Academic literature on the topic 'Record producer'

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Journal articles on the topic "Record producer"

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Weaver, Andrew R., and April D. Shaeffer. "362 Summary of North Carolina Small Ruminant Producer Performance Record Collection Questionnaire." Journal of Animal Science 99, Supplement_3 (2021): 199. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jas/skab235.360.

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Abstract Growing interest and demand for small ruminant production in the Southeastern United States has garnered the need for improved productivity and greater Extension education programs. To better understand North Carolina small ruminant producer performance record collection, a needs assessment questionnaire was conducted. An online questionnaire was sent to sheep and goat producers via Extension email lists and state producer organizations. Producers were given nine weeks to respond to the survey and provided three email reminders. All responses were anonymous. The survey reached approximately 1200 producers. Of those, 131 agreed to the consent form, indicated they owned sheep and/or goats, and completed subsequent questions. A portion of respondents did not answer all questions. Of the 76 goat producers, 75.0% had 25 or less mature breeding females. Of the 75 sheep producers, 58.7% had 25 or less mature breeding females. Twenty producers had both sheep and goats. The portion of producers recording birth (62.6%) and rear (42.7%) type data on their entire flock was numerically greater than those recording birth (29.0%) and weaning (16.8%) weights on their entire flock. In terms of FAMACHA scores, 19.8% record data on their entire flock compared to 41.2% that record some data and 22.1% with no records. 45.8% of producers indicated no fecal egg count (FEC) records with 27.5% recording some FEC data. In terms of genetic selection tools, 41.2% of producers had not heard of estimated breeding values (EBVs) compared to 39.7% that indicated a basic understanding and 3.8% that use EBVs. This aligns with the 44.3% of producers that have not heard of the National Sheep Improvement Program and 38.2% that have a basic understanding. These data indicate the need for greater collection of performance records and participation in genetic evaluation programs among small ruminant producers in North Carolina.
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Narvaez, Peter. "A Tribute: Kenneth S. Goldstein, Record Producer." Journal of American Folklore 109, no. 434 (1996): 450. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/541187.

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Muikku, Jari. "On the role and tasks of a record producer." Popular Music and Society 14, no. 1 (1990): 25–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03007769008591381.

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Wells, Robert S. "70 Integrity Beef Alliance I. Program Overview." Journal of Animal Science 97, Supplement_1 (2019): 4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jas/skz053.007.

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Abstract Noble Research Institute initiated a cow/calf best management practices (BMP) and marketing program in 2000. Over time, the Integrity Beef Alliance program has matured into a producer-run stand-alone Alliance that has received much favorable attention in the industry. The objectives of the program are: 1.) implement BMP’s, 2.) increase selling weights of calves, 3.) increase calf quality and uniformity, 4.) improve marketing efficiencies, 5.) utilize producer records for improvement, and 6.) educate producers to use of BMP’s. This program has developed stringent protocols that must be adhered to throughout the calf production phase. Protocols and requirements center on cow and bull genetics, herd health, preconditioning criteria, and record keeping. Producers who complete all required documentation and pay an annual membership fee are allowed to sell their calves through a value added calf sale, receive a letter of certification to provide to potential direct market buyers, or market through Superior Livestock Video utilizing the Integrity Beef Alliance logo. Through the utilization of financial and production records, members are able to benchmark themselves against other similar operations in the program and against their own performance over time to determine areas of needed improvement and areas of efficiency. Compared with the 2008 NAHMS data, producers have averaged a 28.6 kg increased weaning weight. Many producers have indicated a higher increase in weaning weight compared to their previous protocols. The program has grown from 11 producers in 2005 to 51 members in 2018.
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Westacott, Sophie, Noah J. Planavsky, Ming-Yu Zhao, and Pincelli M. Hull. "Revisiting the sedimentary record of the rise of diatoms." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 118, no. 27 (2021): e2103517118. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2103517118.

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Diatoms are a major primary producer in the modern oceans and play a critical role in the marine silica cycle. Their rise to dominance is recognized as one of the largest shifts in Cenozoic marine ecosystems, but the timing of this transition is debated. Here, we use a diagenetic model to examine the effect of sedimentation rate and temperature on the burial efficiency of biogenic silica over the past 66 million years (i.e., the Cenozoic). We find that the changing preservation potential of siliceous microfossils during that time would have overprinted the primary signal of diatom and radiolarian abundance. We generate a taphonomic null hypothesis of the diatom fossil record by assuming a constant flux of diatoms to the sea floor and having diagenetic conditions driven by observed shifts in temperature and sedimentation rate. This null hypothesis produces a late Cenozoic (∼5 Ma to 20 Ma) increase in the relative abundance of fossilized diatoms that is comparable to current empirical records. This suggests that the observed increase in diatom abundance in the sedimentary record may be driven by changing preservation potential. A late Cenozoic rise in diatoms has been causally tied to the rise of grasslands and baleen whales and to declining atmospheric CO2 levels. Here we suggest that the similarity among these records primarily arises from a common driver—the cooling climate system—that drove enhanced diatom preservation as well as the rise of grasslands and whales, rather than a causal link among them.
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Giraud, X. "Modelling an alkenone-like proxy record in the NW African upwelling." Biogeosciences 3, no. 3 (2006): 251–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/bg-3-251-2006.

