3,823 research outputs found
Race and Policing: An Agenda for Action
This paper is organized into two parts -- Strategic Voice and Tactical Agency. Strategic Voice argues that problems of race in policing cannot be resolved by the police alone. Other people must help by understanding and ameliorating the social conditions that cause race to be associated with crime and hence become a dilemma for American policing. Rather than accepting these conditions as givens, police leaders with their powerful collective voice should actively call attention to what needs to be changed. Tactical Agency outlines what the police can do on their own initiative to deal with the operational dilemmas of race -- in the communities they serve and in their own organizations
A comparison of the modern and classic golf swing: a clinician's perspective
Objective. There is little descriptive research on the motion the body displays during the golf swing. The purpose of this research is to review the modern golf swing and
compare its motion to the classic golf swing.
Discussion. The comparison revealed subtle but significant differences in the backswing and the follow-through positions. The potential implications for power and injury,
particularly of the lower back, are discussed. The discussion describes a third swing, the hybrid swing, which is a combination of the classic and modern swing. The hybrid
swing may potentially reduce the chances of sustaining a low back injury while still retaining the power of the modern swing.
Conclusion. The golf swing has evolved over time as a result of a combination of advanced equipment, course design and human experimentation. The hybrid swing is
being taught by some golf professionals as a balance between the power-potential of the modern swing and the âback-friendly\' nature of the classic swing, though no studies
have so far been conducted on its efficacy. Further investigation into the three golf swings, classic, modern and hybrid, is required to determine which swing is the most effective
while also being friendly to the body. Such research will make possible the development programmes aimed at reducing golf injury rates, particularly to the lower back. South African Journal of Sports Medicine Vol. 18 (3) 2006: pp. 80-9
Functional Multivesicular Structures with Controlled Architecture from 3DâPrinted Droplet Networks
Novel steady state of a microtubule assembly in a confined geometry
We study the steady state of an assembly of microtubules in a confined
volume, analogous to the situation inside a cell where the cell boundary forms
a natural barrier to growth. We show that the dynamical equations for growing
and shrinking microtubules predict the existence of two steady states, with
either exponentially decaying or exponentially increasing distribution of
microtubule lengths. We identify the regimes in parameter space corresponding
to these steady states. In the latter case, the apparent catastrophe frequency
near the boundary was found to be significantly larger than that in the
interior. Both the exponential distribution of lengths and the increase in the
catastrophe frequency near the cell margin is in excellent agreement with
recent experimental observations.Comment: 8 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev.
A modified version of the Bayley Scales of Infant Development-II for cognitive matching of infants with and without Down syndrome
Background Many measures of infants' early cognitive development, including the BSID-II (The Bayley Scales of Infant Development), mix together test items that assess a number of different developmental domains including language, attention, motor functioning and social abilities, and some items contribute to the assessment of more than one domain. Consequently, the scales may lead to under- or over-estimates of cognitive abilities in some clinical samples and may not be the best measure to use for matching purposes.
Method To address this issue we created a modified form of the BSID-II (the BSID-M) to provide a âpurerâ assessment of the general cognitive capacities in infants with Down syndrome (DS) from 6 to 18 months of age. We excluded a number of items that implicated language, motor, attentional and social functioning from the original measure. This modified form was administered to 17 infants with Down syndrome when 6, 12 and 18 months old and to 41 typically developing infants at 4, 7 and 10 months old.
Results The results suggested that the modified form continued to provide a meaningful and stable measure of cognitive functioning and revealed that DS infants may score marginally higher in terms of general cognitive abilities when using this modified form than they might when using the standard BSID-II scales.
Conclusions This modified form may be useful for researchers who need a âpurerâ measure with which to match infants with DS and other infants with intellectual disabilities on cognitive functioning
Community-linked maternal death review (CLMDR) to measure and prevent maternal mortality: a pilot study in rural Malawi.
In Malawi, maternal mortality remains high. Existing maternal death reviews fail to adequately review most deaths, or capture those that occur outside the health system. We assessed the value of community involvement to improve capture and response to community maternal deaths
Formalising design patterns in predicate logic
Design patterns are traditionally outlined in an informal
manner. If they could be formalised, we could derive tools
that automatically recognise design patterns and refactor
designs and code. Our approach is to deploy predicate logic
to specify conditions on the class diagrams that describe
design patterns. The structure of class diagrams is itself
described with a novel meta-notation that can be used for
defining any graphical modelling language. As a result, the
constraints, while based on UML, are highly readable and
have much expressive power. This enables us not only to
recognise design patterns in legacy code, but also to reason
about them at the design stage, such as showing one pattern
to be a special case of another. The paper discusses our
specification of the original 23 design patterns and presents
a representative sample of some of them
On the Composition of Design Patterns
Design patterns are usually applied in a composed form
with each other. It is crucial to be able to formally reason
about how patterns can be composed and to prove the
properties of composed patterns. Based on our previous
work on formal specification of design patterns and formal
reasoning about their properties, this paper focuses on the
composition of design patterns. A notion of composition of
patterns with respect to overlaps is formally defined based
on two operations on design patterns, which are the specialisation
of a pattern with constraints and the lifting of a
pattern with a subset of components as the key. The composition
of design patterns is illustrated by the composition
of Composite, Strategy and Observer patterns. A case
study of the formalisation of the relationship between patterns
as suggested by GoF is also reported
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