Examples

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Engineering

Kinds of Examples

  • additional example
  • another example
  • application example
  • benchmark example
  • best example
  • brief example
  • case example
  • case study example
  • classic example
  • classical example
  • clear example
  • clinical example
  • common example
  • concrete example
  • counter example
  • data example
  • design example
  • detailed example
  • different example
  • early example
  • empirical example
  • engineering example
  • ethnographic example
  • excellent example
  • experimental example
  • explicit example
  • few example
  • field example
  • first example
  • good example
  • historical example
  • hypothetical example
  • illustrative example
  • illustrative numerical example
  • important example
  • industrial example
  • interesting example
  • key example
  • literature example
  • many example
  • model example
  • motivating example
  • natural example
  • negative example
  • new example
  • novel example
  • numerical example
  • numerous example
  • offer example
  • one example
  • one-dimensional example
  • only example
  • other example
  • paper present example
  • paradigmatic example
  • particular example
  • practical example
  • present example
  • prime example
  • prominent example
  • published example
  • rare example
  • real data example
  • real example
  • realistic example
  • recent example
  • relevant example
  • remarkable example
  • representative example
  • second example
  • selected example
  • several example
  • several numerical example
  • significant example
  • simple example
  • simple numerical example
  • simulated example
  • simulation example
  • specific example
  • spectacular example
  • striking example
  • study example
  • successful example
  • synthetic example
  • test example
  • textbook example
  • third example
  • training example
  • two-dimensional example
  • unique example
  • unusual example
  • various example
  • various numerical example
  • well-known example
  • worked example

  • Terms modified by Examples

  • example analysis
  • example application
  • example calculation
  • example case
  • example network
  • example problem
  • example show
  • example showing
  • example shows

  • Selected Abstracts


    REASSESSING NONLINEARITY IN THE URBAN DISADVANTAGE/VIOLENT CRIME RELATIONSHIP: AN EXAMPLE OF METHODOLOGICAL BIAS FROM LOG TRANSFORMATION,

    CRIMINOLOGY, Issue 4 2003
    LANCE HANNON
    Sociologists and criminologists have become increasingly concerned with nonlinear relationships and interaction effects. For example, some recent studies suggest that the positive relationship between neighborhood disadvantage and violent crime is nonlinear with an accelerating slope, whereas other research indicates a nonlinear decelerating slope. The present paper considers the possibility that this inconsistency in findings is partially caused by lack of attention to an important methodological concern. Specifically, we argue that researchers have not been sensitive to the ways in which logarithmic transformation of the dependent variable can bias tests for nonlinearity and statistical interaction. We illustrate this point using demographic and violent crime data for urban neighborhoods, and we propose an alternative procedure to log transformation that involves the use of weighted least-squares regression, heteroscedasticity consistent standard errors, and diagnostics for influential observations. [source]


    TESTING THE ROLE OF INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION IN THE EVOLUTIONARY ORIGIN OF ELEVATIONAL ZONATION: AN EXAMPLE WITH BUARREMON BRUSH-FINCHES (AVES, EMBERIZIDAE) IN THE NEOTROPICAL MOUNTAINS

    EVOLUTION, Issue 5 2007
    Carlos Daniel Cadena
    Interspecific competition might drive the evolution of ecological niches and result in pairs of formerly competing species segregating along ecological gradients following a process of character displacement. This mechanism has been proposed to account for replacement of related species along gradients of elevation in many areas of the world, but the fundamental issue of whether competition is responsible for the origin of elevational replacements has not been tested. To test hypotheses about the role of interspecific competition in the origin of complementary elevational ranges, I combined molecular phylogenetics, phylogeography, and population genetic analyses on Buarremon torquatus and B. brunneinucha (Aves, Emberizidae), whose patterns of elevational distribution suggest character displacement or ecological release. The hypothesis that elevational distributions in these species changed in opposite directions as a result of competition is untenable because: (1) a historical expansion of the range of B. brunneinucha into areas occupied by B. torquatus was not accompanied by a shift in the elevational range of the former species; (2) when B. brunneinucha colonized the range of B. torquatus, lineages of the latter distributions had already diverged; and (3) historical trends in effective population size do not suggest populations with elevational ranges abutting those of putative competitors have declined as would be expected if competition caused range contractions. However, owing to uncertainty in coalescent estimates of historical population sizes, the hypothesis that some populations of B. torquatus have declined cannot be confidently rejected, which suggests asymmetric character displacement might have occurred. I suggest that the main role of competition in elevational zonation may be to act as a sorting mechanism that allows the coexistence along mountain slopes only of ecologically similar species that differ in elevational distributions prior to attaining sympatry. The contrasting biogeographic histories of B. brunneinucha and B. torquatus illustrate how present-day ecological interactions can have recent origins, and highlights important challenges for testing the hypothesis of character displacement in the absence of data on population history and robust reconstructions of the evolution of traits and geographic ranges. [source]


