3,515 results
Search Results
52. USING OUR FACULTIES: COLLECTING THE PAPERS OF WESTERN HISTORIANS AT THE HUNTINGTON LIBRARY.
- Author
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Blodgett, Peter J.
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LIBRARIES , *HISTORIANS , *INFORMATION resources management - Abstract
Among its many collections documenting the history of the Far West, the Huntington Library holds the papers of various western historians. Although such collections present certain inherent challenges, they also can offer significant contributions to the study of the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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53. Predicting long-term business recovery from disaster: a comparison of the Loma Prieta earthquake and Hurricane Andrew1<fn id="fn1"><no>1</no>An Earlier version of this paper was presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, Washington, DC, August 12–16, 2000.</fn>
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Webb, Gary R., Tierney, Kathleen J., and Dahlhamer, James M.
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NATURAL disasters , *LOMA Prieta Earthquake, Calif., 1989 , *HURRICANE Andrew, 1992 , *BUSINESS enterprises , *INFORMATION services - Abstract
This paper examines long-term recovery outcomes of businesses impacted by major natural disasters. Data were collected via two large-scale mail surveys—one administered to Santa Cruz County, California businesses 8 years after the Loma Prieta earthquake and the other administered to businesses in South Dade County, Florida, 6 years after Hurricane Andrew. Based on the results of OLS regression models, we argue that long-term recovery experiences of businesses are affected by various factors, including the economic sector in which a business operates, its age and financial condition, and the scope of its primary market; direct and indirect disaster impacts, including physical damage, forced closure, and disruption of operations; and owner perceptions of the broader economic climate. Previous disaster experience, level of disaster preparedness, and use of external sources of aid were not found to significantly affect the long-term economic viability of businesses in the two study communities. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
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54. THE DEREK FREEMAN PAPERS IN THE MANDEVILLE SPECIAL COLLECTIONS LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO.
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Sather, Clifford
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SCHOLARS , *ARCHIVES , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Discusses the personal papers of the late Derek Freeman, scholar and specialist in Borneo studies, which have been deposited at the Mandeville Special Collections Library at the University of California, San Diego. Acquisition of the collection; Completion of the collection in 2002; Correspondence; Field notes and documents concerned chiefly with Samoa and the so-called Mead-Freeman controversy.
- Published
- 2002
55. Toward Probabilistic Risk Assessment of Wildland–Urban Interface Communities for Wildfires.
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Masoudvaziri, Nima, Elhami-Khorasani, Negar, and Sun, Kang
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WILDLAND-urban interface , *COMMUNITIES , *WILDFIRE prevention , *CUMULATIVE distribution function , *WILDFIRES , *RISK assessment - Abstract
The number of wildfire incidents affecting communities in Wildland–Urban Interface (WUI) areas has been rapidly increasing. Understanding the fire spread between structures and evaluation of the response of the communities to the possible wildfire scenarios are crucial for proper risk management in the existing and future communities. This paper discusses a stochastic methodology to evaluate the community's response to potential wildfire scenarios. The methodology has three primary features: (1) it is based on stochastic modeling of fire spread; (2) it breaks the wildfire incident into two consecutive segments: spread inside the wildland and spread inside the community; (3) it integrates the two spread models in the form of a conditional probability. The paper focuses on fire spread inside the community and applies the proposed methodology to two case studies in California, US. The two case studies demonstrate variations in fire spread within the communities for the given fire scenarios approaching from the wildland. The performance of communities is characterized using cumulative distribution functions of the number of ignited buildings over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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56. What has philosophy ever done for nursing: A discursive shift from margins to mainstream.
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Georges, Jane M.
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CONFERENCES & conventions , *PHILOSOPHY of nursing , *FEMINIST criticism , *HEALTH equity - Abstract
This paper is a personal dialogue of maneuvering the landscape of scholarship in the United States as a nurse faculty. The principal thesis of this paper is that a discursive shift from margins to mainstream literature has occurred within nursing discourse during the past 20 years as the result of a growing body of work by nurse philosophers. I utilize my own work in nursing philosophy as an exemplar and provide a narrative situated in a feminist‐critical paradigm. This paper: (1) presents a historical background through a critical‐feminist lens of the discursive shift using my own work and lived experiences as exemplars; (2) examines a contemporary mainstream 'authoritative' text as an exemplar of this discursive shift and (3) proposes both potential positive intersections and threats in the future development of nursing philosophy resulting from this discursive shift. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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57. Mattering: Per/forming nursing philosophy in the Chthulucene.
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Laurin, Annie‐Claude, Hopkins‐Walsh, Jane, Smith, Jamie B., Brown, Brandon, Martin, Patrick, and Tedjasukmana, Emmanuel Christian
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ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *NURSING , *HUMANISM , *THEORY of knowledge , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *PHILOSOPHY of nursing , *CRITICAL thinking , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *INTELLECT , *NURSES , *NURSING interventions , *ADVANCED practice registered nurses - Abstract
This paper presents an overview of the process of entanglement at the 25th International Philosophy of Nursing Conference (IPNC) at University of California at Irvine held on August 18, 2022. Representing collective work from the US, Canada, UK and Germany, our panel entitled 'What can critical posthuman philosophies do for nursing?' examined critical posthumanism and its operations and potential in nursing. Critical posthumanism offers an antifascist, feminist, material, affective, and ecologically entangled approach to nursing and healthcare. Rather than focusing on the arguments of each of the three distinct but interrelated panel presentation pieces, this paper instead focuses on process and performance (per/formance) and performativity as relational, connected and situated, with connections to nursing philosophy. Building upon critical feminist and new materialist philosophies, we describe intra‐activity and performativity as ways to dehierarchise knowledge making practices within traditional academic conference spaces. Creating critical cartographies of thinking and being are actions of possibility for building more just and equitable futures for nursing, nurses, and those they accompany—including all humans, nonhumans, and more than human matter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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58. Whither nursing philosophy: Past, present and future.
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Holt, Janet
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NURSING , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *PHILOSOPHY of nursing , *NURSING practice , *NURSING education , *ROBOTICS , *NURSE supply & demand - Abstract
A version of this paper was given as the Inaugural Steven Edwards Memorial Lecture at the 25th conference of the International Philosophy of Nursing Society 16th August 2022. Using the literary meaning of 'whither', that is 'to what place', this paper will explore the role of philosophy in nursing, past, present, and future. The paper will begin with some thoughts on the history of nursing philosophy, its development as a subject and the scholarly activities that have led to where it sits today. The establishment of the journal Nursing Philosophy, the Annual Nursing Philosophy Conference, the International Philosophy of Nursing Society (IPONS) and their influence on nursing both in the academy and in practice will be discussed. The concept of nursing philosophy as a discipline will be considered, and how this fits with nursing theory, and nursing knowledge. Philosophical questions central to understanding contemporary nursing in a globalised world will be explored and the use of analytical philosophy and philosophical method in addressing such questions. The paper will conclude by looking to the future; what the role of philosophy might be in shaping nursing as a discipline and in the preparation of future practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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59. Comparing Adjoint Waveform Tomography Models of California Using Different Starting Models.
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Doody, C., Rodgers, A., Afanasiev, M., Boehm, C., Krischer, L., Chiang, A., and Simmons, N.
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INVERSION (Geophysics) , *TOMOGRAPHY , *SEISMIC tomography , *SURFACE of the earth , *SEISMOLOGY , *SEISMOGRAMS , *WAVES (Physics) - Abstract
Adjoint waveform tomography (AWT) sits at the cutting edge of seismic tomography on local, regional, and global scales. However, the choice in starting model may have a significant impact on the final inversion results. In this paper, we present 3 AWT models of California that are based on different starting models. We chose three models that were inverted at different scales: SPiRaL, a global travel‐time tomography model (Simmons et al., 2021, 10.1093/gji/ggab277), CSEM_NA, a regional adjoint tomography model of North America and the North Atlantic (Krischer et al., 2018, 10.1029/2017JB015289), and WUS256, a regional adjoint tomography model of the western US (Rodgers et al., 2022, https://doi.org/10.1029/2022JB024549). We then inverted three AWT models using the same source and receiver set. We ran each model over three period bands: 30–100 s, 25–100 s, and 20–80 s. Once the iterations were finalized, we used five methods of testing model similarity in both the model and data space. We conclude that the choice of starting model has a minimal impact on long wavelength models if an appropriate multi‐scale inversion approach is used. Plain Language Summary: Seismic tomography uses earthquake records to resolve three‐dimensional models of seismic wavespeeds below Earth's surface. Full waveform inversion seeks to model the physics of wave propagation to create models that can most accurately reproduce the waveform data that are observed from recorded events. In this paper, we sought to study the effect of the choice of starting model on final inversion results in California using AWT, a type of Full waveform inversion technique; to our knowledge, this type of experiment has not been carried out before with real data at this scale. We began with three starting models that were created on different scales with different datasets. We then used five methods to compare the final model results. We focused on comparisons of the visual similarity of the models, the tectonic structures the models resolve, and how well the synthetic waveforms match the observed data. We find that the choice of starting model does not have a large impact when the model domain has azimuthally distributed events and stations over long length‐scales. Key Points: We present three adjoint waveform tomography models of California that each begin with a different starting modelThe three final models are compared using five metrics that span both the model space and data spaceBased on a conservative multi‐scale inversion approach, we conclude that the choice of starting model has minimal effect on the final model [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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60. Kansas Readers Feel Loss When Town's Paper Closes.
