28 results on '"Daniel Dunn"'
Search Results
2. Establishing the Foundation for the Global Observing System for Marine Life
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Erin V. Satterthwaite, Nicholas J. Bax, Patricia Miloslavich, Lavenia Ratnarajah, Gabrielle Canonico, Daniel Dunn, Samantha E. Simmons, Roxanne J. Carini, Karen Evans, Valerie Allain, Ward Appeltans, Sonia Batten, Lisandro Benedetti-Cecchi, Anthony T. F. Bernard, Sky Bristol, Abigail Benson, Pier Luigi Buttigieg, Leopoldo Cavaleri Gerhardinger, Sanae Chiba, Tammy E. Davies, J. Emmett Duffy, Alfredo Giron-Nava, Astrid J. Hsu, Alexandra C. Kraberg, Raphael M. Kudela, Dan Lear, Enrique Montes, Frank E. Muller-Karger, Todd D. O’Brien, David Obura, Pieter Provoost, Sara Pruckner, Lisa-Maria Rebelo, Elizabeth R. Selig, Olav Sigurd Kjesbu, Craig Starger, Rick D. Stuart-Smith, Marjo Vierros, John Waller, Lauren V. Weatherdon, Tristan P. Wellman, and Anna Zivian
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biodiversity ,global coordination ,long term observations ,time series ,environmental monitoring ,sustainability ,Science ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,QH1-199.5 - Abstract
Maintaining healthy, productive ecosystems in the face of pervasive and accelerating human impacts including climate change requires globally coordinated and sustained observations of marine biodiversity. Global coordination is predicated on an understanding of the scope and capacity of existing monitoring programs, and the extent to which they use standardized, interoperable practices for data management. Global coordination also requires identification of gaps in spatial and ecosystem coverage, and how these gaps correspond to management priorities and information needs. We undertook such an assessment by conducting an audit and gap analysis from global databases and structured surveys of experts. Of 371 survey respondents, 203 active, long-term (>5 years) observing programs systematically sampled marine life. These programs spanned about 7% of the ocean surface area, mostly concentrated in coastal regions of the United States, Canada, Europe, and Australia. Seagrasses, mangroves, hard corals, and macroalgae were sampled in 6% of the entire global coastal zone. Two-thirds of all observing programs offered accessible data, but methods and conditions for access were highly variable. Our assessment indicates that the global observing system is largely uncoordinated which results in a failure to deliver critical information required for informed decision-making such as, status and trends, for the conservation and sustainability of marine ecosystems and provision of ecosystem services. Based on our study, we suggest four key steps that can increase the sustainability, connectivity and spatial coverage of biological Essential Ocean Variables in the global ocean: (1) sustaining existing observing programs and encouraging coordination among these; (2) continuing to strive for data strategies that follow FAIR principles (findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable); (3) utilizing existing ocean observing platforms and enhancing support to expand observing along coasts of developing countries, in deep ocean basins, and near the poles; and (4) targeting capacity building efforts. Following these suggestions could help create a coordinated marine biodiversity observing system enabling ecological forecasting and better planning for a sustainable use of ocean resources.
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- 2021
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3. What We Have Learned From the Framework for Ocean Observing: Evolution of the Global Ocean Observing System
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Toste Tanhua, Andrea McCurdy, Albert Fischer, Ward Appeltans, Nicholas Bax, Kim Currie, Brad DeYoung, Daniel Dunn, Emma Heslop, Linda K. Glover, John Gunn, Katherine Hill, Masao Ishii, David Legler, Eric Lindstrom, Patricia Miloslavich, Tim Moltmann, Glenn Nolan, Artur Palacz, Samantha Simmons, Bernadette Sloyan, Leslie M. Smith, Neville Smith, Maciej Telszewski, Martin Visbeck, and John Wilkin
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ocean observing ,governance ,framework for ocean observing ,sustainable development ,multi-disciplinary ,international ,Science ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,QH1-199.5 - Abstract
The Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS) and its partners have worked together over the past decade to break down barriers between open-ocean and coastal observing, between scientific disciplines, and between operational and research institutions. Here we discuss some GOOS successes and challenges from the past decade, and present ideas for moving forward, including highlights of the GOOS 2030 Strategy, published in 2019. The OceanObs’09 meeting in Venice in 2009 resulted in a remarkable consensus on the need for a common set of guidelines for the global ocean observing community. Work following the meeting led to development of the Framework for Ocean Observing (FOO) published in 2012 and adopted by GOOS as a foundational document that same year. The FOO provides guidelines for the setting of requirements, assessing technology readiness, and assessing the usefulness of data and products for users. Here we evaluate successes and challenges in FOO implementation and consider ways to ensure broader use of the FOO principles. The proliferation of ocean observing activities around the world is extremely diverse and not managed, or even overseen by, any one entity. The lack of coherent governance has resulted in duplication and varying degrees of clarity, responsibility, coordination and data sharing. GOOS has had considerable success over the past decade in encouraging voluntary collaboration across much of this broad community, including increased use of the FOO guidelines and partly effective governance, but much remains to be done. Here we outline and discuss several approaches for GOOS to deliver more effective governance to achieve our collective vision of fully meeting society’s needs. What would a more effective and well-structured governance arrangement look like? Can the existing system be modified? Do we need to rebuild it from scratch? We consider the case for evolution versus revolution. Community-wide consideration of these governance issues will be timely and important before, during and following the OceanObs’19 meeting in September 2019.