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Abstract. A regional biogeochemical model is applied to the NW African coastal upwelling between 19° N and 27° N to investigate how a water temperature proxy, alkenones, are produced at the sea surface and recorded in the slope sediments. The biogeochemical model has two phytoplankton groups: an alkenone producer group, considered to be coccolithophores, and a group comprising other phytoplankton. The Regional Ocean Modelling System (ROMS) is used to simulate the ocean circulation and takes advantage of the Adaptive Grid Refinement in Fortran (AGRIF) package to set up an embedded griding system. In the simulations the alkenone temperature records in the sediments are between 1.1 and 2.3°C colder than the annual mean SSTs. Despite the seasonality of the coccolithophore production, this temperature difference is not mainly due to a seasonal bias, nor to the lateral advection of phytoplankton and phytodetritus seaward from the cold near-shore waters, but to the production depth of the coccolithophores. If coretop alkenone temperatures are effectively recording the annual mean SSTs, the amount of alkenone produced must vary among the coccolithophores in the water column and depend on physiological factors (e.g. growth rate, nutrient stress).
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Kavonic, Saul. "A generational west coast gas shakeup looms." APPEA Journal 61, no. 2 (2021): 405. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj20081.

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From record high prices, a decade ago, to record low prices more recently, Australia’s west coast gas market is heading towards a structural shakeup that will challenge the status quo for producers, buyers and policymakers. The Western Australian (WA) gas market has been soft recently but is poorly understood, and prices may materially tighten this decade in wake of uncertain new supply timing, liquefied natural gas (LNG) producer recalcitrance towards domestic market, lack of new discoveries (outside Perth Basin), upward pressure on US gas pricing and government policy flexibility towards the emergence of LNG ullage. We believe a bifurcated WA gas market could emerge, whereby policy targets cheap gas to underpin new manufacturing, while existing gas buyers are left to compete against much higher LNG netback parity pricing.
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Giraud, X. "Modelling an alkenone-like proxy record in the NW African upwelling." Biogeosciences Discussions 3, no. 1 (2006): 71–121. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/bgd-3-71-2006.

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Abstract. A regional biogeochemical model is applied to the NW African coastal upwelling between 19° N and 27° N to investigate how a water temperature proxy is produced at the sea surface and recorded in the slope sediments. The biological model has two phytoplankton groups, to distinguish an alkenone producer group (considered as coccolithophores) from other phytoplankton. The Regional Ocean Modelling System (ROMS) is used to simulate the ocean circulation, and takes advantage of the Adaptive Grid Refinement in Fortran (AGRIF) package to set up an embedded griding system. The results show that the alkenone-like temperature records in the sediments are between 1.1 and 2.1°C colder compared to the annual mean SSTs. Despite the seasonality of the coccolithophorid production, this temperature difference is not mainly due to a seasonal bias, nor to the lateral advection of phytoplankton and phytodetritus from the cold water domain to most offshore locations, but to the production depth of the coccolithophores. If core-top sediment alkenone-derived temperatures are effectively recording the annual mean SSTs, the quantitative alkenone production in the water column must be inhomogeneous among the coccolithophore population and depend on physiological factors (growth rate, nutrient stress).
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Neal, Adam Scott. "Lo-fi Today." Organised Sound 27, no. 1 (2022): 32–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1355771822000188.

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This article investigates two current incarnations of ‘lo-fi’ music and questions the extent to which these subgenres are actually low in fidelity. In essence, mainstream ‘hi-fi’ productions use similar effects, such as filtering to sound like a radio or adding noise to sound like a vinyl record. To understand lo-fi today, this article explores music by a lo-fi hip-hop producer and a lo-fi ambient producer, drawing upon the analytical methods of Alan Moore and Dennis Smalley. First to be discussed is Glimlip, one of the many anonymous producers behind the popular Lofi Girl YouTube streams. The next discussed is Amulets, an ambient musician known for using hacked and looped cassette tapes. Analyses of their music demonstrate a level of care in production that goes against the idea that lo-fi is primitive or naive.
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Patmore, David N. C., and Eric F. Clarke. "Making and Hearing Virtual Worlds: John Culshaw and the Art of Record Production." Musicae Scientiae 11, no. 2 (2007): 269–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/102986490701100206.

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A recording represents a paradoxical perceptual source: we can either attend to the sound of the medium, or to the virtual world conveyed by it, and the work of a record producer can be understood as either a process of capturing performances or one of creating virtual worlds. This paper demonstrates that the record producer John Culshaw had clear ideas about how recordings might approach the condition of a work of art, rather than being simply the trace of a moment in time. Culshaw's fundamental aesthetic and technical approach is described and illustrated with reference to a number of key recordings. Taking the relationship between sound recording and film as a starting point, and making use of the concept of subject-position, the tension between Culshaw's radical approach to the listener and traditional approach to the authority of the score is explored. Possible reasons are proposed for the abandonment of his ideas, and for the absence of a Culshaw legacy (apart from the recordings themselves). The paper ends with a brief discussion of the current paradigm for the recording of classical music, which seeks in various ways to reproduce “the live experience” in “the finest seat in the house”.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Record producer"

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Muir, Pete. "The art of the record producer." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 1999.

