21,098 research outputs found
Pacific herring, Clupea harengus pallasi, studies in San Francisco Bay, Monterey Bay, and the Gulf of the Farallones, July 1982 to March 1983
Herring stocks were hydroacoustically surveyed and sampled in San Francisco Bay from November 1982 to March 1983. Twelve discrete herring schools were identified, all of which spawned between November 7 and February 23. One additional school was found in the Bay in March but showed no evidence of spawning. Total biomass estimate from
hydroacoustic surveys was 67,040 tons. Based on MRR biomass estimates from spawned egg counts, an additional 10,000 tons may have spawned in November and December without being detected hydroacoustically. The largest schools occurred in January and February. Hydroacoustic estimates of biomass for individual schools during the season ranged from
270 to 22,300 tons.
Sixty-seven samples, containing a total of 12,232 herring, were collected with variable mesh gill net and midwater trawl or obtained from the commercial roundhaul and gill net fisheries. In general, a trend was observed of decreasing mean size and age as the season progressed.
Schools spawning in November and December consisted primarily of 4-, 5-, 6-, and 7-yr-old fish. Schools sampled from January to March were predominantly 2-, 3-, 4-, and 5-yr-old herring. The 1978, 1979, and 1980 yr classes (ages 5, 4, and 3 yr) were strong, comprising up to 90% of the
samples. The 1981 yr class (2-yr olds) was relatively weak.
Abundant rainfall and resultant low salinity in San Francisco Bay surface waters apparently delayed or prevented herring from spawning in February and March.
A relationship may exist between relative abundance of young-of-the-year fish, as noted from midwater trawl samples collected by the Department's Bay-Delta Study, and the resultant year class strength of newly recruited
2-yr-old herring in San Francisco Bay's spawning stocks. (57pp.
Religion and belief in Higher Education: the experiences of staff and students
This report presents key evidence from ‘Religion and belief in higher education: researching the experiences of staff and students’, a research project commissioned by ECU. The research methods used for this project took into consideration institutional contexts and backgrounds to religion or belief issues to ensure sensitivity to the issues involved. The project utilised the experience of the project stakeholder group in designing all research approaches.Equality Challenge Uni
The stickiness of sound: An absolute lower limit on viscosity and the breakdown of second order relativistic hydrodynamics
Hydrodynamics predicts long-lived sound and shear waves. Thermal fluctuations
in these waves can lead to the diffusion of momentum density, contributing to
the shear viscosity and other transport coefficients. Within viscous
hydrodynamics in 3+1 dimensions, this leads to a positive contribution to the
shear viscosity, which is finite but inversely proportional to the microscopic
shear viscosity. Therefore the effective infrared viscosity is bounded from
below. The contribution to the second-order transport coefficient is
divergent, which means that second-order relativistic viscous hydrodynamics is
inconsistent below some frequency scale. We estimate the importance of each
effect for the Quark-Gluon Plasma, finding them to be minor if
but important if .Comment: 16 pages including two figure
Participant satisfaction with Youth Justice Conferencing
Aims: To evaluate offender and victim satisfaction with New South Wales (NSW) Youth Justice Conferences (YJCs) immediately after conference participation and to re-assess victim satisfaction 4 months after the conference date.Method: A self-report survey designed to assess satisfaction with YJCs was completed by 263 offenders and 141 victims immediately following their participation in a NSW YJC. Additionally, 96 victims also participated in a phone-based survey 4 months after the conference.Results: When asked immediately following the conference, more than 85 per cent of offenders and victims reported being ‘satisfied’ or ‘very satisfied’ with most aspects of the conference. High levels of satisfaction with conferencing were also reported by victims 4 months after the conference. For some measures, however, the percentage of victims who were ‘satisfied’ or ‘very satisfied’ was not as high at the 4-month follow-up, as it was in the baseline survey. The aspect of conferencing that victims at the 4-month follow-up reported the least satisfaction with was the lack of feedback they received from conference staff about the offender’s completion of the outcome plan. Fewer than half of the victims were ‘satisfied’ or ‘very satisfied’ with this part of the conference.Conclusion: The results of this study suggest that offender and victim satisfaction is high immediately following a YJC. Even 4 months after a YJC, victim satisfaction with most aspects of conferencing remains high. Satisfaction levels may be increased still further if, at some point prior to the end of the statutory time-period for completing the plan, victims were provided with feedback about the offender’s progress towards completing the outcome plan. Further research also needs to be conducted comparing victim satisfaction following a conference with victim satisfaction following a court appearance
Attribution of intentional causation influences the perception of observed movements: behavioral evidence and neural correlates
Recent research on human agency suggests that intentional causation is associated with a subjective compression in the temporal interval between actions and their effects. That is, intentional movements and their causal effects are perceived as closer together in time than equivalent unintentional movements and their causal effects. This so-called intentional binding effect is consistently found for one's own self-generated actions. It has also been suggested that intentional binding occurs when observing intentional movements of others. However, this evidence is undermined by limitations of the paradigm used. In the current study we aimed to overcome these limitations using a more rigorous design in combination with functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) to explore the neural underpinnings of intentional binding of observed movements. In particular, we aimed to identify brain areas sensitive to the interaction between intentionality and causality attributed to the observed action. Our behavioral results confirmed the occurrence of intentional binding for observed movements using this more rigorous paradigm. Our fMRI results highlighted a collection of brain regions whose activity was sensitive to the interaction between intentionality and causation. Intriguingly, these brain regions have previously been implicated in the sense of agency over one's own movements. We discuss the implications of these results for intentional binding specifically, and the sense of agency more generally
Performance indicators for primary care groups; an evidence-based approach
The NHS Executive and Department of Health have proposed a wide range of performance indicators many of which are applicable to future primary care groups
Some of these indicators reflect access and efficiency, but few of the effectiveness indicators are based on primary care interventions for which there is evidence that increased uptake results in improved health outcomes
We present a method to identify important primary care interventions of proved efficacy and suggest performance indicators that could monitor their use
Our evidence based approach may be a complementary way of identifying areas for performance indicators to those proposed by the NHS Executive and Department of Health
Our suggested indicators are more likely to help turn evidence into everyday practice and to have an impact on the population's healt
Pacific herring, Clupea harengus pallasi, experimental roe-on-kelp open pound fishery studies in San Francisco Bay, December 1987 to February 1988
The experimental open pound herring roe-on-kelp (ROK) fishery was studied in San Francisco Bay from mid December 1987 to mid February 1988. Five different harvests were observed and sampled. A total of 19.7 tons of Macrocystis sp. kelp covered with herring eggs was processed during this period.