    PHYLOGENETIC COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF LIFE-HISTORY VARIATION AMONG POPULATIONS OF THE LIZARD SCELOPORUS UNDULATUS:AN EXAMPLE AND PROGNOSIS

    EVOLUTION, Issue 3 2004
    Peter H. Niewiarowski
    Abstract Over the past 15 years, phylogenetic comparative methods (PCMs) have become standard in the study of life-history evolution. To date, most studies have focused on variation among species or higher taxonomic levels, generally revealing the presence of significant phylogenetic effects as well as residual variation potentially attributable to adaptive evolution. Recently, population-level phylogenetic hypotheses have become available for many species, making it possible to apply PCMs directly to the level at which experiments are typically used to test adaptive hypotheses. In this study, we present the results of PCMs applied to life-history variation among populations of the widespread and well-studied lizard Sceloporus undulatus. Using S. undulatus (which may represent four closely related species) as an example, we explore the benefits of using PCMs at the population level, as well as consider the importance of several thorny methodological problems including but not limited to nonindependence of populations, lack of sufficient variation in traits, and the typically small sample sizes dictated by the difficulty of collecting detailed demographic data. We show that phylogenetic effects on life-history variation among populations of S. undulatus appear to be unimportant, and that several classic trade-offs expected by theory and revealed by many interspecific comparisons are absent. Our results suggest that PCMs applied to variation in life-history traits below the species level may be of limited value, but more studies like ours are needed to draw a general conclusion. Finally, we discuss several outstanding problems that face studies seeking to apply PCMs below the species level. [source]


    THE RESPONSE OF PARTIALLY DEBRIS-COVERED VALLEY GLACIERS TO CLIMATE CHANGE: THE EXAMPLE OF THE PASTERZE GLACIER (AUSTRIA) IN THE PERIOD 1964 TO 2006

    GEOGRAFISKA ANNALER SERIES A: PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, Issue 4 2008
    ANDREAS KELLERER-PIRKLBAUER
    ABSTRACT. Long-term observations of partly debris-covered glaciers have allowed us to assess the impact of supra-glacial debris on volumetric changes. In this paper, the behaviour of the partially debris-covered, 3.6 km2 tongue of Pasterze Glacier (47°05,N, 12°44,E) was studied in the context of ongoing climate changes. The right part of the glacier tongue is covered by a continuous supra-glacial debris mantle with variable thicknesses (a few centimetres to about 1 m). For the period 1964,2000 three digital elevation models (1964, 1981, 2000) and related debris-cover distributions were analysed. These datasets were compared with long-term series of glaciological field data (displacement, elevation change, glacier terminus behaviour) from the 1960s to 2006. Differences between the debriscovered and the clean ice parts were emphasised. Results show that volumetric losses increased by 2.3 times between the periods 1964,1981 and 1981,2000 with significant regional variations at the glacier tongue. Such variations are controlled by the glacier emergence velocity pattern, existence and thickness of supra-glacial debris, direct solar radiation, counter-radiation from the valley sides and their changes over time. The downward-increasing debris thickness is counteracting to a compensational stage against the common decrease of ablation with elevation. A continuous debris cover not less than 15 cm in thickness reduces ablation rates by 30,35%. No relationship exists between glacier retreat rates and summer air temperatures. Substantial and varying differences of the two different terminus parts occurred. Our findings clearly underline the importance of supra-glacial debris on mass balance and glacier tongue morphology. [source]


    TEMPESTITE DEPOSITS ON A STORM-INFLUENCED CARBONATE RAMP: AN EXAMPLE FROM THE PABDEH FORMATION (PALEOGENE), ZAGROS BASIN, SW IRAN

    JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, Issue 2 2004
    H. Mohseni
    The Pabdeh Formation is part of a thick carbonate-siliciclastic succession in the Zagros Basin of SW Iran which includes carbonate reservoirs of Cretaceous and Cenozoic ages. From field observations and petrographic and facies analysis of exposures in the type section of the Pabdeh Formation, four lithofacies were recognized. These are from oldest to youngest: (i) a mottled, bioturbated bioclastic wackestone/mudstone facies; (ii) a wackestone/packstone facies with horizontal burrows on bedding planes; (iii) a thin-bedded bioclastic wackestone/mudstone facies alternating with thin bioclastic-oolitic-intraclastic intervals; and (iv) a bioclastic foraminiferal / algal / peloidal packstone facies. These observations indicate that facies evolved upwards from deep outer-ramp deposits to inner-ramp deposits within a shoal complex, suggesting progradation of the ramp depositional system. Storm events significantly influenced the ramp system. Storm-generated surges transported sediments from nearshore to the deeper outer-ramp environment where they were deposited as shell-lags, composed mostly of bioclastic packstones, rich in pelagic microfauna with sharp, undulatory erosional basal contacts. The packstones rest on outer ramp mudstones deposited below storm base level. Sedimentary structures in the Pabdeh Formation are those typical of storm deposits, such as hummocky cross-stratification, ripple cross-lamination, ripple marks, escape burrows on the tops of the beds, couplets of fine- and coarse-grained laminae and mixed fauna, as well as intraclasts derived from underlying facies. These distinctive sequences are interpreted to have been generated by waning storm-generated currents. The dominance of fine-grained sediments (medium to fine sand); the lack of large- scale hummocky cross-stratification; the minor amounts of intraclasts derived from underlying facies; the paucity of amalgamated tempestite beds; and the finely-laminated (mm to cm scale) couplets of coarse and fine lamina all suggest a distal tempestite facies. Palaeogeographic reconstruction of the Zagros Basin during the Eocene indicates that the study area was situated in tropical, storm-dominated palaeolatitudes. [source]


