18,092 research outputs found
Universities’ engagement with vocationalism: historical perspective
The aim of this article is to explore the historical context of vocationalism in universities. It is based on an analysis of the history of the university from a vocational perspective. It looks for evidence of vocational engagement in the activities of universities over time, taking a long view from the birth of the Western University in the Middle Ages to the 1980s with the emergence of current issues of vocationalism in university education. It adopts a chronological perspective initially and then a thematic one. The main findings are: (1) vocationalism in university education is as old as the Western University itself, (2) there is evidence from the start of the Western University of vocational engagement in terms of the provision of vocationally relevant subjects, vocationally relevant skills and the development of vocationally relevant attitudes, (3) whereas most graduate employers used to be concerned with the vocationally relevant knowledge, skills and attitudes students acquired on their degree courses, most are now more concerned with graduate capacity and disposition to learn within their employment after graduation and (4) subject-centred education is compatible with university education that supports the vocational aspirations of students
Constructing packings in Grassmannian manifolds via alternating projection
This paper describes a numerical method for finding good packings in
Grassmannian manifolds equipped with various metrics. This investigation also
encompasses packing in projective spaces. In each case, producing a good
packing is equivalent to constructing a matrix that has certain structural and
spectral properties. By alternately enforcing the structural condition and then
the spectral condition, it is often possible to reach a matrix that satisfies
both. One may then extract a packing from this matrix.
This approach is both powerful and versatile. In cases where experiments have
been performed, the alternating projection method yields packings that compete
with the best packings recorded. It also extends to problems that have not been
studied numerically. For example, it can be used to produce packings of
subspaces in real and complex Grassmannian spaces equipped with the
Fubini--Study distance; these packings are valuable in wireless communications.
One can prove that some of the novel configurations constructed by the
algorithm have packing diameters that are nearly optimal.Comment: 41 pages, 7 tables, 4 figure
Bayesian total evidence dating reveals the recent crown radiation of penguins
The total-evidence approach to divergence-time dating uses molecular and
morphological data from extant and fossil species to infer phylogenetic
relationships, species divergence times, and macroevolutionary parameters in a
single coherent framework. Current model-based implementations of this approach
lack an appropriate model for the tree describing the diversification and
fossilization process and can produce estimates that lead to erroneous
conclusions. We address this shortcoming by providing a total-evidence method
implemented in a Bayesian framework. This approach uses a mechanistic tree
prior to describe the underlying diversification process that generated the
tree of extant and fossil taxa. Previous attempts to apply the total-evidence
approach have used tree priors that do not account for the possibility that
fossil samples may be direct ancestors of other samples. The fossilized
birth-death (FBD) process explicitly models the diversification, fossilization,
and sampling processes and naturally allows for sampled ancestors. This model
was recently applied to estimate divergence times based on molecular data and
fossil occurrence dates. We incorporate the FBD model and a model of
morphological trait evolution into a Bayesian total-evidence approach to dating
species phylogenies. We apply this method to extant and fossil penguins and
show that the modern penguins radiated much more recently than has been
previously estimated, with the basal divergence in the crown clade occurring at
~12.7 Ma and most splits leading to extant species occurring in the last 2
million years. Our results demonstrate that including stem-fossil diversity can
greatly improve the estimates of the divergence times of crown taxa. The method
is available in BEAST2 (v. 2.4) www.beast2.org with packages SA (v. at least
1.1.4) and morph-models (v. at least 1.0.4).Comment: 50 pages, 6 figure
The geometry of manifolds and the perception of space
This essay discusses the development of key geometric ideas in the 19th
century which led to the formulation of the concept of an abstract manifold
(which was not necessarily tied to an ambient Euclidean space) by Hermann Weyl
in 1913. This notion of manifold and the geometric ideas which could be
formulated and utilized in such a setting (measuring a distance between points,
curvature and other geometric concepts) was an essential ingredient in
Einstein's gravitational theory of space-time from 1916 and has played
important roles in numerous other theories of nature ever since.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1301.064
PCR for the detection of pathogens in neonatal early onset sepsis.
