136 research outputs found

    Visual Literacy and New Technologies

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    This body of research addresses the connection between arts, identity and new technology, and investigates the impact of images on adolescent identities, the relationship between online modes of communication and cyber-bullying, the increasing visualization of information and explores the way drawing and critical analysis of imagery develops visual literacy. Commissioned by Adobe Systems Pty Ltd, Australia (2003) to compile the Visual Literacy White Paper, Bamford’s report defines visual literacy and highlights its importance in the learning of such skill as problem solving and critical thinking. Providing strategies to promote visual literacy and emphasizing the role of technology in visual communication, this report has become a major reference for policy on visual literacy and cyber-bullying in the UK, USA and Asia

    The Wow and the How: The role of arts education and approaches for teaching

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    Society is facing considerable disruptions. To name but a few we have seismic changes in technology, in the nature of work, in the environment, in inequality, in patterns of life and migration, in health and wellbeing, and in the mistrust of institutions. Above all, we have become increasingly at the mercy of very rapid changes. The arts, and specifically arts education, help to prepare us to learn and to flourish in the world now and in the future. El artículo revisa los aportes de la educación artística a la formación de las personas.  A partir del estudio internacional sobre el impacto de las artes en la educación, encomendado por UNESCO, explicita sus observaciones sobre aspectos vitales para una buena práctica   en la enseñanza de las artes. Discute también algunas creencias y preocupaciones de los profesores de arte y propone un abordaje integrador, denominado Fusion Aproach que armoniza tanto la experiencia del descubrimiento y el asombro (factor wuau!!!)  como la necesidad de desarrollar habilidades específicas de los lenguajes artísticos (el cómo hace). Aborda el papel mediador del docente en las prácticas culturale

    Development of fluorophore-tagged DNA probes for cellular imaging applications

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    Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are single base variations in DNA which give genetic variation. However, SNPs can also be linked to the development of certain diseases. Modified oligonucleotides used to probe biological changes and processes have become an important focus of scientific research. Fluorescent tagging of DNA can be used to sense SNPs in DNA targets through differences in emission intensity on the formation of a duplex. An anthracene-tagged DNA probe developed by Tucker etet alal. is able to discriminate between a fully complementary DNA target sequence and one with a single base difference. This thesis describes how SNP sensing with anthracene-tagged DNA has been extended to SNPs in RNA targets and sequences associated with Alzheimer's disease. Finally, a new dual fluorophore DNA probe was designed for SNP sensing via FRET

    GPS Based Autonomous Navigation Study for the Lunar Gateway

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    This paper describes and predicts the performance of a conceptual autonomous GPS-based navigation system for NASA's planned lunar Gateway. This system is based on the flight-proven Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) GPS navigation system, augmented with an earth-pointed high-gain antenna and with an option for an atomic clock. High-fidelity simulations, calibrated against MMS flight data and making use of GPS transmitter patterns from the GPS Antenna Characterization Experiment (ACE) project are developed for operation of the system in the Gateway Near-Rectilinear Halo Orbit (NRHO). The results indicate that GPS can provide an autonomous, realtime navigation capability with comparable, or superior, performance to traditional Deep Space Network approach with eight hours of tracking per day

    The first known virus isolates from Antarctic sea ice have complex infection patterns

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    Viruses are recognized as important actors in ocean ecology and biogeochemical cycles, but many details are not yet understood. We participated in a winter expedition to the Weddell Sea, Antarctica, to isolate viruses and to measure virus-like particle abundance (flow cytometry) in sea ice. We isolated 59 bacterial strains and the first four Antarctic sea-ice viruses known (PANV1, PANV2, OANV1 and OANV2), which grow in bacterial hosts belonging to the typical sea-ice genera Paraglaciecola and Octadecabacter. The viruses were specific for bacteria at the strain level, although OANV1 was able to infect strains from two different classes. Both PANV1 and PANV2 infected 11/15 isolated Paraglaciecola strains that had almost identical 16S rRNA gene sequences, but the plating efficiencies differed among the strains, whereas OANV1 infected 3/7 Octadecabacter and 1/15 Paraglaciecola strains and OANV2 1/7 Octadecabacter strains. All the phages were cold-active and able to infect their original host at 0 degrees C and 4 degrees C, but not at higher temperatures. The results showed that virus-host interactions can be very complex and that the viral community can also be dynamic in the winter-sea ice.Peer reviewe