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- 2019
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4. Advancing Marine Biological Observations and Data Requirements of the Complementary Essential Ocean Variables (EOVs) and Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBVs) Frameworks
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Frank E. Muller-Karger, Patricia Miloslavich, Nicholas J. Bax, Samantha Simmons, Mark J. Costello, Isabel Sousa Pinto, Gabrielle Canonico, Woody Turner, Michael Gill, Enrique Montes, Benjamin D. Best, Jay Pearlman, Patrick Halpin, Daniel Dunn, Abigail Benson, Corinne S. Martin, Lauren V. Weatherdon, Ward Appeltans, Pieter Provoost, Eduardo Klein, Christopher R. Kelble, Robert J. Miller, Francisco P. Chavez, Katrin Iken, Sanae Chiba, David Obura, Laetitia M. Navarro, Henrique M. Pereira, Valerie Allain, Sonia Batten, Lisandro Benedetti-Checchi, J. Emmett Duffy, Raphael M. Kudela, Lisa-Maria Rebelo, Yunne Shin, and Gary Geller
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essential ocean variables (EOV) ,essential biodiversity variables (EBV) ,marine biodiversity observation network (MBON) ,global ocean observing system (GOOS) ,ocean biogeographic information system (OBIS) ,marine global earth observatory (MarineGEO) ,Science ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,QH1-199.5 - Abstract
Measurements of the status and trends of key indicators for the ocean and marine life are required to inform policy and management in the context of growing human uses of marine resources, coastal development, and climate change. Two synergistic efforts identify specific priority variables for monitoring: Essential Ocean Variables (EOVs) through the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS), and Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBVs) from the Group on Earth Observations Biodiversity Observation Network (GEO BON) (see Data Sheet 1 in Supplementary Materials for a glossary of acronyms). Both systems support reporting against internationally agreed conventions and treaties. GOOS, established under the auspices of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC), plays a leading role in coordinating global monitoring of the ocean and in the definition of EOVs. GEO BON is a global biodiversity observation network that coordinates observations to enhance management of the world's biodiversity and promote both the awareness and accounting of ecosystem services. Convergence and agreement between these two efforts are required to streamline existing and new marine observation programs to advance scientific knowledge effectively and to support the sustainable use and management of ocean spaces and resources. In this context, the Marine Biodiversity Observation Network (MBON), a thematic component of GEO BON, is collaborating with GOOS, the Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS), and the Integrated Marine Biosphere Research (IMBeR) project to ensure that EBVs and EOVs are complementary, representing alternative uses of a common set of scientific measurements. This work is informed by the Joint Technical Commission for Oceanography and Marine Meteorology (JCOMM), an intergovernmental body of technical experts that helps international coordination on best practices for observing, data management and services, combined with capacity development expertise. Characterizing biodiversity and understanding its drivers will require incorporation of observations from traditional and molecular taxonomy, animal tagging and tracking efforts, ocean biogeochemistry, and ocean observatory initiatives including the deep ocean and seafloor. The partnership between large-scale ocean observing and product distribution initiatives (MBON, OBIS, JCOMM, and GOOS) is an expedited, effective way to support international policy-level assessments (e.g., the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services or IPBES), along with the implementation of international development goals (e.g., the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals).