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The record producer has played an extensive role in the development of music aesthetics since the 1950's yet has remained virtually anonymous, save for a few notable exceptions. In this time, producers have developed an art form that exists within the design, capture and rendering of sound. This art form is distinct from the music composition and performance and should receive appropriate acknowledgment. This paper identifies the defining factors of art. These elements are explored through theoretical and practical discussions to establish the artistic contributions of the producer. Through the use of technique - the producer's craft in recording technology, and through the use of form - the producer's design of various layers of recording from composition to mastering, they control the artistic outcomes of the record, which ultimately impact aesthetically on the listener. Therefore the producer is indeed an artist.
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Howlett, Michael John Gilmour. "The record producer as nexus : creative inspiration, technology and the recording industry." Thesis, University of South Wales, 2009. https://pure.southwales.ac.uk/en/studentthesis/the-record-producer-as-nexus(b829aaf3-8ca1-4e8c-ab6e-f4f731644a47).html.

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What is a record producer? There is a degree of mystery and uncertainty about just what goes on behind the studio door. Some producers are seen as Svengali-like figures manipulating artists into mass consumer product. Producers are sometimes seen as mere technicians whose job is simply to set up a few microphones and press the record button. Close examination of the recording process will show how far this is from a complete picture. Artists are special—they come with an inspiration, and a talent, but also with a variety of complications, and in many ways a recording studio can seem the least likely place for creative expression and for an affective performance to happen. The task of the record producer is to engage with these artists and their songs and turn these potentials into form through the technology of the recording studio. The purpose of the exercise is to disseminate this fixed form to an imagined audience—generally in the hope that this audience will prove to be real. Finding an audience is the role of the record company. A record producer must also engage with the commercial expectations of the interests that underwrite a recording. This dissertation considers three fields of interest in the recording process: the performer and the song; the technology of the recording context; and the commercial ambitions of the record company—and positions the record producer as a nexus at the interface of all three. The author reports his structured recollection of five recordings, with three different artists, that all achieved substantial commercial success. The processes are considered from the author‘s perspective as the record producer, and from inception of the project to completion of the recorded work. What were the processes of engagement? Do the actions reported conform to the template of nexus? This dissertation proposes that in all recordings the function of producer/nexus is present and necessary—it exists in the interaction of the artistry and the technology. The art of record production is to engage with these artists and the songs they bring and turn these potentials into form.
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Pratt, Daniel James. "Sensemaking in the recording environment: Understanding the role of the record producer." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2020. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/192096/1/Daniel_Pratt_Thesis.pdf.

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This thesis explores how the record producer participates in the recording studio as a member of a sensemaking team. It examines a variety of recording scenarios from traditional recording studios, to online transnational recording systems, as well as mobile location recordings in Chennai India. This variety of recording settings allowed Dr Pratt to develop a better understanding of how small creative groups negotiate complicated decisions and produce finished recorded work. This study helps new record producers understand the organisational communication skills required to work in the recording industry. It also offers a unique setting for sensemaking research in the field of organisational communication.
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Salahuddin, Sharmin. "Extended producer responsibility in Asia drivers and barriers /." Thesis, Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2005. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B34614758.

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Choi, Fuk-sing. "Producer Responsibility Scheme : management of post-consumer beverage containers in Hong Kong /." View the Table of Contents & Abstract, 2007. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B39850948.

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Yi, Hong. "Service linkages and intra-urban location of producer services : a case study of Guangzhou." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2006. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B35780216.

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Ho, Wai-ling. "A comparative study of consumer housing subsidy and producer housing subsidy in Hong Kong /." View the Table of Contents & Abstract, 2006. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B36438790.

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Kwan, Mei-chi May. "The feasibility of introducing extended producer responsibility into dry cell battery collection and recycling in Hong Kong /." View the Table of Contents & Abstract, 2005. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B34737819.

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Chan, Tsze-wah Gabriel. "Intergration of Hong Kong and the Pearl River Delta towards an optimum division of labor in the provision of producer services /." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 2009. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B43785001.

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Bin, Sheng. "Web-based product platform development for mass customization /." View the Table of Contents & Abstract, 2006. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B36161469.

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Books on the topic "Record producer"

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Mellor, David. How to become a record producer. PC, 1998.

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Cee Lo Green: Rapper, singer, & record producer. ABDO Pub. Co., 2013.

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Robson, David. Prince: Singer-songwriter, musician, and record producer. Mason Crest Publishers, 2010.

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Prince: Singer-songwriter, musician, and record producer. Mason Crest Publishers, 2010.

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Robson, David. Prince: Singer-songwriter, musician, and record producer. Mason Crest Publishers, 2010.

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Robson, David. Prince: Singer-songwriter, musician, and record producer. Mason Crest Publishers, 2010.

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Sapet, Kerrily. Mariah Carey: Singer, songwriter, record producer, actress. Mason Crest Publishers, 2010.

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Sapet, Kerrily. Mariah Carey: Singer, songwriter, record producer, and actress. Mason Crest, 2010.

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Perry, Megan. How to be a record producer in the digital era. Billboard Books, 2008.

