4,959 research outputs found
Alleviating Academic Stress Among 18-19-year-old Older Adolescents Through The Use Of Natural Elements In Indoor Spaces
Mental stress is particularly prevalent among adolescents between the ages of 13-19, and long-term stress can lead to more serious problems such as anxiety and depression. The link between nature and adolescent health has long been a subject of interest. This research study is an exploration related to the theme “mental health protection,” exploring how a design intervention could inject natural elements into the interior spaces where stressful adolescents spend their time. This research paper reviews previous literature regarding mental health and adolescents, expounds on the causes and effects of adolescents’ stress, how adolescents are exposed to the natural environment, and multiple correlations between natural factors and adolescents’ psychological well-being. Based on student feedback, this study proposes a strategy for a prototype design that makes use of gutta-percha, a kind of bio-material from Eucommia Ulmoides. In order to verify the reliability of the design, alternative yet similar structural material was used for assembly and testing. The result of my testing was positive. In addition, I was able to define a research gap that separates this work from previous scholarship. Through my work, I also proposed a speculative prospect of integrating plant-human interaction and biofeedback through plant bionics responses to stress
Alleviating Academic Stress Among 18-19-year-old Older Adolescents Through The Use Of Natural Elements In Indoor Spaces
Mental stress is particularly prevalent among adolescents between the ages of 13-19, and long-term stress can lead to more serious problems such as anxiety and depression. The link between nature and adolescent health has long been a subject of interest. This research study is an exploration related to the theme “mental health protection,” exploring how a design intervention could inject natural elements into the interior spaces where stressful adolescents spend their time. This research paper reviews previous literature regarding mental health and adolescents, expounds on the causes and effects of adolescents’ stress, how adolescents are exposed to the natural environment, and multiple correlations between natural factors and adolescents’ psychological well-being. Based on student feedback, this study proposes a strategy for a prototype design that makes use of gutta-percha, a kind of bio-material from Eucommia Ulmoides. In order to verify the reliability of the design, alternative yet similar structural material was used for assembly and testing. The result of my testing was positive. In addition, I was able to define a research gap that separates this work from previous scholarship. Through my work, I also proposed a speculative prospect of integrating plant-human interaction and biofeedback through plant bionics responses to stress
Wearther: An iOS Mobile Application For Women
Have you ever wondered what to wear for the current weather and
later when you go outside you confirm that you were too optimistic
about your ability to endure the cold?
Wearther: an iOS Mobile Application for Women is an iOS Mobile
Application designed to help women choose the proper outfit that
matches the weather outside. It is an interaction design and visual
design project.
Unlike other dressing related application, Wearther is not a clothing
organizer or a fashion adviser. It is not a weather app either, although
it emphasizes weather. The concept of this project is to analyze real
fabric information and then to suggest proper clothing from the user\u27s
personal wardrobe based on weather condition. The application
provides two options for the user to add their clothing items into
the Wardrobe section: from photo and scan barcode. Users can set
the time that they are preparing outfits for, and then the application
will provide a pool of proper clothing based on the weather condition
at the selected time. After wearing the outfit, the user can log how
she felt about the outfit. The application will then learn from the
user\u27s feedback to adjust and provide more personalized suggestions
next time
Jet fragmentation functions in proton-proton collisions using soft-collinear effective theory
The jet fragmentation function describes the longitudinal momentum
distribution of hadrons inside a reconstructed jet. We study the jet
fragmentation function in proton-proton collisions in the framework of
soft-collinear effective theory (SCET). We find that, up to power corrections,
the jet fragmentation function can be expressed as the ratio of the fragmenting
jet function and the unmeasured jet function. Using renormalization group
techniques, we are able to resum large logarithms of jet radii R in the
perturbative expansion of the cross section. We use our theoretical formalism
to describe the jet fragmentation functions for light hadron and heavy meson
production measured at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Our calculations agree
very well with the experimental data for the light hadron production. On the
other hand, although our calculations for the heavy meson production inside
jets are consistent with the PYTHIA simulation, they fail to describe the LHC
data. We find that the jet fragmentation function for heavy meson production is
very sensitive to the gluon-to-heavy-meson fragmentation function.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures, published version at JHE
Impacts of rural dual economic transformation on the inverted-U curve of rural income inequality: An empirical study of Tianjin and Shandong provinces in the People's Republic of China
Using a case study about rural Tianjin and Shandong provinces, we try to explain what mechanism affects income inequality in rural areas, especially how rural dual structural transformation leads to the income inequality "inverted-U" Curve in some developed areas in the People's Republic of China (PRC). We choose Tianjin to represent developed provinces, which depend on nonagricultural and urban agricultural development modes, and take Shandong Province to represent areas dominated by traditional agriculture. We can clearly observe that the changes in rural income inequality are roughly consistent with the changes in dual economic transformation in different regions. A marginal decomposition analysis on the Gini coefficient changes of income inequality shows that the distribution effect always accounts for the dominant position and determines the inequality change direction, both in Tianjin and Shandong. By comparison, we find that the dual transformation is sure to affect and change the sectoral labor participation rate directly, and then affect and change the within-sector income inequality, and further to make total income inequality go up or down. Through this empirical and comparative study, we suggest some policies to both grow rural income and reduce income inequality in rural PRC, which means accelerating growth in order to go beyond the "inverted-U curve" turning point
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