3,941 research outputs found
Surfing or still drowning? Student nurses’ Internet skills
A study into student nurses’ ability to use the Internet was published in Nurse Education Today in 2004. This paper repeats the research with a cohort of students starting their pre-registration programme in a UK university in 2007.
In 2004 students were reported as having poor Internet skills, and as not being frequent users of the Internet. In this study students were found to have significantly better ability to carry out basic tasks and significantly higher levels of Internet use. Their ability to apply these skills to more complex information literacy tasks however had not increased, with more than half of all students saying they found far too much irrelevant information when searching for specific information on the Internet. The earlier study found that skills and age were not related, which appears to still be the case.
The need for these skills is increasing as education, lifelong learning, and patient information are all increasingly drawing on the developing Internet. Nurse education however is not integrating the skill and knowledge base essential to support this into pre-registration programmes, and the evidence suggests that this will not happen without active management
Constraining the neutron-matter equation of state with gravitational waves
We show how observations of gravitational waves from binary neutron star
(BNS) mergers over the next few years can be combined with insights from
nuclear physics to obtain useful constraints on the equation of state (EoS) of
dense matter, in particular, constraining the neutron-matter EoS to within 20%
between one and two times the nuclear saturation density $n_0\approx 0.16\
{\text{fm}^{-3}}$. Using Fisher information methods, we combine observational
constraints from simulated BNS merger events drawn from various population
models with independent measurements of the neutron star radii expected from
x-ray astronomy (the Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER)
observations in particular) to directly constrain nuclear physics parameters.
To parameterize the nuclear EoS, we use a different approach, expanding from
pure nuclear matter rather than from symmetric nuclear matter to make use of
recent quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) calculations. This method eschews the need to
invoke the so-called parabolic approximation to extrapolate from symmetric
nuclear matter, allowing us to directly constrain the neutron-matter EoS. Using
a principal component analysis, we identify the combination of parameters most
tightly constrained by observational data. We discuss sensitivity to various
effects such as different component masses through population-model
sensitivity, phase transitions in the core EoS, and large deviations from the
central parameter values.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures + supplement 11 page
American Proverb Literature: A Bibliography
With and introduction by F.A. de Caro and Preface by W.K. McNeil
Planetary nebula kinematics in NGC 1316: a young Sombrero
Aims. We present positions and velocities for 796 planetary nebulae (PNe) in
the Fornax Brightest Cluster Galaxy NGC 1316 (Fornax A). The planetary nebulae
and existing kinematics are used to explore the rotation of this merger remnant
and constrain dynamical models. Methods. Using FORS2 on the VLT, the PN
velocities were measured using a counter-dispersed slitless-spectroscopy
technique that produced the largest-to-date sample outside of the Local Group.
Spherical, non-rotating, constant-anisotropy Jeans models were con- strained by
observations of the planetary nebulae and existing integrated light spectra.
Results. The two-dimensional velocity field indicates dynamically-important
rotation that rises in the outer parts, possibly due to the outward transfer of
angular momentum during the merger. The modeling indicates a high dark matter
content, particularly in the outer parts, that is consistent with previous
estimates from dynamical models, lensing and stellar population models.
Conclusions. The exceptionally large sample of PN velocities makes it possible
to explore the kinematics of NGC 1316 in detail. Comparing the results to other
early-type galaxies like NGC 1399 and NGC 4594 (M104, Sombrero), NGC 1316
represents a transi- tion phase from a major-merger event to a bulge-dominated
galaxy like NGC 4594
Assessing the treatment effects in apraxia of speech: introduction and evaluation of the Modified Diadochokinesis Test
Background: The number of reliable and valid instruments to measure the effects of therapy in apraxia of speech (AoS) is limited. Aims: To evaluate the newly developed Modified Diadochokinesis Test (MDT), which is a task to assess the effects of rate and rhythm therapies for AoS in a multiple baseline across behaviours design. Methods: The consistency, accuracy and fluency of speech of 24 adults with AoS and 12 unaffected speakers matched for age, gender and educational level were assessed using the MDT. The reliability and validity of the instrument were considered and outcomes compared with those obtained with existing tests. Results: The results revealed that MDT had a strong internal consistency. Scores were influenced by syllable structure complexity, while distinctive features of articulation had no measurable effect. The testretest and intra- and inter-rater reliabilities were shown to be adequate, and the discriminant validity was good. For convergent validity different outcomes were found: apart from one correlation, the scores on tests assessing functional communication and AoS correlated significantly with the MDT outcome measures. The spontaneous speech phonology measure of the Aachen Aphasia Test (AAT) correlated significantly with the MDT outcome measures, but no correlations were found for the repetition subtest and the spontaneous speech articulation/prosody measure of the AAT. Conclusions & Implications: The study shows that the MDT has adequate psychometric properties, implying that it can be used to measure changes in speech motor control during treatment for apraxia of speech. The results demonstrate the validity and utility of the instrument as a supplement to speech tasks in assessing speech improvement aimed at the level of planning and programming of speech
Quasi-exact solvability of Dirac equation with Lorentz scalar potential
We consider exact/quasi-exact solvability of Dirac equation with a Lorentz
scalar potential based on factorizability of the equation. Exactly solvable and
-based quasi-exactly solvable potentials are discussed separately in
Cartesian coordinates for a pure Lorentz potential depending only on one
spatial dimension, and in spherical coordinates in the presence of a Dirac
monopole.Comment: 10 pages, no figure
Intermediate Tail Dependence: A Review and Some New Results
The concept of intermediate tail dependence is useful if one wants to
quantify the degree of positive dependence in the tails when there is no strong
evidence of presence of the usual tail dependence. We first review existing
studies on intermediate tail dependence, and then we report new results to
supplement the review. Intermediate tail dependence for elliptical, extreme
value and Archimedean copulas are reviewed and further studied, respectively.
For Archimedean copulas, we not only consider the frailty model but also the
recently studied scale mixture model; for the latter, conditions leading to
upper intermediate tail dependence are presented, and it provides a useful way
to simulate copulas with desirable intermediate tail dependence structures.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figur
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Global Potential of Energy Efficiency Standards and Labeling Programs
This report estimates the global potential reductions in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 for energy efficiency improvements associated with equipment (appliances, lighting, and HVAC) in buildings by means of energy efficiency standards and labels (EES&L). A consensus has emerged among the world's scientists and many corporate and political leaders regarding the need to address the threat of climate change through emissions mitigation and adaptation. A further consensus has emerged that a central component of these strategies must be focused around energy, which is the primary generator of greenhouse gas emissions. Two important questions result from this consensus: 'what kinds of policies encourage the appropriate transformation to energy efficiency' and 'how much impact can these policies have'? This report aims to contribute to the dialogue surrounding these issues by considering the potential impacts of a single policy type, applied on a global scale. The policy addressed in this report is Energy Efficient Standards and Labeling (EES&L) for energy-consuming equipment, which has now been implemented in over 60 countries. Mandatory energy performance standards are important because they contribute positively to a nation's economy and provide relative certainty about the outcome (both timing and magnitudes). Labels also contribute positively to a nation's economy and importantly increase the awareness of the energy-consuming public. Other policies not analyzed here (utility incentives, tax credits) are complimentary to standards and labels and also contribute in significant ways to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. We believe the analysis reported here to be the first systematic attempt to evaluate the potential of savings from EES&L for all countries and for such a large set of products. The goal of the analysis is to provide an assessment that is sufficiently well-quantified and accurate to allow comparison and integration with other strategies under consideration
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