    ASSESSMENT OF PREFERENCE WITH CONTROLS FOR RESPONSE BIAS OPERATING IN THE TEST SITUATION: A PRACTICAL EXAMPLE USING OMEGA-3 ENRICHED WHOLEGRAIN BREADS WITH ECUADORIAN CONSUMERS

    JOURNAL OF SENSORY STUDIES, Issue 5 2010
    YAMILLA ALVAREZ-COUREAUX
    ABSTRACT Ecuadorian consumers performed paired preference tests between sunflower rye bread and artisan wholegrain bread enriched with omega-3 fatty acids. Preferences for each were split fairly evenly. Further difference tests suggested that these preferences were elicited by visual rather than flavor/texture cues. The preference test included a "placebo" pair of "identical" stimuli to assess statistically whether the responses to the two test stimuli were merely because of response biases operating in the test situation and not differences in their sensory attributes. The concept of an "operational preference" was introduced to understand some of the ambiguities involved in the definition of preference. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS The measurement of preference and acceptance of foods is important for product development and decisions regarding the launching of new products on to the market. The paired preference test has several problems associated with its design and analysis, and these are worthy of investigation. This article uses a practical example to illustrate some procedures developed as solutions to these challenges. Solutions to the problems involved in preference testing are essential so that the food industry can obtain trustworthy data. [source]


    INTELLIGENTLY DESIGNING DELIBERATIVE HEALTH CARE FORUMS: DEWEY'S METAPHYSICS, COGNITIVE SCIENCE AND A BRAZILIAN EXAMPLE

    POLITICS & POLICY, Issue 6 2008
    Shane Ralston
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    DATING OF THE HOMINID (HOMO NEANDERTHALENSIS) REMAINS ACCUMULATION FROM EL SIDRÓN CAVE (PILOÑA, ASTURIAS, NORTH SPAIN): AN EXAMPLE OF A MULTI-METHODOLOGICAL APPROACH TO THE DATING OF UPPER PLEISTOCENE SITES

    ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 4 2010
    T. De TORRES
    The age of Neanderthal remains and associated sediments from El Sidrón cave has been obtained through different dating methods (14CAMS, U/TH, OSL, ESR and AAR) and samples (charcoal debris, bone, tooth dentine, stalagmitic flowstone, carbonate-rich sediments, sedimentary quartz grains, tooth enamel and land snail shells). Detrital Th contamination rendered Th/U dating analyses of flowstone unreliable. Recent 14C contamination produced spurious age-values from charcoal samples as well as from inadequately pretreated tooth samples. Most consistent 14C dates are grouped into two series: one between 35 and 40 ka and the other between 48 and 49 ka. Most ESR and AAR samples yielded concordant ages, ranging between 39 and 45 ka; OSL dating results permitted adequate bracketing of the sedimentary layer that contained the human remains. Our results emphasize the value of multi-dating approaches for the establishment of reliable chronologies of human remains. [source]


    AN EPR AND ISOTOPIC STUDY OF THE MARBLES OF THE TRAJAN's ARCH AT ANCONA: AN EXAMPLE OF ALLEGED HYMETTIAN PROVENANCE,

    ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 4 2003
    D. Attanasio
    The provenance of 20 marble samples drawn from the Trajan's arch at Ancona, which is supposed to be made of Greek, Hymettian marble, has been established on the basis of the independent use of EPR and isotopic data. The results of the two methods are in good agreement and unequivocally indicate a Proconnesian provenance. Sixteen samples are assigned to this site, whereas two are classified as untypical Proconnesian samples and the remaining two are assigned an unlikely Parian provenance. No indication exists for a possible Hymettian origin of the marbles. A multi-method approach, which employs all of the experimental variables simultaneously, demonstrates that the 18 samples identified as Proconnesian belong to several different quarrying areas within the site. This result is taken as an indication that the Proconnesian quarries were run following a highly organized, semi-industrial production model. The origin of the Hymettian/Proconnesian misunderstanding and the possible misclassification of other Roman monuments in Italy are briefly commented on. [source]


    DUNG BY PREFERENCE: THE CHOICE OF FUEL AS AN EXAMPLE OF HOW ANDEAN POTTERY PRODUCTION IS EMBEDDED WITHIN WIDER TECHNICAL, SOCIAL, AND ECONOMIC PRACTICES,

