9,938 research outputs found
Semantics, sensors, and the social web: The live social semantics experiments
The Live Social Semantics is an innovative application that encourages and guides social networking between researchers at conferences and similar events. The application integrates data and technologies from the Semantic Web, online social networks, and a face-to-face contact sensing platform. It helps researchers to find like-minded and influential researchers, to identify and meet people in their community of practice, and to capture and later retrace their real-world networking activities at conferences. The application was successfully deployed at two international conferences, attracting more than 300 users in total. This paper describes this application, and discusses and evaluates the results of its two deployment
Tube Width Fluctuations in F-Actin Solutions
We determine the statistics of the local tube width in F-actin solutions,
beyond the usually reported mean value. Our experimental observations are
explained by a segment fluid theory based on the binary collision approximation
(BCA). In this systematic generalization of the standard mean-field approach
effective polymer segments interact via a potential representing the
topological constraints. The analytically predicted universal tube width
distribution with a stretched tail is in good agreement with the data.Comment: Final version, 5 pages, 4 figure
Error-resistant Single Qubit Gates with Trapped Ions
Coherent operations constitutive for the implementation of single and
multi-qubit quantum gates with trapped ions are demonstrated that are robust
against variations in experimental parameters and intrinsically indeterministic
system parameters. In particular, pulses developed using optimal control theory
are demonstrated for the first time with trapped ions. Their performance as a
function of error parameters is systematically investigated and compared to
composite pulses.Comment: 5 pages 5 figure
Efficient Algorithms for Optimal Control of Quantum Dynamics: The "Krotov'' Method unencumbered
Efficient algorithms for the discovery of optimal control designs for
coherent control of quantum processes are of fundamental importance. One
important class of algorithms are sequential update algorithms generally
attributed to Krotov. Although widely and often successfully used, the
associated theory is often involved and leaves many crucial questions
unanswered, from the monotonicity and convergence of the algorithm to
discretization effects, leading to the introduction of ad-hoc penalty terms and
suboptimal update schemes detrimental to the performance of the algorithm. We
present a general framework for sequential update algorithms including specific
prescriptions for efficient update rules with inexpensive dynamic search length
control, taking into account discretization effects and eliminating the need
for ad-hoc penalty terms. The latter, while necessary to regularize the problem
in the limit of infinite time resolution, i.e., the continuum limit, are shown
to be undesirable and unnecessary in the practically relevant case of finite
time resolution. Numerical examples show that the ideas underlying many of
these results extend even beyond what can be rigorously proved.Comment: 19 pages, many figure
Generalized Mittag-Leffler functions in the theory of finite-size scaling for systems with strong anisotropy and/or long-range interaction
The difficulties arising in the investigation of finite-size scaling in
--dimensional O(n) systems with strong anisotropy and/or long-range
interaction, decaying with the interparticle distance as
(), are discussed. Some integral representations aiming at the
simplification of the investigations are presented for the classical and
quantum lattice sums that take place in the theory. Special attention is paid
to a more general form allowing to treat both cases on an equal footing and in
addition cases with strong anisotropic interactions and different geometries.
