29,019 research outputs found
Direct combination: a new user interaction principle for mobile and ubiquitous HCI
Direct Combination (DC) is a recently introduced user interaction principle. The principle (previously applied to desktop computing) can greatly reduce the degree of search, time, and attention required to operate user interfaces. We argue that Direct Combination applies particularly aptly to mobile computing devices, given appropriate interaction techniques, examples of which are presented here. The reduction in search afforded to users can be applied to address several issues in mobile and ubiquitous user interaction including: limited feedback bandwidth; minimal attention situations; and the need for ad-hoc spontaneous interoperation and dynamic reconfiguration of multiple devices. When Direct Combination is extended and adapted to fit the demands of mobile and ubiquitous HCI, we refer to it as Ambient Combination (AC) . Direct Combination allows the user to exploit objects in the environment to narrow down the range of interactions that need be considered (by system and user). When the DC technique of pairwise or n-fold combination is applicable, it can greatly lessen the demands on users for memorisation and interface navigation. Direct Combination also appears to offers a new way of applying context-aware information. In this paper, we present Direct Combination as applied ambiently through a series of interaction scenarios, using an implemented prototype system
A visual motor psychological test as a predictor to treatment in nocturnal enuresis
Background and Aims: The neurological control of bladder function and the ability to be dry at night involves not only the acquisition of normal daytime control, but also the establishment of a circadian rhythm in vasopressin release and the ability to arouse to a full bladder during sleep. We postulated that in some children there might be a delay in maturation of the normal neurological pathways involved in establishment of nocturnal continence and examined this by using a specific neuropsychological test.
Methods: Children attending an established nocturnal enuresis clinic were examined using the Rey–Osterrieth test to assess the presence or absence of boundary errors in both copy and memory reproductions. The results of the test were scored independently and blind to the response to treatment with the vasopressin analogue DDAVP.
Results: A significant association was found between boundary type errors and response to DDAVP, with non-responders making significantly more errors. No child with three or more errors responded to DDAVP. Using this test, the ability to predict response to treatment was 70%.
Conclusions: It is postulated that the Rey–Osterrieth test, through the presence or absence of boundary errors, reflects a delay in maturation and/or a disorganisation of the retinal-hypothalamic-cortical pathways in the brain. The association previously described with growth hormone neurosecretory dysfunction syndrome would be compatible with this
MANAGEMENT OF ARTISANAL FISHERIES: THE ROLE OF MARINE FISHERY RESERVES
Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Are Fishermen Rational? A Fishing Expedition
Uncertainty is a defining characteristic of fisheries. Fishermen make decisions affecting their livelihood daily and even hourly, often with scant information on which to evaluate alternatives. Cognitive psychologists and behavioral economists have shown that decisions involving uncertainty often diverge substantially from what would be predicted by expected utility theory. I review relevant findings from the literature on decision making under uncertainty and previous empirical modeling of fishing decisions, and explore the implications of a number of different behavioral theories on fishing decisions of various types. Excerpts from ethnographic interviews of groundfish fishermen in New England are used to illustrate how these fishermen deal with uncertainty in decisions they make about when, where, how, and how long to fish. The interviews provide anecdotal evidence in support of prospect theory and other behavioral hypotheses that appear to contrast with what would be considered rational behavior from a neoclassical economics perspective.Fisheries, risk aversion, prospect theory, uncertainty, heuristics and biases., Community/Rural/Urban Development, Institutional and Behavioral Economics, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods, D01, Q22.,
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