5,219 research outputs found
ICT as learning media and research instrument: What eResearch can offer for those who research eLearning?
Students‘ interactions in digital learning environments are distributed over time and space, and many aspects of eLearning phenomenon cannot be investigated using traditional research approaches. At the same time, the possibility to collect digital data about students‘ online interactions and learning opens a range of new opportunities to use ICT as research tool and apply new research approaches. This symposium brings together some of the recent advancements in the area of ICT-enhanced research and aims to discuss future directions for methodological innovation in this area. The session will include four presentations that will explore different directions of ICT use for eLearning research
Using a collaborative assessment design to support student learning
The purpose of the study was to try to develop an understanding of how groups of pre-service teachers organised, planned and built two information and communication technologies (ICT) resources using a learn-technology-by-design framework. The benefits for students in using a learn-by-design approach have been well researched, and the research has covered a broad range of research streams. A design-based research approach underpins the research. This paper presents the observational data, which was collected in an ICT in the Education unit of study. The collaborative design assessment provided pre-service teachers with the opportunity to collaboratively build an Interactive Whiteboard (IWB) resources and a web-based teaching (website) resource. In this study, seven groups were observed while they engaged in a long-term collaboration and completed two group assessment tasks. The results suggest that students needed both guidance and time to develop their skills in collaboration. While there were variations in the collaborative patterns, these variations did not impact the success of the groups in the development of their ICT resources
A prospective case control study of functional outcomes and related quality of life after colectomy for neoplasia.
AIM: Our aim was to assess bowel function and its effect on overall quality of life (QOL) when compared to healthy controls after colectomy. METHODS: Patients undergoing resection of colorectal neoplasia were recruited pre-operatively and followed up at 6 and 12 months, to assess 'early' bowel function. Patients who underwent surgery 2 to 4 years previously were recruited for assessment of 'intermediate' bowel function. Healthy relatives were recruited as controls. The Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Centre and EQ-5D questionnaires were used to assess bowel function and QOL, respectively. Statistical assessment included regression analyses, parametric and non-parametric tests. The association between QOL and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Centre (MSKCC) scores was evaluated using Spearman's rank correlation. RESULTS: Ninety-one patients were recruited for assessment of 'early' and 85 for 'intermediate' bowel function. There were 85 controls. Patients had a significantly higher number of bowel movements at each follow-up (p < 0.001). At 12 months after surgery, patients reported difficulty with gas-stool discrimination. The 'intermediate' group were found to have lower scores for flatus control (<0.001) and total frequency score (p 0.03), indicating worse function. Patients with higher total MSKCC scores, no symptoms of urgency and those able to control flatus reported better QOL (p 0.006, 0.007 and 0.005, respectively) at 6 and 12 months. Gas-stool differentiation and complete evacuation correlated with better QOL in the 'intermediate' bowel function group (p 0.02 and 0.02, respectively). CONCLUSION: Colonic resection adversely affects elements of bowel function up to 4 years after surgery. Good colonic function, represented by higher MSKCC scores, correlates with better QOL
Processing and Transmission of Information
Contains research objectives, summary of research and reports on two research projects.National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NGL 22-009-013)Joint Services Electronics Programs (U. S. Army, U. S. Navy, and U. S. Air Force) under Contract DA 28-043-AMC-02536(E)U. S. Army Research Office - Durham (Contract DAHCO4-69-C-0042
Explorations in anatomy: the remains from Royal London Hospital
This paper considers the faunal remains from recent excavations at the Royal London Hospital. The remains date to the beginning of the 19th century and offer an insight into the life of the hospital's patients and practices of the attached medical school. Many of the animal remains consist of partially dissected skeletons, including the unique finds of Hermann's tortoise (Testudo hermanni) and Cercopithecus monkey. The hospital diet and developments in comparative anatomy are discussed by integrating the results with documentary research. They show that zooarchaeological study of later post-medieval material can significantly enhance our understanding of the exploitation of animals in this perio
2+1 flavor domain wall QCD on a (2 fm)^3 lattice: light meson spectroscopy with Ls = 16
We present results for light meson masses and pseudoscalar decay constants
from the first of a series of lattice calculations with 2+1 dynamical flavors
of domain wall fermions and the Iwasaki gauge action. The work reported here
was done at a fixed lattice spacing of about 0.12 fm on a 16^3\times32 lattice,
which amounts to a spatial volume of (2 fm)^3 in physical units. The number of
sites in the fifth dimension is 16, which gives m_{res} = 0.00308(4) in these
simulations. Three values of input light sea quark masses, m_l^{sea} \approx
