13,380 research outputs found
Notes from Mrs. Hadgu\u27s Class: Conceptualizing Music Education Curriculum for a Changing World
How can we conceptualize curriculum and school knowledge to better address important questions of social change, contingency of knowledge, life in mediated worlds, and inequalities? To answer this question I wrote fictional stories from students about their favorite moments from their 8th grade music class. Each account deals with a specific activity or instance in which the teacher included social change and/or student centered knowledge in the curriculum. The explanation at the end of the accounts details the reasons for creating each activity and the relation of the stories to texts utilized in class
Characterizing a benchmark scenario for heavy Higgs boson searches in the Georgi-Machacek model
The Georgi-Machacek model is used to motivate and interpret LHC searches for
doubly- and singly-charged Higgs bosons decaying into vector boson pairs. In
this paper we study the constraints on and phenomenology of the "H5plane"
benchmark scenario in the Georgi-Machacek model, which has been proposed for
use in these searches. We show that the entire H5plane benchmark is compatible
with the LHC measurements of the 125 GeV Higgs boson couplings. We also point
out that, over much of the H5plane benchmark, the lineshapes of the two CP-even
neutral heavy Higgs bosons and will overlap and interfere when
produced in vector boson fusion with decays to or . Finally we
compute the decay branching ratios of the additional heavy Higgs bosons within
the H5plane benchmark to facilitate the development of search strategies for
these additional particles.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figures. v2: title changed, refs added, discussion
clarified, version accepted by PR
Multidimensional perfectionism and narcissism: Grandiose or vulnerable?
Multidimensional perfectionism is related to grandiose narcissism, with other-oriented perfectionism showing the strongest, most consistent relationships. The relationships with vulnerable narcissism, however, are unclear. Our study investigated how three forms of perfectionism--self-oriented, other-oriented, and socially prescribed perfectionism (Hewitt & Flett, 1991)--are related to narcissistic grandiosity and vulnerability. A sample of 375 university students completed the Narcissistic Personality Inventory (Raskin & Terry, 1988), Hypersensitive Narcissism Scale (Hendin & Cheek, 1997), and Pathological Narcissism Inventory (Pincus et al., 2009) capturing various facets of narcissistic grandiosity and vulnerability. Multiple regressions were conducted controlling for the overlap between the three forms of perfectionism and gender. Other-oriented perfectionism showed unique positive relationships with key facets of grandiose narcissism. In contrast, socially prescribed perfectionism showed positive relationships with all facets of vulnerable narcissism. Self- and other-oriented perfectionism showed positive relationships with individual facets only. Other-oriented perfectionism appears to represent a form of perfectionism predominantly related to narcissistic grandiosity, whereas socially prescribed perfectionism is predominantly related to narcissistic vulnerability. As the first study to examine perfectionism in relation to narcissistic grandiosity and vulnerability, our research both extends and clarifies the nomological network of the perfectionism construct in important ways
Topcolor in the LHC Era
Ongoing LHC searches for the standard model Higgs Boson in WW or ZZ decay
modes strongly constrain the top-Higgs state predicted in many models with new
dynamics that preferentially affects top quarks. Such a state couples strongly
to top-quarks, and is therefore produced through gluon fusion at a rate that
can be greatly enhanced relative to the rate for the standard model Higgs
boson. As we discuss in this talk, a top-Higgs state with mass less than 300
GeV is excluded at 95% CL if the associated top-pion has a mass of 150 GeV, and
the constraint is even stronger if the mass of the top-pion state exceeds the
top-quark mass or if the top-pion decay constant is a substantial fraction of
the weak scale. These results have significant implications for theories with
strong top dynamics, such as topcolor-assisted technicolor, top-seesaw models,
and certain Higgsless models
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Shape of the posterior vitreous chamber in human emmetropia and myopia
PURPOSE: To compare posterior vitreous chamber shape in myopia to that in emmetropia. METHODS: Both eyes of 55 adult subjects were studied, 27 with emmetropia (mean spherical error [MSE] ≥ -0.55; <+0.75 D; mean +0.09 ± 0.36 D) and 28 with myopia (MSE -5.87 ± 2.31 D). Cycloplegic refraction was measured with a Shin Nippon autorefractor and anterior chamber depth and axial length with a Zeiss IOLMaster. Posterior vitreous chamber shapes were determined from T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (3.0-T) using procedures previously reported by our laboratory. Three-dimensional surface model coordinates were assigned to nasal, temporal, superior, and inferior quadrants and plotted in two dimensions to illustrate the composite shape of respective quadrants posterior to the second nodal point. Spherical analogues of chamber shape were constructed to compare relative sphericity between refractive groups and quadrants. RESULTS: Differences in shape occurred in the region posterior to points of maximum globe width and were thus in general accord with an equatorial model of myopic expansion. Shape in emmetropia is categorized distinctly as that of an oblate ellipse and in myopia as an oblate ellipse of significantly less degree such that it approximates to a sphere. There was concordance between shape and retinotopic projection of respective quadrants into right, left, superior, and inferior visual fields. CONCLUSIONS: Prolate ellipse posterior chamber shapes were rarely found in myopia, and we propose that spherical shape in myopia may constitute a biomechanical limitation on further axial elongation. Synchronization of quadrant shapes with retinotopic projection suggests that binocular growth is coordinated by processes that operate beyond the optic chiasm
Performance of pilot-scale microbial fuel cells treating wastewater with associated bioenergy production in the Caribbean context
Microbial fuel cell (MFC) technology represents a form of renewable energy that generates bioelectricity from what would otherwise be considered a waste stream. MFCs may be ideally suited to the small island developing state (SIDS) context, such as Trinidad and Tobago where seawater as the main electrolyte is readily available and economical renewable and sustainable electricity is also deemed a priority. Hence this project tested two identical laboratory-scaled MFC systems that were specifically designed and developed for the Caribbean regional context. They consisted of two separate chambers, an anaerobic anodic chamber inoculated with wastewater and an aerobic cathodic chamber separated by a proton exchange membrane. Domestic wastewater from two various wastewater treatment plants inflow (after screening) was placed into the anodic chamber, and seawater from the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Paria placed into the cathodic chambers respectively with the bacteria present in the wastewater attaching to the anode. Experimental results demonstrated that the bacterial degradation of the wastewaters as substrate induced an electron flow through the electrodes producing bioelectricity whilst simultaneously reducing the organic matter as biochemical oxygen demand and chemical oxygen demand by 30 to 75%. The average bioenergy output for both systems was 84 mW/m² and 96 mW/m² respectively. This study demonstrated the potential for simultaneous bioenergy production and wastewater treatment in the SIDS context
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