1,323 research outputs found
Web 2.0 en el proceso de enseñanza-aprendizaje. Aplicación a la enseñanza de Economía de la Empresa
El uso de Internet y su evolución acelerada en el tiempo no afecta exclusivamente a las empresas, sino que su ritmo viene marcado precisamente por los que se han de considerar nuevos productores de contenido en la Red. La Universidad no puede quedarse atrás en el uso de las TIC pero tampoco puede centrarse exclusivamente en plataformas de aprendizaje on-line de sofisticación elevada –OCW, Moodle, entre otros-, pero sin otorgar poder para modificar y generar contenidos a los usuarios. La Unidad Docente de Organización de Empresas del Departamento de Economía y Gestión Forestal de la Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros de Montes de la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid propone el uso de plataformas Web 2.0 con el objeto de desarrollar competencias tradicionales y competencias 2.0. Estas plataformas tienen una gran acogida entre el alumnado, presentan utilidad tanto en el presente como en el futuro, y se puede utilizar como plataforma de Learning 2.0 de la Economía y Organización de Empresa
TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF POACEAE POLLEN IN AREAS OF SOUTHERN UNITED KINGDOM, SPAIN AND PORTUGAL
Overall, longer Poaceae pollen seasons coincided with earlier pollen season start dates. Winter rainfall noticeably affects
the intensity of Poaceae pollen seasons in Mediterranean areas, but this was not as important in Worcester. Weekly data
from Worcester followed a similar pattern to that of Badajoz and Évora but at a distance of more than 1500 km and 4-5
weeks later
Observation of a Griffiths-like phase in the paramagnetic regime of ErCo_2
A systematic x-ray magnetic circular dichroism study of the paramagnetic
phase of ErCo2 has recently allowed to identify the inversion of the net
magnetization of the Co net moment with respect to the applied field well above
the ferrimagnetic ordering temperature, Tc. The study of small angle neutron
scattering measurements has also shown the presence of short range order
correlations in the same temperature region. This phenomenon, which we have
denoted parimagnetism, may be related with the onset of a Griffiths-like phase
in paramagnetic ErCo2. We have measured ac susceptibility on ErCo2 as a
function of temperature, applied field, and excitation frequency. Several
characteristics shared by systems showing a Griffiths phase are present in
ErCo2, namely the formation of ferromagnetic clusters in the disordered phase,
the loss of analyticity of the magnetic susceptibility and its extreme
sensitivity to an applied magnetic field. The paramagnetic susceptibility
allows to establish that the magnetic clusters are only formed by Co moments as
well as the intrinsic nature of those Co moments
Phase Separation of Edge States in the Integer Quantum Hall Regime
Coulomb effects on the edge states of a two dimensional electron gas in the
presence of a high magnetic field are studied for different widths of the
boundaries. Schr\"odinger and Poisson equations are selfconsistently solved in
the integer Quantum Hall regime. Regions of flat bands at the Fermi level
appear for smooth interfaces in order to minimize the electrostatic energy
related to the existence of dipoles induced by the magnetic field. These
plateaus determine the phase separation in stripes of compressible and
incompressible electron liquids.Comment: 8 pages, Revtex 3.0, 3 postscript figure
Application of Vegetation Indices to Estimate Acorn Production at Iberian
The Iberian pig valued natural resources of the pasture when fattened in mountain. The variability of acorn production is not contained in any line of Spanish agricultural insurance. However, the production of arable pasture is covered by line insurance number 133 for loss of pasture compensation. This scenario is only contemplated for breeding cows and brave bulls, sheep, goats and horses, although pigs are not included. This insurance is established by monitoring ten-day composites Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) measured by satellite over treeless pastures, using MODIS TERRA satellite. The aim of this work is to check if we can use a satellite vegetation index to estimate the production of acorns
Aplicación de índices de vegetación para evaluar la falta de producción de pastos y montaneras en dehesas.