Kelp harvested from the Santa Barbara Channel Islands was
transported to San Francisco Bay for hanging on the pounds.
Weather conditions at the channel islands affected the condition and dimensions of the harvested kelp. Once suspended on the pounds in bay waters, the cut kelp deteriorated in 8 to 10 d. Based on our sampling, an average of 0.98 tons of kelp with a total blade surface area of 3031 m2 was suspended from each pound.
ROK was sampled at the shoreside processing facility. Densities of attached eggs ranged from light (less than three layers) to heavy (more than six layers) for the five different spawns. Egg coverage on each pound also varied; kelp towards the middle portion of the pound received heavier deposition of eggs. Average weight increase from egg deposition, per blade, was 780% with the kelp weighing an average of 12.2% of the total. An average 13.2% by weight was trimmed during processing. A multiplication factor of 0.206 should be used to convert individual roe herring allotments to ROK allotments.
Standard plastic totes containing processed ROK averaged 1783 lb total gross weight. Totes contained an average of 49.7% ROK by weight. Samples of roe-on-kelp increased an average of 10.9% in weight after brining during processing. (35pp.
Pacific herring, Clupea harengus pallasi, studies in San Francisco and Tomales Bays, April 1987 to March 1988
Herring schools were surveyed hydroacoustically and sampled in San Francisco Bay from late October 1987 to March 1988. Nine large schools (greater than 1000 tons) and four smaller ones were detected. Total acoustic biomass estimate, using a combination of echo integration and "visual integration" methods, was 71,110 tons. Improved acoustic calibration parameters resulted in this estimate being close to the spawn escapement-plus-catch estimate of 68,881 tons. However, the two biomass survey methods ere complementary and, when used together, provide a more accurate estimate of the spawning population than either method alone.
Eighty-two samples, containing a total of 16,316 herring, were collected with variable-mesh gill net, midwater trawl, or obtained from the roundhaul fishery. Mean body length decreased by more then 20 mm from the beginning to the end of the spawning season. Sex ratios favored males in November and December, while females were more abundant in February and March.
The 1982 through 1986 year classes (6- through 2-yr olds) contributed approximately 98% by weight and number to the total 1987-88 spawning biomass in San Francisco Bay. Herring year classes aged 7 and older each comprised no more then 1% of any school.
Above average recruitment occurred for the 1986 year class.
Recruitment may not be complete for some year classes until age 3 yr. This was particularly evident for the 1985 year clear. (72pp.
Optimal Estimation of Several Linear Parameters in the Presence of Lorentzian Thermal Noise
In a previous article we developed an approach to the optimal (minimum
variance, unbiased) statistical estimation technique for the equilibrium
displacement of a damped, harmonic oscillator in the presence of thermal noise.
Here, we expand that work to include the optimal estimation of several linear
parameters from a continuous time series. We show that working in the basis of
the thermal driving force both simplifies the calculations and provides
additional insight to why various approximate (not optimal) estimation
techniques perform as they do. To illustrate this point, we compare the
variance in the optimal estimator that we derive for thermal noise with those
of two approximate methods which, like the optimal estimator, suppress the
contribution to the variance that would come from the irrelevant, resonant
motion of the oscillator. We discuss how these methods fare when the dominant
noise process is either white displacement noise or noise with power spectral
density that is inversely proportional to the frequency ( noise). We also
construct, in the basis of the driving force, an estimator that performs well
for a mixture of white noise and thermal noise. To find the optimal
multi-parameter estimators for thermal noise, we derive and illustrate a
generalization of traditional matrix methods for parameter estimation that can
accommodate continuous data. We discuss how this approach may help refine the
design of experiments as they allow an exact, quantitative comparison of the
precision of estimated parameters under various data acquisition and data
analysis strategies.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Classical and
Quantum Gravit
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