47,172 research outputs found
An investigation into the perspectives of providers and learners on MOOC accessibility
An effective open eLearning environment should consider the target learner’s abilities, learning goals, where learning takes place, and which specific device(s) the learner uses. MOOC platforms struggle to take these factors into account and typically are not accessible, inhibiting access to environments that are intended to be open to all. A series of research initiatives are described that are intended to benefit MOOC providers in achieving greater accessibility and disabled learners to improve their lifelong learning and re-skilling. In this paper, we first outline the rationale, the research questions, and the methodology. The research approach includes interviews, online surveys and a MOOC accessibility audit; we also include factors such the risk management of the research programme and ethical considerations when conducting research with vulnerable learners. Preliminary results are presented from interviews with providers and experts and from analysis of surveys of learners. Finally, we outline the future research opportunities. This paper is framed within the context of the Doctoral Consortium organised at the TEEM'17 conference
Antarctic Ocean polynyas
The spatial and temporal variability of sea ice concentrations derived from Nimbus-7 Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR) brightness temperatures are presented. Emphasis is on the continental shelf region of the Ross Sea during 1984, when supporting data were obtained from oceanographic stations and moored instruments. The effects of the large spring polynya in the Ross Sea on summer insolation, surface heat layer storage, and late autumn ice formation are described
Statistical Inference and the Plethora of Probability Paradigms: A Principled Pluralism
The major competing statistical paradigms share a common remarkable but unremarked thread: in many of their inferential applications, different probability interpretations are combined. How this plays out in different theories of inference depends on the type of question asked. We distinguish four question types: confirmation, evidence, decision, and prediction. We show that Bayesian confirmation theory mixes what are intuitively “subjective” and “objective” interpretations of probability, whereas the likelihood-based account of evidence melds three conceptions of what constitutes an “objective” probability
The Mod-2 wind turbine development project
A major phase of the Federal Wind Energy Program, the Mod-2 wind turbine, a second-generation machine developed by the Boeing Engineering and Construction Co. for the U.S. Department of Energy and the Lewis Research Center of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, is described. The Mod-2 is a large (2.5-MW power rating) horizontal-axis wind turbine designed for the generation of electrical power on utility networks. Three machines were built and are located in a cluster at Goodnoe Hills, Washington. All technical aspects of the project are described: design approach, significant innovation features, the mechanical system, the electrical power system, the control system, and the safety system
R-Parity Conservation from a Top Down Perspective
Motivated by results from the LHC and dark matter searches, we study the
possibility of phenomenologically viable R-parity violation in GUT
models from a top-down point of view. We show that in contrast to the more
model dependent bounds on the proton lifetime, the limits on neutrino masses
provide a robust, stringent and complementary constraint on all
GUT-based R-parity violating models. Focusing on well-motivated string/
theory GUT frameworks with mechanisms for doublet-triplet splitting and a
solution to the problems, we show that imposing the neutrino mass
bounds implies that R-parity violation is disfavored. The arguments can also be
generalized to minimal GUTs. An experimental observation of R-parity
violation would, therefore, disfavor such classes of top-down GUT models.Comment: Citations added, accepted to JHEP with minor revision
Liver Transplantation for Polycystic Liver Disease
Four female patients with severe complications of polycystic liver disease were treated with liver replacement; two patients were also given kidneys from their liver donors. All four of the patients were suffering from extreme fatigue. Three of the recipients have survived for 8, 11, and 60 months with normal liver function and present good health. The fourth patient recovered from a liver-kidney transplantation, but 5 months later, fulminant hepatic failure developed in this patient due to hepatitis B virus, and she died despite emergency hepatic retransplantation. © 1990, American Medical Association. All rights reserved
The -MSSM - An Theory motivated model of Particle Physics
We continue our study of the low energy implications of theory vacua on
manifolds, undertaken in \cite{Acharya:2007rc,Acharya:2006ia}, where it
was shown that the moduli can be stabilized and a TeV scale generated, with the
Planck scale as the only dimensionful input. A well-motivated phenomenological
model - the -MSSM, can be naturally defined within the above framework. In
this paper, we study some of the important phenomenological features of the
-MSSM. In particular, the soft supersymmetry breaking parameters and the
superpartner spectrum are computed. The -MSSM generically gives rise to
light gauginos and heavy scalars with wino LSPs when one tunes the cosmological
constant. Electroweak symmetry breaking is present but fine-tuned. The
-MSSM is also naturally consistent with precision gauge coupling
unification. The phenomenological consequences for cosmology and collider
physics of the -MSSM will be reported in more detail soon.Comment: 42 pages, 7 figures, one figure corrected, reference adde
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