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Reckless: Millionaire record producer Phil Spector and the violent death of Lana Clarkson. St. Martin's Paperbacks, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Record producer"

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McIntyre, Phillip, and Paul Thompson. "Paul McCartney as Record Producer: Complete Immersion in the Creative System." In Paul McCartney and His Creative Practice. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79100-1_6.

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Pearson, Elizabeth H. "Record producers and record keepers." In Exploring the Mid-Republican Origins of Roman Military Administration. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003014768-6-7.

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Mirylenka, Katsiaryna, Paolo Scotton, Christoph Miksovic, and Salah-Eddine Bariol Alaoui. "Linking IT Product Records." In Machine Learning and Knowledge Discovery in Databases. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-43887-6_9.

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Pitt, Ivan L. "Roles of Publishers, Record Labels, and Producers." In Direct Licensing and the Music Industry. Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-17653-6_8.

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Frasca, Simona. "The Record Labels, the Producers, and the Orchestra Directors." In Italian Birds of Passage. Palgrave Macmillan US, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137322425_7.

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Eargle, John M. "Recorded Tape Products for the Consumer." In Handbook of Recording Engineering. Springer US, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4684-9919-3_35.

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Eargle, John. "Recorded Tape Products for the Consumer." In Handbook of Recording Engineering. Springer US, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-1129-5_29.

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Novakov, T., H. Cachier, J. S. Clark, A. Gaudichet, S. Macko, and P. Masclet. "Characterization of Particulate Products of Biomass Combustion." In Sediment Records of Biomass Burning and Global Change. Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-59171-6_6.

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Madhusudhana, Shyam, Gianni Pavan, Lee A. Miller, et al. "Choosing Equipment for Animal Bioacoustic Research." In Exploring Animal Behavior Through Sound: Volume 1. Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-97540-1_2.

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AbstractStudies of animal bioacoustics require equipment to record and analyze sounds and sometimes to play back recorded sounds. Choosing the right equipment can be a difficult task for the novice bioacoustician. In this chapter, we outline the components that make up a typical recording or playback setup, define some of the commonly used terminology for describing the instruments, and present some illustrative studies that required the use of specific types of equipment. We cover instruments used in both terrestrial and aquatic bioacoustic studies. The ensuing discussions will introduce the reader to some of the commonly used microphones, hydrophones, amplifiers, analog-to-digital converters, projectors (loudspeakers), as well as programmable autonomous recording systems. Where applicable, we also discuss some of the pros and cons to be considered when choosing a particular product for a study, and the limitations that specific equipment may pose to the planned research. We also present equipment that can be used to record directly to a computer. Often, it may be necessary to use calibrated equipment so that accurate measurements can be made. We present considerations for calibrating the different components of the recording setup. Finally, we present some additional equipment used in biotremology to measure vibration and particle motion, and we list some smartphone-based applications used in bioacoustic studies.
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Weissman, Dick. "Marketing, Funding, and Networking: Record Stores and the Music Products Industry." In Understanding the Music Business. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315558769-14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Record producer"

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Murray, Fraser, Keith Wee, Yao Fernand Kouadio, Shardul Parihar, and John Andrew Wills. "Single-Trip Completion Technology Development for ERD Wells." In ADIPEC. SPE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/211553-ms.

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Abstract A well operator wanted to maximize operational efficiency for extended-reach drilling (ERD) wells of more than 45,000 ft measured depth (MD) by converting from a two-trip to a single-trip completion solution. A safety valve, field-adjustable polished bore assembly (PBA), and production packer were developed for the single-trip completion design used in both the producer and injector well environments. Strong collaboration between the well operator and completion technology supplier resulted in a tailored technology development and validation program that reduced operational risk as much as reasonably practical. The technology developer achieved several significant technical milestones during the process, which are discussed in more detail. A pre-run computational modelling strategy was developed to manage deployment risks and ensure the technology operated as designed. The analysis performed using this strategy, along with details on how this data is used to configure the technology is also discussed. Track record details are provided to demonstrate successful deployment of the new technology in a live well environment. To date, the operator has successfully deployed three systems in wells between 30,000 and 45,700 ft MD. The well operator and technology supplier continue to collaborate on ongoing and future wells, where the developed system adds significant value.
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Winter, Daniel T. "An Examination of the Alternative Methods Used by the Investment Casting Industry to Produce Sacrificial Patterns: Have All of the Available Options Been Considered?" In ASME 2009 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2009-12880.

