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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
491

Reading comprehension and lexical knowledge: a search for the lexical coverage and vocabulary size thresholds inreading

陳君朋, Chan, Kwan-pang, Kenneth. January 1997 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Education
492

Survival of enteric pathogens on the surface of fresh produce and intake of heterotrophic bacteria in the United States

Stine, William S. January 2004 (has links)
Disease due to the consumption of food contaminated with enteric microorganisms has been well established. The first study described in this dissertation was designed to determine the effect of relative humidity on the pre-harvest survival of enteric pathogens on the surfaces of fresh produce. Additionally, Clostridium perfringens was evaluated as an indicator of fecal contamination on fresh produce. Pathogenic and surrogate microorganisms, including Escherichia coli O157:H7, Escherichia coli ATCC 25922, Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica, Shigella sonnei, C. perfringens, coliphage PRD1, feline calicivirus (FCV), and hepatitis A virus (HAV), were inoculated onto the surfaces of cantaloupe, iceberg lettuce, and bell peppers. Experiments were conducted in a controlled environment chamber. Survival of microorganisms on the produce surfaces was not uniformly affected by relative humidity. However, due to the survival of all microorganisms at least 14 days in at least one experiment, measures should be taken to lessen the exposure of produce to fecal contamination as harvest time approaches. C. perfringens survived longer than all other bacteria and feline calicivirus in all experiments, with the exception of E. coli O157:H7 and S. enterica subsp. enterica on lettuce. This trend suggests that C. perfringens may be an acceptable indicator of bacterial contamination and survival in various environments and on different types of crops. The second study was conducted to determine the intake of heterotrophic bacteria by the average person in the United States from food and water. A literature review was conducted to determine the concentration of heterotrophic plate count (HPC) bacteria in foods and water from the household tap. Food items from grocery stores and fast food restaurants in Tucson, AZ were also evaluated for HPC bacteria. It was determined that in the United States, 0.048 to 4.5% of the typical consumer's HPC bacteria intake is derived from water consumed from the household tap. Therefore, HPC bacteria in tap water do not represent a significant source of the total HPC bacteria consumed in the average diet of individuals in the United States.
493

Simulation of pecan processing for evaluation of process alternatives

Lakhani, Muhammad Bashir, 1960- January 1997 (has links)
A number of alternatives were considered to keep pecan processing economically competitive and sustainable. The industry needed a low risk evaluation technique for testing new high capital plant configurations. A simulation model was developed using the AweSimTM simulation system to form the model structure and framework. The Visual SLAMTM and Visual BASIC programming languages were used to build a network model that provided a mathematical-logical representation of the system. The model mathematically expresses all sub-processes including moisture conditioning, pasteurizing, cracking, shelling, sizing, manual and electronic sorting, resizing, resorting, and packaging. The pecan process simulation model consists of 24 RESOURCES, 353 ACTIVITIES, 48 AWAIT/QUEUE and FREE nodes, 83 BATCH and UNBATCH nodes, 79 ASSIGN nodes, 20 COLCT nodes, 39 GOON nodes, 10 other miscellaneous nodes and a graphic user interface (GUI). The model provides information on equipment utilization, delays, queues and bottlenecks for each process in the system. It also predicts total pecan cracked and total pecan packed, including details of production for each size class i.e. halves; large; medium; small; midget; fine; granule; and oil stock. The model was validated quantitatively by comparing output with actual production figures and qualitatively by plant management. Five options of process alternatives were simulated using the pecan simulation model. The first alternative (including 3 options) was a management proposed configuration for dual electronic sorting of pecan halves to reduce the shell pieces and ensure a lighter color product. Two options were found not viable as they required major capital investments and plant reconfiguration. The third option for dual sorting was found to be a viable process alternative with minor labor additions.
494

Detection of QTLs in angus beef cattle on chromosomes 2 and 11 affecting growth and carcass traits

