11,683 research outputs found
The Inversion Illusion in Parabolic Flight - Its Probable Dependence on Otolith Function
Comparative observations of upright perception in normal subjects and deaf persons with bilateral labyrinthine defect
Lack of response to thermal stimulation of the semicircular canals in the weightlessness phase of parabolic flight
Caloric nystagmus response to thermal stimulation of semicircular canals in weightlessness phase of parabolic fligh
The triple task technique for studying writing processes : on which task is attention focused ?
The triple task technique measures the time and cognitive effort devoted to specific writing processes by combining directed retrospection with secondary task reaction time (RT). Writing a text is the primary task and rapidly detecting auditory probes to index cognitive effort is the secondary task. The third task is retrospecting and categorizing the contents of working memory at the time of each probe. The present paper reviews studies on the reactivity and validity of the technique. Further, one recent criticism of the method's validity is tested here: namely, that the primary task for the experimenter is not the primary task for the writer, thus distorting the time and effort measurements. We found that time and effort allocated to planning, translating, executing, evaluating, and revising was the same when the writer was encouraged by instructions to focus either on the speed of responding or the accuracy of retrospection instead of the text itself. Because writing requires sustained thought and attention to produce a cumulative product, it is apparently difficult to make text production anything but the primary task. The triple task technique offers a useful alternative to pause analysis and verbal protocols for investigating the functional features of writing
Motion Sickness Symptomatology of Labyrinthine Defective and Normal Subjects During Zero Gravity Maneuvers
Motion sickness symptomology of labyrinthine defective and normal human subjects during zero gravity maneuver
Interview with Andrew and Nettie Kellogg
An interview with Andrew and Nettie Kellogg regarding their experiences in a one-room school house.https://scholars.fhsu.edu/ors/1131/thumbnail.jp
Motion sickness precipitated in the weightless phase of parabolic flight by Coriolis accelerations
Human motion sickness susceptibility when exposed to Coriolis accelerations during parabolic flight weightlessnes
Microscopic mechanisms of thermal and driven diffusion of non rigid molecules on surfaces
The motion of molecules on solid surfaces is of interest for technological
applications such as catalysis and lubrication, but it is also a theoretical
challenge at a more fundamental level. The concept of activation barriers is
very convenient for the interpretation of experiments and as input for Monte
Carlo simulations but may become inadequate when mismatch with the substrate
and molecular vibrations are considered. We study the simplest objects
diffusing on a substrate at finite temperature , namely an adatom and a
diatomic molecule (dimer), using the Langevin approach. In the driven case, we
analyse the characteristic curves, comparing the motion for different values of
the intramolecular spacing, both for T=0 and . The mobility of the
dimer is higher than that of the monomer when the drift velocity is less than
the natural stretching frequency. The role of intramolecular excitations is
crucial in this respect. In the undriven case, the diffusive dynamics is
considered as a function of temperature. Contrary to atomic diffusion, for the
dimer it is not possible to define a single, temperature independent,
activation barrier. Our results suggest that vibrations can account for drastic
variations of the activation barrier. This reveals a complex behaviour
determined by the interplay between vibrations and a temperature dependent
intramolecular equilibrium length.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Proceeding of the EMRS 2002 Conference, to be
published in Thin Solid Film
Review of Global Ecology: Environmental Change and Social Flexibility and Environment and Resource Policies for the World Economy
Review of Global Ecology: Environmental Change and Social Flexibility by V. Smil and Environment and Resource Policies for the World Economy by R.N. Coope
Community-based Organizations and Neighborhood Environmental Problem-Solving: A Framework for Adoption of Information Technologies
Community-based organizations (CBOs) today seek improved capacity to address environmental problems in urban neighbourhoods. Many seek access to information technologies such as the Internet and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to expand information about their neighbourhood\u27s environmental quality to support their planning and service efforts. Experience with the Internet has been bolstered somewhat by programmes to create community networks. This experience and experience with GIS in planning at the municipal and state levels reveals a set of technical, organizational and personal prerequisites that bolster successful and effective adoption of information technologies. This paper reviews these prerequisites as they pertain to CBOs and makes recommendations for transactions that could enhance CBO adoption of the Internet and GIS to address environmental problems in urban neighbourhoods. The paper concludes that a constellation of prerequisite conditions, most predominantly data availability problems, staff skill acquisition and staff retention problems, offer the greatest challenges for CBOs seeking to adopt information technologies to manage environmental problems more effectively
A Statistical Survey of Peculiar L and T Dwarfs in SDSS, 2MASS, and WISE
We present the final results from a targeted search for brown dwarfs with
unusual near-infrared colors. From a positional cross-match of SDSS, 2MASS and
WISE, we have identified 144 candidate peculiar L and T dwarfs. Spectroscopy
confirms that 20 of the objects are peculiar or are candidate binaries. Nine of
the 420 objects in our sample are young (200 Myr; 2.1%) and another 8
(1.9%) are unusually red with no signatures of youth. With a spectroscopic
color of 2.58 0.11 mag, one of the new objects, the L6 dwarf
2MASS J03530419+0418193, is among the reddest field dwarfs currently known and
is one of the reddest objects with no signatures of youth known to date. We
have also discovered another potentially very low gravity object, the L1 dwarf
2MASS J00133470+1109403, and independently identified the young L7 dwarf 2MASS
J00440332+0228112, first reported by Schneider and collaborators. Our results
confirm that signatures of low gravity are no longer discernible in low to
moderate resolution spectra of objects older than 200 Myr. The 1.9% of
unusually red L dwarfs that do not show other signatures of youth could be
slightly older, up to 400 Myr. In this case a red color may be
more diagnostic of moderate youth than individual spectral features. However,
its is also possible that these objects are relatively metal-rich, and so have
an enhanced atmospheric dust content.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables, accepted to A
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