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Institution

University of Winnipeg

EducationWinnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
About: University of Winnipeg is a education organization based out in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 3235 authors who have published 6413 publications receiving 150564 citations. The organization is also known as: U of W.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of exposed trout tissues indicated that isomer discrimination may occur at the level of elimination or uptake and elimination processes in the kidney or gill, respectively, which may explain the relative deficiency of branched PFOS isomers in some aquatic species in the field.
Abstract: Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS; C(8)F(17)SO(3) (-)) bioaccumulation and toxicity have been demonstrated in both aquatic and terrestrial organisms. The majority of investigations have examined total PFOS concentrations in wildlife and in toxicity testing, but isomer-specific monitoring studies are less common, and no laboratory-based study of PFOS isomer accumulation in fish has been reported. The present study examined accumulation and maternal transfer of PFOS isomers in zebrafish and tissue-specific accumulation of PFOS isomers in trout parr. A median lethal dose (LC50) of 22.2 and 2.5 mg/L was calculated for adult zebrafish and trout parr, respectively. A two-week PFOS exposure resulted in tissue-specific PFOS accumulation in trout, with maximum concentrations identified in the liver tissue (>50 microg/g). Prior exposure to PFOS as alevin did not affect the accumulation of PFOS in tissues later in life. In both species, accumulation of branched PFOS isomers generally occurred to a lesser extent than linear PFOS, which may explain the relative deficiency of branched PFOS isomers in some aquatic species in the field. Analysis of exposed trout tissues indicated that isomer discrimination may occur at the level of elimination or uptake and elimination processes in the kidney or gill, respectively. When zebrafish underwent a reproductive cycle in the presence of PFOS, approximately 10% (wt) of the adult PFOS body burden was transferred to the developing embryos, resulting in a higher total PFOS concentration in eggs (116 +/- 13.3 microg/g) than in the parent fish (72.1 +/- 7.6 microg/g). The isomer profile in eggs was not significantly different from that of adults, suggesting that the maternal transfer of branched and linear PFOS isomers in fish is largely nonisomer specific.

97 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 2017-Catena
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of different land-uses (paddy, vegetable and un-cultivated) on the variability of soil properties at the catenary level was analyzed by computing cross-variograms and subsequent fitting of theoretical model.
Abstract: Detailed digital soil maps showing the spatial heterogeneity of soil properties consistent with the landscape are required for site-specific management of plant nutrients, land use planning and process-based environmental modeling. We characterized the short-scale spatial heterogeneity of soil properties in an Alfisol catena in a tropical landscape of Sri Lanka. The impact of different land-uses (paddy, vegetable and un-cultivated) was examined to assess the impact of anthropogenic activities on the variability of soil properties at the catenary level. Conditioned Latin hypercube sampling was used to collect 58 geo-referenced topsoil samples (0–30 cm) from the study area. Soil samples were analyzed for pH, electrical conductivity (EC), organic carbon (OC), cation exchange capacity (CEC) and texture. The spatial correlation between soil properties was analyzed by computing cross-variograms and subsequent fitting of theoretical model. Spatial distribution maps were developed using ordinary kriging. The range of soil properties, pH: 4.3–7.9; EC: 0.01–0.18 dS m− 1; OC: 0.1–1.37%; CEC: 0.44–11.51 cmol (+) kg− 1; clay: 1.5–25% and sand: 59.1–84.4% and their coefficient of variations indicated a large variability in the study area. Electrical conductivity and pH showed a strong spatial correlation which was reflected by the cross-variogram close to the hull of the perfect correlation. Moreover, cross-variograms calculated for EC and Clay, CEC and OC, CEC and clay and CEC and pH indicated weak positive spatial correlation between these properties. Relative nugget effect (RNE) calculated from variograms showed strongly structured spatial variability for pH, EC and sand content (RNE < 25%) while CEC, organic carbon and clay content showed moderately structured spatial variability (25% < RNE < 75%). Spatial dependencies for examined soil properties ranged from 48 to 984 m. The mixed effects model fitting followed by Tukey's post-hoc test showed significant effect of land use on the spatial variability of EC. Our study revealed a structured variability of topsoil properties in the selected tropical Alfisol catena. Except for EC, observed variability was not modified by the land uses. Investigated soil properties showed distinct spatial structures at different scales and magnitudes of strength. Our results will be useful for digital soil mapping, site specific management of soil properties, developing appropriate land use plans and quantifying anthropogenic impacts on the soil system.

97 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The proposed method permits recovery of a wide class of nonlinearities which need not be invertible and is computationally very efficient since it does not require a numerical procedure to calculate the inverse of the estimate.
Abstract: In this paper, a new method for the identification of the Wiener nonlinear system is proposed. The system, being a cascade connection of a linear dynamic subsystem and a nonlinear memoryless element, is identified by a two-step semiparametric approach. The impulse response function of the linear part is identified via the nonlinear least-squares approach with the system nonlinearity estimated by a pilot nonparametric kernel regression estimate. The obtained estimate of the linear part is then used to form a nonparametric kernel estimate of the nonlinear element of the Wiener system. The proposed method permits recovery of a wide class of nonlinearities which need not be invertible. As a result, the proposed algorithm is computationally very efficient since it does not require a numerical procedure to calculate the inverse of the estimate. Furthermore, our approach allows non-Gaussian input signals and the presence of additive measurement noise. However, only linear systems with a finite memory are admissible. The conditions for the convergence of the proposed estimates are given. Computer simulations are included to verify the basic theory

97 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Normal controls and subjects with IBD and IBS share similar loci of activations to visceral sensations of stool and pain, as do profiles of patterned response across six of the regions of interest for the control and IBD groups.

97 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a two dimensional FDTD for the dispersion analysis of guided wave structures, a traditionally three dimensional task, is proposed, and the results for a boxed microstrip line on a sapphire substrate are compared with available results.
Abstract: A new compact two dimensional FDTD for the dispersion analysis of guided wave structures, a traditionally three dimensional task, is proposed. To prove the validity of this method, the results for a boxed microstrip line on a sapphire substrate are presented and compared with available results. >

97 citations


Authors

Showing all 3279 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Witold Pedrycz101176658203
Ian Manners9879942573
Michael J. Zaworotko9751944441
Dusit Niyato9697339234
Ekram Hossain9561031736
Henry A. Giroux9051636191
Yves Bergeron8965627494
Fikret Berkes8827149585
David W. Schindler8521739792
Paul L. Hewitt7723619340
Andrew Kusiak7739220737
Philip J. White7531426523
Jonathan W. Martin7329618275
Alan M. Rugman6931121088
Mary E. Power6814720749
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202329
202264
2021277
2020251
2019252
2018264