIC TIONS OF UTO NTED M ARING 1/2 WARND READING SYMBOLS) C EARINGHOUSE APPLICATIONS DIRECTORY(U) DEFENSE GENERAL...Rubin Patterson, SC, USN, DLA DMECSO, (AV) 695-4787. 1 Encl T. R. WILD Captain, SC, U. S . Navy Chief, DLA Depot Mechanization Support Office cc; . DLA-OW...DIc.-TRIBUTrION: DLA-L DLA-Z DLA-ZS DLA- S DLA-WS DGSC-T * DPSC-C DCSC-T DFSC-W DESC-L - DESC-Q * DISC-LO * DDOU-T DDt4P--T - - DDTC-T DDMT-T DRMS DSAC

  16. Actions speak louder than words: Outsiders' perceptions of diversity mixed messages.

    PubMed

    Windscheid, Leon; Bowes-Sperry, Lynn; Kidder, Deborah L; Cheung, Ho Kwan; Morner, Michèle; Lievens, Filip

    2016-09-01

    To attract a gender diverse workforce, many employers use diversity statements to publicly signal that they value gender diversity. However, this often represents a misalignment between words and actions (i.e., a diversity mixed message) because most organizations are male dominated, especially in board positions. We conducted 3 studies to investigate the potentially indirect effect of such diversity mixed messages through perceived behavioral integrity on employer attractiveness. In Study 1, following a 2 × 2 design, participants (N = 225) were either shown a pro gender diversity statement or a neutral statement, in combination with a gender diverse board (4 men and 4 women) or a uniform all-male board (8 men). Participants' perceived behavioral integrity of the organization was assessed. In Study 2, participants (N = 251) either read positive or negative reviews of the organization's behavioral integrity. Employer attractiveness was then assessed. Study 3 (N = 427) investigated the impact of board gender composition on perceived behavioral integrity and employer attractiveness using a bootstrapping procedure. Both the causal-chain design of Study 1 and 2, as well as the significance test of the proposed indirect relationship in Study 3, revealed that a diversity mixed message negatively affected an organization's perceived behavioral integrity, and low behavioral integrity in turn negatively impacted employer attractiveness. In Study 3, there was also evidence for a tipping point (more than 1 woman on the board was needed) with regard to participants' perceptions of the organization's behavioral integrity. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).

  17. Detection of Early lung Cancer Among Military Personnel (DECAMP)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-10-01

    Pulmonology Research Symposium; 2014 October; Austin , TX . Jiwani, A. Z., Maple, E., Mahon, I., Apgar, C., Atwood, C.W., Battaile, J.T., Browning Jr., R...American College of Chest Physicians Conference; 2014 October; Austin , TX . Billatos E, Muse M, Jiwani A, Mahon I, Maple E, Atwood C.W., Apgar C...Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited

  18. Mississippi CaP HBCU Undergraduate Research Training Program

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-11-01

    AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-14-1-0151 TITLE: Mississippi CaP HBCU Undergraduate Research Training Program PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR: Christian Gomez...Final PREPARED FOR: U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for...2017 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Mississippi CaP HBCU Undergraduate Research Training Program 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER W81XWH-14-1-0151 5c

  19. PVAMU/XULA/BCM Summer Prostate Cancer Research Program

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2017-10-01

    AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-15-1-0677 TITLE: PVAMU/XULA/BCM Summer Prostate Cancer Research Program PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR: Nancy L. Weigel...Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited...PVAMU/XULA/BCM Summer Prostate Cancer Research Program 5b. GRANT NUMBER W81XWH-15-1-0677 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR(S) Nancy L. Weigel

  20. The effects of self-induced mood states on behavior and physiological arousal.

    PubMed

    Matheny, K B; Blue, F R

    1977-10-01

    The effects of reading emotionally loaded statements on behavioral tasks and physiological measures were investigated. Statements were constructed to arouse elation, depression, or neutrality. Ss were both pre- and posttested on Writing Speed, Reaction Time, Decision Time, and Spontaneous Verbalizations. Base rates were obtained for heart rate and galvanic skin response. Elation Ss significantly outperformed both Neutral and Depression Ss on the Reaction Time task. Scores for Neutral Ss fell between those of Elation and Depression Ss on three of the four behavioral measures. No significant differneces were found on the physiological measures.

  1. Quantifying risk: verbal probability expressions in Spanish and English.

    PubMed

    Cohn, Lawrence D; Vázquez, Miguel E Cortés; Alvarez, Adolfo

    2009-01-01

    To investigate how Spanish- and English-speaking adults interpret verbal probability expressions presented in Spanish and English (eg, posiblemente and possibly, respectively). Professional translators and university students from México and the United States read a series of likelihood statements in Spanish or English and then estimated the certainty implied by each statement. Several terms that are regarded as cognates in English and Spanish elicited significantly different likelihood ratings. Several language equivalencies were also identified. These findings provide the first reported evaluation of Spanish likelihood terms for use in risk communications directed towards monolingual and bilingual Spanish speakers.

  2. Space for Mankind's Benefit.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    von Puttkamer, Jesco, Ed.; McCullough, Thomas J., Ed.

    Presented are the proceedings of the first international Congress on "Space for Mankind's Benefit" organized by the Huntsville Association of Technical Societies and held November 15-19, 1971, at Huntsville, Alabama. Following introductory statements, a total of 45 articles read in 10 sessions are incorporated. The session headings are: Man in…

  3. Nothing Human

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Wharram, C. C.

    2014-01-01

    In this essay C. C. Wharram argues that Terence's concept of translation as a form of "contamination" anticipates recent developments in philosophy, ecology, and translation studies. Placing these divergent fields of inquiry into dialogue enables us read Terence's well-known statement "I am a human being--I deem nothing…

  4. User-Oriented Project Accounting System.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Hess, Larry G.; Alcorn, Lisa S.

    1990-01-01

    The project accounting system used by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign School of Chemical Sciences exchanges financial data with the campus' central accounting system and allows integration of this information with user-entered data to produce an easily read, fully obligated project accounting statement for the budget and period…

  5. Pairing Linguistic and Music Intelligences

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    DiEdwardo, MaryAnn Pasda

    2005-01-01

    This article describes how music in the language classroom setting can be a catalyst for developing reading, writing, and understanding skills. Studies suggest that pairing music and linguistic intelligences in the college classroom improves students' grades and abilities to compose theses statements for research papers in courses that emphasize…

  6. Reporting of Navy Sponsor Owned Material Stored at the Naval Air Systems Command Activities

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-04-23

    Who Should Read This Report and Why? Navy personnel responsible for reporting the amount and value of Sponsor Owned Material stored at Navy facilities should read this report. It discusses the financial reporting and control of Sponsor Owned Material stored by Naval Air Systems Command activities. Background. The Department of the Navy reported $58.8 billion of Operating Materials and Supplies on its first quarter FY 2006 financial statements. This included a sub-category of supplies and materials termed Sponsor Owned Material. The Navy defines Sponsor

  7. 77 FR 46098 - Statement of Organization, Functions and Delegations of Authority

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-08-02

    ....W. Bill Young Cell Transplantation Program to increase the number of unrelated blood stem cell transplants and improve the outcomes of blood stem cell transplants; (3) administers the National Cord Blood...

  8. 75 FR 28612 - Environmental Impact Statements; Notice of Availability

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-05-21

    ... Counties, OR and Adams and Nez Perce Counties, ID, Wait Period Ends: 06/21/2010, Contact: Robert W. Rock.... EIS No. 20100181, Final EIS, DOE, MS, Kemper County Integrated Gasification Combined-Cycle (IGCC...

  9. Aging-Resilient Associations between the Arcuate Fasciculus and Vocabulary Knowledge: Microstructure or Morphology?

    PubMed Central

    Vaden, Kenneth I.; Cute, Stephanie L.; Yeatman, Jason D.; Dougherty, Robert F.

    2016-01-01

    Vocabulary knowledge is one of the few cognitive functions that is relatively preserved in older adults, but the reasons for this relative preservation have not been well delineated. We tested the hypothesis that individual differences in vocabulary knowledge are influenced by arcuate fasciculus macrostructure (i.e., shape and volume) properties that remain stable during the aging process, rather than white matter microstructure that demonstrates age-related declines. Vocabulary was not associated with age compared to pronounced age-related declines in cognitive processing speed across 106 healthy adults (19.92–88.29 years) who participated in this neuroimaging experiment. Fractional anisotropy in the left arcuate fasciculus was significantly related to individual variability in vocabulary. This effect was present despite marked age-related differences in a T1-weighted/T2-weighted ratio (T1w/T2w) estimate of myelin that were observed throughout the left arcuate fasciculus and associated with age-related differences in cognitive processing speed. However, atypical patterns of arcuate fasciculus morphology or macrostructure were associated with decreased vocabulary knowledge. These results suggest that deterioration of tissue in the arcuate fasciculus occurs with normal aging, while having limited impact on tract organization that underlies individual differences in the acquisition and retrieval of lexical and semantic information. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Vocabulary knowledge is resilient to widespread age-related declines in brain structure that limit other cognitive functions. We tested the hypothesis that arcuate fasciculus morphology, which supports the development of reading skills that bolster vocabulary, could explain this relative preservation. We disentangled (1) the effects of age-related declines in arcuate microstructure (mean diffusivity; myelin content estimate) that predicted cognitive processing speed but not vocabulary, from (2) relatively stable arcuate macrostructure (shape/volume) that explained significant variance in an age-independent association between fractional anisotropy and vocabulary. This latter result may reflect differences in fiber trajectory and organization that are resilient to aging. We propose that developmental sculpting of the arcuate fasciculus determines acquisition, storage, and access of lexical information across the adult lifespan. PMID:27383595

  10. Frequent Statement and Dereference Elimination for Imperative and Object-Oriented Distributed Programs

    PubMed Central

    El-Zawawy, Mohamed A.

    2014-01-01

    This paper introduces new approaches for the analysis of frequent statement and dereference elimination for imperative and object-oriented distributed programs running on parallel machines equipped with hierarchical memories. The paper uses languages whose address spaces are globally partitioned. Distributed programs allow defining data layout and threads writing to and reading from other thread memories. Three type systems (for imperative distributed programs) are the tools of the proposed techniques. The first type system defines for every program point a set of calculated (ready) statements and memory accesses. The second type system uses an enriched version of types of the first type system and determines which of the ready statements and memory accesses are used later in the program. The third type system uses the information gather so far to eliminate unnecessary statement computations and memory accesses (the analysis of frequent statement and dereference elimination). Extensions to these type systems are also presented to cover object-oriented distributed programs. Two advantages of our work over related work are the following. The hierarchical style of concurrent parallel computers is similar to the memory model used in this paper. In our approach, each analysis result is assigned a type derivation (serves as a correctness proof). PMID:24892098

  11. Anesthesiology Journal club assessment by means of semantic changes.

    PubMed

    Vieira, Joaquim Edson; Torres, Marcelo Luís Abramides; Pose, Regina Albanese; Auler, José Otávio Costa Junior

    2014-01-01

    the interactive approach of a journal club has been described in the medical education literature. The aim of this investigation is to present an assessment of journal club as a tool to address the question whether residents read more and critically. this study reports the performance of medical residents in anesthesiology from the Clinics Hospital - University of São Paulo Medical School. All medical residents were invited to answer five questions derived from discussed papers. The answer sheet consisted of an affirmative statement with a Likert type scale (totally disagree-disagree-not sure-agree-totally agree), each related to one of the chosen articles. The results were evaluated by means of item analysis - difficulty index and discrimination power. residents filled one hundred and seventy three evaluations in the months of December 2011 (n=51), July 2012 (n=66) and December 2012 (n=56). The first exam presented all items with straight statement, second and third exams presented mixed items. Separating "totally agree" from "agree" increased the difficulty indices, but did not improve the discrimination power. the use of a journal club assessment with straight and inverted statements and by means of five points scale for agreement has been shown to increase its item difficulty and discrimination power. This may reflect involvement either with the reading or the discussion during the journal meeting. Copyright © 2013 Sociedade Brasileira de Anestesiologia. Published by Elsevier Editora Ltda. All rights reserved.

  12. Effects of disclosing financial interests on attitudes toward clinical research.

    PubMed

    Weinfurt, Kevin P; Hall, Mark A; Dinan, Michaela A; DePuy, Venita; Friedman, Joëlle Y; Allsbrook, Jennifer S; Sugarman, Jeremy

    2008-06-01

    The effects of disclosing financial interests to potential research participants are not well understood. To examine the effects of financial interest disclosures on potential research participants' attitudes toward clinical research. Computerized experiment conducted with 3,623 adults in the United States with either diabetes mellitus or asthma, grouped by lesser and greater severity. Respondents read a description of a hypothetical clinical trial relevant to their diagnosis that included a financial disclosure statement. Respondents received 1 of 5 disclosure statements. Willingness to participate in the hypothetical clinical trial, relative importance of information about the financial interest, change in trust after reading the disclosure statement, surprise regarding the financial interest, and perceived effect of the financial interest on the quality of the clinical trial. Willingness to participate in the hypothetical clinical trial did not differ substantially among the types of financial disclosures. Respondents viewed the disclosed information as less important than other factors in deciding to participate. Disclosures were associated with some respondents trusting the researchers less, although trust among some respondents increased. Most respondents were not surprised to learn of financial interests. Researchers owning equity were viewed as more troubling than researchers who were compensated for the costs of research through per capita payments. Aside from a researcher holding an equity interest, the disclosure to potential research participants of financial interests in research, as recommended in recent policies, is unlikely to affect willingness to participate in research.

  13. Remarkable Retellings, Super Summaries

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Reading Teacher, 2010

    2010-01-01

    Retelling and summarizing are great ways to get children involved in what they're reading--and thinking about what they understand in texts. Summarizing is a more complex task than retelling. Creating a formal summary usually involves reducing a text by about a third, writing a topic statement, eliminating redundant and unimportant details, and…

  14. Specification for Qualification and Certification for Level II - Advanced Welders.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    American Welding Society, Miami, FL.

    This document defines the requirements and program for the American Welding Society (AWS) to certify advanced-level welders through an evaluation process entailing performance qualification and practical knowledge tests requiring the use of advanced reading, computational, and manual skills. The following items are included: statement of the…

  15. Specification for Qualification and Certification for Level III - Expert Welders.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    American Welding Society, Miami, FL.

    This document defines the requirements and program for the American Welding Society to certify expert welders through an evaluation process entailing performance qualification and practical knowledge tests requiring the use of advanced reading, computational, and manual skills. The following items are included: statement of the standard's scope;…

  16. Soft Drinks, Mind Reading, and Number Theory

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Schultz, Kyle T.

    2009-01-01

    Proof is a central component of mathematicians' work, used for verification, explanation, discovery, and communication. Unfortunately, high school students' experiences with proof are often limited to verifying mathematical statements or relationships that are already known to be true. As a result, students often fail to grasp the true nature of…

  17. HEARING, LANGUAGE, AND SPEECH DISORDERS. NINDB RESEARCH PROFILE NUMBER 4.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    National Inst. of Neurological Diseases and Blindness (NIH), Bethesda, MD.

    AS PART OF HIS ANNUAL STATEMENT TO CONGRESS, THE DIRECTOR OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGICAL DISEASES AND BLINDNESS DESCRIBES RESEARCH ACTIVITIES IN SPEECH AND HEARING DISORDERS. THIS REPORT SUMMARIZES INFORMATION CONCERNING THE PREVALENCE AND CAUSES OF COMMUNICATIVE DISORDERS (HEARING, SPEECH, LANGUAGE, VOICE, AND READING) IN CHILDREN AND…

  18. 12 CFR 608.808 - Right to offer to repay claim.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-01-01

    ... explanation. The statement shall recite that the written explanation was read and understood before execution... would create a financial hardship, the FCA shall analyze the debtor's financial condition. The FCA may... financial hardship for the debtor. The written agreement shall set forth the amount and frequency of...

  19. Relation of number and size of fires to fire-season weather indexes in western Washington and western Oregon.

    Treesearch

    Owen P. Cramer

    1959-01-01

    Hard-hitting fire-fighting crews and effective fire prevention held down this year's fire losses despite critical weather." Have you ever read such a statement and wondered how much of the apparently good record was really due to weather conditions?

  20. Predictors of Quality Verbal Engagement in Third-Grade Literature Discussions

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Young, Chase

    2014-01-01

    This study investigates how reading ability and personality traits predict the quality of verbal discussions in peer-led literature circles. Third grade literature discussions were recorded, transcribed, and coded. The coded statements and questions were quantified into a quality of engagement score. Through multiple linear regression, the…

  1. Beyond Literacy in an Uncertain World.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Delker, Paul V.

    Media statements and pronouncements by leaders in various sectors throughout the nation confirm that literacy still means the ability to work with the printed or written word. It is also evident that the term literacy includes more than reading. Literacy encompasses writing, speaking and listening, computing, and even problem-solving skills.…

  2. The Australian Early Childhood Curriculum and a Cosmopolitan Imaginary

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Millei, Zsuzsa; Jones, Alexandra

    2014-01-01

    In our interconnected and interdependent world, national early childhood education and care (ECEC) policies can no longer be made or read independently from their global contexts. Policy statements often display a global awareness that construct notions about "the child" as a "global citizen", particular relations to others and…

  3. Normal Impingement of a Supersonic Jet on a Plane - A Basic Study of Shock-Interference Heating

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1975-12-01

    George Xaler, Pail Zone Dr. H. Lew 28i0 Mr. J. W. Paust A . Mkrtallucci W. Daskin J. D. Cresaswell J. pvttu" J. Cor%.nto C. l!arri, F. GCOrge1. 4...NSWC/WOL/TR 75195 low zE ~ 1 WHITE OAK LABORATORY SNORMAL IMPINGEMENT OF A SUPERSONIC JET ON A PLANE - A BASIC STUDY OF SHOCK-INTERFERENCE HEATING...OF THIS PAGE ("oin DomejaE’ored) __________________ REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE READ INSTRUCTIONS4 2. OV ACE.~ CONTRAT O0GRN NUMBER~ a NS. P ER OR M I

  4. Total RNA Sequencing Analysis of DCIS Progressing to Invasive Breast Cancer

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-09-01

    AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-14-1-0080 TITLE: Total RNA Sequencing Analysis of DCIS Progressing to Invasive Breast Cancer. PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR...PREPARED FOR: U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public Release...SUBTITLE Total RNA Sequencing Analysis of DCIS Progressing to Invasive Breast Cancer. 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER W81XWH-14-1-0080 GRANT11489

  5. Targeting Cell Polarity Machinery to Exhaust Breast Cancer Stem Cells

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-10-01

    AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-15-1-0644 TITLE: Targeting Cell Polarity Machinery to Exhaust Breast Cancer Stem Cells PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR: Chun-Ju...U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public Release...Targeting Cell Polarity Machinery to Exhaust Breast Cancer Stem Cells 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER 5b. GRANT NUMBER W81XWH-15-1-0644 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT

  6. Installation Restoration of Rocky Mountain Arsenal, Pilot Containment Operations, Final Environmental Impact Statement, Part 1.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1977-02-01

    0. . IIU w 00 Z -J-. z 00 D 0 0 !9 I- A, On ~ 0w NON 0~ CoQ UU 00 co qc 00NC r-.N) 0 Lf) C*12 ICD U) o C 14 N0 WU Lo LC LX...for carcinogenic, mutagenic or teratogenic activity in vitro. One report (17) stated that DIMP does not inhibit the enzyme cholinesterase, although no

  7. Innovative Methods for Estimating Densities and Detection Probabilities of Secretive Reptiles Including Invasive Constrictors and Rare Upland Snakes

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2018-01-30

    1  Department of Defense Legacy Resource Management Program Agreement # W9132T-14-2-0010 ( Project # 14-754) Innovative Methods for Estimating...Upland Snakes NA 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER NA 6. AUTHOR(S) 5d. PROJECT NUMBER John D. Willson, Ph.D. 14-754 Shannon Pittman, Ph.D. 5e. TASK NUMBER...STATEMENT Publically available 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES NA 14. ABSTRACT This project demonstrates the broad applicability of a novel simulation

  8. Proposed Navy Software Acquisition Improvement Strategy

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-03-16

    Production and Deployment Operations and Support PRR IOC FOC OTRR DoD/ASN/RDA Policies Call for Gov’t SMEs to Define System Req’s, Support Milestone Reviews...of the SW; but with Gov’t Software SME oversight and insight W o A B C 12 Statement A: Approved for Public Release; Distribution is Unlimited 12...Comp, Segment levels is not sufficient to ensure & meet OA goalsSegment Level CSCIs CSCs Level of De SW CSCI 2 SW CSCI 1 SW CSCI ### Gov’t SW SMEs

  9. F-35A Training Basing Environmental Impact Statement. Volume 2. Appendix A through Appendix C

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-06-01

    Powels, W.A. Russell, G.D. Therres, and J.J. Pottie. 1999. The Influence of Weapons- Testing Noise on Bald Eagle Behavior. Journal of Raptor Research ...gronnrl missions. The oircran. was designed to s tqJplcrncnt and eventually replace legacy aircraft as woll as complement tho air-to-air missio n...09; 8:45am] BILUNG CODE 5001-05-P DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE Department of the Navy Meeting of the Ocean Research and Resources Advisory Panel

  10. Reauthorization of Expiring Federal Elementary and Secondary Education Programs. Volume 5. Adult Education. Hearing on H.R. 5, before the Subcommittee on Elementary, Secondary, and Vocational Education of the Committee on Education and Labor. House of Representatives, One Hundredth Congress, First Session.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Congress of the U.S., Washington, DC. House Committee on Education and Labor.