    ARCHAEOMETRY, Issue 1 2000
    B. SILLAR
    A discussion of how Andean potters acquire and use their fuels is used to demonstrate the ,embedded'nature of ceramic technology. The most common choice of fuel in the highlands of Peru and Bolivia is animal dung (mainly cow, sheep, and llama). This technological choice is related to wider social and economic practices (particularly in relation to animal husbandry) which has further repercussions that affect other technologies (such as agriculture practices). Such a succession of interrelated activities is not unique to pottery; it is fundamental to all technologies and should be considered within archaeological analysis. [source]


    CONTROL ISSUES IN HIGH-SPEED AFM FOR BIOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS: COLLAGEN IMAGING EXAMPLE

    ASIAN JOURNAL OF CONTROL, Issue 2 2004
    Q. Zou
    ABSTRACT This article considers the precision positioning problem associated with high-speed operation of the Atomic Force Microscope (AFM), and presents an inversion-based control approach to achieve precision positioning. Although AFMs have high (nanoscale) spatial resolution, a problem with current AFM systems is that they have low temporal resolution, i.e., AFM imaging is slow. In particular, current AFM imaging cannot be used to provide three-dimensional, time-lapse images of fast processes when imaging relatively-large, soft samples. For instance, current AFM imaging of living cells takes 1,2 minutes (per image frame) , such imaging speeds are too slow to study rapid biological processes that occur in seconds, e.g., to investigate the rapid movement of cells or the fast dehydration and denaturation of collagen. This inability, to rapidly image fast biological processes, motivates our current research to increase the operating speed of the AFM. We apply an inversion-based feedback/feedforward control approach to overcome positioning problems that limit the operating speed of current AFM systems. The efficacy of the method, to achieve high-speed AFM operation, is experimentally evaluated by applying it to image collagen samples. [source]


    ETHICAL REVIEW ISSUES IN COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH BETWEEN US AND LOW , MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY PARTNERS: A CASE EXAMPLE

    BIOETHICS, Issue 8 2008
    SCOTT MCINTOSH
    ABSTRACT The current ethical structure for collaborative international health research stems largely from developed countries' standards of proper ethical practices. The result is that ethical committees in developing countries are required to adhere to standards that might impose practices that conflict with local culture and unintended interpretations of ethics, treatments, and research. This paper presents a case example of a joint international research project that successfully established inclusive ethical review processes as well as other groundwork and components necessary for the conduct of human behavior research and research capacity building in the host country. [source]


    SPECIES VARIABILITY IN CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH: THE EXAMPLE OF ADRENOCORTICOTROPHIN-INDUCED HYPERTENSION

    CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 9 2006
    Judith A Whitworth
    SUMMARY 1Lawrie Beilin has contributed greatly to international hypertension research through both animal and human studies. 2Animals are used in biomedical research to gain insights that can be extrapolated ultimately to humans. 3A simple experimental manipulation, adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH) administration, has a range of different cardiovascular effects in different species. 4Caution should be exercised in extrapolating data from animals to humans. [source]


    THE IMPORTANCE OF NEUTRAL EXAMPLES FOR LEARNING SENTIMENT

    COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE, Issue 2 2006
    Moshe Koppel
    Most research on learning to identify sentiment ignores "neutral" examples, learning only from examples of significant (positive or negative) polarity. We show that it is crucial to use neutral examples in learning polarity for a variety of reasons. Learning from negative and positive examples alone will not permit accurate classification of neutral examples. Moreover, the use of neutral training examples in learning facilitates better distinction between positive and negative examples. [source]


    FURTHER CLEAR EXAMPLES OF THE NEED FOR MORE REASONABLE CONCLUSIONS AND CRITIQUES ABOUT PREVENTION

    ADDICTION, Issue 1 2009
    RICHARD SPOTH
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    FULL-FIELD DYNAMIC DISPLACEMENT AND STRAIN MEASUREMENT-SPECIFIC EXAMPLES USING ADVANCED 3D IMAGE CORRELATION

    EXPERIMENTAL TECHNIQUES, Issue 4 2003
    T. Schmidt
    First page of article [source]


