The Corinth Rift in Central Greece has been studied extensively during the past decades, as it is one of the most seismically active regions in Europe. It is characterized by normal faulting and extension rates between 6 and 15 mm yr −1 in an approximately N10E • direction. On 2013 May 21, an earthquake swarm was initiated with a series of small events 4 km southeast of Aigion city. In the next days, the seismic activity became more intense, with outbursts of several stronger events of magnitude between 3.3 and 3.7. The seismicity migrated towards the east during June, followed by a sudden activation of the western part of the swarm on July 15th. More than 1500 events have been detected and manually analysed during the period between 2013 May 21 and August 31, using over 15 local stations in epicentral distances up to 30 km and a local velocity model determined by an error minimization method. Waveform similarity-based analysis was performed, revealing several distinct multiplets within the earthquake swarm. High-resolution relocation was applied using the double-difference algorithm HypoDD, incorporating both catalogue and cross-correlation differential traveltime data, which managed to separate the initial seismic cloud into several smaller, densely concentrated spatial clusters of strongly correlated events. Focal mechanism solutions for over 170 events were determined using P-wave first motion polarities, while regional waveform modelling was applied for the calculation of moment tensors for the 18 largest events of the sequence. Selected events belonging to common spatial groups were considered for the calculation of composite mechanisms to characterize different parts of the swarm. The solutions are mainly in agreement with the regional NNE-SSW extension, representing typical normal faulting on 30-50 • north-dipping planes, while a few exhibit slip in an NNE-SSW direction, on a roughly subhorizontal plane. Moment magnitudes were calculated by spectral analysis of S waves, yielding b-values between 1.1 and 1.2 in their frequency-magnitude distribution. The seismic moment release history indicates swarm-like activity during the first phase, which could have acted as a preparatory stage for the second phase (after 12 July) that presented a more typical main-shock-aftershock behaviour. The spatiotemporal analysis reveals that the swarm has occurred in a volume that is likely related with the extension at depth of the NNEdipping Pirgaki normal fault, outcropping ∼8 km to the south. The slow velocity of eastward migration of the epicentres during June implies triggering by fluids. The situation appears different in the second phase of the sequence, which was probably triggered by a build-up of stress during the first one. The relatively deep hypocentres of the 2013 swarm, compared 2044
In a test of the predictive utility of the theory of planned behaviour alone and in conjunction with a number of additional variables, 114 participants completed questionnaires measuring predictor variables and, three weeks later, reported exercise. The results of the present study provide partial support for the theory. Past behaviour was the most predictive variable. Subjective norm was not a significant predictor of intention to exercise. Attitude towards exercise was also not a predictor of exercise intention. Self-monitoring acted as a moderator of the attitude-intention relationship. Perceived behavioural control was not a significant predictor of exercise behaviour, while exercise intentions were only weak predictors. The results also suggested that perceived behavioural control and perceived barriers are not equivalent, and should be treated as separate variables that contribute independently to the predictive ability of the model. The implications of the findings are discussed.
In this paper we present new geological and seismological data on the orientation of crustal extension in central Crete (SE Heraklion basin) following the occurrence of two shallow seismic sequences: a) the May 2005 Assimi M=4.1 earthquake sequence and b) the 2013 Houdetsi-Tefeli sequence (3.2≤Mw≤3.6). Emphasis is given to the results of the geological field work, stress analysis, source inversion, aftershock relocations and mapping of earthquake-induced environmental effects. For the first time we find seismological evidence for N-S strike-slip motions along shallow fault planes in central Crete (Amourgeles fault). Our results indicate that while crustal extension dominates there is a combination of active fault kinematics, ranging from normal faulting along the northern edge of Messara basin (south-dipping Plakiotissa fault) to strike-slip faulting inside the SE part Heraklion basin (Houdetsi-Tefeli). The combination of active fault motions accommodates a NW-SE extension of the upper crust.
The theory of planned behavior suggests attitudes are a product of salient beliefs. This study examined whether aggregating salient beliefs was plausible within a more biologically centered information-processing environment. A neural network was used to examine associations among beliefs relating to exercise intention. Data on intentions and behavioral, normative, and control beliefs from 114 respondents were used to train (by error backpropagation) a neural network to associate beliefs with intention. The R-sup-2 between the network's estimated and self-reported intention was.66. The network's representation comprised 6 belief profiles associated with high, moderate, or low behavioral intention. The neural network accommodated complex relationships among beliefs and belief-intention associations and indicated how high-level constructs such as attitudes may be viewed as the best fit (compromise state) between aroused beliefs.
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