6,091 research outputs found
Shared Prosperity, Stronger Regions: An Agenda for Rebuilding America's Older Core Cities
Explores opportunities for community collaborations to promote economic development and neighborhood revitalization, and offers strategies for public/private investment. Includes case studies in Baltimore, Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh
Is movement better? Comparing sedentary and motion-based game controls for older adults
Providing cognitive and physical stimulation for older adults is critical for their well-being. Video games offer the opportunity of engaging seniors, and research has shown a variety of positive effects of motion-based video games for older adults. However, little is known about the suitability of motion-based game controls for older adults and how their use is affected by age-related changes. In this paper, we present a study evaluating sedentary and motion-based game controls with a focus on differences between younger and older adults. Our results show that older adults can apply motion-based game controls efficiently, and that they enjoy motion-based interaction. We present design implications based on our study, and demonstrate how our findings can be applied both to motion-based game design and to general interaction design for older adults. Copyright held by authors
Work domain analysis and intelligent transport systems: Implications for vehicle design
This article presents a Work Domain Analysis (WDA) of the road transport system in Victoria, Australia. A series of driver information requirements and tasks that could potentially be supported through the use of Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) are then extracted from the WDA. The potential use of ITS technologies to circumvent these information gaps and provide additional support to drivers is discussed. It is concluded that driver information requirements are currently not entirely satisfied by contemporary vehicle design and also that there are a number of driving tasks that could be further supported through the provision of supplementary systems within vehicles
How Barred is the NIR Nearby Universe? An analysis using 2MASS
We determine a firm lower limit to the bar fraction of 0.58 in the nearby
universe using J+H+Ks-band images for 134 spirals from 2MASS. With a mean
deprojected semi-major axis of 5.1 kpc, and a mean deprojected ellipticity of
0.45 this local bar sample lays the ground work for studies on bar formation
and evolution at high redshift.Comment: In the proceedings "Penetrating Bars through Masks of Cosmic Dust:
The Hubble Tuning Fork strikes a New Note
The suppression of superconductivity in MgCNi3 by Ni-site doping
The effects of partial substitution of Cu and Co for Ni in the intermetallic
perovskite superconductor MgCNi3 are reported. Calculation of the expected
electronic density of states suggests that electron (Cu) and hole (Co) doping
should have different effects. For MgCNi3-xCux, solubility of Cu is limited to
approximately 3% (x = 0.1), and Tc decreases systematically from 7K to 6K. For
MgCNi3-xCox, solubility of Co is much more extensive, but bulk
superconductivity disappears for Co doping of 1% (x = 0.03). No signature of
long range magnetic ordering is observed in the magnetic susceptibility of the
Co doped material.Comment: submitted, Solid State Communication
Experimental determination of superconducting parameters for the intermetallic perovskite superconductor ${\text {MgCNi}}_3
We have measured upper-critical-field , specific heat C, and
tunneling spectra of the intermetallic perovskite superconductor MgCNi
with a superconducting transition temperature K. Based
on these measurements and relevant theoretical relations, we have evaluated
various superconducting parameters for this material, including the
thermodynamic critical field (0), coherence length (0),
penetration depth (0), lower-critical-field (0), and
Ginsberg-Landau parameter (0). From the specific heat, we obtain the
Debye temperature 280 K. We find a jump of
=2.3 at (where is the
normal state electronic specific coefficient), which is much larger than the
weak coupling BCS value of 1.43. Our tunneling measurements revealed a gap
feature in the tunneling spectra at with 4.6, again larger than the weak-coupling value
of 3.53. Both findings indicate that MgCNi is a strong-coupling
superconductor. In addition, we observed a pronounced zero-bias conductance
peak (ZBCP) in the tunneling spectra.
We discuss the possible physical origins of the observed ZBCP, especially in
the context of the pairing symmetry of the material.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
The Tax Treatment of Pension Contributions in Ireland. Quarterly Economic Commentary Special Article, Summer 2018
Tax treatments of pensions vary widely across countries. This paper examines the current tax treatment of pension contributions in Ireland and some widely discussed alternatives, including equalising the tax relief available to low and high earners. The analysis takes into account both explicit contributions in the private sector, and the implicit value of publicly funded pensions
Using Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of Nuclear Dust Morphology to Rule Out Bars Fueling Seyfert Nuclei
If AGN are powered by the accretion of matter onto massive black holes, how
does the gas in the host galaxy lose the required angular momentum to approach
the black hole? Gas easily transfers angular momentum to stars in strong bars,
making them likely candidates. Although ground-based searches for bars in
active galaxies using both optical and near infrared surface brightness have
not found any excess of bars relative to quiescent galaxies, the searches have
not been able to rule out small-scale nuclear bars. To look for these nuclear
bars we use HST WFPC2-NICMOS color maps to search for the straight dust lane
signature of strong bars. Of the twelve Seyfert galaxies in our sample, only
three have dust lanes consistent with a strong nuclear bar. Therefore, strong
nuclear bars cannot be the primary fueling mechanism for Seyfert nuclei. We do
find that a majority of the galaxies show an spiral morphology in their dust
lanes. These spiral arms may be a possible fueling mechanism.Comment: To be published in the Astronomical Journal, June 1999. 25 pages and
14 figures. Full resolution figures are available at
ftp://www.ciw.edu/pub/mregan/fullfigs.tar.g
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