    GPS Navigation Above 76,000 km for the MMS Mission

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    NASA's MMS mission, launched in March of 2015,consists of a controlled formation of four spin-stabilized spacecraft in similar highly elliptic orbits reaching apogee at radial distances of 12and 25 Earth radii in the first and second phases of the mission. Navigation for MMS is achieved independently onboard each spacecraft by processing GPS observables using NASA GSFC's Navigator GPS receiver and the Goddard Enhanced Onboard Navigation System (GEONS) extended Kalman filter software. To our knowledge, MMS constitutes, by far, the highest-altitude operational use of GPS to date and represents the culmination of over a decade of high-altitude GPS navigation research and development at NASA GSFC. In this paper we will briefly describe past and ongoing high-altitude GPS research efforts at NASA GSFC and elsewhere, provide details on the design of the MMS GPS navigation system, and present on-orbit performance data. We extrapolate these results to predict performance in the Phase 2b mission orbit, and conclude with a discussion of the implications of the MMS results for future high-altitude GPS navigation, which we believe to be broad and far-reaching

    Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) : stellar mass functions by Hubble type

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    This work was supported by the Austrian Science Foundation FWF under grant P23946. AWG was supported under the Australian Research Council's funding scheme FT110100263.We present an estimate of the galaxy stellar mass function and its division by morphological type in the local (0.025 < z < 0.06) Universe. Adopting robust morphological classifications as previously presented (Kelvin et al.) for a sample of 3727 galaxies taken from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly survey, we define a local volume and stellar mass limited sub-sample of 2711 galaxies to a lower stellar mass limit of M = 109.0 MΘ. We confirm that the galaxy stellar mass function is well described by a double-Schechter function given by Μ* = 1010.64 MΘ, α1 = 0.43, φ1* = 4.18 dex-1 Mpc-3, α2 = −1.50 and φ2* = 0.74 dex-1 Mpc-3. The constituent morphological-type stellar mass functions are well sampled above our lower stellar mass limit, excepting the faint little blue spheroid population of galaxies. We find approximately 71-4+3 per cent of the stellar mass in the local Universe is found within spheroid-dominated galaxies; ellipticals and S0-Sas. The remaining 29-3+4 per cent falls predominantly within late-type disc-dominated systems, Sab-Scds and Sd-Irrs. Adopting reasonable bulge-to-total ratios implies that approximately half the stellar mass today resides in spheroidal structures, and half in disc structures. Within this local sample, we find approximate stellar mass proportions for E : S0-Sa : Sab-Scd : Sd-Irr of 34 : 37 : 24 :5.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Global Positioning System Navigation Above 76,000 km for NASA's Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission

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    NASA's Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission, launched in March of 2015, consists of a controlled formation of four spin-stabilized spacecraft in similar highly elliptic orbits reaching apogee at radial distances of 12 and 25 Earth radii (RE) in the first and second phases of the mission. Navigation for MMS is achieved independently on-board each spacecraft by processing Global Positioning System (GPS) observables using NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)'s Navigator GPS receiver and the Goddard Enhanced Onboard Navigation System (GEONS) extended Kalman filter software. To our knowledge, MMS constitutes, by far, the highest-altitude operational use of GPS to date and represents a high point of over a decade of high-altitude GPS navigation research and development at GSFC. In this paper we will briefly describe past and ongoing high-altitude GPS research efforts at NASA GSFC and elsewhere, provide details on the design of the MMS GPS navigation system, and present on-orbit performance data from the first phase. We extrapolate these results to predict performance in the second phase orbit, and conclude with a discussion of the implications of the MMS results for future high-altitude GPS navigation, which we believe to be broad and far-reaching

    Mistral 7B

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    We introduce Mistral 7B v0.1, a 7-billion-parameter language model engineered for superior performance and efficiency. Mistral 7B outperforms Llama 2 13B across all evaluated benchmarks, and Llama 1 34B in reasoning, mathematics, and code generation. Our model leverages grouped-query attention (GQA) for faster inference, coupled with sliding window attention (SWA) to effectively handle sequences of arbitrary length with a reduced inference cost. We also provide a model fine-tuned to follow instructions, Mistral 7B -- Instruct, that surpasses the Llama 2 13B -- Chat model both on human and automated benchmarks. Our models are released under the Apache 2.0 license.Comment: Models and code are available at https://mistral.ai/news/announcing-mistral-7b
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