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Smethers, Steven, Bressers, Bonnie, Willard, Amber, Harvey, Linda, and Freeland, Gloria
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NEWSPAPERS , *PERIODICAL publishing , *PUBLICATIONS ,PERIODICAL local editions - Abstract
This study reports reader's perceptions of loss when the the newspaper in Humbolt, Kan. ceased publication after 129 years. Readers did not find that local media alternatives filled the void left by the newspaper's demise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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61. ROCK-PAPER-SCISSORS: PLAYING THE ODDS WITH THE LAW OF CHILD RELOCATION.
- Author
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Duggan, W. Dennis
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CUSTODY of children , *DIVORCE law , *DIVORCE mediation , *JOINT custody of children , *VISITATION rights (Domestic relations) , *DOMESTIC relations , *FAMILY law courts - Abstract
This article offers for inspection the proposition that the adversarial evidence-based litigation process is unsuitable for resolving custody cases in general and relocation cases in particular. It analyzes the leading cases from New York, Massachusetts, California, England, Canada, and Australia. It reaches a conclusion that no jurisdiction has devised a legal standard or formula that enables a judge to predict the future best interest of a child if that child is allowed to relocate with one parent away from the other. For this reason, the court has a duty to offer as sophisticated and friendly a settlement process and atmosphere as possible. However, knowing that judges will still be required to resolve these difficult cases because they often seem impervious to settlement, the article offers thirty-six factors that a court should consider in all move-away cases. By relying on each of these factors that is relevant to the case, the parents will have an understanding of why the decision was made the way it was and it will also allow for effective appellate review. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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62. Contributed Papers Factors Related to Fecal Corticosterone Levels in California Spotted Owls: Implications for Assessing Chronic Stress.
- Author
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TEMPEL, DOUGLAS J. and GUTIÉRREZ, R. J.
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SPOTTED owl , *CORTICOSTERONE , *PHYSIOLOGICAL stress , *ANIMAL welfare - Abstract
The California Spotted Owl (Strix occidentalis occidentalis ) is under consideration for federal protection and has stimulated ecosystem-level management efforts in Sierra Nevada national forests. Because some populations are declining, we used a noninvasive fecal sampling method to estimate stress hormone (i.e., corticosterone) levels within a local population from April to August 2001. Fecal corticosterone levels were similar to those recorded in a previous study of Northern Spotted Owls (S.o. caurina ) ( &xmacr;= 80.1 ng/g dry feces, SE = 75.8). We then used an information-theoretic approach to identify factors that influence fecal corticosterone levels in Spotted Owls. Our best overall model indicated that nonbreeding owls had higher fecal corticosterone levels than breeding owls early in the breeding season and lower levels later in the breeding season. We collected few samples from breeding owls early in the breeding season, however, which may have influenced the results. Management-related factors reflecting habitat condition and proximity to roads were not correlated with fecal corticosterone. However, factors such as field storage method and sample mass were correlated with the amount of measured fecal corticosterone and should be considered in future studies. Sample vials initially stored on ice had higher levels than those stored immediately in liquid N2 (βstorage= 0.269 ln[ng/g], 95% CI = 0.026, 0.512). Hormone metabolites were extracted from extremely small samples (0.01 g) by slightly modifying the assay protocol, but the amount of corticosterone detected increased as the sample mass decreased (βmass=−6.248 ln[ng/g], 95% CI =−8.877, −3.620). Corticosterone levels were significantly higher in 10 cecal samples collected simultaneously with fecal samples (paired difference = 74.7 ng/g, SE = 45.0, p = 0.001 for a paired t test), so care must be taken to avoid contaminating fecal samples with cecal material. Most of the variation was unexplained by our best model ( R 2= 0.24), and additional factors influencing fecal corticosterone levels need to be identified. Therefore, we recommend that well-designed experiments be conducted under controlled conditions to better determine the effect of factors such as sample handling, partial sampling, and diet on fecal corticosterone levels in owls and other birds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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63. Trotsky Papers at the Hoover Institution: One Chapter of an Archival Mystery Story.
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Reed, Dale and Jakobson, Michael
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SOCIALISM - Abstract
Comments on the discovery of papers on Soviet socialism written by Leon Trotsky and his son, Lev Sedov, in the Boris I. Nicolaevsky Collection in the Archives of the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace at Stanford University in California. Contribution of Leon Trotsky to the study of Russian history; Other repositories in which Trotsky papers can be found; Content of and period covered by the Hoover Institution papers.
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- 1987
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64. The Legacy of Redlining: A Spatial Dynamics Perspective.
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Rey, Sergio Joseph and Knaap, Elijah
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POOR communities , *CITIES & towns , *LOW-income housing , *INCOME distribution , *HOME prices , *ETHNICITY , *METROPOLITAN areas , *LOW-income countries , *GEOGRAPHIC boundaries - Abstract
This paper investigates the long-term impacts of the federal Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) mortgage risk assessment maps on the spatial dynamics of recent income and racial distributions in California metropolitan areas over the 1990-2010 period. We combine historical HOLC boundaries with modern Census tract data and apply recently developed methods of spatial distribution dynamics to examine if legacy impacts are reflected in recent urban dynamics. Cities with HOLC assessments are found to have higher levels of isolation segregation than the non-HOLC group, but no difference in unevenness segregation between the two groups of cities are found. We find no difference in income or racial and ethnic distributional dynamics between the two groups of cities over the period. At the intra-urban scale, we find that the intersectionality of residing in a C or D graded tract that is also a low-income tract falls predominately upon the minority populations in these eight HOLC cities. Our findings indicate that neighborhoods with poor housing markets and high minority concentrations rarely experience a dramatic change in either their racial and ethnic or socioeconomic compositions—and that negative externalities (e.g. lower home prices and greater segregation levels) emanate from these neighborhoods, with inertia spilling over into nearby zones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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65. Experimental Investigation on the Applicability of Microwave-Modified Red-Bed Soft Rock Subgrade Filler.
- Author
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Zhang, Wenjin, Hu, Qijun, He, Leping, Gu, Yucheng, Zeng, Junsen, and He, Liuchenghao
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RAILROAD design & construction , *ROAD construction , *MICROSCOPY , *CARBON emissions , *SLOPE stability , *RED beds , *CONTINENTS - Abstract
Red beds (RBs) are widely distributed in all continents of the world. With the rapid development of road and railway construction, the construction of roads and railways in RB areas is increasing. However, when RB is the filler, it will expose three aspects of serious deficiencies in compaction, mechanical bearing capacity, and water stability, which will cause fatal harm to the subgrade. Therefore, RB has to be abandoned and cannot be used as a subgrade filler. In this paper, different microwave irradiation temperatures (DMITs) from room temperature of 25°C to 700°C were used to reveal the enhancing mechanism of RB in three aspects based on the analysis results of microscopic composition and structure. The microscopic composition and structure show that RB can be divided into a low-temperature section (25°C–400°C) and a high-temperature section (500°C–700°C) under the microwave condition. The low-temperature section has some improvement in the engineering performance of RB, but the influence is limited. The engineering performance of RB is improved completely in the high-temperature section. Specifically, the coarse size of RB increases with the rise in microwave temperature, which is beneficial for improving fine size. The compaction property of RB is not largely affected by the water content and can still meet the most stringent subgrade filler requirements, even under saturated conditions or 0. The California bearing ratio (CBR) value can maintain more than 20% under the ultimate working condition, far higher than the code requirements. The increase of internal friction angle and cohesion can enhance the stability of the cut slope, which is conducive to construction in remote mountainous areas. The water resistance of RB is positively correlated with the microwave irradiation temperature, especially at 700°C; RB experiences secondary hardening after encountering water, the mechanical strength increases, and the softening coefficient reaches 107.44%. The research shows that after microwave high-temperature stabilization, the engineering characteristics of the RB are thoroughly strengthened, and it becomes a high-quality subgrade filler to eliminate the three diseases of RB subgrade completely. Compared with the traditional method of adding stabilizers, microwave in situ RB stabilization reduces the site construction's complexity, saves a lot of stabilizer use and transportation costs, and can effectively reduce carbon emissions. This study provides a positive perspective on the in situ application of the RB soft rock subgrade. It could be a starting point for understanding the microwave-based stabilization of soft rock soils subgrade filler in situ. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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66. What's the problem represented to be? A critical analysis of problem representation in news media and public health communication during a hepatitis A outbreak in San Diego, California, USA.
