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Accurate Data (accurate + data)
Selected AbstractsSustainable use of groundwater for irrigation: a numerical analysis of the subsoil water fluxes,IRRIGATION AND DRAINAGE, Issue 3 2002Mobin-ud-Din Ahmad irrigation; eaux souterraines; surexploitation de l'aquifère; recharge des eaux souterraines; utilisation nette de l'eau souterraine; modélisation au niveau de la parcelle cultivée; le Pakistan Abstract The food-producing regions of the world increasingly rely on irrigation from groundwater resources. Further increases of groundwater use can adversely affect the sustainability of irrigated agriculture and put food security at risk. Sustainability of irrigation at field scale with groundwater is obtained if groundwater recharge is in equilibrium with tubewell extractions and capillary rise. Traditional information on phreatic surface behaviour does not explain the processes causing a phreatic surface to decline or incline. In this study, the physically based numerical model Soil,Water,Atmosphere,Plant (SWAP) was applied to compute soil moisture content and vertical soil water fluxes in the unsaturated zone for the cotton,wheat and rice,wheat cropping system of Punjab, Pakistan. SWAP has been calibrated and verified with in situ measurements of soil moisture content and evapotranspiration fluxes measured by means of the Bowen ratio surface energy balance technique. Accurate data of the soil hydraulic properties are critical for the calibration of the soil moisture distribution. With knowledge of the van Genuchten,Mualem parameters available, SWAP could be applied to assess recharge and capillary rise for most field conditions, including basin irrigation. The results under Pakistani conditions show that deep percolation cannot always be estimated from root zone water balances. An annual recharge of 23.3 cm was computed for the cotton,wheat area. Sustainability of irrigation with groundwater is obtained if a reduction in irrigation with groundwater by 36% is obtained. An annual recharge of 38.9 cm is estimated in rice,wheat systems, and a reduction of 62% in groundwater extraction is required to reach sustainability of groundwater use at field scale. Such information cannot be obtained from classical phreatic surface fluctuation data, and unsaturated zone modelling therefore provides additional insights for groundwater policy making. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. RÉSUMÉ Les régions de production alimentaire de la planète se servent de plus en plus de l'eau souterraine pour l'irrigation. Ultérieurs accroissements de l'utilisation des eaux souterraines peuvent avoir des répercussions négatives sur l'irrigation agricole soutenable et sur la sécurité alimentaire. Une irrigation soutenable au niveau de la parcelle cultivée en utilisant l'eau souterraine est obtenue si le taux de recharge de cette dernière est en équilibre avec le taux d'extraction des puits et la remontée capillaire. L'information traditionellement disponible concernant l'évolution du niveau phréatique ne permet pas d'expliquer les procès qui causeraient son abaissement ou son accroissement. Cette étude présente les resultats obtenus grâce à l'utilisation d'un modèle numérique appelé Soil,Water,Atmosphere,Plant (SWAP), qui se base sur des principes physiques, avec lequel ont été calculés les taux d'humidité du sol et les flux verticaux d'humidité dans la zone non-saturée du sol pour ce qui concèrne le système de cultivation coton,blé et riz,blé du Pounjab, au Pakistan. SWAP a été calibré et verifié grâce à des mesures in situ du taux d'humidité du sol et des flux d'évapotranspiration quantifiés en appliquant le rapport de Bowen, basé sur le concept du bilan énergétique au niveau du sol. Disposer de données prises concernant les propriétés hydrauliques du sol est essentiel pour calibrer la distribution de l'humidité du sol. Grâce à la connaissance des paramètres de van Genuchten,Mualem disponibles, SWAP a pu être utilisé pour évaluer le taux de recharge et la remontée capillaire en fonction de différentes conditions du terrain, irrigation de bassin incluse. Les résultats sous les conditions Pakistanes montrent que la percolation profonde ne peut pas toujours être estimée par les équilibres hydrologiques de la zone radicale. Une recharge annuelle de 23,3 cm a été estimée pour la zone coton,blé. L'utilisation soutenable de l'eau souterraine pour l'irrigation serait obtenue si on en réduisait l'extraction de 36%. Pour ce qui concerne la zone riz,blé, une recharge annuelle de 38,9 cm a été estimée, et une réduction de 62% de l'extraction de l'eau souterraine serait nécessaire pour une utilisation soutenable de l'eau souterraine à l'échelle de la parcelle cultivée. Ces informations ne peuvent pas être obtenues sur la base des données ordinaires concernant les fluctuations du niveau phréatique; la modélisation représente donc un appui essentiel en matière de prise de décision concernant la gestion de l'eau souterraine. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Cannabis and schizophrenia: model projections of the impact of the rise in cannabis use on historical and future trends in schizophrenia in England and WalesADDICTION, Issue 4 2007Matthew Hickman ABSTRACT Aims To estimate long-term trends in cannabis use and projections of schizophrenia assuming a causal relation between cannabis use and schizophrenia. Methods Trends in cannabis use were estimated from a national survey, 2003; and incidence of schizophrenia was derived from surveys in three English cities, 1997,99. A difference equation cohort model was fitted against estimates of schizophrenia incidence, trends in cannabis exposure and assumptions on association between cannabis and schizophrenia. The model projects trends in schizophrenia incidence, prevalence and attributable fraction of cannabis induced schizophrenia. Results Between 1970 and 2002 cannabis exposure increased: incidence by fourfold; period prevalence by 10-fold; and use among under 18-year-olds by 18-fold. In 1997,99 incidence and prevalence of schizophrenia were 17 per 100 000 and 0.63% among men and 7.3 per 100 000 and 0.23% among women, respectively. If cannabis use causes schizophrenia, earlier increases in cannabis use would lead to increases in overall schizophrenia incidence and prevalence of 29% and 12% among men between 1990 and 2010. By 2010 model projections which assume an association between schizophrenia and light and heavy users suggest that approximately one-quarter of new schizophrenia cases could be due to cannabis, whereas if the association is twofold and confined to heavy cannabis users, then approximately 10% of schizophrenia cases may be due to cannabis. Conclusions If cannabis use causes schizophrenia, and assuming other causes are unchanged, then relatively substantial increases in both prevalence and incidence of schizophrenia should be apparent by 2010. More accurate data on cannabis consumption and future monitoring of schizophrenia are critical. [source] Measurement of mutual diffusion coefficients of gases by the Taylor method: Measurements on H2,Air,H2,N2, and H2,O2 systemsHEAT TRANSFER - ASIAN RESEARCH (FORMERLY HEAT TRANSFER-JAPANESE RESEARCH), Issue 3 2002Naoki Matsunaga Abstract Mutual diffusion coefficients of hydrogen gas (H2) into air and its component gases (N2 and O2) have been measured in the temperature range of 30 to 180°C and at atmospheric pressure via the Taylor dispersion method. For a H2,N2 system, the composition dependence of the mutual diffusion coefficient has been studied with both H2 and N2 as the carrier gas. The mutual diffusion coefficients for the H2,air and H2,N2 systems are almost the same and smaller than that for the H2,O2 system by about 5%. The present data for the H2,N2 system, corrected to an equimolar composition, agree well with the accurate data reported by the groups of P. J. Dunlop and of R. J. J. Van Heijningen. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Heat Trans Asian Res, 31(3): 182,193, 2002; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com). DOI 10.1002/htj.10025 [source] The influence of spatial errors in species occurrence data used in distribution modelsJOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2008Catherine H Graham Summary 1Species distribution modelling is used increasingly in both applied and theoretical research to predict how species are distributed and to understand attributes of species' environmental requirements. In species distribution modelling, various statistical methods are used that combine species occurrence data with environmental spatial data layers to predict the suitability of any site for that species. While the number of data sharing initiatives involving species' occurrences in the scientific community has increased dramatically over the past few years, various data quality and methodological concerns related to using these data for species distribution modelling have not been addressed adequately. 2We evaluated how uncertainty in georeferences and associated locational error in occurrences influence species distribution modelling using two treatments: (1) a control treatment where models were calibrated with original, accurate data and (2) an error treatment where data were first degraded spatially to simulate locational error. To incorporate error into the coordinates, we moved each coordinate with a random number drawn from the normal distribution with a mean of zero and a standard deviation of 5 km. We evaluated the influence of error on the performance of 10 commonly used distributional modelling techniques applied to 40 species in four distinct geographical regions. 