2,181 research outputs found
Conjugacy classes of p-cycles of type D in alternating groups
We classify the conjugacy classes of p-cycles of type D in alternating
groups. This finishes the open cases in arXiv:0812.4628. We also determine all
the subracks of those conjugacy classes which are not of type D.Comment: Second paragraph of subsection 2.2 rewritten. 4-th sentence of
subsection 2.4 rewritten. More explanations added in Remark 2.4. Lemma 2.5
and Corollary 2.7 added. Appendix removed and put it as Remark 3.1. Remark
3.2 (former 3.1) reorganized. References: [Da], [EGSS], [H], [IS] added,
[GPPS] removed. Communications in Algebra (2014
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Medical students as global citizens: a qualitative study of medical students' views on global health teaching within the undergraduate medical curriculum
Background: There is increasing interest in global health teaching among medical schools and their students. Schools in the UK and internationally are considering the best structure, methods and content of global health courses. Academic work in this area, however, has tended to either be normative (specifying what global health teaching ought to look like) or descriptive (of a particular intervention, new module, elective, etc.).
Methods: While a number of studies have explored student perspectives on global health teaching, these have often relied on tools such as questionnaires that generate little in-depth evidence. This study instead used qualitative methods to explore medical student perspectives on global health in the context of a new global health module established in the core medical curriculum at a UK medical school.
Results: Fifth year medical students participated in a structured focus group session and semi-structured interviews designed to explore their knowledge and learning about global health issues, as well as their wider perspectives on these issues and their relevance to professional development. While perspectives on global health ranged from global health ‘advocate’ to ‘sceptic’, all of the students acknowledged the challenges of prioritising global health within a busy curriculum.
Conclusions: Students are highly alert to the diverse epistemological issues that underpin global health. For some students, such interdisciplinarity is fundamental to understanding contemporary health and healthcare. For others, global health is merely a topic of geographic relevance. Furthermore, some students appeared to accept global health as a specialist area only relevant to professionals working overseas, while others considered it to be an essential part of working in the globalised world and therefore relevant to all medical professionals. Students also clearly noted that including ‘soft’ subjects and more discursive approaches to teaching and learning often sits awkwardly in a programme where ‘harder’ forms of knowledge and didactic methods tend to dominate. This suggests that more work needs to be done to explain the relevance of global health to medical students at the very beginning of their studies
Momentum-Resolved Charge Excitations in a Prototype One Dimensional Mott Insulator
We report momentum resolved charge excitations in a one dimensional (1-D)
Mott insulator studied using high resolution (~ 325 meV) inelastic x-ray
scattering over the entire Brillouin zone for the first time. Excitations at
the insulating gap edge are found to be highly dispersive (momentum
dependent)compared to excitations observed in two dimensional Mott insulators.
The observed dispersion in 1-D is consistent with charge excitations involving
holons which is unique to spin-1/2 quantum chain systems. These results point
to the potential utility of inelastic x-ray scattering in providing valuable
information about electronic structure of strongly correlated insulators.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, Revised with minor change
The Liberal Playground: Susan Isaacs, Psychoanalysis and Progressive Education in the Interwar Era
The Cambridge Malting House, an experimental school, serves here as a case study for investigating the tensions within 1920s liberal elites between their desire to abandon some Victorian and Edwardian sets of values in favour of more democratic ones, and at the same time their insistence on preserving themselves as an integral part of the English upper class. Susan Isaacs, the manager of the Malting House, provided the parents – some of whom were the most famous scientists and intellectuals of their age – with an opportunity to fulfil their ‘fantasy’ of bringing up children in total freedom. In retrospect, however, she deeply criticized those from their milieu for not fully understanding the real socio-cultural implications of their ideological decision to make independence and freedom the core values in their children’s education. Thus, 1920s progressive education is a paradigmatic case study of the cultural and ideological inner contradictions within liberal thought in the interwar era. The article also shows how psychoanalysis – which attracted many progressive educators – played a crucial role in providing liberals of all sorts with a new language to articulate their political visions, but, at the same time, explored the limits of the liberal discourse as a whole
EFFECT OF A SIX-WEEK NEUROMUSCULAR TRAINING PROGRAM ON VERTICAL STIFFNESS IN HEALTHY HIGH SCHOOL DISTANCE RUNNERS
Athletes, coaches, and health care teams know that preventing running-related injuries (RRI) and improving running performance are extremely important. Proactive neuromuscular training (NMT) is often included as a complement to running programs for this reason. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of proactive six-week low-intensity NMT focused on proximal hip and thigh muscles on healthy high-school runners’ muscle strength, biomechanical stiffness, peak ground reaction force, cadence, and stride length. The study demonstrates that the NMT increased a runner’s total strength by 10.4% and knee extensor strength by 10.3%, showed no change in stiffness, cadence, or stride length, and showed a decrease in ground reaction force post-program by 1.3%. Results show the multivariable nature of RRI risk, and prompt further, more generalizable, evaluation
Identification of Non-unitary triplet pairing in a heavy Fermion superconductor UPt_3
A NMR experiment recently done by Tou et al. on a heavy Fermion
superconductor UPt is interpreted in terms of a non-unitary spin-triplet
pairing state which we have been advocating. The proposed state successfully
explains various aspects of the seemingly complicated Knight shift behaviors
probed for major orientations, including a remarkable d-vector rotation under
weak fields. This entitles UPt as the first example that a charged many
body system forms a spin-triplet odd-par ity pairing at low temperatures and
demonstrates unambiguously that the putative spin-orbit coupling in UPt is
weak.Comment: 4 pages, 2 eps figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 67
(1998) No.