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Felner, Jennifer K., Stieber, Andrew, McCune, Nichole, Reed, Elizabeth, and Calzo, Jerel P.
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PREVENTION of epidemics , *HEALTH policy , *RESEARCH , *MASS media , *PROBLEM solving , *HEPATITIS A vaccines , *PRACTICAL politics , *PUBLIC health , *SOCIAL stigma , *VACCINATION coverage , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *INFECTION control , *PSYCHOSOCIAL factors , *HEALTH , *INFORMATION resources , *DISCOURSE analysis , *HEPATITIS A , *HOMELESS persons , *HEALTH equity , *HOMELESSNESS , *PUBLIC opinion , *DISEASE risk factors , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Discourse regarding public health problems disproportionately affecting marginalized communities may shape and sustain health inequities. Analyses of news media and public health communications in the wake of infectious disease outbreaks provides opportunities to examine how discourse produces dominant public perceptions about the drivers of health emergencies and who is responsible for protecting community health. Guided by Bacchi's "What is the Problem Represented to Be?" analytic approach, this paper critically examines the discursive construction of problems and solutions in news media (n = 35) and public health communication (n = 18 press releases, n = 1 governmental report) regarding an unprecedented hepatitis A outbreak in San Diego, California, USA (2016–2018) that disproportionately affected people experiencing homelessness. We organize our findings around three elements of problem and solution representation with respect to the outbreak: 1. The inequitable attribution of risk and deservingness; 2. assumptions divorced from socio-structural factors and perspectives of marginalized populations; and 3. political theatre as a means of blame-shifting and (in)action. Overall, our findings suggest that even when structural-level issues were acknowledged within news media and public health communication as undergirding the 'problem' of the hepatitis A outbreak, outbreak discourse focused on individual-level responsibility for both the causes of and solutions to it (e.g. vaccines, criminalization of homelessness), and on shifting blame between government actors. These findings have implications for understanding the role that news media and public health agencies play in shaping public perception of the causes, consequences and solutions to infectious disease outbreaks that disproportionately affect marginalized populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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67. Making salient ethics arguments about vaccine mandates: A California case study.
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Navin, Mark C. and Attwell, Katie
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VACCINATION policies , *HEALTH policy , *IMMUNIZATION , *HUMAN rights , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *HARM reduction - Abstract
Vaccine mandates can take many forms, and different kinds of mandates can implicate an array of values in diverse ways. It follows that good ethics arguments about particular vaccine mandates will attend to the details of individual policies. Furthermore, attention to particular mandate policies—and to attributes of the communities they aim to govern—can also illuminate which ethics arguments may be more salient in particular contexts. If ethicists want their arguments to make a difference in policy, they should attend to these kinds of empirical considerations. This paper focuses on the most common and contentious vaccine mandate reform in the contemporary United States: the elimination of nonmedical exemptions (NMEs) to school and daycare vaccine mandates. It highlights, in particular, debates about California's Senate Bill 277 (SB277), which was the first successful recent effort to eliminate NMEs in that country. We use media, secondary sources, and original interviews with policymakers and activists to identify and evaluate three ethics arguments offered by critics of SB277: parental freedom, informed consent, and children's rights to care and education. We then turn to one ethics argument often offered by advocates of SB277: harm prevention. We note, however, that three arguments for mandates that are common in the immunization ethics literature—fairness/free‐riding, children's rights to vaccination, and utilitarianism—did not play a role in debates about SB277. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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68. An item response approach to sea‐level rise policy preferences in a nascent subsystem.
- Author
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Gmoser‐Daskalakis, Kyra, Scott, Tyler A., Lubell, Mark, and Vantaggiato, Francesca P.
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ABSOLUTE sea level change , *ITEM response theory , *ADVOCACY coalition framework , *ENVIRONMENTAL justice , *CLIMATE change , *SEA level - Abstract
Sea‐level rise is a "nascent subsystem" with policy actors actively developing initial policy preferences through participation across multiple policy forums in a polycentric system. This paper uses item‐response models to empirically analyze how actors, perceived problems, and preferred policy solutions are related in a latent "policy space". We focus on California's San Francisco Bay region, where in the last decade, sea‐level rise emerged to become one of the most salient climate adaptation issues. We find that actors and policy preferences are arranged in a two‐dimensional space, with highly engaged actors more likely to consider environmental justice and ecological aspects of sea level rise. Our findings have implications for theories of nascent subsystems within the Advocacy Coalition Framework, and for understanding how a local policy subsystem develops to address and prioritize the multi‐faceted impacts of climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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69. The vowel space as sociolinguistic sign.
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Pratt, Teresa
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VOWELS , *SOCIAL marginality , *SOCIAL space , *STUDENTS , *SOCIAL context , *HIGH schools - Abstract
This paper examines variation in vowel space area and its use in social meaning making. Among adolescents at a California high school, patterns of difference in vowel space correlate to social practices of exclusion in the partying scene, albeit alongside explicit discourses of high school social life as inclusive and fluid. I treat vowel space as a sociolinguistic sign, that is, a holistic semiotic resource at play in addition to (or in tandem with) individual segments. Though the semiotic potential of a given linguistic sign is no doubt shaped by large‐scale patterns of variation, the particular manifestations of meaning making are best viewed at the community level alongside other day‐to‐day practices. Further, I suggest that linguistic practices of difference and discourses of sameness are not contradictory, but instead a feature of the semiotic landscape. I thus interpret this vowel space variation as stylistically meaningful within the context of social actors' ideological orientation to social life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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70. Social reproduction and public finance: A comparative study of TIF in California and Chicago.
- Author
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Wright, Robin and McFadden, Keavy
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PUBLIC finance , *SOCIAL reproduction , *TAX increment financing , *REPRODUCTION , *INCOME inequality , *URBAN policy , *PUBLIC spaces - Abstract
Tax increment financing (TIF) is a mechanism used by municipal governments throughout the United States to fund public and private urban development projects. This paper examines the trajectories of TIF in the state of California and the City of Chicago, where the expansion of TIF as a mechanism for publicly financed development is inextricable from disinvestments in social reproduction and the transformation of public funding for K-12 education. Taking seriously the divergent paths of TIF in each case, we argue that the framework of social reproduction helps expand the scope of TIF as a "policy in place," bringing into view other path and place-dependent factors that shape the adaptation and implementation of public finance mechanisms. Bridging the literature on urban policy and feminist political economy, we suggest that scholars must investigate the place-specific entanglements of social reproduction and public finance if we are to understand how mechanisms such as TIF are adopted, expanded, or curtailed within the broader framework of neoliberal urban governance. In making such an intervention, we expand on calls to attend to the ways public finance can heighten or mitigate economic inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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71. A mereological qualitative study protocol for understanding the lived experience of homelessness in California.