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- 2018
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5. E-Learning and Research Experience Exchange in the Online Setting of Student Peer Mentor Network during COVID-19 Pandemic and beyond: A Laboratory Case Study
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Dorota Lubanska, Sami Alrash, Lia Oschanney, Alan Cieslukowski, Ali Nadi, Philip Habashy, Adam Renaud, Antonio Roye-Azar, Mohamed Soliman, Kadila Adili, Allison Baker, Maliha Baseet, Amy Llancari, Aiden Mitrevski, Sahar Mouawad, Kim Nguyen, Alexandra Sorge, Katie Zuccato, Emmanuel Boujeke, Jason Cala, Stephanie Dinescu, Marissa Ho, Almas Khan, Deya'a Almasri, Daniel Dunn, Hasan Ghafoor, Eddie Grimmett, Elie Mouawad, Ria Patel, Milica Paunic, Depen Sharma, Tiana Visconti, Vanessa Vuong, and Lisa A. Porter
- Abstract
For close to 2 years, we have witnessed the impacts of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on research at several different levels. Among the list, limited access to laboratory-based training for undergraduate students prevented this cohort from gaining exposure to the realities of a research laboratory at a critical time in training when they may have found motivation in this area as a career. COVID exposed a weakness in our training pipeline; an extreme dependency on face-to-face training that threatened to create a void in the research talent needed to replenish the scientific community every year. In the classroom, we witnessed a revolution of e-learning based approaches that could be rapidly implemented based on existing footprints. Out of necessity, our laboratory developed and implemented an e-learning model of an undergraduate peer mentor network that provides a knowledge and experience exchange platform between students with different levels of research experience. Implementation of the platform was to aid students with gaining knowledge in multiple aspects of scientific research and hands-on work in a research laboratory. The collaboration between the students of the network was aimed at not only advancing the theoretical and practical research experience, but also at developing feedback implementation and practicing "soft skills" critical for teamwork and leadership. Herein, we present an overview of the model along with survey responses of the students participating in the peer mentor network. We have found that peer delivery of practical benchwork both via scientific presentations and visualized experiments, reduced the time of training and the amount of staff assistance needed when students returned to the bench. Furthermore, this model accelerated student independence in laboratory work and increased research interest overall. In summary, the model of a peer mentor network has the potential to serve as a training platform and as a customized tool, supplementing research laboratory training at the undergraduate level beyond the pandemic.
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- 2024
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6. Bulls' Zach LaVine to have foot surgery, out for the season
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Sports, Daniel Dunn-Usa Today
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Basketball (Professional) ,Foot diseases ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness ,Chicago Bulls - Abstract
Byline: Daniel Dunn-USA TODAY Sports Chicago Bulls wing Zach LaVine will miss the remainder of the season after next week's scheduled surgery to repair a right foot injury, the Bulls [...]
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- 2024
7. Flexible IoT security middleware for end-to-end cloud-fog communication.
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Bidyut Mukherjee, Songjie Wang, Wenyi Lu, Roshan Lal Neupane, Daniel Dunn, Yijie Ren, Qi Su, and Prasad Calyam
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- 2018
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8. The living infinite: Envisioning futures for transformed human-nature relationships on the high seas
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Laura M. Pereira, Guillermo Ortuño Crespo, Diva J. Amon, Renuka Badhe, Salomão Bandeira, Frida Bengtsson, Miranda Boettcher, Gabrielle Carmine, William W.L. Cheung, Bwalya Chibwe, Daniel Dunn, Maria A. Gasalla, Ghassen Halouani, David E. Johnson, Jean-Baptiste Jouffray, Silvana Juri, Patrick W. Keys, Hannah M. Lübker, Andrew S. Merrie, Farah Obaidullah, Juliano Palacios-Abrantes, Lynne J. Shannon, U. Rashid Sumaila, Edoardo Superchi, Naomi Terry, Colette C.C. Wabnitz, Moriaki Yasuhara, and Wei Zhou
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Ocean ,Economics and Econometrics ,Futures ,Nature Futures Framework ,Governance ,High seas ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Aquatic Science ,Law ,General Environmental Science ,Transformation - Abstract
We find ourselves at a critical crossroads for the future governance of the high seas, but the perceived remoteness of the global ocean creates a psychological barrier for people to engage with it. Given challenges of overexploitation, inequitable access and other sustainability and equity concerns, current ocean governance mechanisms are not fit-for-purpose. This decade offers opportunities for direct impact on ocean governance, however, triggering a global transformation on how we use and protect the half of our planet requires a concerted effort that is guided by shared values and principles across regions and sectors. The aim of the series of workshops outlined in this paper, was to undertake a futures thinking process that could use the Nature Futures Framework as a mechanism to bring more transformative energy into how humans conceptualise the high seas and therefore how we aim to govern the ocean. We found that engaging with the future through science fiction narratives allowed a more radical appreciation of what could be and infusing science with artistic elements can inspire audiences beyond academia. Thus, creative endeavours of co-production that promote and encourage imagination to address current challenges should be considered as important tools in the science-policy interface, also as a way to elicit empathetic responses. This workshop series was a first, and hopefully promising, step towards generating a more creative praxis in how we imagine and then act for a better future for the high seas.