The analysis is simplified further by expressing this general form in terms of
a generalization of the Mittag-Leffler special functions. This turned out to be
very useful for the extraction of asymptotic finite-size behaviours of the
thermodynamic functions.Comment: Accepted for publication in J. Phys. A: Math. and Gen.; 14 pages. The
manuscript has been improved to help reader
A study of the social and physical environment in catering kitchens and the role of the chef in promoting positive health and safety behaviour
This is the account of a mixed method study of chefs and their kitchens in order to identify the nature of their workplace and how this affects their ability to manage health and safety in the kitchen. It included extended periods of observation, monitoring of physical parameters, analysis of records of reported accidents, and a series of reflexive interviews. The findings were integrated and then fed back in a smaller number of second interviews in order to test whether the findings fitted in with the chefs' understanding of their world. Major factors identified included survival in a market environment, the status of the chef (and the kitchen) within organisations, marked autocracy of chefs, and an increasing tempo building up to service time with commensurate heat, noise, and activity. In particular during the crescendo, a threshold shift in risk tolerance was identified. The factors, their interplay, and their implications for health and safety in the catering kitchen are discussed
Proximity morality in medical school â medical students forming physician morality "on the job": Grounded theory analysis of a student survey
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The value of ethics education have been questioned. Therefore we did a student survey on attitudes about the teaching of ethics in Swedish medical schools.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Questionnaire survey on attitudes to ethics education with 409 Swedish medical students participating. We analyzed > 8000 words of open-ended responses and multiple-choice questions using classic grounded theory procedures.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this paper we suggest that medical students take a proximity morality stance towards their ethics education meaning that they want to form physician morality "on the job". This involves comprehensive ethics courses in which quality lectures provide "ethics grammar" and together with attitude exercises and vignette reflections nurture tutored group discussions. Goals of forming physician morality are to develop a professional identity, handling diversity of religious and existential worldviews, training students described as ethically naive, processing difficult clinical experiences, and desisting negative role modeling from physicians in clinical or teaching situations, some engaging in "ethics suppression" by controlling sensitive topic discussions and serving students politically correct attitudes.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We found that medical students have a proximity morality attitude towards ethics education. Rather than being taught ethics they want to form their own physician morality through tutored group discussions in comprehensive ethics courses.</p
Dynamics in binary cluster crystals
As a result of the application of coarse-graining procedures to describe
complex fluids, the study of systems consisting of particles interacting
through bounded, repulsive pair potentials has become of increasing interest in
the last years. A well known example is the so-called Generalized Exponential
Model (GEM-), for which the interaction between particles is described by
the potential . Interactions with
lead to the formation of a novel phase of soft matter consisting of cluster
crystals. Recent studies on the phase behavior of binary mixtures of GEM-
particles have provided evidence for the formation of novel kinds of alloys,
depending on the cross interactions between the two species. This work aims to
study the dynamic behavior of such binary mixtures by means of extensive
molecular dynamics simulations, and in particular to investigate the effect of
the addition of non-clustering particles on the dynamic scenario of
one-component cluster crystals. Analogies and differences with the
one-component case are revealed and discussed by analyzing self- and collective
dynamic correlators.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, submitted to JSTA
Producing the docile body: analysing Local Area Under-performance Inspection (LAUI)
Sir Michael Wilshaw, the head of the Office for Standards in Education (OfSTED), declared a 'new wave' of Local Area Under-performance Inspections (LAUI) of schools 'denying children the standard of education they deserve'. This paper examines how the threat of LAUI played out over three mathematics lessons taught by a teacher in her first year in the profession. A Foucauldian approach is mobilised with regard to disciplinary power and 'docile bodies'. The paper argues that, in the case in point, LAUI was a tool mediating performative conditions and, ultimately, the docile body. The paper will be of concern to policy sociologists, teachers, school leaders, and those interested in school inspection
Being Healthy: a Grounded Theory Study of Help Seeking Behaviour among Chinese Elders living in the UK
The health of older people is a priority in many countries as the worldâs population ages. Attitudes towards help seeking behaviours in older people remain a largely unexplored field of research. This is particularly true for older minority groups where the place that they have migrated to presents both cultural and structural challenges. The UK, like other countries,has an increasingly aging Chinese population about who relatively little is known. This study used a qualitative grounded
theory design following the approach of Glaser (1978). Qualitative data were collected using semi-structured interviews with 33 Chinese elders who were aged between 60 and 84, using purposive and theoretical sampling approaches. Data were analysed using the constant comparative method until data saturation occurred and a substantive theory was generated. âBeing healthyâ (the core category) with four interrelated categories: self-management, normalizing/minimizing, access to health services, and being cured form the theory. The theory was generated around the core explanations provided by
participants and Chinese eldersâ concerns about health issues they face in their daily life. We also present data about how they direct their health-related activities towards meeting their physical and psychological goals of being healthy. Their differential understanding of diseases and a lack of information about health services were potent predictors of nonïżœhelp seeking and âselfâ rather than medical management of their illnesses. This study highlights the need for intervention and health support for Chinese elders
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