58 research outputs found

    The Visibility of (In)security: The Aesthetics of Planning Urban Defences Against Terrorism

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    Urban defences against terrorism have traditionally been based on territorial interventions that sought to seal off and surveil certain public and private spaces considered targets. Lately, though, a much wider range of crowded and public spaces have been viewed as potential targets and thus have been identified as requiring additional security. This has immense implications for the experience of the ‘everyday’ urban landscape. Drawing on contemporary notions that incorporate the study of aesthetics and emotions within critical security and terrorism studies, this article discusses the visual impact of counter-terrorism security measures. It analyses the ‘transmission’ of symbolic messages, as well as the variety of ways in which security might be ‘received’ by various stakeholders. The analysis takes place against the backdrop of concern that obtrusive security measures have the capacity to radically alter public experiences of space and in some cases lead to (intended and unintended) exclusionary practices or a range of negative emotional responses. The article concludes by outlining a ‘spectrum of visible security’ ranging between traditional obtrusive fortified approaches and approaches that embed security features seamlessly or even ‘invisibly’ into the urban fabric

    The Achilles' Heel of Quality: the assessment of student learning

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    This paper explores the dependability of assessments of student achievement when used as performance indicators for internal and external quality monitoring (IQM and EQM). Problems are identified that jeopardise attempts to monitor, control and enhance quality in higher education. Responses are suggested with preference being given to a radical approach based on accepting that reliable national data about complex student achievements are not to be had. It is argued that this means that reliance on EQM is unwise and that more attention should be paid to internal quality enhancement

    Representation of protein secondary structure using bond-orientational order parameters

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    Structural studies of proteins for motif mining and other pattern recognition techniques require the abstraction of the structure into simpler elements for robust matching. In this study, we propose the use of bond-orientational order parameters, a well-established metric usually employed to compare atom packing in crystals and liquids. Creating a vector of orientational order parameters of residue centers in a sliding window fashion provides us with a descriptor of local structure and connectivity around each residue that is easy to calculate and compare. To test whether this representation is feasible and applicable to protein structures, we tried to predict the secondary structure of protein segments from those descriptors, resulting in 0.99 AUC (area under the ROC curve). Clustering those descriptors to 6 clusters also yield 0.93 AUC, showing that these descriptors can be used to capture and distinguish local structural information

    Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometric assay for therapeutic drug monitoring of the tyrosine kinase inhibitor pazopanib in human plasma

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    Contains fulltext : 108522.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)A quantitative bioanalytical liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometric assay for the tyrosine kinase inhibitor pazopanib was developed and validated. Plasma samples were pre-treated using protein precipitation with acetonitrile containing pazopanib-d(4) as internal standard. The extract was injected into the chromatographic system after dilution with water (1:9, v/v). The system consisted of a sub-2mum particle, trifunctional bonded octadecyl silica column with isocratic elution using 0.005% (v/v) of formic acid in a mixture of water (76%, v/v) and acetonitrile (24%, v/v). The analyte was quantified using the selected reaction monitoring mode of a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer with a heated electrospray interface. The assay was validated in a 0.1-100mug/ml calibration range. Within day precisions were 3.6-5.2%, between day precisions 4.0-8.3% and accuracies between 106% and 113% for the whole calibration range. The drug was sufficiently stable under all relevant analytical conditions. The assay has successfully been used to assess drug levels for therapeutic drug monitoring in patients treated with pazopanib
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