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The investment casting (IC) process has remained relatively unchanged throughout recorded history [1]. Indeed, there have been refinements to the individual processes required to produce castings; pattern making, the ceramic materials used to create the molds, foundry equipment, and post-cast processing of the castings. All have undergone numerous improvements. Yet, with the innovations that IC foundries have enjoyed, the casting process still requires a one-to-one ratio to produce an IC component from a sacrificial master pattern [2]. It is the alternative technologies used to produce the sacrificial master pattern that are the focus of this paper. New product development and introduction (NPDI) of an IC component requires the expertise of several engineering disciplines. Communications between the various engineering disciplines are critical to assure that cost effective decisions during product design and process development are made. With that in mind, several of the options available to the engineering teams responsible for NPDI are explored in the subsequent text. Rapid prototype (RP) technologies have played a crucial role during NPDI. The patterns produced using the various forms of RP technologies have allowed the IC industry to be considered by design engineers as a viable manufacturing option for their products. A more recent development in the United States is rapid tooling (RT). RT is an additive process, using metal to build the individual layers of the cavity block or the cavity insert. The finished component can then be used as a wax pattern cavity. Engineering teams should also consider a combination of RT and traditional wax pattern tooling. The complex pattern cavities are produced using RT while the more simple components are produced using traditional tooling. For IC foundries to be competitive all available pattern making options must be considered. Multi-disciplined engineering teams will play an important role choosing the technologies discussed. With careful consideration, the engineering teams responsible for NPDI can ensure the future of the IC industry.
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Luna, Santiago, and Christian Salamea. "Noise pattern definition methodology for noise cancellation in coughs signals using an adaptive filter." In Intelligent Human Systems Integration (IHSI 2022) Integrating People and Intelligent Systems. AHFE International, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe100983.

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This work proposes a methodology to create a reference signal (noise pattern) that can be used in adaptive filtering to minimize the noise produced in a cough record. This noise pattern is able to incorporate information of all types of noises that contaminate a record cough signal. This reference signal has been created using a dataset of cough audio signals. The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) has been used as the evaluation metric of the filtering quality. A system able to minimize the noise across all the record cough files using this methodology with an adaptive filtering technique has been created obtaining results closely to 0db, demonstrating the efficiency and generalization of the proposed technique that is part of the preprocessing phase in a system of characterization and classification of cough records.
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Keegan, Alan, and Andrew Tideswell. "Enabling learners to discover real stories in official statistics with a new synthetic unit record file of the new zealand income survey 2011." In Statistics education for Progress: Youth and Official Statistics. International Association for Statistical Education, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.13401.

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Learners of statistics need datasets reflecting real life contexts. Unit record datasets have interesting properties and contain stories that could engage learners. However, NSOs have legal and ethical duties to protect unit records. To enable access to these stories, Statistics New Zealand has published Synthetic Unit Record Files (SURFs) produced using several methods. With a new SURF based on the New Zealand Income Survey 2011 (NZIS 2011), we enable learners to access a new unit record dataset. Learners have an opportunity to discover and tell the stories about their region or country that are in the actual sample dataset. Learners can experience for themselves interesting aspects, such as: disaggregated data, semi-continuous distributions, and formal classifications. We hope learners will welcome the value of official statistics, as contributors of data and consumers of information from it.
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Ramadhan, Fadillah, Arif Imran, and Afrin Fauzya Rizana. "A record-to-record travel algorithm for multi-product and multi-period inventory routing problem." In 2018 5th International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Applications (ICIEA). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iea.2018.8387109.

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Wiemann, Jasmina, and Derek Briggs. "METAZOAN BIOMOLECULE FOSSILIZATION PRODUCTS RECORD PHYLOGENY, PHYSIOLOGY, AND BIOMINERALIZATION." In GSA Annual Meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, USA - 2019. Geological Society of America, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2019am-334561.

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Wheatley, Edward Jason, Gladwin Correia, Samhar Adi, et al. "Setting New Milestones for Coiled Tubing Intervention in Mega-Reach Wells." In SPE/IATMI Asia Pacific Oil & Gas Conference and Exhibition. SPE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/205775-ms.

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Abstract Maximizing reservoir contact through extended-reach and mega-reach wells has become a prevalent field development strategy for major offshore operators in the Middle East. This is especially true for the giant oilfield "A", where drilling targets go beyond 40,000 ft. measured depth (MD), with MD/TVD ratios in excess of 4.5:1. Such challenging horizons call for a detailed re-evaluation of well interventions. In 2019, the well surveillance program in the field A required intervention in a mega-reach well with a MD over 35,500 ft. and 4.5:1 MD/TVD ratio. This reach was unthinkable only a few years ago but has been made possible thanks to several recent key technological advancements, such as coiled tubing (CT) equipped with optical fiber and new CT hydraulic tractors, proactive and detailed planning during the drilling phase, the development of highly engineered CT string designs, surface equipment upgrades, and accurate software modeling. The target well is an oil producer with horizontal section beyond 23,000 ft., completed with 6 5/8-in. pre-perforated liner and 23 swellable packers placed across the 8 1/2-in. open hole section. A multiphase production logging tool was selected to assess the production profile along its horizontal drain. With a target depth beyond the reach of conventional wireline, CT equipped with optical fiber emerged as the optimum solution to facilitate reach and overcome the weight and pumping limitations of wired CT. A comprehensive CT reach modeling exercise compared the performance of several 2-in. and 2 3/8-in. CT string designs and identified operational requirements and reach gains from CT hydraulic tractors. As a result, an engineered 2-in. CT tapered string of near 36,700 ft. was developed, capable of being equipped with optical fiber line, while delivering the required flow rate and differential pressure to the CT hydraulic tractor without compromising any operational safety margin. At the time of manufacturing, this was considered the longest CT string ever produced and fitted for downhole telemetry. The operation itself set new records for well interventions in mega-reach wells, with a CT reach above 35,500 ft. MD, including a hydraulic tractoring footage over 15,650 ft. MD with spaced slugs of chemical friction reducer. This case study explains how to develop a safe, robust, and effective solution to mega-reach well challenges using the CT-conveyed optical fiber telemetry technology in one of the deepest wells in the field A, setting a new global record in CT reach. The lessons learned are now the reference for other operators in the Middle East and across the globe for performing interventions in wells that continue to be stretched in its extended reach. It also depicts why telemetry through optical fiber is key to the success of such projects and provides an overview of technology needs for the future of mega-reach well developments.
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Martin, Jack. "Stiction Suppression in High Volume MEMS Products." In STLE/ASME 2003 International Joint Tribology Conference. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/2003-trib-0266.

