5,504 research outputs found
Review of the use of partners by KT Offices.
This research was undertaken in partnership with the Institute of Knowledge Transfer
UK Universities undertaking Knowledge Transfer (KT) activities are said to be increasingly supported by both internal and external partners. The aim of this work was to identify the extent to which the KT Offices of UK universities are working in partnership with academics and administrators within their organizations and with external service providers
A questionnaire was developed using an on-line survey tool (www.surveymonkey.com) to explore this issue.
Responses received from the KT Offices at 29 UK universities identified that:
• KT Offices were reported to provide a key role in a wide range of activity areas, with strong support from Senior Management.
• Major levels of academic involvement were a feature of only a minority of activities.
• There was little use of external organisations for undertaking supporting activities
Evidence for structural stacking and repetition in the greenstones of the Kalgoorlie district, western Australia
Most previous stratigraphic interpretations of the southern part of the Norseman-Wiluna Greenstone Belt have proposed polycyclic sequences. These invoked two and sometimes three successive suites of mafic and/or ultimafic volcanics and intrusives separated by felsic volcanics and immature clastic sediments, however no distinctive lithological differences were reported between successive mafic-ultramaic sequences. When interpretations of the area further to the north are integrated, a total of four separate major mafic-ultramafic uites emerges for a large part of the Norseman-Wiluna Belt. Although the author does not intent to imply that all polycyclic stratigraphies are wrong in principle such a situation seems suspiciously over-complex and stimulates the need to look critically at the individual areas where the stratigraphies have seen erected. For the Kalgoorlie area in the south, some of the schemes have already provoked scepticism and a simpler model consisting of one cycle subject to structural repetition has been evolved by workers in the Geological Survey of Western Australia for part of this area. The latter drew attention to the carbon copy similarity between the elements of some polycyclic stratigraphies. Much more regionally extensive integrated structural and stratigraphic data is still required to evaluate the relationship between structure and stratigraphy more fully, an objective substantially limited by poor outcrop and deep weathering, but with due effort, far from unattainable
Application of TRIZ to develop an in-service diagnostic system for a synchronous belt transmission for automotive application
Development of robust diagnostic solutions to monitor the health of systems and components to ensure through life cost effectiveness is often technically difficult, requiring an effective integration of design development with research and innovation. This paper presents a structured application of TRIZ and USIT (Unified Structured Inventive Thinking) to generate concept solutions for an in-service diagnostic system for a synchronous belt drive system for an automotive application. The systematic exploration through TRIZ and USIT methods has led to the development of six concept solution ideas directed at the functional requirement to determine the state or condition of the belt. The paper demonstrates that the combined deployment of TRIZ and USIT frameworks is a valuable approach addressing difficult design problem
On the formation of terrestrial planets in hot-Jupiter systems
We present a series of calculations aimed at examining how an inner system of
planetesimals/protoplanets, undergoing terrestrial planet formation, evolves
under the influence of a giant planet undergoing inward type II migration
through the region bounded between 5 - 0.1 AU. We find that > 60% of the solids
disk survives by being scattered by the giant planet into external orbits.
Planetesimals are scattered outward almost as efficiently as protoplanets,
resulting in the regeneration of a solids disk where dynamical friction is
strong and terrestrial planet formation is able to resume. A simulation
extended for a few Myr after the migration of the giant planet halted at 0.1
AU, resulted in an apparently stable planet of ~ 2 Earth masses forming in the
habitable zone. Migration-induced mixing of volatile-rich material from beyond
the `snowline' into the inner disk regions means that terrestrial planets that
form there are likely to be water-rich. We predict that hot--Jupiter systems
are likely to harbor water-rich terrestrial planets in their habitable zones.
These planets may be detected by future planet search missions.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures. Higher resolution pdf available at
http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~mfogg/fogg_nelson2.pd
Predicting objectively assessed physical activity from the content and regulation of exercise goals: evidence for a mediational model
Grounded in self-determination theory (Deci & Ryan, 2000), the purpose of this work was to examine effects of the content and motivation of adults’ exercise goals on objectively assessed moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). After reporting the content and motivation of their exercise goals, 101 adult participants (Mage = 38.79 years; SD = 11.5) wore an ActiGraph (GT1M) accelerometer for seven days. Accelerometer data were analyzed to provide estimates of engagement in MVPA and bouts of physical activity. Goal content did not directly predict behavioral engagement; however, mediation analysis revealed that goal content predicted behavior via autonomous exercise motivation. Specifically, intrinsic versus extrinsic goals for exercise had a positive indirect effect on average daily MVPA, average daily MVPA accumulated in 10-min bouts and the number of days on which participants performed 30 or more minutes of MVPA through autonomous motivation. These results support a motivational sequence in which intrinsic versus extrinsic exercise goals influence physical activity behavior because such goals are associated with more autonomous forms of exercise motivation
Acoustofluidics 9: Modelling and applications of planar resonant devices for acoustic particle manipulation
This article introduces the design, construction and applications of planar resonant devices for particle and cell manipulation. These systems rely on the pistonic action of a piezoelectric layer to generate a one dimensional axial variation in acoustic pressure through a system of acoustically tuned layers. The resulting acoustic standing wave is dominated by planar variations in pressure causing particles to migrate to planar pressure nodes (or antinodes depending on particle and fluid properties). The consequences of lateral variations in the fields are discussed, and rules for designing resonators with high energy density within the appropriate layer for a given drive voltage presente
The Determinants of Regional Migration in Great Britain: A Duration Approach
Using data from the first fourteen waves of the British Household Panel Survey, we estimate a discrete duration model of interregional migration in Great Britain. By exploiting retrospective information on residency we control for late entry as well as unobserved heterogeneity. We find considerable duration dependence in region of residence in the raw data, most but not all of which disappears when controlling for observable and unobservable differences between individuals. Older workers are less likely to switch region while the better educated are more mobile. There are also some differences between males and females in their likelihood to migrate.regional labour markets, panel data, hazard, duration, migration
Practical estimation methods for linked employer-employee data
Methods for the analysis of linked employer-employee data are not yet available in standard econometrics packages. In this paper, we make the fixed-effects methods developed originally by Abowd, Kramarz, Margolis and others more accessible, where possible, and show how they can be implemented in Stata. To illustrate these techniques, we give an example using German linked data. There is a caveat: when the number of plants is prohibitively large and the investigator wants to estimate the correlation between the worker and firm unobserved heterogeneities, the regressionbased techniques discussed are not feasible. In this version of the paper, we replace our earlier Two-Step estimator by a Classical Minimum Distance estimator. -- Die Analyse von zusammengefügten Personen- und Firmendaten ist bisher nicht in die Statistiksprogramme integriert worden. In dem vorliegenden Beitrag werden die ursprünglich von Abowd, Kramarz, Margolis u.a. entwickelten Analyseverfahren aufbereitet und, sofern möglich, wird gezeigt, wie diese in Stata implementiert werden können. Die vorgestellten Methoden werden mit einem kombinierten Firmen-Beschäftigtendatensatz (LIAB) aus Deutschland veranschaulicht. Es gibt jedoch eine Einschränkung: sofern die Anzahl der Firmen sehr großist und man die Korrelation zwischen den unbeobachtbaren Personen- und Firmenheterogenitäten schätzen möchte, können die in diesem Papier vorgestellten Regressionstechniken nicht verwendet werden. In dieser Fassung des Papiers wird der in der vorherigen Version verwendete 2-Stufen-Schätzer durch einen ?Classical Minimum Distance?-Schätzer ersetzt.linked employee-employer panel data,fixed effects
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