    DETERMINATION OF FAULT SLIP COMPONENTS USING SUBSURFACE STRUCTURAL CONTOURS: METHODS AND EXAMPLES

    JOURNAL OF PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, Issue 3 2004
    S-S. Xu
    Problems with measuring fault slip in the subsurface can sometimes be overcome by using subsurface structural contour maps constructed from well logs and seismic information. These maps are useful for estimating fault slip since fault motion commonly causes the dislocation of structural contours. The dislocation of a contour is defined here as the distance in the direction of fault strike between two contours which have the same value on both sides of a fault. This dislocation can be estimated for tilted beds and folded beds as follows: (i),If a dip-slip fault offsets a tilted bed, the dislocation (Sc) of contours can be estimated from the vertical component (Sv) of the fault slip and the dip (,) of the bedding according to the following relationship: Sc= Sv/tan ,. Since Sc and , can be measured from a contour map, the vertical component of fault slip can be obtained from this equation. If a strike-slip fault offsets a tilted bed, the dislocation (Scs) of contours is equal to the strike-slip of the fault (Sc), that is, Scs= Ss. (ii),If a fault offsets a symmetric fold, the strike component (Scs) of fault slip and the dislocation of the contours (Sc) can be calculated, respectively, from the equations Scs= (Smax+ Smin) / 2 and Sc= (Smax - Smin) / 2. Smax is the greater total dislocation (Sc+ Scs) of a contour line between the two limbs of the fold and Smin is the smaller total dislocation (Sc - Scs) for the same contour line. In this case, Sv can be also calculated using the obtained value of Sc and the equation Sv= Sc tan ,. Similarly, for an asymmetric fold, the dislocation of contours due to the vertical slip component is Scb= (Smax - Smin)/(n + 1), and the strike-slip component is Ss= Scs= (nSmin+ Smax/(n + 1), where n is the ratio between the values of interlines of the two limbs, and Scb is the dislocation of contours due to the vertical slip component for either of the two limbs (here it is for limb b). In all cases, three conditions are required for the calculation of contour dislocation: (i),the contour lines must be approximately perpendicular to the fault strike; the intersection angle between the fault strike and the strike of bedding should be greater than 65°; (ii),the bed must not be dip more than 35°; and (iii),folding or flexure of the stratigraphic horizons must have occurred before faulting. These methods for determining fault slip from the dislocation of structural contours are discussed using case studies from the Cantarell oilfield complex, Campeche Sound (southern Gulf of Mexico), the Jordan-Penwell Ellenburger oilfield in Texas, and the Wilmington oilfield in California. [source]


    DISPOSITIONAL COMPATIBILISM AND FRANKFURT-TYPE EXAMPLES

    PACIFIC PHILOSOPHICAL QUARTERLY, Issue 2 2008
    ISHTIYAQUE HAJI
    It is argued that partisans of Frankfurt examples can still make a powerful case for the view that being able to do otherwise, even on Vihvelin's compatibilist explication of ,could have done otherwise,' is not required for moral responsibility. [source]


    Hypervideo application on an experimental control system as an approach to education

    COMPUTER APPLICATIONS IN ENGINEERING EDUCATION, Issue 1 2008
    Debevc, Matja
    Abstract Hypervideo, as an interactive tool with links within video frames, is becoming widely used in multimedia presentations for e-learning applications. Its concept of rich multimedia presentation together with temporal based link objects, gives a chance for use in engineering education courses, where many practical work and experiments are needed. In the article we present a strategy for the development and navigation of hypervideo application, to be used in engineering education. Example of magnetic suspension system experiment was built as hypervideo application. The system usability was tested with two methods, software usability measurement inventory (SUMI) evaluation and general approach to usability engineering. Test results have shown that hypervideo increases the users' motivation to work and helps students recognize, organize and present specific information. By applying some of the proposed improvements in future development, hypervideo could be a significant tool in the future of engineering education. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Comput Appl Eng Educ 16: 31,44, 2008; Published online in Wiley InterScience (www.interscience.wiley.com); DOI 10.1002/cae.20116 [source]


    Leading by Example: Response to Golet et al.

    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2009
    MARK C. BUCKLEY
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Role of Corridors in Plant Dispersal: an Example with the Endangered Ranunculus nodif lorus

    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 2 2003
    Florian Kirchner
    But the few experimental studies supporting the usefulness of corridors have all concerned animal species. We investigated the role of corridors in seed dispersal, studying population genetic and demographic structure in metapopulations of the rare, pond-dwelling, autogamous plant species Ranunculus nodiflorus L. in the Fontainebleau Forest ( France ). Differentiation on three polymorphic isozyme markers was strong among local populations ( ponds ) within metapopulations ( sites ) and moderate among metapopulations. Partial Mantel tests revealed that the connection of ponds through temporarily flooded natural corridors, facilitating seed migration, had a strong negative effect on genetic differentiation between local populations and that a pond was more likely to be colonized when connected by corridors to other occupied ponds. Thus, corridors are probably a key element of landscape structure for metapopulation dynamics in R. nodiflorus. From a conservation perspective, our results suggest that corridors could increase the chance of persistence of plant species living in fragmented habitats by promoting seed dispersal between habitat patches. Resumen: La propuesta de que la migración de organismos entre parches de hábitat puede ser incrementada por corredores ha sido muy discutida en biología de la conservación. Pero los pocos estudios experimentales que apoyan la utilidad de los corredores han sido enfocados hacia especies de animales. Investigamos el papel de los corredores en la dispersión de semillas, estudiando la genética poblacional y la estructura demográfica en metapoblaciones de la especie de planta rara, autógama, habitante de estanques Ranunculus nodiflorus L. en el bosque Fontainebleau ( Francia ). La diferenciación de tres isozimas polimórficas marcadoras fue fuerte entre las poblaciones locales ( estanques ) dentro de metapoblaciones ( sitios ) y fue moderada entre metapoblaciones. Las pruebas parciales de Mantel revelaron que la conexión de estanques a través de corredores naturales inundados facilitando la migración de semillas, tuvo un efecto negativo fuerte en la diferenciación genética entre poblaciones locales y que un estanque fue más probable de ser colonizado cuando se conectaba por corredores con otros estanques ocupados. Por lo tanto, los corredores probablemente son un factor clave de la estructura del paisaje para dinámicas metapoblacionales en R. nodiflorus. Desde una perspectiva de conservación, nuestros resultados sugieren que los corredores podrían incrementar la probabilidad de persistencia de especies de plantas que viven en hábitats fragmentados al promover la dispersión de semillas entre parches de hábitats. [source]