3Locational error in occurrences reduced model performance in three of these regions; relatively accurate predictions of species distributions were possible for most species, even with degraded occurrences. Two species distribution modelling techniques, boosted regression trees and maximum entropy, were the best performing models in the face of locational errors. The results obtained with boosted regression trees were only slightly degraded by errors in location, and the results obtained with the maximum entropy approach were not affected by such errors. 4Synthesis and applications. To use the vast array of occurrence data that exists currently for research and management relating to the geographical ranges of species, modellers need to know the influence of locational error on model quality and whether some modelling techniques are particularly robust to error. We show that certain modelling techniques are particularly robust to a moderate level of locational error and that useful predictions of species distributions can be made even when occurrence data include some error. [source] Monitoring bird migration with a fixed-beam radar and a thermal-imaging cameraJOURNAL OF FIELD ORNITHOLOGY, Issue 3 2006Sidney A. Gauthreaux Jr ABSTRACT Previous studies using thermal imaging cameras (TI) have used target size as an indicator of target altitude when radar was not available, but this approach may lead to errors if birds that differ greatly in size are actually flying at the same altitude. To overcome this potential difficulty and obtain more accurate measures of the flight altitudes and numbers of individual migrants, we have developed a technique that combines a vertically pointed stationary radar beam and a vertically pointed thermal imaging camera (VERTRAD/TI). The TI provides accurate counts of the birds passing through a fixed, circular sampling area in the TI display, and the radar provides accurate data on their flight altitudes. We analyzed samples of VERTRAD/TI video data collected during nocturnal fall migration in 2000 and 2003 and during the arrival of spring trans-Gulf migration during the daytime in 2003. We used a video peak store (VPS) to make time exposures of target tracks in the video record of the TI and developed criteria to distinguish birds, foraging bats, and insects based on characteristics of the tracks in the VPS images and the altitude of the targets. The TI worked equally well during daytime and nighttime observations and best when skies were clear, because thermal radiance from cloud heat often obscured targets. The VERTRAD/TI system, though costly, is a valuable tool for measuring accurate bird migration traffic rates (the number of birds crossing 1609.34 m [1 statute mile] of front per hour) for different altitudinal strata above 25 m. The technique can be used to estimate the potential risk of migrating birds colliding with man-made obstacles of various heights (e.g., communication and broadcast towers and wind turbines),a subject of increasing importance to conservation biologists. SINOPSIS Estudios previos, en donde no se ha hecho uso de radar, han utilizado cámaras infrarojas de imagen termal (CIT) y el tamaño de individuos como indicador, para detereminar la altura de vuelo. Sin embargo, este método puede dar origen a errores si las aves que vuelan a una misma altura varían en tamaño. Para subsanar esta dificultad y tomar medidas más exactas de la altura de vuelo y el número de individuos en una bandada, desarrollamos una técnica que combina un radar de rayos fijos con antena parabólica (RRF) con una cámara infraroja de imagen termal (RRT/CIT). El CIT provee de un conteo preciso de las aves pasando por un área circular fija de muestreo y el radar provee el dato preciso de la altura de vuelo. Utilizando una videograbadora digital, analizamos las muestras tomadas con la combinación RRT/CIT durante la migración otoñal noctura en el 2000 y el 2003 y durante la migración primaveral diurna del 2003, a través del Golfo de México. Utilizamos la cámara de video para hacer exposiciones en lapsos de tiempo en lo tomado por el CIT y desarrollamos criterios para distinguir entre aves, murciélagos e insectos, usando la huella dejada en el video y la altura del objeto. El CIT trabajo de forma eficiente tanto de dia como de noche, pero aún mejor cuando el cielo estaba despejado (cuando esta ausente la interferencia por la irradiación de calor de parte de las nubes). El sistema RRT/CIT, aunque costoso, es una herramienta valiosa para medir con presición las