    These statements, letters, and supplemental materials were provided by: (1) Janet Jones Ballard, Assault on Literacy Program; (2) Representative Jim Cooper, Tennessee; (3) Mitch Snyder, Center for Creative Non-Violence; (4) Garrett Murphy, Division of Adult and Continuing Education Programs, New York; (5) W. Wilson Goode, mayor of Philadelphia;…

  11. Proceedings of Interservice/Industry Training Systems and Education Conference (15th) Held November 29 - December 2, 1993

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-12-02

    community) or not knowing MPT analysis evaluates human-in- loop costs and how to exploit data that were available to represent capabilities w;th intent...specification b. There is no closed loop ; the process may statements. An agency is preparing a System Specification with minimal security information...Item is one which musk alweys be provided by the CMI system to be AICC compliant. Core Items are those which a lesson may always depend upon being

  12. Calculations of Intersection Cross-Slip Activation Energies in FCC Metals Using Nudged Elastic Band Method

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-08-01

    PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR( S ) 5d. PROJECT NUMBER 5e. TASK NUMBER 5f. WORK UNIT NUMBER 7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME( S ) AND ADDRESS(ES...AGENCY NAME( S ) AND ADDRESS(ES) 10. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S ACRONYM( S ) 11. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S REPORT NUMBER( S ) 12. DISTRIBUTION/AVAILABILITY STATEMENT...References [1] Puschl W. Prog Mater Sci 2002;47:415. [2] Jackson PJ. Prog Mater Sci 1985;29:139. [3] Rao S , Parthasarathy TA, Woodward C. Philos Mag A

  13. Saugus River and Tributaries Flood Damage Reduction Study; Lynn, Malden, Revere and Saugus, Massachusetts. Section 2. Final Environmental Impact Statement and Final Environmental Impact Report

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-12-01

    Growth Commercial Fishing and Commercial Fishing 91 Fleet Q Employment 92 R Population and Community Growth , Including 92 Displacement S Public Facilities...Community Growth , Including 128 Displacement S Public Facilities and Services 129 T Transportation 129 U Navigation 130 V Recreation and Open Space 133 W... Growth and more intensive development in this already densely built-up area, plus rising sea levels, guarantee the continuation of a dangerous

  14. Outpatient Nonavailability Statement Procedures, Health Services Command Catchment Areas, First Quarter, FY 1993 with Comparisons to Fourth Quarter, FY 1992

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-02-12

    oldg 0 0 0 ’e e -’O0 0IL 40 U I- -; - .. j = .- -C 4, -- -z NN 0 Z’’-XLU wKwc I-" ,, G . w aL . 3I-IA Lul-U I- A w -AA! _j w >" 4 cc I of ’ AccA ZO-CK...34 I" 3-m r. U, 9 x . I. U0 U, bIll - r - IdM lieU ; r-- ee s’ sI aa aila I *E UM UM " I-- ua a M. 1- 05 1f- $-- a F6 - m in onI to lI

  15. Optimization of an Internally Finned Rotating Heat Pipe.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-09-01

    ICALC.GT~lI GO TO 1.0 C ** INPUT MODE *** C ELEMENT CONNECTIVITIES C READ (5,-420) NELOSNPANBAN WRITE (6,430) NELNSNl ,NBAN READ (5,440) ( IELt (ICOR(IEL,1...I=1,3),IEL=1,NEL) CWRITE (6,450) C wRITE(6,251) ( IELt (ICOR(IEL,IbtI=1,3), IELINEL) C C TihE CONDENSER GEOMETRY C READ (5,46C) CLI CANGL,RBASEI R21

  16. Electrophysiological and behavioral measures of the influence of literal and figurative contextual constraints on proverb comprehension.

    PubMed

    Ferretti, Todd R; Schwint, Christopher A; Katz, Albert N

    2007-04-01

    Proverbs tend to have meanings that are true both literally and figuratively (i.e., Lightning really doesn't strike the same place twice). Consequently, discourse contexts that invite a literal reading of a proverb should provide more conceptual overlap with the proverb, resulting in more rapid processing, than will contexts biased towards a non-literal reading. Despite this, previous research has failed to find the predicted processing advantage in reading times for familiar proverbs when presented in a literally biasing context. We investigate this issue further by employing both ERP methodology and a self-paced reading task and, second, by creating an item set that controls for problems with items employed in earlier studies. Our results indicate that although people do not take longer to read proverbs in the literally and proverbially biasing contexts, people have less difficulty integrating the statements in literal than figurative contexts, as shown by the ERP data. These differences emerge at the third word of the proverbs.

  17. Reading habits and attitude toward medical humanities of basic science students in a medical college in Western Nepal.

    PubMed

    Shankar, P Ravi; Dubey, Arun K; Mishra, P; Upadhyay, Dinesh K

    2008-01-01

    The Manipal College of Medical Sciences, Pokhara, Nepal, admits students from Nepal, India, Sri Lanka, and other countries to the undergraduate medical course. The present study sought to describe and explore reading habits of medical students during the first three semesters and obtain their views regarding inclusion of medical humanities in the course. The authors introduced a voluntary module in medical humanities to the fifth- and sixth-semester students. Gender, semester, and nationality of respondents were noted. Commonly read noncourse books (fiction and nonfiction) were noted. Student attitudes toward medical humanities were studied using a set of nine statements. A total of 165 of the 220 students (75%) participated. Indians followed by Nepalese were the most common nationalities. Romantic fiction and biography were most commonly read. The Alchemist and The Da Vinci Code were commonly read books. Students were in favor of inclusion of medical humanities in the curriculum. The median total score was 30 (maximum possible score = 45). Students read widely beyond their course. The possibility of introducing medical humanities in the curriculum should be explored.

  18. Citizen Warrior: Major General Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain a Study in Command Leadership

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-04-29

    1999) p. 303. 44 Wallace, p. 68. 45 James E. Kelly, Generals in Bronze, ed. William B. Styple, read Patrick Cullen (Ashland, Blackstone Audio, Inc...Bronze, ed. William B. Styple, read Patrick Cullen. Ashland, Blackstone Audio, Inc., 2008. Knott, Steven W. “Knowledge Must Become Capability

  19. Reading and Seeing Themselves: Boys of Color and Textual (Non-)Connection

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Sciurba, Katie

    2011-01-01

    The discourse on multicultural literature has focused on providing children of color opportunities to "see themselves" in the texts they read. Since the 1920s, advocates like W.E.B. DuBois have stressed that "visibility" in literature fosters positive psychological development among underrepresented groups of children, in…

  20. Feasibility of ultra-wideband SAW RFID tags meeting FCC rules.

    PubMed

    Härmä, Sanna; Plessky, Victor P; Li, Xianyi; Hartogh, Paul

    2009-04-01

    We discuss the feasibility of surface acoustic wave (SAW) radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags that rely on ultra-wideband (UWB) technology. We propose a design of a UWB SAW tag, carry out numerical experiments on the device performance, and study signal processing in the system. We also present experimental results for the proposed device and estimate the potentially achievable reading distance. UWB SAW tags will have an extremely small chip size (<0.5 x 1 mm(2)) and a low cost. They also can provide a large number of different codes. The estimated read range for UWB SAW tags is about 2 m with a reader radiating as low as <0.1 mW power levels with an extremely low duty factor.

  1. Low-power embedded read-only memory using atom switch and silicon-on-thin-buried-oxide transistor

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Sakamoto, Toshitsugu; Tada, Munehiro; Tsuji, Yukihide; Makiyama, Hideki; Hasegawa, Takumi; Yamamoto, Yoshiki; Okanishi, Shinobu; Banno, Naoki; Miyamura, Makoto; Okamoto, Koichiro; Iguchi, Noriyuki; Ogasahara, Yasuhiro; Oda, Hidekazu; Kamohara, Shiro; Yamagata, Yasushi; Sugii, Nobuyuki; Hada, Hiromitsu

    2015-04-01

    We developed an atom-switch read-only memory (ROM) fabricated on silicon-on-thin-buried-oxide (SOTB) for use in a low-power microcontroller for the first time. An atom switch with a low programming voltage and large ON/OFF conductance ratio is suitable for low-power nonvolatile memory. The atom-switch ROM using an SOTB transistor uses a 0.34-1.2 V operating voltage and 12 µA/MHz active current (or 4.5 µW/MHz active power). Furthermore, the sleep current is as low as 0.4 µA when a body bias voltage is applied to the SOTB.

  2. Competing Cues: Older Adults Rely on Knowledge in the Face of Fluency

    PubMed Central

    Brashier, Nadia M.; Umanath, Sharda; Cabeza, Roberto; Marsh, Elizabeth J.

    2017-01-01

    Consumers regularly encounter repeated false claims in political and marketing campaigns, but very little empirical work addresses their impact among older adults. Repeated statements feel easier to process, and thus more truthful, than new ones (i.e., illusory truth). When judging truth, older adults’ accumulated general knowledge may offset this perception of fluency. In two experiments, participants read statements that contradicted information stored in memory; a post-experimental knowledge check confirmed what individual participants knew. Unlike young adults, older adults exhibited illusory truth only when they lacked knowledge about claims. This interaction between knowledge and fluency extends dual-process theories of aging. PMID:28333505

  3. Team Training and Evaluation Strategies: A State-of-Art Review

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1976-06-01

    W . Tornow , Executive...8217■-’’-■■ ■■-■■;■■"■’’•’■’:•■■■," -.: IP^^^^T- W ^^PIIW’^ W !^?^: ■’ ■ ■ I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Special Report SR-ED 76-11 O...Room 200 Towson, MD 21204 READ INSTRUCTIONS BEFORE COMPLETING FORM 3. RECIPIENT’S CATALOG NUMBER W TTl B. CONTRACT OR GRANT

  4. A 6.45 μW Self-Powered SoC With Integrated Energy-Harvesting Power Management and ULP Asymmetric Radios for Portable Biomedical Systems.

    PubMed

    Roy, Abhishek; Klinefelter, Alicia; Yahya, Farah B; Chen, Xing; Gonzalez-Guerrero, Luisa Patricia; Lukas, Christopher J; Kamakshi, Divya Akella; Boley, James; Craig, Kyle; Faisal, Muhammad; Oh, Seunghyun; Roberts, Nathan E; Shakhsheer, Yousef; Shrivastava, Aatmesh; Vasudevan, Dilip P; Wentzloff, David D; Calhoun, Benton H

    2015-12-01

    This paper presents a batteryless system-on-chip (SoC) that operates off energy harvested from indoor solar cells and/or thermoelectric generators (TEGs) on the body. Fabricated in a commercial 0.13 μW process, this SoC sensing platform consists of an integrated energy harvesting and power management unit (EH-PMU) with maximum power point tracking, multiple sensing modalities, programmable core and a low power microcontroller with several hardware accelerators to enable energy-efficient digital signal processing, ultra-low-power (ULP) asymmetric radios for wireless transmission, and a 100 nW wake-up radio. The EH-PMU achieves a peak end-to-end efficiency of 75% delivering power to a 100 μA load. In an example motion detection application, the SoC reads data from an accelerometer through SPI, processes it, and sends it over the radio. The SPI and digital processing consume only 2.27 μW, while the integrated radio consumes 4.18 μW when transmitting at 187.5 kbps for a total of 6.45 μW.

  5. An Exploratory Survey of Teachers' Attitudes toward Sex-Stereotyping.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Minix, Nancy A.; And Others

    This survey examined the attitudes of teachers in southwestern Kentucky toward sex-stereotyping in the classroom. A random sample of 35 teachers of grades kindergarten through adult completed a written survey instrument that asked them to read statements regarding sex-stereotyping and to rate themselves regarding their own classroom practices.…

  6. 75 FR 80821 - Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for Office of Management and Budget Review...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-12-23

    ... statement to read: Three comments were received that expressed support for the research and recommended... design. Specifically, we agree that the study design should include the variables of age, education... another study (FDA-2009-N-0263 (January 5, 2010), ``Presentation of Quantitative Effectiveness and Risk...

  7. Intelligence: A Factor in the Understanding and Appreciation of Editorial Satire.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Gruner, Charles R.

    A study involving 59 undergraduate speech communication students investigated relationships between intelligence, understanding of editorial satire, and appreciation of satire. The students were asked to read three satirical essays and then to pick one of five statements that best described the thesis as intended by the author. Then each satire…

  8. How Important Is Where You Start? Early Mathematics Knowledge and Later School Success

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Claessens, Amy; Engel, Mimi

    2013-01-01

    Background: Children's early skills are essential for their later success in school. Recent evidence highlights the importance of early mathematics, relative to reading and socioemotional skills, for elementary school achievement. Key advocacy groups for both early childhood and mathematics education have issued position statements on the…

  9. Spaces and Places for Disrupting Thinking about Inclusive Education in "Hard Times"

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Winter, Christine

    2012-01-01

    This paper sets out to read closely the National Curriculum Statutory Inclusion Statement in England (2007) alongside "Hard Times" to see if Dickens offers any insights into ethical responsibility and conceptualisations of inclusive education. I begin by presenting some of the meanings and associated problems of the term "inclusive…

  10. RELATE Competencies and Enablers Statements. Teacher Education Forum Series. Vol. 1, No. 5.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Harste, Jerome C.; And Others

    This report displays and briefly describes the set of professional competencies and other learning outcomes that comprise the objectives for elementary majors enrolled in the Indiana University competency-based teacher education program known as RELATE (Reading and Language Arts Teacher Education). This report is divided into 10 units and lists…

  11. 77 FR 35079 - License Renewal Application for Seabrook Station, Unit 1 ; NextEra Energy Seabrook, LLC

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-06-12

    ... Statement (SEIS) to address information related to severe accident mitigation alternatives (SAMA) analysis... contacting the NRC about the availability of information regarding this document. You may access information... available documents online in the NRC Library at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html . To begin the...

  12. A Learning Community Focus for Christian Education

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Littleton, John

    2008-01-01

    The vision statement of St. Saviour's Anglican Church in the Parish of Glen Osmon reads, "We aim to be a worshipping, caring, learning and serving Christian Community." These four aspects of Christian Community are essential and inter-related. The intention in the first part of this article is to explore the "learning" aspects…

  13. Verbal Word Choice of Effective Reading Teachers

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Moran, Kelly A.

    2013-01-01

    Humans are fragile beings easily influenced by the verbal behaviors of others. Spoken words can have a multitude of effects on an individual, and the phrases and statements teachers use in their classrooms on a daily basis have the potential to be either detrimental or inspirational. As increasing numbers of students arrive at schools from broken…

  14. How to Balance Your Checkbook. The CIRcular: Consumer Information Report 1.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Bank of America NT & SA, San Francisco, CA.

    This report presents information on checking accounts, describes how to read a monthly statement from the bank, and provides guidelines for balancing a checkbook. Topics covered include: how banks record transactions; the importance of keeping personal records and of balancing the checkbook promptly; what happens when there are insufficient funds…

  15. Teaching for Civic Engagement: Lesson Learned from Integrating Positive Psychology and Future Studies

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Allen, Jeanie K.

    2011-01-01

    Teaching for civic education holds promise for assisting colleges and universities that suggest the promotion of global citizenship in their mission statements. This paper presents the study of a course where readings and activities from the literature of positive psychology were integrated with studies about current global issues and potential…

  16. A Meta-Analysis of Growth Trends from Vertically Scaled Assessments

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Dadey, Nathan; Briggs, Derek C.

    2012-01-01

    A vertical scale, in principle, provides a common metric across tests with differing difficulties (e.g., spanning multiple grades) so that statements of "absolute" growth can be made. This paper compares 16 states' 2007-2008 effect size growth trends on vertically scaled reading and math assessments across grades 3 to 8. Two patterns…

  17. Final Report for PV Incubator Subcontract No. NAT-0-99013-01: June 14, 2010 - March 2, 2012

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

    Ghosal, K.

    2012-04-01

    The goal of the subcontract is to scale up Semprius' novel micro-cell based modules to an annualized rate of 500 kW of receivers and 10 kW of modules, in support of the DOE 2020 Sunshot Initiative goals. The statement of work (SOW) was broken up into two Phases. Phase I was directed towards process development efforts towards addressing fundamental manufacturing metrics such as yield, die per wafer, automation and throughput. Phase II objectives are to scale to an annualized production rate of 500 kW of receivers and 10 kW of modules, while improving cell efficiency, module efficiency and transfer yield.more » Semprius has met all the technical milestones and deliverables for the contract. All subtasks were completed earlier than expected and the results exceeded the technical targets. In particular, 3J cell efficiency of 41.2% exceeded the target of 38%, module efficiency of 28.3% exceeded the target of 28% and transfer yield of 96.4% exceeds the target of 95%, with all tasks completed well ahead of schedule. Also, devices fabricated from 1st use GaAs substrates and substrates with two re-uses have been shown to be identical.« less

  18. Caries preventive measures in orthodontic practice: the development of a clinical practice guideline.

    PubMed

    Oosterkamp, B C M; van der Sanden, W J M; Frencken, J E F M; Kuijpers-Jagtman, A M

    2016-02-01

    White spot lesions (WSLs) are a side effect of orthodontic treatment, causing esthetic problems and a risk of deeper enamel and dentine lesions. Many strategies have been developed for preventing WSLs, but great variability exists in preventive measures between orthodontists. This study developed statements on which a clinical practice guideline (CPG) can be developed in order to help orthodontists select preventive measures based on the best available evidence. A nominal group technique (RAND-e modified Delphi procedure) was used. A multidisciplinary expert panel rated 264 practice- and evidence-based statements related to the management of WSLs. To provide panel members with the same knowledge, a total of six articles obtained from a systematic review of the literature were read by the panel in preparation of three consensus rounds. According to the technique, a threshold of 75% of all ratings within any 3-point section of the 9-point scale regarding a specific statement was accepted as consensus. After the first and second consensus rounds, consensus was reached on 37.5 and 31.1% of statements, respectively. For the remaining 31.4% of statements, consensus was reached during a 4-h consensus meeting. Statements on the management of WSLs derived from a systematic literature review combined with expert opinion were formally integrated toward consensus through a nominal group technique. These statements formed the basis for developing a CPG on the management of WSLs before and during orthodontic treatment. © 2015 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

  19. Finding a (W)hole in the Text: A Case Study of Four Readers Reading.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Nance, Mary Moore

    The purpose of the study was to examine: (1) which perspectives of Reader Response Theory were most applicable in this study; (2) which factors influenced reader responses; and (3) how readers' responses changed over time. The four participants for this case study were chosen from a subject pool of 10 initiate adult full-time divinity students in…

  20. International Colloquium on Education: British and American Perspectives (4th, Swansea, Wales, United Kingdom, May 22-24, 1995). Proceedings.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Wales Univ., Swansea. Dept. of Education.

    This collection of studies represents collaboration between the Departments of Education of the University of Wales Swansea and the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse. The papers are as follows: (1) "Analysing the Social Climate of Schools and Classrooms" (Robert W. Bilby); (2) "Reading Whose World?" (Diane Cannon); (3)…

  1. On Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages. Series I.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Allen, Virginia French, Ed.

    The contents of this volume, a compilation of papers read at the first conference of TESOL (Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages), are grouped according to general subject and authors: (1) TESOL as a Professional Field--A.H. Marckwardt, F.J. Colligan, W.F. Marquardt; (2) Reports on Special Programs--J.E. Officer, R.B. Long, M.C.…

  2. Attitudes towards the outgroup are predicted by activity in the precuneus in Arabs and Israelis.

    PubMed

    Bruneau, Emile G; Saxe, Rebecca

    2010-10-01

    The modern socio-political climate is defined by conflict between ethnic, religious and political groups: Bosnians and Serbs, Tamils and Singhalese, Irish Catholics and Protestants, Israelis and Arabs. One impediment to the resolution of these conflicts is the psychological bias that members of each group harbor towards each other. These biases, and their neural bases, are likely different from the commonly studied biases towards racial outgroups. We presented Arab, Israeli and control individuals with statements about the Middle East from the perspective of the ingroup or the outgroup. Subjects rated how 'reasonable' each statement was, during fMRI imaging. Increased activation in the precuneus (PC) while reading pro-outgroup vs. pro-ingroup statements correlated strongly with both explicit and implicit measures of negative attitudes towards the outgroup; other brain regions that were involved in reasoning about emotionally-laden information did not show this pattern. Copyright 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  3. 75 FR 52997 - Nebraska Public Power District; Cooper Nuclear Station; Exemption

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-08-30

    ... documented in the letter from R.W. Borchardt (NRC) to M.S. Fertel (Nuclear Energy Institute) dated June 4...(c)(25)(i)- (vi). Therefore, in accordance with 10 CFR 51.22(b), no environmental impact statement or...

  4. H-Field, E-Field, and Combined Field Solutions for Bodies of Revolution

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1977-03-01

    thle Report) A - Approved for I)ublic release; distribution unlimited 17. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of the abetrect entered fIn Block 20, If differentI ...transfer the differential operator on 0 in (49) to Wp Since S is closed,.+.ffi" ff V s (P W) ds 0 (51) S where W denotes W Now, the representation V...Se Cti iOn V , i t: i SSlIo071 t h at IeIIC liTlTIiý(O 0 0tt IS e quI a IIor, as-, ocK a te d w ith th el co-b i n1e d f e I d -o 1mnitIl a t 1 1) os n

  5. Resolving Conflicts Between Syntax and Plausibility in Sentence Comprehension

    PubMed Central

    Andrews, Glenda; Ogden, Jessica E.; Halford, Graeme S.

    2017-01-01

    Comprehension of plausible and implausible object- and subject-relative clause sentences with and without prepositional phrases was examined. Undergraduates read each sentence then evaluated a statement as consistent or inconsistent with the sentence. Higher acceptance of consistent than inconsistent statements indicated reliance on syntactic analysis. Higher acceptance of plausible than implausible statements reflected reliance on semantic plausibility. There was greater reliance on semantic plausibility and lesser reliance on syntactic analysis for more complex object-relatives and sentences with prepositional phrases than for less complex subject-relatives and sentences without prepositional phrases. Comprehension accuracy and confidence were lower when syntactic analysis and semantic plausibility yielded conflicting interpretations. The conflict effect on comprehension was significant for complex sentences but not for less complex sentences. Working memory capacity predicted resolution of the syntax-plausibility conflict in more and less complex items only when sentences and statements were presented sequentially. Fluid intelligence predicted resolution of the conflict in more and less complex items under sequential and simultaneous presentation. Domain-general processes appear to be involved in resolving syntax-plausibility conflicts in sentence comprehension. PMID:28458748

  6. Effect of different financial competing interest statements on readers' perceptions of clinical educational articles: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial.