    Using Phylogenetic Diversity Measures to Set Priorities in Conservation: an Example from Southern South America

    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, Issue 5 2001
    Paula Posadas
    The goal of these ranks for conservation is to consider as many factors as possible that provide additional taxic information, such as taxa richness, taxa distributional patterns, area endemicity, and complementarity between areas. At present there are many measures that consider phylogenetic information, including node-based, genetic-distance, and feature-based measures. We devised a modified phylogenetic node-based index that we call "taxonomic endemicity standardized weight," which considers not only the taxonomic distinctness of the taxa that inhabit a given area but their endemicity as well. Once the standardized weight of the taxonomic endemicity identifies the area of highest priority, complementarity can be used to identify the second area and so on. We used this node-based index to rank priority areas for conservation in southern South America, and we compared the results of our rankings to results based on other node-based indexes. Our index identified Santiago district, in Central Chile province, as the highest priority area for conservation, followed by Maule, Malvinas, and districts of Subantarctic province. Malvinas exhibits greater complementarity relative to Santiago than Maule does, however, so Malvinas is ranked second in priority. Indexes based on phylogenetic information measure the evolutionary component of biodiversity and allow one to identify areas that will ensure the preservation of evolutionary potential and phylogenetically rare taxa. The modified index we propose is sensitive to taxic distinctness and endemicity as well and allows information from diverse taxa to be combined (i.e., different cladograms). The use of complementarity allows for preservation of the maximum quantity of taxa in a minimal number of protected areas. Resumen: Las medidas de diversidad filogenética jerarquiza a las áreas para prioridades de conservación de biodiversidad con base en información codificada en filogenias (cladogramas), La meta de estas categorías de conservación requiere tomar en consideración tantos factores que proporcionan información adicional (riqueza de taxones, patrones de distribución de los taxones, endemicidad del área y complementariedad entre áreas) como sea posible. Actualmente hay muchas medidas que consideran información filogenética (basadas en nodos, distancia genética y basadas en características). Diseñamos un índice filogenético modificado basado en nodos que denominamos "peso estandarizado de endemicidad taxonómica", el cual considera no solo la peculiaridad genética de los taxa que habitan una región determinada sino también su endemicidad. Una vez que el peso estandarizado de endemicidad identifica el área de mayor prioridad, la complementariedad se puede usar para identificar la segunda área y así sucesivamente. Utilizamos este índice basado en nodos para jerarquizar áreas prioritarias para conservación en el sur de América del Sur, y comparamos los resultados de nuestras jerarquizaciones con resultados obtenidos con otros índices basados en nodos. Nuestro índice identificó al distrito de Santiago, en la provincia de Chile Central, como el área de mayor prioridad para conservación, seguido por Maule, Malvinas y distritos de la provincia Subantártica. Sin embargo, Malvinas presenta mayor complementariedad en relación con Santiago que el Maule y, por tanto, Malvinas ocupa la segunda prioridad. Los índices basados en información filogenética miden el componente evolutivo de la biodiversidad y permiten la identificación de áreas que aseguran la preservación de taxones con potencial evolutivo y filogenéticamente peculiares. El índice modificado que proponemos es sensible tanto a la peculiaridad de los taxones como a la endemicidad y permite combinar información de diversos taxones (i.e. cladogramas diferentes). El uso de la complementariedad permite la preservación de la mayor cantidad de taxones en un número mínimo de áreas protegidas. [source]


    Integration of Different Data Bodies for Humanitarian Decision Support: An Example from Mine Action

