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Emergency and Disaster Preparedness for Individuals Who Use Augmentative and Alternative Communication: A Pilot Study on Supported Planning Using a Toolkit (open access)

Emergency and Disaster Preparedness for Individuals Who Use Augmentative and Alternative Communication: A Pilot Study on Supported Planning Using a Toolkit

Article describes how when emergencies or disasters arise, individuals who use augmentative and alternative communication are particularly vulnerable. This study highlights the need for preparedness activities that are person-centered and account for the communication support needs of individuals who use AAC if faced with an emergency/disaster.
Date: January 3, 2024
Creator: Barton-Hulsey, Andrea; Boesch, Miriam C.; Chung, Yoosun; Caswell, Tina; Sonntag, Amy M. & Quach, Wendy
System: The UNT Digital Library
A gene based combination test using GWAS summary data (open access)

A gene based combination test using GWAS summary data

Article describes how gene-based association tests provide a useful alternative and complement to the usual single marker association tests, especially in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). The authors propose a test named OWC based on summary statistics from GWAS data.
Date: January 3, 2023
Creator: Zhang, Jianjun; Liang, Xiaoyu; Gonzales, Samantha; Liu, Jianguo; Gao, Xiaoyi Raymond & Wang, Xuexia
System: The UNT Digital Library
Identification of Pueraria spp. through DNA barcoding and comparative transcriptomics (open access)

Identification of Pueraria spp. through DNA barcoding and comparative transcriptomics

This article presents research where various kudzu accessions were analyzed through barcoding and comparative transcriptomics, generating tools for identification and molecular pathway analysis.
Date: January 3, 2022
Creator: Adolfo, Laci M.; Rao, Xiaolan & Dixon, R. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Instructional Models for Course-Based Research Experience (CRE) Teaching (open access)

Instructional Models for Course-Based Research Experience (CRE) Teaching

This article presents a study that was done over a period of 3 years to explicate the instructional processes involved in teaching an undergraduate course-based research experience (CRE). The study presented here delineated a set of specific instructional practices used by active CRE instructors and modeled the relations between the use of these practices and specified outcomes. The resultant educational models should provide clarification of the ways in which the aims of CRE can be effectively achieved by instructors.
Date: January 3, 2022
Creator: Hanauer, David I.; Graham, Mark J.; Arnold, Rachel J.; Ayuk, Mary A.; Balish, Mitchell F.; Beyer, Andrea R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Victims of "adaptation": climate change, sacred mountains, and perverse resilience (open access)

Victims of "adaptation": climate change, sacred mountains, and perverse resilience

This article proposes the concept of "perverse adaptation", where one actor or institution's adaptation to climate change in fact produces aftershocks and secondary impacts upon other groups. Drawing on ethnographic and sociolinguistic research in northern Arizona regarding artificial snowmaking at a ski resort on a sacred mountain, the author elucidates resort supporters' and others' attempts to frame snowmaking as a sustainable adaptation to drought (and, implicitly, climate change) while counterpoising these framings with narratives from local activists as well as Diné (Navajo) individuals.
Date: January 3, 2019
Creator: Dunstan, Adam
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multicultural Center in the News, December 14, 2005 (open access)

Multicultural Center in the News, December 14, 2005

A document about a story in the NT Daily that covers the placement of UNT on a Publisher's Pick List for their Hispanic programs and grants. The article is titled "Magazine honors efforts to recruit, retain Hispanic students".
Date: January 3, 2006
Creator: University of North Texas. Multicultural Center.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Draft Genome Sequence of the Cyanotroph Pseudomonas monteilii BCN3 (open access)

Draft Genome Sequence of the Cyanotroph Pseudomonas monteilii BCN3

This article reports the first draft genome of Pseudomonas monteilii BCN3, a cyanotroph isolated from sewage sludge.
Date: January 3, 2019
Creator: Jones, Lauren B. & Kunz, Daniel A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Seismic Velocities Contain Information About Depth, Lithology, Fluid Content, and Microstructure (open access)