- Author
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Duke, Michael, Dhatt, Zena K., Jacques, Tianna, Garcia, Cheyenne, Taylor, Grace, Kushel, Margot, and Knight, Kelly
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RESEARCH protocols , *QUALITATIVE research , *HOMELESSNESS , *DATA management , *SOCIAL groups , *EXPERIMENTAL design - Abstract
Although qualitative interview studies provide in‐depth understandings of the opinions and lived experiences of social groups, they are typically small in scale, bounded by a small number of physical or virtual spaces, and designed to capture relatively demarcated aspects of participants' experiences. This paper describes the qualitative component of a large mixed method study of homelessness in California. The qualitative study consisted of seven substudies across eight counties, each exploring different dimensions of homelessness. We recruited participants from the overall sample, a statewide representative sample of adults experiencing homelessness recruited in eight counties, based on their responses to questions from the survey interviews. Using a novel data management strategy, we analyzed each substudy as a stand‐alone project, and explored the relationship between thematic content across the substudies. Our mereological study design presents an approach for developing complex qualitative policy studies across a range of topic areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
72. Regulatory Alchemy: How the Water Cycle Becomes Capital in the California Desert.
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Sizek, Julia
- Subjects
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ALCHEMY , *HYDROLOGIC cycle , *ENVIRONMENTAL reporting , *POLITICAL geography , *POLITICAL ecology , *DESERTS - Abstract
A proposed project will take water from an aquifer in the California desert to the coast. Lacking final approvals more than 30 years after it started, the project remains a plan despite sizeable opposition. What is its secret? In this paper, I examine the imaginaries of the underground aquifer underneath the lands of Cadiz Inc, the project proponent. While local theories insist the company is at the centre of a Chinatown conspiracy, I argue that the company stays alive through regulatory alchemy, a term that reveals the magic at the heart of scientific and regulatory approval processes. I examine narratives of the aquifer in environmental compliance and financial reporting in order to reveal how regulatory processes become the conditions of profit‐making, building on debates in critical legal geography and political ecology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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73. A comparison of methods for excluding light from stems to evaluate stem photosynthesis.
- Author
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Valverdi, Nadia A., Acosta, Camilla, Dauber, Gabriella R., Goldsmith, Gregory R., and Ávila‐Lovera, Eleinis
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SURFACE temperature , *AVOCADO , *HUMIDITY , *PHOTOSYNTHESIS , *WATER vapor , *CARBON dioxide , *ALUMINUM foil - Abstract
Premise: A comparison of methods using different materials to exclude light from stems to prevent stem CO2 exchange (i.e., photosynthesis), without affecting stem conductance to water vapor, surface temperature, and relative humidity, was conducted on stems of avocado trees in California. Methods and Results: The experiment featured three materials: aluminum foil, paper‐based wrap, and mineral‐based paint. We examined stem CO2 exchange with and without the light exclusion treatments. We also examined stem surface temperature, relative humidity, and photosynthetic active radiation (PAR) under the cover materials. All materials reduced PAR and stem CO2 exchange. However, aluminum foil reduced stem surface temperature and increased relative humidity. Conclusions: Methods used to study stem CO2 exchange through light exclusion have historically relied on methods that may induce experimental artifacts. Among the methods tested here, mineral‐based paint effectively reduced PAR without affecting stem surface temperature and relative humidity around the stem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
74. "We Survived This": California Missions, Colonialism, and Indigenous Belonging.
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Gomez, Abel R.
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CATHOLIC missions , *IMPERIALISM , *NATIVE Americans , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *SACRED space , *ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
The California mission system linked Spanish Catholic and political institutions. To secure land and convert Indigenous peoples, the Spanish built 21 missions from San Diego to Sonoma in the 18th and 19th centuries. These missions were sites of disease, violence, and mass death. They were also places built by Native people, on Native lands, where they lived, prayed, and were buried. As a result, missions are fundamentally Indigenous places and important touchstones for descendants today. This article examines such meanings in the lives of several Ohlone peoples, Indigenous peoples of the San Francisco-Monterey region. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with Ohlone tribes, I argue that we can understand relationships they sustain with California missions by considering such places as Indigenous cemeteries, Indigenous churches, and especially both. While dominant narratives restrict "missionized" Indigenous peoples to an irrecoverable past, this paper theorizes California mission as sites of violence, survival, and belonging to homeland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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75. ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS PRESENTED TO THE SEVENTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR THE PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAL STUDY OF SLEEP.
- Author
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Foulkes, David and Kales, Anthony
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PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY , *SLEEP , *MEETINGS , *INTEREST (Philosophy) ,SLEEP & psychology - Abstract
The article presents abstracts of papers presented to the seventh annual meeting of the Association for the Psychophysiological Study of Sleep (APSS). The seventh annual meeting of the APSS was held at the Miramar Hotel, Santa Monica, California in April 1967. APSS was founded in 1961 for the purpose of promoting both formal and informal exchange of information among workers from various disciplines with a common interest in the psychophysiology of sleep.
- Published
- 1968
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76. SGH2 plant to produce green hydrogen from waste in California.
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WASTE paper , *RECYCLED paper , *HYDROGEN - Abstract
In the US, SGH2 Energy Global is partnering with the City of Lancaster in southern California to build a large-scale 'green' hydrogen facility, using the company's Solena Plasma Enhanced Gasification (SPEG) technology to produce 11 000 kg/day of hydrogen from recycled mixed paper waste. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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77. Teacher Sensemaking in an Early Education Research–Practice Partnership.
- Author
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Datnow, Amanda, Guerra, Alison Wishard, Cohen, Shana R., Kennedy, Benjamin C., and Lee, Joseph
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WISDOM , *SCHOOL districts , *PARTNERSHIPS in education , *TEACHERS , *PHRONESIS , *EARLY childhood education - Abstract
Background/Context: High quality early education, preschool through third grade, has received significant attention as a vehicle for addressing academic disparities. Research–practice partnerships (RPPs) offer a promising strategy for improving early education and closing the gap between research and practice; however, RPPs in the early learning context are understudied, and there is little information about how teachers experience them. Purpose/Research Questions: Grounded in a framework of sensemaking theory and research on teachers' beliefs and RPPs, this paper addresses the following questions: (1) How did an early education RPP attempt to build a meaningful and trusting partnership and amplify teacher voices? (2) How did teachers make sense of new knowledge within the context of the RPP and their practical wisdom? (3) To what degree were teachers reaffirming existing beliefs vs. questioning or adjusting current beliefs through their participation in the RPP? Research Design: This paper relies on qualitative data gathered as part of an interdisciplinary education neuroscience longitudinal RPP project between university researchers and educators in a California school district. The data analyzed for this paper included field notes and artifacts from RPP meetings and transcripts of teacher interviews. Conclusions/Recommendations: The RPP intentionally created opportunities for teachers to amplify their perspectives and interpretations. Within RPP meeting spaces, teachers reflected on their beliefs and practices in light of research conducted in their schools and, more generally, sometimes adjusting and other times reaffirming their views. The extent to which teachers incorporated new knowledge into their cognitive schemas varied based on the topic and how and where the information was presented. These findings yield important implications for research–practice partnerships and system change in early childhood education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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78. Papers of Russian Poet Andrei Voznesenskii Available to Researchers at Stanford University Libraries.
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Fleishman, EkaterinaK.
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INFORMATION resources , *RUSSIAN literature , *RUSSIAN poetry , *RUSSIAN art , *ACADEMIC libraries - Abstract
Stanford University Libraries has recently acquired and made available to researchers the personal and professional papers of Russian poet Andrei Voznesenskii (Andrey Voznesensky). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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79. A Dynamic Systems Approach for Detecting and Localizing of Infarct-Related Artery in Acute Myocardial Infarction Using Compressed Paper-Based Electrocardiogram (ECG).
- Author
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Le, Trung Q., Chandra, Vibhuthi, Afrin, Kahkashan, Srivatsa, Sanjay, and Bukkapatnam, Satish
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DYNAMICAL systems , *BIOMEDICAL signal processing , *MYOCARDIAL infarction , *PERCUTANEOUS coronary intervention , *ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY , *ACUTE coronary syndrome , *ARTERIES - Abstract
Timely evaluation and reperfusion have improved the myocardial salvage and the subsequent recovery rate of the patients hospitalized with acute myocardial infarction (MI). Long waiting time and time-consuming procedures of in-hospital diagnostic testing severely affect the timeliness. We present a Poincare pattern ensemble-based method with the consideration of multi-correlated non-stationary stochastic system dynamics to localize the infarct-related artery (IRA) in acute MI by fully harnessing information from paper-based Electrocardiogram (ECG). The vectorcardiogram (VCG) diagnostic features extracted from only 2.5-s long paper ECG recordings were used to hierarchically localize the IRA—not mere localization of the infarcted cardiac tissues—in acute MI. Paper ECG records and angiograms of 106 acute MI patients collected at the Heart Artery and Vein Center at Fresno California and the 12-lead ECG signals from the Physionet PTB online database were employed to validate the proposed approach. We reported the overall accuracies of 97.41% for healthy control (HC) vs. MI, 89.41 ± 9.89 for left and right culprit arteries vs. others, 88.2 ± 11.6 for left main arteries vs. right-coronary-ascending (RCA) and 93.67 ± 4.89 for left-anterior-descending (LAD) vs. left-circumflex (LCX). The IRA localization from paper ECG can be used to timely triage the patients with acute coronary syndromes to the percutaneous coronary intervention facilities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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80. INTRODUCTION TO SELECTED PAPERS FROM THE 4TH COMPUTATIONAL SYSTEMS BIOINFORMATICS CONFERENCE (CSB'05).