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Analog Devices has shipped over 120 million MEMS inertial sensors (accelerometers and gyros). Most are used in automotive air bag systems so high reliability is absolutely critical. the DMD die used in the Texas Instruments’ DLP image projection systems have up to 1.3 million micromirrors on each die that are designed to touch and release. the DLP product line also has a well-established record of high reliability. Clearly, both Companies have solved the problem of MEMS stiction to the extent that it no longer impacts field reliability. However, stiction remains a primary cause of failure in other micromachined products that are produced on less mature processes than those employed by high volume manufacturers like ADI and TI. This paper discusses the fundamental causes of stiction and the techniques that commercial MEMS suppliers use to suppress it.
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Chang, H. Y. "Spark gap produced plasma diagnostics." In 1990 Plasma Science IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts. IEEE, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/plasma.1990.110549.

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Deacon, David A. G. "UV Source Characteristics of The Storage Ring Free Electron Laser." In Free-Electron Laser Applications in the Ultraviolet. Optica Publishing Group, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/fel.1988.wa2.

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A storage ring based free electron laser was the technology used to produce the first visible radiation from an FEL [1], and still holds the record for short wavelength operation and total photons produced by any FEL facility below 1 micron. This performance record is a result of the high brightness available in existing storage ring machines. High electron beam brightness is the central requirement for short wavelength free electron lasers. Since the optical gain drops for shorter wavelength, the threshold for a given machine depends on its brightness. While the "old" storage ring machine ran out of steam at 463 nm [2], the two "new" machines will operate down to 120 nm (Orsay, 1988) and 50 nm (Stanford, 1990).
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Reports on the topic "Record producer"

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Spangler, Stephen, Roger Fujan, Carl Broyles, et al. Record Package guidance : best practices. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/41460.

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The CAD/BIM Technology Center receives numerous questions throughout the year regarding the development of a Record Package that shows as-built conditions. While the Center does produce Standards on the look and organization of CAD drawings that are used to show as-built conditions, users wanted guidance on the Record Package development. The Chicago District had undertaken the development of such guidance, but a formal document was never officially released. The CAD/BIM Community of Practice (CoP) Work Structure Committee finished this guidance and their efforts are reflected in this document.
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Leis, Sherry. Network scale fire atlas supports land management in national parks. Edited by Tani Hubbard. National Park Service, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36967/2295133.

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Long-term vegetation monitoring allows land managers to make treatment decisions based on data. Fire management is a commonly used approach to managing grasslands, but fire history in grasslands is challenging to record because of spatial and temporal scales and rapid ecosystem recovery. We built a seven-park fire occurrence record (fire atlas) using a geodatabase tool. Multiple sources for fire perimeters were vetted using a verification and editing process. The fire occurrence geodatabase was then used as the basis for an analysis that used buffering around monitoring site locations to determine burned status through time. The resulting products were beneficial for communicating with managers, administrators, and fire staff. Planning and education projects were also important uses of the information. Future efforts will focus on improving attribute consistency and relating vegetation trends to fire occurrence.
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Brooks, G. R. Thickness record of varves from glacial Ojibway Lake recovered in sediment cores from Frederick House Lake, northeastern Ontario. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/329275.

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The thicknesses of 384 rhythmic couplets were measured along a composite sequence of glacial Lake Ojibway glaciolacustrine deposits recovered in two sediment cores from Frederick House Lake, Ontario. The visual comparison of distinctive couplets in the CT-scan radiographs of the Frederick House core samples to photographs of core samples from Reid Lake show a match of ±1 varve number from v1656-v1902, and ±5 varve numbers between v1903-v2010, relative to the regional numbering of the Timiskaming varve series. There are two interpretations for the post-v2010 couplets that fall within the Connaught varve sequence of the regional series. In the first, the interpreted numbering spans from v2066-v2115, which produces a gap of 55 missing varves equivalent to v2011-v2065, and corresponds to the original interpretation of the Connaught varve numbering. The second spans v2011a-v2060a, and represents alternative (a) numbering for the same varves. Varve thickness data are listed in spreadsheet files (.xlsx and .csv formats), and CT-Scan radiograph images of core samples are laid out on a mosaic poster showing the interpreted varve numbering and between-core sample correlations of the varve couplets.
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Kearns, Nick, and William Beale. Show me the Money: Perspectives on Applying for Government Research and Development Co-funding. Unitec ePress, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.34074/ocds.022.