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- 2023
9. No. 25 UTSA, No. 24 Troy tangle in Orlando
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Sports, Daniel Dunn-Usa Today
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Football teams ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Daniel Dunn-USA TODAY Sports UTSA quarterback Frank Harris will return for a seventh season at the school, but his immediate focus is on achieving a program first. The No. [...]
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- 2022
10. Anthony Richardson, Florida set to test South Carolina
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Sports, Daniel Dunn-Usa Today
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Football teams ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Daniel Dunn-USA TODAY Sports Attaining bowl eligibility under first-year coach Billy Napier is Florida's focus on Saturday when the Gators host South Carolina in Gainesville, Fla. Florida (5-4, 2-4 [...]
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- 2022
11. Ex-team psychologist sues Spurs in Joshua Primo case
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Sports, Daniel Dunn-Usa Today
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Basketball (Professional) -- Cases ,Psychologists -- Cases ,Company legal issue ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness ,San Antonio Spurs -- Cases - Abstract
Byline: Daniel Dunn-USA TODAY Sports A former clinical psychologist who worked for the San Antonio Spurs said the team failed to act when she reported multiple instances of indecent exposure [...]
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- 2022
12. Texas A&M, Florida try to put struggles aside in SEC battle
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Sports, Daniel Dunn-Usa Today
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News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Daniel Dunn-USA TODAY Sports When it comes to Southeastern Conference play, the Texas A&M Aggies and Florida Gators are generally expected to be near the top of the standings, [...]
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- 2022
13. Priority areas to protect mangroves and maximise ecosystem services
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Alvise Dabalà, Farid DAHDOUH-GUEBAS, Daniel Dunn, Jason Everett, Catherine Lovelock, Jeffrey Hanson, Kristine Camille Buenafe, Sandra Neubert, and Anthony Richardson
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Anthropogenic activities threaten global biodiversity and ecosystem services. Yet, area-based conservation efforts typically target biodiversity protection whilst minimising conflict with economic activities, failing to consider ecosystem services. Here we identify priority areas that maximise both the protection of mangrove biodiversity and their ecosystem services. We reveal that despite 13.1% of the mangrove distribution being currently protected, all mangrove species are not adequately represented and many areas that provide disproportionally large ecosystem services are missed. Optimising the placement of future conservation efforts to protect 30% of global mangroves potentially safeguards an additional 16.2 billion USD of coastal property value, 6.2 million people, 1,187.9 Mt C, and 51.7 million fisher days yr− 1. Our findings suggest that there is a pressing need for including ecosystem services in protected area design and that strategic prioritisation and coordination of mangrove conservation could provide substantial benefits to human wellbeing.
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- 2022
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14. Diverse routes to expertise in facial recognition
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Alice Towler, James Daniel Dunn, Sergio Castro Martínez, Reuben Moreton, Fredrick Eklöf, Arnout Ruifrok, Richard Kemp, and David White
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ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION - Abstract
Facial recognition errors jeopardize national security, criminal justice, public safety and civil rights. Here, we compare the most accurate humans and facial recognition technology in a detailed lab-based evaluation and international proficiency test for forensic scientists involving 27 forensic departments from 14 countries. We find striking cognitive and perceptual diversity between naturally skilled super-recognizers, trained forensic examiners and deep neural networks, despite them achieving equivalent accuracy. Clear differences emerged in super-recognizers’ and forensic examiners’ perceptual processing, errors, and response patterns: super-recognizers were fast, biased to respond ‘same person’ and misidentified people with extreme confidence, whereas forensic examiners were slow, unbiased and strategically avoided misidentification errors. Further, these human experts and algorithms disagreed on the similarity of faces, pointing to differences in their face representations. Our findings reveal there are multiple types of facial recognition expertise, some of which are better suited to particular real-world facial recognition roles than others.
