Showing 791 - 800 of 5701 Items
Date: 2011-06-01
Creator: David K. Hecht
Access: Open access
- This article uses the voluminous public discourse around Rachel Carson and her controversial bestseller Silent Spring to explore Americans' views on science and scientists. Carson provides a particularly interesting case study because of intense and public debates over whether she was a scientist at all, and therefore whether her book should be granted legitimacy as science. Her career defied easy classification, as she acted variously as writer, activist, and environmentalist in addition to scientist. Defending her work as legitimate science, which many though not all commentators did, therefore became an act of defining what both science and scientists could and should be. This article traces the variety of nonscientific images and narratives readers and writers assigned to Carson, such as "reluctant crusader" and "scientist-poet." It argues that nonscientific attributes were central to legitimating her as both admirable person and admirable scientist. It explores how debates over Silent Spring can be usefully read as debates over the desirability of putatively nonscientific attributes in the professional work of a scientist. And it examines the nature of Carson's very democratized image for changing notions of science and scientists in 1960s United States politics and culture. © 2011 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Date: 2013-03-01
Creator: William R. Jackman, Shelby H. Davies, David B. Lyons, Caitlin K. Stauder, Benjamin R., Denton-Schneider, Andrea Jowdry, Sharon R. Aigler, Scott A. Vogel, David W. Stock
Access: Open access
- Teeth with two or more cusps have arisen independently from an ancestral unicuspid condition in a variety of vertebrate lineages, including sharks, teleost fishes, amphibians, lizards, and mammals. One potential explanation for the repeated origins of multicuspid teeth is the existence of multiple adaptive pathways leading to them, as suggested by their different uses in these lineages. Another is that the addition of cusps required only minor changes in genetic pathways regulating tooth development. Here we provide support for the latter hypothesis by demonstrating that manipulation of the levels of Fibroblast growth factor (Fgf) or Bone morphogenetic protein (Bmp) signaling produces bicuspid teeth in the zebrafish (Danio rerio), a species lacking multicuspid teeth in its ancestry. The generality of these results for teleosts is suggested by the conversion of unicuspid pharyngeal teeth into bicuspid teeth by similar manipulations of the Mexican Tetra (Astyanax mexicanus). That these manipulations also produced supernumerary teeth in both species supports previous suggestions of similarities in the molecular control of tooth and cusp number. We conclude that despite their apparent complexity, the evolutionary origin of multicuspid teeth is positively constrained, likely requiring only slight modifications of a pre-existing mechanism for patterning the number and spacing of individual teeth. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Date: 2007-12-01
Creator: Michael M. Franz, Travis N. Ridout
Access: Open access
- Well over $1 billion was spent on televised political advertising in the U.S. in 2004. Given the ubiquity of the 30 second spot, one might presume that ads must affect viewers' vote choices. Somewhat surprisingly, though, scholars have yet to make much progress in confirming this claim. In this paper, we leverage a comprehensive dataset that tracks political ads in the nation's top media markets and a survey of presidential and U.S. Senate voters in 2004. We ask whether exposure to presidential and Senate advertising influences voters' evaluations of candidates and the choices that they make at the ballot box. In the end, we find considerable evidence that advertising persuades-and that its impact varies depending on the characteristics of the viewer. © 2007 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.
Date: 2004-09-01
Creator: Travis N. Ridout, Dhavan V. Shah, Kenneth M. Goldstein, Michael M. Franz
Access: Open access
- Scholars employ various methods to measure exposure to televised political advertising but often arrive at conflicting conclusions about its impact on the thoughts and actions of citizens. We attempt to clarify one of these debates while validating a parsimonious measure of political advertising exposure. To do so, we assess the predictive power of six different measurement approaches - from the simple to the complex - on learning about political candidates. Two datasets are used in this inquiry: (1) geo-coded political advertising time-buy data, and (2) a national panel study concerning patterns of media consumption and levels of political knowledge. We conclude that many traditional methods of assessing exposure are flawed. Fortunately, there is a relatively simple measure that predicts knowledge about information featured in ads. This measure involves combining a tally of the volume of advertisements aired in a market with a small number of survey questions about the television viewing habits of geo-coded respondents.
Date: 2013-06-11
Creator: Kent Kovacs, Stephen Polasky, Erik Nelson, Bonnie L. Keeler, Derric, Pennington, Andrew J. Plantinga, Steven J. Taff
Access: Open access
- We evaluate the return on investment (ROI) from public land conservation in the state of Minnesota, USA. We use a spatially-explicit modeling tool, the Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services and Tradeoffs (InVEST), to estimate how changes in land use and land cover (LULC), including public land acquisitions for conservation, influence the joint provision and value of multiple ecosystem services. We calculate the ROI of a public conservation acquisition as the ratio of the present value of ecosystem services generated by the conservation to the cost of the conservation. For the land scenarios analyzed, carbon sequestration services generated the greatest benefits followed by water quality improvements and recreation opportunities. We found ROI values ranged from 0.21 to 5.28 depending on assumptions about future land use change, service values, and discount rate. Our study suggests conservation is a good investment as long as investments are targeted to areas with low land costs and high service values. © 2013 Kovacs et al.
Date: 2004-01-01
Creator: Paul Freedman, Michael Franz, Kenneth Goldstein
Access: Open access
- Concern about the state of American democracy is a staple of political science and popular commentary. Critics warn that levels of citizen participation and political knowledge are disturbingly low and that seemingly ubiquitous political advertising is contributing to the problem. We argue that political advertising is rife with both informational and emotional content and actually contributes to a more informed, more engaged, and more participatory citizenry. With detailed advertising data from the 2000 election, we show that exposure to campaign advertising produces citizens who are more interested in the election, have more to say about the candidates, are more familiar with who is running, and ultimately are more likely to vote. Importantly, these effects are concentrated among those citizens who need it most: those with the lowest pre-existing levels of political information.
