218 research outputs found
Psychosocial factors predicting first-year college student success
This study made use of a model of college success that involves students achieving academic goals and life satisfaction. Hierarchical regressions examined the role of six psychosocial factors for college success among 579 first-year college students. Academic self-efficacy and organization and attention to study were predictive of first semester grade point average (GPA) when controlling relevant demographic factors. Academic self-efficacy was even predictive of end-of-year GPA when controlling previous, first-semester GPA. Mediation analyses revealed that first-semester GPA was an important mediator between these two psychosocial variables and end-of-year GPA. Additional psychosocial variables were predictive of college students’ life satisfaction: stress and time management, involvement with college activity, and emotional satisfaction with academics. We explore how formulating interventions on the basis of psychosocial factors offers an avenue for students to address specific attitudes, emotions, and behaviors that relate to college success
Focality and Asymmetry in Multi-battle Contests
This article examines behavior in two-person constant-sum Colonel Blotto games in which each player maximizes the expected total value of the battlefields won. A lottery contest success function is employed in each battlefield. Recent experimental research on such games provides only partial support for Nash equilibrium behavior. We hypothesize that the salience of battlefields affects strategic behavior (the salient target hypothesis). We present a controlled test of this hypothesis – against Nash predictions – when the sources of salience come from certain asymmetries in either battlefield values or labels (as in Schelling (1960)). In both cases, subjects over-allocate the resource to the salient battlefields relative to the Nash prediction. However, the effect is stronger with salient values. In the absence of salience, we replicate previous results in the literature supporting the Nash prediction
Focality and Asymmetry in Multi-battle Contests
This article examines the influence of focality in Colonel Blotto games with a lottery contest success function (CSF), where the equilibrium is unique and in pure strategies. We hypothesise that the salience of battlefields affects strategic behaviour (the salient target hypothesis) and present a controlled test of this hypothesis against Nash predictions, checking the robustness of equilibrium play. When the sources of salience come from asymmetries in battlefield values or labels (as in Schelling, 1960), subjects over-allocate the resource to the salient battlefields relative to the Nash prediction. However, the effect is stronger with salient values. In the absence of salience, we find support for the Nash prediction
The use of post-electroplating surface modification treatments to mitigate tin whisker growth
The use of post-electroplating surface modification treatments to mitigate tin whisker growt
The development of post-electroplating surface modification treatments to mitigate tin whisker growth
The development of post-electroplating surface modification treatments to mitigate tin whisker growt
An investigation into the effect of a post-electroplating electrochemical oxidation treatment on tin whisker formation
Since the ‘cracked oxide theory’ was proposed by Tu in 1994,1 there has only
been a limited number of studies that have sought to investigate the effect of
the Sn oxide on whisker growth. The current study has used electrochemical
oxidation to produce oxide films, which has enabled the effect of the surface
oxide thickness on whisker growth to be established. The effect of oxide
thickness on whisker growth has been investigated for tin electrodeposits on
both Cu and brass substrates. The influence of applied oxidation potential on
the thickness of the Sn oxide film has been investigated using x-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy (XPS) for potassium bicarbonate–carbonate and borate
buffer electrolyte solutions. Whisker growth from electrochemically oxidised
Sn-Cu deposits on Cu and Sn deposits on brass has been investigated and
compared with samples left to develop a native air-formed oxide. XPS studies
show that the thickness of the electrochemically formed Sn oxide film is
dependent on the applied oxidation potential and the total charge passed.
Subsequent whisker growth studies demonstrate that electrochemically oxidised
Sn-Cu deposits on Cu and Sn deposits on brass are significantly less
susceptible to whisker growth than those having a native oxide film. For Sn
deposits on brass, the electrochemically formed Sn oxide greatly reduces Zn
oxide formation at the surface of the tin deposit, which results in whisker
mitigation. For Sn-Cu deposits on Cu, the reduction in whisker growth must
simply derive from the increased thickness of the Sn oxide, i.e. the Sn oxide
film has an important role in stemming the development of whiskers
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Broadband spectral combining of three pulse-shaped fiber amplifiers with 42fs compressed pulse duration.