Ben Abdallah, M'heni, 1963- January 1999 (has links)
Mapping quantitative trait loci (QTL) using genetic markers is the first step in implementing marker assisted selection programs. Microsatellite loci and polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphisms (PCR-RFLP) were used as genetic markers for QTL affecting carcass traits: hot carcass weight (HCW), 12th rib fat thickness (FT), kidney, pelvic and heart fat (KPH) percentage, marbling score (MB), quality grade (QG), ribye area (REA) and yield grade (YG) and growth traits: weaning weight (WW) and yearling weight (YW). Phenotypic data were collected on seven Angus half-sib family groups with an average of 28 progeny per sire. DNA extracted from ear tissue samples was used evaluate nine microsatellites covering a 40 centimorgan (cM) region on chromosome 2, and thirteen microsatellite markers and one PCR-RFLP spanning 38 cM on chromosome 11. Each sire was heterozygous for an average of 4 markers for each chromosome. Data were analyzed by family with the interval-mapping program, ANIMAP. The results revealed that the region on chromosome 2 flanked by the microsatellite loci BM2808 and RM041 were strongly associated with KPH percentage (total LOD = 5.81) with an effect of about 1.5 phenotypic standard deviation in one family. Markers BMS2872 (46 cM), BMS2024 (55 cM), and BMS1126 (56.3 cM) on chromosome 2 tend to be associated with REA, HCW, and YW (total LOD of 2.8, 3.75 and 2.5). Regions nearby BMS989 (85.4 cM), BMS2208 (113.2 cM), and HEL 13 (114.5 cM) on chromosome 11 indicate linkage associated with KPH, FT and MB respectively (total LODs of 3.56, 3.1, and 2.54). All these marker-linked QTLs had an estimated effect more than .75 phenotypic standard deviation. These findings show that there are several chromosome regions associated with carcass traits in beef and demonstrate the power of genetic linkage analysis to detect these regions even in small families.
495

Fingerprinting biological materials

Liu, Hui Qing, 1957- January 1992 (has links)
A study for non-destructive measurement and analysis of agricultural products was undertaken. Some enhancements were made to a spectrophotometer, DK-2A to meet the requirements of low uniform error band when using the factor analysis method. The instrument was modified by adding an integrating sphere, optical transducer, and electronic interface linked to a computer. The instrument was calibrated using targets traceable to NITS standards of BaSO₄ with mixtures of Carbon Black. This gave a range of known reflectance and provided consistent and reproducible data every 5 nm wavelengths between 350 nm and 800 nm. The spectral wavelength bands of the different biological materials were studied with target factor analysis. Target factors were applied in biological materials to characterize the important spectral properties. Pigment of foods, chlorophyll, carotenoid and myoglobin were separated from the spectral response of oranges, apples and meat. Their respective spectral signatures were determined.
496

Exergy analysis of a pilot milk processing system

Fang, Zigang, 1958- January 1991 (has links)
Exergy analysis is applied in the thesis research to evaluate the energy usage of a pilot scale milk processing system. Using water as made-up fluid milk, the performance of separate components of the system was examined during steady state operation using both exergy and energy principles. The irreversibility distribution among these components was obtained to show the impact of energy degradation in each component on the overall system thermal performance. The difference between energy and exergy methods is discussed through comparisons of First and Second Law efficiencies to demonstrate the importance of exergy analysis. A mathematical programming model was constructed in terms of the exergy concept and solved numerically in an attempt to find a set of optimal operating state variables (temperatures and flow rates) under which irreversibility of the entire system is theoretically minimized. Finally, suggestions for operational management of the system and its components are presented which could increase the efficiency of energy usage in the system, thus reducing energy costs.
497

Toxic and mutagenic potentials of herbal teas

Manteiga, Raquel, 1963- January 1991 (has links)
Three commercially available herbal tea preparations (Weightless, Female Toner, and PMS) and one single ingredient herbal preparation, Chaparral (Larrea tridentata), were sequentially extracted with solvents of decreasing polarity (water, methanol and chloroform) and the crude extracts obtained screened for toxic/mutagenic potentials using the brine shrimp (Artemia sp.), mouse acute toxicity, Salmonella/microsomal mutagenicity, and chicken embryo bioassays. The crude aqueous extract from Weightless Tea was very toxic to brine shrimp larvae and had a cathartic action in mice at the highest concentration tested. While Weightless tea crude water extract was not mutagenic to Salmonella typhimurium TA100 at the concentrations tested, three chromatographic isolates obtained from a silica Gel 60 column were mutagenic to the test organism. Two of these isolates were detoxified after inclusion of a microsomal activation system. The teratogenic potentials of these isolates are unknown as the results obtained from the chicken embryo bioassay were not conclusive.
498

Nutraceutical properties of jiaogulan and HPLC fingerprinting for differentiation and quality control

