905 research outputs found

    Care and gender: A time worn narrative? Perceptions of carework in the Scottish out of school care workforce

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    This is a small-scale temporal study that highlights the lived experiences of five women practitioners employed in the Scottish Out of School Care (OSC) workforce, also known internationally as school-aged childcare (SAC). The five practitioners entered the childcare profession without a relevant professional qualification. Whilst play and learning are central themes of school-aged childcare both nationally and internationally, the focus of this study examines the temporal nature of care experiences in relation to gender, seats of power and constructions of the good enough mother. It focuses on the care experiences, careers, and aspirations of the women over their life course: past, present, and beyond. The five practitioners were initially interviewed through the aid of a temporal tool, the biographical life grid, which was employed to assist reflexive biographical narrative interviews. The biographical life grid is a visual method frequently used to capture past and present memories of life events, and as such often offers a further window into the perceptions surrounding those memories. The life grid was substituted reflexively for two simple 24-hour clocks to map both chronological and felt-time reflections as the study progressed. This study aims to capture a time element, relating not only to professional aspirations but also to the constructions of the women’s developing sense of a caring self. A feminist Foucauldian, poststructural lens is applied to interpret the biographical narratives in what is arguably a gendered profession. The analysis of the narratives considers how constructions on caring both in private and professional lives may be influenced over time through engagement with family, society, professional requirements and discourse in policy. Foucauldian discourse analysis is employed to interpret how seats of power, particularly emanating from the self, may affect the practitioner’s decision making in relation to career choices. Interpretations arising from the discourse analysis on the findings subsequently considers any resulting relevance for the future of recruitment, retention, and career resilience not only for the Scottish Out of School Care (OSC) workforce but also potentially for all professional caring employment

    Representing proof transformations for program optimization

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    Supersonic Flow of Chemically Reacting Gas-Particle Mixtures. Volume 2: RAMP - A Computer Code for Analysis of Chemically Reacting Gas-Particle Flows

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    A computer program written in conjunction with the numerical solution of the flow of chemically reacting gas-particle mixtures was documented. The solution to the set of governing equations was obtained by utilizing the method of characteristics. The equations cast in characteristic form were shown to be formally the same for ideal, frozen, chemical equilibrium and chemical non-equilibrium reacting gas mixtures. The characteristic directions for the gas-particle system are found to be the conventional gas Mach lines, the gas streamlines and the particle streamlines. The basic mesh construction for the flow solution is along streamlines and normals to the streamlines for axisymmetric or two-dimensional flow. The analysis gives detailed information of the supersonic flow and provides for a continuous solution of the nozzle and exhaust plume flow fields. Boundary conditions for the flow solution are either the nozzle wall or the exhaust plume boundary

    Supersonic flow of chemically reacting gas-particle mixtures. Volume 1: A theoretical analysis and development of the numerical solution

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    A numerical solution for chemically reacting supersonic gas-particle flows in rocket nozzles and exhaust plumes was described. The gas-particle flow solution is fully coupled in that the effects of particle drag and heat transfer between the gas and particle phases are treated. Gas and particles exchange momentum via the drag exerted on the gas by the particles. Energy is exchanged between the phases via heat transfer (convection and/or radiation). Thermochemistry calculations (chemical equilibrium, frozen or chemical kinetics) were shown to be uncoupled from the flow solution and, as such, can be solved separately. The solution to the set of governing equations is obtained by utilizing the method of characteristics. The equations cast in characteristic form are shown to be formally the same for ideal, frozen, chemical equilibrium and chemical non-equilibrium reacting gas mixtures. The particle distribution is represented in the numerical solution by a finite distribution of particle sizes

    L'effort associé à la reconnaissance de la parole chez les adultes et les personnes aînées

