56,203 research outputs found
Include 2011 : The role of inclusive design in making social innovation happen.
Include is the biennial conference held at the RCA and hosted by the Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design. The event is directed by Jo-Anne Bichard and attracts an international delegation
Adaptation of WASH Services Delivery to Climate Change and Other Sources of Risk and Uncertainty
This report urges WASH sector practitioners to take more seriously the threat of climate change and the consequences it could have on their work. By considering climate change within a risk and uncertainty framework, the field can use the multitude of approaches laid out here to adequately protect itself against a range of direct and indirect impacts. Eleven methods and tools for this specific type of risk management are described, including practical advice on how to implement them successfully
Pragmatic but Principled: Background report on Integrated Water Resource Management
IWRM is about integrated and "joined-up" management. It is about promoting integration across sectors, applications, groups in society and time, based upon an agreed set of principles. IWRM has been widely applied and aims for more coordinated use of land and water and is divided into full (wholly integrated activities) and light (applying the principles at the local level). The main criticisms of IWRM are the failure to translate the theory into action and the lack of change on the ground. There is a need for both light and full IWRM, but future projects need to increase participation and engagement.Water and Sanitation for the Urban Poo
An investigation into the application of Claims Analysis to evaluate usability of a digital library interface
There is a need for tools that help developers evaluate the usability of digital library interfaces. The potential for using Claims Analysis to help developers in this way has been investigated in three linked case studies. The first explored the design rationale of an existing design with its developers. This showed that they had considered positive consequences for novice uses but that they found it difficult to identify negative effects. The second study explored the detailed design of an add-on feature. A scenario and sample claims were introduced to evaluate exploratory use within an action cycle of planning, execution and evaluation. This framework provided an effective stimulus to enable the developers to evaluate the design and explore opportunities for redesign. Finally, some novice users explored the digital library and the findings from this were used to validate a user scenario and claims
Personal History of Violence and Response to Violence: A Quantitative and Free-Response Study Focusing on College-Age Students
This study examined the relationship between people’s history with violence and how they responded to a graphically violent real-life video. A review of the literature revealed there had been extensive research done about the effects of media and violence on individuals, yet there is a lack of evidence about the effect that violent home footage can have on college-aged students. This relational study utilized a questionnaire that included both a Likert scale and a free-response portion with 25 undergraduate students rating their relationship with violence in the past and their response to a violent video. Greater prior exposure to violence was associated with more extreme responses to violent videos. Suggestions are made for further research involving a larger study utilizing different types of violence recorded in real-life situations
The Effect of Network and Infrastructural Variables on SPDY's Performance
HTTP is a successful Internet technology on top of which a lot of the web
resides. However, limitations with its current specification, i.e. HTTP/1.1,
have encouraged some to look for the next generation of HTTP. In SPDY, Google
has come up with such a proposal that has growing community acceptance,
especially after being adopted by the IETF HTTPbis-WG as the basis for
HTTP/2.0. SPDY has the potential to greatly improve web experience with little
deployment overhead. However, we still lack an understanding of its true
potential in different environments. This paper seeks to resolve these issues,
offering a comprehensive evaluation of SPDY's performance using extensive
experiments. We identify the impact of network characteristics and website
infrastructure on SPDY's potential page loading benefits, finding that these
factors are decisive for SPDY and its optimal deployment strategy. Through
this, we feed into the wider debate regarding HTTP/2.0, exploring the key
aspects that impact the performance of this future protocol
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