9,085 research outputs found

    Ecos de la academia: Revista de la Facultad de Educación, Ciencia y Tecnología - FECYT Nro 5

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    Ecos de la academia, Revista de la Facultad de Educación Ciencia y Tecnología es una publicación científica de la Universidad Técnica del Norte, con revisión por pares a doble ciego que publica artículos en idioma español, quichua, portugués e inglés. Se edita con una frecuencia semestral con dos números por año.En ella se divulgan trabajos originales e inéditos generados por los investigadores, docentes y estudiantes de la FECYT, y contribuciones de profesionales de instituciones docentes e investigativas dentro y fuera del país, con calidad, originalidad y relevancia en las áreas de ciencias sociales y tecnología aplicada.Realidad socioinclusiva del adulto mayor del grupo etario mayor a los 70 años en las parroquias urbanas de Ibarra. Orientación vocacional y personalidad en el Sistema Nacional de Nivelación y Admisión en la Universidad Técnica de Ambato. Las primeras tarjetas postales de Ibarra, Ecuador: 1906-1914. Aprendizaje móvil en el aula. Aproximación a la Concepción Etnomatemática. La ética en la investigación educativa: ¿condición indispensable?. Inteligencia sociocultural para la inclusión. Atención al alumnado inmigrante: la visión de una profesora francesa en Galicia. Análisis crítico de la dimensión ambiental del ecosistema montañoso Guamuhaya, Cuba (1995-2014). La adaptación curricular inclusiva en la educación regular. El arte en la provincia de Imbabura de mediados del siglo XIX en torno a las escuelas de arte. Formación integral: un estudio de algunos logros y carencias. Experiencias en la publicidad online en la ciudad de Ibarra, Ecuador. Estudio exploratorio de la incidencia de los hogares disfuncionales en la iniciación sexual temprana de los adolescentes. Etnografía Virtual como aplicación metodológica: Caso Chevron en Ecuador. Alfabetización y calidad de vida: percepción de los alfabetizados. Elaboración de un manual mediante el método Delphi para la enseñanza de patronaje. Pertinencia de la Carrera de Turismo de la UTN, en el contexto de la Región 1 del Ecuador, 2016-2020. Preferencias por doble titulación de bachilleres de la Zona 1 de Ecuador y Nariño de Colombia. “Mucha Publicidad”, II Simposio de Diseño, Publicidad y Sociedad, de la UTN. Normas de presentación de artículos en la revista Ecos de la Academia

    Complicated objects: artifacts from the Yuanming Yuan in Victorian Britain

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    The 1860 spoliation of the Summer Palace at the close of the Second Opium War by British and French troops was a watershed event within the development of Britain as an imperialist nation, which guaranteed a market for opium produced in its colony India and demonstrated the power of its armed forces. The distribution of the spoils to officers and diplomatic corps by campaign leaders in Beijing was also a sign of the British Army’s rising power as an instrument of the imperialist state. These conditions would suggest that objects looted from the site would be integrated into an imperialist aesthetic that reflected and promoted the material benefits of military engagement overseas and foregrounded the circumstances of their removal to Britain for campaign members and the British public. This study mines sources dating to the two decades following the war – including British newspapers, auction house records, exhibition catalogs and works of art – to test this hypothesis. Findings show that initial movements of looted objects through the military and diplomatic corps did reinforce notions of imperialist power by enabling campaign members to profit from the spoliation through sales of looted objects and trophy displays. However, material from the Summer Palace arrived at a moment when British manufacturers and cultural leaders were engaged in a national effort to improve the quality of British goods to compete in the international marketplace and looted art was quickly interpolated in this national conversation. Ironically, the same “free trade” imperatives that motivated the invasion energized a new design movement that embraced Chinese ornament. As a consequence, political interpretations of the material outside of military collections were quickly joined by a strong response to Chinese ornament from cultural institutions and design leaders. Art from the Summer Palace held a prominent place at industrial art exhibitions of the postwar period and inspired new designs in a number of mediums. While the availability of Chinese imperial art was the consequence of a military invasion and therefore a product of imperialist expansion, evidence presented here shows that the design response to looted objects was not circumscribed by this political reality. Chinese ornament on imperial wares was ultimately celebrated for its formal qualities and acknowledged links to the Summer Palace were an indicator of good design, not a celebration of victory over a failed Chinese state. Therefore, the looting of the Summer Palace was ultimately an essential factor in the development of modern design, the essence of which is a break with Classical ornament