    DISASTERS, Issue 4 2003
    Aldo A. Benini
    Geographic information systems (GIS) are increasingly used for integrating data from different sources and substantive areas, including in humanitarian action. The challenges of integration are particularly well illustrated by humanitarian mine action. The informational requirements of mine action are expensive, with socio,economic impact surveys costing over US$1.5 million per country, and are feeding a continuous debate on the merits of considering more factors or ,keeping it simple'. National census offices could, in theory, contribute relevant data, but in practice surveys have rarely overcome institutional obstacles to external data acquisition. A positive exception occurred in Lebanon, where the landmine impact survey had access to agricultural census data. The challenges, costs and benefits of this data integration exercise are analysed in a detailed case study. The benefits are considerable, but so are the costs, particularly the hidden ones. The Lebanon experience prompts some wider reflections. In the humanitarian community, data integration has been fostered not only by the diffusion of GIS technology, but also by institutional changes such as the creation of UN-led Humanitarian Information Centres. There is a question whether the analytic capacity is in step with aggressive data acquisition. Humanitarian action may yet have to build the kind of strong analytic tradition that public health and poverty alleviation have accomplished. [source]


    Panayiotopoulos Syndrome: An Important Electroclinical Example of Benign Childhood System Epilepsy

    EPILEPSIA, Issue 6 2007
    Michael Koutroumanidis
    Summary:, As a result of the converging evidence from multiple large independent studies, Panayiotopoulos syndrome (PS) is now formally recognized as a distinct clinical entity within the spectrum of benign focal epilepsies of childhood. Clinically, PS is manifested by predominantly autonomic seizures and electrographically with multifocal interictal spikes, while the few published ictal recordings have documented onsets of variable lobar topography. These typical electroclinical features do not allow straightforward assignment to a distinctive cortical area, rendering the term "focal",as we currently understand it,problematic. This is a critical review of the clinical and EEG features of PS, focusing on those characteristics that may shed some light on its so far elusive pathophysiology. We also explore its electroclinical similarities to other idiopathic "focal" epilepsies and its differences to symptomatic focal epilepsies that may also manifest with autonomic ictal symptoms and signs. This methodology allows the formation of a rational hypothesis on the pathophysiology of PS that seems to be emerging as a good model for the so-called "system" (nonsymptomatic) epilepsies, with potentially important taxonomic implications. [source]


    Complexation of 2,6-Bis(3-pyrazolyl)pyridine,Bis(thiocyanato)iron(II) with a Bridging 4,4,-Bipyridine: A New Example of a Dinuclear Spin Crossover Complex

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 7 2008
    Dalila Fedaoui
    Abstract Investigation of the coordination behavior of 2,6-bis(3-pyrazolyl)pyridine,bis(thiocyanato)iron(II) towards bridging ligands led to the discovery of a novel dinuclear complex showing spin-crossover. Chemical and structural characterization and a first report of physical properties are presented.(© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2008) [source]


    First Example of a Gold(I) N -Heterocyclic-Carbene-Based Initiator for the Bulk Ring-Opening Polymerization of L -Lactide

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 18 2006
    Lipika Ray
    Abstract Synthesis, structure, and catalysis studies of two Au- and Ag-based initiators, namely, [3-(N - tert -butylacetamido)-1-(2-hydroxycyclohexyl)imidazol-2-ylidene]AuCl (1c) and [3-(N - tert -butylacetamido)-1-(2-hydroxycyclohexyl)imidazol-2-ylidene]AgCl (1b), for the bulk ring-opening polymerization of L -lactide are reported. Specifically, gold complex 1c was obtained from silver complex 1b by the transmetalation reaction with (SMe2)AuCl. Silver complex 1b was synthesized by the treatment of 3-(N - tert -butylacetamido)-1-(2-hydroxycyclohexyl)imidazolium chloride (1a) with Ag2O. Compound 1a was synthesized directly from the reaction of N - tert -butyl-2-chloroacetamide, cyclohexene oxide, and imidazole. The molecular structures of 1a, 1b, and 1c have been determined by X-ray diffraction studies. The formation of neutral monomeric complexes with linear geometries at the metal centers was observed for both 1b and 1c. The Au and Ag complexes 1c and 1b successfully catalyzed the bulk ring-opening polymerization of L -lactide at elevated temperatures under solvent-free melt conditions to produce moderate to low molecular weight polylactide polymers with narrow molecular weight distributions. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2006) [source]


    Syntheses, Spectroscopic Studies, and Crystal Structures of Chiral [Rh(aminocarboxylato)(,4 -cod)] and Chiral [Rh(amino alcohol)(,4 -cod)](acetate) Complexes with an Example of a Spontaneous Resolution of a Racemic Mixture into Homochiral Helix-Enantiomers

