35,200 research outputs found
The Impact of Cultural Familiarity on Students’ Social Media Usage in Higher Education
Using social media (SM) in Higher education (HE) becomes unavoidable in the new teaching and learning pedagogy.
The current generation of students creates their groups on SM for collaboration. However, SM can be a primary source of
learning distraction due to its nature, which does not support structured learning. Hence, derived from the literature, this study proposes three learning customised system features, to be implemented on SM when used in Higher Education HE.
Nevertheless, some psychological factors appear to have a stronger impact on students’ adoption of SM in learning than the proposed features. A Quantitative survey was conducted at a university in Uzbekistan to collect 52 undergraduate students’ perception of proposed SM learning customised features in Moodle. These features aim to provide localised, personalised, and privacy control self-management environment for collaboration in Moodle. These features could be significant in predicting students’ engagement with SM in HE. The data analysis showed a majority of positive feedback towards the proposed learning customised SM. However, the surveyed students’ engagement with these features was observed as minimal. The course leader initiated a semi-structured interview to investigate the reason. Although the students confirmed their acceptance of the learning customised features, their preferences to alternate SM, which is Telegram overridden their usage of the proposed learning customized SM, which is Twitter. The students avoided the Moodle integrated Twitter (which provided highly accepted features) and chose to use the Telegram as an external collaboration platform driven by their familiarity and social preferences with the Telegram since it is the popular SM in Uzbekistan. This study is part of an ongoing PhD research which involves deeper frame of learners’ cognitive usage of the learning management system. However, this paper exclusively discusses the cultural familiarity impact of student’s adoption of SM in HE
Effect of interfacial oxide layers on the current-voltage characteristics of Al-Si contacts
Aluminum-silicon contacts with very thin interfacial oxide layers and various surface impurity concentrations are studied for both n and p-type silicon. To determine the surface impurity concentrations on p(+)-p and n(+)-n structures, a modified C-V technique was utilized. Effects of interfacial oxide layers and surface impurity concentrations on current-voltage characteristics are discussed based on the energy band diagrams from the conductance-voltage plots. The interfacial oxide and aluminum layer causes image contrasts on X-ray topographs
Counterparty Credit Limits: An Effective Tool for Mitigating Counterparty Risk?
A counterparty credit limit (CCL) is a limit imposed by a financial
institution to cap its maximum possible exposure to a specified counterparty.
Although CCLs are designed to help institutions mitigate counterparty risk by
selective diversification of their exposures, their implementation restricts
the liquidity that institutions can access in an otherwise centralized pool. We
address the question of how this mechanism impacts trade prices and volatility,
both empirically and via a new model of trading with CCLs. We find empirically
that CCLs cause little impact on trade. However, our model highlights that in
extreme situations, CCLs could serve to destabilize prices and thereby
influence systemic risk
Modulated Amplitude Waves in Collisionally Inhomogeneous Bose-Einstein Condensates
We investigate the dynamics of an effectively one-dimensional Bose-Einstein
condensate (BEC) with scattering length subjected to a spatially periodic
modulation, . This "collisionally inhomogeneous" BEC is
described by a Gross-Pitaevskii (GP) equation whose nonlinearity coefficient is
a periodic function of . We transform this equation into a GP equation with
constant coefficient and an additional effective potential and study a
class of extended wave solutions of the transformed equation. For weak
underlying inhomogeneity, the effective potential takes a form resembling a
superlattice, and the amplitude dynamics of the solutions of the
constant-coefficient GP equation obey a nonlinear generalization of the Ince
equation. In the small-amplitude limit, we use averaging to construct
analytical solutions for modulated amplitude waves (MAWs), whose stability we
subsequently examine using both numerical simulations of the original GP
equation and fixed-point computations with the MAWs as numerically exact
solutions. We show that "on-site" solutions, whose maxima correspond to maxima
of , are significantly more stable than their "off-site" counterparts.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures (many with several parts), to appear in Physica
D; higher resolution versions of some figures are available at
http://www.its.caltech.edu/~mason/paper
Control in the technical societies: a brief history
By the time control engineering emerged as a coherent body of knowledge and practice (during and just after WW2) professional engineering societies had existed for many decades. Since control engineering is an interdisciplinary branch of the profession, new sections devoted to control were quickly established within the various existing technical societies. In addition, some new bodies devoted specifically or primarily to control were established. This article, a revised version of a paper presented at the IEEE 2009 Conference on the History of Technical Societies, describes how control engineering as a distinct branch of engineering became represented in technical societies in a number of countries
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