4,872 research outputs found

    Development of a technology adoption and usage prediction tool for assistive technology for people with dementia

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    This article is available open access through the publisher’s website at the link below. Copyright @ The Authors 2013.In the current work, data gleaned from an assistive technology (reminding technology), which has been evaluated with people with Dementia over a period of several years was retrospectively studied to extract the factors that contributed to successful adoption. The aim was to develop a prediction model with the capability of prospectively assessing whether the assistive technology would be suitable for persons with Dementia (and their carer), based on user characteristics, needs and perceptions. Such a prediction tool has the ability to empower a formal carer to assess, through a very limited amount of questions, whether the technology will be adopted and used.EPSR

    Anesthesiology Posters - 2019

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    Anesthesiology Postershttps://scholarlycommons.libraryinfo.bhs.org/research_education/1000/thumbnail.jp

    Simulated surface diffusion in nanoporous gold and its dependence on surface curvature

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    The morphological evolution of nanoporous gold is generally believed to be governed by surface diffusion. This work specifically explores the dependence of mass transport by surface diffusion on the curvature of a gold surface. The surface diffusivity is estimated by molecular dynamics simulations for a variety of surfaces of constant mean curvature, eliminating any chemical potential gradients and allowing the possible dependence of the surface diffusivity on mean curvature to be isolated. The apparent surface diffusivity is found to have an activation energy of ~0.74 eV with a weak dependence on curvature, but is consistent with the values reported in the literature. The apparent concentration of mobile surface atoms is found to be highly variable, having an Arrhenius dependence on temperature with an activation energy that also has a weak curvature dependence. These activation energies depend on curvature in such a way that the rate of mass transport by surface diffusion is nearly independent of curvature, but with a higher activation energy of ~1.01 eV. The curvature dependencies of the apparent surface diffusivity and concentration of mobile surface atoms is believed to be related to the expected lifetime of a mobile surface atom, and has the practical consequence that a simulation study that does not account for this finite lifetime could underestimate the activation energy for mass transport via surface diffusion by ~0.27 eV.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figure

    Passage Re-Ranking in Live QA NLP Pipelines with BERT

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    Passage ranking and document ranking are two common tasks in NLP. Many state of the art pipelines use BM25 to retrieve passages. The top results of this ranking are then re-ranked using a BERT transformer trained on the MS MARCO Passage data set. This system and variations have proved highly effective. In addition, questions and answers using BERT are also well explored topics. However, these systems are fundamentally limited by speed and resource consumption requirements. Given an arbitrary corpus and a collection of pre-trained models, we would like to prove that it is possible to create a live Question Answering machine without fine tuning for a particular topic. In particular, we employ a BERT re-ranker to find the first acceptable fit to pass to our QA transformer. This approach is fundamentally different from past research in that it is focused on first fit and not best fit. The goal of this research is to allow anyone to employ off the shelf components to create an effective, interactive question answering system

    Evaluation of the English version of the Fear of COVID-19 Scale and its relationship with behavior change and political beliefs

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    The COVID-19 pandemic has many individuals around the world fearing for their lives. The constant news coverage, rapid transmission, and relatively high mortality rate, make fearfulness a natural response. To assess the fear of COVID-19, the Fear of COVID-19 Scale (FCV-19S) was developed. The primary aim of the present study was to conduct the first psychometric assessment and validation of the English version of the FCV-19S. Two samples were collected in New Zealand. Sample 1 comprised 1624 participants of which 1397 completed all questions and were used in the analyses. Sample 2 comprised 1111 participants of which 1023 completed all questions and were used in the analyses. Several psychometric tests were conducted to ascertain the scale’s reliability and validity. Across both samples, the FCV-19S had high internal consistency. Consistent with the earlier validation studies, the FCV-19S displayed a moderately strong relationship with the perceived infectability and germ aversion subscales of the perceived vulnerability to disease scale (PVDS). Furthermore, FCV-19S scores were negatively correlated with the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS) scores. With respect to the motivating role of fear, there was a significant relationship between FCV-19S scores and adherence to the lockdown rules that were implemented in New Zealand. Finally, consistent with recent reports on the politicization of the COVID-19 pandemic, an exploratory question found that participants who rated themselves as more conservative tended to report lower FCV-19S scores. The English version of the COVID-19S is a sound unidimensional scale with robust psychometric properties and can be used with confidence among English-speaking populations

    The formation of a novel free radical metabolite from CCl4 in the perfused rat liver and in vivo.

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    Electron spin resonance spectroscopy has been used to monitor free radicals formed during CCl4 metabolism by perfused livers from phenobarbital-treated rats. Livers were perfused simultaneously with the spin trap phenyl N-t-butylnitrone and with either 12CCl4 or 13CCl4. Perfusate samples and CHCl3:CH3OH extracts of perfusate and liver samples were analyzed for phenyl N-t-butylnitrone radical adducts of reactive free radicals. In the organic extracts, hyperfine coupling constants and 13C isotope effects observed in the ESR spectra indicated the presence of the radical adduct of the trichloromethyl radical. Surprisingly, an additional free radical signal about two orders of magnitude more intense than that of the phenyl N-t-butylnitrone/CCl.3 radical adduct was observed in the aqueous liver perfusate. This adduct was also detected by ESR in rat urine 2 h after intragastric addition of spin trap and CCl4. This radical adduct had hyperfine coupling constants and 13C isotope effects identical with the radical adduct of the carbon dioxide anion radical (CO2-.). Analysis of the pH dependence of the coupling constants yielded a pK alpha of 2.8 for the CO2-. radical adduct formed either in the perfused liver or chemically. Carbon tetrachloride is converted into CCl.3 by cytochrome P-450 through a reductive dehalogenation. The trichloromethyl free radical reacts with oxygen to form the trichloromethyl peroxyl radical, CCl3OO., which may be converted into .COCl and then trapped. This radical adduct would hydrolyze to the carboxylic acid form, which is detected spectroscopically. Alternatively, the carbon dioxide anion free radical could form through complete dechlorination and then react with the spin trap to give the CO2-. radical adduct directly

    Nudges and other moral technologies in the context of power: Assigning and accepting responsibility

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    Strawson argues that we should understand moral responsibility in terms of our practices of holding responsible and taking responsibility. The former covers what is commonly referred to as backward-looking responsibility , while the latter covers what is commonly referred to as forward-looking responsibility . We consider new technologies and interventions that facilitate assignment of responsibility. Assigning responsibility is best understood as the second- or third-personal analogue of taking responsibility. It establishes forward-looking responsibility. But unlike taking responsibility, it establishes forward-looking responsibility in someone else. When such assignments are accepted, they function in such a way that those to whom responsibility has been assigned face the same obligations and are susceptible to the same reactive attitudes as someone who takes responsibility. One family of interventions interests us in particular: nudges. We contend that many instances of nudging tacitly assign responsibility to nudgees for actions, values, and relationships that they might not otherwise have taken responsibility for. To the extent that nudgees tacitly accept such assignments, they become responsible for upholding norms that would otherwise have fallen under the purview of other actors. While this may be empowering in some cases, it can also function in such a way that it burdens people with more responsibility that they can (reasonably be expected to) manage
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