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- 2021
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15. Enabling Parallel Performance and Portability of Solid Mechanics Simulations Across CPU and GPU Architectures
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Nathaniel Morgan, Caleb Yenusah, Adrian Diaz, Daniel Dunning, Jacob Moore, Erin Heilman, Evan Lieberman, Steven Walton, Sarah Brown, Daniel Holladay, Russell Marki, Robert Robey, and Marko Knezevic
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performance ,portability ,productivity ,GPUs ,fine-grained parallelism ,solid mechanics ,Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 - Abstract
Efficiently simulating solid mechanics is vital across various engineering applications. As constitutive models grow more complex and simulations scale up in size, harnessing the capabilities of modern computer architectures has become essential for achieving timely results. This paper presents advancements in running parallel simulations of solid mechanics on multi-core CPUs and GPUs using a single-code implementation. This portability is made possible by the C++ matrix and array (MATAR) library, which interfaces with the C++ Kokkos library, enabling the selection of fine-grained parallelism backends (e.g., CUDA, HIP, OpenMP, pthreads, etc.) at compile time. MATAR simplifies the transition from Fortran to C++ and Kokkos, making it easier to modernize legacy solid mechanics codes. We applied this approach to modernize a suite of constitutive models and to demonstrate substantial performance improvements across different computer architectures. This paper includes comparative performance studies using multi-core CPUs along with AMD and NVIDIA GPUs. Results are presented using a hypoelastic–plastic model, a crystal plasticity model, and the viscoplastic self-consistent generalized material model (VPSC-GMM). The results underscore the potential of using the MATAR library and modern computer architectures to accelerate solid mechanics simulations.
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- 2024
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16. Beyond static spatial management: Scientific and legal considerations for dynamic management in the high seas
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Patrick Halpin, Derek Tittensor, Robin Warner, Gabriel Reygondeau, Elliott Hazen, Kristina Gjerde, Daniel Dunn, Joanna Mossop, and Guillermo Ortuño Crespo
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Natural and human stressors in the high seas act across a wide range of spatial and temporal scales. These include direct interaction such as fisheries bycatch or indirect interaction like warming oceans and plastic ingestion. Area-based management tools (ABMTs), such as marine protected areas and time-area closures, are a widely accepted and a broadly successful form of management used to mitigate localized human impacts on marine species and ecosystems. Protection provides an opportunity for population recovery, which can then propagate outside of the closure. As the United Nations negotiates a new treaty on the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction, efforts to design and implement high seas ABMTs at appropriate scales are critical to ensure that these spatial protection measures are most effective and climate-ready in the face of changing oceans. Here we identify the four most important temporal scales – contemporary, intra-annual, multi-annual and multidecadal – for aligning high seas ABMTs to relevant ecological, oceanographic and atmospheric processes. From this, we explore how managers and decision-makers can integrate this knowledge when implementing a new treaty.
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- 2020
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17. Flexible IoT security middleware for end-to-end cloud–fog communication
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Daniel Dunn, Bidyut Mukherjee, Yijie Ren, Roshan Lal Neupane, Songjie Wang, Qi Su, Wenyi Lu, and Prasad Calyam
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Computer Networks and Communications ,business.industry ,Computer science ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,Cloud computing ,02 engineering and technology ,Encryption ,End-to-end principle ,Hardware and Architecture ,Middleware ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Session (computer science) ,Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution ,Communications protocol ,business ,Software ,Computer network - Abstract
IoT (Internet of Things) based smart devices such as sensors have been actively used in edge clouds i.e., ‘fogs’ along with public clouds. They provide critical data during scenarios ranging from e.g., disaster response to in-home healthcare. However, for these devices to work effectively, end-to-end security schemes for the device communication protocols have to be flexible and should depend upon the application requirements as well as the resource constraints at the network-edge. In this paper, we present the design and implementation of a flexible IoT security middleware for end-to-end cloud–fog communications involving smart devices and cloud-hosted applications. The novel features of our middleware are in its ability to cope with intermittent network connectivity as well as device constraints in terms of computational power, memory, energy, and network bandwidth. To provide security during intermittent network conditions, we use a ‘Session Resumption’ algorithm in order for our middleware to reuse encrypted sessions from the recent past, if a recently disconnected device wants to resume a prior connection that was interrupted. In addition, we describe an ‘Optimal Scheme Decider’ algorithm that enables our middleware to select the best possible end-to-end security scheme option that matches with a given set of device constraints. Experiment results show how our middleware implementation also provides fast and resource-aware security by leveraging static properties i.e., static pre-shared keys (PSKs) for a variety of IoT-based application requirements that have trade-offs in higher security or faster data transfer rates.