Resonant X-Ray Scattering on the M-Edge Spectra from Triple-k Structure Phase in U_{0.75}Np_{0.25}O_{2} and UO_{2}
We derive an expression for the scattering amplitude of resonant x-ray
scattering under the assumption that the Hamiltonian describing the
intermediate state preserves spherical symmetry. On the basis of this
expression, we demonstrate that the energy profile of the RXS spectra expected
near U and Np M_4 edges from the triple-k antiferromagnetic ordering phase in
UO_{2} and U_{0.75}Np_{0.25}O_{2} agree well with those from the experiments.
We demonstrate that the spectra in the \sigma-\sigma' and \sigma-\pi' channels
exhibit quadrupole and dipole natures, respectively.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. Supp
Incommensurate lattice distortion in the high temperature tetragonal phase of La(Sr,Ba)CuO
We report incommensurate diffuse (ICD) scattering appearing in the
high-temperature-tetragonal (HTT) phase of La(Sr,Ba)CuO
with observed by the neutron diffraction technique. For
all compositions, a sharp superlattice peak of the low-temperature-orthorhombic
(LTO) structure is replaced by a pair of ICD peaks with the modulation vector
parallel to the CuO octahedral tilting direction, that is, the diagonal
Cu-Cu direction of the CuO plane, above the LTO-HTT transition temperature
. The temperature dependences of the incommensurability for all
samples scale approximately as , while those of the integrated intensity
of the ICD peaks scale as . These observations together with
absence of ICD peaks in the non-superconducting sample evince a
universal incommensurate lattice instability of hole-doped 214 cuprates in the
superconducting regime.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Spectroscopy and carrier dynamics in CdSe self-assembled quantum dots embedded in ZnxCdyMg1−x−ySe
Time-resolved and steady-state photoluminescence,reflectivity, and absorption experiments were performed on CdSequantum dots in ZnxCdyMg1−x−ySe barriers. Studies of the capture times of the photoexcited carriers into the quantum dots and of electron-hole recombination times inside the dots were performed. Photoluminescence rise time yielded capture times from 20 ps to 30 ps. All samples exhibit fast and slow photoluminescence decays, consistent with observing two independent but energetically overlapping decays. The faster relaxation times for the sample emitting in the blue range is 90 ps, whereas for the two samples emitting in the green it is 345 ps and 480 ps. The slower relaxation times for the sample emitting in blue is 310 ps, whereas for the samples emitting in green is 7.5 ns. These results are explained on the basis of the structural differences among the quantum-dot samples
First Steps towards Underdominant Genetic Transformation of Insect Populations
The idea of introducing genetic modifications into wild populations of insects to stop them from spreading diseases is more than 40 years old. Synthetic disease refractory genes have been successfully generated for mosquito vectors of dengue fever and human malaria. Equally important is the development of population transformation systems to drive and maintain disease refractory genes at high frequency in populations. We demonstrate an underdominant population transformation system in Drosophila melanogaster that has the property of being both spatially self-limiting and reversible to the original genetic state. Both population transformation and its reversal can be largely achieved within as few as 5 generations. The described genetic construct {Ud} is composed of two genes; (1) a UAS-RpL14.dsRNA targeting RNAi to a haploinsufficient gene RpL14 and (2) an RNAi insensitive RpL14 rescue. In this proof-of-principle system the UAS-RpL14.dsRNA knock-down gene is placed under the control of an Actin5c-GAL4 driver located on a different chromosome to the {Ud} insert. This configuration would not be effective in wild populations without incorporating the Actin5c-GAL4 driver as part of the {Ud} construct (or replacing the UAS promoter with an appropriate direct promoter). It is however anticipated that the approach that underlies this underdominant system could potentially be applied to a number of species.
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