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In 2012-14 Unitec Institute of Technology (in partnership with The Innovation Workshop) carried out research into the application process for New Zealand Government Research & Development [R&D] co-funding administered by the Ministry of Science & Innovation (now Callaghan Innovation Ltd). This research revealed widespread applicant frustration with the application criteria and process. A significant problem perceived by High Value Manufacturing and Service Small Medium Enterprises (HVMS SME) businesses is the focus of R&D funding on product innovation followed by a lack of funding to support later stage commercialisation of products. This later stage of product and market development is excluded from Callaghan Innovation co-funding, leading to ‘prototypes-on-a-shelf’. Applicants also found the process time consuming, due to the complexity of the application questions and the delays in response from the funding network of regional funding partners and the Government Ministry. HVMS SME often used consultants to help manage the application, which is frowned upon by both the regional funding partners and Callaghan Innovation, despite the high levels of co-funding success from these applicants. This work has been carried out during the establishment period of Callaghan Innovation Ltd and some of the above issues may be historic and/or transitional as the institutional arrangements change. This research records the HVMS SME experience in applying for R&D co-funding. Consideration of the user experience, captured in this research, may reveal opportunities to improve the process with better outcomes for the applicants and the economy.
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Venäläinen, Ari, Sanna Luhtala, Mikko Laapas, et al. Sää- ja ilmastotiedot sekä uudet palvelut auttavat metsäbiotaloutta sopeutumaan ilmastonmuutokseen. Finnish Meteorological Institute, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35614/isbn.9789523361317.

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Climate change will increase weather induced risks to forests, and thus effective adaptation measures are needed. In Säätyö project funded by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, we have summarized the data that facilitate adaptation measures, developed weather and climate services that benefit forestry, and mapped what kind of new weather and climate services are needed in forestry. In addition, we have recorded key further development needs to promote adaptation. The Säätyö project developed a service product describing the harvesting conditions of trees based on the soil moisture assessment. The output includes an analysis of the current situation and a 10-day forecast. In the project we also tested the usefulness of long forecasts beyond three months. The weather forecasting service is sidelined and supplemented by another co-operation project between the Finnish Meteorological Institute and Metsäteho called HarvesterSeasons (https://harvesterseasons.com/). The HarvesterSeasons service utilizes long-term forecasts of up to 6 months to assess terrain bearing conditions. A test version of a wind damage risk tool was developed in cooperation with the Department of Forest Sciences of the University of Eastern Finland and the Finnish Meteorological Institute. It can be used to calculate the wind speeds required in a forest area for wind damage (falling trees). It is currently only suitable for researcher use. In the Säätyö project the possibility of locating the most severe wind damage areas immediately after a storm was also tested. The method is based on the spatial interpolation of wind observations. The method was used to analyze storms that caused forest damages in the summer and fall of 2020. The produced maps were considered illustrative and useful to those responsible for compiling the situational picture. The accumulation of snow on tree branches, can be modeled using weather data such as rainfall, temperature, air humidity, and wind speed. In the Säätyö project, the snow damage risk assessment model was further developed in such a way that, in addition to the accumulated snow load amount, the characteristics of the stand and the variations in terrain height were also taken into account. According to the verification performed, the importance of abiotic factors increased under extreme snow load conditions (winter 2017-2018). In ordinary winters, the importance of biotic factors was emphasized. According to the comparison, the actual snow damage could be explained well with the tested model. In the interviews and workshop, the uses of information products, their benefits, the conditions for their introduction and development opportunities were mapped. According to the results, diverse uses and benefits of information products and services were seen. Information products would make it possible to develop proactive forest management, which would reduce the economic costs caused by wind and snow damages. A more up-to-date understanding of harvesting conditions, enabled by information products, would enhance the implementation of harvesting and harvesting operations and the management of timber stocks, as well as reduce terrain, trunk and root damage. According to the study, the introduction of information is particularly affected by the availability of timeliness. Although the interviewees were not currently willing to pay for the information products developed in the project, the interviews highlighted several suggestions for the development of information products, which could make it possible to commercialize them.
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Paulen, R. C., and I. R. Smith. Surficial geology, Sulphur Bay, western Great Slave Lake, Northwest Territories, NTS 85-G. Natural Resources Canada/CMSS/Information Management, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/330073.

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The Sulphur Bay map sheet is a low-relief terrain underlain by lower- to middle-Devonian dolostone and limestone. A thin (<4 m thick) Laurentide Ice Sheet-derived glacial sediment cover drapes most of the landscape, except for bedrock outcrops exposed near Great Slave Lake. Relict glacial landforms record an older northwest ice flow across the region. These are strongly overprinted by subsequent west-southwest-oriented flutings and mega-scale glacial lineations formed during deglaciation. As ice retreated, the entire map area became inundated by glacial Lake McConnell and then subsequently by the expanded postglacial Great Slave Lake. This produced a discontinuous, coarse winnowed surface lag over higher terrain and thin sheets of glaciolacustrine nearshore sands over lower-lying regions. Abundant iceberg furrows occur throughout the map area. Bogs and fens have formed over much of the landscape and display extensive thermokarst.
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Wolf, Maximillian, Gadea Mendez Grueso, Tom Robinson, et al. Symposium Report—The Future Course of Populism in the Post-Pandemic Era: The State of Globalization, Multilateral Governance, and Democracy. European Center for Populism Studies (ECPS), 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55271/rp0002.

