11,833 research outputs found

    Interview with Nicholas Christopher, author of Somewhere in the Night: Film Noir and the American City

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    Interview with Nicholas Christopher, author of Somewhere in the Night: Film Noir and the American Cit

    Special Section Guest Editorial: Advances in Agro-Hydrological Remote Sensing for Water Resources Conservation

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    This special section focuses on the use of remote sensing tools in some of these areas, including monitoring the volume and turbidity in lake fresh water resources, retrieving soil organic matter from spectral information with particular attention to abandoned croplands and areas affected by wildfires, and identification and monitoring of natural and agricultural vegetation through emerging techniques such as shallow and deep learning algorithms. These data mining and analysis approaches are particularly promising and include convolutional neural network and the application of back propagation neural network algorithms for soil water content monitoring and the extraction of other canopy information

    Remote Sensing for Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Hydrology XX

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    This proceedings volume contains papers presented during the Remote Sensing for Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Hydrology Conference. The Conference was part of the International Symposium on Remote Sensing sponsored by SPIE—The International Society for Optics and Photonics. The Symposium was held at the ESTREL Congress Centre, Berlin, Germany, from 10th to 13th of September 2018. Approximately 40+ oral and 20 poster papers were presented during this year’s conference, covering a broad range of topics in the field of remote sensing applications for environmental science

    Remote Sensing for Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Hydrology XIV

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    Introduction - This proceedings volume contains papers presented during the conference on Remote Sensing for Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Hydrology XIV. The conference was part of the 19th International Symposium on Remote Sensing sponsored by SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering. The symposium was held at the Edinburgh International Conference Centre, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, from 24th to 26th of September 2012. The conference is dedicated to providing rapid dissemination of scientific and technical information, and attracted scientists and professionals from throughout Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Americas. More than 30 oral and 30 poster presentations were given, covering a broad range of topics in the field of remote sensing applications in environmental science. The program was organized according to major themes, with 10 sessions on Agriculture: Leaf Area Index, Crop monitoring (2), Vegetation; Ecosystems: Water Bodies; Hydrology: Hydrology, Snow, Energy Balance, Thermal Remote Sensing, Water Content. The poster presentations also had good representation from the three major themes. The presentations described both fundamental and applications-based research activities from modelling, to laboratory and field experiments, to operational applications. We extend our thanks to the Session chairs (Francesco Vuolo, Institute of Surveying, Remote Sensing and Land Information – University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, and John H. Prueger, Agricultural Research Service – United States Department of Agriculture). The oral program also included four invited presentations: John H. Prueger of United States Department of Agriculture (USA) gave a presentation on the subject “Sources of uncertainty for eddy covariance measurements over heterogeneous surfaces in a semi-arid region: impact to remote sensing”; Giuseppe Ciraolo of Università degli Studi di Palermo (Italy) gave a presentation on the subject “Mapping evapotranspiration on vineyards: a comparison between Penman-Monteith and Energy Balance approaches for operational purposes”; Massimo Menenti of Technische Univ. Delft (Netherlands) gave a presentation on the subject “Hyperspectral imaging: do information content, land cover classification, sensitivity analysis and inverse modeling of spectral reflectance lead to the same set of optimal spectral bands?”; Shahid Habib of NASA Goddard Space Flight Ctr. (USA) gave a presentation on the subject “Overview of USAID-World Bank-NASA collaboration to address water management issues in the MENA region”. We also thank the presenters for their efforts and to the participants for their insightful questions and discussions. Special thanks are also due to the host city for the excellent venue, to Joel Shields the Proceedings Coordinator, to Alex Pulchart Rusova the Program Coordinator and to the SPIE organizational staff for their support prior to, during, and after the symposium. We look forward to an even more successful and exciting conference in 2013 in Dresden (Germany). The Chairs and Editors Christopher Neale Antonino Maltes

    Matt Christopher Papers - Accession 1309

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    The collection includes letters written by the children’s book author, Matt Christopher, to his son, Marty Christopher. Many of the letters also contain newspaper articles of interest to Matt Christopher, which deal with local sports teams, his writing career, his participation in an exhibition baseball game against the New York Giants in 1938, and other of general interest. Most of the letters are personal in nature, however, a majority of the letters delve into Matt Christopher’s writing career, personal interests, the author’s health, as well as his family life.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/2649/thumbnail.jp

    Matt Christopher Papers - Accession 1221

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    Matt Christopher (1917-1997) was a prolific author of children’s books having written over 100 books as well as over 300 short stories, articles, poems, and screenplays. Most of his writings dealt with sports themes, but he also wrote fantasy and mystery themed stories as well. The Matt Christopher Papers consist of both published and unpublished manuscripts, articles, and short stories. Also included are personal and business correspondence, biographical information, scrapbooks, photographs, and memorabilia.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/1976/thumbnail.jp

