1,071 research outputs found
Design thinking and sport for development: enhancing organizational innovation
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. Rationale/purpose: To determine if the field of sport for development (SFD) presents opportunities for the employment of design thinking approaches toward enhancing organizational innovation. Design/methodology/approach: We undertook a scoping study to determine if and how SFD research and practice aligns with five established themes of design thinking practice. Findings: Design thinking indicators are present across the breadth of SFD research. A total of 14 SFD articles display total thematic alignment with design thinking practice, particularly in regard to five key indicators of such alignment: (a) deep user understanding, (b) diversity of perspectives, (c) testing for user feedback, (d) futuristic thinking, and (e) bias toward action. Practical implications: Five key indicators represent logical points of entry for the employment of design thinking in SFD research and practice. Research contribution: Design thinking has become popular in the broad field of management, but this is the first study of the concept in the sport management domain
Anomalous mass dependence of radiative quark energy loss in a finite-size quark-gluon plasma
We demonstrate that for a finite-size quark-gluon plasma the induced gluon
radiation from heavy quarks is stronger than that for light quarks when the
gluon formation length becomes comparable with (or exceeds) the size of the
plasma. The effect is due to oscillations of the light-cone wave function for
the in-medium transition. The dead cone model by Dokshitzer and
Kharzeev neglecting quantum finite-size effects is not valid in this regime.
The finite-size effects also enhance the photon emission from heavy quarks.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Robust 3D U-Net Segmentation of Macular Holes
Macular holes are a common eye condition which result in visual impairment.
We look at the application of deep convolutional neural networks to the problem
of macular hole segmentation. We use the 3D U-Net architecture as a basis and
experiment with a number of design variants. Manually annotating and measuring
macular holes is time consuming and error prone. Previous automated approaches
to macular hole segmentation take minutes to segment a single 3D scan. Our
proposed model generates significantly more accurate segmentations in less than
a second. We found that an approach of architectural simplification, by greatly
simplifying the network capacity and depth, exceeds both expert performance and
state-of-the-art models such as residual 3D U-Nets
Future directions: Cultural competence and the higher education sector
© The Author(s) 2020. In one sense or another, the chapters in this book have all acknowledged that cultural competence is a set of behaviours, attitudes and/or policies that come together in the higher education sector or among professional and academic staff, and students enabling them to operate efficiently in intercultural contexts (Cross, Bazron, Dennis, & Isaacs in Towards a culturally competent system of care: a monograph on effective services for minority children who are severely emotionally disturbed. Child and Adolescent Service System Program Technical Assistance Center, Georgetown University Child Development Center, Washington, DC, 1989)
An International Urogynecological Association (IUGA)/International Continence Society (ICS) joint report on the terminology for the conservative and nonpharmacological management of female pelvic floor dysfunction
There has been an increasing need for the terminology on the conservative management of female pelvic floor dysfunction to be collated in a clinically based consensus report.This Report combines the input of members and elected nominees of the Standardization and Terminology Committees of two International Organizations, the International Urogynecological Association (IUGA) and the International Continence Society (ICS), assisted at intervals by many external referees. An extensive process of nine rounds of internal and external review was developed to exhaustively examine each definition, with decision-making by collective opinion (consensus). Before opening up for comments on the webpages of ICS and IUGA, five experts from physiotherapy, neurology, urology, urogynecology, and nursing were invited to comment on the paper.A Terminology Report on the conservative management of female pelvic floor dysfunction, encompassing over 200 separate definitions, has been developed. It is clinically based, with the most common symptoms, signs, assessments, diagnoses, and treatments defined. Clarity and ease of use have been key aims to make it interpretable by practitioners and trainees in all the different specialty groups involved in female pelvic floor dysfunction. Ongoing review is not only anticipated, but will be required to keep the document updated and as widely acceptable as possible.A consensus-based terminology report for the conservative management of female pelvic floor dysfunction has been produced, aimed at being a significant aid to clinical practice and a stimulus for research
Electromagnetic Emission and Energy Loss in the QGP
I discuss why photon production from the Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP) presents an
interesting problem, both experimentally and theoretically. I show how the
photon emission rate can be computed under the simplifying assumption that the
QGP fully thermalizes. The theoretical issues are very similar to those for jet
energy loss; so it should be possible to treat them in a common formalism and
relate the predictions of one phenomenon to those of the other.Comment: 8 pages, invited talk at Quark Matter 200
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