8,082 research outputs found
Temperature compensated digital inertial sensor
A circuit which maintains the inertial element of a gyroscope or accelerometer at a constant position by delivering pulses to a rebalancing motor is discussed. The circuit compensates for temperature changes by using a temperature sensor that varies the threshold of inertial element movement required to generate a rebalance pulse which reacts to changes in viscosity of the flotation fluid. The output of the temperature sensor also varies the output level of the current source to compensate for changes in the strength of the magnets of the rebalancing motor. The sensor also provides a small signal to the rebalance motor to provide a temperature dependent compensation for fixed drift or fixed bias
Rejoinder: Classifier Technology and the Illusion of Progress
Rejoinder: Classifier Technology and the Illusion of Progress
[math.ST/0606441]Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/088342306000000079 in the
Statistical Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Temperature compensation of digital inertial sensors
Heaters for thermal stabilization are unnecessary when analog dc voltage provided by gyroscope temperature sensor is used to change outputs to compensate for temperature variations. Sensor is normally installed on all precision gryoscopes
Discussion of "Bayesian Models and Methods in Public Policy and Government Settings" by S. E. Fienberg
Fienberg convincingly demonstrates that Bayesian models and methods represent
a powerful approach to squeezing illumination from data in public policy
settings. However, no school of inference is without its weaknesses, and, in
the face of the ambiguities, uncertainties, and poorly posed questions of the
real world, perhaps we should not expect to find a formally correct inferential
strategy which can be universally applied, whatever the nature of the question:
we should not expect to be able to identify a "norm" approach. An analogy is
made between George Box's "no models are right, but some are useful," and
inferential systems [arXiv:1108.2177].Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/11-STS331A the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Wonderful Examples, but Let's not Close Our Eyes
The papers in this collection are superb illustrations of the power of modern
Bayesian methods. They give examples of problems which are well suited to being
tackled using such methods, but one must not lose sight of the merits of having
multiple different strategies and tools in one's inferential armoury.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/13-STS446 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Rape myth acceptance, victim blame attribution and Just World Beliefs: a rapid evidence assessment
Background:
Rape is underreported, potentially because individuals self-blame and/or are blamed by others. Research predominantly illustrates male-perpetrated stranger-rape of females; thus, there may be a perception that rape myth acceptance (RMA) and victim-blaming are most prevalent in males. The purpose of this rapid evidence assessment was to investigate the availability of high-quality research into the effects of Just World Beliefs, perpetrator/victim gender, and stranger- and acquaintance/marital-rape scenarios on victim-blaming and RMA.
Methods:
Several electronic databases were searched for empirical papers using terms including: ‘victim blame’, ‘rape myth acceptance’, ‘Just World Beliefs’, ‘type of rape’ and ‘gender’. Gough's (2007) weight of evidence framework was used to assess quality prior to inclusion.
Findings:
Studies retained after filtering and quality assessment suggested that RMA was predictive of victim-blaming with both male and female ‘victims’. Rape myth acceptance is more prevalent in males even in male ‘victim’ scenarios, and Just World Belief was positively associated with RMA. Greater victim-blaming was attributed in stranger- vs. acquaintance-rape scenarios.
Discussion:
There are no absolute conclusions regarding the role of gender or situational factors and rape-supportive/victim-blaming attitudes. Further empirical research is required to understand the prevalence of RMA in perceptions of marital rape and, particularly, homosexual marital rape
CFD assessments within strongly transient domains
Assessments based on CFD snapshots of stable conditions within strongly transient domains do not address many aspects of performance associated with occupant interventions, control actions or changing climate. Such domains (e.g. double skin façades) are characterised by transient flow patterns due to changing weather patterns, actuation of dampers intermittent opening of façade windows and operation of building environmental systems. Importing boundary conditionsfrom whole building simulation is an improvement but it discounts the impact of the flow predictions on the building domain. A transient approach is suggested which is fully coupled to flow and thermal solvers for the building fabric, environmental control systems and air flow regime. The paper reviews a number of patterns of flow evolution in strongly transient domains in response to changes in ambient conditions, damper actuation, façade openings and intermittent flow from mechanical ventilation systems
The volume and source of cyberabuse influences victim blame and perceptions of attractiveness
Cyberabuse is an escalating problem in society, as opportunities for abuse to occur in online public domains increase. Such acts are often defined by the frequency of abuse, and in many cases multiple individuals play a part in the abuse. Although consequences of such acts are often severe, there is typically little public sympathy/support for victims. To better understand perceptions of victims of abusive online acts, we manipulated the Volume (low, high) and Source (same-source, multi-source) of abusive posts in artificially-manipulated Facebook timelines of four fictitious ‘victims’. One hundred and sixty-four participants [United Kingdom-based; aged 18–59] rated ‘victims’ on measures of direct victim blame (DVB) and perceived social-, physical- and task-attractiveness. Results revealed significant Volume × Source interactions on DVB and social-attractiveness ratings. Few abusive posts authored by a single source yielded higher DVB and lower social-attractiveness ratings. Strong correlations between attractiveness and DVB were observed. We propose that our results could be due to an observer desensitization effect, or that participants interpreted the posts as indicative of friendly ‘teasing’ or ‘banter’ within an established social relationship, helping to explain why victims of online abuse often receive little sympathy or support
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