758 research outputs found
Secondary implementation of interactive engagement teaching techniques: Choices and challenges in a Gulf Arab context
We report on a "Collaborative Workshop Physics" instructional strategy to
deliver the first IE calculus-based physics course at Khalifa University, UAE.
To these authors' knowledge, this is the first such course on the Arabian
Peninsula using PER-based instruction. A brief history of general university
and STEM teaching in the UAE is given. We present this secondary implementation
(SI) as a case study of a novel context and use it to determine if PER-based
instruction can be successfully implemented far from the cultural context of
the primary developer and, if so, how might such SIs differ from SIs within the
US. With these questions in view, a pre-reform baseline of MPEX, FCI, course
exam and English language proficiency data are used to design a hybrid
implementation of Cooperative Group Problem Solving. We find that for students
with high English proficiency, normalized gain on FCI improves from =
0.16+/-0.10 pre- to = 0.47+/-0.08 post-reform, indicating successful SI. We
also find that is strongly modulated by language proficiency and discuss
likely causes. Regardless of language skill, problem-solving skill is also
improved and course DFW rates drop from 50% to 24%. In particular, we find
evidence in post-reform student interviews that prior classroom experiences,
and not broader cultural expectations about education, are the more significant
cause of expectations at odds with the classroom norms of well-functioning
PER-based instruction. This result is evidence that PER-based innovations can
be implemented across great changes in cultural context, provided that the
method is thoughtfully adapted in anticipation of context and culture-specific
student expectations. This case study should be valuable for future reforms at
other institutions, both in the Gulf Region and developing world, facing
similar challenges involving SI of PER-based instruction outside the US.Comment: v1: 28 pages, 9 figures. v2: 19 pages, 6 figures, includes major
reorganization and revisions based on anonymous peer review. v3: 19 pages, 6
figures, minor revisions based on anonymous peer revie
Pattern formation driven by nematic ordering of assembling biopolymers
The biopolymers actin and microtubules are often in an ongoing
assembling/disassembling state far from thermal equilibrium. Above a critical
density this leads to spatially periodic patterns, as shown by a scaling
argument and in terms of a phenomenological continuum model, that meets also
Onsager's statistical theory of the nematic--to--isotropic transition in the
absence of reaction kinetics.
This pattern forming process depends much on nonlinear effects and a common
linear stability analysis of the isotropic distribution of the filaments is
often misleading. The wave number of the pattern decreases with the
assembling/disassembling rate and there is an uncommon discontinuous transition
between the nematic and the periodic state.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
CEH-GEAR: 1 km resolution daily and monthly areal rainfall estimates for the UK for hydrological and other applications
The Centre for Ecology & Hydrology â Gridded Estimates of Areal Rainfall (CEH-GEAR) data set was developed to provide reliable 1 km gridded estimates of daily and monthly rainfall for Great Britain (GB) and Northern Ireland (NI) (together with approximately 3500 km2 of catchment in the Republic of Ireland) from 1890 onwards. The data set was primarily required to support hydrological modelling.
The rainfall estimates are derived from the Met Office collated historical weather observations for the UK which include a national database of rain gauge observations. The natural neighbour interpolation methodology, including a normalisation step based on average annual rainfall (AAR), was used to generate the daily and monthly rainfall grids. To derive the monthly estimates, rainfall totals from monthly and daily (when complete month available) rain gauges were used in order to obtain maximum information from the rain gauge network. The daily grids were adjusted so that the monthly grids are fully consistent with the daily grids. The CEH-GEAR data set was developed according to the guidance provided by the British Standards Institution.