Seismic Velocities Contain Information About Depth, Lithology, Fluid Content, and Microstructure

Recent advances in field and laboratory methods for measuring elastic wave velocities provide incentive and opportunity for improving interpretation of geophysical data for engineering and environmental applications. Advancing the state-of-the-art of seismic imaging requires developing petrophysical relationships between measured velocities and the hydrogeology parameters and lithology. Our approach uses laboratory data and rock physics methods. Compressional (Vp) and shear (Vs) wave velocities, Vp/Vs ratios, and relative wave amplitudes show systematic changes related to composition, saturation, applied stress (analogous to depth), and distribution of clay for laboratory ultrasonic measurements on soils. The artificial soils were mixtures of Ottawa sand and a second phase, either Wyoming bentonite or peat moss used to represent clay or organic components found in natural soils. Compressional and shear wave velocities were measured for dry, saturated, and partially-saturated conditions, for applied stresses between about 7 and 100 kPa, representing approximately the top 5 m of the subsurface. Analysis of the results using rock physics methods shows the link between microstructure and wave propagation, and implications for future advances in seismic data interpretation. For example, we found that Vp in dry sand-clay mixtures initially increases as clay cements the sand grains and fills porosity, but then Vp decreases …
Date: January 3, 2002
Creator: Berge, P A & Bonner, B P
System: The UNT Digital Library
Facile Synthesis of a Crystalline, High-Surface Area SnO2 Aerogel (open access)

Facile Synthesis of a Crystalline, High-Surface Area SnO2 Aerogel

We report the preparation of a novel monolithic SnO{sub 2} aerogel using a straightforward sol-gel technique. TEM and XRD analysis show that the as-prepared material is comprised of interconnected, randomly oriented crystalline (rutile) SnO{sub 2} nanoparticles {approx}3-5 nm in size. As a result, the low-density SnO{sub 2} monolith ({approx}97% porous) exhibits a very high surface area of 383 m{sup 2}/g. /XANES spectroscopy at the Sn M{sub 4,5} edge reveals that the electronic structure of the SnO{sub 2} aerogel is similar to that of tetragonal SnO rather than SnO{sub 2} or {beta}-Sn, and that the undercoordinated surface atoms in the material introduce additional Sn-related electronic states close to the conduction band minimum.
Date: January 3, 2005
Creator: Baumann, T. F.; Kucheyev, S. O.; Gash, A. E. & Satcher, J. H. Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Up-scaling analysis with rigorous error estimates for poromechanics in random polycrystals of porous laminates (open access)

Up-scaling analysis with rigorous error estimates for poromechanics in random polycrystals of porous laminates

A detailed analytical model of random polycrystals of porous laminates has been developed. This approach permits detailed calculations of poromechanics constants as well as transport coefficients. The resulting earth reservoir model allows studies of both geomechanics and fluid permeability to proceed semi-analytically. Rigorous bounds of the Hashin-Shtrikman type provide estimates of overall bulk and shear moduli, and thereby also provide rigorous error estimates for geomechanical constants obtained from up-scaling based on a self-consistent effective medium method. The influence of hidden or unknown microstructure on the final results can then be evaluated quantitatively. Descriptions of the use of the model and some examples of typical results on the poromechanics of such a heterogeneous reservoir are presented.
Date: January 3, 2005
Creator: Berger, E. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lattice Matrix Elements and CP Violation in B and KA Physics: Status and Outlook (open access)

