4,518 research outputs found
Ecological modernisation in the public catering sector. Danish experiences with use of organic food
The paper is part of the proceedings of an iPOPY seminar. The authors reflect on whether and how organic food in schools and kindergartens can be described as a part of an ecological modernization strategy in Denmark. They discuss how it has merged with more economically and technically approach in public catering policy. They discuss how it has merged with more economically and technically approaches in public catering policy
Upgrading Existing Footings With Micro-Piles
The use of pressure-injected micro-piles to upgrade the load carrying capacity of existing spread footings and to limit settlement is described. Theoretical pile load capacity and predicted settlement have been verified by a full-scale pile load test
The Legal Structure of Ring-Fenced Bodies in the United Kingdom - A Response to Consultation Paper CP19/14 on the Implementation of Ring-fencing: on Legal Structure, Governance and the continuity of Services and Facilities
__Abstract__
This paper is submitted by Prof. Dr. Klaus Heine1 and Enmanuel Cedeño-Brea2, in response to the Prudential Regulatory Authorityâs (PRA) Consultation Paper CP19/14 on âThe Implementation of Ring-fencing: consultation on legal structure, governance and the continuity of services and facilitiesâ, published on October 2014 (hereinafter, the âConsultation Paperâ or âCP19/14â)
The (im-)moral scientist? Measurement and framing effects shape the association between scientists and immorality
Recent years have not only seen growing public distrust in science, but also in the people conducting science. Yet, attitudes toward scientists remain largely unexplored, and the limited body of literature that exists points to an interesting ambivalence. While survey data suggest scientists to be positively evaluated (e.g., respected and trusted), research has found scientists to be perceived as capable of immoral behavior. We report two experiments aimed at identifying what contributes to this ambivalence through systematic investigations of stereotypical perceptions of scientists. In these studies, we particularly focus on two potential sources of inconsistencies in previous work: divergent operationalizations of morality (measurement effects), and different specifications of the broad group of scientists (framing effects). Results show that scientists are generally perceived as more likely to violate binding as opposed to individualizing moral foundations, and that they deviate from control groups more strongly on the latter. The extent to which different morality measures reflect the differentiation between binding and individualizing moral foundations at least partially accounts for previous contradictory findings. Moreover, the results indicate large variation in perceptions of different types of scientists: people hold more positive attitudes toward university-affiliated scientists as compared to industry-affiliated scientists, with perceptions of the 'typical scientist' more closely resembling the latter. Taken together, the findings have important academic ramifications for science skepticism, morality, and stereotyping research as well as valuable practical implications for successful science communication
Entanglement in Quantum Spin Chains, Symmetry Classes of Random Matrices, and Conformal Field Theory
We compute the entropy of entanglement between the first spins and the
rest of the system in the ground states of a general class of quantum
spin-chains. We show that under certain conditions the entropy can be expressed
in terms of averages over ensembles of random matrices. These averages can be
evaluated, allowing us to prove that at critical points the entropy grows like
as , where and are determined explicitly. In an important class of systems,
is equal to one-third of the central charge of an associated Virasoro algebra.
Our expression for therefore provides an explicit formula for the
central charge.Comment: 4 page
Highway Interchange Constructed With Slurry Walls
The use of slurry walls to support 40 feet high embankments and bridge structures at Techwood-Spring Connector, part of Williams Street Interchange in Atlanta, is described. Advantages of using slurry walls in lieu of conventional walls are discussed
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