rutas migratorias y el número de aves moviéndose a diferente altura. Dicho sistema es de gran utilidad para determinar el riesgo de coliciones de aves migratorias con obstáculos construidos por el hombre a diferentes alturas (ej. torres de comunicación o turbinas de viento), asuntos de gran relevancia e importancia para la conservación de aves. [source] In-vitro and in-vivo assays for angiogenesis-modulating drug discovery and developmentJOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY: AN INTERNATI ONAL JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE, Issue 2 2006Michelle W. Phung In the past 35 years, significant findings have been made in relation to angiogenesis, and how this usually normal physiological function is converted into an abnormal state in cancer. To search for agents that can inhibit angiogenesis, and thereby prevent a tumour from proliferation and spread that is ultimately fatal to the patient, various in-vitro assays have been developed. In addition, older assays have been refined usually into high throughput screening formats, mainly by the biopharmaceutical industry in their attempts to develop novel therapeutic molecules and maintain a pipeline of lead candidates. The central aim is to extract more accurate data that would facilitate the birth of innovative mechanisms to defeat aberrant angiogenesis in-vivo. At the same time, better in-vivo models have been established, with the goal to mimic as close as possible the natural progression of various types of neoplasms in response to a good angiogenic response. More clinically relevant models are needed as anti-angiogenesis drug discovery and drug development companies fast track their lead molecules from preclinical investigations to phase I clinical trials. [source] EVALUATION OF LIGHT DETECTION AND RANGING (LIDAR) FOR MEASURING RIVER CORRIDOR TOPOGRAPHY,JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, Issue 1 2002Zachary H. Bowen ABSTRACT: LIDAR is relatively new in the commercial market for remote sensing of topography and it is difficult to find objective reporting on the accuracy of LIDAR measurements in an applied context. Accuracy specifications for LIDAR data in published evaluations range from 1 to 2 m root mean square error (RMSEx,y) and 15 to 20 cm RMSEz. Most of these estimates are based on measurements over relatively flat, homogeneous terrain. This study evaluated the accuracy of one LIDAR data set over a range of terrain types in a western river corridor. Elevation errors based on measurements over all terrain types were larger (RMSEz equals 43 cm) than values typically reported. This result is largely attributable to horizontal positioning limitations (1 to 2 m RMSEx,y) in areas with variable terrain and large topographic relief. Cross-sectional profiles indicated algorithms that were effective for removing vegetation in relatively flat terrain were less effective near the active channel where dense vegetation was found in a narrow band along a low terrace. LIDAR provides relatively accurate data at densities (50,000 to 100,000 points per km2) not feasible with other survey technologies. Other options for projects requiring higher accuracy include low-altitude aerial photography and intensive ground surveying. [source] ALSPAC,The Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and ChildrenPAEDIATRIC & PERINATAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, Issue 1 2001Golding ALSPAC (The Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, formerly the Avon Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood) was specifically designed to determine ways in which the individual's genotype combines with environmental pressures to influence health and development. To date, there are comprehensive data on approximately 10 000 children and their parents, from early pregnancy until the children are aged between 8 and 9. The study aims to continue to collect detailed data on the children as they go through puberty noting, in particular, changes in anthropometry, attitudes and behaviour, fitness and other cardiovascular risk factors, bone mineralisation, allergic symptoms and mental health. The study started early during pregnancy and collected very detailed data from the mother and her partner before the child was born. This not only provided accurate data on concurrent features, especially medication, symptoms, diet and lifestyle, attitudes and behaviour, social and environmental features, but was unbiased by parental knowledge of any problems that the child might develop. From the time of the child's birth many different aspects of the child's environment have been monitored and a wide range of phenotypic data collected. By virtue of being based in one geographic