1,698 research outputs found
Value creation strategies in credence food productions. The case of organic farming in Italy
In this paper we analyse different strategies used by Italian organic farmers to create value from credence food production. More specifically, we consider the following strategies: participation in policy support programmes (i.e. rural development measures and agro-environmental schemes), direct marketing (i.e. short-chains, on-farm businesses, agro-tourism), on-farm processing and being a member of a marketing and/or processing cooperative. We use data from the 2006 Italian FADN (Farm Accountancy Data Network) related to 981 organic farmers. To estimate the factors affecting farmers’ strategies and to evaluate them simultaneously we implement a multivariate probit model (MVP). The results could be helpful to implement guidelines for public and private intervention in the next CAP programming period. Allowing for differences in farmers’ goals and their impact on the choice of farming method and strategies is important in a modern competitive scenario
Factors Affecting Participation of Italian Farmers in Rural Development Policy
In this paper a (micro)econometric approach is developed by considering the farmer likelihood to participate in different policy programs as linked to the objective of farmer to maximize their welfare. In this way we model farmers participation in policy support scheme by using a new institutional economics approach and conceptualizing the decision to entry as a contractual choice between two rural development types of policy. Different discrete choice modelling approaches are used to analyze the complementarity/ substitutability of different policy programs such as environmental-related measures and farm investment supports policy schemes and the main driving factors behind them. We use an extensive cross-sectional database related to the Italian FADN 2006. Results indicate that social capital and institutional factors should be taken much more into account in order to understand farmers likelihood to entry in policy support schemes. Location and farm(er) socio-economic features are also relevant factors. Moreover complementarity has been found between different policy schemes
Mesozoic spreading kinematics: consequences for Cenozoic Central and Western Mediterranean subduction
The highly complex tectonics of Central and Western Mediterranean subduction are well documented, but there is significant debate about the responsible dynamics. The motions of the main plates, Africa including Adria, Europe and Iberia, imposed initial and boundary conditions on the evolution of subduction that are often not considered. To quantitatively evaluate these conditions, we make a set of reconstructions from Mesozoic opening through Cenozoic closing of the Alpine Tethys, using main-plate kinematic data from several authors. Geologic and tectonic information are only added to constrain the location of the break-up boundary and a single plate-margin rearrangement at the end of the opening phase. Otherwise, the plates remain undeformed. This rigid-plate approach illustrates the context in which surface deformation and subduction occurred and provides estimates (with uncertainties) of the amount of material that should be accounted for in orogens or documented seismically in the mantle. Full tectonic reconstructions should satisfy such constraints. Opening led to alternating domains of predominantly oceanic lithosphere formed by normal spreading and domains dominated by transform motion, floored mainly by extended continental lithosphere. The transform domain structures provide logical decoupling zones to allow Penninic, Ligurian and Pyrenean basins to start subducting independently. The complex buoyancy in the transform domain linking Ligurian and Penninic basins, and obliquity between directions of opening and closing may account for a number of the oceanic basins and continental slivers often invoked to explain Alpine geology. The significant proportion of continental lithosphere in the Alboran would have favoured delamination of mantle lithosphere over subduction. The almost completely subducted Penninic slab obstructed subduction of the Ligurian domain in the direction of Africa-Europe convergence, possibly forcing the rollback of the Appeninic/Calabrian trenc
X-ray spectral state evolution in IGR J17091-3624 and comparison of its heartbeat oscillation properties with those of GRS 1915+105
In this work, we study the X-ray timing and spectral evolution of the
transient low mass X-ray binary IGR J17091-3624 during first 66 days of its
2011 outburst. We present results obtained from observations with two
instruments, Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE)/Proportional Counter Array
(PCA) and SWIFT/X-ray telescope (XRT), between 09 February, 2011 and 15 April,
2011. Using quasi-periodic oscillation classifications, power density spectrum
characteristics, time-lag behavior and energy spectral properties, we determine
source states and their transitions at different times of the outburst. During
the first part of the evolution, the source followed trends usually observed
from transient black hole X-ray binaries (BHXBs). Interestingly, a gradual
transition is observed in IGR J17091-3624 from the low-variability SIMS,
commonly seen in BHXBs, to a high-variability state with regular, repetitive
and structured pulsations, seen only from GRS 1915+105 (also known as 'rho'
class variability/'heartbeat' oscillations). We study the time evolution of
characteristic time-scale, quality factor and rms amplitude of heartbeat
oscillations in IGR J17091-3624. We also present a detailed comparison of the
timing and spectral properties of heartbeat oscillations and their evolution in
IGR J17091-3624 and GRS 1915+105.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in the Ap
PLANT: A Method for Detecting Changes of Slope in Noisy Trajectories
Time traces obtained from a variety of biophysical experiments contain valuable information on underlying processes occurring at the molecular level. Accurate quantification of these data can help explain the details of the complex dynamics of biological systems. Here, we describe PLANT (Piecewise Linear Approximation of Noisy Trajectories), a segmentation algorithm that allows the reconstruction of time-trace data with constant noise as consecutive straight lines, from which changes of slopes and their respective durations can be extracted. We present a general description of the algorithm and perform extensive simulations to characterize its strengths and limitations, providing a rationale for the performance of the algorithm in the different conditions tested. We further apply the algorithm to experimental data obtained from tracking the centroid position of lymphocytes migrating under the effect of a laminar flow and from single myosin molecules interacting with actin in a dual-trap force-clamp configuration.The authors gratefully acknowledge financial support fromthe European Commission (FP7-ICT-2011-7, grant number 288263), Erasmus Mundus Doctorate Program Europhoton-ics (grant number 159224-1-2009-1-FR-ERA MUNDUS-EMJD), Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competi-tiveness (“Severo Ochoa” Programme for Centres of Excellence in Research & Development SEV-2015-0522,and FIS2014-56107-R grants), Generalitat de Catalunyathrough the CERCA program, Italian Ministry of Uni-versity and Research (FIRB “Futuro in Ricerca” 2013grant n. RBFR13V4M2 and Flagship Project NANOMAX),Fundaci ́o Privada CELLEX (Barcelona), Ente Cassa diRisparmio di Firenze, Human Frontier Science Program (GARGP0027/2012) and LaserLab Europe 4 (GA 654148). C.M.acknowledges funding from the Spanish Ministry of Econ-omy and Competitiveness (MINECO) and the EuropeanSocial Fund (ESF) through the Ram ́on y Cajal program 2015(RYC-2015-17896).Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Discovery of the INTEGRAL X/Gamma-ray transient IGR J00291+5934: a Comptonised accreting ms pulsar ?