    PubMed

    Schroter, Sara; Pakpoor, Julia; Morris, Julie; Chew, Mabel; Godlee, Fiona

    2016-06-10

    Financial ties with industry are varied and common among academics, doctors and institutions. Clinical educational articles are intended to guide patient care and convey authors' own interpretation of selected data. Author biases in educational articles tend to be less visible to readers compared to those in research papers. Little is known about which types of competing interest statements affect readers' interpretation of the credibility of these articles. This study aims to investigate how different competing interest statements in educational articles affect clinical readers' perceptions of the articles. 2040 doctors who are members of the British Medical Association (BMA) and receive a copy of the British Medical Journal (The BMJ) each week will be randomly selected and invited by an email to participate in the study. They will be randomised to receive 1 of 2 Clinical Reviews, each with 1 of 4 possible competing interest statements. Versions of each review will be identical except for permutations of the competing interest statement. Study participants will be asked to read their article and complete an online questionnaire. The questionnaire will ask participants to rate their confidence in the conclusions drawn in the article, the importance of the article, their level of interest in the article and their likeliness to change their practice from the article. Factorial analyses of variance and analyses of covariance will be carried out to assess the impact of the type of competing interest statement and Clinical Review on level of confidence, importance, interest and likeliness to change practice. The study protocol, questionnaire and letter of invitation to participants have been reviewed by members of The BMJ's Ethics Committee for ethical concerns. The trial results will be disseminated to participants and published in a peer-reviewed journal. NCT02548312; Pre-results. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/

  7. Increasing girls’ knowledge about human papillomavirus vaccination with a pre-test and a national leaflet: a quasi-experimental study

    PubMed Central

    2013-01-01

    Background Adolescent girls are at an age to be involved in the decision about HPV vaccination uptake and therefore need adequate information about the vaccination. This study assesses to what extent reading an official information leaflet about HPV contributes to girls’ knowledge levels, and to what extent an increase in knowledge is boosted by a pre-test measurement. Methods Participants (girls aged 11–14 years) were systematically allocated to group A that completed a pre-test measurement (12 true/false statements) or to group B that did not complete it. Subsequently, both groups read the HPV leaflet and completed the post-test measurement. Results The response rate was 237/287 (83%). Pre-test scores in group A (M = 3.6, SD = 1.81, p < 0.001) were lower than post-test mean knowledge scores (0–10) in group B (M = 4.6, SD = 2.05). Post-test knowledge scores in group A were higher than those in group B [6.2 (SD = 2.06) versus 4.6 (SD = 2.05), p < 0.001]. In the post-test measurement, about a third of both groups knew that vaccinations do not give 100% protection against cervical cancer and that the duration of protection is unknown. Conclusions Reading the information leaflet had a positive effect on knowledge, even more so when boosted by a pre-test measurement. However, knowledge on the degree and duration of protection against cervical cancer remained limited. Focusing girls’ attention on important aspects before they start reading the leaflet (e.g. by including a quiz on the first page) may serve to raise their awareness of these aspects. PMID:23802703

  8. Increasing girls' knowledge about human papillomavirus vaccination with a pre-test and a national leaflet: a quasi-experimental study.

    PubMed

    Hofman, Robine; Schiffers, Puck A W H; Richardus, Jan Hendrik; Raat, Hein; de Kok, Inge M C M; van Ballegooijen, Marjolein; Korfage, Ida J

    2013-06-26

    Adolescent girls are at an age to be involved in the decision about HPV vaccination uptake and therefore need adequate information about the vaccination. This study assesses to what extent reading an official information leaflet about HPV contributes to girls' knowledge levels, and to what extent an increase in knowledge is boosted by a pre-test measurement. Participants (girls aged 11-14 years) were systematically allocated to group A that completed a pre-test measurement (12 true/false statements) or to group B that did not complete it. Subsequently, both groups read the HPV leaflet and completed the post-test measurement. The response rate was 237/287 (83%). Pre-test scores in group A (M = 3.6, SD = 1.81, p < 0.001) were lower than post-test mean knowledge scores (0-10) in group B (M = 4.6, SD = 2.05). Post-test knowledge scores in group A were higher than those in group B [6.2 (SD = 2.06) versus 4.6 (SD = 2.05), p < 0.001]. In the post-test measurement, about a third of both groups knew that vaccinations do not give 100% protection against cervical cancer and that the duration of protection is unknown. Reading the information leaflet had a positive effect on knowledge, even more so when boosted by a pre-test measurement. However, knowledge on the degree and duration of protection against cervical cancer remained limited. Focusing girls' attention on important aspects before they start reading the leaflet (e.g. by including a quiz on the first page) may serve to raise their awareness of these aspects.

  9. Effective Teaching of Reading: Research and Practice.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Hoffman, James V., Ed.

    Distilling and interpreting past and current research on the effective teaching of reading is the focus of this volume. The titles and authors are as follows: "Research in Effective Teaching: An Overview of Its Development" (William H. Rupley, Beth S. Wise, and John W. Logan); "Process-Product Research on Effective Teaching: A Primer for a…

  10. Reading Second. Brown Letters on Education

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Whitehurst, Grover

    2009-01-01

    Former President George W. Bush finished his tenure without having won congressional renewal of his No Child Left Behind (NCLB) policy. With President Barack Obama now at the helm, NCLB is up for debate. Brown Center Director Grover "Russ" Whitehurst examines Reading First, a key component of NCLB, that aims to ensure that all children…

  11. Human Factors Analysis of Two Prototype Army Maintenance Training and Evaluation Simulation System (AMTESS) Devices. Appendixes

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-10-01

    ACE ’»>••» 0<i« t»».!-«*) REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE READ INSTRUCTIONS BEFORE COMPLETING FORM 1 . REPOOT NUMlE* Research Note 84-126 2. CQVT...Criswell, Robert W.,Swezey, John A. Allen, Robert T. Hays 1 . CONTRACT OR GRANT NUMtERf; MDA 903-79-C-0177 i. RER’ORWINC ORGANIZATION NAME AND...er i H«V •■ it OMOLITC i/W 01OMP 414.4401 1 UNCLASSIFIED »CURITY CkASSiriCATlOM *» TMIt » A«C f"»«i »«• ***-**> Ä This volume contair.3 the

  12. Military Retirement. Dream or Dilemma for Air Force Chaplains

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-02-01

    DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of the abstract entered in Block 20, ii different Irom Report) I6. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 1S. KEY WORDS (Continue on reverse side...Chaplains by James W. Milisaps, Chaplain, Lt Col, USAF A RESEARCH REPORT SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY IN FULFILLMENT OF THE RESEARCH seFo REQUIREMENT IY&’IC...TAR February 1983 IA ~.t.~ I -- w DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE MR WAR COLLEGE (ATC) MAXWELL AIR FORCE BASS, ALABAMA 26112 Office of the Dean School of

  13. 76 FR 29021 - Written Re-Evaluation and Record of Decision for the Final Environmental Impact Statement for the...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-05-19

    ..., Orlando Airports District Office, 5950 Hazeltine National Drive, Suite 400, Orlando, FL 32822-5024. 407-812-6331 Ext. 129. Issued in Orlando, Florida, on May 12, 2011. W. Dean Stringer, Manager, FAA Orlando...

  14. Markovian Queues with Arrival Dependence

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1976-03-01

    adding together the three balance equations for P 2o’ ^21’ "^22 as ^°ll°ws ’ 1 20 2 21 <W P21= XP10 + *2P22 H- ( ^ l^ 2 )p22 = Xp11 "lP20 +UlP21 +V22...REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE READ INSTRUCTIONSBEFORE COMPLETING FORM 1 REPORT NUMBER 2 . GOVT ACCESSION NO. 3. RECIPIENT’S CATALOG NUMBER 4. TITLE (and...ADDITIONAL FACTS CONCERNING THE TRANSIENT DISTRIBUTION OF WAITING TIMES FOR ARRIVING CUSTOMERS 2 ? IV. THE TWO CHANNEL SERVER QUEUE WITH SINGLE

  15. Dynamic Response of Ramjet Inlets to Downstream Perturbations.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-01-31

    NDC -00784 UNCLASSIFIED N98814-8R-C-8481 F/S 26/4 NL EIIIIIIIII-EIIhIIIIIIIIE EllhlhllllhhI *lfl gi IIDi w,. . , 2 9,- * .t .C- 0- . 1-" "L/" wo 1. I...dual-throat model configured as a small supersonic wind tunnel . References to a diffuser in the task statements reflect these initial ideas. However, it...determination of UB requires a wind tunnel test or possibly a free jet experiment with a large jet diameter compared to the model size. 1 5 17 4 4 4~,d

  16. 49 CFR 7.5 - Availability of opinions, orders, staff manuals, statements of policy, and interpretations and...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... availability for public inspection and copying of the following reading room materials: (1) Any final opinion... staff manual or instruction to staff that affects any member of the public, including the prescribing of.... However, this does not include staff manuals or instructions to staff concerning internal operating rules...

  17. 49 CFR 7.5 - Availability of opinions, orders, staff manuals, statements of policy, and interpretations and...

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... availability for public inspection and copying of the following reading room materials: (1) Any final opinion... staff manual or instruction to staff that affects any member of the public, including the prescribing of.... However, this does not include staff manuals or instructions to staff concerning internal operating rules...

  18. The Effect of Process Writing Activities on the Writing Skills of Prospective Turkish Teachers

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Dilidüzgün, Sükran

    2013-01-01

    Problem statement: Writing an essay is a most difficult creative work and consequently requires detailed instruction. There are in fact two types of instruction that contribute to the development of writing skills: Reading activities analysing texts in content and schematic structure to find out how they are composed and process writing…

  19. English Language Arts and the Economy: Discursive Constructions of Two Fields

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Collin, Ross

    2018-01-01

    This article presents discourse analyses of two teachers' statements about the economic payoff of studying English in the United States' high schools. Specifically, the article examines how English teachers construe reading as an economic asset that can be developed in schools and used on the job. Pierre Bourdieu's concepts of field and capital…

  20. A Five-Year Comparison of Actual and Recommended Parental Practices for Promoting Children's Literacy Development.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Baker, Linda; Sonnenschein, Susan; Serpell, Robert

    This report details a 5-year study comparing family literacy practices of families from preschool to Grade 3 with recommendations from the position statement of the National Association for the Education of Young Children and the International Reading Association (NAEYC-IRA). Participating were African- and European-American families of children…

  1. With Dante in Hell on 9/11: "That Day We Read No Further"

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Rosenstein, Roy

    2015-01-01

    In this article, Roy Rosenstein shares the events that occurred during his first day of teaching the Dante and Medieval Culture course in the fall semester of 2001 at the American University of Paris (AUP). On, September 11, 2001, immediately following Rosenstein's opening statement of "Welcome to hell," the class was alerted to the…

  2. Holistic Education: Principles, Perspectives and Practices. A Book of Readings Based on "Education 2000: A Holistic Perspective."

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Flake, Carol L., Ed.

    In 1991 a conference of holistic educators produced "Education 2000: A Holistic Perspective," a statement of what education should be and an examination of holistic theory. This book expands that work with 59 articles exploring the principles of holistic education and describing holistic education programs. Holistic education calls for…

  3. 77 FR 26316 - Progress Energy Florida; Final Environmental Impact Statement for Combined Licenses for Levy...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-05-03

    ..., Rockville, Maryland, 20852 or from NRC's Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC's Web site at www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html . The ADAMS accession numbers for the... . In addition, the following four public libraries have agreed to make the final EIS available to the...

  4. Reading Resistance: The Record of Tsunesaburo Makiguchi's Interrogation by Wartime Japan's "Thought Police"

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Ito, Takao

    2009-01-01

    This article examines the record of Tsunesaburo Makiguchi's interrogation as a thought criminal following his arrest in July, 1943. By comparing and contrasting his responses and statements against the official government positions, I hope to clarify the nature of his critique of the wartime fascist regime. Makiguchi himself was an educator, and…

  5. 78 FR 65903 - Proposed Waste Confidence Rule and Draft Generic Environmental Impact Statement

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-11-04

    .../public-involve/public-meetings/index.cfm no later than 10 days prior to each meeting. Dated at Rockville... reactor's licensed life for operation and prior to ultimate disposal (the proposed Waste Confidence rule... documents online in the NRC Library at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html . To begin the search...

  6. Information Retrieval Center: A Proposal for the Implementation of CD-ROM Database Technology at Memphis State University Libraries.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Evans, John; Park, Betsy

    This planning proposal recommends that Memphis State University Libraries make information on CD-ROM (compact disc--read only memory) available in the Reference Department by establishing an Information Retrieval Center (IRC). Following a brief introduction and statement of purpose, the library's databases, users, staffing, facilities, and…

  7. Endorsement of Couples Counseling in a Domestic Violence Case as a Function of Training

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Bapat, Mona; Tracey, Terence

    2009-01-01

    Reactions of students in helping professions to domestic violence were examined with respect to whether or not the students had any training in domestic violence. One hundred, four students read one of two vignettes describing a domestic violence case and responded to statements related to treatment options. The vignettes differed only in…

  8. From Students to Change Agents: The 2009 K. Patricia Cross Future Leaders Awards

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2009

    2009-01-01

    One of the author's chief delights as editor of "Change" is to read, every year, the personal statements of students who have won the K. Patricia Cross Future Leaders Award. Pat Cross, professor "emerita" at the University of California, Berkeley, has long been a leading scholar in higher education. These future leaders of…

  9. Building Better Bridges: Teaching Adolescents Who Are Poor Readers in Eighth Grade to Comprehend History Text

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    O'Connor, Rollanda E.; Beach, Kristen D.; Sanchez, Victoria; Bocian, Kathleen M.; Roberts, Sarana; Chan, Olivia

    2017-01-01

    Helping struggling readers to learn history content in middle school can be difficult due to heavy reading demands. In this study, researchers taught poor readers with and without disabilities in eighth grade to generate main idea statements; create, compare, and contrast paragraphs; and identify cause and effect relations, along with relevant…

  10. LATIN FOR SECONDARY SCHOOLS (A GUIDE TO MINIMUM ESSENTIALS).

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    LEAMON, M. PHILLIP; AND OTHERS

    A SET OF MINIMUM ESSENTIALS FOR EACH LEVEL OF A 4-YEAR SEQUENCE OF LATIN IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS IS PRESENTED IN THIS CURRICULUM GUIDE. FOLLOWING STATEMENTS OF THE OBJECTIVES OF LATIN STUDY--READING THE LATIN OF THE GREAT ROMAN AUTHORS, ATTAINING A LINGUISTIC PROFICIENCY, AND ACQUIRING A WIDER HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL AWARENESS--THE GUIDE OUTLINES FOR…

  11. Further Studies of Turbulence Structure Resulting from Interactions between Embedded Vortices and Wall Jets at High Blowing Ratios

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1989-12-01

    measured at the top of each column of nodes. 3UV Reads data from uv data file and plots contours of -7 u’’w ’, and u’v ’" normalized with respect to...I I - / ( 1 I m * -0 U v \\ ms.---inm w N D a) D N U rd w -- 0 in i z 0 in i !.. ! I ! ! ! ! I I I I ! ! V TD z m~ cu m V, Figure 8. w (Boundary Layer

  12. First Results From the Spatial Heterodyne Imager for Mesospheric Radicals (SHIMMER): Diurnal Variation of Mesospheric Hydroxyl

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-10-08

    L01808, doi:10.1029/ 2005GL024048. Pickett, H. M., W. G. Read, K. K. Lee , and Y. L. Yung (2006b), Observa- tion of night OH in the mesosphere, Geophys. Res...Offermann, M. Riese, P. Preusse, D. F. Strobel , and J. M. Russell III (1997), Implica- tions of satellite OH observations for middle atmospheric H2O

  13. State Politics and Higher Education. A Book of Readings.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Goodall, Leonard E., Ed.

    Papers are included on the topics of: state constitutions and higher education (Samuel K. Gove and Susan Welch); executive leadership and the universities (John W. Lederle, Patrick J. Lucey, Allen Rosenbaum, John W. Wood, Malcolm Moos and Francis E. Rourke); legislative control of higher education (Heinz Eulau and Harold Quinley, David D. Henry,…

  14. Drawing Children into Reading: A Qualitative Case Study of a Preschool Drawing Curriculum

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    DeFauw, Danielle L.

    2016-01-01

    This article details a qualitative case study of 24 preschool children engaged with step-by-step drawing instruction provided by five educators as they developed their fine motor skills and drew detailed objects using the Drawing Children Into Reading curriculum (Halperin, W. A. (2011a). "Project 50 preschool manual." South Haven, MI:…

  15. Reading for Repetition and Reading for Translation: Do They Involve the Same Processes?

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Macizo, Pedro; Bajo, M. Teresa

    2006-01-01

    Theories of translation differ in the role assigned to the reformulation process. One view, the ''horizontal'' approach, considers that translation involves on-line searches for matches between linguistic entries in the two languages involved [Gerver, D. (1976). Empirical studies of simultaneous interpretation: A review and a model. In R. W.…

  16. Challenges in Reading: Twelfth Yearbook of the College Reading Association, 1990.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Padak, Nancy D., Ed.; And Others

    This yearbook contains the following 24 articles on a variety of topics: "A Model for Diagnostic Narratives in Teacher Education" (B. J. Walker); "Teacher Expectations: Modifying One's Teaching through the Self-Monitoring Process" (T. R. Blair and D. L. Jones); "Preparing Teacher/Researchers" (M. W. Olson and M. K. Gillis); "Student Teacher Use of…

  17. Competing cues: Older adults rely on knowledge in the face of fluency.

    PubMed

    Brashier, Nadia M; Umanath, Sharda; Cabeza, Roberto; Marsh, Elizabeth J

    2017-06-01

    Consumers regularly encounter repeated false claims in political and marketing campaigns, but very little empirical work addresses their impact among older adults. Repeated statements feel easier to process, and thus more truthful, than new ones (i.e., illusory truth). When judging truth, older adults' accumulated general knowledge may offset this perception of fluency. In two experiments, participants read statements that contradicted information stored in memory; a post-experimental knowledge check confirmed what individual participants knew. Unlike young adults, older adults exhibited illusory truth only when they lacked knowledge about claims. This interaction between knowledge and fluency extends dual-process theories of aging. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved).

  18. 75 FR 32158 - Information Collection; SRS Publications Evaluation Card

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-06-07

    ..., filing of petitions and applications and agency #0;statements of organization and functions are examples... should be addressed to Forest Service, USDA, Southern Research Station, Science Delivery Group, 200 W.T... through Friday. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Title: SRS Publications Evaluation Card. OMB Number: 0596-0163...

  19. SKIMMR: facilitating knowledge discovery in life sciences by machine-aided skim reading

    PubMed Central

    Burns, Gully A.P.C.

    2014-01-01

    Background. Unlike full reading, ‘skim-reading’ involves the process of looking quickly over information in an attempt to cover more material whilst still being able to retain a superficial view of the underlying content. Within this work, we specifically emulate this natural human activity by providing a dynamic graph-based view of entities automatically extracted from text. For the extraction, we use shallow parsing, co-occurrence analysis and semantic similarity computation techniques. Our main motivation is to assist biomedical researchers and clinicians in coping with increasingly large amounts of potentially relevant articles that are being published ongoingly in life sciences. Methods. To construct the high-level network overview of articles, we extract weighted binary statements from the text. We consider two types of these statements, co-occurrence and similarity, both organised in the same distributional representation (i.e., in a vector-space model). For the co-occurrence weights, we use point-wise mutual information that indicates the degree of non-random association between two co-occurring entities. For computing the similarity statement weights, we use cosine distance based on the relevant co-occurrence vectors. These statements are used to build fuzzy indices of terms, statements and provenance article identifiers, which support fuzzy querying and subsequent result ranking. These indexing and querying processes are then used to construct a graph-based interface for searching and browsing entity networks extracted from articles, as well as articles relevant to the networks being browsed. Last but not least, we describe a methodology for automated experimental evaluation of the presented approach. The method uses formal comparison of the graphs generated by our tool to relevant gold standards based on manually curated PubMed, TREC challenge and MeSH data. Results. We provide a web-based prototype (called ‘SKIMMR’) that generates a network of inter-related entities from a set of documents which a user may explore through our interface. When a particular area of the entity network looks interesting to a user, the tool displays the documents that are the most relevant to those entities of interest currently shown in the network. We present this as a methodology for browsing a collection of research articles. To illustrate the practical applicability of SKIMMR, we present examples of its use in the domains of Spinal Muscular Atrophy and Parkinson’s Disease. Finally, we report on the results of experimental evaluation using the two domains and one additional dataset based on the TREC challenge. The results show how the presented method for machine-aided skim reading outperforms tools like PubMed regarding focused browsing and informativeness of the browsing context. PMID:25097821

  20. The development rubrics skill argued as alternative assessment floating and sinking materials

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Viyanti; Cari; Sunarno, Widha; Prasetyo, Zuhdan Kun

    2017-11-01

    The quality of arguing to learners of floating and sinking material can be assessed by using the rubric of an argumentation assessment skill as an alternative assessment. The quality of the argument is measured by the ability of learners to express the claim in a structured manner in order to maintain the claim with supporting data. The purpose of this study was to develop an argument skill rubric based on the preliminary study results which showed a gap between demands and reality related to the students ‘floating and sinking students’ argument skills. This research was conducted in one of State Senior High School Bandar Lampung. The study population is all students of senior high scholl class XI. Research sample was taken by randomly obtained by 20 students. The research used descriptive survey method. Data were obtained through a multiple choice test both grounded and interview. The results were analyzed based on the level of students’ argumentation skills that had met the criteria which developed in the assessment rubric. The results of the data analysis found that the learners are in the range of levels 1 through 3. Based on the data the average learner is at the level of quality argument “high” for component I and the quality of “low” argument for component 2. This indicates learners experience difficulty which making alternative statement supported by reference in accordance with the initial statement submitted. This fact is supported by interviews that learners need a structured strategy to design alternative statements from shared reading sources to support the preliminary statements presented.

