4,229 research outputs found

    Binaural virtual auditory display for music discovery and recommendation

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    Emerging patterns in audio consumption present renewed opportunity for searching or navigating music via spatial audio interfaces. This thesis examines the potential benefits and considerations for using binaural audio as the sole or principal output interface in a music browsing system. Three areas of enquiry are addressed. Specific advantages and constraints in spatial display of music tracks are explored in preliminary work. A voice-led binaural music discovery prototype is shown to offer a contrasting interactive experience compared to a mono smartspeaker. Results suggest that touch or gestural interaction may be more conducive input modes in the former case. The limit of three binaurally spatialised streams is identified from separate data as a usability threshold for simultaneous presentation of tracks, with no evident advantages derived from visual prompts to aid source discrimination or localisation. The challenge of implementing personalised binaural rendering for end-users of a mobile system is addressed in detail. A custom framework for assessing head-related transfer function (HRTF) selection is applied to data from an approach using 2D rendering on a personal computer. That HRTF selection method is developed to encompass 3D rendering on a mobile device. Evaluation against the same criteria shows encouraging results in reliability, validity, usability and efficiency. Computational analysis of a novel approach for low-cost, real-time, head-tracked binaural rendering demonstrates measurable advantages compared to first order virtual Ambisonics. Further perceptual evaluation establishes working parameters for interactive auditory display use cases. In summation, the renderer and identified tolerances are deployed with a method for synthesised, parametric 3D reverberation (developed through related research) in a final prototype for mobile immersive playlist editing. Task-oriented comparison with a graphical interface reveals high levels of usability and engagement, plus some evidence of enhanced flow state when using the eyes-free binaural system

    Academic integrity : a call to research and action

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    Originally published in French:L'urgence de l'intĂ©gritĂ© acadĂ©mique, Éditions EMS, Management & société, Caen, 2021 (ISBN 978-2-37687-472-0).The urgency of doing complements the urgency of knowing. Urgency here is not the inconsequential injunction of irrational immediacy. It arises in various contexts for good reasons, when there is a threat to the human existence and harms to others. Today, our knowledge based civilization is at risk both by new production models of knowledge and by the shamelessness of knowledge delinquents, exposing the greatest number to important risks. Swiftly, the editors respond to the diagnostic by setting up a reference tool for academic integrity. Across multiple dialogues between the twenty-five chapters and five major themes, the ethical response shapes pragmatic horizons for action, on a range of disciplinary competencies: from science to international diplomacy. An interdisciplinary work indispensable for teachers, students and university researchers and administrators

    Program and Proceedings: The Nebraska Academy of Sciences 1880-2023. 142th Anniversary Year. One Hundred-Thirty-Third Annual Meeting April 21, 2023. Hybrid Meeting: Nebraska Wesleyan University & Online, Lincoln, Nebraska

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    AERONAUTICS & SPACE SCIENCE Chairperson(s): Dr. Scott Tarry & Michaela Lucas HUMANS PAST AND PRESENT Chairperson(s): Phil R. Geib & Allegra Ward APPLIED SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY SECTION Chairperson(s): Mary Ettel BIOLOGY Chairpersons: Lauren Gillespie, Steve Heinisch, and Paul Davis BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES Chairperson(s): Annemarie Shibata, Kimberly Carlson, Joseph Dolence, Alexis Hobbs, James Fletcher, Paul Denton CHEM Section Chairperson(s): Nathanael Fackler EARTH SCIENCES Chairpersons: Irina Filina, Jon Schueth, Ross Dixon, Michael Leite ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Chairperson: Mark Hammer PHYSICS Chairperson(s): Dr. Adam Davis SCIENCE EDUCATION Chairperson: Christine Gustafson 2023 Maiben Lecturer: Jason Bartz 2023 FRIEND OF SCIENCE AWARD TO: Ray Ward and Jim Lewi

    Power, Gender, and Trust in Experiences of Pediatric Emergency Physician Teleconsultation and Maternal Antenatal Anxiety in Pakistan

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    Background: In Pakistan, innovative strategies for improving access to health care, such as telemedicine (TM) and task shifting, are growing rapidly to address critical gaps in maternal and child health (MCH). Qualitative studies of social and contextual factors can help improve the development or implementation of such interventions. Objectives: This dissertation closely examines constructs of power, gender, and trust in the contexts of two populations: (1) pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) providers in a novel TM program applying synchronous expert teleconsultation to improve quality of care, and (2) pregnant women with experiences of anxiety informing the content of a psychological intervention by non-specialists. Methods: Manuscript one uses the TM Theory of Use framework to thematically analyze 20 in-depth interviews covering experiences or perspectives of doctors, nurses, and TM program administrators, while Manuscript two draws on conversation analysis methods to examine transcripts of 88 PEM teleconsultations. Manuscript three is a secondary analysis applying a women’s empowerment framework to formative research interviews on sources and mitigators of antenatal anxiety in 19 symptomatic women. Data for the qualitative TM program evaluation were collected from October 2019 to January 2020 at Sindh government hospitals, while formative research interviews on antenatal anxiety were conducted between September 2017 and August 2018 at Holy Family Hospital in Rawalpindi. Results: Perceived levels of asymmetric power and mutual trust in TM produced widely divergent and conflicting theories of use among PEM providers, while some gender-based opportunities in TM contributed to emergent social functions beyond its intended aims. Although teleconsultants accounted for a disproportionate share of asking questions and controlling topic, closer examination revealed strategic ambiguity and reciprocity as means of negotiating power and building trust in TM-mediated clinical discourse, particularly by women teleconsultants. For antenatal anxiety, gender norms and women’s disempowerment were key contextual factors contributing to women’s symptoms and limiting pregnancy-related agency and available coping strategies. Conclusion: Efforts to expand access to high quality care for mothers and children must include studies of context, whether the sociotechnical context of TM innovations or the cultural context of psychosocial interventions, to understand associated opportunities, constraints, successes, and failures in improving MCH

