scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

University of Arizona

EducationTucson, Arizona, United States
About: University of Arizona is a education organization based out in Tucson, Arizona, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 63805 authors who have published 155998 publications receiving 6854915 citations. The organization is also known as: UA & U of A.
Topics: Population, Galaxy, Stars, Redshift, Star formation


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify ten contrasting perspectives that shape the vulnerability debate but have not been discussed collectively and present a set of global vulnerability drivers that are known with high confidence: (1) droughts eventually occur everywhere; (2) warming produces hotter Droughts; (3) atmospheric moisture demand increases nonlinearly with temperature during drought; (4) mortality can occur faster in hotter Drought, consistent with fundamental physiology; (5) shorter Drought can become lethal under warming, increasing the frequency of lethal Drought; and (6) mortality happens rapidly
Abstract: Patterns, mechanisms, projections, and consequences of tree mortality and associated broad-scale forest die-off due to drought accompanied by warmer temperatures—“hotter drought”, an emerging characteristic of the Anthropocene—are the focus of rapidly expanding literature. Despite recent observational, experimental, and modeling studies suggesting increased vulnerability of trees to hotter drought and associated pests and pathogens, substantial debate remains among research, management and policy-making communities regarding future tree mortality risks. We summarize key mortality-relevant findings, differentiating between those implying lesser versus greater levels of vulnerability. Evidence suggesting lesser vulnerability includes forest benefits of elevated [CO2] and increased water-use efficiency; observed and modeled increases in forest growth and canopy greening; widespread increases in woody-plant biomass, density, and extent; compensatory physiological, morphological, and genetic mechanisms; dampening ecological feedbacks; and potential mitigation by forest management. In contrast, recent studies document more rapid mortality under hotter drought due to negative tree physiological responses and accelerated biotic attacks. Additional evidence suggesting greater vulnerability includes rising background mortality rates; projected increases in drought frequency, intensity, and duration; limitations of vegetation models such as inadequately represented mortality processes; warming feedbacks from die-off; and wildfire synergies. Grouping these findings we identify ten contrasting perspectives that shape the vulnerability debate but have not been discussed collectively. We also present a set of global vulnerability drivers that are known with high confidence: (1) droughts eventually occur everywhere; (2) warming produces hotter droughts; (3) atmospheric moisture demand increases nonlinearly with temperature during drought; (4) mortality can occur faster in hotter drought, consistent with fundamental physiology; (5) shorter droughts occur more frequently than longer droughts and can become lethal under warming, increasing the frequency of lethal drought nonlinearly; and (6) mortality happens rapidly relative to growth intervals needed for forest recovery. These high-confidence drivers, in concert with research supporting greater vulnerability perspectives, support an overall viewpoint of greater forest vulnerability globally. We surmise that mortality vulnerability is being discounted in part due to difficulties in predicting threshold responses to extreme climate events. Given the profound ecological and societal implications of underestimating global vulnerability to hotter drought, we highlight urgent challenges for research, management, and policy-making communities.

1,786 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive set of recommendations that can be used to give researchers in MIS and the behavioral sciences a framework for developing valid measures is presented. But the scale development and validation of constructs is still a challenging activity.
Abstract: Despite the fact that validating the measures of constructs is critical to building cumulative knowledge in MIS and the behavioral sciences, the process of scale development and validation continues to be a challenging activity Undoubtedly, part of the problem is that many of the scale development procedures advocated in the literature are limited by the fact that they (1) fail to adequately discuss how to develop appropriate conceptual definitions of the focal construct, (2) often fail to properly specify the measurement model that relates the latent construct to its indicators, and (3) underutilize techniques that provide evidence that the set of items used to represent the focal construct actually measures what it purports to measure Therefore, the purpose of the present paper is to integrate new and existing techniques into a comprehensive set of recommendations that can be used to give researchers in MIS and the behavioral sciences a framework for developing valid measures First, we briefly elaborate upon some of the limitations of current scale development practices Following this, we discuss each of the steps in the scale development process while paying particular attention to the differences that are required when one is attempting to develop scales for constructs with formative indicators as opposed to constructs with reflective indicators Finally, we discuss several things that should be done after the initial development of a scale to examine its generalizability and to enhance its usefulness