  1. High power cascaded mid-infrared InAs/GaSb light emitting diodes on mismatched GaAs

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

    Provence, S. R., E-mail: sydney-provence@uiowa.edu; Ricker, R.; Aytac, Y.

    2015-09-28

    InAs/GaSb mid-wave, cascaded superlattice light emitting diodes are found to give higher radiance when epitaxially grown on mismatched GaAs substrates compared to lattice-matched GaSb substrates. Peak radiances of 0.69 W/cm{sup 2}-sr and 1.06 W/cm{sup 2}-sr for the 100 × 100 μm{sup 2} GaSb and GaAs-based devices, respectively, were measured at 77 K. Measurement of the recombination coefficients shows the shorter Shockley-Read-Hall recombination lifetime as misfit dislocations for growth on GaAs degrade the quantum efficiency only at low current injection. The improved performance on GaAs was found to be due to the higher transparency and improved thermal properties of the GaAs substrate.

  2. Human exposure to polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE), as evidenced by data from a duplicate diet study, indoor air, house dust, and biomonitoring in Germany.

    PubMed

    Fromme, Hermann; Körner, Wolfgang; Shahin, Nabil; Wanner, Antonia; Albrecht, Michael; Boehmer, Sigrun; Parlar, Harun; Mayer, Richard; Liebl, Bernhard; Bolte, Gabriele

    2009-11-01

    Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDE) are used as flame retardants in a wide variety of products. As part of the Integrated Exposure Assessment Survey (INES), this study aimed to characterize the exposure of an adult German population using duplicate diet samples, which were collected daily over seven consecutive days, and indoor air and house dust measurements. Our study population consisted of 27 female and 23 male healthy subjects, aged 14-60 years, all of whom resided in 34 homes in southern Bavaria. In these 34 residences the air was sampled using glass fiber filters and polyurethane foams and the dust was collected from used vacuum cleaner bags. The median (95th percentile) daily dietary intake of six Tetra- to HeptaBDE congeners was 1.2 ng/kg b.w. (3.3 ng/kg b.w.) or 67.8 ng/day (208 ng/day) (calculated from the 7-day median values of each study subject). Concentrations in indoor air and dust (cumulative Tri- to DecaBDE congener readings) ranged from 8.2 to 477 pg/m(3) (median: 37.8 pg/m(3)) and 36.6 to 1580 ng/g (median: 386 ng/g), respectively. For some congeners, we identified a significant correlation between air and dust levels. The median (95th percentile) blood concentration of total Tetra- to HexaBDE congener readings was 5.6 (13.2)ng/g lipid. No significant sex differences were observed, but higher blood concentrations were found in younger participants. Using a simplified toxicokinetic model to predict the body burden from exposure doses led to results that were of the same order of magnitude as the measured blood concentrations. Based on these measurements and given our exposure assumptions, we estimated for the total tetra- to heptabrominated congener count an average (high) comprehensive total daily intake of 1.2 ng/kg b.w. (2.5 ng/kg b.w.). Overall, our results suggest that dietary exposure is the dominant intake pathway at least in our study population, responsible for 97% (average intake) and 95% (high intake) of the total intake of an adult population.

  3. The Galvanic Corrosion of Graphite Epoxy Composite Materials Coupled with Alloys

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1975-12-01

    Approved for public release; distribution unlimited. 17 DISTR:3UTION STATEMENT (of the absatract entered in Block 10, If different from Report) IS...SUPPLEMENTARY NIOTES 1x6Voved for p ,11c elease; IA14 AFR j,90- 17 .~y C. X Capta~4 USAF Dre c tor’ of Xn f’orma Cion 19. K~EY W OS (Continiue an r.overse...acceptability by particular alloy is as follows: Acceptable-Ti-6A1-4V, Ti-6A!-2Sn-4 Zr-2o, Rene 41, Inconel X, Inconel, AFC-77, PH 17 -7, SS-304, Be-Cu, SS

  4. Capital Campaigns.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Dalessandro, David; And Others

    1989-01-01

    Eight articles focus on capital campaigns including setting goals (D. Dalessandro), the lead gift (D. A. Campbell), motivating trustees (J. J. Ianolli, Jr.), alumni associations (W. B. Adams), role of public relations officers (R. L. Williams), special events( H.R. Gilbert), the campaign document (R. King), and case statements (D. R. Treadwell,…

  5. ANNUAL REPORT

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

    None

    1959-07-01

    The national laboratory concept, laboratory objectives, the staff, research facilities. research activities, and administration are discussed in general terms and a financial statement is given. Fairly detailed accounts are given for the research programs in the fields of physics, accelerator development, instrumentation, applied mathematics, chemistry, nuclear engineering, biology, and medicine. (W.D.M.)

  6. Evaluation of use of reading comprehension strategies to improve reading comprehension of adult college students with acquired brain injury.

    PubMed

    Griffiths, Gina G; Sohlberg, McKay Moore; Kirk, Cecilia; Fickas, Stephen; Biancarosa, Gina

    2016-01-01

    Adults with mild to moderate acquired brain injury (ABI) often pursue post-secondary or professional education after their injuries in order to enter or re-enter the job market. An increasing number of these adults report problems with reading-to-learn. The problem is particularly concerning given the growing population of adult survivors of ABI. Despite the rising need, empirical evaluation of reading comprehension interventions for adults with ABI is scarce. This study used a within-subject design to evaluate whether adult college students with ABI with no more than moderate cognitive impairments benefited from using reading comprehension strategies to improve comprehension of expository text. Integrating empirical support from the cognitive rehabilitation and special education literature, the researchers designed a multi-component reading comprehension strategy package. Participants read chapters from an introductory-level college anthropology textbook in two different conditions: strategy and no-strategy. The results indicated that reading comprehension strategy use was associated with recall of more correct information units in immediate and delayed free recall tasks; more efficient recall in the delayed free recall task; and increased accuracy recognising statements from a sentence verification task designed to reflect the local and global coherence of the text. The findings support further research into using reading comprehension strategies as an intervention approach for the adult ABI population. Future research needs include identifying how to match particular reading comprehension strategies to individuals, examining whether reading comprehension performance improves further through the incorporation of systematic training, and evaluating texts from a range of disciplines and genres.

  7. Complete Genome Sequence of the Mesoplasma florum W37 Strain

    PubMed Central

    Baby, Vincent; Matteau, Dominick; Knight, Thomas F.

    2013-01-01

    Mesoplasma florum is a small-genome fast-growing mollicute that is an attractive model for systems and synthetic genomics studies. We report the complete 825,824-bp genome sequence of a second representative of this species, M. florum strain W37, which contains 733 predicted open reading frames and 35 stable RNAs. PMID:24285658

  8. Progress on the FDM Development at SRON: Toward 160 Pixels

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    den Hartog, R. H.; Bruijn, M. P.; Clenet, A.; Gottardi, L.; Hijmering, R.; Jackson, B. D.; van der Kuur, J.; van Leeuwen, B. J.; van der Linden, A. J.; van Loon, D.; Nieuwenhuizen, A.; Ridder, M.; van Winden, P.

    2014-08-01

    SRON is developing the electronic read-out for arrays of transition edge sensors using frequency domain multiplexing in combination with base-band feedback. The astronomical applications of this system are the read-out of soft X-ray micro-calorimeters in a potential instrument on the European X-ray mission-under-study Athena+ and far-IR bolometers for the Safari instrument on the Japanese mission SPICA. In this paper we demonstrate the simultaneous read-out of 38 bolometer pixels at a 12 aW/Hz dark NEP level. The stability of the read-out is assessed over 400 s. time spans. Although some 1/f noise is present, there are several bolometers for which 1/f-free read-out can be demonstrated.

  9. "And They Let You Know You're Not Alone and That's What They're Here For": Persistence Narratives of Women Immigrants in Public Library Literacy Programs.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Cuban, Sondra

    This study examines persistence narratives of female immigrants in three public library literacy programs. The narrative analysis method was used. Transcripts of student interviews and biographical portraits were read, and incidents, images, events, and statements concerning persistence supports and barriers, literacy, and language learning were…

  10. Analysis of Teachers' Views on the Configuration of First Reading and Writing Process with Games

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Saygili, Gizem

    2013-01-01

    Problem Statement: Moving schooling age to an earlier time as a result of the transition to the practice of 12-year non-continuous compulsory education in 2012-2013 academic year has brought the discussions on whether students' readiness is sufficient or not. However, the teachers' readiness is also an issue as important as a student's readiness…

  11. Colleges Have Lost Interest in Designing Campuses with Meaning

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Greenberg, Allan

    2007-01-01

    All buildings convey meaning--whether or not that was intended by architect and client--and it has little to do with questions of budget, architectural style, or self-expression. The architecture of a university's campus is an open book that most people have forgotten how to read. A campus is an edited statement of the institution's self-image.…

  12. The FBI's Library Awareness Program: National Security vs Government Intrusion into American Libraries [and] The KGB and the Library Target.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Information Reports and Bibliographies, 1988

    1988-01-01

    Presents statements made to the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights by representatives of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the library community concerning the surveillance of library users' reading habits as a national security measure. An FBI study on the extent of Soviet intelligence service's utilization of…

  13. Building Better Bridges: Teaching Adolescents Who Are Poor Readers in 8th Grade to Comprehend History Text

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    O'Connor, Rollanda E.; Beach, Kristen D.; Sanchez, Victoria; Bocian, Kathleen M.; Roberts, Sarana; Chan, Olivia

    2017-01-01

    Helping struggling readers to learn history content in middle school can be difficult due to heavy reading demands. In this study, researchers taught poor readers with and without disabilities in 8th grade to generate main idea statements, create compare and contrast paragraphs, and identify cause and effect relationships, along with relevant…

  14. Validity Issues Involved in Cross-Grade Statements about NAEP Results

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Thissen, David

    2012-01-01

    The reading and mathematics measures of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) have been, and continue to be, reported on scales that appear to have the properties of "cross-grade" scales: Reported scores are higher for 8th-grade students than for 4th-grade students, and higher for 12th-grade students than for 8th-grade students.…

  15. Imagery and Visual Literacy: Selected Readings from the Annual Conference of the International Visual Literacy Association (26th, Tempe, Arizona, October 12-16, 1994).

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Beauchamp, Darrell G.; And Others

    This document contains selected conference papers all relating to visual literacy. The topics include: process issues in visual literacy; interpreting visual statements; what teachers need to know; multimedia presentations; distance education materials for correctional use; visual culture; audio-visual interaction in desktop multimedia; the…

  16. Logistics Composite Model (LCOM) Workbook

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1976-06-01

    nc;-J to e UNCLASSIFIED SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE (When Dots Ew.ervol. REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE READ INSTRUCTIONS BEFORE COMPLETING FORM I...Controlling Office) 15. SECURITY CLASS. (of this report) Unclassified 158. DECLASSIFICATIONDOWNGRADING SCHEDULE 16. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of this Report...ID SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE (When Des Entered) K7 UNCLASSIFIED SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE(Whon Dal Entore o l Logic networks

  17. Near East and North Africa: A Question Syllabus. Center for Area and Country Studies.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Howard, Harry N.

    This study syllabus on the Near East and North Africa is divided into twelve units. Designed to familiarize government personnel assigned to the area with the region and people, each unit consists of a statement of the main objectives to be studied, questions for consideration, and a list of suggested readings from books and periodicals. Units…

  18. Evaluation Transportability Testing of the Joint Modular Intermodal Platform (JMIP) Unit #4, TP-94-01, Transportability Testing Procedures

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2007-07-01

    447 3893 VSN: NL1FR5 MFG Serial #: T-018447EFJM Weight: 19,340 lbs 3-1 5. Semitrailer, flatbed , breakbulk/container transporter, 22.5 ton Model...CHAFTING PIECE, 118" X 6" X 40" PLYWOOD, (I REaD). LAMINATE TO BEARING PIECE W16-6d NAILS EVENLY SPACED. SIDE STRAPPING BOARD ASSEMBLY (2 REOD) (I

  19. Protein expression of preferred human codon-optimized Gaussia luciferase genes with an artificial open-reading frame in mammalian and bacterial cells.

    PubMed

    Inouye, Satoshi; Suzuki, Takahiro

    2016-12-01

    The protein expressions of three preferred human codon-optimized Gaussia luciferase genes (pGLuc, EpGLuc, and KpGLuc) were characterized in mammalian and bacterial cells by comparing them with those of wild-type Gaussia luciferase gene (wGLuc) and human codon-optimized Gaussia luciferase gene (hGLuc). Two synthetic genes of EpGLuc and KpGLuc containing the complete preferred human codons have an artificial open-reading frame; however, they had the similar protein expression levels to those of pGLuc and hGLuc in mammalian cells. In bacterial cells, the protein expressions of pGLuc, EpGLuc, and KpGLuc with approximately 65% GC content were the same and showed approximately 60% activities of wGLuc and hGLuc. The artificial open-reading frame in EpGLuc and KpGLuc did not affect the protein expression in mammalian and bacterial cells. Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  20. Exploration of solar radiation data from three geo-political zones in Nigeria.

    PubMed

    Adejumo, Adebowale O; Suleiman, Esivue A; Okagbue, Hilary I

    2017-08-01

    In this paper, readings of solar radiation received at three meteorological sites in Nigeria were analysed. Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) statistical test was carried out on the data set to observe the significant differences on radiations for each quarter of the specified years. The data were obtained in raw form from Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NIMET), Oshodi, Lagos. In order to get a clear description and visualization of the fluctuations of the radiation data, each year were considered independently, where it was discovered that for the 3rd quarter of each year, there is a great fall in the intensity of the solar radiation to as low as 73.27 (W/m 2 ), 101.66 (W/m 2 ), 158.51 (W/m 2 ) for Ibadan, Port-Harcourt and Sokoto respectively. A detailed data description is available for the averages across months for each quarter. The data can provide insights on the health implications of exposure to solar radiation and the effect of solar radiation on climate change, food production, rainfall and flood patterns.

  1. Negative mood disrupts self- and reward-biases in perceptual matching.

    PubMed

    Sui, Jie; Ohrling, Erik; Humphreys, Glyn W

    2016-01-01

    There are established effects of self- and reward-biases even on simple perceptual matching tasks [Sui, J., He, X., & Humphreys, G. W. (2012). Perceptual effects of social salience: Evidence from self-prioritization effects on perceptual matching. Journal of Experimental Psychology, Human Perception and Performance, 38, 1105-1117]; however we know little about whether these biases can be modulated by particular interventions, and whether the biases then change in the same way. Here we assessed how the biases alter under conditions designed to induce negative mood. We had participants read a list of self-related negative or neutral mood statements [Velten, E. (1968). A laboratory task for induction of mood states. Behavior Research and Therapy, 6, 473-482] and also listen for 10 min to a passage of negative or neutral music, prior to carrying out perceptual matching with shapes associated to personal labels (self or stranger) or reward (£12 or £1). Responses to the self- and high-reward-associated shapes were selectively slower and less sensitive (d') following the negative mood induction procedures, and the decrease in mood correlated with decreases in the reaction time bias across "high saliency" (self and high-reward) stimuli. We suggest that negative mood may decrease self- and reward-biases through reducing attention to salient external stimuli.

  2. Purdue professors review energy issues: six separate statements for the National Research Council Committee on Nuclear and Alternative Energy Systems

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

    Not Available

    1976-01-01

    In the Introductory statement, Professor Philip N. Powers, Director of the Energy Engineering Center, discussed briefly the societal stresses resulting from energy shortfalls, the conservation and lower-growth-rate approach, the energy decision-making process, international considerations of energy supply and demand, the consideration for alternative energy sources other than nuclear or coal, and the cost-effectiveness of environmental improvements. Professor Leonard Z. Breen's statement, Energy and Society, discusses population changes, communication networks in decision making, effects of urbanizing and suburbanizing, and social impacts of changing technologies. Professor Otto C. Doering in his statement, Alternate Fuels and Agricultural Production, emphasizes such things as timemore » constraints, relative inflexibility with respect to energy source, and the biological nature of agriculture (especially weather concerns). Professor Frank P. Incropera identifies the technology of power generation (especially increasing power plant efficiency) as the first priority in his statement, Efficient Energy Utilization and Conservation. Professor Reinhardt Schuhmann, Jr. in his statement, National Problem Solving and Energy, suggests that the primary objective should be development of a new national energy process, rather than the collection and analysis of comprehensive and detailed data and rather than refinement of forecasting and scenario building. Professor Jay W. Wiley in his statement, Planning for Effective Energy Utilization, specifies certain basic understandings that must be recognized in the following areas: economic relationships, energy sources, fission nuclear energy, and electric power production in the short run. (MCW)« less

  3. Evaluation of actuator energy storage and power sources for spacecraft applications

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Simon, William E.; Young, Fred M.

    1993-01-01

    The objective of this evaluation is to determine an optimum energy storage/power source combination for electrical actuation systems for existing (Solid Rocket Booster (SRB), Shuttle) and future (Advanced Launch System (ALS), Shuttle Derivative) vehicles. Characteristic of these applications is the requirement for high power pulses (50-200 kW) for short times (milliseconds to seconds), coupled with longer-term base or 'housekeeping' requirements (5-16 kW). Specific study parameters (e.g., weight, volume, etc.) as stated in the proposal and specified in the Statement of Work (SOW) are included.

  4. Maco/Micro Studies of Hydrogen Embrittlement Mechanisms in Titanium and Aluminum Alloys.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-04-01

    DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (.frhe .,bstf-f: - te-.J ’ h/’ 4 J .0 d lfr n, /5,po IS. SUPPLEMENTARY N3TES a Hydrogen Embrittlement, Titanium Alloys, Aluminum...AD-A116 025 MINNESOTA U4IV MINNEAPOLIS F/ 6 11/ 6 NACO/MICRO STUD~IES OF HYDRO6EN ENORITTLEMENT MECHANISMS IN TITA--CYCCUD APR 81 W W GERBERICH AFOSR77...HYDROGEN EMBRITTLEMENT MECHANSIMS IN TITANIUM AND ALUMINUM ALLOYS FINAL REPORT for Period October 1975 to October 1981 4M University of Minnesota Minneapolis

  5. Oyster Shell Dredging in Atchafalaya Bay and Adjacent Waters, Louisiana. Draft Environmental Impact Statement and Appendixes,

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-04-01

    importance with the development of the Atchafalaya Delta region (Thompson and Deegan , 1980). Although several works have been prepared which dealt with the...47:189-228. Craig , N.J., R.E. Turner, and J.W. Day, Jr. 1979. Land loss in coastal Louisiana (USA). J. Environ. Management 3(1): 133-144. Cratsley, D.W...University, Baton Rouge. 285 pp. EI-114 Thompson, B.A and L.A. Deegan . 1983. The Atchafalaya River delta: a "new" fishery nursery with recommendations for

  6. Misperceiving Bullshit as Profound Is Associated with Favorable Views of Cruz, Rubio, Trump and Conservatism

    PubMed Central

    Pfattheicher, Stefan; Schindler, Simon

    2016-01-01

    The present research investigates the associations between holding favorable views of potential Democratic or Republican candidates for the US presidency 2016 and seeing profoundness in bullshit statements. In this contribution, bullshit is used as a technical term which is defined as communicative expression that lacks content, logic, or truth from the perspective of natural science. We used the Bullshit Receptivity scale (BSR) to measure seeing profoundness in bullshit statements. The BSR scale contains statements that have a correct syntactic structure and seem to be sound and meaningful on first reading but are actually vacuous. Participants (N = 196; obtained via Amazon Mechanical Turk) rated the profoundness of bullshit statements (using the BSR) and provided favorability ratings of three Democratic (Hillary Clinton, Martin O’Malley, and Bernie Sanders) and three Republican candidates for US president (Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, and Donald Trump). Participants also completed a measure of political liberalism/conservatism. Results revealed that favorable views of all three Republican candidates were positively related to judging bullshit statements as profound. The smallest correlation was found for Donald Trump. Although we observe a positive association between bullshit and support for the three Democrat candidates, this relationship is both substantively small and statistically insignificant. The general measure of political liberalism/conservatism was also related to judging bullshit statements as profound in that individuals who were more politically conservative had a higher tendency to see profoundness in bullshit statements. Of note, these results were not due to a general tendency among conservatives to see profoundness in everything: Favorable views of Republican candidates and conservatism were not significantly related to profoundness ratings of mundane statements. In contrast, this was the case for Hillary Clinton and Martin O’Malley. Overall, small-to-medium sized correlations were found, indicating that far from all conservatives see profoundness in bullshit statements. PMID:27128318

  7. Misperceiving Bullshit as Profound Is Associated with Favorable Views of Cruz, Rubio, Trump and Conservatism.

    PubMed

    Pfattheicher, Stefan; Schindler, Simon

    2016-01-01

    The present research investigates the associations between holding favorable views of potential Democratic or Republican candidates for the US presidency 2016 and seeing profoundness in bullshit statements. In this contribution, bullshit is used as a technical term which is defined as communicative expression that lacks content, logic, or truth from the perspective of natural science. We used the Bullshit Receptivity scale (BSR) to measure seeing profoundness in bullshit statements. The BSR scale contains statements that have a correct syntactic structure and seem to be sound and meaningful on first reading but are actually vacuous. Participants (N = 196; obtained via Amazon Mechanical Turk) rated the profoundness of bullshit statements (using the BSR) and provided favorability ratings of three Democratic (Hillary Clinton, Martin O'Malley, and Bernie Sanders) and three Republican candidates for US president (Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, and Donald Trump). Participants also completed a measure of political liberalism/conservatism. Results revealed that favorable views of all three Republican candidates were positively related to judging bullshit statements as profound. The smallest correlation was found for Donald Trump. Although we observe a positive association between bullshit and support for the three Democrat candidates, this relationship is both substantively small and statistically insignificant. The general measure of political liberalism/conservatism was also related to judging bullshit statements as profound in that individuals who were more politically conservative had a higher tendency to see profoundness in bullshit statements. Of note, these results were not due to a general tendency among conservatives to see profoundness in everything: Favorable views of Republican candidates and conservatism were not significantly related to profoundness ratings of mundane statements. In contrast, this was the case for Hillary Clinton and Martin O'Malley. Overall, small-to-medium sized correlations were found, indicating that far from all conservatives see profoundness in bullshit statements.