    Das kolonisierte Heiligtum: Diskriminierungskritische Perspektiven auf das Verfahren der Musealisierung

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    Während der Zeit des historischen Kolonialismus wurden in Völkerkundemuseen komplexe Formen rassistischer und religiöser Diskriminierung institutionalisiert, z.B. in den dort gültigen Ästhetik- und Kunstbegriffen. Viele der heutigen Museumsangestellten erklären sich deswegen zu Reformen bereit. Doch können sie sich tatsächlich vom Kolonialismus trennen? Ist eine Dekolonisation ethnologischer Museen mit kolonialer Beute je abschließend möglich? Am Beispiel umstrittener Heiligtümer lebender Kulturen untersucht der Autor das Verfahren der Musealisierung durch die Linse der Diskriminierungskritik. Im Fokus stehen dabei die Sammlungen der "Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin"

    Lift EVERY Voice and Sing: An Intersectional Qualitative Study Examining the Experiences of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Queer Faculty and Administrators at Historically Black Colleges and Universities

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    While there is minimal literature that address the experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans* identified students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), the experiences of Black, queer faculty and administrators at HBCUs has not been studied. This intersectional qualitative research study focused on the experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer identified faculty and administrators who work at HBCUs. By investigating the intersections of religion, race, gender, and sexuality within a predominantly Black institution, this study aims to enhance diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts at HBCUs by sharing the experiences of the LGBQ faculty and administrators that previously or currently work at an HBCU as a full-time employee. The research questions that guided this study were 1) How have LGBQ faculty and staff negotiated/navigated their careers at HBCUs? and 2) How do LGBQ faculty and staff at HBCUs influence cultural (relating to LGBQ inclusion) change at the organizational level? The main theoretical framework used was intersectionality and it shaped the chosen methodology and methods. The Politics of Respectability was the second theoretical framework used to describe the intra-racial tensions within the Black/African American community. The study included 60-120 minute interviews with 12 participants. Using intersectionality as a guide, the data were coded and utilized for thematic analysis. Then, an ethnodramatic performance engages readers. The goals of this study were to encourage policy changes, promote inclusivity for LGBQ employees at HBCUs, and provide an expansion to the body of literature in the field pertaining to the experiences of LGBQ faculty and administrators in higher education

    TLC : une architecture photovoltaïque concentrée (CPV) au potentiel d’efficacité élevé à faible coût