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Ying Xu and Markstein, Peter
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CONFERENCES & conventions , *BIOINFORMATICS , *GENE expression , *GENETIC regulation , *ALLOSTERIC enzymes - Abstract
Information on the 4th Computational Systems Bioinformatics Conference which was held in August 2005 in Stanford, California is presented. The papers presented at the conference discussed about genomic structures, gene functions, gene expression, helical transmembrane proteins, and mathematical pathways regulated by allosteric enzyme.
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- 2006
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81. Crop Water Productivity from Cloud-Based Landsat Helps Assess California's Water Savings.
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Foley, Daniel, Thenkabail, Prasad, Oliphant, Adam, Aneece, Itiya, and Teluguntla, Pardhasaradhi
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LANDSAT satellites , *WATER security , *REMOTE-sensing images , *CROPS , *WATER use , *ARABLE land - Abstract
Demand for food and water are increasing while the extent of arable land and accessible fresh water are decreasing. This poses global challenges as economies continue to develop and the population grows. With agriculture as the leading consumer of water, better understanding how water is used to produce food may help support the increase of Crop Water Productivity (CWP; kg/m3), the ratio of crop output per unit of water input (or crop per drop). Previous large-scale CWP studies have been useful for broad water use modeling at coarser resolutions. However, obtaining more precise CWP, especially for specific crop types in a particular area and growing season as outlined here are important for informing farm-scale water management decision making. Therefore, this study focused on California's Central Valley utilizing high-spatial resolution satellite imagery of 30 m (0.09 hectares per pixel) to generate more precise CWP for commonly grown and water-intensive irrigated crops. First, two products were modeled and mapped. 1. Landsat based Actual Evapotranspiration (ETa; mm/d) to determine Crop Water Use (CWU; m3/m2), and 2. Crop Productivity (CP; kg/m2) to estimate crop yield per growing season. Then, CWP was calculated by dividing CP by CWU and mapped. The amount of water that can be saved by increasing CWP of each crop was further calculated. For example, in the 434 million m2 study area, a 10% increase in CWP across the 9 crops analyzed had a potential water savings of 31.5 million m3 of water. An increase in CWP is widely considered the best approach for saving maximum quantities of water. This paper proposed, developed, and implemented a workflow of combined methods utilizing cloud computing based remote sensing data. The environmental implications of this work in assessing water savings for food and water security in the 21st century are expected to be significant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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82. Detecting the Preparatory Phase of Induced Earthquakes at The Geysers (California) Using K‐Means Clustering.
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Iaccarino, A. G. and Picozzi, M.
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K-means clustering , *INDUCED seismicity , *GEYSERS , *QUANTUM dots , *EARTHQUAKE prediction , *INJECTION wells , *ATMOSPHERIC nucleation - Abstract
The generation of strong earthquakes is a long‐debated problem in seismology, and its importance is increased by the possible implications for earthquake forecasting. It is hypothesized that the earthquake generation processes are anticipated by several phenomena occurring within a nucleation region. These phenomena, also defined as preparatory processes, load stress on the fault leading it to reach a critical state. In this paper, we investigate the seismicity preceding 19 moderate (Mw ≥ 3.5) earthquakes at The Geysers, Northern California, aiming to verify the existence of a preparatory phase before their occurrence. We apply an unsupervised K‐means clustering technique to analyze time series of physics‐related features extracted from catalog information and estimated for events occurred before the mainshocks. Specifically, we study the temporal evolution of the b‐value from the Gutenberg‐Richter (b), the magnitude of completeness (Mc), the fractal dimension (Dc), the inter‐event time (dt), and the moment rate (M˙0 ${\dot{M}}_{0}$). Our analysis shows that out of 19 moderate magnitude events considered, a common preparatory phase for 11 events is clearly identified, plus other five events for which we can guess a preparatory phase but with different characteristics from the previous ones. The latter result confirms that even within the same tectonic context different possible activation behaviors may exist. The duration of the preparatory process ranges between about 16 hr and 4 days. We observe that also for the retrieved preparatory process a decrease in b, Mc, and Dc, and an increase of M˙0 ${\dot{M}}_{0}$. Finally, we show a clear correlation between events with a preparation phase and the location of injection's wells, suggesting an important role of fluids in the preparatory process. Plain Language Summary: We investigate the preparatory phase of moderate magnitude‐induced earthquakes at The Geysers geothermal field in California by studying the spatiotemporal evolution and dynamic properties of small magnitude events and using an unsupervised machine learning approach. To this aim, we rely on features extracted from seismic catalog information that are used for a K‐means clustering analysis. Our results highlight changes in the seismicity characteristics before the moderate‐induced earthquakes. We find that most of the analyzed target earthquakes present a preparatory phase, and that most of the cases the latter presents common characteristics in their key features. We show that the seismicity clusters in space and time before moderate events also becoming more energetic. We estimate a duration for the detected preparatory phases that ranges from 16 hr to 4 days. Finally, we show that the presence of a preparatory phase is correlated to the proximity of injection's wells, suggesting a significant role of fluids in the earthquake's nucleation process. Key Points: Moderate‐induced earthquakes at The Geysers can be preceded by a preparatory phase detectable using K‐means clustering on catalog featuresThe detected preparatory phase has common characteristics presenting negative trends of b‐value, Mc, and Dc and a positive trend of M˙0 ${\dot{M}}_{0}$The earthquakes with a preparatory phase are located nearer to the injection's wells in the area than the events without it [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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83. Influence of Recycled Concrete Aggregates on the California Bearing Ratio (CBR) of Granular Sub-bases.
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Salcedo Fontalvo, José Eduardo, Vega Araujo, Daniela Lucia, Ariza Polo, Lucia, Padilla Quiroz, Justin, and Castro Cabeza, Andrea
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RECYCLED concrete aggregates , *MINERAL aggregates , *MECHANICAL abrasion , *WASTE products as building materials , *PERCENTILES , *PENETRATION mechanics - Abstract
Recycled concrete aggregates (RCAs) have a high potential to be used as replacements for natural aggregates in the construction of pavements with similar or even better characteristics. This paper evaluates the influence of RCA as a partial replacement in a granular sub-base of 37.5 mm nominal maximum size (GSB38). Specifically, two replacement percentages of RCA by weight of the coarse aggregate of the GSB38 were evaluated: 10 and 15. To estimate the influence on the mechanical behavior, abrasion tests were carried out in the Los Angeles (LA) abrasion and California bearing ratio (CBR) methods. For GSB38, the average abrasion results were 30.54%. The CBR for the same material at a penetration of 0.254 cm was 26.90, 61.00 and 76.20% and at a penetration of 0.508 cm was 33.00, 65.70 and 82.00% for 10, 25 and 56 blows per layer, respectively. For GSB38 with 10% RCA, similar and even better behavior than natural GSB38 was found in terms of LA abrasion, with an average result of 38.68%. The CBR for the same alternative at a penetration of 0.254 cm was 13.20, 52.80 and 57.70% and at a penetration of 0.508 cm was 18.00, 61.30 and 68.90% for 10, 25 and 56 blows per layer, respectively. But GSB38 with 15% RCA showed an average abrasion of 45.51%, indicating a decrease compared with natural GSB38 and GSB38 with 10% RCA. The CBR for the same alternative also shows a decreasing trend. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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84. Drinking in Mexico by Whites and Hispanics on and off the US/Mexico border in California.
