CONVERTED WAVES IN REFRACTION SURVEYS OVER MARKERS WITH VARIABLE DEPTH

Geophysics ◽  
1964 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 733-744 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. H. Hall

Converted head waves are observed sufficiently often in crustal and other refraction surveys to raise interesting questions as to their possibilities in interpretation. Some simple cases are examined in which sequences of P, S, and converted head waves are assumed to be observed over a two‐ and a three‐layer medium. Investigation is made of the theoretical requirements in terms of numbers of shot and recording points, and the number of members in the sequence, to allow calculation of layer velocities and thicknesses when there is low to moderate structure on the interfaces. It is found that as few as a single shot and a single recording point, and two, three, or four members of a sequence are sufficient to allow determination of some or all of the P and S velocities in the layers, and the depths to the layers below shot and recording point. How far these possibilities can be realized in practice is dependent on the development of techniques to produce and observe converted waves consistently in refraction surveys. To what extent this can be done is at present little known, and is a matter for future research. If converted waves can be used regularly in refraction work, some operational advantages might result as follows. Because of the decrease in the number of shot and recording points necessary to derive velocities and depths when sequences of head waves are observed, it is possible either to gather usable data with minimum effort, or, if a more elaborate array of points is used, to achieve greater detail regarding the lateral variation in velocity and depth over what would have been obtained from a single wave type.

Toxins ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annika Jagels ◽  
Viktoria Lindemann ◽  
Sebastian Ulrich ◽  
Christoph Gottschalk ◽  
Benedikt Cramer ◽  
...  

The genus Stachybotrys produces a broad diversity of secondary metabolites, including macrocyclic trichothecenes, atranones, and phenylspirodrimanes. Although the class of the phenylspirodrimanes is the major one and consists of a multitude of metabolites bearing various structural modifications, few investigations have been carried out. Thus, the presented study deals with the quantitative determination of several secondary metabolites produced by distinct Stachybotrys species for comparison of their metabolite profiles. For that purpose, 15 of the primarily produced secondary metabolites were isolated from fungal cultures and structurally characterized in order to be used as analytical standards for the development of an LC-MS/MS multimethod. The developed method was applied to the analysis of micro-scale extracts from 5 different Stachybotrys strains, which were cultured on different media. In that process, spontaneous dialdehyde/lactone isomerization was observed for some of the isolated secondary metabolites, and novel stachybotrychromenes were quantitatively investigated for the first time. The metabolite profiles of Stachybotrys species are considerably influenced by time of growth and substrate availability, as well as the individual biosynthetic potential of the respective species. Regarding the reported adverse effects associated with Stachybotrys growth in building environments, combinatory effects of the investigated secondary metabolites should be addressed and the role of the phenylspirodrimanes re-evaluated in future research.


2019 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-39
Author(s):  
John L. Luckner ◽  
Rashida Banerjee ◽  
Sara Movahedazarhouligh ◽  
Kaitlyn Millen

Current federal legislation emphasizes the use of programs, interventions, strategies, and activities that have been demonstrated through research to be effective. One way to increase the quantity and quality of research that guides practice is to conduct replication research. The purpose of this study was to undertake a systematic review of the replication research focused on self-determination conducted between 2007 and 2017. Using methods used by Cook and colleagues, we identified 80 intervention studies on topics related to self-determination, of which 31 were coded as replications. Intervention study trends, rate of replication studies, percentage of agreements between findings of original and replication studies, amount of author overlap, and types of research designs used are reported along with recommendations for future research.


1982 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 160-164
Author(s):  
Glenn L. Falkowski ◽  
Arthur M. Guilford ◽  
Jack Sandler

Utilizing airflow therapy, Schwartz (1976) has claimed an 89% success rate with stutterers following treatment and an 83% success rate at one year follow-up. Such claims have yet to be documented in the scientific literature. The purposes of this study were: (a) to investigate the effectiveness of a modified version of airflow therapy; (b) to examine the relative importance of its two main components—passive airflow and elongation of the first vowel spoken. The speech of two adult male stutterers with a lengthy history of stuttering, was assessed with spontaneous speaking and reading tasks. Results indicated marked improvement in both subjects' speech on the reading task was maintained at follow-up 10 weeks later. For spontaneous speech, results were generally weaker and less durable. Effects of the two treatment components were cumulative and did not allow determination of any differential effectiveness between components. Implications of these findings were considered and directions for future research discussed.