  8. 78 FR 60009 - Environmental Impact Statement: Erie and Genesee Counties, New York

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-09-30

    ... and Genesee Counties, New York AGENCY: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), DOT; New York State... counties of Erie and Genesee, New York (NYSDOT Project Identification Number: 5528.28). A Notice of Intent... CONTACT: Jonathan McDade, Division Administrator, Federal Highway Administration, New York Division, Leo W...

  9. 18 CFR 1301.48 - Public availability of transcripts and other documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-04-01

    ... regular business hours in the TVA Research Library, 400 W. Summit Hill Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902..., Media Relations, Tennessee Valley Authority, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-1499; state that it is a request... Authority, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-1401. Such notice shall include a statement that it is an appeal from...

  10. 18 CFR 1301.48 - Public availability of transcripts and other documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-04-01

    ... regular business hours in the TVA Research Library, 400 W. Summit Hill Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902..., Media Relations, Tennessee Valley Authority, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-1499; state that it is a request... Authority, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-1401. Such notice shall include a statement that it is an appeal from...

  11. 18 CFR 1301.48 - Public availability of transcripts and other documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-04-01

    ... regular business hours in the TVA Research Library, 400 W. Summit Hill Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902..., Media Relations, Tennessee Valley Authority, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-1499; state that it is a request... Authority, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-1401. Such notice shall include a statement that it is an appeal from...

  12. 18 CFR 1301.48 - Public availability of transcripts and other documents.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-04-01

    ... regular business hours in the TVA Research Library, 400 W. Summit Hill Drive, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902..., Media Relations, Tennessee Valley Authority, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-1499; state that it is a request... Authority, Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-1401. Such notice shall include a statement that it is an appeal from...

  13. Tinnitus Multimodal Imaging

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-10-01

    1 AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-13-1-0494 TITLE: Tinnitus Multimodal Imaging PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR...TYPE Annual 3. DATES COVERED 30 Sept 2013 – 29 Oct 2014 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER Tinnitus Multimodal Imaging...AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited 13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 14. ABSTRACT Tinnitus is a common auditory

  14. Digging for knowledge

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Szu, Harold; Jenkins, Jeffrey; Hsu, Charles; Goehl, Steve; Miao, Liden; Cader, Masud; Benachenhou, Dalila

    2009-04-01

    The "smile of a mother" is always recognized, whenever and wherever. But why is my PC always dumb and unable to recognize me or my needs, whoever or whatever? This paper postulates that such a 6 W's query and search system needs matching storage. Such a lament will soon be mended with a smarter PC, or a smarter Google engine, a network computer, working in the field of data retrieval, feature extraction, reduction, and knowledge precipitation. Specifically, the strategy of modern information storage and retrieval shall work like our brains, which are constantly overwhelmed by 5 pairs of identical tapes taken by eyes, ears, etc. 5 high fidelity sensors generate 5 pairs of high definition tapes which produce the seeing and hearing etc. in our perception. This amounts to 10 tapes recorded in a non-abridged fashion. How can we store and retrieve them when we need to? We must reduce the redundancy, enhancing the signal noise ratio, and fusing invariant features using a simple set of mathematical operations to write according to the union and read by the intersection in the higher dimensional vector space. For example, (see paper for equation) where the query must be phrased in terms of the union of imprecise or partial set of 6w's denoted by the union of lower case w's. The upper case W's are the archival storage of a primer tree. A simplified humanistic representation may be called the 6W space (who, what, where, when, why, how), also referred to as the Newspaper geometry. It seems like mapping the 6W to the 3W (World Wide Web) is becoming relatively easier. It may thus become efficient and robust by rapidly digging for knowledge through the set operations of union, writing, and intersection, reading, upon the design of 6 W query searching engine matched efficiently by the 6W vector index databases. In fact, Newspaper 6D geometry may be reduced furthermore by PCA (Principal Component Analysis) eigenvector mathematics and mapped into the 2D causality space comprised of the causes (What, How, Why) and the effects (Where, When and Who). If this hypothesis of brain strategy were true, one must then develop a 6W query language to support a 6Wordered set storage of linkage pointers in high D space. In other words, one can easily map the basic 1st Gen. Google Web, 1-D statistical PageRanking databases, to a nested 6W tree where each branch of sub-6-W is stemming from the prime 6 W tree, using a system of automated text mining assisted by syntactic semantics to discern the properties of the 6W for that query. Goehl et al. has demonstrated previously that such is doable, but one may need more tools to support the knowledge extraction and automated feature reduction. In this paper, we have set out to demonstrate lossless down sampling using the 2nd Gen wavelet transform, the so-called "1-D Cartesian lifting processing of Swelden" adopted by JPEG 2000. "The loss of statistics, if any (including PageRanking and 1-D lifting), is the loss of geometry insights," such as 2-D vector time series, video, whose 1-D lifting Cartesian product will loss the diagonal changes insights.

  15. Technical Operations Support (TOPS) II. Delivery Order 0011: Summary Status of MISSE-1 and MISSE-2 Experiments and Details of Estimated Environmental Exposures for MISSE-1 and MISSE-2

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2006-07-01

    distinct types of devices were used that respond to radiation differently, TLDs (thermoluminescent dosimeters ), Charge-Coupled Devices (CCDs) and...optocouplers. The TLDs respond to total ionizing dose, most of which is contributed to by the trapped electrons for locations with less than 100 mils of... electrons , slab config. Space Station Calc., 1 yr dose, protons + electrons 7th TLD on W2-15 gave anomalously low reading BREB =Boeing Radiation

  16. Toda theory from six dimensions

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Córdova, Clay; Jafferis, Daniel L.

    2017-12-01

    We describe a compactification of the six-dimensional (2,0) theory on a foursphere which gives rise to a two-dimensional Toda theory at long distances. This construction realizes chiral Toda fields as edge modes trapped near the poles of the sphere. We relate our setup to compactifications of the (2,0) theory on the five and six-sphere. In this way, we explain a connection between half-BPS operators of the (2,0) theory and twodimensional W-algebras, and derive an equality between their conformal anomalies. As we explain, all such relationships between the six-dimensional (2,0) theory and Toda field theory can be interpreted as statements about the edge modes of complex Chern-Simons on various three-manifolds with boundary.

  17. Further Comment on "AGU Statement Regarding the Conviction of Italian Seismologists"

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Amato, Alessandro; Cocco, Massimo; Cultrera, Giovanna; Galadini, Fabrizio; Margheriti, Lucia; Nostro, Concetta; Pantosti, Daniela

    2013-07-01

    In the opinion of the undersigned, AGU's position statement regarding the conviction of Italian seismologists, issued following the 22 October 2012 conviction of six Italian scientists and one government official related to the 2009 L'Aquila earthquake (see Eos, 93(44), 444, 10.1029/2012EO440013), is absolutely right and correct. We believe that Franco Marenco's opinion disagreeing with AGU's position (Eos, 94(6), 63, doi:10.1002/2013EO060006) is misleading because it is based only on biased information gathered from the media. We invite Marenco and anyone who is interested in better understanding the L'Aquila trial and related issues to retrieve and read original documents and information from http://processoaquila.wordpress.com/.

  18. Utility of diffusion-weighted MR imaging in the diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrum abnormality.

    PubMed

    Sannananja, Bhagya; Ellermeier, Anna; Hippe, Daniel S; Winter, Thomas C; Kang, Stella K; Lee, Susanna I; Kilgore, Mark R; Dighe, Manjiri K

    2018-04-17

    The aim of this study was to evaluate the utility of added DWI sequences as an adjunct to traditional MR imaging in the evaluation of abnormal placentation in patients with suspicion for placenta accreta spectrum abnormality or morbidly adherent placenta (MAP). The study was approved by local ethics committee. The subjects included pregnant women with prenatal MRI performed between July 2013 to July 2015. All imaging was performed on a Philips 1.5T MR scanner using pelvic phased-array coil. Only T2-weighted and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) series were compiled for review. Two randomized imaging sets were created: set 1 included T2-weighted series only (T2W); set 2 included T2W with DWI series together (T2W + DWI). Three radiologists, blinded to history and pathology, reviewed the imaging, with 2 weeks of time between the two image sets. Sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy for MAP were calculated and compared between T2W only and T2W + DWI reads. Associations between imaging findings and invasion on pathology were tested using the Chi-squared test. Confidence scores, inter-reader agreement, and systematic differences were documented. A total of 17 pregnant women were included in the study. 8 cases were pathologically diagnosed with MAP. There were no significant differences in the diagnostic accuracy between T2W and T2W + DWI in the diagnosis of MAP in terms of overall accuracy (62.7% for T2W vs. 68.6% for T2W + DWI, p = 0.68), sensitivity (70.8% for T2W vs. 95.8% for T2W + DWI, p = 0.12), and specificity (55.6% for T2W vs. 44.4% for T2W + DWI, p = 0.49). There was no significant difference in the diagnostic confidence between the review of T2W images alone and the T2W + DWI review (mean 7.3 ± 1.8 for T2W vs. 7.5 ± 1.8 for T2W + DWI, p = 0.37). With the current imaging technique, addition of DWI sequence to the traditional T2W images cannot be shown to significantly increase the accuracy or reader confidence for diagnosis of placenta accreta spectrum abnormality. However, DWI does improve identification of abnormalities in the placental-myometrial interface.

  19. Ezra Pound: A Collection of Critical Essays. Twentieth Century Views Series.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Sutton, Walter, Ed.

    One of a series of works aimed at presenting contemporary critical opinion on major authors, this collection includes essays by Walter Sutton, William Butler Yeats, William Carlos Williams, T. S. Eliot, F. R. Leavis, Hugh Kenner, M. L. Rosenthal, Forrest Read, David W. Evans, W. M. Frohock, Harold H. Watts, Earl Miner, Murray Schafer, J. P.…

  20. Numerical approach to reference identification of Staphylococcus, Stomatococcus, and Micrococcus spp.

    PubMed

    Rhoden, D L; Hancock, G A; Miller, J M

    1993-03-01

    A numerical-code system for the reference identification of Staphylococcus species, Stomatococcus mucilaginosus, and Micrococcus species was established by using a selected panel of conventional biochemicals. Results from 824 cultures (289 eye isolate cultures, 147 reference strains, and 388 known control strains) were used to generate a list of 354 identification code numbers. Each six-digit code number was based on results from 18 conventional biochemical reactions. Seven milliliters of purple agar base with 1% sterile carbohydrate solution added was poured into 60-mm-diameter agar plates. All biochemical tests were inoculated with 1 drop of a heavy broth suspension, incubated at 35 degrees C, and read daily for 3 days. All reactions were read and interpreted by the method of Kloos et al. (G. A. Hebert, C. G. Crowder, G. A. Hancock, W. R. Jarvis, and C. Thornsberry, J. Clin. Microbiol. 26:1939-1949, 1988; W. E. Kloos and D. W. Lambe, Jr., P. 222-237, in A. Balows, W. J. Hansler, Jr., K. L. Herrmann, H. D. Isenberg, and H. J. Shadomy, ed., Manual of Clinical Microbiology, 5th ed., 1991). This modified reference identification method was 96 to 98% accurate and could have value in reference and public health laboratory settings.

  1. Feasibility Report and Environmental Impact Statement for Navigation Improvements at Bayou La Batre, Alabama. Volume 2. Appendices.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-09-12

    34 7714 1-716 -8 m16 y.LSMUO*W O son onx ___ __ __"a_ -1~66 (70NQNERAN T-SAStJ 7- \\SAA R VAAF- -0.o4 r~TS~ Grv) LTC~~ o r. S(P4 CILTY) #4 6-~ Fusin"_ Nowo ...5S82,575 63 53,600 $226,224 $240,819 $1,180,984 16+1+1 431, 100 1.40 603,540 70,900 95,152 96 3,600 347 , 148 288,259 1,404,999 18+1+1 567,300 1.20 680,0 70

  2. A System Approach to Navy Medical Education and Training. Appendix 11. Advanced General Duty Corpsman.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1974-08-31

    PILONIDAL CYST /ABSCESS TURN PAGE LEFT PtS7 OF & CED GENERAL TASK BC(KLET TASK N-. I ENTEO RESPONSES TO STATEmENTS PELOo I’! LEFT SIIE ’F Oij, 03 ( fF PESP7...NSE BrKLET I IPRESCPIBE TREATMENT FOR PILO\\IOAL CYST /49SCESS 2 IOBSEQVE FrC/REPORT SYMPTOMS OF INTESTINAL wCtS 3 IMAKE PRELIMINARY DIEGNOSIS CF A4EIC...INGROWN NAIL 45 IEXTRACT SEBACEOUS MATERIAL FROM COMEDO 46 ITRIM CORNS/CALLUSES 47 IEXCISE SEBACEOUS CYST /LIPOMA 48 IEXCISE POLYP 49 IGIVE CARE TO BURN

  3. International Symposium on Gas Kinetics (10th), Held at the University College of Swansea (United Kingdom). Abstracts of Papers 24-29 July 1988

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-07-29

    PHOTOGRAPH THIS SHEET 0" DTI FILE COPY cv) w LEVEL INVENTORY N z DOfENT IDENTIFICATION Appovcd , DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT ACCESSION FOR NTIS GRA DTIC...0.0 ,o. 04 43- A 𔃾Cv 󈧰 0 ’ ’ ’ t >0 0 04.1 065 . 0 441 -P ’a 4,1t 2 a - 1 -1 0 0 0410-A4j 410 C r00. mCQ v’ 0C >1, -VSlS aൾ a00U,4m C a 040000.04

  4. Extended experience benefits spatial mental model development with route but not survey descriptions.

    PubMed

    Brunyé, Tad T; Taylor, Holly A

    2008-02-01

    Spatial descriptions symbolically represent environmental information through language and are written in two primary perspectives: survey, analogous to viewing a map, and route, analogous to navigation. Readers of survey or route descriptions form abstracted perspective flexible representations of the described environment, or spatial mental models. The present two experiments investigated the maintenance of perspective in spatial mental models as a function of description perspective and experience (operationalized through repetition), and as reflected in self-paced reading times. Experiment 1 involved studying survey and route descriptions either once or three times, then completing map drawing and true/false statement verification. Results demonstrated that spatial mental models are readily formed with survey descriptions, but require relatively more experience with route descriptions; further, some limited evidence suggests perspective dependence in spatial mental models, even following extended experience. Experiment 2 measured self-paced reading during three successive description presentations. Average reading times over the three presentations reduced more for survey relative to route descriptions, and there was no evidence for perspective specificity in resulting spatial mental models. This supports Experiment 1 findings demonstrating the relatively time-consuming nature of acquiring spatial mental models from route, but not survey descriptions. Results are discussed with regard to developmental, discourse processing, and spatial mental model theory.

  5. Motivating people to learn cardiopulmonary resuscitation and use of automated external defibrillators.

    PubMed

    McDonald, Deborah Dillon; Martin, Deborah; Foley, Diane; Baker, Lee; Hintz, Deborah; Faure, Lauren; Erman, Nancy; Palozie, Jessica; Lundquist, Kathleen; O'Brien, Kara; Prior, Laura; Songco, Narra; Muscillo, Gwyn; Graziani, Denise; Tomczyk, Michael; Price, Sheryl

    2010-01-01

    The purpose of this study was to test the effect of a motivational message on the intention of laypersons to learn cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and automated external defibrillator (AED) use. A pretest-posttest, double-blind, randomized design was used with 220 community-dwelling adults. Participants were randomly assigned to the treatment group reading the CPR and AED pamphlet emphasizing learning CPR and AED use to save someone they love and the 3-minute window for response time; or to the comparison group reading the identical pamphlet without the 2 motivational statements. Intention to learn CPR and AED use and to look for AEDs in public areas was measured before and after reading the respective pamphlet. No significant difference emerged between the groups for the number of participants planning to learn CPR and AED use. A significant number of participants in both groups increased intention to learn CPR and AED use. Significantly more treatment participants than comparison participants planned to routinely look for AEDs in public areas after reading the pamphlet, however. Teaching critical facts such as the low survival rate for out-of-hospital cardiac arrest might encourage laypersons to learn CPR and AED use. Routinely teaching family members of people at risk for a cardiac arrest about the short window of time in which CPR and AED use must begin and encouraging them to learn about CPR and AEDs to save someone they love may encourage family members to identify the location of AEDs in public places.

  6. A user's manual for the Loaded Microstrip Antenna Code (LMAC)

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Forrai, D. P.; Newman, E. H.

    1988-01-01

    The use of the Loaded Microstrip Antenna Code is described. The geometry of this antenna is shown and its dimensions are described in terms of the program outputs. The READ statements for the inputs are detailed and typical values are given where applicable. The inputs of four example problems are displayed with the corresponding output of the code given in the appendices.

  7. Automatic/Control Processing and Attention.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-04-01

    changes that occur with practice have lead many researchers to propose that qualitative changes occur in the processing (e.g., James, 1890; LaBerge ...functions are similar. Perception & Psychophvsics, 1972, 12, 378-3G4. (b) March 26, 19C2 Page 22 LaBerge , D. Acquisition of automatic processing in... LaBerge & S. J. Samuels (Eds.), Lasic Proc7’-.es in reading: Perception and comprehension. Hillsdale, N.J.: Schneider, W., & Shiffrin, R. M

  8. [The use of medical journals by medical students. Which medical journals are read?].

    PubMed

    Algra, Annemijn M; Dekker, Friedo W

    2015-01-01

    To investigate the role of scientific medical journals in Dutch medical curricula. Descriptive questionnaire study. In 2013, medical students (from year 3 onwards) at the Leiden University Medical Centre (LUMC), were invited to respond to an online questionnaire. They were presented with 28 multiple-choice questions and 11 statements about the use of scientific medical journals in the medical curriculum. We calculated the frequencies of the answers per question and analysed differences between medical students using two-by-two tables. The questionnaire was completed by 680 (53.0%) of 1277 invited medical students enrolled at the LUMC. Most of the respondents were those doing clinical rotations (56.6%) and 60.1% had research experience. More than half of the students read at least one scientific journal a few times per month; this percentage was 38.8% among third-year students, 49.3% among fourth-year students, 60.0% among those on clinical rotation, and was higher among students with research experience (63.3%) than among those without research experience (44.1%). Nearly 90% of students agreed with the statement that the development of academic and scientific education should take place in the bachelor's phase of medical school. Medical students start to read scientific medical journals at an early phase in the medical curriculum and this increases further when students start to undertake research projects or go on clinical rotation. Medical curricula should be constructed in such a way that medical students learn to select and interpret research findings adequately for themselves before they turn to articles from scientific medical journals.

  9. Optimal Length of Assignment of PPBES Programmers of the DA Staff.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-06-01

    8217 or "strang agreement" with arW statem t. I e y one msub-group non-PA officers, registered collective disagremisn; this involved the statement that...key - far greater influence tbmn bde odk . - 4 yrs ist coalete tours Stability Important in working with Congressionml staffers Give psychological

  10. 75 FR 7536 - Environmental Impact Statement: Ottawa County, MI

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-02-19

    ... Baird District Library, 123 Exchange St., Spring Lake. Robinson Township Hall, 12010 120th Ave., Grand... request. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ruth Hepfer, Area Engineer at FHWA Michigan Division, 315 W. Allegan Street, Room 201; Lansing, MI 48933; by phone at (517) 702-1847, or email at Ruth[email protected

  11. 78 FR 18899 - Oranges, Grapefruit, Tangerines, and Tangelos Grown in Florida; Hearing on Proposed Amendment of...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2013-03-28

    ... markets, eliminate the use of separate acceptance statements in the nomination process, and require... requirements for domestic shipments and authorize different regulations for different markets. 8. Amend Sec...) W-Murcott tangerines (8) Tangors (d) Pummelos; (1) Hirado Buntan and other pink seeded pummelos (e...

  12. Characterization of Rain Attenuation and Depolarization at W/V Bands

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2015-07-30

    AIR FORCE BASE , NM 87117-5776 DTIC COPY NOTICE AND SIGNATURE PAGE Using Government drawings, specifications, or other data included in this...WITH ASSIGNED DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT. //SIGNED// //SIGNED// STEVEN A. LANE PAUL HAUSGEN, Ph.D. Program Manager Technical Advisor, Space Based Advanced... Stations ........................................................................................ 11  Figure 3. Transmitter Block Diagram

  13. How generation affects source memory.

    PubMed

    Geghman, Kindiya D; Multhaup, Kristi S

    2004-07-01

    Generation effects (better memory for self-produced items than for provided items) typically occur in item memory. Jurica and Shimamura (1999) reported a negative generation effect in source memory, but their procedure did not test participants on the items they had generated. In Experiment 1, participants answered questions and read statements made by a face on a computer screen. The target word was unscrambled, or letters were filled in. Generation effects were found for target recall and source recognition (which person did which task). Experiment 2 extended these findings to a condition in which the external sources were two different faces. Generation had a positive effect on source memory, supporting an overlap in the underlying mechanisms of item and source memory.

  14. Decision Making: An Imperative for Language Learning; Highlights of the Annual Language Arts Conference of Memphis State University (7th, Memphis, June 12-14, 1974).

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Rakes, Thomas A., Ed.; Brotherton, Sophia, Ed.

