1,493 research outputs found
What Every Faculty Developer Needs to Know about Learning Groups
This article advances two related propositions. One is that virtually all of the commonly reported problems with learning groups, such as less content coverage, free-riders, and students\u27 feeling that instructors are not teaching unless they are talking, are a natural consequence of they way the groups are being used. The other is that the vast majority of the problems can be prevented by avoiding group assignments that retard the development of effective learning teams and limit student learning. This article will a) examine the underlying causes of the most commonly reported problems with learning groups, b) outline some simple, but effective, strategies for preventing their occurrence in the first place and, c) describe a new tool, the Learning Activity Impact Grid (LAI-Grid), that can be used to ensure that assignments promote both team development and learning
Structural Stability and Renormalization Group for Propagating Fronts
A solution to a given equation is structurally stable if it suffers only an
infinitesimal change when the equation (not the solution) is perturbed
infinitesimally. We have found that structural stability can be used as a
velocity selection principle for propagating fronts. We give examples, using
numerical and renormalization group methods.Comment: 14 pages, uiucmac.tex, no figure
Diffusion-Limited Annihilation with Initially Separated Reactants
A diffusion-limited annihilation process, A+B->0, with species initially
separated in space is investigated. A heuristic argument suggests the form of
the reaction rate in dimensions less or equal to the upper critical dimension
. Using this reaction rate we find that the width of the reaction front
grows as in one dimension and as in two
dimensions.Comment: 9 pages, Plain Te
Curating a Global Collection of Fiddler Crabs for the American Museum of Natural History, NYC
A collection of approximately 1000 jars of preserved fiddler crabs was received from Dr. F.H. Barnwell, Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota–Twin Cities. It contained jars of crabs from Africa, the Americas, and the Indo-Pacific. Specimens in each jar were sorted by species and gender and then counted. An Excel® spreadsheet recorded collecting data while Google Earth® determined the GPS of each recovery site. The collection was reduced to 569 jars containing 68 species representing seven genera. The entire collection consists of 7804 crabs with 5925 males and 1879 females. New labels with up-dated information were made for each jar. Barnwell’s scientific legacy is now ready for transport to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City
An independent assessment of uncertainty for radiocarbon analysis with the new generation high-yield accelerator mass spectrometers
ABSTRACT. The radiocarbon dating facility at the Centre for Isotope Research, University of Groningen went through a major upgrade in 2017 and this included installation of a MICADAS accelerator mass spectrometer (AMS). In the first 18 months, we performed 4000 sample and 3000 reference measurements. A careful evaluation of those measurement results is presented, to characterize the various sources of uncertainty and to ultimately assign, for every sample measurement, a realistic expanded uncertainty. This analysis was performed on the measurements of secondary references and sample duplicates in various phases of their processing steps. The final expanded uncertainty includes both the 14C measurement uncertainties and uncertainties originating from pretreatment steps. Where the 14C measurement uncertainty includes straightforward uncertainties arising from Poisson statistics, background subtraction, calibration on Oxalic Acid II and δ13C correction, the uncertainties originating from pretreatment steps are based on the spread of actual measurement results for secondary references and sample duplicates. We show that the 14C measurement uncertainty requires expansion, depending on the number of processing steps involved prior to a 14C measurement, by a maximum factor of 1.6 at our laboratory. By using these expansion (multiplication) factors, we make our reported uncertainty both more realistic and reliable
The new paradigm of hepatitis C therapy: integration of oral therapies into best practices.