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- 2018
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18. On a Simplified Approach to Achieve Parallel Performance and Portability Across CPU and GPU Architectures
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Nathaniel Morgan, Caleb Yenusah, Adrian Diaz, Daniel Dunning, Jacob Moore, Erin Heilman, Calvin Roth, Evan Lieberman, Steven Walton, Sarah Brown, Daniel Holladay, Marko Knezevic, Gavin Whetstone, Zachary Baker, and Robert Robey
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performance ,portability ,productivity ,GPUs ,dense and sparse data ,fine-grained parallelism ,Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 - Abstract
This paper presents software advances to easily exploit computer architectures consisting of a multi-core CPU and CPU+GPU to accelerate diverse types of high-performance computing (HPC) applications using a single code implementation. The paper describes and demonstrates the performance of the open-source C++ matrix and array (MATAR) library that uniquely offers: (1) a straightforward syntax for programming productivity, (2) usable data structures for data-oriented programming (DOP) for performance, and (3) a simple interface to the open-source C++ Kokkos library for portability and memory management across CPUs and GPUs. The portability across architectures with a single code implementation is achieved by automatically switching between diverse fine-grained parallelism backends (e.g., CUDA, HIP, OpenMP, pthreads, etc.) at compile time. The MATAR library solves many longstanding challenges associated with easily writing software that can run in parallel on any computer architecture. This work benefits projects seeking to write new C++ codes while also addressing the challenges of quickly making existing Fortran codes performant and portable over modern computer architectures with minimal syntactical changes from Fortran to C++. We demonstrate the feasibility of readily writing new C++ codes and modernizing existing codes with MATAR to be performant, parallel, and portable across diverse computer architectures.
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- 2024
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19. Pelagic Biogeography
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Gabriel Reygondeau and Daniel Dunn
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- 2019
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20. Imaging use after 35% hydrogen peroxide ingestion by a 3-year-old: a case report
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T. Christy Hallett, Lauren Klein, Daniel Dunnavant, Allison J. Weatherly, Rebecca S. Kidd, and Rebecca E. Bruccoleri
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pediatric ,ingestion ,hydrogen peroxide ,ultrasound ,case report ,Toxicology. Poisons ,RA1190-1270 - Abstract
AbstractHydrogen peroxide, at 35% concentration, is a potent surface cleaner not intended for ingestion. We present a case of unintentional ingestion of 35% hydrogen peroxide by a 3-year-old male that resulted in portal venous gas. In particular, we illustrate the correlation of ultrasound with computed tomography with the prospect of pediatric patients avoiding unnecessary ionizing radiation and barriers to care.
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- 2023
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21. Pathologic Evaluation of Axillary Dissection Specimens Following Unexpected Identification of Tumor Within Sentinel Lymph Nodes
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Jessica, Gutierrez, Daniel, Dunn, Margit, Bretzke, Eric, Johnson, John, O'Leary, Diane, Stoller, Sally, Fraki, Leslie, Diaz, and Tamera, Lillemoe
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy ,Breast Neoplasms ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Humans ,Female ,Lymph Nodes ,Prospective Studies ,Aged - Abstract
Context—Axillary lymph node dissection has been the standard of care after identification of a positive sentinel lymph node for breast cancer patients.Objective—To determine the likelihood of non–sentinel lymph node involvement for patients with negative sentinel node by frozen section, who are subsequently found to have tumor cells in the sentinel node by permanent section levels and/or cytokeratin immunohistochemistry.Design—One hundred three patients with invasive breast cancer exhibiting negative frozen section evaluation of their sentinel node, but later found to have isolated tumor cells (n = 46), micrometastasis (n = 46), or metastases (n = 11) in their sentinel node by permanent sections or immunohistochemistry, were enrolled in this prospective cohort study and underwent completion axillary dissection.Results—Six of 46 patients (13%) with isolated tumor cells in their sentinel node, 15 of 46 patients (33%) with micrometastasis in their sentinel node, and 2 of 11 patients (18%) with metastasis in their sentinel node had additional findings in the nonsentinel nodes. These findings resulted in a pathologic stage change in 2 patients. Predictors of positive nonsentinel nodes were 2 or more positive sentinel nodes (P = .002), sentinel nodes with micrometastasis versus isolated tumor cells (P = .03), and those with angiolymphatic invasion (P = .04).Conclusions—Our findings lend support to axillary node dissection for patients with micrometastasis or metastasis in their sentinel nodes. However, studies with clinical follow-up are needed to determine whether axillary node dissection is necessary for patients with isolated tumor cells in sentinel nodes.
