992 research outputs found
From toothpick legs to dropping vaginas: Gender and sexuality in Joan Rivers' stand-up comedy performance
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below. Copyright @ 2011 Intellect.This article employs sociocultural analysis to examine Joan Rivers’ stand-up comedy performances in order to reveal how she successfully operates in a sphere of artistic expression that has been, and continues to be, male-dominated. The analysis uncovers how Rivers’ stand-up comedy performance involves a complex combination of elements and how it fuses features that are regarded as ‘traditionally masculine’, such as aggression, with features frequently used by other female stand-up comedians, such as self-deprecating comedy and confessional comedy. Furthermore, the analysis exposes the complex ways in which constructions of gender and sexuality are negotiated and re-negotiated in Rivers’ stand-up comedy performance, and illustrates how dominant ideological identity constructions can be simultaneously reinforced and subverted within the same comic moment
Time Value of Commercial Product Returns
Once lightly regarded, the flow of product returns has become a significant concern for many manufacturers. For
products, such as PCs, whose value deteriorates rapidly with time, the increasing rates of return from on-line sales have elevated the need for effective reverse supply chain designs. Products lose value in the return stream in two important ways: first, their value diminishes during time delays while awaiting evaluation, repair or refurbishing; second, losses can be incurred through erroneous disposition decisions due to incorrect assessments of the product’s value over time. Using field
data for several consumer electronics products, we build analytical models to capture the economic value of a time-sensitive product over its life cycle and then use these models to develop supply chain designs that maximize value recovered from the return steam. We show that the returned product’s "time value" is a critical design parameter
Resolving the discrepancy between lensing and X-ray mass estimates of the complex galaxy cluster Abell 1689
There is a long-standing discrepancy between galaxy cluster masses determined
from X-ray and gravitational lensing observations of which Abell 1689 is a
well-studied example. In this work we take advantage of 180 ks of Chandra X-ray
observations and a new weak gravitational study based on a Hubble Space
Telescope mosaic covering the central 1.8 Mpc x 1.4 Mpc to eliminate the mass
discrepancy. In contrast to earlier X-ray analyses where the very circular
surface brightness has been inferred as Abell 1689 being spherically symmetric
and in hydrostatic equilibrium, a hardness ratio map analysis reveals a regular
and symmetric appearing main clump with a cool core plus some substructure in
the North Eastern part of the cluster. The gravitational lensing mass model
supports the interpretation of Abell 1689 being composed of a main clump, which
is possibly a virialized cluster, plus some substructure. In order to avoid
complications and mis-interpretations due to X-ray emission from the
substructure, we exclude it from the mass reconstruction. Comparing X-ray and
lensing mass profiles of the regular main part only, shows no significant
discrepancy between the two methods and the obtained mass profiles are
consistent over the full range where the mass can be reconstructed from X-rays
(out to approx. 1 Mpc). The obtained cluster mass within approx. 875 kpc
derived from X-rays alone is 6.4 plus/minus 2.1 x 10^14 solar masses compared
to a weak lensing mass of 8.6 plus/minus 3.0 x 10^14 solar masses within the
same radius.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, accepted by Ap
A decomposition algorithm for robust lot sizing problem with remanufacturing option
In this paper, we propose a decomposition procedure for constructing robust optimal production plans for reverse inventory systems. Our method is motivated by the need of overcoming the excessive computational time requirements, as well as the inaccuracies caused by imprecise representations of problem parameters. The method is based on a min-max formulation that avoids the excessive conservatism of the dualization technique employed by Wei et al. (2011). We perform a computational study using our decomposition framework on several classes of computer generated test instances and we report our experience. Bienstock and Özbay (2008) computed optimal base stock levels for the traditional lot sizing problem when the production cost is linear and we extend this work here by considering return inventories and setup costs for production. We use the approach of Bertsimas and Sim (2004) to model the uncertainties in the input
The case for biophysics super-groups in physics departments
Increasing numbers of physicists engage in research activities that address biological questions from physics perspectives or strive to develop physics insights from active biological processes. The on-going development and success of such activities morph our ways of thinking about what it is to 'do biophysics' and add to our understanding of the physics of life. Many scientists in this research and teaching landscape are homed in physics departments. A challenge for a hosting department is how to group, name and structure such biophysicists to best add value to their emerging research and teaching but also to the portfolio of the whole department. Here we discuss these issues and speculate on strategies
Thermal responses of single zone offices on existing near-extreme summer weather data