Emerging data indicate that all-oral antiviral treatments for chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) will become a reality in the near future. In replacing interferon-based therapies, all-oral regimens are expected to be more tolerable, more effective, shorter in duration and simpler to administer. Coinciding with new treatment options are novel methodologies for disease screening and staging, which create the possibility of more timely care and treatment. Assessments of histologic damage typically are performed using liver biopsy, yet noninvasive assessments of histologic damage have become the norm in some European countries and are becoming more widespread in the United States. Also in place are new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) initiatives to simplify testing, improve provider and patient awareness and expand recommendations for HCV screening beyond risk-based strategies. Issued in 2012, the CDC recommendations aim to increase HCV testing among those with the greatest HCV burden in the United States by recommending one-time testing for all persons born during 1945-1965. In 2013, the United States Preventive Services Task Force adopted similar recommendations for risk-based and birth-cohort-based testing. Taken together, the developments in screening, diagnosis and treatment will likely increase demand for therapy and stimulate a shift in delivery of care related to chronic HCV, with increased involvement of primary care and infectious disease specialists. Yet even in this new era of therapy, barriers to curing patients of HCV will exist. Overcoming such barriers will require novel, integrative strategies and investment of resources at local, regional and national levels
Curating a Global Collection of Fiddler Crabs for the American Museum of Natural History, NYC
A collection of approximately 1000 jars of preserved fiddler crabs was received from Dr. F.H. Barnwell, Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota–Twin Cities. It contained jars of crabs from Africa, the Americas, and the Indo-Pacific. Specimens in each jar were sorted by species and gender and then counted. An Excel® spreadsheet recorded collecting data while Google Earth® determined the GPS of each recovery site. The collection was reduced to 569 jars containing 68 species representing seven genera. The entire collection consists of 7804 crabs with 5925 males and 1879 females. New labels with up-dated information were made for each jar. Barnwell’s scientific legacy is now ready for transport to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City
Shift in the velocity of a front due to a cut-off
We consider the effect of a small cut-off epsilon on the velocity of a
traveling wave in one dimension. Simulations done over more than ten orders of
magnitude as well as a simple theoretical argument indicate that the effect of
the cut-off epsilon is to select a single velocity which converges when epsilon
tends to 0 to the one predicted by the marginal stability argument. For small
epsilon, the shift in velocity has the form K(log epsilon)^(-2) and our
prediction for the constant K agrees very well with the results of our
simulations. A very similar logarithmic shift appears in more complicated
situations, in particular in finite size effects of some microscopic stochastic
systems. Our theoretical approach can also be extended to give a simple way of
deriving the shift in position due to initial conditions in the
Fisher-Kolmogorov or similar equations.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Preferences and skills of Indian public sector teachers
With a sample of 700 future public sector primary teachers in India, a Discrete Choice Experiment is used to measure job preferences, particularly regarding location. General skills are also tested. Urban origin teachers and women are more averse to remote locations than rural origin teachers and men respectively. Women would require a 26-73 percent increase in salary for moving to a remote location. The results suggest that existing caste and gender quotas can be detrimental for hiring skilled teachers willing to work in remote locations. The most preferred location is home, which supports decentralised hiring, although this could compromise skills
Renormalization Group Theory And Variational Calculations For Propagating Fronts
We study the propagation of uniformly translating fronts into a linearly
unstable state, both analytically and numerically. We introduce a perturbative
renormalization group (RG) approach to compute the change in the propagation
speed when the fronts are perturbed by structural modification of their
governing equations. This approach is successful when the fronts are
structurally stable, and allows us to select uniquely the (numerical)
experimentally observable propagation speed. For convenience and completeness,
the structural stability argument is also briefly described. We point out that
the solvability condition widely used in studying dynamics of nonequilibrium
systems is equivalent to the assumption of physical renormalizability. We also
implement a variational principle, due to Hadeler and Rothe, which provides a
very good upper bound and, in some cases, even exact results on the propagation
speeds, and which identifies the transition from ` linear'- to `
nonlinear-marginal-stability' as parameters in the governing equation are
varied.Comment: 34 pages, plain tex with uiucmac.tex. Also available by anonymous ftp
to gijoe.mrl.uiuc.edu (128.174.119.153), file /pub/front_RG.tex (or .ps.Z
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