    This document presents nine papers which were originally prepared for the 1974 Annual Language Arts Conference at Memphis State University. Included are: "Proxemics" by Dale F. Baltus; "Reading and Study Skill Hints for Intermediate and Secondary Teachers" by Stuart W. Bray; "A Reading Game License" by Flora C. Fowler; "Teach Kids to Think" by…

  15. From the "Escuela Moderna" to the "Tyovaen Opisto": Reading, (W)Riting, and Revolution, the 3 "Rs" of Expanded Proletarian Literacy

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Kaunonen, Gary

    2011-01-01

    In working class education, one of the primary goals in addition to basic literacy was the formulation of class-based interpretations of society. In the late 19th and early 20th century, as literacy programs began to filter into the lives of proletariat, an attempt to expand the definition of literacy past basic reading and writing skills…

  16. Survey of endosymbionts in the Diaphorina citri metagenome and assembly of a Wolbachia wDi draft genome.

    PubMed

    Saha, Surya; Hunter, Wayne B; Reese, Justin; Morgan, J Kent; Marutani-Hert, Mizuri; Huang, Hong; Lindeberg, Magdalen

    2012-01-01

    Diaphorina citri (Hemiptera: Psyllidae), the Asian citrus psyllid, is the insect vector of Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus, the causal agent of citrus greening disease. Sequencing of the D. citri metagenome has been initiated to gain better understanding of the biology of this organism and the potential roles of its bacterial endosymbionts. To corroborate candidate endosymbionts previously identified by rDNA amplification, raw reads from the D. citri metagenome sequence were mapped to reference genome sequences. Results of the read mapping provided the most support for Wolbachia and an enteric bacterium most similar to Salmonella. Wolbachia-derived reads were extracted using the complete genome sequences for four Wolbachia strains. Reads were assembled into a draft genome sequence, and the annotation assessed for the presence of features potentially involved in host interaction. Genome alignment with the complete sequences reveals membership of Wolbachia wDi in supergroup B, further supported by phylogenetic analysis of FtsZ. FtsZ and Wsp phylogenies additionally indicate that the Wolbachia strain in the Florida D. citri isolate falls into a sub-clade of supergroup B, distinct from Wolbachia present in Chinese D. citri isolates, supporting the hypothesis that the D. citri introduced into Florida did not originate from China.

  17. Survey of Endosymbionts in the Diaphorina citri Metagenome and Assembly of a Wolbachia wDi Draft Genome

    PubMed Central

    Saha, Surya; Hunter, Wayne B.; Reese, Justin; Morgan, J. Kent; Marutani-Hert, Mizuri; Huang, Hong; Lindeberg, Magdalen

    2012-01-01

    Diaphorina citri (Hemiptera: Psyllidae), the Asian citrus psyllid, is the insect vector of Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus, the causal agent of citrus greening disease. Sequencing of the D. citri metagenome has been initiated to gain better understanding of the biology of this organism and the potential roles of its bacterial endosymbionts. To corroborate candidate endosymbionts previously identified by rDNA amplification, raw reads from the D. citri metagenome sequence were mapped to reference genome sequences. Results of the read mapping provided the most support for Wolbachia and an enteric bacterium most similar to Salmonella. Wolbachia-derived reads were extracted using the complete genome sequences for four Wolbachia strains. Reads were assembled into a draft genome sequence, and the annotation assessed for the presence of features potentially involved in host interaction. Genome alignment with the complete sequences reveals membership of Wolbachia wDi in supergroup B, further supported by phylogenetic analysis of FtsZ. FtsZ and Wsp phylogenies additionally indicate that the Wolbachia strain in the Florida D. citri isolate falls into a sub-clade of supergroup B, distinct from Wolbachia present in Chinese D. citri isolates, supporting the hypothesis that the D. citri introduced into Florida did not originate from China. PMID:23166822

  18. Commentary: Race Man and Philosopher of Education--A Reflection on W.E.B. Du Bois

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Gordon, Edmund W.; Watkins, L'Tanya M.

    2017-01-01

    The brilliantly developed emphasis in the work of Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois on race and the political economy has led many of his readers to misunderstand and underestimate his additional important contributions to and perspectives on education. In addition, some of his work not commonly read by educators as well as his unpublished musings from later…

  19. Principles of War: The Selma Campaign

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-04-01

    i ".11 ^ ^ ^ § ^ AIR COMMAND AND STAFF COLLEGE STUDENT" REPORT PRINCIPLES...STATEMENT A Appiovod toi public lelaaMt Dirtribution Unlimited 84 09 05 225 -.-■v. ^. ^. ^. A •". ■%•.-’. m’fi1«1 ^^ p.’irjtvtj". ’ i ■ i . 1...JH. ,, ■ i ;> MA .. lit 8 l.^.1- "’ ’ ■U.,.L.1 >■ ■B,W-’■’•’ •’ ’ "^ ?» .■• ir, r; • r ’ i " wM’ ».’ ■," ’. ■«". REPORT NUMBER

  20. Fatigue Strength of Welded Joints and Fatigue Strength of Welded Joints: A Review of the Literature to July 1, 1936

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1936-12-02

    a1loying. The first part of this statement Is simple to under- - td and is along the lines suggested by our studies of beet effeet am " union 189"t pwpestie...38, Feb. 1931. 189. Hodge, J. C., Amer. Weld. Soc. Jnl. 9, 93-116, Oct. 1930. 190. Hawkins, H. W., Proc. Rugby Engg. Soc., 27, 41-65 (1), (1932-1933...Construction, Gosstroyizdat, Moscow, 1933, 43-46; All- Union Scientific Engg. Soc. Welders, Research Works on Welding, 1934, 163-171. 262. Iller, R. W. Autog

  1. Application of classification trees for the qualitative differentiation of focal liver lesions suspicious for metastasis in gadolinium-EOB-DTPA-enhanced liver MR imaging.

    PubMed

    Schelhorn, J; Benndorf, M; Dietzel, M; Burmeister, H P; Kaiser, W A; Baltzer, P A T

    2012-09-01

    To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of qualitative descriptors alone and in combination for the classification of focal liver lesions (FLLs) suspicious for metastasis in gadolinium-EOB-DTPA-enhanced liver MR imaging. Consecutive patients with clinically suspected liver metastases were eligible for this retrospective investigation. 50 patients met the inclusion criteria. All underwent Gd-EOB-DTPA-enhanced liver MRI (T2w, chemical shift T1w, dynamic T1w). Primary liver malignancies or treated lesions were excluded. All investigations were read by two blinded observers (O1, O2). Both independently identified the presence of lesions and evaluated predefined qualitative lesion descriptors (signal intensities, enhancement pattern and morphology). A reference standard was determined under consideration of all clinical and follow-up information. Statistical analysis besides contingency tables (chi square, kappa statistics) included descriptor combinations using classification trees (CHAID methodology) as well as ROC analysis. In 38 patients, 120 FLLs (52 benign, 68 malignant) were present. 115 (48 benign, 67 malignant) were identified by the observers. The enhancement pattern, relative SI upon T2w and late enhanced T1w images contributed significantly to the differentiation of FLLs. The overall classification accuracy was 91.3 % (O1) and 88.7 % (O2), kappa = 0.902. The combination of qualitative lesion descriptors proposed in this work revealed high diagnostic accuracy and interobserver agreement in the differentiation of focal liver lesions suspicious for metastases using Gd-EOB-DTPA-enhanced liver MRI. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.

  2. Perceptions and Knowledge of Caffeinated Energy Drinks: Results of Focus Groups With Canadian Youth.

    PubMed

    McCrory, Cassondra; White, Christine M; Bowman, Carolyn; Fenton, Nancy; Reid, Jessica L; Hammond, David

    2017-04-01

    To examine use, knowledge, and perceptions of caffeinated energy drinks (CEDs) among youth. Qualitative research using focus group discussions (n = 4). Two Canadian cities (Toronto and Montreal). Youth aged 12-18 years (n = 41). Perceived definitions of CEDs, reasons for use, knowledge of health effects, use with alcohol, marketing perceptions, and use and understanding of cautionary statements on packaging. Data were analyzed using a modified grounded-theory approach. Youth identified CEDs as products that provide energy and contain caffeine and sugar. Compared with mainstream CED brands and energy shots, youth were less likely to perceive Gatorade, Coca-Cola, and a Starbucks beverage as energy drinks, despite some ambiguity. The majority of participants believed that CEDs, including mixed with alcohol, were not necessarily harmful in moderation and that marketing was targeted toward older youth and young adults. Awareness of cautionary statements on CEDs was low; cautionary statements were perceived as difficult to find and read owing to the design and small font. Findings suggest a need to increase public education regarding the potential risks of CED consumption, including enhancements to the mandated cautionary statements, with greater attention to the impact of CED marketing on youth. Copyright © 2016 Society for Nutrition Education and Behavior. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

  3. Another quasi-experimental study of understanding/appreciation of editorial satire.

    PubMed

    Gruner, C R; Gruner, M W; Travillion, L J

    1991-12-01

    College students completed a 17-item scale measuring the "propensity to argue controversial topics" and 7 other nominal-scale independent variables. They then read three editorial satires and checked which of five statements was the intended thesis of each satire's author. They also rated each satire on interestingness and funniness. Analysis indicated dependence between understanding of satire and sex and regular readership of "The Far Side."

  4. Advanced Launch System (ALS) Space Transportation Expert System Study

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-03-01

    goal (i.e. it develops a plan). The expert system checks the configuration, issues control commands, and reads sensor inputs to determine facts. The...than a conceptual design issue - a statement does not imply consequences, and only invokes database slot-filler actions such as inheriting an ancestor’s...Subclasses all other classes Private Components Public Components Functions Flatten -> storableForm Action : Creates a flat storable form of the object

  5. The Voices of Non-Adopters: Members of the Virginia and Nebraska State Boards of Education on Why Their States Did Not Adopt the Common Core Standards

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    State Education Standard, 2012

    2012-01-01

    On June 24, 2010, the Virginia Board of Education unanimously adopted a statement expressing its continuing commitment to Virginia's Standards of Learning (SOL) and opposition to making participation in federal grant and entitlement programs contingent on word-for-word adoption of the newly developed Common Core State Standards in reading and…

  6. One Among Many: Building Partner Capacity in a Multinational Command

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2012-03-20

    initiative-life/ (accessed March 10, 2012). UNESCO defines literacy as “The ability to read and write with understanding a simple statement related...Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, “ UNESCO Institute for Statistics Glossary,” 2006, http://glossary.uis.unesco.org/glossary...Command Brief, briefing slides, Fort Polk, LA , February 8, 2012 and MAJ John A. Redford, Brigade Operations Officer, 162d Infantry Brigade, Fort

  7. Young People Take Their Rightful Places as Full and Contributing Members of a World Class Workforce: Philadelphia Youth Network Annual Report 2006

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Philadelphia Youth Network, 2006

    2006-01-01

    The title of this year's annual report has particular meaning for all of the staff at the Philadelphia Youth Network. The phrase derives from Philadelphia Youth Network's (PYN's) new vision statement, developed as part of its recent strategic planning process, which reads: All of our city's young people take their rightful places as full and…

  8. Autonomous Acquisition Simulator and Associated Data (AASAD).

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1981-01-15

    7 AA95 709 FORD AEROSPACE AND COMMUNICATIONS CORP NEWPORT EACH -ETC F/ 19/5 AUTONOMOUS ACQUISITI N SIMULAT R AND ASSOCIATED DATA (AASAD)(U) JAN 81...llllllllllllJm AUTONOMOUS ACQUISITION 7 SIMULATOR AND ASSOCIATED DATA I BY S. R. KING J. R. BERCHTOLD H. MACK K. R. TAYLOR A. W. MATHE J. N. CAST A. S...FORT BELVOIR, VIRGINIA 22060 81 2 27 01 UNCLASSIFIED SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE (When Data Entered) REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE READ

  9. Parallel Systems Laboratory: Access, Allocation, and Control

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-06-30

    boog Eae...4d READ ISTRUCTIONSREPORT DOCUMENTATIO PAGE BEFOR COMPLETNG FORM I. REPORT NUMNER 2. GOVT ACCESSION NO 3- RECIPINT’S CATALOG NUMR9 . TITLE (an...a summary of the salient results of this research in capsule form which is followed by an extensive list of publications, dissertations and theses...because it provides the asymptotic use of currently wasted cycles. To do so, we examine a distribution of w(u It) in a very simple form and for

  10. Testing theories of irony processing using eye-tracking and ERPs.

    PubMed

    Filik, Ruth; Leuthold, Hartmut; Wallington, Katie; Page, Jemma

    2014-05-01

    Not much is known about how people comprehend ironic utterances, and to date, most studies have simply compared processing of ironic versus non-ironic statements. A key aspect of the graded salience hypothesis, distinguishing it from other accounts (such as the standard pragmatic view and direct access view), is that it predicts differences between processing of familiar and unfamiliar ironies. Specifically, if an ironic utterance is familiar, then the ironic interpretation should be available without the need for extra inferential processes, whereas for unfamiliar ironies, the literal interpretation would be computed first, and a mismatch with context would lead to a re-interpretation of the statement as being ironic. We recorded participants' eye movements while they were reading (Experiment 1), and electrical brain activity while they were listening to (Experiment 2), familiar and unfamiliar ironies compared to non-ironic controls. Results show disruption to eye movements and an N400-like effect for unfamiliar ironies only, supporting the predictions of the graded salience hypothesis. In addition, in Experiment 2, a late positivity was found for both familiar and unfamiliar ironic materials, compared to non-ironic controls. We interpret this positivity as reflecting ongoing conflict between the literal and ironic interpretations of the utterance. PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved.

  11. Clinical practice guidelines and consensus statements in oncology--an assessment of their methodological quality.

    PubMed

    Jacobs, Carmel; Graham, Ian D; Makarski, Julie; Chassé, Michaël; Fergusson, Dean; Hutton, Brian; Clemons, Mark

    2014-01-01

    Consensus statements and clinical practice guidelines are widely available for enhancing the care of cancer patients. Despite subtle differences in their definition and purpose, these terms are often used interchangeably. We systematically assessed the methodological quality of consensus statements and clinical practice guidelines published in three commonly read, geographically diverse, cancer-specific journals. Methods Consensus statements and clinical practice guidelines published between January 2005 and September 2013 in Current Oncology, European Journal of Cancer and Journal of Clinical Oncology were evaluated. Each publication was assessed using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation II (AGREE II) rigour of development and editorial independence domains. For assessment of transparency of document development, 7 additional items were taken from the Institute of Medicine's standards for practice guidelines and the Journal of Clinical Oncology guidelines for authors of guidance documents. Consensus statements and clinical practice guidelines published between January 2005 and September 2013 in Current Oncology, European Journal of Cancer and Journal of Clinical Oncology were evaluated. Each publication was assessed using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation II (AGREE II) rigour of development and editorial independence domains. For assessment of transparency of document development, 7 additional items were taken from the Institute of Medicine's standards for practice guidelines and the Journal of Clinical Oncology guidelines for authors of guidance documents. Thirty-four consensus statements and 67 clinical practice guidelines were evaluated. The rigour of development score for consensus statements over the three journals was 32% lower than that of clinical practice guidelines. The editorial independence score was 15% lower for consensus statements than clinical practice guidelines. One journal scored consistently lower than the others over both domains. No journals adhered to all the items related to the transparency of document development. One journal's consensus statements endorsed a product made by the sponsoring pharmaceutical company in 64% of cases. Guidance documents are an essential part of oncology care and should be subjected to a rigorous and validated development process. Consensus statements had lower methodological quality than clinical practice guidelines using AGREE II. At a minimum, journals should ensure that that all consensus statements and clinical practice guidelines adhere to AGREE II criteria. Journals should consider explicitly requiring guidelines to declare pharmaceutical company sponsorship and to identify the sponsor's product to enhance transparency.

  12. Assessing the New Literacies of Online Reading Comprehension: An Informative Interview with W. Ian O'Byrne, Lisa Zawilinski, J. Greg McVerry, and Donald J. Leu at the University of Connecticut

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Mokhtari, Kouider; Kymes, Angel; Edwards, Patricia

    2008-01-01

    The constantly changing nature of literacy, brought about by the Internet and other forms of information and communication technologies (ICTs), has pressed researchers and practitioners to seek new ways of addressing the complexities of reading comprehension and writing on and with the Internet. In this brief interview, members of the New…

  13. A Comparison of Measured and Calculated Air-Transported Radiation from a Fast. Unshielded Nuclear Reactor.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-12-01

    UNSHIELDED NUCLEAR REACTOR by H. A. Robitaille and B. E. Hoffarth D T ICS ELECTE SEP 1 5 i9813 C- LA . DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT A O PROJECT NO. 1 DECEMBER 1980...et de neutrons b diff6rentes distances jusqu’ 1100 m~tres du r6acteur ncldaire & neutrons rapides de la Pulse Radiation Division de la U.S. Army...u)UOU 𔃽N~nl4 N0in0 -CuD z f- 000 LUU ’4 :1O 00 w4 w4 w (u3)uU3 𔃽N~n-A NO.Ln3 rc ino OQQ z ca co, 0 0- C ) LU c C. M CU m CD 0 LA (u3uOU 𔃽N~n1.4No

  14. 76 FR 53633 - Airworthiness Directives; Viking Air Limited (Type Certificate No. A-815 Formerly Held by...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-08-29

    ... Building Ground Floor, Room W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590. FOR FURTHER... form required in paragraph (f)(1) of airplanes: Within (figure 1 of this this AD, the total maximum...) 329-4090; e-mail: [email protected] . Figure 1 (g) Paperwork Reduction Act Burden Statement A...

  15. Coherent Backscattering: Conceptions and Misconceptions (Reply to Comments by Bruce W. Hapke and Robert M. Nelson)

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Tishkovets, Victor P.; Mishchenko, Michael

    2010-01-01

    Although the note by Hapke and Nelson has virtually no relevance to our original publication, it contains a number of statements that are misleading and/or wrong. We, therefore, use this opportunity to dispel several profound misconceptions that continue to hinder the progress in remote sensing of planetary surfaces.

  16. Tinnitus Multimodal Imaging

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2016-12-01

    images were segmented into gray and white matter images and spatially normalized to the MNI template (3 mm isotropic voxels) using the DARTEL toolbox in...AWARD NUMBER: W81XWH-13-1-0494 TITLE: Tinnitus Multimodal Imaging PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR: Steven Wan Cheung CONTRACTING ORGANIZATION... Medical Research and Materiel Command Fort Detrick, Maryland 21702-5012 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT: Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited

  17. Environmental Technology Verification Report and Statement for Baghouse Filtration Products, W. L. Gore & Associates, Inc. 5117 High Durability PPS Laminate Filtration Media (Tested March-April 2012)

    EPA Science Inventory

    Baghouses are air pollution control devices used to control particulate emissions from stationary sources and are among the technologies evaluated by the APCT Center. Baghouses and their accompanying filter media have long been one of the leading particulate control techniques fo...

  18. Mathematical Frameworks for Diagnostics, Prognostics and Condition Based Maintenance Problems

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2008-08-15

    REPORT Mathematical Frameworks for Diagnostics, Prognostics and Condition Based Maintenance Problems (W911NF-05-1-0426) 14. ABSTRACT 16. SECURITY ...other documentation. 12. DISTRIBUTION AVAILIBILITY STATEMENT Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited 9. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY NAME...parallel and distributed computing environment were researched. In support of the Condition Based Maintenance (CBM) philosophy, a theoretical framework

  19. Expansion of the Eclipse Digital Signal Processing System.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-12-01

    8217eOU WIdT TO,. Fig 1 IE.ETZIM U2. E( 11 -4., - IULTIPI.E P * S WI) STPM FILTER (- PAWtfTEP FILE PFILE FILTER FILE: WILE FIEP. LENGTH 55 WINIIM OF WQS...Vg u I k114 2.2 1 .2 I 11 .l111 1.6 MICROCOPY RESOLUTION TEST CHART NA, ONA BURMAU OF SrANDARDS-1963 A b i -I i.i 1s Lt USF w191 UNITED STATES AIR...SIGNAL PROCESSING SYSTI.M I"’ 1 /GI,/V/H 2 D- I6 Gordon R. Alln ist Lt USAF" I . . SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE (When Data Entered) READ

  20. Assessment of strategic processing during narrative comprehension in individuals with mild cognitive impairment.

    PubMed

    Schmitter-Edgecombe, Maureen; Creamer, Scott

    2010-07-01

    A think-aloud protocol was used to examine the strategies used by individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) during text comprehension. Twenty-three participants with MCI and 23 cognitively healthy older adults (OA) read narratives, pausing to verbalize their thoughts after each sentence. The verbal protocol analysis developed by Trabasso and Magliano (1996) was then used to code participants' utterances into inferential and non-inferential statements; inferential statements were further coded to identify the memory operation used in their generation. Compared with OA controls, the MCI participants showed poorer story comprehension and produced fewer inferences. The MCI participants were also less skilled at providing explanations of story events and in using prior text information to support inference generation. Poorer text comprehension was associated with poorer verbal memory abilities and poorer use of prior text events when producing inferential statements. The results suggest that the memory difficulties of the MCI group may be an important cognitive factor interfering with their ability to integrate narrative events through the use of inferences and to form a global coherence to support text comprehension.

  1. Perspective: An Extension of the STROBE Statement for Observational Studies in Nutritional Epidemiology (STROBE-nut): Explanation and Elaboration

    PubMed Central

    Berg, Christina; Forsum, Elisabet; Larsson, Christel; Sonestedt, Emily; Åkesson, Agneta; Lachat, Carl; Hawwash, Dana; Kolsteren, Patrick; Byrnes, Graham; De Keyzer, Willem; Van Camp, John; Cade, Janet E; Greenwood, Darren C; Slimani, Nadia; Cevallos, Myriam; Egger, Matthias; Huybrechts, Inge; Wirfält, Elisabet

    2017-01-01

    Nutritional epidemiology is an inherently complex and multifaceted research area. Dietary intake is a complex exposure and is challenging to describe and assess, and links between diet, health, and disease are difficult to ascertain. Consequently, adequate reporting is necessary to facilitate comprehension, interpretation, and generalizability of results and conclusions. The STrengthening the Reporting of OBservational studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) statement is an international and collaborative initiative aiming to enhance the quality of reporting of observational studies. We previously presented a checklist of 24 reporting recommendations for the field of nutritional epidemiology, called “the STROBE-nut.” The STROBE-nut is an extension of the general STROBE statement, intended to complement the STROBE recommendations to improve and standardize the reporting in nutritional epidemiology. The aim of the present article is to explain the rationale for, and elaborate on, the STROBE-nut recommendations to enhance the clarity and to facilitate the understanding of the guidelines. Examples from the published literature are used as illustrations, and references are provided for further reading. PMID:28916567

  2. Atmospheric Conditions in the Middle East

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1985-06-01

    g -..- " r ’ "SECRI UNCLASSIFIED SEUIYCLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE (101hen Doi& Entered) READ INSTRUCTIONS I . EPRT REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE EBEFORE...34.L- ] : o UNi LM 0 P- 4 4’ i ow N a# -W’ %C r % m4 P4 " % .E~ 0% P-4 "-4 4 0 "- 0 P-10 ON C4 LON4 N 1 0% 44 04 co eq 00 9; 119...344 0 (~ I ) 91 𔃺 𔃺 0 ൖ N 09 1% U)09 (9 (𔃻 (𔄃 4 919 ..m -. • • • • •w w.-• -. v , !’ r r " •= • . . . . .. . ’’ .’ -••. w L

  3. Comparative study of long-term outcomes of accelerated and conventional collagen crosslinking for progressive keratoconus.

