956 research outputs found
The impact of self-efficacy, expectations, and readiness on hearing aid outcomes
Objective: To examine the impact of self-efficacy and expectations for hearing aids, and readiness to improve hearing, on hearing aid outcome measures in first-time adult hearing aid users Design: A prospective, single centre design. Predictor variables measured at the hearing assessment included measures of self-efficacy, expectations and readiness to improve hearing. Outcome measures obtained at sixweek follow-up were the Glasgow Hearing Aid Benefit Profile and Satisfaction with Amplification in Daily Life. Study sample: A sample of 30 first-time adult hearing aid users were recruited through a public-sector funded audiology clinic. Results: When measured prior to hearing aid fitting, self-efficacy for hearing aids predicted satisfaction with hearing aids but was not related to other hearing aid outcomes. Expectations of hearing aids, in particular positive expectations, and readiness to improve hearing predicted outcomes for hearing aid satisfaction and benefit, although not hearing aid use. Hearing sensitivity was not correlated with hearing aid outcomes. Conclusions: These results suggest that assessment of expectations of hearing aids, and readiness to improve hearing, may be useful to help identify individuals attending audiology clinics who would most likely benefit from hearing aid provision
The mechanical and material properties of elderly human articular cartilage subject to impact and slow loading
Copyright © 2013 IPEM. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Peer reviewedPostprin
Environmental monitoring : phase 5 final report (April 2019 - March 2020)
This report presents the results and interpretation for Phase 5 of an integrated environmental
monitoring programme that is being undertaken around two proposed shale gas sites in England –
Preston New Road, Lancashire and Kirby Misperton, North Yorkshire. The report should be read
in conjunction with previous reports freely available through the project website1
. These provide
additional background to the project, presentation of earlier results and the rationale for
establishment of the different elements of the monitoring programme
Cherenkov radiation emitted by ultrafast laser pulses and the generation of coherent polaritons
We report on the generation of coherent phonon polaritons in ZnTe, GaP and
LiTaO using ultrafast optical pulses. These polaritons are coupled modes
consisting of mostly far-infrared radiation and a small phonon component, which
are excited through nonlinear optical processes involving the Raman and the
second-order susceptibilities (difference frequency generation). We probe their
associated hybrid vibrational-electric field, in the THz range, by
electro-optic sampling methods. The measured field patterns agree very well
with calculations for the field due to a distribution of dipoles that follows
the shape and moves with the group velocity of the optical pulses. For a
tightly focused pulse, the pattern is identical to that of classical Cherenkov
radiation by a moving dipole. Results for other shapes and, in particular, for
the planar and transient-grating geometries, are accounted for by a convolution
of the Cherenkov field due to a point dipole with the function describing the
slowly-varying intensity of the pulse. Hence, polariton fields resulting from
pulses of arbitrary shape can be described quantitatively in terms of
expressions for the Cherenkov radiation emitted by an extended source. Using
the Cherenkov approach, we recover the phase-matching conditions that lead to
the selection of specific polariton wavevectors in the planar and transient
grating geometry as well as the Cherenkov angle itself. The formalism can be
easily extended to media exhibiting dispersion in the THz range. Calculations
and experimental data for point-like and planar sources reveal significant
differences between the so-called superluminal and subluminal cases where the
group velocity of the optical pulses is, respectively, above and below the
highest phase velocity in the infrared.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure
Automated Analysis in Feature Modelling and Product Configuration
The automated analysis of feature models is one of the thriving
topics of research in the software product line and variability management
communities that has attracted more attention in the last years.
A recent literature review reported that more than 30 analysis operations
have been identi ed and di erent analysis mechanisms have been
proposed. Product con guration is a well established research eld with
more than 30 years of successful applications in di erent industrial domains.
Our hypothesis, that is not really new, is that these two independent
areas of research have interesting synergies that have not been
fully explored. To try to explore the potential synergies systematically, in
this paper we provide a rapid review to bring together these previously
disparate streams of work. We de ne a set of research questions and give
a preliminary answer to some of them. We conclude that there are many
research opportunities in the synergy of these independent areas.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación TIN2009- 07366Junta de Andalucía TIC-590
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