- Author
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Caetano, Raul, Vaeth, Patrice A. C., Gruenewald, Paul J., Ponicki, William R., and Kaplan, Zoe
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CONFIDENCE intervals , *HISPANIC Americans , *SURVEYS , *ALCOHOL drinking , *RESEARCH funding , *WHITE people - Abstract
This paper compares drinking patterns of Whites and Hispanics who after crossing the U.S./Mexico border drink and do not drink in Mexico. Data came from a household survey of 1,209 adults 18 to 39 years of age in California. Residence near the US/Mexico border increases the likelihood of drinking in Mexico (AOR = 4.57; 95%CI = 2.45–8.52; p <.001). Hispanics (AOR = 1.91; 95%CI = 1.26–2.90; p <.01), those who drink more frequently (AOR = 1.05; 95%CI = 1.02–1.09; p <.01) and those who drink six or more drinks in day (AOR = 1.91; 95%CI = 1.26–2.29; p <.01) are more likely than Whites and lighter drinkers to report this behavior. Crossing the U.S./Mexico border to drink is influenced by living close to the border, Hispanic ethnicity, and drinking many drinks in a day. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
85. Confidence in COVID‐19 vaccines moderates the association between vaccination status and mental distress.
- Author
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Tan, Chee Meng, Owuamalam, Chuma, Sarma, Vengadeshvaran J., and Ng, Pek Kim
- Subjects
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CONFIDENCE , *COVID-19 vaccines , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *FACTOR analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *VACCINATION status , *STATISTICAL models , *DATA analysis software , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *LONGITUDINAL method , *OPTIMISM ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
Previous research has demonstrated that becoming vaccinated with the Coronavirus vaccine may lower mental distress. However, it remains uncertain whether this relationship holds amid concerns of vaccine side effects and doubts of the vaccine's protective capabilities. We presented three studies that showed how vaccine confidence negatively influences the relationship between vaccine uptake and mental distress. Using two‐way fixed effects regression models, Study 1 analyzes longitudinal survey of respondents from Los Angeles County in the US, while Study 2 uses the same analytical strategy but generalises findings by analysing longitudinal data of participants across all 50 US states. Main results of both studies show that (i) vaccination uptake is linked with reduced mental distress among individuals with high vaccine confidence (ii) vaccine uptake has no effect on mental distress among individuals with low vaccine confidence. Lastly, Study 3 applies multilevel analysis to a large‐scale pseudo‐panel study of 15 developed countries. Results for the third study corroborate finding (i) but not (ii) in that the multinational study finds that vaccine uptake is actually associated with higher mental distress among individuals with low vaccine confidence. In sum, our paper shows that the palliative effect of vaccination on mental health only exists when vaccine confidence is high. Results are mixed on whether vaccination affects mental distress when individual vaccine confidence is low. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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86. Elevator Ventilation and SARS-CoV-2-Relevant Particulate Matter Removal in Three Older California Elevators.
- Author
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Kado, Michael J., Perttula, Kelsi, Noth, Elizabeth M., Moore, David, Nguyen, Patton Khuu, Perrino, Charles, Nicas, Mark, and Hammond, S. Katharine
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ELEVATORS , *PARTICULATE matter , *VENTILATION , *PRECAUTIONARY principle , *AIR pollutants , *AIR filters - Abstract
The objective of this study was to measure particulate matter (PM) total loss rates in three older (1940s, 1960s, and 1980s) elevators in California during two phases and three low-cost intervention modes. Tracer gas decay and <2 μm aerodynamic diameter nontoxic NaCl particles (PM2) were used to calculate PM2 loss rates. The NaCl particles were considered surrogates for smaller particles carrying SARS-CoV-2. Empirical PM2 loss rates were paired with modeled dynamic scenarios to estimate SARS-CoV-2-relevant PM2 removal. Mean loss rates (hr-1) ranged from 1.8 to 184. Compared to a closed-door, stationary elevator, the moving elevators had a fourfold increased mean loss rate (hr-1), while an air cleaner in a stationary elevator increased the mean loss rates sixfold. In a dynamic particle removal simulation of a ten-story elevator, PM was removed 1.38-fold faster with an air cleaner intervention during bottom and top floor stops only (express ride) and 1.12-fold faster with an air cleaner during every other floor stops. The increase in removal rates due to the air cleaner was modest due to the higher moving and open-door removal rates, except during stationary phase. The half-life of PM2 particles in a stationary elevator after all passengers have left can be 8-12 minutes following a single emission and 2-5 minutes with an air cleaner. The low particle removal rate in the stationary elevator requires an intervention so that the particle removal rate will be high to eliminate infectious aerosol. If codes permit, keeping the door open when the elevator is stationary is most effective; otherwise, an air cleaner in a stationary elevator should be used. While an air cleaner is commonly seen as a substantial improvement in reducing potential virus concentration in air, in the moving elevator scenarios, the effect is quite modest. This paper provides empirical particle loss rates inside elevators, the effectiveness of air cleaners in a dynamic elevator space, two approaches to control infectious agents while the elevator is stationary, and support for a precautionary approach towards elevator use amidst a pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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87. "Entre Nosotras:" a qualitative study of a peer-led PrEP project for transgender latinas.
- Author
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Zamudio-Haas, Sophia, Koester, Kim, Venegas, Luz, Salinas, Ariana, Herrera, Cinthya, Gutierrez-Mock, Luis, Welborn, Layla, Deutsch, Madeline B., and Sevelius, Jae
- Subjects
- *
PRE-exposure prophylaxis , *HISPANIC American women , *DISCRIMINATION in medical care , *GENDER affirming care , *HISPANIC Americans , *TRANS women - Abstract
Background: Uptake of HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) remains low among transgender people as compared to other subgroups, despite high rates of HIV acquisition. In California, Latinx people comprise 40% of the population and Latina transgender women experience some of the highest burden of HIV of any subgroup, indicating a critical need for appropriate services. With funding from the California HIV/AIDS Research Programs, this academic-community partnership developed, implemented, and evaluated a PrEP project that co-located HIV services with gender affirming care in a Federally Qualified Heath Center (FQHC). Trans and Latinx staff led intervention adaptation and activities. Methods: This paper engages qualitative methods to describe how a PrEP demonstration project- Triunfo- successfully engaged Spanish-speaking transgender Latinas in services. We conducted 13 in-depth interviews with project participants and five interviews with providers and clinic staff. Interviews were conducted in Spanish or English. We conducted six months of ethnographic observation of intervention activities and recorded field notes. We conducted thematic analysis. Results: Beneficial elements of the intervention centered around three intertwined themes: creating trusted space, providing comprehensive patient navigation, and offering social support "entre nosotras" ("between us women/girls"). The combination of these factors contributed to the intervention's success supporting participants to initiate and persist on PrEP, many of whom had previously never received healthcare. Participants shared past experiences with transphobia and concerns around discrimination in a healthcare setting. Developing trust proved foundational to making participants feel welcome and "en casa/ at home" in the healthcare setting, which began from the moment participants entered the clinic and continued throughout their interactions with staff and providers. A gender affirming, bilingual clinician and peer health educators (PHE) played a critical part in intervention development, participant recruitment, and patient navigation. Conclusions: Our research adds nuance to the existing literature on peer support services and navigation by profiling the multifaced roles that PHE served for participants. PHE proved instrumental to empowering participants to overcome structural and other barriers to healthcare, successfully engaging a group who previously avoided healthcare in clinical settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. Determination of the Basic Geotechnical Parameters of Blast-Furnace Slag from the Kremnica Region.
- Author
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Bulko, Roman, Masarovičová, Soňa, and Gago, Filip
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SLAG , *MINERAL aggregates , *COHESION , *INTERNAL friction , *AGGREGATE industry , *INFORMATION resources management - Abstract
A decisive aspect of site evaluation for construction is the presence of anthropogenic materials occurring in the geological environment. The geotechnical properties of blast-furnace slag were investigated as a potential substitute for aggregates in the construction industry. The basic geotechnical parameters of the slag were determined, which are critical for evaluating its stability, environmental impact, and usability in geotechnical construction. The research focused on monitoring the physical and mechanical properties of the two samples, and also included mineralogical analysis. The obtained results demonstrated that the slag belongs to the category of poorly graded gravel, G2/GP, and gravel with an admixture of fine-grained soil, G3/G-F. In addition, other important parameters, such as the water disintegration of the slag aggregate, the minimum and maximum bulk densities, the California bearing ratio (CBR), the oedometric modulus (Eoed), and shear tests (the angle of internal friction φ and cohesion c), were determined. The results from this paper provide important information for the proper management of blast-furnace slag so to minimize its environmental impact and achieve sustainability in the mining industry. At the same time, it enables a better understanding of the use of slag as a substitute for aggregates in geotechnical tasks. Despite its local importance in relation to the investigated case, the presented study has significant educational and scientific value for the construction sector, where it is necessary to evaluate anthropogenic activities and materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
89. "Prior-Prior Year" FAFSA Increased Aid Submissions but Likely not Enrollment.