2019 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 185-191 ◽  
Author(s):  
EDYTA KONECKA ◽  
JOANNA MOKRACKA ◽  
SYLWIA KRZYMIŃSKA ◽  
ADAM KAZNOWSKI

We observed the death of insect caterpillars of Spodoptera exigua in the laboratory culture line and identified Serratia marcescens as the bacterial causative agent of the insect death. We confirmed that S. marcescens had insecticidal activity against S. exigua and caused high mortality of larvae. The LC50 values of S. marcescens CFU per 1cm2 of insect diet surface were similar for all isolates. Our research reports novel strains with high pesticidal activity as candidates for future research on a new bioinsecticide. As bioinsecticides cannot be harmful to non-target organisms, we determined the pathogenic properties of S. marcescens to humans. We proved the ability of S. marcescens todamage mammalian epithelial cells. All strains had cytopathic effects to Vero cells with a cytotoxic index ranging from 51.2% ± 3.8%to 79.2% ± 4.1%. We found that all of the strains excreted catecholate siderophore – enterobactin. All isolates were resistant to sulfamethoxazole, tobramycin, gentamicin, cefepime, and aztreonam. We did not observe the ESBL phenotype and the integrons’ integrase genes. Resistance to sulfamethoxazole was due to the presence of the sul1 or sul2 gene. The use of resistant S. marcescens strains that are pathogenic to humans in plant protection may cause infections difficult to cure and lead to the spread of resistance genes. The results of our study emphasize the necessity of determination of the safety to vertebrates of the bacteria that are proposed to serve as biocontrol agents. The novelty of our study lies in the demonstration of the indispensability of the bacteria verification towards the lack of hazardous properties to humans.


CAUCHY ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 154
Author(s):  
Shofwan Ali Fauzi

<div class="standard"><a id="magicparlabel-1110">Artificial Neural Network (ANN) is beginning little by little to replace the task of an expert, even with the ANN can be a tool to replace a doctor. One of kind of ANN is Backpropagation networks, this network can be used to training programs in order to be able to recognize whether it is pig or cow wave spectra. To determine the output in Backpropagation training required suitable activation functions. Therefore, in this research will be compared to some of the activation function that can be used in training. Activation functions will be tested with the ratio test to determine the interval convergence. After tested with the ratio test it was found that the activation function was the best activation function to use the Backpropagation network training, because it has a weight range that can meet the methods used in the determination of weights. When tested with the data, the activation function is able to recognize correctly all trial datas. Expected in future research to examine the weight that makes the interval training to achieve fast convergence and the error bit.</a></div>


2021 ◽  
Vol 29 (21) ◽  
pp. 33481
Author(s):  
L. A. Nagel ◽  
P. J. Skrodzki ◽  
L. A. Finney ◽  
R. Nawara ◽  
M. Burger ◽  
...  

1994 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Venkateswarlu

This review on determination of fluorine in biological materials briefly covers (a) a discussion of various forms of fluorine in body fluids and tissues [and also in foods]; (b) methods of their determination, including pretreatment of samples, separation and concentration of F and its final measurement; (c) an evaluation of the analytical methods used and interpretation of results; and (d) some recommendations for future research in fluorine analytical methods applicable to biological materials.


1993 ◽  
Vol 37 (02) ◽  
pp. 126-137
Author(s):  
Ming-Chung Fang ◽  
Ming-Ling Lee ◽  
Chwang-Kuo Lee

The technique of time-domain numerical simulation for the occurrence of water shipping on board in head waves is presented. The nonlinear effects of the large-amplitude motion are treated. These nonlinear factors include the effect of large wave amplitude, large ship motion, the change of hull configuration below the free surface and the nonlinear resultant wave. Therefore, the variation of the potentials and the hydrodynamic coefficients for a ship at each time step must be carefully treated. While handling the determination of the instantaneous wave surface around the ship hull, the complete incident, diffracted, and radiated wave system is used rather than the incident wave only. The complexity of the ship speed effect on the related terms is also treated at each time step, especially for the radiation problems. An experimental setup is also designed to measure the motion response and the relative motion, and comparisons are made. The results show excellent agreement and the validity of the theory is confirmed. The successful development of the present technique can be extended to analyze the dynamic stability, capsize phenomena, and ship motion in irregular waves


Author(s):  
Chronoula Voutsina

Abstract Existing research suggests that young children can develop a partial understanding of the equal sign as an operator rather than as a relational symbol of equivalence. This partial understanding can be the result of overemphasis on canonical equation syntaxes of the type a + b = c in elementary school mathematics. This paper presents an examination of context and syntax nuances of relevant sections from the grade 1 Greek series of textbooks and workbooks. Using a conceptual framework of context variation, the analysis shows qualitative differences between equations of similar syntax and provides a nuanced determination of contextual and structural aspects of ‘variation’ in how the equal sign is presented in elementary mathematics. The paper proposes that since equations have context-specific meanings, context variations should constitute a separate element of analysis when investigating how the equal sign is presented. The implication for practice and future research is that nuanced considerations of equation syntax within varied contexts are needed for elaborating analyses of the equal sign presentation that move beyond dichotomized categorizations of canonical/non-canonical syntaxes.


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