8,182 research outputs found
Trace Substances, Science and Law: Perspectives from the Social Sciences
Using advances in analytical technology as a point of departure, Dr. Short reviews what social science research reveals about perceptions, decision making processes and behaviors of organizations and individuals who try to cope with risk and uncertainty
What is being conveyed to health professionals and consumers through web and print sources of nutrition information?
Nutrition misinformation can be harmful. Within dietetics there is an acknowledgement that nutrition information should be consistent, science-based and made relevant to different segments of the population. This paper reports on a study, conducted in Scotland, which involved focus groups and interviews with consumers and health professionals to explore messages relating to a healthy diet and to starchy foods and foods high in fat or sugar in particular. The research also involved a discourse analysis of articles aimed at health professionals and consumers. Evidence based, clearly written web and print articles were not the norm. Many articles contained value-laden messages and inconsistent or unclear advice. Nutrition information was rarely contextualized for consumers to help them incorporate the advice into their daily lives. Consumers and health professionals reported feeling 'bombarded' by messages about diet, which was sometimes confusing. There is considerable scope for improving nutrition messaging in Scotland.Peer reviewe
Cryptanalyzing a discrete-time chaos synchronization secure communication system
This paper describes the security weakness of a recently proposed secure
communication method based on discrete-time chaos synchronization. We show that
the security is compromised even without precise knowledge of the chaotic
system used. We also make many suggestions to improve its security in future
versions.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, latex forma
Patterning the insect eye: from stochastic to deterministic mechanisms
While most processes in biology are highly deterministic, stochastic
mechanisms are sometimes used to increase cellular diversity, such as in the
specification of sensory receptors. In the human and Drosophila eye,
photoreceptors sensitive to various wavelengths of light are distributed
randomly across the retina. Mechanisms that underlie stochastic cell fate
specification have been analysed in detail in the Drosophila retina. In
contrast, the retinas of another group of dipteran flies exhibit highly ordered
patterns. Species in the Dolichopodidae, the "long-legged" flies, have regular
alternating columns of two types of ommatidia (unit eyes), each producing
corneal lenses of different colours. Individual flies sometimes exhibit
perturbations of this orderly pattern, with "mistakes" producing changes in
pattern that can propagate across the entire eye, suggesting that the
underlying developmental mechanisms follow local, cellular-automaton-like
rules. We hypothesize that the regulatory circuitry patterning the eye is
largely conserved among flies such that the difference between the Drosophila
and Dolichopodidae eyes should be explicable in terms of relative interaction
strengths, rather than requiring a rewiring of the regulatory network. We
present a simple stochastic model which, among its other predictions, is
capable of explaining both the random Drosophila eye and the ordered, striped
pattern of Dolichopodidae.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
X-ray Measurement of the subpixel structure of the XMM EPIC MOS CCD
We report here the results of a mesh experiment to measure the subpixel
structure of the EPIC MOS CCDs on board the XMM X-ray observatory. The pixel
size is 40m square while the mesh hole spacing is 48m, a combination
quite different from our standard mesh experiment. We have verified that this
combination functions properly and have analyzed the CCD structure with
sub-pixel resolution. The EPIC MOS CCD has an open electrode structure to
improve detection efficiency at low energies. We obtained the distribution of
various grades of X-ray events inside the pixel. A horizontally split two-pixel
event is generated near the channel stop which forms a straight vertical pixel
boundary whereas a vertically split two-pixel event is generated where the
potential due to the thinned gate structure forms a wavy horizontal pixel
boundary. Therefore, the effective pixel shape is not a square but is
distorted. The distribution of X-ray events clearly shows that the two etched
regions in each pixel, separated by the bridging finger of the enlarged (open)
electrode. We measured the difference in X-ray transmission between the
conventional and open regions of the pixel using O-K and Cu-L X-ray emission
lines, and found it to be consistent with an electrode thickness comprising
m of Si and m of SiO2.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Nucl. Instr. and
Methods
Geology
Papers from private industry reporting applications of remote sensing to oil and gas exploration were presented. Digitally processed LANDSAT images were successfully employed in several geologic interpretations. A growing interest in digital image processing among the geologic user community was shown. The papers covered a wide geographic range and a wide technical and application range. Topics included: (1) oil and gas exploration, by use of radar and multisensor studies as well as by use of LANDSAT imagery or LANDSAT digital data, (2) mineral exploration, by mapping from LANDSAT and Skylab imagery and by LANDSAT digital processing, (3) geothermal energy studies with Skylab imagery, (4) environmental and engineering geology, by use of radar or LANDSAT and Skylab imagery, (5) regional mapping and interpretation, and digital and spectral methods
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