0.85 m_s, 0.59 m_s and 0.33 m_s were used to allow for extrapolations to the
physical light quark limit, whilst the heavier sea quark mass was fixed to
approximately the physical strange quark mass m_s. The exact rational hybrid
Monte Carlo algorithm was used to evaluate the fractional powers of the fermion
determinants in the ensemble generation. We have found that f_\pi = 127(4) MeV,
f_K = 157(5) MeV and f_K/f_\pi = 1.24(2), where the errors are statistical
only, which are in good agreement with the experimental values.Comment: RBC and UKQCD Collaborations. 17 pages, 14 figures. Typeset with
ReVTEX4. v2: replaced with the version published in PRD with improved
introductio
The VLT-FLAMES Tarantula Survey XVIII. Classifications and radial velocities of the B-type stars
We present spectral classifications for 438 B-type stars observed as part of the VLT-FLAMES Tarantula Survey (VFTS) in the 30 Doradus region of the Large Magellanic Cloud. Radial velocities are provided for 307 apparently single stars, and for 99 targets with radial-velocity variations which are consistent with them being spectroscopic binaries. We investigate the spatial distribution of the radial velocities across the 30 Dor region, and use the results to identify candidate runaway stars. Excluding potential runaways and members of two older clusters in the survey region (SL 639 and Hodge 301), we determine a systemic velocity for 30 Dor of 271.6 ± 12.2 kms-1 from 273 presumed single stars. Employing a 3σ criterion we identify nine candidate runaway stars (2.9% of the single stars with radial-velocity estimates). The projected rotational velocities of the candidate runaways appear to be significantly different to those of the full B-type sample, with a strong preference for either large (≥345 kms-1) or small (≤65 kms-1) rotational velocities. Of the candidate runaways, VFTS 358 (classified B0.5: V) has the largest differential radial velocity (−106.9 ± 16.2 kms-1), and a preliminary atmospheric analysis finds a significantly enriched nitrogen abundance of 12 + log (N/H) ≳ 8.5. Combined with a large rotational velocity (ve sin i = 345 ± 22 kms-1), this is suggestive of past binary interaction for this star
Creativity and Autonomy in Swarm Intelligence Systems
This work introduces two swarm intelligence algorithms -- one mimicking the behaviour of one species of ants (\emph{Leptothorax acervorum}) foraging (a `Stochastic Diffusion Search', SDS) and the other algorithm mimicking the behaviour of birds flocking (a `Particle Swarm Optimiser', PSO) -- and outlines a novel integration strategy exploiting the local search properties of the PSO with global SDS behaviour. The resulting hybrid algorithm is used to sketch novel drawings of an input image, exploliting an artistic tension between the local behaviour of the `birds flocking' - as they seek to follow the input sketch - and the global behaviour of the `ants foraging' - as they seek to encourage the flock to explore novel regions of the canvas. The paper concludes by exploring the putative `creativity' of this hybrid swarm system in the philosophical light of the `rhizome' and Deleuze's well known `Orchid and Wasp' metaphor
Software Citation Implementation Challenges
The main output of the FORCE11 Software Citation working group
(https://www.force11.org/group/software-citation-working-group) was a paper on
software citation principles (https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj-cs.86) published in
September 2016. This paper laid out a set of six high-level principles for
software citation (importance, credit and attribution, unique identification,
persistence, accessibility, and specificity) and discussed how they could be
used to implement software citation in the scholarly community. In a series of
talks and other activities, we have promoted software citation using these
increasingly accepted principles. At the time the initial paper was published,
we also provided guidance and examples on how to make software citable, though
we now realize there are unresolved problems with that guidance. The purpose of
this document is to provide an explanation of current issues impacting
scholarly attribution of research software, organize updated implementation
guidance, and identify where best practices and solutions are still needed
First results from 2+1-Flavor Domain Wall QCD: Mass Spectrum, Topology Change and Chiral Symmetry with
We present results for the static interquark potential, light meson and
baryon masses, and light pseudoscalar meson decay constants obtained from
simulations of domain wall QCD with one dynamical flavour approximating the
quark, and two degenerate dynamical flavours with input bare masses ranging
from to approximating the and quarks. We compare these
quantities obtained using the Iwasaki and DBW2 improved gauge actions, and
actions with larger rectangle coefficients, on lattices. We seek
parameter values at which both the chiral symmetry breaking residual mass due
to the finite lattice extent in the fifth dimension and the Monte Carlo time
history for topological charge are acceptable for this set of quark masses at
lattice spacings above 0.1 fm. We find that the Iwasaki gauge action is best,
demonstrating the feasibility of using QCDOC to generate ensembles which are
good representations of the QCD path integral on lattices of up to 3 fm in
spatial extent with lattice spacings in the range 0.09-0.13 fm. Despite large
residual masses and a limited number of sea quark mass values with which to
perform chiral extrapolations, our results for light hadronic physics scale and
agree with experimental measurements within our statistical uncertainties.Comment: RBC and UKQCD Collaborations. 82 pages, 34 figures Typos correcte
- …