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    L’objectif principal de cette thèse était de quantifier et comparer l’effort requis pour reconnaître la parole dans le bruit chez les jeunes adultes et les personnes aînées ayant une audition normale et une acuité visuelle normale (avec ou sans lentille de correction de la vue). L’effort associé à la perception de la parole est lié aux ressources attentionnelles et cognitives requises pour comprendre la parole. La première étude (Expérience 1) avait pour but d’évaluer l’effort associé à la reconnaissance auditive de la parole (entendre un locuteur), tandis que la deuxième étude (Expérience 2) avait comme but d’évaluer l’effort associé à la reconnaissance auditivo-visuelle de la parole (entendre et voir le visage d’un locuteur). L’effort fut mesuré de deux façons différentes. D’abord par une approche comportementale faisant appel à un paradigme expérimental nommé double tâche. Il s’agissait d’une tâche de reconnaissance de mot jumelée à une tâche de reconnaissance de patrons vibro-tactiles. De plus, l’effort fut quantifié à l’aide d’un questionnaire demandant aux participants de coter l’effort associé aux tâches comportementales. Les deux mesures d’effort furent utilisées dans deux conditions expérimentales différentes : 1) niveau équivalent – c'est-à-dire lorsque le niveau du bruit masquant la parole était le même pour tous les participants et, 2) performance équivalente – c'est-à-dire lorsque le niveau du bruit fut ajusté afin que les performances à la tâche de reconnaissance de mots soient identiques pour les deux groupes de participant. Les niveaux de performance obtenus pour la tâche vibro-tactile ont révélé que les personnes aînées fournissent plus d’effort que les jeunes adultes pour les deux conditions expérimentales, et ce, quelle que soit la modalité perceptuelle dans laquelle les stimuli de la parole sont présentés (c.-à.-d., auditive seulement ou auditivo-visuelle). Globalement, le ‘coût’ associé aux performances de la tâche vibro-tactile était au plus élevé pour les personnes aînées lorsque la parole était présentée en modalité auditivo-visuelle. Alors que les indices visuels peuvent améliorer la reconnaissance auditivo-visuelle de la parole, nos résultats suggèrent qu’ils peuvent aussi créer une charge additionnelle sur les ressources utilisées pour traiter l’information. Cette charge additionnelle a des conséquences néfastes sur les performances aux tâches de reconnaissance de mots et de patrons vibro-tactiles lorsque celles-ci sont effectuées sous des conditions de double tâche. Conformément aux études antérieures, les coefficients de corrélations effectuées à partir des données de l’Expérience 1 et de l’Expérience 2 soutiennent la notion que les mesures comportementales de double tâche et les réponses aux questionnaires évaluent différentes dimensions de l’effort associé à la reconnaissance de la parole. Comme l’effort associé à la perception de la parole repose sur des facteurs auditifs et cognitifs, une troisième étude fut complétée afin d’explorer si la mémoire auditive de travail contribue à expliquer la variance dans les données portant sur l’effort associé à la perception de la parole. De plus, ces analyses ont permis de comparer les patrons de réponses obtenues pour ces deux facteurs après des jeunes adultes et des personnes aînées. Pour les jeunes adultes, les résultats d’une analyse de régression séquentielle ont démontré qu’une mesure de la capacité auditive (taille de l’empan) était reliée à l’effort, tandis qu’une mesure du traitement auditif (rappel alphabétique) était reliée à la précision avec laquelle les mots étaient reconnus lorsqu’ils étaient présentés sous les conditions de double tâche. Cependant, ces mêmes relations n’étaient pas présentes dans les données obtenues pour le groupe de personnes aînées ni dans les données obtenues lorsque les tâches de reconnaissance de la parole étaient effectuées en modalité auditivo-visuelle. D’autres études sont nécessaires pour identifier les facteurs cognitifs qui sous-tendent l’effort associé à la perception de la parole, et ce, particulièrement chez les personnes aînées.The primary objective of the current thesis was to quantify and compare the amount of listening effort that young and older, normal-hearing adults with normal (or corrected normal) vision expend when speech is presented in background noise. Listening effort refers to the attentional and cognitive resources required to understand speech. Study 1 was designed to determine the listening effort associated with auditory speech recognition (hearing a speaker) whereas Study 2 examined the listening effort involved with audiovisual speech recognition (hearing and seeing the face of a speaker). Listening effort was assessed behaviourally, using a dual task paradigm where a word recognition task was paired with a tactile pattern recognition task and, with self-reported ratings. Both measures of listening effort were assessed under two experimental conditions: 1) equated level - where the level of background noise was the same for all participants and, 2) equated performance - where single task word recognition performance did not differ between groups. The tactile task costs revealed that older adults expended more listening effort than young adults for both experimental conditions regardless of the perceptual modality in which the speech stimuli were presented (i.e., audio-only and audiovisual). Overall, the cost involved with tactile task performance was highest for older adults when speech was presented audiovisually. While visual cues can improve audiovisual speech recognition our results suggest they can also place an extra demand on processing resources with performance consequences for the word and tactile tasks under dual task conditions. Consistent with the literature, the correlation findings of Study 1 and Study 2 support the idea that dual task measures and self-reported ratings each assess different aspects of listening effort. As listening effort draws upon auditory and cognitive factors, the purpose of Study 3 was to determine to what extent the separate components of auditory working memory (capacity and processing) contribute towards the variance observed in listening effort and to determine if the pattern of working memory predictor variables changes with age. Results of a sequential regression analysis for young adults indicated that a measure of auditory capacity (span size) was related to listening effort whereas a measure of auditory processing (alphabetical recall) was related to the cost associated with word recognition accuracy performance under dual task conditions. However, these relationships did not extend to older adults or to the data obtained when the speech recognition tasks were performed audiovisually. Further research is required to determine what cognitive factors underlie listening effort – especially for older adults

