1,881 research outputs found

    Requirements for tracking radar for falling spheres

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    Error analysis on radar tracking of falling sphere

    Evidence-based planning and costing palliative care services for children : novel multi-method epidemiological and economic exemplar

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    Background: Children’s palliative care is a relatively new clinical specialty. Its nature is multi-dimensional and its delivery necessarily multi-professional. Numerous diverse public and not-for-profit organisations typically provide services and support. Because services are not centrally coordinated, they are provided in a manner that is inconsistent and incoherent. Since the first children’s hospice opened in 1982, the epidemiology of life-limiting conditions has changed with more children living longer, and many requiring transfer to adult services. Very little is known about the number of children living within any given geographical locality, costs of care, or experiences of children with ongoing palliative care needs and their families. We integrated evidence, and undertook and used novel methodological epidemiological work to develop the first evidence-based and costed commissioning exemplar. Methods: Multi-method epidemiological and economic exemplar from a health and not-for-profit organisation perspective, to estimate numbers of children under 19 years with life-limiting conditions, cost current services, determine child/parent care preferences, and cost choice of end-of-life care at home. Results: The exemplar locality (North Wales) had important gaps in service provision and the clinical network. The estimated annual total cost of current children’s palliative care was about £5.5 million; average annual care cost per child was £22,771 using 2007 prevalence estimates and £2,437- £11,045 using new 2012/13 population-based prevalence estimates. Using population-based prevalence, we estimate 2271 children with a life-limiting condition in the general exemplar population and around 501 children per year with ongoing palliative care needs in contact with hospital services. Around 24 children with a wide range of life-limiting conditions require end-of-life care per year. Choice of end-of-life care at home was requested, which is not currently universally available. We estimated a minimum (based on 1 week of end-of-life care) additional cost of £336,000 per year to provide end-of-life support at home. Were end-of-life care to span 4 weeks, the total annual additional costs increases to £536,500 (2010/11 prices). Conclusions: Findings make a significant contribution to population-based needs assessment and commissioning methodology in children’s palliative care. Further work is needed to determine with greater precision which children in the total population require access to services and when. Half of children who died 2002-7 did not have conditions that met the globally used children's palliative care condition categories, which need revision in light of findings

    Strategic digital collection development in academic libraries

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    This 2015 study uses web analytics, subject term analysis, and download statistics to gauge the presence, visibility, and popularity of University of Illinois digital collections on the web. With a grounding in current best practices, it provides a pragmatic methodology for the institutional analysis of digital collections with an eye to strategic digital collection development.Ope

    Microcellular injection moulding: a comparison between MuCell process and the novel micro-foaming technology IQ Foam

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    The present work aims to compare two different injection moulding foaming technologies, the already known MuCell® process and the new emerged technology IQ Foam®, as well as the cell structure and mechanical behavior of the obtained components. Glass fiber reinforced-polypropylene (>PP GF<) was employed to produce rectangular plates at solid and foamed conditions by using MuCell® and IQ Foam® processes combined with the complementary Core Back expansion molding technology, and the material structure as well as the tensile, flexural and impact properties were studied. A solid skin-foamed core structure was observed in the samples foamed by both techniques. The mechanical properties decreased gradually with the apparent density of the microcellular plates. By increasing the thickness of the part because of the expansion of the cavity with the Core Back technology, the apparent density decreased but the flexural stiffness was greatly enhanced. Foamed samples obtained by IQ Foam® technology exhibited thicker solid surface layers and lower cell density than that of the MuCell® ones, but consequently higher resistant area, and thus, slightly higher mechanical properties. The new IQ Foam® technology is able to produce foamed parts with properties comparable to that of the MuCell® process, offering additional benefits such as cost-effectiveness, easy to use and machine-independencePostprint (author's final draft

    Influence of HiPIMS pulse widths on the deposition behaviour and properties of CuAgZr compositionally graded films

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    In this work, the influence of different pulse widths (25, 50 and 100 μs) during high power impulse magnetron sputtering (HiPIMS) of copper, silver and zirconium was investigated in terms of plasma properties and properties of combinatorial composition gradient CuAgZr film libraries. In situ plasma diagnostics via optical emission spectroscopy (OES), time-of-flight mass spectrometry (TOFMS), and modified quartz crystal microbalance (m-QCM), followed by film ex situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) investigations allowed to determine the effect of deposition parameters on the thin films' microstructural changes. Changing the pulse width, while keeping the duty cycle constant, modified the discharge composition in the target region and the ionised fraction of the sputtered species in the substrate region. The maximum Cu ionised fraction (19 %) was found for 50 μs, resulting in compact and smooth morphology for Cu-rich films, whereas short 25 μs pulses provided porous columnar films with rough surfaces, as the result from Ar+ bombardment. For Ag-rich films, Ag segregation allowed the deposition of dense layers, regardless of the used pulse width. Furthermore, low Ag (<10 at.%) CuAgZr films produced via HiPIMS and direct-current magnetron sputtering (DCMS) were compared in terms of structural and mechanical property changes as a function of Zr contents. For the studied chemical composition range, a linear relationship between Zr content, XRD phase shift and mechanical properties was observed for HiPIMS films, in contrast to DCMS's more abrupt transitions. An increase in hardness and elastic modulus (up to 44 % and 22 %, respectively) was found for the HiPIMS films compared to DCMS ones. The obtained results highlight HiPIMS's flexibility in providing a wide range of tailoring possibilities to meet specific application requirements, such as crystalline microstructure, density and associated mechanical properties

    On the usefulness of the speech phase spectrum for pitch extraction

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    © 2018 International Speech Communication Association. All rights reserved. Most frequency domain techniques for pitch extraction such as cepstrum, harmonic product spectrum (HPS) and summation residual harmonics (SRH) operate on the magnitude spectrum and turn it into a function in which the fundamental frequency emerges as argmax. In this paper, we investigate the extension of these three techniques to the phase and group delay (GD) domains. Our extensions exploit the observation that the bin at which F(magnitude) becomes maximum, for some monotonically increasing function F, is equivalent to bin at which F(phase) has maximum negative slope and F(groupdelay) has the maximum value. To extract the pitch track from speech phase spectrum, these techniques were coupled with the source-filter model in the phase domain that we proposed in earlier publications and a novel voicing detection algorithm proposed here. The accuracy and robustness of the phase-based pitch extraction techniques are illustrated and compared with their magnitude-based counterparts using six pitch evaluation metrics. On average, it is observed that the phase spectrum can be successfully employed in pitch tracking with comparable accuracy and robustness to the speech magnitude spectrum
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