    PubMed

    Males, J J; Viswanathan, D

    2018-01-01

    PurposeTo compare the long-term outcomes of accelerated corneal collagen crosslinking (CXL) to conventional CXL for progressive keratoconus.Patients and methodsComparative clinical study of consecutive progressive keratoconic eyes that underwent either accelerated CXL (9 mW/cm 2 ultraviolet A (UVA) light irradiance for 10 min) or conventional CXL (3 mW/cm 2 UVA light irradiance for 30 min). Eyes with minimum 12 months' follow-up were included. Post-procedure changes in keratometry readings (Flat meridian: K1; steep meridian: K2), central corneal thickness (CCT), best spectacle-corrected visual acuity (BSCVA), and manifest refraction spherical equivalent (MRSE) were analysed.ResultsA total of 42 eyes were included. In all, 21 eyes had accelerated CXL (20.5±5.5 months' follow-up) and 21 eyes had conventional CXL group (20.2±5.6 months' follow-up). In the accelerated CXL group, a significant reduction in K2 (P=0.02), however no significant change in K1 (P=0.35) and CCT (P=0.62) was noted. In the conventional CXL group, a significant reduction was seen in K1 (P=0.01) and K2 (P=0.04), but not in CCT (P=0.95). Although both groups exhibited significant reductions in K2 readings, no noteworthy differences were noted between them (P=0.36). Improvements in BSCVA (accelerated CXL; P=0.22 and conventional CXL; P=0.20) and MRSE (accelerated CXL; P=0.97 and conventional CXL; P=0.54) were noted, however were not significant in either group.ConclusionAccelerated and conventional CXL appear to be effective procedures for stabilising progressive keratoconus in the long-term.

  4. Proceedings of The 1980 Army Numerical Analysis and Computers Conference (17th) Held at Moffett Field, California on 20-21 February 1980.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1980-08-01

    relationship would be the solution of ZIG(s) F(s)) z n u(nT) fg(t) u(t) f(nT-t) u(nT-t) dt na-to -W 1 (12) The mean value theorem of the integral...4.16) corresponds to a positive eigenvalue X of (2.12) and conversely via the relationships (4.17a) a - (4.17b) = Because a is a monotone increasing...statements show how the time dependent displacements for any location of the foundation can be found, this information is used with relationships for

  5. December financial checkup for physicians.

    PubMed

    Miller, Rita

    2014-01-01

    December is a busy month for holiday fun, but don't neglect your financial health! Physicians should review their business and personal finances at year end to ensure they are on target both for income generated and taxes paid. Preparing for the April 15 tax filing is aided by a thorough review in December. Payroll items such as W2s, 1099s, and employee benefits need to be reviewed. Retirement savings should be analyzed. Make sure to look at your business profit/loss statement and balance sheet. Personal contributions and other tax planning strategies need to be completed by the end of the year. Your CPA can help!

  6. Department of the Air Force Environmental Statement. Construction and Operation of the West Coast OTH-B Radar System, Lake and Klamath Counties, Oregon; Modoc and Sacramento Counties, California; Pierce County, Washington; Elmore County, Idaho

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-02-01

    readily available. EXCEPTION: In the past decade, the Glenns Ferry, Hammett , Grandview, Bruneau, and Boise areas being within an hour or less driving...density, the exclusion fence would be located at a distance where the power density would not exceed 0.1 mW/cm2 . Consistent with Equation 19 on the...distances between 250 and 1,500 ft (per Equation 3, p. B-7). These values imply averaging over substantial periods of time, whereas individuals in aircraft

  7. Erratum.

    PubMed

    1990-04-27

    In the Author Index to volume 247, January-March 1990, the entry for "Spencer, Roy W. and Christy, John R." was incorrect. It should have read, "Precise monitoring of global temperature trends from satellites. p1558 30 Mar 1990."

  8. Department of Defense Annual Cost Analysis Symposium (17th) Held at Arlington, Virginia on 12-15 September 1982.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-09-01

    CA- 2: < C . V D CD LU CD C - U .- LU CA V) u 0.. VA 0 0.. L:U 0. - i LU u A C.D C u- C) LU wU 0.. 00 LUV ) - - ~ z C ci, ci, CA L L >- L" CDU CA 7: U...1 . o i s =Z.~ Irk: c 43- L a a I -cm I -ty Pa ea -~ c.C a I.f oIl sa a 1 !& amv 0-4 P 1- inj 0!6I o. i4. I e S!& I a DIVI ~ a Ip- w o cr 1, -40 e a...Data Entered) ___________________________________________READ INSTRUCTIONS REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE BEFORE COMPLETING FORM I . REPORT NUMBER 12. GOVT

  9. The Effect of Compressibility on the Pressure Reading of a Prandtl Pitot Tube at Subsonic Flow Velocity

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Walchner, O

    1939-01-01

    Errors arising from yawed flow were also determined up to 20 degrees angle of attack. In axial flow, the Prandtl pitot tube begins at w/a approx. = 0.8 to give an incorrect static pressure reading, while it records the tank pressure correctly, as anticipated, up to sonic velocity. Owing to the compressibility of the air, the Prandtl pitot tube manifests compression shocks when the air speed approaches velocity of sound. This affects the pressure reading of the instrument. Because of the increasing importance of high speed in aviation, this compressibility effect is investigated in detail.

  10. ERDA authorization, Fiscal Year 1977. Part I. Conservation. Hearings before the Subcommittee on Energy Research, Development and Demonstration of the Committee on Science and Technology, U. S. House of Representatives, Ninety-Fourth Congress, Second Session

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

    Not Available

    1976-01-01

    The hearing was the first in a series of nine before the subcommittee in connection with the fiscal year 1977 ERDA authorization bill. The ERDA conservation program and its funding are reviewed and Representative Ray Thornton, presiding, announced that Congress was expected to pass significant energy conservation legislation to augment the existing ERDA program. Included here is a statement on the issue by Mr. Austin N. Heller, Asst. Administrator for Conservation, ERDA, who was accompanied by his division directors--Mr. Francis Parry, Mr. John Brogan, Dr. Maxine Savitz, Dr. John Belding, and Mr. George Murray. Another statement was presented by Rogermore » W. Sant, Asst. Administrator for Energy, FEA. Additional statements are presented in Appendix I by Mr. Lowell Endahl, National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, and Mr. Wes Uhlman, Mayor of Seattle, Wash. Additional information is presented in three other appendixes. (MCW)« less

  11. Comprehension by learning-disabled and nondisabled adolescents of personal/social problems presented in text.

    PubMed

    Williams, J P

    1991-01-01

    Four groups of 14-year-olds, differing in reading level, learning disability status, and socioeconomic status, read and retold short problem narratives and answered questions. The pattern of reporting components of the problem schema (goal/obstacles/choices) differed for problems presented with or without a statement of the character's priority for action, suggesting that including priorities adds another level of information to the problem text and changes its macrostructure. Even the poorest readers showed this sensitivity to text structure. Three of the four measures of problem representation (idea units recalled, problem-schema components reported, and error rate) reflected overall reading ability. However, the degree to which extraneous information was incorporated into problem representations did not. Learning-disabled students made more importations, and more implausible importations, than did non-disabled students. Moreover, this pattern was associated with poor problem solving. Only proficient readers showed awareness of the source of the information (text or extratext) on which their predictions were based.

  12. Statement of Mark R. Disler, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Civil Rights Division, before the Committee on Labor and Human Resources, United States Senate, Concerning Grove City Legislation.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Disler, Mark R.

    Testimony concerning the Supreme Court decisions in the case of Grove City College v. Bell (1984) is presented in this document. The Courts ruling that Federal aid to a student constitutes funding only of the college's student air program, nor the entire institution, reflected the more persuasive reading of the Title IX Education Amendments,…

  13. A bill to require the Federal Reserve to make certain changes to the small bank holding company policy statement on assessment of financial and managerial factors, and for other purposes.

    THOMAS, 113th Congress

    Sen. King, Angus S., Jr. [I-ME

    2014-07-30

    Senate - 07/30/2014 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs. (All Actions) Notes: For further action, see H.R.3329, which became Public Law 113-250 on 12/18/2014. Tracker: This bill has the status IntroducedHere are the steps for Status of Legislation:

  14. Reframing Our Pursuit of Life Balance

    PubMed Central

    Ogden, Rachel R.; Ryan-Haddad, Ann; Strang, Aimee F.

    2015-01-01

    During our time in the 2013 Academic Leadership Fellows Program, we explored what it takes to achieve life balance through a framework presented in a Harvard Business Review article. In this Statement, we describe 5 different areas from the article that provide infrastructure for reflecting on how we have learned to approach life balance in academia. We also provide brief messages based on this reading and others to help academics’ pursuit of life balance. PMID:25995509

  15. Reframing our pursuit of life balance.

    PubMed

    Fuentes, David G; Ogden, Rachel R; Ryan-Haddad, Ann; Strang, Aimee F

    2015-04-25

    During our time in the 2013 Academic Leadership Fellows Program, we explored what it takes to achieve life balance through a framework presented in a Harvard Business Review article. In this Statement, we describe 5 different areas from the article that provide infrastructure for reflecting on how we have learned to approach life balance in academia. We also provide brief messages based on this reading and others to help academics' pursuit of life balance.

  16. Critical Thinking Training for Army Officers. Volume 2: A Model of Critical Thinking

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2009-02-01

    content of beliefs. Many theorists have suggested that a marker of poor CT is belief in the paranormal , evidenced by reading one’s horo- scope on a...that CT is not related to global belief in the paranormal (Royalty, 1995). At this point, it appears that individual differences in CT do not govern... paranormal beliefs versus statistical reasoning. The Journal of Genetic Psychology, 156(4), 477-488. Sa, W. C., West, R. F., & Stanovich, K. E. (1999

  17. Likelihood Ratio Tests for Relationships between Two Covariance Matrices.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1982-11-01

    mk+l+...+mp)/(p-k). Then, using the results on the asymptotic distribution of the functions of the roots mk+l,...,m p (see Fang and Krishnaiah , 1982...variances and co- variances of the variables in (6.1) is k , :i, 12 E( i- l,...,k (6.2) A B... B D (X) B A ... B (6.3) Krishnaiah and Lee (1974) and...P,R. Krishnaiah for reading the manuscript and making useful comments. 7. REFERENCES [1] Anderson, T.W. (1951). Estimating linear restrictions on

  18. Development of Intelligent Computer-Assisted Instruction Systems to Facilitate Reading Skills of Learning-Disabled Children

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-12-01

    Unclassified/Unlimited 13. ABSTRACT ~Maximum 2W0 worr*J The purpose of this thesis is to develop a high-level model to create seli"adapting software which...Department of Computer Science ABSTRACT The purpose of this thesis is to develop a high-level model to create self-adapting software which teaches learning...stimulating and demanding. The power of the system model described herein is that it can vary as needed by the individual student. The system will

  19. The many faces of agency

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Doyle, Walter

    2015-06-01

    This forum article is a response to the article by Alandeom W. Oliveira, Patterson Rogers, Cassie F. Quigley, Denis Sambursky, Kimberly Barss, and Seema Rivera, The article explores agency from the perspective of both personal action and an understanding of causality within environmental systems, and it explores environmental read-alouds as pedagogical events to enhance elementary school students' climate literacy and activism. In my response I attempt to sharpen the idea of agency through the literatures on (1) prevention education and (2) the dynamics of classroom task systems.

  20. Resolute Apt, Northwest Territories, Canada. Revised Uniform Summary of Surface Weather Observations (RUSSWO). Parts A-F.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1972-01-17

    ITS ASHEVILLE, N. C. II POI L, TD ’ Reiew and-Approval Statement This report is approved for public release. There is no objection to unlimited...14000 -,46 0 t* ski :ph 0 51194 TTj i-ri -T-. _T7. 40( -~677. - Td -. 7.4 12000 40’ aiNb6 5(2,7 03*1 67.0 67*9 7gT) 7Z* 9 7Z*9 70,0 77., 774 70uZ i 1...DEPRESSION (F) TOTAL TOTAL(F I o 1 2 3 4 5 - ..7 - . - 27-..8. .93...B W8- BubWe B.b TD ..ew . (F’ 0 . 2 3-4 ’ 5-6 7.8 9-10 1.12 13-1415-16 17- 819.20 21-22 22

  1. Outpatient Nonavailability Statement Procedures, Health Services Command Catchment Areas, Third Quarter, Fiscal Year 1993 with Comparisons to Second Quarter, Fiscal Year 1993.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1993-08-09

    Concerning this reporting policy , the OCHAMPUS ADP Manual, Chapter 2,Addendum F, Page 2.F-23, C-6, April 6, 1993 is quoted I as follows: 2 I U...Secretary of Defense (HA), Health Services I Financing (HSF), ATTN: Dr. Velthuis, Coordinated Care Policy , Rm IB657, The Pentagon, DC 20301-1200 (1) Office...Nt Lr IN nL- .c 0. 4cU ,.4 -. 4 a - L uJ UO,, W z0s 0 ". Lu 4c - F 30 0 0o 0 0 0c cA cnCD C 𔃺 N. 9e 6, *4J Li* - 4 44 (ry LI A 4 .CL C-0 I is a a - 4c

  2. Medical journals of Nigeria, quo vadis?

    PubMed

    Eke, N; Nkanginieme, K E O

    2002-01-01

    The Nigerian health sector is beset with an underdeveloped Continuing Medical Education (CME) programme, a scarcity of reading materials and the lack of a reading culture. Recent issues of available journals were obtained and read to identify data such as: the ownership and base, presence of mission statement, print quality, administrative and editorial matters, abstract format, CME value of articles, advertisements, subscription information and communication channels and practice. The availability of the journals in the libraries of the three 'first generation' teaching hospitals and accessibility through the Medline were ascertained. Twenty-eight current journals were obtained. Lagos has the highest number of editorial bases. Fifteen journals belong to national medical associations, 2 to regions and 11 to institutions. The journal title was considered appropriate in 13, cover design was good in 15, paper quality was good in 20 and legibility was good in 11 journals. Poor editing was manifested by bad grammar, spelling and punctuation. Six journals contained review articles of good CME value. Eight journals had a full compliment of communication facilities. The existence of a functional independent administrative office or staff was indicated in 7 journals. No journal indicated the dates of submission and acceptance of articles. Twenty-one journals were on the shelf of the library of ABUTH, Zaria. Two journals are accessible through the Medline and another is on-line. Adequate funding and improved management will effectively address most of the problems identified.

  3. Development of the Visual Word Form Area Requires Visual Experience: Evidence from Blind Braille Readers.

    PubMed

    Kim, Judy S; Kanjlia, Shipra; Merabet, Lotfi B; Bedny, Marina

    2017-11-22

    Learning to read causes the development of a letter- and word-selective region known as the visual word form area (VWFA) within the human ventral visual object stream. Why does a reading-selective region develop at this anatomical location? According to one hypothesis, the VWFA develops at the nexus of visual inputs from retinotopic cortices and linguistic input from the frontotemporal language network because reading involves extracting linguistic information from visual symbols. Surprisingly, the anatomical location of the VWFA is also active when blind individuals read Braille by touch, suggesting that vision is not required for the development of the VWFA. In this study, we tested the alternative prediction that VWFA development is in fact influenced by visual experience. We predicted that in the absence of vision, the "VWFA" is incorporated into the frontotemporal language network and participates in high-level language processing. Congenitally blind ( n = 10, 9 female, 1 male) and sighted control ( n = 15, 9 female, 6 male), male and female participants each took part in two functional magnetic resonance imaging experiments: (1) word reading (Braille for blind and print for sighted participants), and (2) listening to spoken sentences of different grammatical complexity (both groups). We find that in blind, but not sighted participants, the anatomical location of the VWFA responds both to written words and to the grammatical complexity of spoken sentences. This suggests that in blindness, this region takes on high-level linguistic functions, becoming less selective for reading. More generally, the current findings suggest that experience during development has a major effect on functional specialization in the human cortex. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The visual word form area (VWFA) is a region in the human cortex that becomes specialized for the recognition of written letters and words. Why does this particular brain region become specialized for reading? We tested the hypothesis that the VWFA develops within the ventral visual stream because reading involves extracting linguistic information from visual symbols. Consistent with this hypothesis, we find that in congenitally blind Braille readers, but not sighted readers of print, the VWFA region is active during grammatical processing of spoken sentences. These results suggest that visual experience contributes to VWFA specialization, and that different neural implementations of reading are possible. Copyright © 2017 the authors 0270-6474/17/3711495-10$15.00/0.

  4. Development of the Visual Word Form Area Requires Visual Experience: Evidence from Blind Braille Readers

    PubMed Central

    Kanjlia, Shipra; Merabet, Lotfi B.

    2017-01-01

    Learning to read causes the development of a letter- and word-selective region known as the visual word form area (VWFA) within the human ventral visual object stream. Why does a reading-selective region develop at this anatomical location? According to one hypothesis, the VWFA develops at the nexus of visual inputs from retinotopic cortices and linguistic input from the frontotemporal language network because reading involves extracting linguistic information from visual symbols. Surprisingly, the anatomical location of the VWFA is also active when blind individuals read Braille by touch, suggesting that vision is not required for the development of the VWFA. In this study, we tested the alternative prediction that VWFA development is in fact influenced by visual experience. We predicted that in the absence of vision, the “VWFA” is incorporated into the frontotemporal language network and participates in high-level language processing. Congenitally blind (n = 10, 9 female, 1 male) and sighted control (n = 15, 9 female, 6 male), male and female participants each took part in two functional magnetic resonance imaging experiments: (1) word reading (Braille for blind and print for sighted participants), and (2) listening to spoken sentences of different grammatical complexity (both groups). We find that in blind, but not sighted participants, the anatomical location of the VWFA responds both to written words and to the grammatical complexity of spoken sentences. This suggests that in blindness, this region takes on high-level linguistic functions, becoming less selective for reading. More generally, the current findings suggest that experience during development has a major effect on functional specialization in the human cortex. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The visual word form area (VWFA) is a region in the human cortex that becomes specialized for the recognition of written letters and words. Why does this particular brain region become specialized for reading? We tested the hypothesis that the VWFA develops within the ventral visual stream because reading involves extracting linguistic information from visual symbols. Consistent with this hypothesis, we find that in congenitally blind Braille readers, but not sighted readers of print, the VWFA region is active during grammatical processing of spoken sentences. These results suggest that visual experience contributes to VWFA specialization, and that different neural implementations of reading are possible. PMID:29061700

  5. VizieR Online Data Catalog: GRAMS carbon-star model grid (Srinivasan+, 2011)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Srinivasan, S.; Sargent, B. A.; Meixner, M.

    2011-07-01

    Synthetic spectra and photometry for the GRAMS carbon-star set of radiative transfer models is provided in FITS form. Also included are various stellar and dust shell parameters related to the models. For each model, a 130-wavelength spectrum for the bare photosphere and one for the star+dust spectrum are available. The fluxes are in F_nu (Jansky) and are computed at the LMC distance (distance modulus = 18.5mag). Synthetic photometry is computed for 34 narrow- and broad-band filters which, in order, are: U, B, V, I, J, H, Ks, IRAC36, IRAC45, IRAC5_8, IRAC8_0, MIPS24, MIPS70, MIPS160, AKARIN2, AKARIN3, AKARIN4, AKARIS7, AKARIS9W, AKARIS11, AKARIL15, AKARIL18W, AKARIL24, WISEW1, WISEW2, WISEW3 and WISEW4 (see the footnotes in the article for more about these filters). Please read the FITS header for more information on the data. (2 data files).

  6. Conjunctivitis

    MedlinePlus

    ... 22. Review Date 8/20/2016 Updated by: Franklin W. Lusby, MD, ophthalmologist, Lusby Vision Institute, La Jolla, CA. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Isla Ogilvie, PhD, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team. Pinkeye Read more NIH ...

  7. Environmental and Water Quality Operational Studies. Environmental Guidelines for Dike Fields.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1984-09-01

    public release; distribution unlimited. I. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of the abstract entered In Block 20, If different from Report) IS. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES...necessary and identify by block number) Aquatic biology--Environmental aspects. (LC) Dikes (Engineering)--Design and construction--Environmental...w ad Idenwify by block number) ’The environmental guidelines for dike fields-contained within this report consist of environmental objectives, design

  8. 75 FR 1609 - Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement for Beddown of Training F-35A Aircraft

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2010-01-12

    ...; Tucson International Airport Air Guard Station: Monday, March 1, 2010, at Sunnyside High School Foyer... published. This revised Notice of Intent has been prepared to notify the public of the changes in the cities..., February 8, 2010, at Marsing High School Commons, 301 W. Eighth Avenue, Marsing, Idaho; Tuesday, February 9...

  9. Statement of Facts for 1976 City-Wide Mock Trial Competitions. United States v. Percy W. Snodgrass.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    National Inst. for Citizen Education in the Law, Washington, DC.

