503 research outputs found
Iterative Micro-Identity Content Analysis:Studying Identity Development within and across Real-Time Interactions
Identity development occurs in the context of real-time interactions. However, existing research on interactions has focused on identity processes and little is known about identity content development within interactions. We define real-time identity as claims about selves, formulated in the service of an interactional “social business.” The aim of this methodological paper is to introduce Iterative Micro-Content Analysis (IMICA) as an approach to studying the changes and consistencies in real-time identity content. We outline four key principles of IMICA and offer a step by step guide to its analytic stages. We provide two worked examples for illustration: a video-recorded conversation between two young women on the topic of “love and desire,” and audio-recorded speed-dating conversations between young same-sex attracted men. The worked examples demonstrate how IMICA can be used to study how identity claims change within a single interaction as well as across multiple interactions. We argue that IMICA’s empirical insights into the concrete mechanisms through which social interactions shape identities are of both theoretical and practical relevance. We discuss how IMICA may allow for a micro-level operationalization of macro-level concepts (e.g., exploration or identity centrality), outline how it may be combined with quantitative analyses, and discuss its limitations
Exploring Exploration:Identity Exploration in Real-Time Interactions among Peers
In this short-term longitudinal study, we examine specific examples of identity exploration in real-time interactions among peers. The participants included 12 first-year students majoring in literature, social sciences, and humanities at a national university in Japan (M age = 18.2; SD = 0.39; 83.3% female). They were divided into four triads that participated in weekly 20-minute discussions for nine successive weeks around three identity domains: learning, romantic relationships, and career. Transcripts were analyzed using a grounded theory approach. Seven characteristics of exploration were identified in real-time interactions: support, open disclosure, meta-exploration, investigating, creating an idea, conflict, and demotivating. In addition, these characteristics generated three major overarching patterns that advanced exploration: creating a safe environment for exploration, clarification and elaboration of the idea embedded in support essential for promoting exploration, and a combination of finding a keyword and repeating it on the border between exploration and discovering an aspect of identity. Overall, our results reveal that exploration in real-time interactions among peers did not involve a fixed sequence of characteristics; rather, it was vitalized by mutual affirmation, going back and forth among different characteristics of exploration while taking small steps
Thermal Conversion of Guanylurea Dicyanamide into Graphitic Carbon Nitride via Prototype CNx Precursors
Guanylurea dicyanamide, [(H2N)C(-O)NHC(NH2)2][N(CN)2], has been synthesized by ion exchange reaction in aqueous solution and structurally characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (C2/c, a = 2249.0(5) pm, b = 483.9(1) pm, c = 1382.4(3) pm, β = 99.49(3)°, V = 1483.8(5) × 106 pm3, T = 130 K). The thermal behavior of the molecular salt has been studied by thermal analysis, temperature-programmed X-ray powder diffraction, FTIR spectroscopy, and mass spectrometry between room temperature and 823 K. The results were interpreted on a molecular level in terms of a sequence of thermally induced addition, cyclization, and elimination reactions. As a consequence, melamine (2,4,6-triamino-1,3,5-triazine) is formed with concomitant loss of HNCO. Further condensation of melamine yields the prototypic CNx precursor melem (2,6,10-triamino-s-heptazine, C6N7(NH2)3), which alongside varying amounts of directly formed CNxHy material transforms into layered CNxHy phases without significant integration of oxygen into the core framework owing to the evaporation of HNCO. Thus, further evidence can be added to melamine and its condensation product melem acting as “key intermediates” in the synthetic pathway toward graphitic CNxHy materials, whose exact constitution is still a point at issue. Due to the characteristic formation process and hydrogen content a close relationship with the polymer melon is evident. In particular, the thermal transformation of guanylurea dicyanamide clearly demonstrates that the formation of volatile compounds such as HNCO during thermal decomposition may render a large variety of previously not considered molecular compounds suitable CNx precursors despite the presence of oxygen in the starting material
Conventional methods fail to measure cp(omega) of glass-forming liquids
The specific heat is frequency dependent in highly viscous liquids. By
solving the full one-dimensional thermo-viscoelastic problem analytically it is
shown that, because of thermal expansion and the fact that mechanical stresses
relax on the same time scale as the enthalpy relaxes, the plane thermal-wave
