305 research outputs found
El trabajo práctico en la enseñanza de las ciencias : una revisión
This article is a review about the effectiveness of practicals in science education at the secondary and tertiary levels. Through more than one hundred references, the authors conclude solid arguments have not been provided to justify the great deal of material and human resources needed for the implementation of this educational tool. In spite of these disappointing findings, the authors do not deny the central role of practicals in science education, and they justify these negative results by invoking the great complexity of the subject, the ambiguity that surrounds the term «practicals», and an unsuitable methodology that researchers use to measure their effectiveness. Finally, some plausible solutions to the problem are suggested, such as the characterisation of the educational objectives of practicals, or the use of a qualitative evaluation methodology
Information Diffusion Power of Political Party Twitter Accounts During Japan's 2017 Election
In modern election campaigns, political parties utilize social media to
advertise their policies and candidates and to communicate to electorates. In
Japan's latest general election in 2017, the 48th general election for the
Lower House, social media, especially Twitter, was actively used. In this
paper, we perform a detailed analysis of social graphs and users who retweeted
tweets of political parties during the election. Our aim is to obtain accurate
information regarding the diffusion power for each party rather than just the
number of followers. The results indicate that a user following a user who
follows a political party account tended to also follow the account. This means
that it does not increase diversity because users who follow each other tend to
share similar values. We also find that followers of a specific party
frequently retweeted the tweets. However, since users following the user who
follow a political party account are not diverse, political parties delivered
the information only to a few political detachment users.Comment: The 10th International Conference on Social Informatics (SocInfo
2018
On the influence of social bots in online protests. Preliminary findings of a Mexican case study
Social bots can affect online communication among humans. We study this
phenomenon by focusing on #YaMeCanse, the most active protest hashtag in the
history of Twitter in Mexico. Accounts using the hashtag are classified using
the BotOrNot bot detection tool. Our preliminary analysis suggests that bots
played a critical role in disrupting online communication about the protest
movement.Comment: 10 page
Improved 3D sparse maps for high-performance SFM with low-cost omnidirectional robots
We consider the use of low-budget omnidirectional platforms for 3D mapping and self-localisation. These robots specifically permit rotational motion in the plane around a central axis, with negligible displacement. In addition, low resolution and compressed imagery, typical of the platform used, results in high level of image noise (_ ∽ 10). We observe highly sparse image feature matches over narrow inter-image baselines. This particular configuration poses a challenge for epipolar geometry extraction and accurate 3D point triangulation, upon which a standard structure from motion formulation is based. We propose a novel technique for both feature filtering and tracking that solves these problems, via a novel approach to the management of feature bundles. Noisy matches are efficiently trimmed, and the scarcity of the remaining image features is adequately overcome, generating densely populated maps of highly accurate and robust 3D image features. The effectiveness of the approach is demonstrated under a variety of scenarios in experiments conducted with low-budget commercial robots
Understanding online political networks: The case of the far-right and far-left in Greece
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.This paper examines the connectivity among political networks on Twitter. We explore dynamics inside and between the far right and the far left, as well as the relation between the structure of the network and sentiment. The 2015 Greek political context offers a unique opportunity to investigate political communication in times of political intensity and crisis. We explore interactions inside and between political networks on Twitter in the run up to the elections of three different ballots: the parliamentary election of 25 January, the bailout referendum of 5 July, the snap election of 20 September; we, then, compare political action during campaigns with that during routinized politics.This work received funding from the European Union Horizon 2020 Programme (Horizon2020/2014–2020), under grant agreement 688380
How Polarized Have We Become? A Multimodal Classification of Trump Followers and Clinton Followers
Polarization in American politics has been extensively documented and
analyzed for decades, and the phenomenon became all the more apparent during
the 2016 presidential election, where Trump and Clinton depicted two radically
different pictures of America. Inspired by this gaping polarization and the
extensive utilization of Twitter during the 2016 presidential campaign, in this
paper we take the first step in measuring polarization in social media and we
attempt to predict individuals' Twitter following behavior through analyzing
ones' everyday tweets, profile images and posted pictures. As such, we treat
polarization as a classification problem and study to what extent Trump
followers and Clinton followers on Twitter can be distinguished, which in turn
serves as a metric of polarization in general. We apply LSTM to processing
tweet features and we extract visual features using the VGG neural network.