We report the discovery of a high-energy transient with the IBIS/ISGRI
detector on board the INTEGRAL observatory. The source, namely IGR J00291+5934,
was first detected on 2nd December 2004 in the routine monitoring of the
IBIS/ISGRI 20--60 keV images. The observations were conducted during Galactic
Plane Scans, which are a key part of the INTEGRAL Core Programme observations.
After verifying the basic source behaviour, the discovery was announced on 3rd
December. The transient shows a hard Comptonised spectrum, with peak energy
release at about 20 keV and a total luminosity of ~ 0.9E36 erg/s in the 5--100
keV range, assuming a distance of 3 kpc. Following the INTEGRAL announcement of
the discovery of IGR J00291+5934, a number of observations were made by other
instruments. We summarise the results of those observations and, together with
the INTEGRAL data, identifiy IGR J00291+5934 as the 6th member of a class of
accreting X-ray millisecond pulsars.Comment: Accepted for publication as an A&A Letter 24/01/2005. 5 pages, 2
figure
The 2009 outburst of H~1743-322 as observed by RXTE
We analyze the RXTE observations of the 2009 outburst of H~1743-322, as well
as the observations of the previous five outbursts for comparison. The
hardness-intensity diagram (HID) shows a complete counter-clockwise q-track for
the 2009 outburst and, interestingly, the track falls in} between a huge one in
2003, with a complete transition to high/soft state, and that of} the failed
outburst in 2008. It leaves the low/hard state but does not reach the leftmost
edge of the overall HID. While the lowest hardness (6--19 keV/3--6 keV) values}
in the HID is about 0.3--0.4 for the 2009 outburst, similar to the ``failed
state transition" seen in the persistent black hole XRB Cyg X-1, the timing
analysis shows that a transition to the high soft state occurred. During the
low/hard state of the 2009 outburst, the inner radius of the accretion disk is
found to be closer to the central black hole and have an anti-correlation with
the disk temperature. These results may be understood as the reprocessing} of
the hot corona on the disk's} soft X-rays, which can lead to an underestimation
of the inner radius of the accretion disk. In the luminosity diagram of the
corona versus the disk, the tracks of the outbursts} in 2003 and 2009 cross the
line which represents a roughly equal contribution to the entire emission from
the thermal and the non-thermal components;} the track of the 2008 outburst has
the turn-over falling} on this line. This may be indicative of an emission
balance between the corona and the disk, which prevents the state transition
from going further than the low/hard state.Comment: accepted by A&
Early predictors of impaired social functioning in male rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta)
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by social cognition impairments but its basic disease mechanisms remain poorly understood. Progress has been impeded by the absence of animal models that manifest behavioral phenotypes relevant to ASD. Rhesus monkeys are an ideal model organism to address this barrier to progress. Like humans, rhesus monkeys are highly social, possess complex social cognition abilities, and exhibit pronounced individual differences in social functioning. Moreover, we have previously shown that Low-Social (LS) vs. High-Social (HS) adult male monkeys exhibit lower social motivation and poorer social skills. It is not known, however, when these social deficits first emerge. The goals of this study were to test whether juvenile LS and HS monkeys differed as infants in their ability to process social information, and whether infant social abilities predicted later social classification (i.e., LS vs. HS), in order to facilitate earlier identification of monkeys at risk for poor social outcomes. Social classification was determined for N = 25 LS and N = 25 HS male monkeys that were 1–4 years of age. As part of a colony-wide assessment, these monkeys had previously undergone, as infants, tests of face recognition memory and the ability to respond appropriately to conspecific social signals. Monkeys later identified as LS vs. HS showed impairments in recognizing familiar vs. novel faces and in the species-typical adaptive ability to gaze avert to scenes of conspecific aggression. Additionally, multivariate logistic regression using infant social ability measures perfectly predicted later social classification of all N = 50 monkeys. These findings suggest that an early capacity to process important social information may account for differences in rhesus monkeys’ motivation and competence to establish and maintain social relationships later in life. Further development of this model will facilitate identification of novel biological targets for intervention to improve social outcomes in at-risk young monkeys
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