There have been a number of attempts in the past to define “near extreme” weather for facilitating overheating analysis in free running buildings. The most recently efforts include CIBSE latest release of Design Summer Year (DSY) weather using multiple complete weather years and a newly proposed composite DSY. This research aims to assess how various single zone offices respond to these new definitions of near extreme weathers. Parametric studies were carried out on single zone offices through which four sampling sets of models were employed to examine the thermal responses of dry bulb temperature, global solar radiation & wind speed collectively. London weather data from 1976 to 1995 were used and the overheating assessments were made based on CIBSE Guide A & BS EN 15251. The research discovers that solar radiation and wind both influence the predicted indoor warmth with solar radiation has obvious stronger impacts than wind. No perfect correlation was found from observation and Spearman’s rank order analysis on the ranks between the weather warmth and the predicted indoor warmth. The ranks made using multiple weather parameters show better correlation than some of the dry bulb temperature only metrics. The research also discovers that the Test Reference Year weather behaves warmer than expected. It is also found that a single complete year can not represent the near-extreme consistently and there is no evidence a composite DSY is better statistically. These findings support the notion of using multiple complete warm weather years for overheating assessments
Standardizing admission and discharge processes to improve patient flow: a cross sectional study
Background: The aim of this study was to evaluate how hospital capacity was managed focusing on standardizing the admission and discharge processes. Methods: This study was set in a 900-bed university affiliated hospital of the National Health Service, near Barcelona (Spain). This is a cross-sectional study of a set of interventions which were gradually implemented between April and December 2008. Mainly, they were focused on standardizing the admission and discharge processes to improve patient flow. Primary administrative data was obtained from the 2007 and 2009 Hospital Database. Main outcome measures were median length of stay, percentage of planned discharges, number of surgery cancellations and median number of delayed emergency admissions at 8:00 am. For statistical bivariate analysis, we used a Chi-squared for linear trend for qualitative variables and a Wilcoxon signed ranks test and a Mann-Whitney test for non-normal continuous variables. Results: The median patients' global length of stay was 8.56 days in 2007 and 7.93 days in 2009 (p < 0.051). The percentage of patients admitted the same day as surgery increased from 64.87% in 2007 to 86.01% in 2009 (p < 0.05). The number of cancelled interventions due to lack of beds was 216 patients in 2007 and 42 patients in 2009. The median number of planned discharges went from 43.05% in 2007 to 86.01% in 2009 (p < 0.01). The median number of emergency patients waiting for an in-hospital bed at 8:00 am was 5 patients in 2007 and 3 patients in 2009 (p < 0.01). Conclusions: In conclusion, standardization of admission and discharge processes are largely in our control. There is a significant opportunity to create important benefits for increasing bed capacity and hospital throughput
The selection of search sources influences the findings of a systematic review of people’s views: a case study in public health
Background For systematic reviews providing evidence for policy decisions in specific geographical regions, there is a need to minimise regional bias when seeking out relevant research studies. Studies on people’s views tend to be dispersed across a range of bibliographic databases and other search sources. It is recognised that a comprehensive literature search can provide unique evidence not found from a focused search; however, the geographical focus of databases as a potential source of bias on the findings of a research review is less clear. This case study describes search source selection for research about people’s views and how supplementary searches designed to redress geographical bias influenced the findings of a systematic review. Our research questions are: a) what was the impact of search methods employed to redress potential database selection bias on the overall findings of the review? and b) how did each search source contribute to the identification of all the research studies included in the review? Methods The contribution of 25 search sources in locating 28 studies included within a systematic review on UK children’s views of body size, shape and weight was analysed retrospectively. The impact of utilising seven search sources chosen to identify UK-based literature on the review’s findings was assessed. Results Over a sixth (5 out of 28) of the studies were located only through supplementary searches of three sources. These five studies were of a disproportionally high quality compared with the other studies in the review. The retrieval of these studies added direction, detail and strength to the overall findings of the review. All studies in the review were located within 21 search sources. Precision for 21 sources ranged from 0.21% to 1.64%. Conclusions For reducing geographical bias and increasing the coverage and context-specificity of systematic reviews of people’s perspectives and experiences, searching that is sensitive and aimed at reducing geographical bias in database sources is recommended
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