Integrating these two sets of features boosts the overall performance. We are
able to achieve an accuracy of 69%, suggesting that the high degree of
polarization recorded in the literature has started to manifest itself in
social media as well.Comment: 16 pages, SocInfo 2017, 9th International Conference on Social
Informatic
Movies, ethics and accounting: a teaching experience
This research presents an innovative learning experience undertaken
in three groups of a financial accounting course at the
University of Valencia (Spain). After watching three accountingrelated
movies, students answered a test based on each movie
with questions about the ethical and accounting issues described
in them and their satisfaction with the learning technique.
Nonparametric tests and a multivariate analysis showed that the
students who participated in this experience obtained a higher
exam mark than those who did not. Our results evidence a significant
effect on the final exam mark for more questions only in
one of the movies. Our results are valuable because they show
that students engage in this methodological approach, which can
be helpful for them to improve their exam performance
Inferring Population Preferences via Mixtures of Spatial Voting Models
Understanding political phenomena requires measuring the political
preferences of society. We introduce a model based on mixtures of spatial
voting models that infers the underlying distribution of political preferences
of voters with only voting records of the population and political positions of
candidates in an election. Beyond offering a cost-effective alternative to
surveys, this method projects the political preferences of voters and
candidates into a shared latent preference space. This projection allows us to
directly compare the preferences of the two groups, which is desirable for
political science but difficult with traditional survey methods. After
validating the aggregated-level inferences of this model against results of
related work and on simple prediction tasks, we apply the model to better
understand the phenomenon of political polarization in the Texas, New York, and
Ohio electorates. Taken at face value, inferences drawn from our model indicate
that the electorates in these states may be less bimodal than the distribution
of candidates, but that the electorates are comparatively more extreme in their
variance. We conclude with a discussion of limitations of our method and
potential future directions for research.Comment: To be published in the 8th International Conference on Social
Informatics (SocInfo) 201
Interleukin-8 expression in bronchoalveolar lavage cells in the evaluation of alveolitis in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
AbstractInterleukin-8 (IL-8) is a neutrophilic chemotactic factor which may have a prominent role in the attraction of neutrophils to the lung in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). The objective of this study was to investigate the usefulness of IL-8 expression in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cells in the evaluation of alveolitis in IPF. We analysed the BAL cell expression of IL-8 by immunocytochemistry in 19 patients with IPF (six smokers, three ex-smokers and ten non-smokers) and in a control group composed of 14 individuals (six smokers, eight non-smokers). In IPF, BAL was performed on both the pulmonary lobe with the most extensive involvement and the one less extensively involved on high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) scans. The percentages and absolute numbers of BAL IL-8+ macrophages from lobes with the most extensive HRCT scan involvement (36 ± 6% and (6 ± 2 × 104 ml−1) (SE) and from those less extensively involved [26% ± 4% and (6 ± 1) × 104 ml−1] were significantly higher with respect to both those from healthy smokers [17% ± 6% and (7 ± 4) × 104 ml−1] and those from non-smokers [2% ± 1% and (1 ± 0·3) × 104 ml−1] (P=0·005 and P=0·001, respectively), without differences between the two lobes. In contrast, both the proportions and the absolute numbers of BAL neutrophils in IPF were significantly higher in lobes with the most extensively involved HRCT scan in comparison with lobes with the least extensive involvement [13% ± 3%, (3 ± 1) × 104 ml−1 vs. 8% ± 2%, (1 ± 0·3) × 104 ml−1, P=0·05]. Moreover, the numbers of BAL neutrophils, but not those of IL-8+ macrophages, correlated with the extent of total pulmonary HRCT scan abnormalities in the most involved lobe (r=0·64, P=0·04). A correlation between neutrophils and IL-8+ cells was not observed. The results of this study suggest that, in IPF, BAL neutrophilia offers a better description of the disease inflammatory process than the expression of IL-8 in BAL cells
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