Lattice Matrix Elements and CP Violation in B and KA Physics: Status and Outlook

Status of lattice calculations of hadron matrix elements along with CP violation in B and in K systems is reviewed. Lattice has provided useful input which, in conjunction with experimental data, leads to the conclusion that CP-odd phase in the CKM matrix plays the dominant role in the observed asymmetry in B {yields} {psi}K{sub s}. It is now quite likely that any beyond the SM, CP-odd, phase will cause only small deviations in B-physics. Search for the effects of the new phase(s) will consequently require very large data samples as well as very precise theoretical predictions. Clean determination of all the angles of the unitarity triangle therefore becomes essential. In this regard B {yields} KD{sup 0} processes play a unique role. Regarding K-decays, remarkable progress made by theory with regard to maintenance of chiral symmetry on the lattice is briefly discussed. First application already provide quantitative information on B{sub K} and the {Delta}I = 1/2 rule. The enhancement in ReA{sub 0} appears to arise solely from tree operators, esp. Q{sub 2}; penguin contribution to ReA{sub 0} appears to be very small. However, improved calculations are necessary for {epsilon}{prime}/{epsilon} as there the contributions of QCD penguins and electroweak penguins largely seem …
Date: January 3, 2003
Creator: Soni, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Comparison of Detailed Level and Superconfiguration Models of Neon (open access)

A Comparison of Detailed Level and Superconfiguration Models of Neon

The superconfiguration (SC) approach to collisional-radiative modeling can significantly decrease the computational demands of finding non-LTE level populations in complex systems. However, it has not yet been fully determined whether the statistical averaging of SC models leads to a significant loss of accuracy. The present work compares results from two independent models: a detailed-level accounting (DLA) model based on HULLAC data and the SC model MOST. The relatively simple level structures of the K- and L-shell ions of the neon test system ensure a tractable number of levels in the DLA model but challenge the statistical assumptions of the SC approach. Nonetheless, we find fair agreement between the two models for average ion charges, SC populations, and various effective temperatures.
Date: January 3, 2005
Creator: Hansen, S B; Fournier, K B; Bauche-Arnoult, C; Bauche, J & Peyrusse, O
System: The UNT Digital Library
Short range chemical ordering in bulk metallic glasses (open access)

Short range chemical ordering in bulk metallic glasses

We provide direct experimental evidence for a non-random distribution of atomic constituents in Zr-based multi-component bulk metallic glasses using positron annihilation spectroscopy. The Ti content around the open-volume regions is significantly enhanced at the expense of Cu and Ni, indicating that Cu and Ni occupy most of the volume bounded by their neighboring atoms while Ti and Zr are less closely packed and more likely to be associated with open-volume regions. Temperature-dependent measurements indicate the presence of at least two different characteristic sizes for the open volume regions. Measurements on hydrogen-charged samples show that the larger open-volume regions can be filled by hydrogen up to a critical density. Beyond this critical density, local atomic-scale open-volume damage is created in the sample to accommodate additional hydrogen. The onset of this local damage in positron annihilation data coincides with the onset of volume expansion in X-ray diffraction data.
Date: January 3, 2001
Creator: Sterne, P A; Asoka-Kumar, P; Hartley, J H; Howell, R H; Nieh, T G; Flores, K M et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Vulnerability And Risk Assessment Using The Homeland-Defense Operational Planning System (HOPS) (open access)

Vulnerability And Risk Assessment Using The Homeland-Defense Operational Planning System (HOPS)

For over ten years, the Counterproliferation Analysis and Planning System (CAPS) at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) has been a planning tool used by U.S. combatant commands for mission support planning against foreign programs engaged in the manufacture of weapons of mass destruction (WMD). CAPS is endorsed by the Secretary of Defense as the preferred counterproliferation tool to be used by the nation's armed services. A sister system, the Homeland-Defense Operational Planning System (HOPS), is a new operational planning tool leveraging CAPS expertise designed to support the defense of the U.S. homeland. HOPS provides planners with a basis to make decisions to protect against acts of terrorism, focusing on the defense of facilities critical to U.S. infrastructure. Criticality of facilities, structures, and systems is evaluated on a composite matrix of specific projected casualty, economic, and sociopolitical impact bins. Based on these criteria, significant unidentified vulnerabilities are identified and secured. To provide insight into potential successes by malevolent actors, HOPS analysts strive to base their efforts mainly on unclassified open-source data. However, more cooperation is needed between HOPS analysts and facility representatives to provide an advantage to those whose task is to defend these facilities. Evaluated facilities include: refineries, major ports, …
Date: January 3, 2005
Creator: Durling, Jr., R L; Price, D E & Spero, K K
System: The UNT Digital Library
Variable Red Giants--The MACHO View (open access)