El ganado porcino ibérico aprovecha los recursos naturales de la dehesa mediante montanera, principalmente la bellota y los pastos existentes. La línea 133 de los seguros agrarios españoles recoge el seguro de compensación por pérdida de pastos, solo para bovino reproductor y de lidia, ovino, caprino y equino, no incluyen los cerdos en montanera. Emplea un Índice de Vegetación de la Diferencia Normalizada (NDVI) medido por satélite sobre pastos desarbolados. El objetivo es comprobar si se puede utilizar un índice de vegetación para estimar la producción de pasto y bellota. Se han tomado datos del aforo de montaneras desde 1999 al 2005, y del pasto en dehesas de Salamanca (Vitigudino), Cáceres (Trujillo) y Córdoba (Pozoblanco) durante 2010 al 2012. Con los datos de 2010 y 2011 se estableció una función de producción del pasto fresco en función del NDVI, mostrando un coeficiente de correlación de 0,975, altamente significativa. Los datos obtenidos en 2012 se utilizaron para validar la función de producción de pasto fresco. La comparación entre los valores observados y simulados para 2012 ha mostrado un coeficiente de correlación de 0,734. Como conclusión, el NDVI puede ser un buen estimador de la cantidad de pasto fresco en dehesas españolas
Response to comment on 'Amphibian fungal panzootic causes catastrophic and ongoing loss of biodiversity'
Lambert et al. question our retrospective and holistic epidemiological assessment of the role of chytridiomycosis in amphibian declines. Their alternative assessment is narrow and provides an incomplete evaluation of evidence. Adopting this approach limits understanding of infectious disease impacts and hampers conservation efforts. We reaffirm that our study provides unambiguous evidence that chytridiomycosis has affected at least 501 amphibian species
A new view of electrochemistry at highly oriented pyrolytic graphite
Major new insights on electrochemical processes at graphite electrodes are reported, following extensive investigations of two of the most studied redox couples, Fe(CN)64–/3– and Ru(NH3)63+/2+. Experiments have been carried out on five different grades of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) that vary in step-edge height and surface coverage. Significantly, the same electrochemical characteristic is observed on all surfaces, independent of surface quality: initial cyclic voltammetry (CV) is close to reversible on freshly cleaved surfaces (>400 measurements for Fe(CN)64–/3– and >100 for Ru(NH3)63+/2+), in marked contrast to previous studies that have found very slow electron transfer (ET) kinetics, with an interpretation that ET only occurs at step edges. Significantly, high spatial resolution electrochemical imaging with scanning electrochemical cell microscopy, on the highest quality mechanically cleaved HOPG, demonstrates definitively that the pristine basal surface supports fast ET, and that ET is not confined to step edges. However, the history of the HOPG surface strongly influences the electrochemical behavior. Thus, Fe(CN)64–/3– shows markedly diminished ET kinetics with either extended exposure of the HOPG surface to the ambient environment or repeated CV measurements. In situ atomic force microscopy (AFM) reveals that the deterioration in apparent ET kinetics is coupled with the deposition of material on the HOPG electrode, while conducting-AFM highlights that, after cleaving, the local surface conductivity of HOPG deteriorates significantly with time. These observations and new insights are not only important for graphite, but have significant implications for electrochemistry at related carbon materials such as graphene and carbon nanotubes
CP asymmetry in in a general two-Higgs-doublet model with fourth-generation quarks
We discuss the time-dependent CP asymmetry of decay in an
extension of the Standard Model with both two Higgs doublets and additional
fourth-generation quarks. We show that although the Standard Model with
two-Higgs-doublet and the Standard model with fourth generation quarks alone
are not likely to largely change the effective from the decay of
, the model with both additional Higgs doublet and
fourth-generation quarks can easily account for the possible large negative
value of without conflicting with other experimental
constraints. In this model, additional large CP violating effects may arise
from the flavor changing Yukawa interactions between neutral Higgs bosons and
the heavy fourth generation down type quark, which can modify the QCD penguin
contributions. With the constraints obtained from processes
such as and , this model can lead to the
effective to be as large as in the CP asymmetry of .Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, references added, to appear in Eur.Phys.J.
Class-modeling analysis reveals T-cell homeostasis disturbances involved in loss of immune control in elite controllers
Despite long-lasting HIV replication control, a significant proportion of elite controller (EC) patients may experience CD4 T-cell loss. Discovering perturbations in immunological parameters could help our understanding of the mechanisms that may be operating in those patients experiencing loss of immunological control.
Methods A case–control study was performed to evaluate if alterations in different T-cell homeostatic parameters can predict CD4 T-cell loss in ECs by comparing data from EC patients showing significant CD4 decline (cases) and EC patients showing stable CD4 counts (controls). The partial least-squares–class modeling (PLS-CM) statistical methodology was employed to discriminate between the two groups of patients, and as a predictive model.
Results
Herein, we show that among T-cell homeostatic alterations, lower levels of naïve and recent thymic emigrant subsets of CD8 cells and higher levels of effector and senescent subsets of CD8 cells as well as higher levels of exhaustion of CD4 cells, measured prior to CD4 T-cell loss, predict the loss of immunological control.
Conclusions
These data indicate that the parameters of T-cell homeostasis may identify those EC patients with a higher proclivity to CD4 T-cell loss. Our results may open new avenues for understanding the mechanisms underlying immunological progression despite HIV replication control, and eventually, for finding a functional cure through immune-based clinical trials.projects RD12/0017/0031, RD16/0025/
0013, and SAF2015-66193-R as part of the Health Research and Development
Strategy, State Plan for Scientific and Technical Research and Innovation (2008–
2011 and 2013–2016) and cofinanced by the Institute of Health Carlos III (ISCIII),
Sub-Directorate General for Research Assessment and Promotion and European
Regional Development Fund. NR is a Miguel Servet investigator from the ISCIII
(CP14/00198), Madrid, Spain. C Restrepo was funded by project RD12/0017/
0031 and is currently funded by project RD16/0025/0013. M García is a
predoctoral student co-funded by grant CP14/00198 and an Intramural
Research Scholarship from Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria-Fundación Jiménez
Díaz (IIS-FJD)
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