method does not measure the isobaric frequency-dependent specific heat
c_p(omega). This method rather measures a "longitudinal" frequency-dependent
specific heat, a quantity defined and detailed here that is in-between
c_p(omega) and c_v(omega). This result means that no wide-frequency
measurements of c_p(omega) on liquids approaching the calorimetric glass
transition exist. We briefly discuss consequences for experiment
Thermal Diffusion and Quench Propagation in YBCO Pancake Coils Wound with ZnO-and Mylar Insulations
The thermal diffusion properties of several different kinds of YBCO
insulations and the quench properties of pancake coils made using these
insulations were studied. Insulations investigated include Nomex, Kapton, and
Mylar, as well as insulations based on ZnO, Zn2GeO4, and ZnO-Cu. Initially,
short stacks of YBCO conductors with interlayer insulation, epoxy, and a
central heater strip were made and later measured for thermal conductivity in
liquid nitrogen. Subsequently, three different pancake coils were made. The
first two were smaller, each using one meter total of YBCO tape present as four
turns around a G-10 former. One of these smaller coils used Mylar insulation
co-wound with the YBCO tape, the other used YBCO tape onto which ZnO based
insulation had been deposited. One larger coil was made which used 12 total
meters of ZnO-insulated tape and had 45 turns. The results for all short sample
and coil thermal conductivities were ~1-3 Wm-1K-1. Finally, quench propagation
velocity measurements were performed on the coils (77 K, self field) by
applying a DC current and then using a heater pulse to initiate a quench.
Normal zone propagation velocity (NZP) values were obtained for the coils both
in the radial direction and in the azimuthal direction. Radial NZP values
(0.05-0.7 mm/s) were two orders of magnitude lower than axial values (~14-17
mm/s). Nevertheless, the quenches were generally seen to propagate radially
within the coils, in the sense that any given layer in the coil is driven
normal by the layer underneath it.Comment: 58 pages, 5 tables, 16 fig
Integration of environmental assessment in a PLM context: a case study in luxury industry
Nowadays, the environment becomes a major issue in our society. It gives rise to regu-lations, market demand and stakeholder's pressure which are concerning companies. These latter have to reduce the negative impact of their new product by eco-design and adopting a continuous improvement for their existing product portfolio. To do so, environmental assessment system is needed. Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) is the most known and recognized. However, this method is complex, requires significant resources and a large amount of accurate data. We propose a methodology to connect a simplified LCA tool with PLM system and ERP to evaluate an entire product portfolio at any time. This will allow design teams to consider the environmental issues in early design phase and gives the companies a global vision of their product portfolio. This methodology is experimented with packaging products of luxury brand, using the Teamcenter PLM system and a Simplified LCA Too
Phylogenetic convergence and multiple shell shape optima for gliding scallops (Bivalvia: Pectinidae)
An important question in evolutionary biology is how often, and to what extent, do similar ecologies elicit distantly related taxa to evolve towards the same phenotype? In some scenarios, the repeated evolution of particular phenotypes may be expected, for instance when species are exposed to common selective forces that result from strong functional demands. In bivalved scallops (Pectinidae), some species exhibit a distinct swimming behaviour (gliding), which requires specific biomechanical attributes to generate lift and reduce drag during locomotive events. Further, a phylogenetic analysis revealed that gliding behaviour has independently evolved at least four times, which raises the question as to whether these independent lineages have also converged on a similar phenotype. Here, we test the hypothesis that gliding scallops display shell shape convergence using a combination of geometric morphometrics and phylogenetic comparative methods that evaluate patterns of multivariate trait evolution. Our findings reveal that the gliding species display less morphological disparity and significant evolutionary convergence in morphospace, relative to expectations under a neutral model of Brownian motion for evolutionary phenotypic change. Intriguingly, the phylomorphospace patterns indicate that gliding lineages follow similar evolutionary trajectories to not one, but two regions of morphological space, and subsequent analyses identified significant differences in their biomechanical parameters, suggesting that these two groups of scallops accomplish gliding in different ways. Thus, whereas there is a clear gliding morphotype that has evolved convergently across the phylogeny, functionally distinct morphological subforms are apparent, suggesting that there may be two optima for the gliding phenotype in the Pectinidae.J. M. Serb, E. Sherratt, A. Alejandrino & D. C. Adam
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