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The ECPS’s First Annual International Symposium, titled “The Future Course of Populism in the Post-Pandemic Era: The State of Globalization, Multilateral Governance, and Democracy,” was held online in Brussels on February 18, 2022, and brought together scholars from the political, social, and economic sciences, as well as populism experts and civil society audiences, to discuss the impact of populist policies on the national, regional, and global management of the Covid-19 pandemic. In doing so, the symposium aimed at contributing to informed predictions on the post-pandemic international political landscape. This report is the product of these fruitful conversations and is intended to keep the record of the Symposium. It includes brief summaries of the speeches and, also, links to the full videos of presentations.
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Aguiar, Luis, and Joel Waldfogel. Quality Predictability and the Welfare Benefits from New Products: Evidence from the Digitization of Recorded Music. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w22675.

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Waldfogel, Joel. Copyright Protection, Technological Change, and the Quality of New Products: Evidence from Recorded Music since Napster. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w17503.

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10

Willis, C., F. Jorgensen, S. A. Cawthraw, et al. A survey of Salmonella, Escherichia coli (E. coli) and antimicrobial resistance in frozen, part-cooked, breaded or battered poultry products on retail sale in the United Kingdom. Food Standards Agency, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.46756/sci.fsa.xvu389.

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Frozen, breaded, ready-to-cook chicken products have been implicated in outbreaks of salmonellosis. Some of these outbreaks can be large. For example, one outbreak of Salmonella Enteritidis involved 193 people in nine countries between 2018 and 2020, of which 122 cases were in the UK. These ready-to-cook products have a browned, cooked external appearance, which may be perceived as ready-to-eat, leading to mishandling or undercooking by consumers. Continuing concerns about these products led FSA to initiate a short-term (four month), cross-sectional surveillance study undertaken in 2021 to determine the prevalence of Salmonella spp., Escherichia coli and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in frozen, breaded or battered chicken products on retail sale in the UK. This study sought to obtain data on AMR levels in Salmonella and E. coli in these products, in line with a number of other FSA instigated studies of the incidence and nature of AMR in the UK food chain, for example, the systematic review (2016). Between the beginning of April and the end of July 2021, 310 samples of frozen, breaded or battered chicken products containing either raw or partly cooked chicken, were collected using representative sampling of retailers in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland based on market share data. Samples included domestically produced and imported chicken products and were tested for E. coli (including extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing, colistin-resistant and carbapenem-resistant E. coli) and Salmonella spp. One isolate of each bacterial type from each contaminated sample was randomly selected for additional AMR testing to determine the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) for a range of antimicrobials. More detailed analysis based on Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS) data was used to further characterise Salmonella spp. isolates and allow the identification of potential links with human isolates. Salmonella spp. were detected in 5 (1.6%) of the 310 samples and identified as Salmonella Infantis (in three samples) and S. Java (in two samples). One of the S. Infantis isolates fell into the same genetic cluster as S. Infantis isolates from three recent human cases of infection; the second fell into another cluster containing two recent cases of infection. Countries of origin recorded on the packaging of the five Salmonella contaminated samples were Hungary (n=1), Ireland (n=2) and the UK (n=2). One S. Infantis isolate was multi-drug resistant (i.e. resistant to three different classes of antimicrobials), while the other Salmonella isolates were each resistant to at least one of the classes of antimicrobials tested. E. coli was detected in 113 samples (36.4%), with counts ranging from <3 to >1100 MPN (Most Probable Number)/g. Almost half of the E. coli isolates (44.5%) were susceptible to all antimicrobials tested. Multi-drug resistance was detected in 20.0% of E. coli isolates. E. coli isolates demonstrating the ESBL (but not AmpC) phenotype were detected in 15 of the 310 samples (4.8%) and the AmpC phenotype alone was detected in two of the 310 samples (0.6%) of chicken samples. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) testing showed that five of the 15 (33.3%) ESBL-producing E. coli carried blaCTX-M genes (CTX-M-1, CTX-M-55 or CTX-M-15), which confer resistance to third generation cephalosporin antimicrobials. One E. coli isolate demonstrated resistance to colistin and was found to possess the mcr-1 gene. The five Salmonella-positive samples recovered from this study, and 20 similar Salmonella-positive samples from a previous UKHSA (2020/2021) study (which had been stored frozen), were subjected to the cooking procedures described on the sample product packaging for fan assisted ovens. No Salmonella were detected in any of these 25 samples after cooking. The current survey provides evidence of the presence of Salmonella in frozen, breaded and battered chicken products in the UK food chain, although at a considerably lower incidence than reported in an earlier (2020/2021) study carried out by PHE/UKHSA as part of an outbreak investigation where Salmonella prevalence was found to be 8.8%. The current survey also provides data on the prevalence of specified AMR bacteria found in the tested chicken products on retail sale in the UK. It will contribute to monitoring trends in AMR prevalence over time within the UK, support comparisons with data from other countries, and provide a baseline against which to monitor the impact of future interventions. While AMR activity was observed in some of the E. coli and Salmonella spp. examined in this study, the risk of acquiring AMR bacteria from consumption of these processed chicken products is low if the products are cooked thoroughly and handled hygienically.
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