229,100 research outputs found
World prehistory from the margins: the role of coastlines in human evolution
Conventional accounts of world prehistory are dominated by land-based narratives progressing from scavenging and hunting of land mammals and gathering of plants to animal domestication and crop agriculture, and ultimately to urban civilisations supported by agricultural surpluses and trade. The use of coastlines and marine resources has been viewed as marginal, late in the sequence, or anomalous. This bias is primarily the result of three factors: the removal of most relevant evidence by sealevel change; the bad press given to coastal hunters and gatherers by 19th century ethnographers; and a belief in technological 'primitivism'. In this paper I will examine the case for treating coastal habitats as amongst the most attractive for human settlement, and coastlines and seaways not as barriers but as gateways to human movement and contact, from early hominid dispersals to the rise of the great coastal and riverine civilisations
Perceptions of Happiness and Its Determinants An Intergenerational Study of What People Think about Money and Happiness
This study examines people’s perceptions of happiness. Specifically, it seeks to define the determinants of happiness, with a focus on the link between happiness and financial state. Of particular interest is an examination of differences in attribution (if any) on this issue between disparate age groups. An online questionnaire was created and then completed by 538 total participants. Belief that money can buy happiness was tested in two different ways: the Measure of Materialistic Attitudes Scale from the Handbook of Marketing, and the Money-Happiness scale, which was generated for this research. The study also evaluated people’s happiness levels using a device patterned after the Oxford Happiness Questionnaire (Hills 2002). The results suggested that as age increases, the tendency to believe that money buys happiness decreases. Furthermore, males are more likely than females to believe that the material possessions that money can buy will bring them increased happiness. In addition, the younger generation is more likely than the older generation to believe that achievement increases happiness while the older generation puts more importance on religious or spiritual beliefs and practices for increases in happiness. This research helps add to a growing research interest in understanding sources of personal contentment
An Application for Research: the Large Hadron Collider
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) machine at CERN was designed and built
primarily to find or exclude the existence of the Higgs boson, for which a
large amount of data is needed by the LHC experiments. This requires operation
at high luminosity, which in turn requires running with thousands of
high-intensity proton bunches in the machine. After quantifying the data
required by the experiments and elucidating the LHC parameters needed to
achieve this, this paper explains how the LHC beams are fabricated from the
pulse(s) coming from the CERN Duoplasmatron source.Comment: 10 pages, contribution to the CAS-CERN Accelerator School: Ion
  Sources, Senec, Slovakia, 29 May - 8 June 2012, edited by R. Bailey,
  CERN-2013-00
The relationships and supports that matter to children looked after (CLA) in long term voluntary accommodation (Children Act 1989, s 20)
The overall aim of this practitioner-led research project was to explore relationships and conceptualisations of ‘permanence in foster care’ from the young person’s perspective. A multidimensional conceptualisation of permanence, with a focus on supportive networks, was used to identify the relationships that a group of looked after young people viewed as significant to them and to explore which relationship groups they accessed for social support. 
Participants were a convenience sample of six (two male, four female) young people (aged 13 – 16) who were voluntarily accommodated (Children Act 1989, s.20) in the long term care of the local authority. Four participants were living with foster carers and two were in residential homes.
Participants constructed a personal network map, placing themselves at the centre of a concentric circles diagram and the names of the people in their support network in the surrounding circles. To ascertain participants’ perceptions of who provides what type of support, they were asked how they would respond in three scenarios that were designed to elicit specific measures of social support (affective support, self-affirmation, and instrumental assistance).
The results showed that the young people considered a wide variety of relationships as important to them and were able to utilise a range of relationships as sources of social support. Significantly, despite their physical absence, sibling relationships were unanimously viewed as important and appeared to hold the potential to provide much support.
This research suggests the potential value in moving beyond physical conceptualisations of permanence and instead adopting a systemic relationships-based approach, which recognises a young person’s entire social network. Recommendations for practice include providing support to strengthen all significant relationships, regardless of their physical presence.
This research project hopes to highlight the potentially unique needs of voluntarily accommodated young people. The discussion suggests the importance of reinforcing the implementation of voluntary accommodation as it was intended, as “support for children and families” (Children Act 1989, part 3)
Staggered Heavy Baryon Chiral Perturbation Theory
Although taste violations significantly affect the results of staggered
calculations of pseudoscalar and heavy-light mesonic quantities, those entering
staggered calculations of baryonic quantities have not been quantified. Here I
develop staggered chiral perturbation theory in the light-quark baryon sector
by mapping the Symanzik action into heavy baryon chiral perturbation theory.
For 2+1 dynamical quark flavors, the masses of flavor-symmetric nucleons are
calculated to third order in partially quenched and fully dynamical staggered
chiral perturbation theory. To this order the expansion includes the leading
chiral logarithms, which come from loops with virtual decuplet-like states, as
well as terms the order of the cubed pion mass, which come from loops with
virtual octet-like states. Taste violations enter through the meson propagators
in loops and tree-level terms the order of the squared lattice spacing. The
pattern of taste symmetry breaking and the resulting degeneracies and mixings
are discussed in detail. The resulting chiral forms are appropriate to lattice
results obtained with operators already in use and could be used to study the
restoration of taste symmetry in the continuum limit. I assume that the fourth
root of the fermion determinant can be incorporated in staggered chiral
perturbation theory using the replica method.Comment: 54 pages; v2: corrected discussion in Sec. III.C, conclusions
  unchange
Physical Therapy and Proper Sleep Positions Lead to Improved Hamstring Flexibility
Research Question: How effectively can physical therapy and correct sleep positioning improve hamstring flexibility and reduce pain, based on age and everyday activity
Social deprivation and widening participation: the continuing power of local cultures
This paper considers social deprivation and widening participation in a South Yorkshire community.  It examines why young adults living within a working class community choose not to enter higher education.  It discusses the expectations, motivations and aspirations of these young adults, whilst focusing on the impact of local, cultural, social and economic factors
Assistive Technology, Accommodations, and the Americans with Disabilities Act
This brochure on Assistive Technology, Accommodations, and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is one of a series on human resources practices and workplace accommodations for persons with disabilities edited by Susanne M. Bruyère, Ph.D., CRC, SPHR, Director, Program on Employment and Disability, School of Industrial and Labor Relations - Extension Division, Cornell Universit
Safe Environments for Innovation: the development of a new multidisciplinary masters programme
In September 2007, three schools at Northumbria University came together in collaboration to create a Masters Programme in Multidisciplinary Design Innovation (MDI). The lead school was the School of Design working together with the School of Computing, Engineering and Information Sciences (CEIS) and the Newcastle Business School (NBS). This innovation was in response to an emerging understanding within the School of Design of the value of ‘Design-Thinking’ as a multi-disciplinary activity (developed and reinforced through a series of under-graduate pilot projects) and the Cox Review of Creativity in Business: building on the UK’s strengths, which was commissioned by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, at the time of the 2005 Budget (Cox, 2005). (Design-Thinking is an approach to viewing business and organisational situations from a more interpretative perspective than that of traditional business analysis (Lester et al,1998)) The programme was launched in September 2008
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