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 11 2006
    Mohammed Enamullah
    Abstract The dimeric complex acetato(,4 -cycloocta-1,5-diene)rhodium(I), [Rh(O2CMe)(,4 -cod)]2 (cod = cycloocta-1,5-diene), reacts with amino acids [HAA = L -alanine, (S)-2-amino-2-phenylacetic acid (L -phenylglycine), N -methylglycine, and N -phenylglycine] and with the amino alcohol (S)-2-amino-2-phenylethanol to afford the aminocarboxylato(,4 -cycloocta-1,5-diene)rhodium(I) complexes [Rh(AA)(,4 -cod)] (AA = deprotonated amino acid = aminocarboxylato ligand) and [(S)-2-amino-2-phenylethanol](,4 -cycloocta-1,5-diene)rhodium(I) acetate, [Rh{(S)-HOCH2,CH(Ph)-NH2}(,4 -cod)](O2CMe) (V). The complexes are characterized by IR, UV/Vis, 1H/13C NMR and mass spectroscopy. The achiral N -phenylglycine ligand gives a chiral N -phenylglycinato complex [Rh(O2C,CH2,NHPh)(,4 -cod)] (IV) with the amine nitrogen atom becoming the stereogenic center upon metal coordination. Complex IV crystallizes in the tetragonal, chiral space group P43 and the crystal structure reveals twofold spontaneous resolution of a racemic mixture into homochiral helix-enantiomers. The investigated crystal contained only one type of helix, namely (left-handed or M- ) 43 -helical chains. This is traced first to an intermolecular N,H···O hydrogen bonding from the stereogenic amino group to a neighboring unligated carboxyl oxygen atom that connects only molecules of the same (R)-configuration into (left-handed or M- ) 43 -helical chains. This intrachain homochirality is supplemented, secondly, by the interlocking of adjacent chains with their corrugated van der Waals surface to allow for an interchain transmission of the sense of helicity, building the single crystal from the same homochiral helix-enantiomer. The enantiomeric amino alcohol complex V crystallizes in the monoclinic, noncentrosymmetric (Sohncke) space group P21. (© Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2006) [source]


    Analyses of the Performance Potential of Oxidic PVD Wear-Protection Coatings on Cutting Tools Using the Example of Crystalline ,-Al2O3,

    ADVANCED ENGINEERING MATERIALS, Issue 7 2008
    F. Klocke
    This paper focuses on the high performance potential of oxidic PVD coatings on cutting tools using the example of crystalline ,-Al2O3. The materials used during the cutting processes were the nickel-based alloy, Inconel 718, in wet-cut drilling and milling as well as a quenched and tempered steel in dry-cut milling. The conclusion that may be drawn from these analyses is that oxidic PVD coatings are characterised by outstanding wear behaviour and can contribute to a significant increase in cutting performance. [source]


    The Role of Surface Water Drainage in Environmental Change: a Case Example of the Upper South East of South Australia; an Historical Review

    GEOGRAPHICAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2001
    Kathryn H. Taffs
    The role of surface water drainage in environmental change in Australia is rarely appreciated. Drains can modify surface water hydrology, not only altering flow regimes but also rapidly dispersing contaminants and altering the natural hydrological balance of associated flora and fauna. Yet drainage continues to be considered a viable management strategy rather than as a cause of land degradation. The impact of surface water drainage in an inherently saline area of South Australia, the Upper South East, is investigated. Surface water drains were constructed by developers in an attempt to increase the area of land available and viable for agricultural land use. Drainage strategies altered the natural direction, magnitude and frequency of surface water flow. The Upper South East has experienced periods of both increased surface water and flooding, and surface water deficit, in the past one hundred years. The region now receives less surface water than under pre-European conditions, but local runoff is channelled into and through the wetlands more rapidly than before European settlement. Future management strategies are likely to continue this trend, to the detriment of remnant natural wetlands. [source]


    Comparison of Linear Regression Models for Quantitative Geochemical Analysis: An Example Using X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometry

    GEOSTANDARDS & GEOANALYTICAL RESEARCH, Issue 3 2005
    Mirna Guevara
    calibration analytique; régression linéaire; matériaux de référence en géochimie; géochimie analytique; loi de propagation d'erreurs This paper presents statistical aspects related to the calibration process and a comparison of different regression approaches of relevance to almost all analytical techniques. The models for ordinary least-squares (OLS), weighted least-squares (WLS), and maximum likelihood fitting (MLF) were evaluated and, as a case study, X-ray fluorescence (XRF) calibration curves for major elements in geochemical reference materials were used. The results showed that WLS and MLF models were statistically more consistent in comparison with the usually applied OLS approach. The use of uncertainty on independent and dependent variables during the calibration process and the calculation of final uncertainty on individual results using error propagation equations are the novel aspects of our work. Cet article présente les aspects statistiques liés au processus de calibration et fait une comparaison des différents calculs de régression utilisés dans pratiquement toutes les techniques analytiques. Les modèles des moindres carrés ordinaires (MCO) et pondérés (MCP), et d'ajustement de maximum de vraisemblance (AMV) ont étéévalués et appliqués aux courbes de calibration d'éléments majeurs obtenues en analyse par fluorescence X (XRF) de matériaux certifiés de référence. Les résultats obtenus avec les modèles MCP et AMV sont plus cohérents statistiquement que ceux obtenus la méthode classique des MCO. L'utilisation de l'incertitudes sur des variables indépendantes ou dépendantes durant la procédure de calibration et le calcul de l'incertitude finale sur chaque résultat à partir des lois de propagation d'erreur sont des aspects novateurs de ce travail. [source]