16,383 research outputs found
"It's Not Too Aggressive": Key Features of Social Branding Anti-Tobacco Interventions for High-Risk Young Adults.
Purpose. Peer crowd-targeted campaigns are a novel approach to engage high-risk young adults in tobacco use prevention and cessation. We elicited the perspectives of young adult key informants to understand how and why two social branding interventions were effective: (1) "COMMUNE," designed for "Hipsters" as a movement of artists and musicians against Big Tobacco, and (2) "HAVOC," designed for "Partiers" as an exclusive, smoke-free clubbing experience. Design. Qualitative study (27 semistructured qualitative phone interviews). Setting. Intervention events held in bars in multiple U.S. cities. Participants: Twenty-seven key informants involved in COMMUNE or HAVOC as organizers (e.g., musicians, event coordinators) or event attendees. Measures. We conducted semistructured, in-depth interviews. Participants described intervention events and features that worked or did not work well. Analysis. We used an inductive-deductive approach to thematically code interview transcripts, integrating concepts from intervention design literature and emergent themes. Results: Participants emphasized the importance of fun, interactive, social environments that encouraged a sense of belonging. Anti-tobacco messaging was subtle and nonjudgmental and resonated with their interests, values, and aesthetics. Young adults who represented the intervention were admired and influential among peers, and intervention promotional materials encouraged brand recognition and social status. Conclusion. Anti-tobacco interventions for high-risk young adults should encourage fun experiences; resonate with their interests, values, and aesthetics; and use subtle, nonjudgmental messaging
Stern-Gerlach Entanglement in Spinor Bose-Einstein Condensates
Entanglement of spin and position variables produced by spatially
inhomogeneous magnetic fields of Stern-Gerlach type acting on spinor
Bose-Einstein condensates may lead to interference effects at the level of
one-boson densities. A model is worked out for these effects which is amenable
to analytical calculation for gaussian shaped condensates. The resulting
interference effects are sensitive to the spin polarization properties of the
condensate.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
On the design of optimal input signals in system identification
The problem of designing optimal inputs in the identification of linear systems with unknown random parameters is considered using a Bayesian approach. The information matrix, which is positive definite for the class of systems analyzed, gives a measure of performance for the system inputs. The computation of the optimal closed-loop input mappings is shown to be a nontrivial exercise in adaptive control. Deterministic optimal inputs are shown to be easily computable. Numerical examples are given. A Kalman filter is used to estimate the parameters. A necessary condition for the Kalman filter not to diverge when applying linear feedback is also given
Central galaxies in different environments: Do they have similar properties?
We perform an exhaustive comparison among central galaxies from SDSS catalogs
in different local environments at 0.01<=z<=0.08. The central galaxies are
separated into two categories: group centrals (host halos containing
satellites) and field centrals (host halos without satellites). From the
latter, we select other two subsamples: isolated centrals and bright field
centrals, both with the same magnitude limit. The stellar mass (Ms)
distributions of the field and group central galaxies are different, which
explains why in general the field central galaxies are mainly located in the
blue cloud/star forming regions, whereas the group central galaxies are
strongly biased to the red sequence/passive regions. The isolated centrals
occupy the same regions as the bright field centrals since both populations
have similar Ms distributions. At parity of Ms, the color and specific star
formation rate (sSFR) distributions of the samples are similar, specially
between field and group centrals. Furthermore, we find that the stellar-to-halo
mass (Ms-Mh) relation of isolated galaxies does not depend on the color, sSFR
and morphological type. For systems without satellites, the Ms-Mh relation
steepens at high halo masses compared to group centrals, which is a consequence
of assuming a one-to-one relation between group total stellar mass and halo
mass. Under the same assumption, the scatter around the Ms-Mh relation of
centrals with satellites increases with halo mass. Our results suggest that the
mass growth of central galaxies is mostly driven by the halo mass, with
environment and mergers playing a secondary role.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures after last Referee's report. Accepted for
publication in Ap
The Benefits of Peer Review and a Multisemester Capstone Writing Series on Inquiry and Analysis Skills in an Undergraduate Thesis.
This study examines the relationship between the introduction of a four-course writing-intensive capstone series and improvement in inquiry and analysis skills of biology senior undergraduates. To measure the impact of the multicourse write-to-learn and peer-review pedagogy on student performance, we used a modified Valid Assessment of Learning in Undergraduate Education rubric for Inquiry and Analysis and Written Communication to score senior research theses from 2006 to 2008 (pretreatment) and 2009 to 2013 (intervention). A Fisher-Freeman-Halton test and a two-sample Student's t test were used to evaluate individual rubric dimensions and composite rubric scores, respectively, and a randomized complete block design analysis of variance was carried out on composite scores to examine the impact of the intervention across ethnicity, legacy (e.g., first-generation status), and research laboratory. The results show an increase in student performance in rubric scoring categories most closely associated with science literacy and critical-thinking skills, in addition to gains in students' writing abilities
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