29,479 research outputs found
Repository Steering Groups
A well-chosen, well-informed and committed Steering
Group can make an important contribution to the
sustained success of a repository. This Briefing Paper
highlights some of the issues for consideration when
planning the role, remit and composition of a repository
Steering Group
Microdosimetric concepts relevant to HZE-particles
The biological effectiveness of HZE-particles
i s determined by the extreme microscopic concentrations
of energy transfer in the vicinity
of the particle tracks. The concept of linear
energy transfer fails to describe this situation
adequately. The more rigorous microdosimetric
concepts are presented. A simplified
treatment, based on the radial distribution
of energy around the track core, is then considered
Multi-modal information processing for visual workload relief
The simultaneous performance of two single-dimensional compensatory tracking tasks, one with the left hand and one with the right hand, is discussed. The tracking performed with the left hand was considered the primary task and was performed with a visual display or a quickened kinesthetic-tactual (KT) display. The right-handed tracking was considered the secondary task and was carried out only with a visual display. Although the two primary task displays had afforded equivalent performance in a critical tracking task performed alone, in the dual-task situation the quickened KT primary display resulted in superior secondary visual task performance. Comparisons of various combinations of primary and secondary visual displays in integrated or separated formats indicate that the superiority of the quickened KT display is not simply due to the elimination of visual scanning. Additional testing indicated that quickening per se also is not the immediate cause of the observed KT superiority
Aging, Emotion, Attention, and Binding in the Taboo Stroop Task: Data and Theories.
How does aging impact relations between emotion, memory, and attention? To address this question, young and older adults named the font colors of taboo and neutral words, some of which recurred in the same font color or screen location throughout two color-naming experiments. The results indicated longer color-naming response times (RTs) for taboo than neutral base-words (taboo Stroop interference); better incidental recognition of colors and locations consistently associated with taboo versus neutral words (taboo context-memory enhancement); and greater speed-up in color-naming RTs with repetition of color-consistent than color-inconsistent taboo words, but no analogous speed-up with repetition of location-consistent or location-inconsistent taboo words (the consistency type by repetition interaction for taboo words). All three phenomena remained constant with aging, consistent with the transmission deficit hypothesis and binding theory, where familiar emotional words trigger age-invariant reactions for prioritizing the binding of contextual features to the source of emotion. Binding theory also accurately predicted the interaction between consistency type and repetition for taboo words. However, one or more aspects of these phenomena failed to support the inhibition deficit hypothesis, resource capacity theory, or socio-emotional selectivity theory. We conclude that binding theory warrants further test in a range of paradigms, and that relations between aging and emotion, memory, and attention may depend on whether the task and stimuli trigger fast-reaction, involuntary binding processes, as in the taboo Stroop paradigm
A Search for Distant Galactic Cepheids Toward l=60
We present results of a survey of a 6-square-degree region near l=60, b=0 to
search for distant Milky Way Cepheids. Few MW Cepheids are known at distances
>~ R_0, limiting large-scale MW disk models derived from Cepheid kinematics;
this work was designed to find a sample of distant Cepheids for use in such
models. The survey was conducted in the V and I bands over 8 epochs, to a
limiting I~=18, with a total of ~ 5 million photometric observations of ~ 1
million stars. We present a catalog of 578 high-amplitude variables discovered
in this field. Cepheid candidates were selected from this catalog on the basis
of variability and color change, and observed again the following season. We
confirm 10 of these candidates as Cepheids with periods from 4 to 8 days, most
at distances > 3 kpc. Many of the Cepheids are heavily reddened by intervening
dust, some with implied extinction A_V > 10 mag. With a future addition of
infrared photometry and radial velocities, these stars alone can provide a
constraint on R_0 to 8%, and in conjunction with other known Cepheids should
provide good estimates of the global disk potential ellipticity.Comment: 18 pages, 4 tables, 13 figures (LaTeX / AASTeX
The ultrafilter number for singular cardinals
We prove the consistency of a singular cardinal with small value of
the ultrafilter number , and arbitrarily large value of .Comment: 8 page
A Component Based Heuristic Search Method with Evolutionary Eliminations
Nurse rostering is a complex scheduling problem that affects hospital
personnel on a daily basis all over the world. This paper presents a new
component-based approach with evolutionary eliminations, for a nurse scheduling
problem arising at a major UK hospital. The main idea behind this technique is
to decompose a schedule into its components (i.e. the allocated shift pattern
of each nurse), and then to implement two evolutionary elimination strategies
mimicking natural selection and natural mutation process on these components
respectively to iteratively deliver better schedules. The worthiness of all
components in the schedule has to be continuously demonstrated in order for
them to remain there. This demonstration employs an evaluation function which
evaluates how well each component contributes towards the final objective. Two
elimination steps are then applied: the first elimination eliminates a number
of components that are deemed not worthy to stay in the current schedule; the
second elimination may also throw out, with a low level of probability, some
worthy components. The eliminated components are replenished with new ones
using a set of constructive heuristics using local optimality criteria.
Computational results using 52 data instances demonstrate the applicability of
the proposed approach in solving real-world problems.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figure
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