Date: 2009-06-01
Creator: Yoshiyuki Yamamoto, Mardi S. Byerly, William R. Jackman, William R. Jeffery
Access: Open access
- This study addresses the role of sonic hedgehog (shh) in increasing oral-pharyngeal constructive traits (jaws and taste buds) at the expense of eyes in the blind cavefish Astyanax mexicanus. In cavefish embryos, eye primordia degenerate under the influence of hyperactive Shh signaling. In concert, cavefish show amplified jaw size and taste bud numbers as part of a change in feeding behavior. To determine whether pleiotropic effects of hyperactive Shh signaling link these regressive and constructive traits, shh expression was compared during late development of the surface-dwelling (surface fish) and cave-dwelling (cavefish) forms of Astyanax. After an initial expansion along the midline of early embryos, shh was elevated in the oral-pharyngeal region in cavefish and later was confined to taste buds. The results of shh inhibition and overexpression experiments indicate that Shh signaling has an important role in oral and taste bud development. Conditional overexpression of an injected shh transgene at specific times in development showed that taste bud amplification and eye degeneration are sensitive to shh overexpression during the same early developmental period, although taste buds are not formed until much later. Genetic crosses between cavefish and surface fish revealed an inverse relationship between eye size and jaw size/taste bud number, supporting a link between oral-pharyngeal constructive traits and eye degeneration. The results suggest that hyperactive Shh signaling increases oral and taste bud amplification in cavefish at the expense of eyes. Therefore, selection for constructive oral-pharyngeal traits may be responsible for eye loss during cavefish evolution via pleiotropic function of the Shh signaling pathway. © 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Date: 2018-05-11
Creator: H. Kim, E. Kim, C. Chong, P. G. Kevrekidis, J., Yang
Access: Open access
- We report an experimental and numerical demonstration of dispersive rarefaction shocks (DRS) in a 3D-printed soft chain of hollow elliptical cylinders. We find that, in contrast to conventional nonlinear waves, these DRS have their lower amplitude components travel faster, while the higher amplitude ones propagate slower. This results in the backward-tilted shape of the front of the wave (the rarefaction segment) and the breakage of wave tails into a modulated waveform (the dispersive shock segment). Examining the DRS under various impact conditions, we find the counterintuitive feature that the higher striker velocity causes the slower propagation of the DRS. These unique features can be useful for mitigating impact controllably and efficiently without relying on material damping or plasticity effects.
Date: 2014-08-01
Creator: Jenna Watling
Access: Open access
- Since early July, I’ve been working on three projects. I’ve been studying parrotfish speciation, dissecting green crabs, and collecting samples of muscle tissue from blue mussels. My primary occupation is the study of parrotfish speciation with Dr. Carlon. He has found evidence of speciation through hybridization, which is has not been commonly observed. During the 2013-2014 academic year, he and I extracted DNA from fin or scale samples from Pacific parrotfish. Throughout the year and during this summer, we have been amplifying specific genes—nuclear and mitochondrial—using a polymerase chain reaction, confirming the amplification via gel electrophoresis, and preparing the samples for Sanger sequencing, which is done by the Nevada Genomics Center. Once we receive the sequencing results electronically, I use the program Geneious to check the quality of the individual sequences and resolve ambiguous calls (e.g., whether a specific base pair is an arginine or a cytosine) and align the sequences so we can compare them base pair by base pair. By examining both nuclear and mitochondrial genes, which evolve at different rates, we can hypothesize about the way in which different species arise. Green crab (Carcinus maenas) dissection is an early step in Aidan Short’s analysis of their diet. I assist in collecting tissue samples. We collect muscle tissue from the crabs’ claws. These samples will allow Aiden to differentiate between the crabs’ food and the crabs themselves. Then their carapaces are cut open and their entire stomachs are collected. In the near future, Aidan will use next-generation sequencing to identify any species present in the crab stomachs and quantify the abundance of these species’ DNA. Sequencing the crabs’ stomach contents is more precise and more complete than the older method of hard part analysis. The green crabs’ diet is of interest because green crabs are an invasive species and have been implicated in loss of sea grass beds and decreasing soft shell clam populations. Collection of tissue from blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) and bay mussels (M. trossulus) is a preliminary step for Dr. Sarah Kingston’s investigation of the genetic basis of variation in shell calcification rate under environmental conditions possible due to ocean acidification. She collects mussels from various sites along the Maine coast, marks each with a color and number, and records their buoyant weight. The buoyant weight allows Dr. Kingston to determine the mass of the shells without having to kill the mussels. In the first round of experiments, Dr. Kingston determined which of three experimental schemes (involving the manipulation of food levels, temperature, and pH) resulted in the greatest variation of shell calcification after two weeks. The harshest scheme—no food, high temperature, and low pH—resulted in the greatest variation, and this scheme will be used in the experiment going forward. After the experimental period, the mussels are re-weighed and tissue samples are collected. I assist in tissue sample collection; we cut open the mussels and remove the foot and the adductor muscle. In the next round of experiments, I will further assist by participating in mussel collection, monitoring tank conditions during the experimental period, and labeling and weighing the specimens. The DNA libraries obtained from the tissue samples will be sent away for next generation sequencing, and Dr. Kingston will begin looking for genetic variation associated with calcification rates. Final Report, summer 2014 student-faculty research.