- Author
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Bettinger, Eric, Gurantz, Oded, Lee, Monica, and Long, Bridget Terry
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STUDENT financial aid , *FINANCIAL aid , *GOVERNMENT aid , *FEDERAL aid , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is the primary gatekeeper to secure financial aid for college. The federal government instituted two changes to the process in 2017, commonly known as "prior-prior year" FAFSA: (1) an earlier start date that lengthens the filing period and (2) the ability to use completed taxes from the prior calendar year. This paper uses descriptive statistics to examine resulting changes in application filing behavior in California. Students submitted their FAFSA substantially earlier and refiling rates increased among independent students in the policy year. Although these changes may have reduced the burden of applying, the earlier submissions did not appear to substantially alter state aid receipt or postsecondary attendance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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90. Water Resource Surveillance for the Salton Sea in California By Adaptive Sequential Monitoring of Its Landsat Images.
- Author
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Yi, Fan and Qiu, Peihua
- Subjects
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WATER supply , *LANDSAT satellites , *STATISTICAL process control , *REMOTE-sensing images , *QUALITY control charts - Abstract
Gradual loss of water resource in the Salton Sea has got much attention from researchers recently for its damage to the local environment and ecosystems for human beings, animals and plants. To monitor the water resource of the lake, researchers usually obtain certain water resource indices manually from databases such as the satellite images of the region. In this paper, we develop a new method to monitor the area of the Salton Sea automatically. By this method, the lake boundary is first segmented from each satellite image by an image segmentation procedure, and then its area is computed by a numerical algorithm. The sequence of lake areas computed from satellite images taken at different time points is then monitored by a control chart from the statistical process control literature. Because the lake area changes gradually over time, the control chart designed for detecting process mean drifts is used here for the water resource surveillance application. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. Antibiograms as one-health tools for antimicrobial stewardship: California's experience with livestock antibiogram development.
- Author
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Lorenz, Catherine, Silva, Marissa, Frey, Erin, Fritz, Heather, and Marshall, Edith
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ANTIMICROBIAL stewardship , *LIVESTOCK development , *DRUG resistance in microorganisms , *VETERINARY medicine , *ANIMAL species - Abstract
Antibiograms are collections of antimicrobial susceptibility data for a particular bacterial organism and host species. Antibiograms are important tools for antimicrobial stewardship, as they may be used to guide empiric antimicrobial therapy and assess trends in antimicrobial resistance, maximizing treatment success and preserving the efficacy of currently available pharmaceuticals. Targeted use of antimicrobials is critically important to minimize the spread of antimicrobial resistance, which may be conveyed between animals and humans directly but may also be spread through the environment and ecological niches, such as soil, water, and wildlife reservoirs. To effectively utilize antibiograms as part of a comprehensive antimicrobial stewardship plan, veterinarians need to know data characteristics, including the source population, body site (when possible), and number of isolates included, in addition to the animal species and bacterial organisms for which each breakpoint was developed. Although widely used in human health systems, antibiograms are not often available in veterinary medicine. This paper describes antibiogram creation and use, discusses antibiogram development by US veterinary diagnostic laboratories, and shares California's process to create and promote livestock antibiograms . The companion Currents in One Health article by Burbick et al, AJVR, September 2023, addresses the benefits and challenges associated with developing veterinary antibiograms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
92. Probabilistic Tsunami Damage Assessment for Structural Mitigation Policy Guidance.
- Author
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Lynett, Patrick, Graehl, Nicholas, Patton, Jason, Bott, Jacqueline, Wilson, Rick, and McCrink, Tim
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TSUNAMI damage , *TSUNAMIS , *TSUNAMI warning systems , *TSUNAMI hazard zones , *EARTHQUAKE hazard analysis , *REGIONAL planning , *TOPOGRAPHY - Abstract
Some areas of the California coast have physical conditions—such as local bathymetry, topography, shoreline orientation, and other factors—that increase the risk for damage from tsunami inundation compared with other regions. Technical tsunami hazard analyses can inform decision-makers on regional planning and policy decisions. In this paper, we focus on recent efforts in California to delineate various tsunami hazard zones along the coastline under the Seismic Hazard Mapping Act, wherein structural mitigation measures will be recommended. To define the zone wherein structural mitigation measures are recommended, we present a state-wide tsunami reliability analysis that combines existing probabilistic hazard information and structure fragility curves derived from recent events. We examine design-life chances of significant structural damage for various structure types along all developed coastlines throughout California and use this analysis to show how hazard and risk have different correlations throughout the State. Finally, we outline an approach for creating mitigation zones, which provides state-wide tsunami risk consistency for all structures in the tsunami inundation zone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. Sex‐biased parental investment and female wealth accumulation in ancient California.
- Author
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Greenwald, Alexandra M., Burns, Gregory R., Eerkens, Jelmer W., Bartelink, Eric J., Leventhal, Alan, and Arellano, Monica V.
- Subjects
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BREASTFEEDING , *SEX allocation , *WEALTH inequality , *RESIDENTIAL mobility , *THIRD molars , *MOLARS , *GRAVE goods - Abstract
Objectives: The mortuary record at Middle Period site Kalawwasa Rummeytak (CA‐SCL‐134) (2600‐1225 cal BP) in California's southern Santa Clara Valley shows pronounced wealth inequality; Olivella shell bead wealth, as well as other grave goods, are concentrated in the burials of several older adult females. The concentration of wealth among women, along with regional strontium isotopic evidence of male‐biased residential shifts in early adulthood, suggests a matrilineal kinship system that practiced matrilocal post‐marital residence patterns. We suggest local resource enhancement effects incentivized keeping women in their natal communities and investing more in female offspring. Materials and Methods: With the consent of, and in collaboration with, the Muwekma Ohlone Tribe of the San Francisco Bay Area, this paper employs isotopic analysis (δ15N and δ13C, 86Sr/87Sr) to examine duration of exclusive breastfeeding, weaning age (complete cessation of breastmilk consumption), early childhood diet, and lifetime residential mobility of individuals interred at Kalawwasa Rummeytak to test the assumption that the site inhabitants favored matrilocality and that female offspring received greater levels of investment in groups with female wealth/status attainment. First molars, third molars, and bone was sampled from 22 individuals. Results: The average weaning age for females at Kalawwasa Rummeytak is 36.3 months ± 9.7 (1 SD), or just over 3 years. The average weaning age for males is 31.2 ± 7.9 months (1 SD), or about 2.6 years. Infants at the site were provisioned with supplemental foods dominated by C3 plants and terrestrial herbivores, as well as anadromous fish. After weaning, individuals consumed a diet dominated by acorns, C3 plants, and terrestrial herbivores, with periodic inclusion of anadromous fish. 30% of the sampled population of females exhibit local first molar 87Sr/86Sr values, suggesting that Kalawwasa Rummeytak is their natal community. None of the males interred at the site are locals. Discussion: Despite the small sample size often unavoidable in archaeological contexts, we find possible female‐biased parental investment strategies. Cessation of breastfeeding (weaning) was, on average, 5 months earlier for males compared to females. There are no differences between females and males in the consumption of supplemental or post‐weaning foods. Strontium data suggest a flexible postmarital residence system that favored matrilocality. This may have incentivized greater investment in female offspring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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94. Exact inference for disease prevalence based on a test with unknown specificity and sensitivity.
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Cai, Bryan, Ioannidis, John P. A., Bendavid, Eran, and Tian, Lu
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DISEASE prevalence , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) , *INFERENTIAL statistics , *COVID-19 pandemic , *MEASUREMENT errors - Abstract
To make informative public policy decisions in battling the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, it is important to know the disease prevalence in a population. There are two intertwined difficulties in estimating this prevalence based on testing results from a group of subjects. First, the test is prone to measurement error with unknown sensitivity and specificity. Second, the prevalence tends to be low at the initial stage of the pandemic and we may not be able to determine if a positive test result is a false positive due to the imperfect test specificity. The statistical inference based on a large sample approximation or conventional bootstrap may not be valid in such cases. In this paper, we have proposed a set of confidence intervals, whose validity doesn't depend on the sample size in the unweighted setting. For the weighted setting, the proposed inference is equivalent to hybrid bootstrap methods, whose performance is also more robust than those based on asymptotic approximations. The methods are used to reanalyze data from a study investigating the antibody prevalence in Santa Clara County, California in addition to several other seroprevalence studies. Simulation studies have been conducted to examine the finite-sample performance of the proposed method. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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95. Desert Dreams and Techno-Utopian Nightmares: The Complex History of California City and the Colonial Gaze Towards the Desert.
