1,607 research outputs found

    Potential shaping and the method of controlled Lagrangians

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    We extend the method of controlled Lagrangians to include potential shaping for complete state-space stabilization of mechanical systems. The method of controlled Lagrangians deals with mechanical systems with symmetry and provides symmetry-preserving kinetic shaping and feedback-controlled dissipation for state-space stabilization in all but the symmetry variables. Potential shaping complements the kinetic shaping by breaking symmetry and stabilizing the remaining state variables. The approach also extends the method of controlled Lagrangians to include a class of mechanical systems without symmetry such as the inverted pendulum on a cart that travels along an incline

    Social welfare, genetic welfare? Boundary-work in the IVF/PGD clinic

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    Copyright @ 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.Through the lens of the ‘welfare of the child’ assessment, this paper explores how staff working in the area of in vitro fertilisation and preimplantation genetic diagnosis (IVF/PGD) balance reïŹ‚exive relations of legitimacy and accountability between the public and private spheres, and between medicine, the citizen and the state. The wider research of which this analysis is a part uses multiple methods to study two National Health Service Assisted Conception Units in England. Research methods used included observation clinics and interviews with staff from a range of disciplines. We illustrate how the staff reveal tensions between their views that the welfare of the child assessment can be seen as intrusive and discriminatory, and on the other hand that medical intervention in reproduction should be socially and professionally accountable. These tensions can be understood sociologically in terms of a gradual movement from socially based solutions to fertility problems and disabilities, towards a biomedical, and arguably genetically oriented world view of such problems. Rather than being viewed as discrete, these two orientations should be seen as indicating an emergent direction of travel along a continuum, with elements of both being present in the accounts. We argue that consideration of the welfare of the child involves staff in ethical boundary-work across the two orientations and between the accountabilities and responsibilities of healthcare professionals, individuals and the state.The Wellcome Trust Biomedical Ethics Programme, who funded the project ‘Facilitating choice, framing choice: the experience of staff working in preimplantation genetic diagnosis’ (no. 074935)

    Choosing embryos: Ethical complexity and relational autonomy in staff accounts of PGD

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    Copyright @ 2008 the authors. This article is available in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/deed.en_CA.The technique of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) is commonly explained as a way of checking the genes of embryos produced by IVF for serious genetic diseases. However, complex accounts of this technique emerged during ethics discussion groups held for PGD staff. These form part of a study exploring the social processes, meanings and institutions that frame and produce ‘ethical problems’ for practitioners, scientists and others working in the specialty of PGD in the UK. Two ‘grey areas’ raised by staff are discussed in terms of how far staff are, or in the future may be, able to support autonomous choices of women/couples: accepting ‘carrier’ embryos within the goal of creating a ‘healthy’ child; and sex selection of embryos for social reasons. These grey areas challenged the staff’s resolve to offer individual informed choice, in the face of their awareness of possible collective social effects that might ensue from individual choices. We therefore argue that these new forms of choice pose a challenge to conventional models of individual autonomy used in UK genetic and reproductive counselling, and that ‘relational autonomy’ may be a more suitable ethical model to describe the ethical principles being drawn on by staff working in this area.The Wellcome Trust Biomedical Ethics Programme, who funded the project ‘Facilitating choice, framing choice: the experience of staff workingin pre-implantation genetic diagnosis’ (no: 074935)

    A ‘healthy baby’: The double imperative of preimplantation genetic diagnosis

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    This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below. Copyright @ 2010 The Authors.This article reports from a study exploring the social processes, meanings and institutions that frame and produce ‘ethical problems’ and clinical dilemmas for practitioners, scientists and others working in the specialty of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD). A major topic in the data was that, in contrast to IVF, the aim of PGD is to transfer to the woman’s womb only those embryos likely to be unaffected by serious genetic disorders; that is, to produce ‘healthy babies’. Staff described the complex processes through which embryos in each treatment cycle must meet a double imperative: they must be judged viable by embryologists and ‘unaffected’ by geneticists. In this article, we focus on some of the ethical, social and occupational issues for staff ensuing from PGD’s double imperative.The Wellcome Trus

    Measuring students\u27 perceptions of plagiarism: Modification and Rasch validation of a plagiarism attitude scale

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    Plagiarism is a significant area of concern in higher education, given university students\u27 high self-reported rates of plagiarism. However, research remains inconsistent in prevalence estimates and suggested precursors of plagiarism. This may be a function of the unclear psychometric properties of the measurement tools adopted. To investigate this, we modified an existing plagiarism scale (to broaden its scope), established its psychometric properties using traditional (EFA, Cronbach\u27s alpha) and modern (Rasch analysis) survey evaluation approaches, and examined results of well-functioning items. Results indicated that traditional and modern psychometric approaches differed in their recommendations. Further, responses indicated that although most respondents acknowledged the seriousness of plagiarism, these attitudes were neither unanimous nor consistent across the range of issues assessed. This study thus provides rigorous psychometric testing of a plagiarism attitude scale and baseline data from which to begin a discussion of contextual, personal, and external factors that influence students\u27 plagiarism attitudes

    Automated Identification and Tracking of Deformation Twin Structures in Molecular Dynamics Simulations

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    Deformation twinning significantly influences the microstructure, texture, and mechanical properties of metals, necessitating comprehensive studies of twin formation and interactions. While experimental methods excel at analyzing individual samples, they often lack the capability for temporal analysis of twinned structures. Molecular dynamics simulations offer a temporal dimension, yet the absence of suitable tools for automated crystal twin identification has been a significant limitation. In this article, we introduce a novel computational tool integrated into the visualization and analysis software OVITO. Our tool automates the identification of coherent twin boundaries, links related twin boundaries, validates twin structures through orientation analysis, and tracks twins over time, providing quantifiable data and enabling in-depth investigations. Validation on a copper single crystal under shear loading demonstrates successful tracking of various twins, revealing their genesis and growth over multiple timesteps. This innovative approach promises to advance the computational materials science domain by facilitating the study of deformation twinning, offering profound insights into the behavior and mechanical performance of materials

    STRUCTURAL PROCESSING OF VISUAL INFORMATION

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    One lesson that has been learned from previous approaches to scene analysis is that local methods are insufficient for extracting reliable information about the contents of a scene. Two different procedures that have been tried in order to remedy this deficiency are the use of knowledge via a priori information and internal models and multilevel analysis based on hierarchies of representations such as cone systems. It does not seem appropriate to drive the very first levels of analysis by a priori knowledge. It is doubtful that it will be possible to use knowledge in a way general and versatile enough to direct low level processing, and there is a need for some powerful data driven mechanisms that might at a later stage invoke internal models. It would seem more appropriate to obtain some crude global information through glancing or planning at low resolution levels that can drive a more scrutinous analysis at high resolution levels. While hierarchal systems are therefore good, the way they are currently being constructed is not necessarily good. In this context the issue of low level representation becomes more and more important, and not enough attention has been paid to this issue. Even Marr's provocative ideas about his primal sketch do not go to a sufficient level of analysis, and it is felt that more of the workload should be thrown onto the first processing levels. In this paper is posited a comprehensive hierarchal data structure that requires no decisions and therefore no parameters for its construction. The technique does not require preselected windows, but rather uses context-dependent criteria. The data structure is versatile, easily computed, and invertible in the sense that the original image is completely recoverable
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