2,755 research outputs found
The assignment brief
This article is available open access under a creative commons license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). Copyright @ 2009 Elsevier Ltd.This paper reports on the results of a pilot study conducted in The School of Engineering and Design at Brunel University, which considered how easily students could extract ‘meaningful’ information from an assignment brief. The study used two documents, a ‘standard’ module specific assignment brief (PB1), which used a proforma document issued by the Taught Programmes Office (TPO) and a ‘redesigned’ assessment brief (RB2), which also used the ‘basic’ proforma document as the design template. Both documents used the same data but the redesigned version used principles of Information Architecture to structure the data. The study used a designed questionnaire to elicit responses from students at Level 2, which compared and contrasted the two documents
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TUGS: I feel what you see
This article identifies how navigation aids can assist a wide range of visually impaired individuals, particularly focussing on the currently available GPS (Global Positioning Satellite) linked mobile technology systems. Some of the problems with these systems are identified (audio messaging masking critical ambient sound signals) and describes the design and development of a passive tactile interface, which uses the body as the method of communicating navigational information to the user
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TUGS – The tactile user guidance system
The Electronic System and Information Technology Research Group at Brunel University has designed a multifaceted navigation system for blind and visually impaired pedestrians. The primary operation of the system mimics the advantages of an informed sighted guide by using Global Positioning Systems and remote (sighted on the user) video cameras as navigational sensors. The information generated is streamed to a central control centre. This allows the system to operate in a fully automatic or operator assisted mode dependent on the users requirements. Initially the system used an audio link to transfer information to the user, however this has proved problematic. Clear unimpeded access to ambient sound is vital for visually impaired and blind pedestrians, both for efficient wayfinding and safety. Any system which has a continuing dialogue with the user, for example, navigational instructions received through an audio link, interferes with the users ability to process ambient sounds. To solve this problem a novel Tactile User Guidance System (TUGS) with vibrating actuators, has been designed and experimentally tested.
In this paper we present the design and experimental verification of TUGS with both visually impaired and sighted users. Although we have taken the visually impaired user as the ‘worst case scenario’ a practical ability to transfer information through the tactile sense has considerable value to other groups who may find themselves in restricted or overloaded visual or audio situations. These groups include; front line responders in the emergency services, railroad workers, pilots and remote vehicle operators
Protocol for a mixed-methods exploratory investigation of care following intensive care discharge: the REFLECT study
© Author(s) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.INTRODUCTION: A substantial number of patients discharged from intensive care units (ICUs) subsequently die without leaving hospital. It is unclear how many of these deaths are preventable. Ward-based management following discharge from ICU is an area that patients and healthcare staff are concerned about. The primary aim of REFLECT (Recovery Following Intensive Care Treatment) is to develop an intervention plan to reduce in-hospital mortality rates in patients who have been discharged from ICU. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: REFLECT is a multicentre mixed-methods exploratory study examining ward care delivery to adult patients discharged from ICU. The study will be made up of four substudies. Medical notes of patients who were discharged from ICU and subsequently died will be examined using a retrospective case records review (RCRR) technique. Patients and their relatives will be interviewed about their post-ICU care, including relatives of patients who died in hospital following ICU discharge. Staff involved in the care of patients post-ICU discharge will be interviewed about the care of this patient group. The medical records of patients who survived their post-ICU stay will also be reviewed using the RCRR technique. The analyses of the substudies will be both descriptive and use a modified grounded theory approach to identify emerging themes. The evidence generated in these four substudies will form the basis of the intervention development, which will take place through stakeholder and clinical expert meetings. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Ethical approval has been obtained through the Wales Research and Ethics Committee 4 (17/WA/0107). We aim to disseminate the findings through international conferences, international peer-reviewed journals and social media. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN14658054.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Efficient implementation of finite volume methods in Numerical Relativity
Centered finite volume methods are considered in the context of Numerical
Relativity. A specific formulation is presented, in which third-order space
accuracy is reached by using a piecewise-linear reconstruction. This
formulation can be interpreted as an 'adaptive viscosity' modification of
centered finite difference algorithms. These points are fully confirmed by 1D
black-hole simulations. In the 3D case, evidence is found that the use of a
conformal decomposition is a key ingredient for the robustness of black hole
numerical codes.Comment: Revised version, 10 pages, 6 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Kikuchi-Fujimoto Disease in a 30-Year-Old Caucasian Female
Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease is a rare, self-limited, histiocytic, necrotizing lymphadenitis first described in Japan in 1972. Necrosis of lymph node tissue is caused by apoptosis and may be virally induced. It commonly presents with cervical lymphadenitis and fever. Despite its low incidence, Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease should be considered in patients with persistent lymphadenopathy. Originally thought to occur only in young Asian women, it is now recognized in other geographic regions. We report a 30-year-old white woman with Kikuchi-Fujimoto disease. We discuss the clinical features, differential diagnosis, radiography, pathology, and outcome
Search for axion-like particles using a variable baseline photon regeneration technique
We report the first results of the GammeV experiment, a search for milli-eV
mass particles with axion-like couplings to two photons. The search is
performed using a "light shining through a wall" technique where incident
photons oscillate into new weakly interacting particles that are able to pass
through the wall and subsequently regenerate back into detectable photons. The
oscillation baseline of the apparatus is variable, thus allowing probes of
different values of particle mass. We find no excess of events above background
and are able to constrain the two-photon couplings of possible new scalar
(pseudoscalar) particles to be less than 3.1x10^{-7} GeV^{-1} (3.5x10^{-7}
GeV^{-1}) in the limit of massless particles.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. This is the version accepted by PRL and includes
updated limit
Travelling waves for the Gross-Pitaevskii equation II
The purpose of this paper is to provide a rigorous mathematical proof of the
existence of travelling wave solutions to the Gross-Pitaevskii equation in
dimensions two and three. Our arguments, based on minimization under
constraints, yield a full branch of solutions, and extend earlier results,
where only a part of the branch was built. In dimension three, we also show
that there are no travelling wave solutions of small energy.Comment: Final version accepted for publication in Communications in
Mathematical Physics with a few minor corrections and added remark
Zeno Dynamics of von Neumann Algebras
The dynamical quantum Zeno effect is studied in the context of von Neumann
algebras. We identify a localized subalgebra on which the Zeno dynamics acts by
automorphisms. The Zeno dynamics coincides with the modular dynamics of that
subalgebra, if an additional assumption is satisfied. This relates the modular
operator of that subalgebra to the modular operator of the original algebra by
a variant of the Kato-Lie-Trotter product formula.Comment: Revised version; further typos corrected; 9 pages, AMSLaTe
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