1,783 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Jan 1997-Nature
TL;DR: The authors' data show that melanocortinergic neurons exert a tonic inhibition of feeding behaviour, and chronic disruption of this inhibitory signal is a likely explanation of the agouti obesity syndrome.
Abstract: DOMINANT alleles at the agouti locus (A) cause an obesity syndrome in the mouse, as a consequence of ectopic expression of the agouti peptide1–6. This peptide, normally only found in the skin, is a high-affinity antagonist of the melanocyte-stimulating hormone receptor (MC1-R)7, thus explaining the inhibitory effect of agouti on eumelanin pigment synthesis. The agouti peptide is also an antagonist of the hypothalamic melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4-R)7–9. To test the hypothesis that agouti causes obesity by antagonism of hypothalamic melanocortin receptors7, we identified cyclic melanocortin analogues10 that are potent agonists or antagonists of the neural MC3 (refs 11, 12) and MC4 receptors. Intracerebroventricular administration of the agonist, MTII, inhibited feeding in four models of hyperphagia: fasted C57BL/6J, ob/ob, and AY mice, and mice injected with neuropeptide Y. Co-administration of the specific melanocortin antagonist and agouti-mimetic SHU9119 completely blocked this inhibition. Furthermore, administration of SHU9119 significantly enhanced nocturnal feeding, or feeding stimulated by a prior fast. Our data show that melanocortinergic neurons exert a tonic inhibition of feeding behaviour. Chronic disruption of this inhibitory signal is a likely explanation of the agouti obesity syndrome.

1,781 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
S. Twomey1
TL;DR: In this paper, the albedo of a cloud is proportional to optical thickness for thin clouds, but changes more slowly with increasing thickness as the number of cloud nuclei is increased.

1,776 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Inkjet printing has been used as a free-form fabrication method for building three-dimensional parts and is being explored as a way of printing electrical and optical devices, especially where these involve organic components.
Abstract: Inkjet printing is familiar as a method of printing text and images onto porous surfaces. In the last few years it has been used as a free-form fabrication method for building three-dimensional parts and is being explored as a way of printing electrical and optical devices, especially where these involve organic components. Inkjet printers are also being used to produce arrays of proteins and nucleic acids. The need for a versatile inkjet technology for free-forming materials and for multilayer devices raises a number of materials problems that do not apply to conventional printing of images. Higher resolutions will be needed if organic transistors are to be printed. Also, it must be possible to print pinhole-free layers to avoid shorting of devices. Multiple layers must be printed such that they mix and react to form a single material or such that they form discrete unmixed layers. Printing on dense rather than porous substrates will be the norm. This article reviews the range of materials that has been ...

1,774 citations


Authors

Showing all 64388 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Simon D. M. White189795231645
Julie E. Buring186950132967
David H. Weinberg183700171424
Richard Peto183683231434
Xiaohui Fan183878168522
Dennis S. Charney179802122408
Daniel J. Eisenstein179672151720
David Haussler172488224960
Carlos S. Frenk165799140345
Jian-Kang Zhu161550105551
Tobin J. Marks1591621111604
Todd Adams1541866143110
Jane A. Cauley15191499933
Wei Zheng1511929120209
Daniel L. Schacter14959290148
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
University of California, San Diego
204.5K papers, 12.3M citations

91% related

Cornell University
235.5K papers, 12.2M citations

90% related

University of Washington
305.5K papers, 17.7M citations

90% related

University of Michigan
342.3K papers, 17.6M citations

90% related

Harvard University
530.3K papers, 38.1M citations

90% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023205
2022994
20217,006
20207,325
20196,716
20186,375