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- 2011
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22. Factorization of Boosted Multijet Processes for Threshold Resummation
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Andrew Hornig, Christian W. Bauer, and Nicholas Daniel Dunn
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Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Null (mathematics) ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Jet (particle physics) ,Type (model theory) ,01 natural sciences ,symbols.namesake ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph) ,Soft-collinear effective theory ,Factorization ,0103 physical sciences ,Weierstrass factorization theorem ,symbols ,Effective field theory ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Resummation ,010306 general physics ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Explicit applications of factorization theorems for processes at hadron colliders near the hadronic endpoint have largely focused on simple final states with either no jets (e.g., Drell-Yan) or one inclusive jet (e.g., deep inelastic scattering and prompt photon production). Factorization for the former type of process gives rise to a soft function that depends on timelike momenta, whereas the soft function for the latter type depends on null momenta. We derive in soft-collinear effective theory a factorization theorem that allows for an arbitrary number of jets, where the jets are defined with respect to a jet algorithm, together with any number of non-strongly interacting particles. We find the soft function in general depends on the null components of the soft momenta inside the jets and on a timelike component of the soft momentum outside of the jets. This generalizes and interpolates between the soft functions for the cases of no jets and one inclusive jet. We verify consistency of our factorization theorem to order alpha_s for any number of jets. While in this paper we demonstrate consistency only near the hadronic endpoint, we keep the kinematics general enough (in particular allowing for nonzero boost) to allow for an extension to partonic threshold resummation away from the hadronic endpoint., Section added, along with minor revisions and citations
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- 2010
23. Comment on new physics contributions to Gamma_{12}^s
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Nicholas Daniel Dunn and Christian W. Bauer
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Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Physics beyond the Standard Model ,Electroweak interaction ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Asymmetry ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,symbols.namesake ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph) ,symbols ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics) ,media_common - Abstract
A recent measurement by the D0 collaboration finds a like-sign di-muon charge asymmetry in the B system that is roughly 3 sigma larger than the value predicated by the Standard Model. This suggests new physics contributing to B-Bbar mixing. For the current central value of the CP asymmetry, the required size of Gamma_{12}^s is larger than Standard Model estimates of this quantity. In this paper, we will explore the constraints on new physics contributions to Gamma_{12}^s. We show that there are two dimension six operators of Standard Model fields in the electroweak Hamiltonian whose coefficients are not constrained enough to rule out possible contributions from new physics. We argue that a more precise measurement of tau(B_s)/tau(B_d), which is possible with currently available data, could either support or strongly constrain the existence of new physics in Gamma_{12}^s., Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Minor revisions and references added
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- 2010
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24. Medical underwriting gets an electronic makeover
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D Bradford, Johnson, James, Minnich, and Daniel, Dunn
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Automation ,Internet ,Insurance, Health ,Risk Adjustment ,Diffusion of Innovation ,United States - Abstract
Taditional new business underwriting, especially in small group and individual markets, is limited by the amount of information that carriers obtain. The current method of medical underwriting driven by questionnaire responses is labor-intensive and time-consuming for the prospective insured, the broker, and the insurance carrier.
- Published
- 2006
25. Laparoscopic gastric fundoplication for treatment of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). Results from 150 consecutive cases
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John, Graber, Daniel, Dunn, Eric, Johnson, Peter, Alden, Margit, Bretzke, and Jesse, Markman
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Adult ,Male ,Reoperation ,Minnesota ,Fundoplication ,Hospitals, Community ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,Postoperative Complications ,Treatment Outcome ,Gastroesophageal Reflux ,Humans ,Female ,Laparoscopy ,Aged ,Follow-Up Studies ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is common and often not adequately managed with lifestyle changes and medication. Laparoscopic gastric fundoplication has widely been accepted as the mainstay in surgical treatment for patients who fail medical management. We present a review of 150 consecutive patients with symptoms of failed medical management of GERD who were operated on at a community hospital. Patients received either a 360 degrees wrap (Nissen Fundoplication) or a 270 degrees wrap (Toupet) and, if warranted, a repair of a hiatal hernia. Thirty-nine percent of the patients were discharged on the first postop day, and another 47% were discharged on the second postop day. Heartburn and coughing were completely eliminated in 90% of patients and reduced to a level that was well tolerated in all but three patients. Some dysphagia, early satiety, and bloating were typical in the immediate postop period but were generally minor and improved substantially in the first 4 to 8 weeks. Six percent of patients had some complication, some severe and requiring reoperation, but all resolved. Eighty-five percent of the patients stated that the outcomes was either "perfect" or "much better." Laparoscopic gastric fundoplication for treatment of chronic GERD is an excellent option for patients who have medically uncontrolled reflux symptoms.