Xie, Zhuohong 24 August 2013 (has links)
<p> To promote its use in nutraceutical and functional food ingredients, jiaogulan (<i>Gynostemma pentaphyllium</i>) of different sources, genotypes and parts of the plant were investigated for their chemical profiles and biological properties. The first part of this research studied five commercial jiaogulan for their phytochemical profiles, and antioxidant, anti-proliferative and anti-inflammatory effects. It was found that individual jiaogulan samples significantly differed in their chemical and biological properties. The second part of this research further investigated phytochemical compositions and biological activities in different genotypes and parts of jiaogulan. The results indicated that different genotypes or plant parts of jiaogulan may have different biological activities. The results led to the third study to develop chromatographic fingerprinting techniques for differentiating genotypes and plant parts of jiaogulan using LC/MS. LC-MS fingerprints combined with PCA were able to differentiate diploid and tetraploid, and the leaf and whole botanical jiaogulan. The results from this research suggest the potential use of selected jiaogulan to improve human health while enhancing food agriculture economy, and indicate that HPLC fingerprinting may be a useful controlling the quality of jiaogulan.</p>
499

A study of the fluid mechanics and the cultivation of mammalian cells in a magnetically stabilized fluidized bed bioreactor

Mathew, John January 1995 (has links)
The culture of anchorage dependent mammalian cells on microcarrier offers an attractive avenue for achieving high productivity of therapeutic and diagnostic proteins in bioreactors. Reducing production costs require high cell density that is accompanied by mass transfer limitations of nutrients and oxygen. High agitations required to overcome these limitations can cause considerable cell damage. In this work a novel magnetically stabilized fluidized bed (MSFB) bioreactor is developed to culture mammalian cells on microcarriers. A fluid mechanical study of the MSFB, using a laser light transmission technique showed that the local particle motion is reduced by increasing the applied magnetic field strength. This low turbulent behavior of particles in a MSFB allows for potential cultivation of cells in a three dimensional manner. Two types of magnetically susceptible microcarriers are developed for culturing cells in a MSFB. The performance of the MSFB and an ordinary fluidized bed is compared in terms of cell density, growth rate and death rate of baby hamster kidney (BHK-21) cells. Very high cell densities ($5\times10\sp7$ cells/ml) are obtained in both the modes of operation. Results indicate that cells grow at a faster rate in a MSFB as compared to an ordinary fluidized bed. To delineate the effects of flow and magnetic field on cell proliferation, BHK cells were cultured on nonmagnetically susceptible microcarriers in the presence and absence of a 80 gauss DC magnetic field. Five pairs of experiments showed that a uniform static magnetic field increased the growth of BHK-21 cells in a fluidized bed environment. The reduced local motion of particles and the high cell densities that can be attained in a MSFB makes it suitable as a 3-D cell culture system. Preliminary experiments showed the formation of 3-D cell aggregates when hepatoma cells were cultured to high cell densities in the MSFB. A linear stability analysis of the equations of motion describing a fluidized bed predicted that the stability of the state of uniform fluidization could be enhanced by applying a nonuniform magnetic field.
500

Skins| Exploring the transformational aspects of the arts as process and product through food and gardening in a rural Arizona community

Wallace Cooper, Eve Morgana 30 January 2014 (has links)
<p> <i>Skins</i> is a project that evaluated the impact of art participation on choices regarding food and gardening in a rural Arizona community. The study was structured by an emergent methodological design, making use of survey, interview, and observation in an effort to capture the full richness of participant experience. The purpose of the project was to meet community wide health goals and measure if and how the arts can create conversation that will result in positive social change. Participants were invited to join open public groups and were also generated from existing groups and organizations in the town of Ajo, AZ. As an artist and former teacher, I chose to implement this project in Ajo partly because of its unique geography, history, and culture, and mainly because of my committed role in the community. In addition to proving that the arts can indeed lead to social change, I also implemented the <i>Skins</i> project as a way to practice my community based arts facilitation and leadership skills and put theory to practice. The results of this project support current theories and trends in the community development field including efforts such as building social capital and utilizing asset based strategies. The project exemplified arts education at work in the community and made a strong case for the positive outcomes of involving youth in the arts process. Planning and activities exhibited the value of one of the Community Based Arts field's main tenants of allowing process to dictate product. Statistics and quantitative data showed that by participating in arts activities on the topic of food and gardening, Ajo community members found a desire to change their eating and nutrition habits and manifested this desire in numerous ways. By impacting personal decision making and provoking a shift in thought patterns and in behavior this project contributed to wider community change. This study allowed for many directions for further research and serves as a contribution to the evolving Community Based Arts field.</p>

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