23,987 research outputs found
Emotion and memory in nostalgia sport tourism: Examining the attraction to postmodern ballparks through an interdisciplinary lens
Nostalgia sport tourism, one of Gibson’s (1998) three forms of sport tourism, appears to have received little scholarly attention in contrast to active sport tourism and event sport tourism (Fairley, 2003; Gibson, 2002, 2003; Ritchie & Adair, 2004). Despite this apparent lack of research relative to the other two domains, insightful and thought-provoking scholarship has emerged within nostalgia sport tourism. Sociology, which is one of sport tourism’s parent disciplines, has influenced much of this scholarship (Gibson, 2004; Harris, 2006). Among other things, this epistemological orientation has yielded the importance of emotion and memory to nostalgically oriented experiences. This paper considers the emergence of emotion and memory within nostalgia sport tourism and, in so doing, continues this sociological emphasis. In particular, it argues that interaction ritual (IR) theory (Collins, 2004), a micro-sociological perspective, can be used to provide scholars with a deep understanding of tourists’ and excursionists’ motivations for engaging in nostalgically oriented experiences. Three additional constructs from the field of sport geography – place, placelessness (Relph, 1976), and topophilia (Tuan, 1974) – are posited as useful supplements to IR theory that can enable sport tourism scholars to develop a more nuanced conceptualization of those elements inherent within nostalgically oriented sport sites. These theoretical positions are synthesized and used as a framework to examine sport tourists’ and excursionists’ attraction to the recent ‘throwback’ aesthetic of contemporary Major League Baseball park design
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Designing and piloting PTLLS ESOL: Appendix 4: provider’s final report
This is a final report of a project funded by LSIS to design, pilot and evaluate an specialised PTLLS programme in ESOL. The project was piloted with WCS and evaluated the pros and cons of delivering such a project in a specifc way to practitioners who are already employed in a teaching role in the LLS sector.
[Grant: £5000
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Using targeted observation sessions as a replacement for micro teaching sessions on a PTLLS ESOL course
This paper reports on the piloting and evaluation of an innovative approach to the delivery of the observation component of PTLLS under a funded LSIS action research project
The Ohio land allocation model: Report on phase 1
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
The Ohio land allocation model, phase 2
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Preventing Multipartite Disentanglement by Local Modulations
An entangled multipartite system coupled to a zero-temperature bath undergoes
rapid disentanglement in many realistic scenarios, due to local,
symmetry-breaking, differences in the particle-bath couplings. We show that
locally controlled perturbations, addressing each particle individually, can
impose a symmetry, and thus allow the existence of decoherence-free
multipartite entangled systems in zero-temperature environments.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
SCAR arrow-wing active flutter suppression system
The potential performance and direct operating cost benefits of an active flutter suppression system (FSS) for the NASA arrow-wing supersonic cruise configuration were determined. A FSS designed to increase the flutter speed of the baseline airplane 20 percent. A comparison was made of the performance and direct operating cost between the FSS equipped aircraft and a previously defined configuration with structural modifications to provide the same flutter speed. Control system synthesis and evaluation indicated that a FSS could provide the increase in flutter speed without degrading airplane reliability, safety, handling qualities, or ride quality, and without increasing repeated loads or hydraulic and electrical power capacity requirements
Bounds on Scalar Masses in Theories of Moduli Stabilization
In recent years it has been realised that pre-BBN decays of moduli can be a
significant source of dark matter production, giving a `non-thermal WIMP
miracle' and substantially reduced fine-tuning in cosmological axion physics.
We study moduli masses and sharpen the claim that moduli dominated the pre-BBN
Universe. We conjecture that in any string theory with stabilized moduli there
will be at least one modulus field whose mass is of order (or less than) the
gravitino mass. Cosmology then generically requires the gravitino mass not be
less than about 30 TeV and the cosmological history of the Universe is
non-thermal prior to BBN. Stable LSP's produced in these decays can account for
the observed dark matter if they are `wino-like.' We briefly consider
implications for the LHC, rare decays, and dark matter direct detection and
point out that these results could prove challenging for models attempting to
realize gauge mediation in string theory.Comment: 7 pages. v3: published versio
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