- Published
- 2003
26. Viscoplastic self-consistent formulation as generalized material model for solid mechanics applications
- Author
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Miroslav Zecevic, Ricardo A. Lebensohn, Michael Rogers, Jacob Moore, Vincent Chiravalle, Evan Lieberman, Daniel Dunning, Galen Shipman, Marko Knezevic, and Nathaniel Morgan
- Subjects
Finite element method ,Solid dynamics ,Crystal plasticity ,Microstructures ,Taylor anvil ,Parallel computing ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
The viscoplastic self-consistent (VPSC) formulation is extended into a generalized material model/code (VPSC-GMM) that can be easily called by different explicit and implicit boundary-value problem solvers, including high-performance parallel computing implementations. To that end, necessary numerical, algorithmic and programming improvements to the baseline VPSC formulation were developed, and are thoroughly presented in this work. The novel VPSC-GMM is coupled with a Lagrangian finite element (FE) hydrodynamics code, and validated by comparison with stand-alone VPSC predictions for one-element simulations of uniaxial compression and tension and simple shear. Finally, VPSC-GMM coupled with the hydrodynamics FE code is applied to simulate Taylor impact of a polycrystalline tantalum Taylor cylinder. Good agreement between the predicted deformed cylinder shape and the experimental measurement is observed. In terms of parallel computing performance, linear scaling of the computational time with the number of threads is observed.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Bronchioloalveolar Cell Carcinoma of the Lung: A Clinicopathological Study
- Author
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Demetre M. Nicoloff, Bruce Hertel, Daniel Dunn, and William I Norwood
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Basal cell ,In patient ,Aged ,Lung ,business.industry ,Significant difference ,Adenocarcinoma, Bronchiolo-Alveolar ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Surgery ,Lung tumor ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Thirty-nine patients with bronchioloalveolar carcinoma were reviewed. The primary lung tumor from 27 patients was examined and divided by histological criteria into three categories. The type 1 pattern was associated with a mean survival of 4.7 years. A mean survival of 3.8 years was attained in patients with type 2. Patients with the type 3 pattern had an average survival of 1.4 years. There was a statistically significant difference in survival when types 1 and 2 together were compared with type 3 (rho less than 0.05). Another statistically significant finding was a mean survival of 5.2 years in patients with negative lymph nodes after surgical resection and a 2.2 year mean survival in patients with positive nodes. The tumor histology of bronchioloalveolar carcinoma should be examined carefully to obtain helpful information in predicting survival. We recommend that these tumors be classified as well-differentiated or poorly differentiated bronchioloalveolar carcinoma.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Digital Media, Creativity, Narrative Structure and Heritage
- Author
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Tara Copplestone and Daniel Dunne
- Subjects
archaeology ,museum ,IT ,museum interactive ,digital archaeology ,narrative ,narrative structure ,media ,heritage ,digital creativity ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Media forms, digital creativity and narrative structure have a reflexive relationship to the narratives they portray. Digital media combined with creativity facilitate a wide range of narrative structures, many of which are digitally specific, beyond the norm of traditional displays. However, many of the heritage outcomes we observe through digital media employ narrative structures that do not make use of the specifically digital affordances. This article seeks to explore what narrative structure is, how digital media afford certain structures and the impact that digital media and narrative structure have on how we can engage with the past. To this end it will leverage two key case-study sectors; two digital exhibits located at Moesgård Museum, and two digital exhibitions created by the authors of this article in partnership with external practitioners. These case studies, in conjunction with wider discussion, will be used to explore how and why narrative structure is currently employed within digitally mediated heritage outcomes and what other forms of engagement might be afforded by further digitally mediated narrative structures. It is hoped that, through this research, a foundation for understanding the interrelation between the heritage sector, digital creativity,interactive technology and narrative studies can be established.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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