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Institution

Mississippi State University

EducationStarkville, Mississippi, United States
About: Mississippi State University is a education organization based out in Starkville, Mississippi, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Catfish. The organization has 14115 authors who have published 28594 publications receiving 700030 citations. The organization is also known as: The Mississippi State University of Agriculture and Applied Science & Mississippi State University of Agriculture and Applied Science.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the use of action spectra in calculating biologically effective ultraviolet radiation fluence is reviewed, and a new method is presented for optimum estimation of an action spectrum from data obtained in such experiments.
Abstract: The use of action spectra in calculating biologically effective ultraviolet radiation fluence is reviewed. In predicting biological damage due to ozone depletion, the most reliable action spectra are those derived from experiments utilizing polychromatic irradiation filtered by sharp cut-off UV filters. A new method is presented for optimum estimation of an action spectrum from data obtained in such experiments. Details of the mathematical procedures are discussed, and examples of their use on data from both plant and animal objects are given.

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To remove surface-reflected light in field measurements of remote sensing reflectance, a spectral optimization approach was applied, with results compared with those from remote-sensing models and from direct measurements suggesting that reasonable results for remote sensingreflectance of clear blue water to turbid brown water are obtainable from above-surface measurements, even under conditions of high waves.
Abstract: Using hyperspectral measurements made in the field, we show that the effective sea-surface reflectance ρ (defined as the ratio of the surface-reflected radiance at the specular direction corresponding to the downwelling sky radiance from one direction) varies not only for different measurement scans, but also can differ by a factor of 8 between 400 nm and 800 nm for the same scan. This means that the derived water-leaving radiance (or remote-sensing reflectance) can be highly inaccurate if a spectrally constant ρ value is applied (although errors can be reduced by carefully filtering measured raw data). To remove surface-reflected light in field measurements of remote sensing reflectance, a spectral optimization approach was applied, with results compared with those from remote-sensing models and from direct measurements. The agreement from different determinations suggests that reasonable results for remote sensing reflectance of clear blue water to turbid brown water are obtainable from above-surface measurements, even under conditions of high waves.

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Interestingly, a simple unsupervised change detection method provided similar accuracy as supervised approaches, and a digital elevation model-based predictive method yielded a comparable projected change detection map without using post-event data.
Abstract: The 2009-2010 Data Fusion Contest organized by the Data Fusion Technical Committee of the IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Society was focused on the detection of flooded areas using multi-temporal and multi-modal images. Both high spatial resolution optical and synthetic aperture radar data were provided. The goal was not only to identify the best algorithms (in terms of accuracy), but also to investigate the further improvement derived from decision fusion. This paper presents the four awarded algorithms and the conclusions of the contest, investigating both supervised and unsupervised methods and the use of multi-modal data for flood detection. Interestingly, a simple unsupervised change detection method provided similar accuracy as supervised approaches, and a digital elevation model-based predictive method yielded a comparable projected change detection map without using post-event data.

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Before lymphocyte infiltration, many small lymphocytes could be seen in the wall of the postcapillaries indicating their origin as blood borne, and many of the high endothelial cells which appeared subsequent to the injection of PHA were revealed to be in S phase.

161 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The models clearly suggest that resistance management programs using untreated refuges should not over-emphasize random mating at the cost of making the habitat too fine-grained, and differences between the two models may be due to the population regulation incorporated in the spatially explicit model.
Abstract: The interaction of population dynamics and movement among two habitat types (toxic transgenic fields and nontoxic refuge fields) on the evolution of insecticide resistance was examined in two different simulation models. The two models were developed to test the hypothesis that increasing habitat grain from fine-grained to coarse-grained, and the resultant increase in nonrandom mating, would increase the rate of local adaptation, here the evolution of resistance. The first model, a complex, stochastic spatially explicit model, altered habitat grain by varying adult dispersal rates between habitat patches. In contrast to the expectation that increasing patch isolation and increasing the coarseness of the habitats would increase the rate of resistance evolution, intermediate levels of dispersal actually delayed resistance by as much as fivefold over the range of dispersal levels observed. Source-sink dynamics related to ovipositional patterns and the related population dynamics appear to explain the results. A simple deterministic model was developed to abstract out the separate impacts of mating and ovipositional behaviors. This model showed qualitatively the same results, although under similar assumptions it predicted much longer delays in resistance evolution. In this model, nonrandom mating alone always increased the rate at which insects adapted to transgenic crops, but nonrandom mating in combination with nonrandom oviposition could significantly delay resistance evolution. Differences between the two models may be due to the population regulation incorporated in the spatially explicit model. The models clearly suggest that resistance management programs using untreated refuges should not over-emphasize random mating at the cost of making the habitat too fine-grained.

161 citations


Authors

Showing all 14277 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Naomi J. Halas14043582040
Bin Liu138218187085
Shuai Liu129109580823
Vijay P. Singh106169955831
Liangpei Zhang9783935163
K. L. Dooley9532063579
Feng Chen95213853881
Marco Cavaglia9337260157
Tuan Vo-Dinh8669824690
Nicholas H. Barton8426732707
S. Kandhasamy8123550363
Michael S. Sacks8038620510
Dinesh Mohan7928335775
James Mallet7820921349
George D. Kuh7724830346
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202347
2022247
20211,725
20201,620
20191,465
20181,467