Background: Epidemiological studies of disease exposure risk are frequently based on observational, cross-sectional data, and use statistical approaches as crucial tools for formalising causal processes and making predictions of exposure risks. However, an acknowledged limitation of traditional models is that the inferred relationships are correlational, cannot easily distinguish direct from...
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship
between the self-body cathexis of obese women and their attitudes
toward physical activity. Fifty inventories were used for the
research in this project. The volunteer subjects' ages ranged from
18 to 45 with a mean age of 28.9 years. The...
Deaf students in mainstream colleges are withdrawing at an alarming rate. Approximately 70% of the 123,000 deaf students enrolled in 2,300 colleges across the United States will not persist until graduation. This qualitative study examined what factors in the academic and social environment are linked to deaf college students' perceptions...
This study tested multiple hydrologic mechanisms to explain snowpack dynamics in extreme
rain-on-snow floods, which occur widely in the temperate and polar regions. We examined 26, 10 day
large storm events over the period 1992–2012 in the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest in western Oregon,
using statistical analyses (regression, ANOVA, and...
Full Text:
, CEOAS, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA
JuliaA. Jones, Geography, CEOAS, Oregon State
This study tested multiple hydrologic mechanisms to explain snowpack dynamics in extreme
rain-on-snow floods, which occur widely in the temperate and polar regions. We examined 26, 10 day
large storm events over the period 1992–2012 in the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest in western Oregon,
using statistical analyses (regression, ANOVA, and...
Full Text:
, western Cascades, Oregon
Keith Jennings1 and JuliaA. Jones1
1Geography, CEOAS, Oregon State University
This study tested multiple hydrologic mechanisms to explain snowpack dynamics in extreme rain-on-snow floods, which occur widely in the temperate and polar regions. We examined 26, 10 day large storm events over the period 1992–2012 in the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest in western Oregon, using statistical analyses (regression, ANOVA, and...
Industrial emissions of SO₂ and NOₓ, resulting in the formation and deposition of sulfuric and nitric acids, affect the health of both terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Since the mid-late 20th century, legislation to control acid rain precursors in both Europe and the US has led to significant declines in both...
This study examined daily streamflow response over up to four decades in northwest conifer forest and eastern deciduous forest sites in the United States. We used novel methods to analyze daily observations of climate and streamflow spanning more than 900 basin years of record at 14 treated/control basin pairs where...
Large river basins integrate the signal of water from atmospheres to oceans. Climate change is widely expected to alter streamflow and potentially disrupt water management systems. We tested the ecological resilience -- capacity of headwater ecosystems to sustain streamflow under climate change – and the engineering resilience – capacity of...
This study investigated how roads interact with hillslope flow in a steep, forested landscape dominated by subsurface flow and how road interactions with hillslope flow paths influence hydrologic response during storms in a second-order catchment. Runoff was measured continuously from 12 subcatchments draining to road segments and covering 14% of...