BACKGROUND: A large proportion of neonates are treated for presumed bacterial sepsis with broad spectrum antibiotics even though their blood cultures subsequently show no growth. This study aimed to investigate PCR-based methods to identify pathogens not detected by conventional culture. METHODS: Whole blood samples of 208 neonates with suspected early onset sepsis were tested using a panel of multiplexed bacterial PCRs targeting Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus agalactiae (GBS), Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pyogenes (GAS), Enterobacteriaceae, Enterococcus faecalis, Enterococcus faecium, Ureaplasma parvum, Ureaplasma urealyticum, Mycoplasma hominis and Mycoplasma genitalium, a 16S rRNA gene broad-range PCR and a multiplexed PCR for Candida spp. RESULTS: Two-hundred and eight samples were processed. In five of those samples, organisms were detected by conventional culture; all of those were also identified by PCR. PCR detected bacteria in 91 (45%) of the 203 samples that did not show bacterial growth in culture. S. aureus, Enterobacteriaceae and S. pneumoniae were the most frequently detected pathogens. A higher bacterial load detected by PCR was correlated positively with the number of clinical signs at presentation. CONCLUSION: Real-time PCR has the potential to be a valuable additional tool for the diagnosis of neonatal sepsis
Upward Three-Dimensional Grid Drawings of Graphs
A \emph{three-dimensional grid drawing} of a graph is a placement of the
vertices at distinct points with integer coordinates, such that the straight
line segments representing the edges do not cross. Our aim is to produce
three-dimensional grid drawings with small bounding box volume. We prove that
every -vertex graph with bounded degeneracy has a three-dimensional grid
drawing with volume. This is the broadest class of graphs admiting
such drawings. A three-dimensional grid drawing of a directed graph is
\emph{upward} if every arc points up in the z-direction. We prove that every
directed acyclic graph has an upward three-dimensional grid drawing with
volume, which is tight for the complete dag. The previous best upper
bound was . Our main result is that every -colourable directed
acyclic graph ( constant) has an upward three-dimensional grid drawing with
volume. This result matches the bound in the undirected case, and
improves the best known bound from for many classes of directed
acyclic graphs, including planar, series parallel, and outerplanar
Requirements for contractility in disordered cytoskeletal bundles
Actomyosin contractility is essential for biological force generation, and is
well understood in highly organized structures such as striated muscle.
Additionally, actomyosin bundles devoid of this organization are known to
contract both in vivo and in vitro, which cannot be described by standard
muscle models. To narrow down the search for possible contraction mechanisms in
these systems, we investigate their microscopic symmetries. We show that
contractile behavior requires non-identical motors that generate large enough
forces to probe the nonlinear elastic behavior of F-actin. This suggests a role
for filament buckling in the contraction of these bundles, consistent with
recent experimental results on reconstituted actomyosin bundles.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures; text shortene
The Dynamical Mean Field Theory phase space extension and critical properties of the finite temperature Mott transition
We consider the finite temperature metal-insulator transition in the half
filled paramagnetic Hubbard model on the infinite dimensional Bethe lattice. A
new method for calculating the Dynamical Mean Field Theory fixpoint surface in
the phase diagram is presented and shown to be free from the convergence
problems of standard forward recursion. The fixpoint equation is then analyzed
using dynamical systems methods. On the fixpoint surface the eigenspectra of
its Jacobian is used to characterize the hysteresis boundaries of the first
order transition line and its second order critical end point. The critical
point is shown to be a cusp catastrophe in the parameter space, opening a
pitchfork bifurcation along the first order transition line, while the
hysteresis boundaries are shown to be saddle-node bifurcations of two merging
fixpoints. Using Landau theory the properties of the critical end point is
determined and related to the critical eigenmode of the Jacobian. Our findings
provide new insights into basic properties of this intensively studied
transition.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, 1 tabl
The expert-public interface in municipal waste management decision making: exploring opinions from stakeholder groups
Local authorities need to find more effective ways to engage communities because public
participation in collection schemes and acceptance of municipal waste facilities are integral
to delivering effective waste strategies. The technical expertise politicians relied on in the
past, to produce cost-effective and environmentally sound solutions, no longer provides
sufficient justification to approve waste facilities. A new conceptualization of the relationship
between science and politics, whereby there is some balance in the use of expert and local
knowledge, is required to legitimize waste policy decisions. This paper aims to develop a
better understanding of what happens at the interface between ‘expert’ and ‘public’ in
municipal waste management decision making. It establishes opinions on the extent to which
public values and preferences may be considered in practice in order to avoid or resolve
controversial issues by gaining public consent
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