    Breakfast and exercise contingently affect postprandial metabolism and energy balance in physically active males

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    The present study examined the impact of breakfast and exercise on postprandial metabolism, appetite and macronutrient balance. A sample of twelve (blood variables n 11) physically active males completed four trials in a randomised, crossover design comprising a continued overnight fast followed by: (1) rest without breakfast (FR); (2) exercise without breakfast (FE); (3) breakfast consumption(1859 kJ) followed by rest (BR); (4) breakfast consumption followed by exercise (BE). Exercise was continuous, moderate-intensity running (expending approximately 2·9MJ of energy). The equivalent time was spent sitting during resting trials. A test drink (1500 kJ) was ingested on all trials followed 90 min later by an ad libitum lunch. The difference between the BR and FR trials in blood glucose time-averaged AUC following test drink consumption approached significance (BR: 4·33 (SEM 0·14) v. FR: 4·75 (SEM 0·16) mmol/l; P¼0·08); but it was not different between FR and FE (FE: 4·77 (SEM 0·14) mmol/l; P¼0·65); and was greater in BE (BE: 4·97 (SEM 0·13) mmol/l) v. BR(P¼0·012). Appetite following the test drink was reduced in BR v. FR (P¼0·006) and in BE v. FE (P¼0·029). Following lunch, the most positive energy balance was observed in BR and least positive in FE. Regardless of breakfast, acute exercise produced a less positive energy balance following ad libitum lunch consumption. Energy and fat balance is further reduced with breakfast omission. Breakfast improved the overall appetite responses to foods consumed later in the day, but abrogated the appetite suppressive effect of exercise

    A Combined Geometric Morphometric and Discrete Element Modeling Approach for Hip Cartilage Contact Mechanics.

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    Finite element analysis (FEA) provides the current reference standard for numerical simulation of hip cartilage contact mechanics. Unfortunately, the development of subject-specific FEA models is a laborious process. Owed to its simplicity, Discrete Element Analysis (DEA) provides an attractive alternative to FEA. Advancements in computational morphometrics, specifically statistical shape modeling (SSM), provide the opportunity to predict cartilage anatomy without image segmentation, which could be integrated with DEA to provide an efficient platform to predict cartilage contact stresses in large populations. The objective of this study was, first, to validate linear and non-linear DEA against a previously validated FEA model and, second, to present and evaluate the applicability of a novel population-averaged cartilage geometry prediction method against previously used methods to estimate cartilage anatomy. The population-averaged method is based on average cartilage thickness maps and therefore allows for a more accurate and individualized cartilage geometry estimation when combined with SSM. The root mean squared error of the population-averaged cartilage geometry predicted by SSM as compared to the manually segmented cartilage geometry was 0.31 ± 0.08 mm. Identical boundary and loading conditions were applied to the DEA and FEA models. Predicted DEA stress distribution patterns and magnitude of peak stresses were in better agreement with FEA for the novel cartilage anatomy prediction method as compared to commonly used parametric methods based on the estimation of acetabular and femoral head radius. Still, contact stress was overestimated and contact area was underestimated for all cartilage anatomy prediction methods. Linear and non-linear DEA methods differed mainly in peak stress results with the non-linear definition being more sensitive to detection of high peak stresses. In conclusion, DEA in combination with the novel population-averaged cartilage anatomy prediction method provided accurate predictions while offering an efficient platform to conduct population-wide analyses of hip contact mechanics

    Comparing Observed Stellar Kinematics and Surface Densities in a Low-latitude Bulge Field to Galactic Population Synthesis Models

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    We present an analysis of Galactic bulge stars from Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 observations of the Stanek window (l, b = [0.25,-2.15]) from two epochs approximately two years apart. This data set is adjacent to the provisional Wide-field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST) microlensing field. Proper motions are measured for approximately 115,000 stars down to 28th mag in V band and 25th mag in I band, with accuracies of 0.5 mas yr-1 (20 km s-1) at I ≈ 21. A cut on the longitudinal proper motion μ l allows us to separate disk and bulge populations and produce bulge-only star counts that are corrected for photometric completeness and efficiency of the proper-motion cut. The kinematic dispersions and surface density in the field are compared to the nearby SWEEPS sight line, finding a marginally larger-than-expected gradient in stellar density. The observed bulge star counts and kinematics are further compared to the Besançon, Galaxia, and GalMod Galactic population synthesis models. We find that most of the models underpredict low-mass bulge stars by ∼33% below the main-sequence turnoff, and upwards of ∼70% at redder J and H wavebands. While considering inaccuracies in the Galactic models, we give implications for the exoplanet yield from the WFIRST microlensing mission
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