area, linkage to medical and educational records is relatively simple, and hands-on assessments of children and parents using local facilities has the advantage of high quality control. The comprehensiveness of the ALSPAC approach with a total population sample unselected by disease status, and the availability of parental genotypes, provides an adequate sample for statistical analysis and for avoiding spurious results. The study has an open policy in regard to collaboration within strict confidentiality rules. [source] What can the age composition of a population tell us about the age composition of its out-migrants?POPULATION, SPACE AND PLACE (PREVIOUSLY:-INT JOURNAL OF POPULATION GEOGRAPHY), Issue 1 2007Jani S. Little Abstract Preliminary findings show that the age structure of a population can provide valuable information about the age composition of its out-migrants, and that this relationship can become a key ingredient in the proposed new method for estimating the age profile of out-migrants when accurate data are not available. The method relies on the Rogers-Castro model schedule to consistently and accurately represent age profiles of out-migration, and the results show that variation among these out-migration schedules can be captured by a typology based on a small set of clusters, or families of schedules. Membership of the clusters is then predicted from simple measures of population composition using discriminant function analysis. The investigation is based on data for US states, CMSAs, MSAs and non-metropolitan counties, and their outflows of migrants between 1995 and 2000. The measures of population age composition come from official 1995 intercensal age-specific population estimates for the same geographical units. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The Need for Double-Sampling Designs in Survival Studies: An Application to Monitor PEPFARBIOMETRICS, Issue 1 2009Ming-Wen An Summary In 2007, there were 33.2 million people around the world living with HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS/WHO, 2007). In May 2003, the U.S. President announced a global program, known as the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), to address this epidemic. We seek to estimate patient mortality in PEPFAR in an effort to monitor and evaluate this program. This effort, however, is hampered by loss to follow-up that occurs at very high rates. As a consequence, standard survival data and analysis on observed nondropout data are generally biased, and provide no objective evidence to correct the potential bias. In this article, we apply double-sampling designs and methodology to PEPFAR data, and we obtain substantially different and more plausible estimates compared with standard methods (1-year mortality estimate of 9.6% compared to 1.7%). The results indicate that a double-sampling design is critical in providing objective evidence of possible nonignorable dropout and, thus, in obtaining accurate data in PEPFAR. Moreover, we show the need for appropriate analysis methods coupled with double-sampling designs. [source] The incidence of chronic scrotal pain after vasectomy: a prospective auditBJU INTERNATIONAL, Issue 6 2007Thomas A. Leslie OBJECTIVE To assess the extent of scrotal pain in men before and after vasectomy, to produce accurate data for the benefit of men considering this procedure, and hence improved informed consent about the outcomes, as chronic scrotal pain after vasectomy is a poorly quantified clinical problem. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between November 2004 and January 2006 nine surgeons carried out vasectomies in 625 men (mean age 39.9 years, sd 5.6) under local anaesthesia. A questionnaire was devised to establish the presence of any scrotal or testicular pain, and to characterize this discomfort; 6 months after the procedure a modified version of the same questionnaire was administered. RESULTS In all, 593 (94.7%) men returned the preoperative questionnaires and were entered into the study; 488 (82.2%) of these completed the follow-up questionnaire, giving a mean (sd) follow-up of 6.8 (1.6) months. In all, 65 men reported new-onset scrotal pain at 7 months (14.7%). The mean visual analogue score for this pain was 3.4/10. Four men (0.9%) in the responding group described pain after vasectomy as ,quite severe and noticeably affecting their quality of life'. CONCLUSION At 7 months after vasectomy about 15% of previously asymptomatic men have some degree of scrotal discomfort. These early data indicate that chronic scrotal pain after vasectomy is a genuine entity, but a longer-term follow-up in this group will be important to allow further evaluation of how this pain develops with time. [source] |