10,605 research outputs found
Student experiences of virtual reality - a case study in learning special relativity
We present a study of student learning through the use of virtual reality. A
software package is used to introduce concepts of special relativity to
students in a game-like environment where users experience the effects of
travelling at near light speeds. From this new perspective, space and time are
significantly different to that experienced in everyday life. The study
explores how students have worked with this environment and how these students
have used this experience in their study of special relativity. A mixed method
approach has been taken to evaluate the outcomes of separate implementations of
the package at two universities. Students found the simulation to be a positive
learning experience and described the subject area as being less abstract after
its use. Also, students were more capable of correctly answering concept
questions relating to special relativity, and a small but measurable
improvement was observed in the final exam
Torts—Parent\u27s Indemnity Contract Void as Against Public Policy
Badigian v. Badigia
Evaluation of the educational guidance program in the Weeks Junior High School, Newton Centre, Massachusetts
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1943. This item was digitized by the Internet Archive
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An Events-Based T&L Simulation Game
The paper outlines enhancements to a sustainable tourism simulation game designed for use in undergraduate tourism and hospitality T&L. The extensions to the original game are based on student feedback and allow players to choose between different event/festival options as an engine for destination development and rejuvenation. Each event type has different economic, environmental and social impacts and factoring these into the simulation game is the focus of the extended abstract that follows
Variability in clinically measured wideband acoustic immittance over time in young and old adults
Wideband acoustic immittance (WAI) measures of the middle ear have the potential to increase our ability to detect changes in the middle ear transfer function not seen using traditional tympanometry. In order to use this new tool diagnostically we must first understand its normal clinical variability. The present study aimed to investigate the variability that occurs when wideband acoustic immittance (WAI) is measured clinically within subjects as a function of subject age, as a function of time, and as a function of pressure. A total of thirty-six ears from eighteen subjects were studied (n=18 young adults ears, n=18 older adult ears). Subjects were included in the study if they had negative history of middle ear disease, normal tympanogram at 226 Hz (peak pressure ±50daPA), and an air-bone gap less than 10 dB. Subjects were tested on two days separated by at least a week using a commercial acoustic-immittance system (Interacoustics Titan©). Otoscopy was completed at the beginning of each session to ensure proper probe fit. Following otoscopy, wideband absorbance measurements with a hermetic seal (WBT) were obtained by recording the acoustic response to a click stimulus as a function of frequency and pressure. The wideband clicks were presented at a rate of 21.5/sec and an intensity of 100 dB peSPL (~65 dB nHL) and WAI was measured at 107 frequency data points from 226 to 8,000 Hz. WBT was first measured in the subject’s right and left ears and then the probe was reinserted and a second measure was made using the same protocol. Wideband absorbance measures as a function of ambient pressure (WBA) were obtained without pressure next. A hermetically sealed ear canal was not necessary in order to successfully record a WBA measurement from a subject. A measurement was made in the subject’s right and left ears, and then the probe was reinserted for a second, identical condition. Both WBT and WBA measures were repeated on a second study session at least one week after the first study session.
Wideband absorbance measures for both age groups, under ambient pressure (WBA) were slightly more variable between days than wideband absorbance measure under tympanic peak pressure and with a hermetic seal (WBT). Variability was also seen between tests on the same day after probe reinsertion for both WBA and WBT measurements; however this variability was much smaller than the between-day measurements. Variability remained small in both age groups with slightly greater variability seen in younger adults under both WBT and WBA conditions. Regardless of these factors, essentially all average WAI responses during both test sessions (with the exception of the 6,000 Hz one-third octave interval), fell within the 95% confidence intervals provided by the Titan clinical system. Our results suggest that clinical measures of WAI are most stable when measured at tympanometric peak, and that age may play a role in the amount of variability in WAI over time. Variability over time is small and should not alter clinical decision-making
Corporations— Continuing Wrong Theory Adopted in Action for Inadequate Freight Rates
Ripley v. International Railways of Central America, 8 N.Y.2d 430, 209 N.Y.S.2d 289 (1960)
Decedents\u27 Estates and Trusts—Interest of Remainderman Predeceasing Life Tenant Vested Subject To Divestment
In re Rick\u27s Trust, 10 N.Y.2d 231, 219 N.Y.S.2d 30 (1961)
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