2,802 research outputs found
Survey, analysis and evaluation test on high voltage/current pulse transmission cables
A survey, analysis, and testing of available cable connector configurations were carried out in connection with transmission of high voltage/current to an exploding wire bridge. Transmission was desired at high efficiency with maximum cable flexibility, at minimum weight and size of the cable connector, with maximum cable length while maintaining applicable voltage/current pulse characteristics, and with due consideration to environmental parameters
No Graphic Design Will Contain You
let this book serve as an archive of my tender uncoiling; a thesis in that the work has begun, though no problems will be solved here. a search for ripe language; an opening; a threshold
Recent Evaluative Research on Jury Trial Innovations
During the past decade, state jury reform commissions, many individual federal and state judges, and jury scholars have advocated the adoption of a variety of innovative trial procedures to assist jurors in trials. Many jury trial reforms reflect growing awareness of best practices in education and communication as well as research documenting that jurors take an active rather than a passive approach to their decision-making task. Traditional adversary jury trial procedures often appear to assume that jurors are blank slates, who will passively wait until the end of the trial and the start of jury deliberations to form opinions about the evidence. However, we now know that jurors quite actively engage in evidence evaluation, developing their opinions as the trial progresses. It makes sense to revise trial procedures so they take advantage of jurorsâ decision-making tendencies and strengths.
Although reform groups have endorsed many of these innovations, until recently there was only modest evidence about their impact in the courtroom. Now, substantial research on the effects of most of the reforms on juror comprehension and juror satisfaction with the trial has been completed and reported. Data are now available to judges and others seeking reliable empirical support for the changes to the traditional jury trial. This article will describe the methods used to study juries and jury trials and present recent data now available for each of the major proposed innovations. We also draw on new findings from our own recent research testing the comparative advantages of jury innovations for understanding complex scientific evidence
The Mediating Effects of Time Management on Accounting Studentsâ Perception of Time Pressure, Satisfaction with the Major, and Academic Performance
We model a relationship between accounting studentsâ individual characteristics (locus of control and personal need for structure) and satisfaction with the accounting major and academic performance. We hypothesize that perception of time pressure on exams, time management behaviors, and perceived control of time mediate the relationship. We find that locus of control and desire for structure influence time management behavior. These behaviors, in turn, influence perceived control of time and satisfaction, but not performance. Our results suggest potential benefit of counseling accounting students on time management behavior
Can Jury Trial Innovations Improve Juror Understanding of DNA Evidence?
A single spot of blood on a pink windowsill will tell investigators who broke a windowpane, turned a lock, and kidnapped 2-year-old Molly Evans from her bedroom in the middle of the night. An expert witness will testify that the DNA profile of the blood evidence recovered from the windowsill was entered into CODIS, an electronic database of DNA profiles. That process yielded a âhit,â identifying the defendant as the most likely source of the blood inside Mollyâs room.
But will jurors be able to understand the expertâs intricate analysis and use it to reach a verdict? And whatâif anyâsteps can be taken to increase jurorsâ comprehension of complex DNA evidence? Questions such as these prompted an NIJ-funded study on the impact of jury trial innovations upon mock jurorsâ understanding of contested mitochondrial DNA (mtNDA) evidence. By examining how jurors in different experimental conditions performed on a Juror Comprehension Scale both before and after deliberations, researchers were able to assess whether four specific innovations improved jurorsâ understanding of this complex evidence and identify which innovations worked best
Rlpy: A Value-Function-Based Reinforcement Learning Framework for Education and Research
RLPy is an object-oriented reinforcement learning software package with a focus on valuefunction-based methods using linear function approximation and discrete actions. The framework was designed for both educational and research purposes. It provides a rich library of fine-grained, easily exchangeable components for learning agents (e.g., policies or representations of value functions), facilitating recently increased specialization in reinforcement learning. RLPy is written in Python to allow fast prototyping, but is also suitable for large-scale experiments through its built-in support for optimized numerical libraries and parallelization. Code profiling, domain visualizations, and data analysis are integrated in a self-contained package available under the Modified BSD License at
http://github.com/rlpy/rlpy. All of these properties allow users to compare various reinforcement learning algorithms with little effort
Teachers' classroom feedback: still trying to get it right
This article examines feedback traditionally given by teachers in schools. Such feedback tends to focus on children's acquisition and retrieval of externally prescribed knowledge which is then assessed against mandated tests. It suggests that, from a sociocultural learning perspective, feedback directed towards such objectives may limit children's social development. In this article, I draw on observation and interview data gathered from a group of 27 9- to 10-year olds in a UK primary school. These data illustrate the children's perceived need to conform to, rather than negotiate, the teacher's feedback comments. They highlight the children's sense that the teacher's feedback relates to school learning but not to their own interests. The article also includes alternative examples of feedback which draw on children's own inquiries and which relate to the social contexts within which, and for whom, they act. It concludes by suggesting that instead of looking for the right answer to the question of what makes teachers' feedback effective in our current classrooms, a more productive question might be how a negotiation can be opened up among teachers and learners themselves, about how teachers' feedback could support children's learning most appropriately
Large-area submillimeter resolution CdZnTe strip detector for astronomy
We report the first performance measurements of a sub-millimeter CdZnTe strip detector developed as a prototype for space-borne astronomical instruments. Strip detector arrays can be used to provide two-dimensional position resolution with fewer electronic channels than pixellated arrays. Arrays of this type and other candidate technologies are under investigation for the position-sensitive backplane detector for a coded-aperture telescope operating in the range of 30 - 300 keV. The prototype is a 1.4 mm thick, 64 multiplied by 64 stripe CdZnTe array of 0.375 mm pitch in both dimensions, approximately one square inch of sensitive area. Pulse height spectra in both single and orthogonal stripe coincidence mode were recorded at several energies. The results are compared to slab- and pixel-geometry detector spectra. The room-temperature energy resolution is less than 10 keV (FWHM) for 122 keV photons with a peak-to-valley ratio greater than 5:1. The response to photons with energies up to 662 keV appears to be considerably improved relative to that of previously reported slab and pixel detectors. We also show that strip detectors can yield spatial and energy resolutions similar to those of pixellated arrays with the same dimensions. Electrostatic effects on the pulse heights, read-out circuit complexity, and issues related to design of space borne instruments are also discussed
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