2,971 research outputs found
An explanation of anomalous non-Hookean deformation of ionic single crystals
Anomalous non-Hookean deformation of ionic single crystal
Profitability and risk evaluation of novel perennial pasture systems for livestock producers in the high rainfall zone: Context, Approach and Preliminary Results
The decision to invest in pasture improvement raises various questions for the livestock grazier, with the most pertinent being about the potential returns and risks. In the high rainfall zone of south-west Victoria, researchers have trialled novel perennial pasture systems with the aim of substantially increasing on-farm profits whilst simultaneously improving environmental outcomes. Results from the Hamilton EverGraze® proof site have shown potential to greatly improve livestock production. Promotion of the pasture technology is the next step. Key to this process is developing information about profitability and risk regarding the decision to invest in the new pasture. To help meet this need a model of a representative mixed livestock farm system for the region has been developed to generate information about profit, cash wealth and risk to aid extension and help inform decisions. The farm is comprised of a wool and meat producing sheep system and a beef enterprise. Using the model, the performance of two of the novel pasture systems can be evaluated against current practice, and compared to determine which of the two is the most beneficial EverGraze® option for the future. The risk associated with the pasture decision is assessed by considering different price structures and seasonal outcomes, and evaluating these effects on net benefits. Discounted cash flows, net present values and internal rates of return are estimated for the alternative systems, which include the effects of this price and seasonal variability. Preliminary results have been calculated, however further work is needed to confirm these. The method and results of the analysis provide information that is valuable for farm decisions about investing in a new pasture system and provide a basis for future economic analyses at the case study site and elsewhere.Farm Management,
Inhibition in the dynamics of selective attention: an integrative model for negative priming
We introduce a computational model of the negative priming (NP) effect that includes perception, memory, attention, decision making, and action. The model is designed to provide a coherent picture across competing theories of NP. The model is formulated in terms of abstract dynamics for the activations of features, their binding into object entities, their semantic categorization as well as related memories and appropriate reactions. The dynamic variables interact in a connectionist network which is shown to be adaptable to a variety of experimental paradigms. We find that selective attention can be modeled by means of inhibitory processes and by a threshold dynamics. From the necessity of quantifying the experimental paradigms, we conclude that the specificity of the experimental paradigm must be taken into account when predicting the nature of the NP effect
The life cycle of starbursting circumnuclear gas discs
High-resolution observations from the sub-mm to the optical wavelength regime
resolve the central few 100pc region of nearby galaxies in great detail. They
reveal a large diversity of features: thick gas and stellar discs, nuclear
starbursts, in- and outflows, central activity, jet interaction, etc.
Concentrating on the role circumnuclear discs play in the life cycles of
galactic nuclei, we employ 3D adaptive mesh refinement hydrodynamical
simulations with the RAMSES code to self-consistently trace the evolution from
a quasi-stable gas disc, undergoing gravitational (Toomre) instability, the
formation of clumps and stars and the disc's subsequent, partial dispersal via
stellar feedback. Our approach builds upon the observational finding that many
nearby Seyfert galaxies have undergone intense nuclear starbursts in their
recent past and in many nearby sources star formation is concentrated in a
handful of clumps on a few 100pc distant from the galactic centre. We show that
such observations can be understood as the result of gravitational
instabilities in dense circumnuclear discs. By comparing these simulations to
available integral field unit observations of a sample of nearby galactic
nuclei, we find consistent gas and stellar masses, kinematics, star formation
and outflow properties. Important ingredients in the simulations are the
self-consistent treatment of star formation and the dynamical evolution of the
stellar distribution as well as the modelling of a delay time distribution for
the supernova feedback. The knowledge of the resulting simulated density
structure and kinematics on pc scale is vital for understanding inflow and
feedback processes towards galactic scales.Comment: accepted by MNRA
Influenza A virus production in a single-use orbital shaken bioreactor with ATF or TFF perfusion systems
Bauernhofeffekt und Bio-Milchkonsum vor dem Hintergrund des Grundprinzips Gesundheit in der Ökologischen Landwirtschaft
The farm effect, reported in more than 40 studies, is associated with the more wellknown hygiene hypothesis. In particular the early consumption of untreated milk in a
human's life may, besides genetic predisposition, impact the immune system of children and may prevent atopic diseases in their whole lifespan. Due to the special role of untreated milk, the question was answered, which milk causes a remarkable farm effect. There is evidence for differences between effects of treatment degrees of milk as well as its organic and conventional origin. These findings were evaluated before the background of organic agriculture by comprehensively reviewing existing interdisciplinary literature including medicinal studies and by conducting an expert interview. In consequence traditional lifestyle habits such as farm visits by children and organic milk consumption should be implemented in future preventive approaches, particularly because health has always been eminent in the principles of the organic agricultural movement
Product Service System Innovation in the Smart City
Product service systems (PSS) may usefully form part of the mix of innovations necessary to move society toward more sustainable futures. However, despite such potential, PSS implementation is highly uneven and limited. Drawing on an alternate socio-technical perspective of innovation, this paper provides fresh insights, on among other things the role of context in PSS innovation, to address this issue. Case study research is presented focusing on a use orientated PSS in an urban environment: the Copenhagen city bike scheme. The paper shows that PSS innovation is a situated complex process, shaped by actors and knowledge from other locales. It argues that further research is needed to investigate how actors interests shape PSS innovation. It recommends that institutional spaces should be provided in governance landscapes associated with urban environments to enable legitimate PSS concepts to co-evolve in light of locally articulated sustainability principles and priorities
Antichain cutsets of strongly connected posets
Rival and Zaguia showed that the antichain cutsets of a finite Boolean
lattice are exactly the level sets. We show that a similar characterization of
antichain cutsets holds for any strongly connected poset of locally finite
height. As a corollary, we get such a characterization for semimodular
lattices, supersolvable lattices, Bruhat orders, locally shellable lattices,
and many more. We also consider a generalization to strongly connected
hypergraphs having finite edges.Comment: 12 pages; v2 contains minor fixes for publicatio
Taxation of real estate: Russian reforms and foreign practice
In this report, a comparative analysis of Russian reforms in the field of real estate taxation is conducted and foreign practice investigated
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