3,496 research outputs found
Untangling the Web of E-Research: Towards a Sociology of Online Knowledge
e-Research is a rapidly growing research area, both in terms of publications
and in terms of funding. In this article we argue that it is necessary to
reconceptualize the ways in which we seek to measure and understand e-Research
by developing a sociology of knowledge based on our understanding of how
science has been transformed historically and shifted into online forms. Next,
we report data which allows the examination of e-Research through a variety of
traces in order to begin to understand how the knowledge in the realm of
e-Research has been and is being constructed. These data indicate that
e-Research has had a variable impact in different fields of research. We argue
that only an overall account of the scale and scope of e-Research within and
between different fields makes it possible to identify the organizational
coherence and diffuseness of e-Research in terms of its socio-technical
networks, and thus to identify the contributions of e-Research to various
research fronts in the online production of knowledge
Web archives: the future
T his report is structured first, to engage in some speculative thought about the possible futures of the web as an exercise in prom pting us to think about what we need to do now in order to make sure that we can reliably and fruitfully use archives of the w eb in the future. Next, we turn to considering the methods and tools being used to research the live web, as a pointer to the types of things that can be developed to help unde rstand the archived web. Then , we turn to a series of topics and questions that researchers want or may want to address using the archived web. In this final section, we i dentify some of the challenges individuals, organizations, and international bodies can target to increase our ability to explore these topi cs and answer these quest ions. We end the report with some conclusions based on what we have learned from this exercise
Mapping the UK Webspace: Fifteen Years of British Universities on the Web
This paper maps the national UK web presence on the basis of an analysis of
the .uk domain from 1996 to 2010. It reviews previous attempts to use web
archives to understand national web domains and describes the dataset. Next, it
presents an analysis of the .uk domain, including the overall number of links
in the archive and changes in the link density of different second-level
domains over time. We then explore changes over time within a particular
second-level domain, the academic subdomain .ac.uk, and compare linking
practices with variables, including institutional affiliation, league table
ranking, and geographic location. We do not detect institutional affiliation
affecting linking practices and find only partial evidence of league table
ranking affecting network centrality, but find a clear inverse relationship
between the density of links and the geographical distance between
universities. This echoes prior findings regarding offline academic activity,
which allows us to argue that real-world factors like geography continue to
shape academic relationships even in the Internet age. We conclude with
directions for future uses of web archive resources in this emerging area of
research.Comment: To appear in the proceeding of WebSci 201
Compact Resolved Ejecta in the Nearest Tidal Disruption Event
Tidal disruption events (TDEs) occur when a star or sub-stellar object passes
close enough to a galaxy's supermassive black hole to be disrupted by tidal
forces. NGC 4845 (d=17 Mpc) was host to a TDE, IGR J12580+0134, detected in
November 2010. Its proximity offers us a unique close-up of the TDE and its
aftermath. We discuss new Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) and Karl G. Jansky
Very Large Array (JVLA) observations, which show that the radio flux from the
active nucleus created by the TDE has decayed in a manner consistent with
predictions from a jet-circumnuclear medium interaction model. This model
explains the source's broadband spectral evolution, which shows a spectral peak
that has moved from the submm (at the end of 2010) to GHz radio frequencies (in
2011-2013) to <1 GHz in 2015. The milliarcsecond-scale core is circularly
polarized at 1.5 GHz but not at 5 GHz, consistent with the model. The VLBA
images show a complex structure at 1.5 GHz that includes an east west extension
~40 milliarcsec (3 pc) long as well as a resolved component 52 milliarcsec (4.1
pc) northwest of the flat-spectrum core, which is all that can be seen at 5
GHz. If ejected in 2010, the NW component must have had v=0.96 c over five
years. However, this is unlikely, as our model suggests strong deceleration to
speeds < 0.5c within months and a much smaller, sub-parsec size. In this
interpretation, the northwest component could have either a non-nuclear origin
or be from an earlier event.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, ApJ, in press; v2 includes error corrections and
slight additions to the analysi
Is there a genetic relationship between alcoholism and depression?
The Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA) seeks to identify genes contributing to alcoholism and related traits (i.e., phenotypes), including depression. Among alcoholic subjects the COGA study found an increased prevalence of depressive syndrome (i.e., depression that may or may not occur in conjunction with increased drinking). This combination of alcoholism and depression tends to run in families. Comorbid alcoholism and depression occurred substantially more often in first-degree relatives of COGA participants with alcoholism than in relatives of control participants. Based on these data, COGA investigators defined three phenotypes—“alcoholism,” “alcoholism and depression,” and “alcoholism or depression”—and analyzed whether these phenotypes were linked to specific chromosomal regions. These analyses found that the “alcoholism or depression” phenotype showed significant evidence for genetic linkage to an area on chromosome 1. This suggests that a gene or genes on chromosome 1 may predispose some people to alcoholism and others to depression (which may be alcohol induced)
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