We demonstrate ultra-broadband spectral combining of ultrashort pulses from Yb-doped fiber amplifiers, with coherently spectrally synthesized pulse shaping, to achieve tens-of-fs pulses. This method can fully compensate for gain narrowing and high order dispersion over broad bandwidth. We produce 42fs pulses by spectrally synthesizing three chirped-pulse fiber amplifiers and two programmable pulse shapers across an 80nm overall bandwidth. To the best of our knowledge, this is the shortest pulse duration achieved from a spectrally combined fiber system at one-micron wavelength. This work provides a path toward high-energy, tens-of-fs fiber chirped-pulse amplification systems
Nonlinear Dynamics in Ecosystem Response to Climatic Change: Case Studies and Policy Implications
Many biological, hydrological, and geological processes are interactively linked in ecosystems. These ecological phenomena normally vary within bounded ranges, but rapid, nonlinear changes to markedly different conditions can be triggered by even small differences if threshold values are exceeded. Intrinsic and extrinsic ecological thresholds can lead to effects that cascade among systems, precluding accurate modeling and prediction of system response to climate change. Ten case studies from North America illustrate how changes in climate can lead to rapid, threshold-type responses within ecological communities; the case studies also highlight the role of human activities that alter the rate or direction of system response to climate change. Understanding and anticipating nonlinear dynamics are important aspects of adaptation planning since responses of biological resources to changes in the physical climate system are not necessarily proportional and sometimes, as in the case of complex ecological systems, inherently nonlinear
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The influence of remote aerosol forcing from industrialised economies on the future evolution of East and West African rainfall
Past changes in global industrial aerosol emissions have played a significant role in historical shifts in African rainfall and yet assessment of the impact on African rainfall of near term (10-40 year) potential aerosol emission pathways remains largely unexplored.
Whilst existing literature links future aerosol declines to a northward shift of Sahel rainfall, existing climate projections rely on RCP scenarios that do not explore the range of air quality drivers. Here we present projections from two emission scenarios that better envelope the range of potential aerosol emissions. More aggressive emission cuts results in northward shifts of the tropical rain-bands whose signal can emerge from expected internal variability on short, 10-20 year, time horizons. We also show for the first time that this northward shift also impacts East Africa, with evidence of delays to both onset and withdrawal of the Short Rains. However, comparisons of rainfall impacts across models suggest that only certain aspects of both the West and East African model responses may be robust, given model uncertainties.
This work motivates the need for wider exploration of air quality scenarios in the climate science community to assess the robustness of these projected changes and to provide evidence to underpin climate adaptation in Africa. In particular, revised estimates of emission impacts of legislated measures every 5-10 years would have a value in providing near term climate adaptation information for African stakeholders
The Winter Strategy – a Multifaceted Integrated Care Intervention to Support People with Chronic and Complex Care Needs during the Australian Winter Period
Introduction: Health care demands increase over the winter period, especially for people with chronic diseases. Hospital avoidance programs have potential to address seasonal surges. Methods: An integrated care intervention was provided to patients at high risk of hospitalisation during the 2017 and 2018 winters in Northern New South Wales, Australia. Patients received increased support including general practice sick day action plans, automated admission notifications to the general practitioner, and care coordination services. Outcomes were provider and patient experience and preventable hospitalisation rates. Results: The program enrolled 1244 participating patients from 37 general practices with at least 12 months follow-up. It was associated with marked improvements in provider and patient experience. However, when compared to a propensity score matched control group there was no difference in hospital utilisation or emergency presentation rates. Discussion and Conclusion: An integrated care strategy to address chronic care needs of patients in winter was well received by practitioners and patients, but did not translate to changes in hospital utilisation or emergency presentation rates. Areas for improvement include: strengthening inter-professional engagement between hospital, specialists and primary care providers, more tailored support services for patients with complex health needs, and a more expansive set of process measures beyond hospital and emergency utilisation to assess impact
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