3,446 research outputs found

    Advances in catalysis for fuel cells

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    Organic barley producers' desired qualities for crop improvement

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    Barley fits well into many different organic farming systems. It can be grown as either a winter or spring annual crop in many temperate regions. Barley can be used for food, malting, or animal feed, providing growers with diverse marketing opportunities. Despite its advantages, many organic farmers in the USA have not adopted barley as a regular crop in their rotation. Researchers surveyed organic barley producers to discover what they considered to be the main obstacles to growing barley. The primary obstacles identified were limited markets and price. Breeding and development of high-quality barley suitable for organic systems and specialty markets may be a way to expand markets and secure a better price. Farmers identified yield as the most important agronomic trait of interest, but other traits such as nutritional quality were also highly ranked. Naked (hull-less) barley bred for multi-use quality is a possible alternative that allows organic farmers to sell into multiple markets. Most respondents expressed interest in the development of such varieties suitable for organic farming conditions. The researchers conducted follow-up interviews to obtain detailed information on how barley is used in organic farming systems, production practices, costs of production, and what traits farmers would like to see breeders focus on

    Improving Barley for Organic Producers: What Do Organic Producers Want?

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    Researchers surveyed organic barley producers in order to find out how many acres they are growing, what varieties they grow, what markets they are growing barley for, whether they receive a price premium for organic barley, whether they are growing or would be interested in growing multi-use naked barley, what production challenges they face, and what traits they would like to see improved

    User acceptance of intelligent avionics: A study of automatic-aided target recognition

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    User acceptance of new support systems typically was evaluated after the systems were specified, designed, and built. The current study attempts to assess user acceptance of an Automatic-Aided Target Recognition (ATR) system using an emulation of such a proposed system. The detection accuracy and false alarm level of the ATR system were varied systematically, and subjects rated the tactical value of systems exhibiting different performance levels. Both detection accuracy and false alarm level affected the subjects' ratings. The data from two experiments suggest a cut-off point in ATR performance below which the subjects saw little tactical value in the system. An ATR system seems to have obvious tactical value only if it functions at a correct detection rate of 0.7 or better with a false alarm level of 0.167 false alarms per square degree or fewer

    The effects of business-to-business relationships on electronic procurement systems: An exploratory study

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    For many organisations e-Procurement has become a necessity. Nevertheless, while e-procurement has generated considerable hype the phenomenon is generally under-researched. This paper explores the effects that business-to-business relationships have on e-Procurement systems using a field study of 6 companies. The study classifies business-to-business (B2B) relationships as being adversarial and collaborative, and examines the effects that each have on the electronically supported transaction phases of the procurement lifecycle. The research findings indicate that B2B relationships have most effect on the sourcing, fulfilment, and consumption phases of the procurement cycle

    Ontology Summit 2008 Communiqué: Towards an open ontology repository

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    Each annual Ontology Summit initiative makes a statement appropriate to each Summits theme as part of our general advocacy designed to bring ontology science and engineering into the mainstream. The theme this year is "Towards an Open Ontology Repository". This communiqué represents the joint position of those who were engaged in the year's summit discourse on an Open Ontology Repository (OOR) and of those who endorse below. In this discussion, we have agreed that an "ontology repository is a facility where ontologies and related information artifacts can be stored, retrieved and managed." We believe in the promise of semantic technologies based on logic, databases and the Semantic Web, a Web of exposed data and of interpretations of that data (i.e., of semantics), using common standards. Such technologies enable distinguishable, computable, reusable, and sharable meaning of Web and other artifacts, including data, documents, and services. We also believe that making that vision a reality requires additional supporting resources and these resources should be open, extensible, and provide common services over the ontologies

    Validation of a Scale to Measure Patient-Perceived Barriers to Medication Use

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    AIMS: Medication adherence may explain why patients show very different clinical outcomes. Previous assessments of adherence have used refill rates and pill counts. Few studies have investigated patient-identified barriers to using medications as prescribed. This is particularly true for persons with diabetes, most of whom are using poly-pharmacy regimens. We created a questionnaire to measure patient perceptions of barriers to medication adherence (PBMA) targeting a predominately low income, inner-city minority population. METHODS: Twenty items (Likert scale) leading with "I sometimes don't take my diabetes medicines because..." were developed from 5 focus groups (N=48). A questionnaire including these items was mailed to 1000 patients who have diabetes. RESULTS: Using data from 267 respondents (Mean age=58, 74%female, 43% non-Hispanic Caucasian, 77% income<$15,000), exploratory factor analyses with varimax rotation identified 5 factors, that may contribute to poor medication adherence: personal access to medications (F1); communication with providers (F2); understanding or appropriately following the prescribed regimen (F3); side effects (F4) and system factors that inhibited access to medication (F5). Cronbach alphas ranged from .73 to .83 for the five factors and was .92 for total scale score. No relationships were found between total scores and gender, race, or income. Greater perception of barriers was significantly (p<0.01) associated with being younger (r= -0.21), being bothered more by physical (r= -0.40) and emotional side effects (r= 0.43), and less satisfaction with control of blood sugar by diabetes medications (r= 0.45). CONCLUSIONS: This instrument is reliable, factorially valid, and consistent with clinical observation regarding factors known to be associated with patient medication adherence. Although study participants were patients with diabetes, the PBMA may be applicable to other therapeutic areas
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