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    Abstract: Human civilization has grown dependent on ready access to low-cost energy, but the fossil fuels that currently meet the bulk of humanity’s energy needs are causing environmental destruction, including potentially catastrophic global warming. Solar energy has to potential to halt global warming, and, if low enough in cost, to also bring the whole world’s population to a first world living standard. Silicon PV has dramatically reduced costs largely through decreasing the cost and increasing the efficiency of the silicon cells, but silicon is nearing its theoretical efficiency limits, and even if the cells were free, silicon PV would still be too expensive to meet these goals. Tandem CPV cells are roughly twice as efficient as silicon, but previous CPV designs have been unable to compete with silicon on cost in spite of the efficiency advantage. A new CPV architecture, called TLC for its trough, lens and cone concentration stages, proposed using initial concentration by a low-cost trough mirror to shrink the rest of an CPV module by 40X and thus reduce overall module costs. But before this PhD research project, TLC was only a paper study. This PhD research project was started to answer the question of whether TLC could work out as well as it appeared, or whether there were hidden flaws that precluded beating silicon PV on cost, or possibly even precluded TLC from working at all. Thesis chapter 3 details the main optical design aspects, and chapter 4 covers the design of the rest of the TLC module, including leading variations where there is more than one plausible way to achieve low cost and high reliability. The work included building a unified analytical model spreadsheet that linked known aspects of the TLC design together and estimated costs for a given design variation. Thesis chapter 5 covers the economics of the proposed design, with a focus on materials costs since these dominate PV overall costs, and a section on reliability since product lifetime strongly influences life-cycle cost. The work included building 3D-CAD models to refine the TLC design, and then the prototyping of individual parts and processes, and finally building a physical prototype of a TLC mini-module and putting it in sun. This physical confirmation was necessary because even after TLC has been “built” many times, in visualization, on paper, on spreadsheets, and then in COMSOL, until TLC was physically built, hidden flaws could arise at any time. Chapter 6 of this thesis covers the simulation and validation carried out to show that it is plausible that TLC can meet its cost targets. The conclusion of this thesis summarizes the overall project. The project was a success, producing a TLC design with high potential efficiency, very low materials cost, and low estimated process costs, with the potential to beat even the US Department of Energy’s goal for PV pricing in 2030. Ray-tracing a 3D model showed that the design could achieve high concentration with adequate acceptance angles, and tests showed that the prototyping cells were suitable for TLC’s massively parallel microcell-array receiver configuration. The project also successfully tested the proposed manufacturing process for molding semi-dense arrays of tertiary optical elements on the back of a lens tile and assembled a TLC mini module which was tested on sun at the focus of a trough mirror. Four papers have already been published, with a fifth paper accepted, as result of this work.La civilisation humaine est devenue de plus en plus dépendante d'un accès facile à une énergie à faible coût, mais les combustibles fossiles qui répondent actuellement à la majeure partie des besoins énergétiques de l'humanité causent la destruction de l'environnement, y compris un réchauffement climatique potentiellement catastrophique. L'énergie solaire a le potentiel d'arrêter le réchauffement climatique et, si son coût est suffisamment bas, d'amener également la population mondiale entière à un niveau de vie du premier monde. Les coûts de photovoltaïque (PV) à base de silicium ont été considérablement réduits en grande partie en diminuant le prix et en augmentant l'efficacité des cellules en silicium, cependant l’utilisation de silicium a ses limites d'efficacité théoriques, et même si les cellules étaient gratuites, la PV à base de silicium serait encore trop chère pour atteindre ces objectifs. Les cellules de photovoltaïque concentré (CPV) Tandem sont environ deux fois plus efficaces que celles à base de silicium, mais malgré l'avantage de leur efficacité, les architectures des années précédentes de CPV n'ont pas été en mesure de rivaliser avec le silicium en termes de coût. Une nouvelle architecture CPV, appelée TLC (Trough-Lens-Cone) utilise la concentration initiale par un miroir parabolique à faible coût combiné avec un module CPV de 40X et ainsi réduire les coûts globaux du module. Avant ce projet de recherche de doctorat, TLC n'était qu'une étude sur papier. Cette thèse a pour but de répondre à la question de savoir si l’approche TLC pouvait fonctionner aussi bien qu'elle était apparue, ou s'il y avait des défauts cachés qui empêchaient de battre le silicium PV sur le coût, ou pourrait même empêcher la TLC de fonctionner. Ce travail comprenait la construction d'un modèle de tableur unifié qui reliait les aspects connus de la conception TLC et les coûts estimés pour une variation de conception donnée. Nous présentons également la construction de modèles 3D-CAD pour raffiner la conception TLC, puis le prototypage de pièces individuelles et de processus, et enfin la construction d'un prototype physique d'un mini-module TLC qui est mis au soleil. Cette validation physique était nécessaire car même après que TLC ait été théoriquement et numériquement « construit » à plusieurs reprises soit, en visualisation, sur papier, sur des feuilles de calcul, puis dans COMSOL, avant que TLC soit physiquement construit, des défauts cachés pouvaient survenir à tout moment. La mise en œuvre de ce projet a réussi, produisant une conception TLC cohérente qui avait un rendement élevé avec un coût des matériaux très bas et des faibles coûts estimatifs de processus, avec un potentiel de battre même l’objectif du département américain de l'énergie pour la tarification du silicium photovoltaïque en 2030. Le suivi de raies (Ray-tracing) avec un modèle 3D a montré que la conception pouvait atteindre une concentration élevée avec des angles d'acceptation adéquats. Les tests ont également montré que les cellules de prototypage ont été bien adaptées à la nouvelle configuration de TLC de récepteur à matrice de microcellules massivement parallèle. Le projet a également testé avec succès le processus de fabrication proposé pour le moulage de réseaux semi-denses d'éléments optiques tertiaires à l'arrière d'un carreau de lentille. Le projet a également réussi à assembler un mini-module TLC et à tester sous le soleil avec le focus d'un miroir parabolique. Quatre articles ont déjà été publiés, avec un cinquième article accepté, à la suite de ce travail