    Cervical cancer screening and HPV vaccination:Improvements by use of the health policy cycle

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    OPTIMISING THE MANAGEMENT OF LOW BACK PAIN: New intervention targets and process evaluations

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    Low back pain is the leading cause of years lived with disability and is associated with personal suffering and societal and economic burden. The burden of low back pain has not improved since 1990, partially because most current interventions are ineffective, and patients do not have access to many adequate treatments. The findings of this thesis have provided new evidence on the effects of a promising pharmacological intervention, the effects of contemporary nonpharmacological interventions, and the mechanisms and acceptability of novel interventions with new treatment targets for low back pain. This thesis has six chapters. Chapter One introduced problems and evidence gaps in the literature on low back pain addressed in the following thesis chapters. Chapter Two provided evidence that the most promising and advanced pharmacological intervention in the development pipeline for chronic pain, anti-NGF, does not provide clinically meaningful improvements in pain and function and is associated with an increased risk of experiencing an adverse event in adults with low back pain. Chapter Three summarised the findings from all Cochrane systematic reviews that investigated the effects of nonpharmacological interventions for low back pain, providing an accessible synthesis for consumers of the high-quality evidence of current treatments for low back pain. Chapter Four investigated the importance of targeting pain catastrophising to reduce pain intensity for chronic low back pain. Chapter Five presented the facilitators and barriers for the acceptability of an effective nonpharmacological intervention involving new treatment targets to treat chronic low back pain. Chapter Six summarised the main findings and provided the clinical and research implications for the management of low back pain. This doctoral thesis provides new evidence to optimise the management of low back pain. It is unlikely that a new and effective pharmacological intervention will be available for the management of low back pain in the following years. There are nonpharmacological options that probably provide benefits for chronic low back pain. Higher-quality randomised controlled trials are necessary to clarify the effects of nonpharmacological interventions on acute low back pain. Treatment optimisation for chronic low back pain depends on identifying new treatment targets and interventions. The identification of effective treatment targets requires high-quality mediation studies. The successful implementation of interventions with new treatment targets will depend on strategies to address common barriers to the acceptability of the treatment

    Learning disentangled speech representations

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    A variety of informational factors are contained within the speech signal and a single short recording of speech reveals much more than the spoken words. The best method to extract and represent informational factors from the speech signal ultimately depends on which informational factors are desired and how they will be used. In addition, sometimes methods will capture more than one informational factor at the same time such as speaker identity, spoken content, and speaker prosody. The goal of this dissertation is to explore different ways to deconstruct the speech signal into abstract representations that can be learned and later reused in various speech technology tasks. This task of deconstructing, also known as disentanglement, is a form of distributed representation learning. As a general approach to disentanglement, there are some guiding principles that elaborate what a learned representation should contain as well as how it should function. In particular, learned representations should contain all of the requisite information in a more compact manner, be interpretable, remove nuisance factors of irrelevant information, be useful in downstream tasks, and independent of the task at hand. The learned representations should also be able to answer counter-factual questions. In some cases, learned speech representations can be re-assembled in different ways according to the requirements of downstream applications. For example, in a voice conversion task, the speech content is retained while the speaker identity is changed. And in a content-privacy task, some targeted content may be concealed without affecting how surrounding words sound. While there is no single-best method to disentangle all types of factors, some end-to-end approaches demonstrate a promising degree of generalization to diverse speech tasks. This thesis explores a variety of use-cases for disentangled representations including phone recognition, speaker diarization, linguistic code-switching, voice conversion, and content-based privacy masking. Speech representations can also be utilised for automatically assessing the quality and authenticity of speech, such as automatic MOS ratings or detecting deep fakes. The meaning of the term "disentanglement" is not well defined in previous work, and it has acquired several meanings depending on the domain (e.g. image vs. speech). Sometimes the term "disentanglement" is used interchangeably with the term "factorization". This thesis proposes that disentanglement of speech is distinct, and offers a viewpoint of disentanglement that can be considered both theoretically and practically

    Bibliographic Control in the Digital Ecosystem

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    With the contributions of international experts, the book aims to explore the new boundaries of universal bibliographic control. Bibliographic control is radically changing because the bibliographic universe is radically changing: resources, agents, technologies, standards and practices. Among the main topics addressed: library cooperation networks; legal deposit; national bibliographies; new tools and standards (IFLA LRM, RDA, BIBFRAME); authority control and new alliances (Wikidata, Wikibase, Identifiers); new ways of indexing resources (artificial intelligence); institutional repositories; new book supply chain; “discoverability” in the IIIF digital ecosystem; role of thesauri and ontologies in the digital ecosystem; bibliographic control and search engines
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