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'Hidden' disability: an investigation into the characteristics of employees with Asperger's syndrome
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How talented people with Aspergerās are locked out of the career system
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Who makes better use of technology for learning in D&T? Schools or university?
University teacher training departments have many functions in their role as Schools for Initial Teacher Education (ITE), these include accrediting qualified teacher status, teaching subject knowledge and pedagogy, and influencing change in a school subject's content and pedagogy. This paper discusses this latter area. It can be easy for teacher training in universities to become ivory towers, modelling new ideas for curriculum delivery and content in a 'bubble' away from the real world of the school classroom. A centre of design and technology (D&T) education at an English university has undertaken research-led developments in the use of web 2.0 technologies and technology enhanced learning (TEL), modelling how they can be used in the classroom. The research examined in this paper is the next stage of the centre's curriculum development to ensure the relevance of the university curriculum content and practices. Anecdotal evidence suggests that the use of TEL in secondary schools is inconsistent and sporadic with D&T teachers using TEL, with minimal awareness of research available, which could inform their practice. This impacts on the centre's trainee teachers as they begin teaching in schools during their final year of the course, with a possible unrealistic expectation of how TEL is used in schools, based on their university experiences
First Principles Calculations of Ionic Vibrational Frequencies in PbMg1/3Nb2/3O3
Lattice dynamics for several ordered supercells with composition
PbMg1/3Nb2/3O (PMN) were calculated with first-principles frozen phonon
methods. Nominal symmetries of the supercells studied are reduced by lattice
instabilities. Lattice modes corresponding to these instabilities, equilibrium
ionic positions, and infrared (IR) reflectivity spectra are reported.Comment: 6 pages; Fundamental physics of Ferroelectrics 200
Control of P2X2 Channel Permeability by the Cytosolic Domain
ATP-gated P2X channels are the simplest of the three families of transmitter-gated ion channels. Some P2X channels display a time- and activation-dependent change in permeability as they undergo the transition from the relatively Na+-selective I1 state to the I2 state, which is also permeable to organic cations. We report that the previously reported permeability change of rat P2X2 (rP2X2) channels does not occur at mouse P2X2 (mP2X2) channels expressed in oocytes. Domain swaps, species chimeras, and point mutations were employed to determine that two specific amino acid residues in the cytosolic tail domain govern this difference in behavior between the two orthologous channels. The change in pore diameter was characterized using reversal potential measurements and excluded field theory for several organic ions; both rP2X2 and mP2X2 channels have a pore diameter of ~11 Ć
in the I1 state, but the transition to the I2 state increases the rP2X2 diameter by at least 3 Ć
. The I1 to I2 transition occurs with a rate constant of ~0.5 s^-1. The data focus attention on specific residues of P2X2 channel cytoplasmic domains as determinants of permeation in a state-specific manner
Effects of Vacancies on Properties of Relaxor Ferroelectrics: a First-Principles Study
A first-principles-based model is developed to investigate the influence of
lead vacancies on the properties of relaxor ferroelectric Pb(Sc1/2Nb1/2)O3
(PSN). Lead vacancies generate large, inhomogeneous, electric fields that
reduce barriers between energy minima for different polarization directions.
This naturally explains why relaxors with significant lead vacancy
concentrations have broadened dielectric peaks at lower temperatures, and why
lead vacancies smear properties in the neighborhood of the ferroelectric
transition in PSN. We also reconsider the conventional wisdom that lead
vacancies reduce the magnitude of dielectric response.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Building effective models from sparse but precise data
A common approach in computational science is to use a set of of highly
precise but expensive calculations to parameterize a model that allows less
precise, but more rapid calculations on larger scale systems. Least-squares
fitting on a model that underfits the data is generally used for this purpose.
For arbitrarily precise data free from statistic noise, e.g. ab initio
calculations, we argue that it is more appropriate to begin with a ensemble of
models that overfit the data. Within a Bayesian framework, a most likely model
can be defined that incorporates physical knowledge, provides error estimates
for systems not included in the fit, and reproduces the original data exactly.
We apply this approach to obtain a cluster expansion model for the Ca[Zr,Ti]O3
solid solution.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Grain Boundary Loops in Graphene
Topological defects can affect the physical properties of graphene in
unexpected ways. Harnessing their influence may lead to enhanced control of
both material strength and electrical properties. Here we present a new class
of topological defects in graphene composed of a rotating sequence of
dislocations that close on themselves, forming grain boundary loops that either
conserve the number of atoms in the hexagonal lattice or accommodate
vacancy/interstitial reconstruction, while leaving no unsatisfied bonds. One
grain boundary loop is observed as a "flower" pattern in scanning tunneling
microscopy (STM) studies of epitaxial graphene grown on SiC(0001). We show that
the flower defect has the lowest energy per dislocation core of any known
topological defect in graphene, providing a natural explanation for its growth
via the coalescence of mobile dislocations.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures. Revised title; expanded; updated reference
Diffusion of Point Defects in Two-Dimensional Colloidal Crystals
We report the first study of the dynamics of point defects, mono and
di-vacancies, in a confined 2-D colloidal crystal in real space and time using
digital video microscopy. The defects are introduced by manipulating individual
particles with optical tweezers. The diffusion rates are measured to be
Hz for mono-vacancies and
Hz for di-vacancies. The elementary diffusion
processes are identified and it is found that the diffusion of di-vacancies is
enhanced by a \textit{dislocation dissociation-recombination} mechanism.
Furthermore, the defects do not follow a simple random walk but their hopping
exhibits memory effects, due to the reduced symmetry (compared to the
triangular lattice) of their stable configurations, and the slow relaxation
rates of the lattice modes.Comment: 6 pages (REVTEX), 5 figures (PS
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