Variable Red Giants--The MACHO View

The authors present a study of the MACHO red variable population in the Large Magellanic Cloud. This study reveals six period-luminosity relations among the red variable population. Only two of these were known prior to MACHO. The results are consistent with Mira pulsation in the fundamental mode. A sequence comprising 26% of the red variable population can not be explained by pulsation. They propose a dust {kappa}-mechanism in the circumstellar environment is responsible for the long period variation of these objects. The luminosity function of the variables shows a sharp edge at the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB). This is the first clear indication of a population of variable stars within the immediate vicinity of the TRGB. The results indicate this population amounts to 8% of the RGB population near the TRGB.
Date: January 3, 2003
Creator: Keller, S C & Cook, K H
System: The UNT Digital Library
The PDQs of FAST: Simplifying function analysis for construction value studies (open access)

The PDQs of FAST: Simplifying function analysis for construction value studies

Three methods for simplifying FAST Diagrams are described which can encourage its use in construction-type value studies and bridge the gap between Information and Creativity. ``Project-FAST,`` ``Dormant- FAST`` and ``Quick-FAST`` are explained by examples which illustrate how the problem-solving capabilities of Function Analysis can be derived even from shorthand versions of FAST.
Date: January 3, 1993
Creator: Sperling, R. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
BEAR electrostatic analyzer: Flight results (open access)

BEAR electrostatic analyzer: Flight results

The Electrostatic Analyzer (ESA) measured the intensity of charged particles returning to the BEAR payload during flight on 13 July 1989. These particles form part or all of the current that returns to the payload to neutralize the charge ejected with the beam. By measuring the return flux with high time resolution, we can study the physics of charging processes. When the neutralizer was off, the payload emitted 10 mA negative and charged to several hundred volts with a maximum of{approximately}800V. With the neutralizer on (normal configuration) the payload emitted {approximately} 1mA negative and received electrons with energies up to a few hundred volts in some attitudes. This suggests charging to a few hundred volts. The charging rate of the payload is consistent with the rocket body capacitance with respect to a vacuum. 1 ref., 14 figs.
Date: January 3, 1990
Creator: Anderson, Hugh R.; Potter, Douglas W.; Morse, David L.; Olson, Joseph R.; Johnson, J. Lorraine & Pongratz, Morris
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photoelectron Diffraction of Magnetic Ultrathin Films: Fe/Cu(001) (open access)

Photoelectron Diffraction of Magnetic Ultrathin Films: Fe/Cu(001)

The preliminary results of an ongoing investigation of Fe/Cu(001) are presented here. Energy dependent photoelectron diffraction, including the spin-dependent variant using the multiplet split Fe3s state, is being used to investigate the nanoscale structures formed by near-monolayer deposits of Fe onto Cu(001). Core-level photoemission from the Fe3p and Fe3s states has been generated using synchrotron radiation as the tunable excitation source. Tentatively, a comparison of the experimental Fe3p cross section measurements with multiple scattering calculations indicates that the Fe is in a fourfold hollow site with a spacing of 3.6{Angstrom} between it and the atom directly beneath it, in the third layer. This is consistent with an FCC structure. The possibility of utilizing spin-dependent photoelectron diffraction to investigate magnetic ultrathin films will be demonstrated, using our preliminary spectra of the multiplet-split Fe3s os near-monolayer Fe/Cu(001). 18 refs., 10 figs.
Date: January 3, 1991
Creator: Tobin, J.G. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA)); Wagner, M.K. (Wisconsin Univ., Madison, WI (USA). Dept. of Chemistry); Guo, X.Q. & Tong, S.Y. (Wisconsin Univ., Milwaukee, WI (USA). Dept. of Physics)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Z physics and tests of the standard model (open access)