    GENDERED EMBODIMENT, STABILITY AND CHANGE: WOMEN’S WEIGHTLIFTING AS A TOOL FOR RECOVERY FROM EATING DISORDERS

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    This thesis explores the everyday embodied experiences of women who use amateur weightlifting as a vehicle for recovery from eating disorders. Within online spaces and on social media, women frequently share their experiences of using weightlifting to overcome issues relating to disordered eating, body image, and mental health. In particular, women with a history of eating disorders credit weightlifting to be integral to their recovery journey. However, there is a dearth of research on women’s experiences with exercise during eating disorder recovery and no research that identifies weightlifting as beneficial to this process. To the contrary, discursive links are drawn between the practices of self-surveillance exercised by both eating disorder sufferers and weightlifters alike. In this regard, engagement with weightlifting during eating disorder recovery may signal the transferal of pathology from one set of behaviours to another. That is, from disordered eating to rigid and self-regulatory exercise routines. This thesis examines how women subjectively navigate and make sense of this pathologisation. The data for this research comes from longitudinal semi-structured interviews and photo elicitation with 19 women, living in the United Kingdom, who engaged in weightlifting during their eating disorder recovery. In addition, to build up a holistic picture and to explore how this phenomenon also ‘takes place’ online, I conducted a netnography of the overlapping subcultures of female weightlifting and eating disorder recovery on Instagram. Women’s standpoint theory and interpretative phenomenological analysis are combined to form the underpinning theoretical and analytical tools used to engage with these three rich data sets. Moreover, throughout I draw on an eclectic range of disciplinary perspectives, in order to bring together multiple fields of research and develop novel theoretical frameworks. In the findings, I argue that women’s experiences using weightlifting as a tool for recovery from eating disorders manifests in an embodied sense of multiplicity. In this sense, understandings of the body that are often viewed as ontologically distinct (muscularity/thinness/fatness) hang-together at once in the lived experience of a single individual. I argue that women, particularly those who have previously struggled with an eating disorder, are too readily positioned as vulnerable to media and representation. To theoretically combat these ideas regarding women’s assumed passivity, I develop the concept of ‘digital pruning’ to account for women’s agency in relation to new media. I contend that weightlifting offers women in recovery from eating disorders a new framework for approaching eating and exercise. Specifically, weightlifting’s norms and values legitimate occupying a larger body, which gives women in recovery permission to eat and gain-weight in a way that is both culturally sanctioned and health-promoting. Finally, I explore identity transformation as a specific tenet of recovery from eating disorders. I argue that, on social media, recovery identities are characterised by personal empowerment, resilience, and independence. While offline, quieter and less culturally glorified aspects of recovery (such as relationships of care) are central to women’s accounts of developing a new sense of self as they transition away from an eating disorder identity. In summary, this thesis is an examination of the ways in which women strategically navigate pathology in relation to their bodies, social media, food/exercise practices, and identity. I argue that women develop a set of ‘DIY’ recovery practices that allow them to consciously channel and draw on their negative experiences with eating disorders, to develop new ways of living that serve their overall wellbeing. Weightlifting is integral to this process, as it provides women transitioning out of this difficult phase in their lives with new ways of relating to their bodies and of being in the world. I situate this phenomenon within a neoliberal socio-political climate in which individuals are required to take personal responsibility for their mental health and wellbeing, despite living within conditions which are not conducive to recovery

    Development of attention to social interactions in naturalistic scenes

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    The gut microbiome variability of a butterflyfish increases on severely degraded Caribbean reefs.

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    Environmental degradation has the potential to alter key mutualisms that underlie the structure and function of ecological communities. How microbial communities associated with fishes vary across populations and in relation to habitat characteristics remains largely unknown despite their fundamental roles in host nutrition and immunity. We find significant differences in the gut microbiome composition of a facultative coral-feeding butterflyfish (Chaetodon capistratus) across Caribbean reefs that differ markedly in live coral cover (∼0-30%). Fish gut microbiomes were significantly more variable at degraded reefs, a pattern driven by changes in the relative abundance of the most common taxa potentially associated with stress. We also demonstrate that fish gut microbiomes on severely degraded reefs have a lower abundance of Endozoicomonas and a higher diversity of anaerobic fermentative bacteria, which may suggest a less coral dominated diet. The observed shifts in fish gut bacterial communities across the habitat gradient extend to a small set of potentially beneficial host associated bacteria (i.e., the core microbiome) suggesting essential fish-microbiome interactions may be vulnerable to severe coral degradation
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