38,306 research outputs found
First year student experience
The application was made on behalf of the undergraduate courses team who sought to enhance the first year experience by engaging students in the practice of business. The intention was to develop and signpost enterprising qualities and characteristics in first year learners and develop confidence as well as competence.
The undergraduate review for FBL commenced in September 2009. This offered an opportunity to innovate and build good practice in enterprise learning as a pilot to inform the undergraduate review. The team sought to provide a coherent and relevant set of learning experiences that could be achieved outside structured curriculum that would enable learning through live projects
Cronin Effect at Different Rapidities at RHIC
Calculations of the nuclear modification factor, R_dAu, for pi^0 production
in dAu collisions at s_NN^1/2 = 200 GeV are presented. The applied
pQCD-improved parton model incorporates intrinsic k_T. Nuclear multiscattering
and nuclear shadowing are considered in the Au nucleus. Theoretical results are
displayed for midrapidity and high pseudorapidity (eta), and compared to
preliminary PHENIX and BRAHMS data.Comment: Contributed to 17th International Conference on Ultra Relativistic
Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (Quark Matter 2004), Oakland, California, 11-17
Jan 200
Motorola cash management: The evolution of a global system
The set of interorganizational information systems used for global cash management in business markets is analyzed. A longitudinal case study of Motorola is presented. Their strategy has evolved from an internal cost saving focus to a cooperative one, yielding significant strategic benefits by the inclusion of trading partners. The financial aspects of Motorola's business relationships with trading partners and its principal bank have been transformed through a process of organizational learning and adaptation coupled with the close integration of information systems (ISs) throughout the cash supply chain. Cooperative behavior between Motorola and its suppliers, with the help of Citibank, has enabled a coordinated response to bring cash flows in line with product flows. The results are compared with existing IS marketing theories on business relationships, market structure, and globalization
Human behavior in Prisoner's Dilemma experiments suppresses network reciprocity
During the last few years, much research has been devoted to strategic
interactions on complex networks. In this context, the Prisoner's Dilemma has
become a paradigmatic model, and it has been established that imitative
evolutionary dynamics lead to very different outcomes depending on the details
of the network. We here report that when one takes into account the real
behavior of people observed in the experiments, both at the mean-field level
and on utterly different networks the observed level of cooperation is the
same. We thus show that when human subjects interact in an heterogeneous mix
including cooperators, defectors and moody conditional cooperators, the
structure of the population does not promote or inhibit cooperation with
respect to a well mixed population.Comment: 5 Pages including 4 figures. Submitted for publicatio
Sets of Priors Reflecting Prior-Data Conflict and Agreement
In Bayesian statistics, the choice of prior distribution is often debatable,
especially if prior knowledge is limited or data are scarce. In imprecise
probability, sets of priors are used to accurately model and reflect prior
knowledge. This has the advantage that prior-data conflict sensitivity can be
modelled: Ranges of posterior inferences should be larger when prior and data
are in conflict. We propose a new method for generating prior sets which, in
addition to prior-data conflict sensitivity, allows to reflect strong
prior-data agreement by decreased posterior imprecision.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, In: Paulo Joao Carvalho et al. (eds.), IPMU
2016: Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Information
Processing and Management of Uncertainty in Knowledge-Based Systems,
Eindhoven, The Netherland
Mathematical modelling of the pathogenesis of multiple myeloma-induced bone disease
Multiple myeloma (MM) is the second most common haematological malignancy and results in destructive bone lesions. The interaction between MM cells and the bone microenvironment plays an important role in the development of the tumour cells and MM-induced bone disease and forms a 'vicious cycle' of tumour development and bone destruction, intensified by suppression of osteoblast activity and promotion of osteoclast activity. In this paper, a mathematical model is proposed to simulate how the interaction between MM cells and the bone microenvironment facilitates the development of the tumour cells and the resultant bone destruction. It includes both the roles of inhibited osteoblast activity and stimulated osteoclast activity. The model is able to mimic the temporal variation of bone cell concentrations and resultant bone volume after the invasion and then removal of the tumour cells and explains why MM-induced bone lesions rarely heal even after the complete removal of MM cells. The behaviour of the model compares well with published experimental data. The model serves as a first step to understand the development of MM-induced bone disease and could be applied further to evaluate the current therapies against MM-induced bone disease and even suggests new potential therapeutic targets
Holographic Superconductors from Einstein-Maxwell-Dilaton Gravity
We construct holographic superconductors from Einstein-Maxwell-dilaton
gravity in 3+1 dimensions with two adjustable couplings and the charge
carried by the scalar field. For the values of and we
consider, there is always a critical temperature at which a second order phase
transition occurs between a hairy black hole and the AdS RN black hole in the
canonical ensemble, which can be identified with the superconducting phase
transition of the dual field theory. We calculate the electric conductivity of
the dual superconductor and find that for the values of and where
is small the dual superconductor has similar properties to the
minimal model, while for the values of and where is
large enough, the electric conductivity of the dual superconductor exhibits
novel properties at low frequencies where it shows a "Drude Peak" in the real
part of the conductivity.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures; v2, typos corrected; v3, refs added, to appear
in JHE
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Undrained sliding resistance of shallow foundations subject to torsion
While the behavior of shallow foundations under vertical load combinations has been the subject of numerous studies, the response of shallow foundations subjected to combined horizontal and torsional loading has received considerably less attention. New offshore applications of shallow foundations for LNG facilities and other subsea structures have underscored the importance of the behavior of shallow embedded foundations subjected to combined in-plane translation and torsion. This study investigates the undrained bearing capacity of rectangular and square shallow foundations under eccentric horizontal loads through comparisons of various limit equilibrium and plastic limit analysis solutions to 3-D finite element solutions. In general, the plastic limit approach considered in this paper agrees well with the finite element solutions, although it has some tendency to over-predict capacity at greater embedment depths. The studies revealed a general insensitivity in the shape of the yield envelope to variations in embedment depth, which permits a simplified analysis suitable for first order estimates of load capacity. The variables considered in this study include footing aspect ratio, embedment depth, and load direction in addition to eccentricity.This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final version can be found published by ASCE in the Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering here: http://ascelibrary.org/doi/abs/10.1061/(ASCE)GT.1943-5606.0001138
Crystal bending in triple-Laue X-ray interferometry. Part II. Phase-contrast topography
In a previous paper [Sasso et al. (2023). J. Appl. Cryst. 56, 707-715], the operation of a triple-Laue X-ray interferometer having the splitting or recombining crystal cylindrically bent was studied. It was predicted that the phase-contrast topography of the interferometer detects the displacement field of the inner crystal surfaces. Therefore, opposite bendings result in the observation of opposite (compressive or tensile) strains. This paper reports on the experimental confirmation of this prediction, where opposite bendings were obtained by copper deposition on one or the other of the crystal sides
Crystal bending in triple-Laue X-ray interferometry. Part I. Theory
The measured value of the (220) lattice-plane spacing of silicon 28 using scanning X-ray interferometry is essential to realize the kilogram by counting Si-28 atoms. An assumption made is that the measured lattice spacing is the bulk value of an unstrained crystal forming the analyser of the interferometer. However, analytical and numerical studies of the X-ray propagation in bent crystals suggest that the measured lattice spacing might refer to the analyser surface. To confirm the result of these studies and to support experimental investigations of the matter by phase-contrast topography, a comprehensive analytical model is given of the operation of a triple-Laue interferometer having the splitting or recombining crystal bent
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