Z physics and tests of the standard model

Fundamental aspects of Z physics are reviewed with an emphasis on e/sup +/e/sup /minus// annihilation. The effects of radiative corrections, both from ordinary QED and from the electroweak interactions are considered from an elementary point of view, but in some detail. The possibility of mixing with an extra Z boson is discussed. The implications for experiments are stressed. Additional information that will be obtained from measurements of the W in collider experiments is considered. 18 refs., 20 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: January 3, 1989
Creator: Cahn, R.N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Uv Thomson scattering from x-ray laser plasmas (open access)

Uv Thomson scattering from x-ray laser plasmas

Plasmas produced by irradiating massive carbon targets with a 1.064 {mu}m, 1.5 ns laser pulse at incident energies of {approximately}100 J have been investigated. UV thermal Thomson scattering was used to obtain the electron and ion temperatures, as well as drift velocities. The electron density was obtained by optical interferometry. The results are compared to hydrodynamic computer modeling. 6 refs., 6 figs.
Date: January 3, 1991
Creator: La Fontaine, B.; Baldis, H. A.; Villeneuve, D. M.; Bernard, J. E.; Enright, G. D. (National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, ON (Canada)); Rosen, M. D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computer modeling of inelastic wave propagation in porous rock (open access)

Computer modeling of inelastic wave propagation in porous rock

Computer modeling of wave propagation in porous rock has several important applications. Among them are prediction of fragmentation and permeability changes to be caused by chemical explosions used for in situ resource recovery, and the understanding of nuclear explosion effects such as seismic wave generation, containment, and site hardness. Of interest in all these applications are the distance from the source to which inelastic effects persist and the amount of porosity change within the inelastic region. In order to study phenomena related to these applications, the Cam Clay family of models developed at Cambridge University was used to develop a similar model that is applicable to wave propagation in porous rock. That model was incorporated into a finite-difference wave propagation computer code SOC. 10 figures, 1 table. (RWR)
Date: January 3, 1979
Creator: Cheney, J. A. (Univ. of California, Davis); Schatz, J. F. & Snell, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Method of using in situ porosity measurements to place an upper bound on geothermal reservoir compaction (open access)

Method of using in situ porosity measurements to place an upper bound on geothermal reservoir compaction

Placing an upper bound on reservoir compaction requires placing a lower bound on the reservoir effective compaction modulus. Porosity-depth data can be used to find that lower-bound modulus in a young sedimentary basin. Well-log and sample porosity data from a geothermal field in the Imperial Valley, CA, give a lower-bound modulus of 7.7 x 10{sup 3} psi. This modulus is used with pressure drops calculated for a reservoir to determine an upper bound on reservoir compaction. The effects of partial reinjection and aquifer leakage on upper-bound subsidence estimated from the compaction are illustrated for a hypothetical reservoir and well array.
Date: January 3, 1979
Creator: Schatz, J. F.; Kasameyer, P. W. & Cheney, J. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quantitative risk in radiation protection standards (open access)

Quantitative risk in radiation protection standards

Although the overall aim of radiobiology is to understand the biological effects of radiation, it also has the implied practical purpose of developing rational measures for the control of radiation exposure in man. The emphasis in this presentation is to show that the enormous effort expended over the years to develop quantitative dose-effect relationships in biochemical and cellular systems, animals, and human beings now seems to be paying off. The pieces appear to be falling into place, and a framework is evolving to utilize these data. Specifically, quantitative risk assessments will be discussed in terms of the cellular, animal, and human data on which they are based; their use in the development of radiation protection standards; and their present and potential impact and meaning in relation to the quantity dose equivalent and its special unit, the rem.
Date: January 3, 1979
Creator: Bond, V.P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A study of tau decays of the W boson at CDF (Collider Detector at Fermilab) (open access)

A study of tau decays of the W boson at CDF (Collider Detector at Fermilab)

A report is given of a search for tau decays of the W boson in p{bar p} collisions at {radical}s = 1.8 TeV using the Collider Detector at Fermilab (CDF). A description of a hardware trigger specifically designed to enhance the number of events with tau decays is presented along with the results of a preliminary analysis of data taken during the 1988--89 run of CDF. 10 refs., 4 figs.
Date: January 3, 1990
Creator: Gladney, L. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library