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İşbilen, Ezgi
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GAZE , *DREAMS , *DESERTS , *FORM perception , *MILITARY bases ,CALIFORNIA state history - Abstract
Despite being some of the harshest environments to design for and inhabit, deserts are considered some of the most malleable in our imagination. Countless military bases, proving grounds, gunneries, and practice fields that simulate other locales prove that in military imagination, deserts are nondescript proxy spaces waiting to be filled with the character of whatever location they are to imitate. The developers' imagination is not far behind. Through a historical case study of California City, an ambitiously planned but only partially built desert development project, and unpacking of the terms "desert" and "wasteland," this essay examines the colonial gaze towards the desert that often shapes our perceptions of this unique environment and exposes the fallacies in our thinking that lead us to imagine deserts as a blank slate waiting to be transformed. The paper also highlights the dangers of overconfidence in technology to create techno-utopias and the need to acknowledge the reality of the desert's harsh environment in any planning or development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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96. Operationalizing Real-Time Monitoring Data in Simulation Models Using the Public Domain HEC-DSSVue Software Platform.
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Tran, Vi, Helmrich, Stefanie, Quinn, Nigel W. T., and O'Day, Peggy A.
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FREEWARE (Computer software) , *PYTHON programming language , *SIMULATION methods & models , *DATA modeling , *WATER quality , *DATA management - Abstract
This paper describes a public domain semiautomated data screening and quality assurance processing tool useful for both discrete and continuous data. This application serves both a field research project assessing salinity and methylmercury drainage load control options and the requirements of a public domain watershed-based water quality forecasting model used to provide decision support for short-term salinity management in the San Joaquin River Basin of California. The US Army Corps of Engineers HEC-DSSVue data management and visualization platform was enhanced in the former application with Python scripts that performed the basic data quality assurance functions. Analogous tools were developed for use on the HOSTGATOR cloud server using the same Python scripts and algorithms to migrate quality-controlled data directly to a server for use by the Watershed Analysis Risk Management Framework (WARMF) water quality forecasting model. The Python scripts for both applications are easily adaptable by other potential users who do not currently have the resources to implement an enterprise-level hydrological data management and real-time quality assurance software system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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97. Toward a 3D kinetic tomography of Taurus clouds: II. A new automated technique and its validation.
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Duchêne, Q., Hottier, C., Lallement, R., Vergely, J. L., Babusiaux, C., Marchal, A., and Arenou, F.
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DOPPLER effect , *INTERSTELLAR medium , *STELLAR parallax , *TOMOGRAPHY , *MILKY Way - Abstract
Context. Three-dimensional (3D) kinetic maps of the Milky Way interstellar medium are an essential tool in studies of its structure and of star formation. Aims. We aim to assign radial velocities to Galactic interstellar clouds now spatially localized based on starlight extinction and star distances from Gaia and stellar surveys. Methods. We developed an automated search for coherent projections on the sky of clouds isolated in 3D extinction density maps on the one hand, and regions responsible for CO radio emissions at specific Doppler shifts on the other hand. The discrete dust structures were obtained by application of the Fellwalker algorithm to a recent 3D extinction density map. For each extinction cloud, a technique using a narrow sliding spectral window moved along the contour-bounded CO spectrum and geometrical criteria was used to select the most likely velocity interval. Results. We applied the new contour-based technique to the 3D extinction density distribution within the volume encompassing the Taurus, Auriga, Perseus, and California molecular complexes. From the 45 clouds issued from the decomposition, 42 were assigned a velocity. The remaining structures correspond to very weak CO emission or extinction. We used the non-automated assignments of radial velocities to clouds of the same region presented in Paper I and based on KI absorption spectra as a validation test. The new fully automated determinations were found to be in good agreement with these previous measurements. Conclusions. Our results show that an automated search based on cloud-contour morphology can be efficient and that this novel technique may be extended to wider regions of the Milky Way and at larger distance. We discuss its limitations and potential improvements after combination with other techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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98. Fostering existential well-being: mobility, dwelling, and Undocumented Student Resource Centers in California.
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Ellis, Basia Daria
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WELL-being , *STUDENT well-being , *SOCIAL history , *SOCIAL change , *DWELLINGS - Abstract
In recent years, scholars have taken increased interest in the existential dimensions of human im/mobility largely to trace how growing numbers of persons across the globe are pressed to navigate increasingly restrictive mobility regimes. The focus on restrictive contexts has, however, deterred researchers from considering experiences of well-being in precarious conditions. This paper shows how a place-based approach to the study of im/mobility can address this gap by directing scholarly attention to supportive places that promote the well-being of various groups facing limited social conditions. Drawing upon phenomenological healthcare studies, I theorize existential well-being as a dialectic of dwelling-mobility, and study how an increasingly visible supportive place on college campuses in California—namely, the Undocumented Student Resource Center (USRC)—impacts the existential experiences of undocumented students involved in its operations. I theorize 'place' from a sociocultural psychological perspective, viewing USRCs as dynamic, psycho-social-material realities produced by USRC staff and students involved in distinct meaning-making practices. I then discuss research conducted with an USRC in Northern California to show how its distinct socio-material design and psychosocial practices contributed to the development of existential well-being in undocumented students. I conclude that a place-based approach to the study of existential im/mobility can shed light on well-being experiences that are not dependent on the eradication of restrictive mobility regimes and (as such) can contribute to social change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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99. Adaptive Coda‐Wave Imaging With Voronoi Tessellation.
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Mao, Shujuan, Ellsworth, William L., and Beroza, Gregory C.
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GREEN'S functions , *SEISMIC wave velocity , *SURFACE of the earth , *THEORY of wave motion , *SURFACE waves (Seismic waves) , *IMAGING systems in seismology , *SYNTHETIC aperture radar - Abstract
Reconstructions of Green's functions by ambient noise interferometry enable the imaging of the Earth's subsurface. Coda waves from reconstructed Green's functions can be utilized to perform time‐dependent imaging of processes that vary substantially at daily to monthly time scales in the crust. Time‐lapse Coda‐Wave Imaging (CWI) can detect tiny changes in seismic velocity with high temporal resolution. While previous studies on CWI have mainly focused on the descriptions of coda waves' propagation, little attention has been paid to choosing effective inversion algorithms that are suitable for CWI. Here we address this issue by developing a pragmatic inversion approach based on Voronoi tessellation with mesh cells adapted to coda‐wave sensitivity kernels. Using seismic stations in Central California, we present both synthetic and real data imaging to demonstrate that this approach stabilizes the inversion, is computationally efficient, and provides spatially adaptive resolution. We further propose a heuristic approach for a quantitative assessment of spatial resolution based on multi‐scale checkerboard tests. Plain Language Summary: Seismologists can extract information about the properties and structures beneath the Earth's surface by calculating the interferometry of background seismic vibrations. In recent years, this idea has been widely employed to monitor the time‐varying underground processes associated with tectonic, volcanic, hydrologic, and anthropogenic activities. Coda waves, the waves that are multiply scattered, are often used in monitoring applications because of their high sensitivity and time resolution, but their spatial paths are complicated. In this paper we introduce a new method for improving the inversion in Coda‐Wave Imaging based on Voronoi tessellation. By using mesh cells adapted to the geometry of seismic stations in Central California, we show that this method helps to stabilize the inversion and provide spatially adaptive resolution. Additionally, we propose a straightforward way to assess quantitatively the resolution of the images obtained through this method. Key Points: We present a pragmatic approach to improving coda‐wave imaging of seismic velocity changes based on Voronoi tessellationThis approach stabilizes the spatial inversion and provides adaptive resolution using seismic stations with irregular geometry in Central CaliforniaWe further propose a heuristic approach for a quantitative assessment of the spatial resolution based on multi‐scale checkerboard tests [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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100. Heart failure prediction using machine learning.
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Gandla, Vengala Rao, Mallela, David Vinay, and Chaurasiya, Rahul
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HEART failure , *SUPPORT vector machines , *RANDOM forest algorithms , *HEART diseases , *MACHINE learning , *FORECASTING - Abstract
Over 17.3 million people are dying because of cardio-vascular disease. In past, predicting heart failure (HF) disease was a challenging task. In the modern era, we have relevant training data for HF prediction. Using state-of-the-art machine learning (ML) models, the HF can be predicted with high precision. In this paper, by employment of different ML algorithms, we predict whether a person has cardio-vascular disease (CVD) or not using relevant symptoms of the person. This research predicts the heart failure chances using discriminative attributes that are collected from the patients. A standard dataset from the university of California at Irvine (UCI) that contains 14 parameters related to heart disease has been examined in this study. Our machine learning models are trained using five different classification techniques. The algorithms are logistic regression, k-nearest neighbours (KNN), support vector machines (SVM), random forest, and gradient boosting. The SVM classifier has shown the highest accuracy of 86.84%. The accuracy of predictions has also been enhanced by suitable data pre-processing and cross validation techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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