The CEH-GEAR data set contains 1 km grids of daily and monthly rainfall estimates for GB and NI for the period 1890â2012. For each day and month, CEH-GEAR includes a secondary grid of distance to the nearest operational rain gauge. This may be used as an indicator of the quality of the estimates. When this distance is greater than 100 km, the estimates are not calculated due to high uncertainty
Modeling oscillatory Microtubule--Polymerization
Polymerization of microtubules is ubiquitous in biological cells and under
certain conditions it becomes oscillatory in time. Here simple reaction models
are analyzed that capture such oscillations as well as the length distribution
of microtubules. We assume reaction conditions that are stationary over many
oscillation periods, and it is a Hopf bifurcation that leads to a persistent
oscillatory microtubule polymerization in these models. Analytical expressions
are derived for the threshold of the bifurcation and the oscillation frequency
in terms of reaction rates as well as typical trends of their parameter
dependence are presented. Both, a catastrophe rate that depends on the density
of {\it guanosine triphosphate} (GTP) liganded tubulin dimers and a delay
reaction, such as the depolymerization of shrinking microtubules or the decay
of oligomers, support oscillations. For a tubulin dimer concentration below the
threshold oscillatory microtubule polymerization occurs transiently on the
route to a stationary state, as shown by numerical solutions of the model
equations. Close to threshold a so--called amplitude equation is derived and it
is shown that the bifurcation to microtubule oscillations is supercritical.Comment: 21 pages and 12 figure
Assessment of Serum Proteomics to Detect Large Colon Adenomas
A non-invasive blood test that could reliably detect early CRC or large adenomas would provide an important advance in colon cancer screening. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a serum proteomics assay could discriminate among persons with and without a large (â„1cm) colon adenoma. To avoid problems of âbiasâ that have affected many studies about molecular markers for diagnosis, specimens were obtained from a previously-conducted study of CRC etiology in which bloods had been collected before the presence or absence of neoplasm had been determined by colonoscopy, helping to assure that biases related to differences in sample collection and handling would be avoided. Mass spectra of 65 unblinded serum samples were acquired using a nano-electrospray ionization source on a QSTAR-XL mass spectrometer. Classification patterns were developed using the ProteomeQuestÂź algorithm, performing measurements twice on each specimen, and then applied to a blinded validation set of 70 specimens. After removing 33 specimens that had discordant results, the âtest groupâ comprised 37 specimens that had never been used in training. Although in the primary analysis no discrimination was found, a single post-hoc analysis, done after hemolyzed specimens had been removed, showed sensitivity of 78%, specificity of 53%, and an accuracy of 63% (95% CI: 53% to 72%). The results of this study, although preliminary, suggest that further study of serum proteomics, in a larger number of appropriate specimens, could be useful. They also highlight the importance of understanding sources of ânoiseâ and âbiasâ in studies of proteomics assays
Corporate governance and financial constraints on strategic turnarounds
The paper extends the Robbins and Pearce (1992) two-stage turnaround response model to include governance factors. In addition to the retrenchment and recovery, the paper proposes the addition of a realignment stage, referring specifically to the re-alignment of expectations of principal and agent groups. The realignment stage imposes a threshold that must be crossed before the retrenchment and hence recovery stage can be entered. Crossing this threshold is problematic to the extent that the interests of governance-stakeholder groups diverge in a crisis situation. The severity of the crisis impacts on the bases of strategy contingent asset valuation leading to the fragmentation of stakeholder interests. In some cases the consequence may be that management are prevented from carrying out turnarounds by governance constraints. The paper uses a case study to illustrate these dynamics, and like the Robbins and Pearce study, it focuses on the textile industry. A longitudinal approach is used to show the impact of the removal of governance constraints. The empirical evidence suggests that such financial constraints become less serious to the extent that there is a functioning market for corporate control. Building on governance research and turnaround literature, the paper also outlines the general case necessary and sufficient conditions for successful turnarounds
Human Resources and the Resource Based View of the Firm
The resource-based view (RBV) of the firm has influenced the field of strategic human resource management (SHRM) in a number of ways. This paper explores the impact of the RBV on the theoretical and empirical development of SHRM. It explores how the fields of strategy and SHRM are beginning to converge around a number of issues, and proposes a number of implications of this convergence
Gutted adenoviral vector growth using E1/E2b/E3-deleted helper viruses
Background Helper-dependent, or gutted, adenoviruses (Ad) lack viral coding sequences, resulting in reduced immunotoxicity compared with conventional Ad vectors. Gutted Ad growth requires a conventional Ad to supply replication and packaging functions in trans . Methods that allow high-titer growth of gutted vectors while reducing helper contamination, and which use safer helper viruses, will facilitate the use of gutted Ad vectors in vivo . Methods Replication-defective helper viruses were generated that are deleted for Ad E1, E2b and E3 genes, but which contain lox P sites flanking the packaging signal. Complementing Ad packaging cell lines (C7-cre cells) were also generated by transfecting 293 cells with the Ad E2b genes encoding DNA polymerase and pre-terminal protein, and with a cre-recombinase plasmid. Results We show that C7-cre cells allow efficient production of gutted Ad using ÎE1 + ÎE2b + ÎE3 helper viruses whose growth can be limited by cre- lox P-mediated excision of the packaging signal. Gutted Ad vectors carrying âŒ28 kb cassettes expressing full-length dystrophin were prepared at high titers, similar to those obtained with E2b+ helpers, with a resulting helper contamination of <1%. Conclusions These new packaging cell lines and helper viruses offer several significant advantages for gutted Ad vector production. They allow gutted virus amplification using a reduced number of passages, which should reduce the chances of selecting rearranged products. Furthermore, the residual helper contamination in gutted vector preparations should be less able to elicit immunological reactions upon delivery to tissues, since E2b-deleted vectors display a profound reduction in viral gene expression. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/35231/1/305_ftp.pd
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