10,114 research outputs found
Management of Science
NASA concept, philosophy, and approach to science managemen
Recommended from our members
Nomad, a naval message understanding system
We are building systems to automatically analyze Navy messages. Such messages typically are terse and use many abbreviations and Navy jargon. As a result, they are more difficult to understand than everyday English.The NOMAD system interacts with a message sender to ensure that only unambiguous and reasonably correct messages are generated. The VOX system will allow a human tutor to interactively extend the knowledge base of NOMAD
Toward a Negri-inspired theory of c/Constitution: a contemporary Canadian case study
This thesis excavates Antonio Negri's theorization of the distinction between 'the
material and formal constitution' (one which I distinguish throughout by way of
capitalization as 'the material constitution' and 'the formal Constitution' or, in the
shorthand contraction, 'c/Constitution'). In the first half of the thesis this is undertaken
by way of a theoretical line of inquiry (Chapter I-III) and in the second as a series of
concretized case studies drawn from contemporary Canadian constitutional
historiography (Chapters IV-VI).
The first chapter of this thesis (Chapter I) presents the October 1970 Front de libération
de Québec (FLQ) Crisis as an event which contains within itself, not unlike similar
events surrounding the kidnap and murder of Aldo Moro by the Brigate Rosse (BR) in
1978 Italy, the contours of a Negri-inspired entry into the subject matter. Chapter II
offers a more situated analysis of some of Negri's key texts on the c/Constitution from
the sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties to further ground the conceptual experiment
underlying the thesis. Chapter III examines how Negri's thought is developed and
brought up to date in his English language collaboration with Michael Hardt. Here, a
significant detour will be taken through the critical literature responsive to Empire
(2000). This is done first in a contemporary Canadian analysis of the form of
sovereignty corresponding to 'Empire' (Chapter IV); second in a Canadian inquiry into
the form of collective subjectivity understood by the concept of 'the multitude' (Chapter
V); and, third in an Indigenous Canadian consideration of possible alternatives to the
Constitution of the State in the 'constitution of the common' (Chapter VI)
Telling the Stars: A Quantitative Approach to Assessing the Use of Folk Tales in Science Education.
This research examines the impact of paired folk tales and science explanations on students in third through sixth grades who viewed program modules from the SkyTeller Project of Lynn Moroney and the Lunar and Planetary Institute of Houston, Texas. The audience consisted of over 3500 students in eight locations in the United States. Because few quantitative studies have been conducted to examine the use of stories in science education, the development of an instrument to assess students\u27 attitudes toward science and stories forms a major part of this research. During the final stage of testing, the revised instrument and methods found significant increase in positive attitude toward science after the presentations. Questionnaires, telephone calls, and on-site visits with program presenters and teachers confirmed quantitative results. Despite the difficulties of conducting large-scale studies and the traditionally small response compliance, quantitative assessment can provide useful information for evaluating storytelling media
Preliminary rotor wake measurements with a laser velocimeter
A laser velocimeter (LV) was used to determine rotor wake characteristics. The effect of various fuselage widths and rotor-fuselage spacings on time averaged and detailed time dependent rotor wake velocity characteristics was defined. Definition of time dependent velocity characteristics was attempted with the LV by associating a rotor azimuth position with each velocity measurement. Results were discouraging in that no apparent time dependent velocity characteristics could be discerned from the LV measurements. Since the LV is a relatively new instrument in the rotor wake measurement field, the cause of this lack of periodicity is as important as the basic research objectives. An attempt was made to identify the problem by simulated acquisition of LV-type data for a predicted rotor wake velocity time history. Power spectral density and autocorrelation function estimation techniques were used to substantiate the conclusion that the primary cause of the lack of time dependent velocity characteristics was the nonstationary flow condition generated by the periodic turbulence level that currently exists in the open throat configuration of the wind tunnel
Optimizing significance testing of astronomical forcing in cyclostratigraphy
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
- âŠ