    Dr. Christopher von Rueden – Faculty Author Interview

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    Dr. Christopher von Rueden, an anthropologist and Assistant Professor in the Jepson School of Leadership Studies, discusses a recent article entitled, “Men’s status and reproductive success in 33 non-industrial societies: Effects of subsistence, marriage system, and reproductive strategy,” which he co-authored with Dr. Adrian Jaeggi, an anthropologist at Emory University. Their findings were recently published in the journal, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

    Head and neck cooling does not improve maximal voluntary torque or rate or torque development during brief maximal voluntary contractions in the heat

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    Introduction: maximal voluntary torque (MVT) is impaired when hyperthermic due to a reduction in the central nervous system’s capacity to voluntarily drive the available force capacity of muscle. Rate of torque development (RTD) is considered more functionally relevant than MVT in some situations and neural drive is a key determinant of RTD. Head and neck cooling can improve endurance performance when hyperthermic, but its effects on neural drive are unclear. The purpose of this study was to investigate head and neck cooling on thermal perception during whole-body hyperthermia on MVT, RTD, neural drive and the contractile properties of the muscle.Method: 9 participants completed two trials in HOT conditions (50°C, 40% RH), involving light exercise before passive heating to a rectal temperature (Tre) of 39.5°C. During one trial, the head and neck was continuously cooled (HOTcool) using a towel soaked in ice water. At Tre=39.5°C neuromuscular measurements were completed to assess MVT, voluntary activation and EMG at MVT normalised to maximal M-wave. Voluntary RTD and normalised EMG were measured over 0-50, 0-100, 0-150 and 0-200 ms. Involuntary RTD at 0-50 ms was measured during evoked octets at 300 Hz. Thermoregulatory and perceptual variables were measured throughout.Results: MVT and RTD, and their neuromuscular determinants were unaffected by cooling (P &gt; 0.05). Neck (-20%) and head (-12%) temperature were lower in HOTcool, as were thermal sensation of the head (-36%) and body (-12%) and thermal comfort (body) (-23%). Time to target Tre was increased (71%) in HOTcool, and not all participants were able to reach 39.5°C. Tre (-0.3%) and skin temperature (-6%) were lower in HOTcool (P &lt; 0.05), but heart rate was similar (P &gt; 0.05).Conclusions: head and neck cooling did not affect MVT, RTD, or the neuromuscular determinants of these functional variables despite improving perceptions of thermal strain.<br/

    Passive hyperthermia reduces maximal but not explosive torque production

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    Introduction: hyperthermia can reduce maximal voluntary force/torque (MVT) of skeletal muscle due to reduced neural activation (Todd et al., 2005). Rate of force/torque development (RTD) may be a more functionally relevant measure of neuromuscular performance than MVT; however, the effect of hyperthermia on RTD has received little attention. Primary determinants of RTD include neural activation and electrically evoked involuntary RTD (Maffiuletti et al., 2016), and whilst neural activation may decrease with hyperthermia, increased muscle temperature improves involuntary RTD, so it is unclear how voluntary RTD will be affected by hyperthermia. This study aimed to investigate the effects of progressive passive whole-body hyperthermia on MVT and voluntary RTD, as well as the neural and contractile factors contributing to any effects.Methods: nine male participants completed two trials; one involving passive heating to a rectal temperature (Tre) of 39.5˚C (HOT) and the other (CON) where Tre was maintained at ~37˚C. The same neuromuscular measurements of the knee extensors were completed when participants first entered the chamber (Tre ~37˚C; Base), and at Tre=38.5˚C (ModHyp) and Tre=39.5˚C (SevHyp), in the HOT trial, and at equivalent time points into the CON trial. MVT, voluntary activation (VA) determined via interpolated twitch, and EMG at MVT normalised to maximal M-wave (EMGMVT) were measured during MVCs. Explosive voluntary RTD and normalised EMG were measured over 0-50 (RTD50; EMG50) and 0-100 (RTD100; EMG100) from torque/EMG onsets during explosive contractions. Involuntary RTD50 was measured during evoked octets at 300Hz.Results: in the HOT trial, MVT declined throughout and was 15% lower at SevHyp than Base (P=0.016), which coincided with declines in EMGMVT (-44%; P&lt;0.005) and VA (-16%; P&lt;0.005) from Base to SevHyp. In contrast, voluntary RTD50 and RTD100 remained unaffected in the HOT trial (P&gt;0.05), despite 23-31% decreases in EMG50 and EMG100 from Base to SevHyp (P&lt;0.001). Involuntary RTD50 however, increased from Base to ModHyp (10%; P&lt;0.001) and from ModHyp to SevHyp (4%; P&lt;0.001). There were no changes in any dependent variables throughout the CON trial.Conclusion: as expected MVT declined as a result of passive hyperthermia which was largely due to reduced neural activation (i.e., EMGMVT and VA). In contrast, this study provides novel evidence that voluntary RTD was largely unaffected by passive hyperthermia, despite considerable reductions in explosive neural activation, which likely occurred due to the increased involuntary RTD, and thus cancelling out of neural and contractile effects.<br/
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