    Prepared by the District of Columbia Street Law Project for its annual city-wide mock trial competition, this instructional handout provides material for a murder trial. The defendant shot the victim in the course of a violent dispute. The prosecution charges murder while the defendant claims to have acted in self-defense. The handout clarifies…

  10. Shock Testing the SEAWOLF Submarine, Final Environmental Impact Statement

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1998-05-01

    relevant experience. Phil Barfield. Operational requirements. B.S. Mechanical Engineering. 14 years relevant experience. James Craig . Appendix D. B.S...Atlantic Biodiversity Center Nassau, Delaware Russell DeConti Center for Coastal Studies Provincetown, Massachusetts Robert Deegan Sierra Club...either area. C-9 APPENDIX D PHYSICAL IMPACTS OF EXPLOSIONS ON MARINE MAMMALS AND TURTLES James C. Craig Christian W. Hearn Naval Surface Warfare

  11. STATEMENT OF GEORGE W. FELLENDORF BEFORE THE MARYLAND COMMISSION TO STUDY EDUCATIONAL NEEDS OF HANDICAPPED CHILDREN.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    FELLENDORF, GEORGE W.

    THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL ASSOCIATION FOR THE DEAF URGED THAT THE STATE OF MARYLAND CONTINUE TO INVESTIGATE NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN THE AREA OF EDUCATION OF THE HANDICAPPED. HE RECOMMENDED THAT CONTINUAL REVIEW AND RECOMMENDATIONS OF NEEDS BE MADE BY REGIONAL SUBCOMMITTEES, PROGRAMS BE COORDINATED BY AN ADMINISTRATOR AT THE…

  12. [Educative intervention and development of position and critical reading].

    PubMed

    Angulo-Bernal, Sonia Elizabeth; Leyva-González, Félix Arturo; Viniegra-Velázquez, Leonardo

    2007-01-01

    To investigate the professors of technical courses of the area of health, the effects of a promotional educative strategy of the participation in the development of a position prior to the education and of the aptitude for the critical theoretical text reading and information of educative research. A longitudinal study took place, of intervention. In order to measure the degree of development of a position before the education, it was applied to the instrument Concepts and ideas about education. It consists of 72 statements, organized in duple that expresses two different approaches from education: participative and passive. For the inquiry of the degree of development of critical reading two instruments were applied: 1) Theoretical text reading of education and, 2) Reading information of educative research, constituted both by 120 itemes. The validity and trustworthiness of the three instruments were valued by experts with experience in teaching and educative research. The strategy was implemented through activities in seminary form, which were done twice a week, with a duration of five hours per session, for nine months; within the activities outside the classroom, the student completed reading of a theoretical text and/or report of educative research and the resolution of a reading guide (task). During the activities in a propitious classroom, discussion atmosphere and promoting at any moment the participation of the students; a space for the reflective recovery of their own experience was opened, for the analysis and interchange of ideas and for the critic and self-criticism of the main educative practices. The professor intervened when individual participation diminished; he also channeled the discussion, indicating to the enlightening observations and strong arguments of the students. The three instruments were applied to the group of professors of technical courses (n = 10); the initial measurement was applied before initiating the educative strategy and the final measurement at the end of the same plan. The qualification of the instruments and the capture of information were made by a blind technical worker. Subsequent to the educative strategy we observed a statistically significant advance in position -inferred through its main indicator: critical theoretical text consequence- and reading. The advances shown in critical reading for information of educative research were below the critical theoretical text reading. The development of position before the education and the aptitudes for critical reading of theoretical texts and information of educative research, in professors of technical courses of the area of health, it is possible, if educative atmospheres are created that lead to the participation -halfway through by the critic.

  13. 21 CFR 740.2 - Conspicuousness of warning statements.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-04-01

    ... 21 Food and Drugs 7 2010-04-01 2010-04-01 false Conspicuousness of warning statements. 740.2... (CONTINUED) COSMETICS COSMETIC PRODUCT WARNING STATEMENTS General § 740.2 Conspicuousness of warning statements. (a) A warning statement shall appear on the label prominently and conspicuously as compared to...

  14. 21 CFR 740.2 - Conspicuousness of warning statements.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-04-01

    ... 21 Food and Drugs 7 2013-04-01 2013-04-01 false Conspicuousness of warning statements. 740.2... (CONTINUED) COSMETICS COSMETIC PRODUCT WARNING STATEMENTS General § 740.2 Conspicuousness of warning statements. (a) A warning statement shall appear on the label prominently and conspicuously as compared to...

  15. 21 CFR 740.2 - Conspicuousness of warning statements.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-04-01

    ... 21 Food and Drugs 7 2014-04-01 2014-04-01 false Conspicuousness of warning statements. 740.2... (CONTINUED) COSMETICS COSMETIC PRODUCT WARNING STATEMENTS General § 740.2 Conspicuousness of warning statements. (a) A warning statement shall appear on the label prominently and conspicuously as compared to...

  16. 21 CFR 740.2 - Conspicuousness of warning statements.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-04-01

    ... 21 Food and Drugs 7 2011-04-01 2010-04-01 true Conspicuousness of warning statements. 740.2... (CONTINUED) COSMETICS COSMETIC PRODUCT WARNING STATEMENTS General § 740.2 Conspicuousness of warning statements. (a) A warning statement shall appear on the label prominently and conspicuously as compared to...

  17. 21 CFR 740.2 - Conspicuousness of warning statements.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-04-01

    ... 21 Food and Drugs 7 2012-04-01 2012-04-01 false Conspicuousness of warning statements. 740.2... (CONTINUED) COSMETICS COSMETIC PRODUCT WARNING STATEMENTS General § 740.2 Conspicuousness of warning statements. (a) A warning statement shall appear on the label prominently and conspicuously as compared to...

  18. Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Strategic Target System. Volume III

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1992-05-01

    HH e . = - - A. H -O , ai ^ V-w;^M3J ^3 c +*’’ Q in tn a in ’■*5i iii +> jB ^f* TT-P...a a « HH -IUOJ m •£ a HŔ JJ • rH»J JJ-H « O B c u a H OJJ «^ w-i c s s a a Ö H a JJ fto BBC -H u^ U "W BUBO 0££ ɠ O...3 <§ E"S"§ « ö •S<S 00« gŖ O n> ■ £ a * BO 1 > I B JB S « - £ B 8 ^ O C O tj K I- O D, =« ° ° "O "P^MO’C S « S -S *" «

  19. VHSIC Hardware Description Language (VHDL) Benchmark Suite

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1990-10-01

    T7 prit.iy label iTM Architecture label I flO inch Label I TIC ) P rae s Label I W Conkgurstion Spec. 1 21 Appendix B. Test Descriptions, Shell Code...Siensls R Accnss Operaist s Iov (soc 3 3 & 7 3 61 $ File I/0 S1 Reed S2 Write T Label Site TI Signal TIA Archi~ecture TIE Block TIC Port T2 VariableI...Access Operations I (sec 3 3 & 7.3 61 1 S FI I/0 1 Sl Read 52 Write T Label SreI TI Signal TIA Architeclt TIR Block TIC

  20. 28 CFR 10.2 - Language of registration statement.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-07-01

    ... 28 Judicial Administration 1 2011-07-01 2011-07-01 false Language of registration statement. 10.2... ON ACTIVITIES WITHIN THE UNITED STATES Registration Statement § 10.2 Language of registration statement. Registration statements must be in English if possible. If in a foreign language they must be...

  1. Trajectories of Math and Reading Achievement in Low Achieving Children in Elementary School: Effects of Early and Later Retention in Grade

    PubMed Central

    Moser, Stephanie E.; West, Stephen G.; Hughes, Jan N.

    2012-01-01

    This study investigated the effects of retention or promotion in first grade on growth trajectories in mathematics and reading achievement over the elementary school years (grades 1–5). From a large multiethnic sample (n = 784) of children who were below the median in literacy at school entrance, 363 children who were either promoted (n = 251) or retained (n = 112) in first grade could be successfully matched on 72 background variables. Achievement was measured annually using Woodcock-Johnson W scores; scores of retained children were shifted back one year to permit same-grade comparisons. Using longitudinal growth curve analysis, trajectories of math and reading scores for promoted and retained children were compared. Retained children received a one year boost in achievement; this boost fully dissipated by the end of elementary school. The pattern of subsequent retention in grades 2, 3 and 4 and placement in special education of the sample during the elementary school years is also described and their effects are explored. Policy implications for interventions for low achieving children are considered. PMID:23335818

  2. [The Bilbao declaration: international meeting on the law concerning the human genome project].

    PubMed

    1994-06-01

    The Bilbao statement was the result of a work meeting, held the day before the closing session by a group of representative experts, formed by general chairmen and meeting organizers. The compelled and necessary consent gave rise to the document that was read and communicated to the world's public opinion during the closing act on may 26, 1993. Notwithstanding, the working group considered that the divulged version was provisory and committed to continue the task of re-elaborating the statement. The aim was to complete and improve it, taking the greatest advantage of the important meeting achievements. The document that is next reproduced is the definitive integral version of the Bilbao Statement. The expert group that takes the responsibility of this Statement is Jean Dausset, Nobel Prize of Medicine (1980); Carleton Gajdusek, Nobel Prize of Medicine (1976); Santiago Grisolía president of UNESCO committee for the Genome Project; Michael Kirby, President of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, Australia; Aaron Klug, member of the Constitutional Council, Paris, France; Rafael Mendizábal, Judge of the Constitutional Court, Madrid, Spain; Juan Bautista Pardo, President of the Superior Court of Justice of the Basque Country and Carlos María Romeo Casabona, Director of the Chair of Law and Human Genome of the University of Deusto (Bilbao).

  3. Eyelid bump

    MedlinePlus

    ... 423. Review Date 8/20/2016 Updated by: Franklin W. Lusby, MD, ophthalmologist, Lusby Vision Institute, La Jolla, CA. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Isla Ogilvie, PhD, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team. Eyelid Disorders Read more ...

  4. Military Review, v71 n3

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1991-03-01

    BOOK REVIEWS points out that all soldiers look for inspiration. acters; the French and Austrian orders of battle; Good leaders provide it by personal...families. Great Before I read this book , I was largely unaware credit is rightfully given to the National Military that a clandestine organization such as...best from other tournals stem a aM ep 64 Letters Roef 0111 104M fW EV1EW. 67 Book Reviews contemporary reading for the orc’ressiora wm those of M ature

  5. Boston: An Urban Community. Boston's Black Letters: From Phillis Wheatley to W. E. B. DuBois. Culture and Its Conflicts: The Example of Nineteenth-century Boston. The Emerging Immigrants of Boston. Annotated Reading Lists.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Jenkins, Hugh M.; And Others

    These three annotated reading guides were developed for courses offered at the Boston Public Library under the National Endowment for the Humanities Learning Library Program. The permutations in style and content of black Boston literature are exemplified in this collection of 18 writings to serve as an index to the cultural and social life of the…

  6. The 20 GHz spacecraft IMPATT solid state transmitter

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Best, T.; Ngan, Y. C.

    1986-01-01

    The engineering development of a solid-state transmitter amplifier operating in the 20-GHz frequency range is described. This effort involved a multitude of disciplines including IMPATT device development, circulator design, multiple-diode circuit design, and amplifier integration and test. The objective was to develop a transmitter amplifier demonstrating the feasibility of providing an efficient, reliable, lightweight solid-state transmitter to be flown on a 30 to 20 GHz communication demonstration satellite. The work was done under contract from NASA/Lewis Research Center for a period of three years. The result was the development of a GaAs IMPACT diode amplifier capable of an 11-W CW output power and a 2-dB bandwidth of 300 MHz. GaAs IMPATT diodes incorporating diamond heatsink and double-Read doping profile capable of 5.3-W CW oscillator output power and 15.5% efficiency were developed. Up to 19% efficiency was also observed for an output power level of 4.4 W. High performance circulators with a 0.2 dB inserting loss and bandwidth of 5 GHz have also been developed. These represent a significant advance in both device and power combiner circuit technologies in K-band frequencies.

  7. The Total Field in Collective Bremsstrahlung in a Nonequilibrium Relativistic Beam-Plasma System.

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1983-09-01

    Of S"ANDARDS-1963-A L i o UNCLASSIFIED SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE (1111bo Does Banero REPOR DOCUMENTATION PAGE READ INSTRUCTIONS r. REPORT...release; distribution unlimited. 17. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of Me. absract mimed I Block it, different from Aepoft) 1S. SUPPLEMEMY1INANY NOTES kiDL...the nonradlative part of the field of the par- I ticls and a stochastic part corresponding to the bremsstrahlung radiation field. The relations

  8. The Black Elderly in Poverty. Hearing before the Congressional Black Caucus, "Brain Trust on Aging" and the Select Committee on Aging, House of Representatives, Ninety-Ninth Congress, First Session, September 27, 1985.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Congressional Black Caucus, Washington, DC.

    This document presents a transcript of a hearing on the problems of the black elderly poor. Statements read by nine advocates for the aged and agency representatives are included. Among the issues discussed are cutbacks of Federal income support and maintenance programs, housing, health care, and nutrition; and the fact that older blacks are three…

  9. Comments on Static vs Kinetic Friction

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Kessler, Gabriel

    2009-09-01

    I'm writing to comment on the article published in the March edition of The Physics Teacher titled "Choose Wisely: Static or Kinetic Friction—The Power of Dimensionless Plots." As I was reading the article, something caught my eye that I couldn't reconcile with. It was the phrase on page 160 in the first column near the bottom. The statement was that the experimental value for the coefficient of kinetic friction was "unexpectedly greater than the coefficient of static friction!"

  10. Interservice Procedures for Instructional Systems Development. Phase 3. Develop

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1975-08-01

    Occur at wide intervals to be learned *Reads about the actions to *Occur at the end, but before be learned tests or on-the-job performance *Watches a...the particular sub-category. Use the learning objective action statement, conditions, standards, and the test item to help select which guidelines to...objective. EXAMPLE If you have a CLASSIFYING objective like "identifying poisonous plants,’ when you get to guideline 16. "To test learning, require the

  11. Sounding Narrative Medicine: Studying Students’ Professional Identity Development at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

    PubMed Central

    Miller, Eliza; Balmer, Dorene; Hermann, Nellie; Graham, Gillian; Charon, Rita

    2014-01-01

    Purpose To learn what medical students derive from training in humanities, social sciences, and the arts in a narrative medicine curriculum and to explore narrative medicine’s framework as it relates to students’ professional development. Method On completion of required intensive, half-semester narrative medicine seminars in 2010, 130 second-year medical students at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons participated in focus group discussions of their experiences. Focus group transcriptions were submitted to close iterative reading by a team who performed a grounded-theory-guided content analysis, generating a list of codes into which statements were sorted to develop overarching themes. Provisional interpretations emerged from the close and repeated readings, suggesting a fresh conceptual understanding of how and through what avenues such education achieves its goals in clinical training. Results Students’ comments articulated the known features of narrative medicine—attention, representation, and affiliation—and endorsed all three as being valuable to professional identity development. They spoke of the salience of their work in narrative medicine to medicine and medical education and its dividends of critical thinking, reflection, and pleasure. Critiques constituted a small percentage of the statements in each category. Conclusions Students report that narrative medicine seminars support complex interior, interpersonal, perceptual, and expressive capacities. Students’ lived experiences confirm some expectations of narrative medicine curricular planners while exposing fresh effects of such work to view. PMID:24362390

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

    DE GERONIMO,G.; FRIED, J.; FROST, E.

    We describe a front-end application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) developed for a silicon Compton telescope. Composed of 32 channels, it reads out signals in both polarities from each side of a Silicon strip sensor, 2 mm thick 27 cm long, characterized by a strip capacitance of 30 pF. Each front-end channel provides low-noise charge amplification, shaping with a stabilized baseline, discrimination, and peak detection with an analog memory. The channels can process events simultaneously, and the read out is sparsified. The charge amplifier makes uses a dual-cascode configuration and dual-polarity adaptive reset, The low-hysteresis discriminator and the multi-phase peak detectormore » process signals with a dynamic range in excess of four hundred. An equivalent noise charge (ENC) below 200 electrons was measured at 30 pF, with a slope of about 4.5 electrons/pF at a peaking time of 4 {micro}s. With a total dissipated power of 5 mW the channel covers an energy range up to 3.2 MeV.« less

  13. A UHF RFID system with on-chip-antenna tag for short range communication

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Qi, Peng; Chun, Zhang; Xijin, Zhao; Zhihua, Wang

    2015-05-01

    A UHF RF identification system based on the 0.18 μm CMOS process has been developed for short range and harsh size requirement applications, which is composed of a fully integrated tag and a special reader. The whole tag chip with the antenna takes up an area of 0.36 mm2, which is smaller than other reported tags with an on-chip antenna (OCA) using the standard CMOS process. A self-defined protocol is proposed to reduce the power consumption, and minimize the size of the tag. The specialized SOC reader system consists of the RF transceiver, digital baseband, MCU and host interface. Its power consumption is about 500 mW. Measurement results show that the system's reading range is 2 mm with 20 dBm reader output power. With an inductive antenna printed on a paper substrate around the OCA tag, the reading range can be extended from several centimeters to meters, depending on the shape and size of the inductive antenna.

  14. Secretion of the Streptomyces tyrosinase is mediated through its trans-activator protein, MelC1.

    PubMed

    Leu, W M; Chen, L Y; Liaw, L L; Lee, Y H

    1992-10-05

    The tyrosinase of Streptomyces antibioticus is encoded by the second open reading frame, melC2 of the melanin operon (melC). The upstream open reading frame melC1 specifies a 146-amino acid protein with a typical NH2-terminal signal-peptide characteristic of a secretory protein. The MelC1 protein is involved in the transfer of copper ion to apotyrosinase MelC2 via binary complex formation (Lee, Y.-H. W., Chen, B.-F., Wu, S.-Y., Leu, W.-M., Lin, J.-J., Chen, C. W., and Lo, S. J. (1988) Gene (Amst.) 65, 71-81; Chen, L.-Y., Leu, W.-M., Wang, K.-T., and Lee, Y.-H.W. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 20100-20107). To investigate whether the export of tyrosinase is also dependent on MelC1, a mutational study of its signal-peptide sequence was performed. Four different mutants were obtained. Mutation at the positively charged region (mutant M-6LE, Arg6-Arg7----Leu6-Glu7) or the hydrophobic region (mutant M-16D, Val16----Asp16) led to Mel- phenotypes. These lesions caused a severe 7-10-fold reduction of the export of both the MelC1 and MelC2 proteins and a concomitant accumulation of the two proteins in the cytosolic fraction. The cell-associated tyrosinase activity in M-6LE but not in the M-16D mutant was dramatically reduced to 4% of the activity found in the wild type strain, suggesting that the basic NH2 terminus of MelC1 is also important for the trans-activation function of this protein. Nevertheless, the defects on the trans-activation and/or secretory functions of MelC1 in mutants M-6LE and M-16D are not due to the impairment of the formation of the MelC1.MelC2 complex. The translation of melanin operon genes in these two mutants also decreased. In contrast, the tyrosinase activity and the secretion of MelC2 were not affected if the mutations occurred at the putative cleavage site of the signal peptidase (e.g. mutant M-29SM, Arg29-Ala30----Ser29-Met30 or mutant 29-SMG, Arg29-Ala30-Asp31----Ser29-Med30-Gly31+ ++). Additionally, tyrosinase activity and its export were abolished in a MelC1-negative mutant, M-950. Taken together, these results demonstrate that a functional MelC1 is essential for tyrosinase secretion and activity. Furthermore, the results suggest that like other secretory proteins, basic and hydrophobic residues in the MelC1 signal sequence are an important feature of the signal-peptide and play a pivotal role in the secretion of both the MelC1 and MelC2 proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

  15. Doubting Thomas: Reading Between the Lines.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    Carrington, Bruce; Denscombe, Martyn

    1987-01-01

    Explains the continuing popularity of the Reverend W. Awdry's "Railway Series" featuring Thomas the Tank Engine. Argues that though the settings are anachronistic, the ideology expressed through Thomas the Tank Engine is congruent with that of the New Right. (SRT)

  16. Subconjunctival hemorrhage

    MedlinePlus

    ... 22. Review Date 5/10/2017 Updated by: Franklin W. Lusby, MD, ophthalmologist, Lusby Vision Institute, La Jolla, CA. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, Brenda Conaway, Editorial Director, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team. Bleeding Read more Eye ...

  17. Statement of Facts for 1993 City-Wide Mock Trial Competitions. Sandra W. v. Gregg M.

    ERIC Educational Resources Information Center

    National Inst. for Citizen Education in the Law, Washington, DC.

    Prepared by the District of Columbia Street Law Project for its 22nd annual city-wide mock trial competition, this instructional handout provides the material for a mock civil trial in which Sandra Williams sues Gregg Mason for negligent transmission of the Human Immuno-Deficient Virus (HIV). On the night of May 15, 1990, Sandra and Gregg engaged…

  18. Equalization in Aeronautical Telemetry Using Multiple Antennas

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2014-04-01

    Multiple Antennas April 2014 DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT A. Approved for public release: distribution unlimited. Test Resource Management Center...Telemetry Using Multiple Antennas 5a. CONTRACT NUMBER: W900KK-13-C- 0026 5b. GRANT NUMBER: N/A 5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER 6. AUTHOR(S) Michael...employing two transmit antennas and as a method for exploiting partial channel state information by the transmitter. The generalization involves

  19. Environmental Impact Statement. Small Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Program Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana. Appendix E

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1987-12-01

    c-oup nustemnera. It the -"ociltng fr-o the increased coads aaacntated ,ith the n bcei aseline inremtental poern comtes fe-s BaRsin, the coat. lei...for 0111 thdis pr~oject W tEF: 540 21. Authorization. Section 6.0 of the DEIS contains a -;t of only federal "Authorizing Agust 21. 1987 Actions

  20. 77 FR 1428 - Proposed Amendment of Class E Airspace; Willcox, AZ and Revocation of Class E Airspace; Cochise, AZ

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2012-01-10

    ... action must submit with those comments a self-addressed stamped postcard on which the following statement... will be date/time stamped and returned to the commenter. All communications received on or before the...., long. 109[deg]25'22'' W.; to lat. 32[deg]10'20'' N., and the Arizona/New Mexico border, thence south...

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