1,048 research outputs found

    Sit, Stay, Support! Exploring Canine-Assisted Activities with Individuals with Disabilities

    Get PDF
    Research describing animal-assisted activities (AAA) and their impact on young children have been documented, albeit sparingly, in the research base. This emerging base includes AAA efforts with “reluctant readers” (e.g., Lane & Zavada, 2013) and developing readers (e.g., Linder, Mueller, Gibbs, Alper, & Freeman, 2018). Scorzato et al. (2017) reported evidence from their pilot study on the behavior, communication, and social skills with adults with severe to profound intellectual disabilities. Fung (2017) noted that most animal-assisted related research to date has been focused on more therapeutic purposes, being delivered by health-care professionals. However, there has been more literature prevalent in the past few decades describing canine-assisted reading programs in public libraries; yet, there are few controlled studies which show clear measures of outcomes. Additionally, efforts have generally taken root in more urban areas (i.e., see www.sitstayread.org). Fung continued, making a case for canine-assisted activities (CAA) which focused on reading with participants being students with disabilities. She noted that canines could be used as a non-judgmental audience, as a speech elicitor, as a comfort companion, and as a younger sibling, allowing the child with a disability to become a caretaker to build self-esteem. The purpose of this presentation is to provide a description of law, the hierarchy of CAA, and research regarding animal-assistance strategies and programs. Target Audience: Educator

    We Set the Climate: Implications for Rural School Counselors in Creating LGBTQIA-affirming Schools

    Get PDF
    This phenomenological qualitative study examined a Southern regional sample (N=9) of rural school counselors’ perspectives of the procedures and processes that contributed to their ability to create safe zones in an effort to make their schools more LGBTQIA-affirming. The researchers identified five key themes and twelve subthemes. The key themes were: (a) organized support system, (b) collaborations with school leadership, (c) addressing challenges, (d) utilization of professional development resources, and (e) adherence to professional ethics

    Next to leading order eta production at hadron colliders

    Full text link
    Inclusive eta production at hadron colliders is considered,based on evaluation of eta fragmentation functions at next to leading order. Absolute predictions at LHC and SSC are presented, including the ratio η/π0\eta/\pi^0, together with the estimate of the theoretical uncertainty, as a possible neutral background to the H→γγH\to \gamma\gamma detection.Comment: 8 pages, latex, FNT/T-93/13,14 figures avilable upon reques

    Sharp lower bounds on the fractional matching number

    Get PDF
    A fractional matching of a graph G is a function f from E(G) to the interval [0,1] such that \sum_{e\in\Gamma(v)}f(e) \le 1 for each v\in V(G), where \Gamma(v) is the set of edges incident to v. The fractional matching number of G, written \alpha'_*(G), is the maximum of \sum_{e\in E(G)}f(e) over all fractional matchings f. For G with n vertices, m edges, positive minimum degree d, and maximum degree D, we prove \alpha'_*(G) \ge \max\{m/D, n-m/d, d n/(D+d)\}. For the first two bounds, equality holds if and only if each component of G is r-regular or is bipartite with all vertices in one part having degree r, where r=D for the first bound and r=d for the second. Equality holds in the third bound if and only if G is regular or is (d,D)-biregular

    Distributed Testing of Excluded Subgraphs

    Get PDF
    We study property testing in the context of distributed computing, under the classical CONGEST model. It is known that testing whether a graph is triangle-free can be done in a constant number of rounds, where the constant depends on how far the input graph is from being triangle-free. We show that, for every connected 4-node graph H, testing whether a graph is H-free can be done in a constant number of rounds too. The constant also depends on how far the input graph is from being H-free, and the dependence is identical to the one in the case of testing triangles. Hence, in particular, testing whether a graph is K_4-free, and testing whether a graph is C_4-free can be done in a constant number of rounds (where K_k denotes the k-node clique, and C_k denotes the k-node cycle). On the other hand, we show that testing K_k-freeness and C_k-freeness for k>4 appear to be much harder. Specifically, we investigate two natural types of generic algorithms for testing H-freeness, called DFS tester and BFS tester. The latter captures the previously known algorithm to test the presence of triangles, while the former captures our generic algorithm to test the presence of a 4-node graph pattern H. We prove that both DFS and BFS testers fail to test K_k-freeness and C_k-freeness in a constant number of rounds for k>4

    Boundary conformal field theories and loop models

    Full text link
    We propose a systematic method to extract conformal loop models for rational conformal field theories (CFT). Method is based on defining an ADE model for boundary primary operators by using the fusion matrices of these operators as adjacency matrices. These loop models respect the conformal boundary conditions. We discuss the loop models that can be extracted by this method for minimal CFTs and then we will give dilute O(n) loop models on the square lattice as examples for these loop models. We give also some proposals for WZW SU(2) models.Comment: 23 Pages, major changes! title change

    The Impact of Rainfall on Flows and Loadings at Georgia’s Wastewater Treatment Plants

    Get PDF
    Proceedings of the 2007 Georgia Water Resources Conference, March 27-29, 2007, Athens, Georgia.Inflow and Infiltration (I/I) is extraneous water that enters a sewage treatment plant via groundwater infiltration or direct stormwater entry into sewers. This study is an attempt to quantify I/I impacts based on an assessment of influent and effluent data from twenty-four wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) in Georgia with design capacities of 37,850 m3/d (10-mgd) or greater. Twelve months of operating data from the 2003 calendar year were evaluated. The objectives of the study were to determine the effect of rainfall intensity on the volumetric flow rate to each WWTP; and the relationship between flow rate and the influent biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and influent Total Suspended Solids (TSS) concentrations. Moderate to strong correlations were observed between rainfall intensity and volumetric flow rate; and volumetric flow rate and influent BOD and TSS concentrations. Weak correlations were observed for some of the relationships when applied to the complete data set; however, stronger correlations were achieved by performing statistical analyses of variance and pooling subsets of the data. Peaking factors were similar to those reported in the literature.Sponsored and Organized by: U.S. Geological Survey, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Natural Resources Conservation Service, The University of Georgia, Georgia State University, Georgia Institute of TechnologyThis book was published by the Institute of Ecology, The University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602-2202. The views and statements advanced in this publication are solely those of the authors and do not represent official views or policies of The University of Georgia, the U.S. Geological Survey, the Georgia Water Research Institute as authorized by the Water Resources Research Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-397) or the other conference sponsors

    The Hubble rate in averaged cosmology

    Full text link
    The calculation of the averaged Hubble expansion rate in an averaged perturbed Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker cosmology leads to small corrections to the background value of the expansion rate, which could be important for measuring the Hubble constant from local observations. It also predicts an intrinsic variance associated with the finite scale of any measurement of H_0, the Hubble rate today. Both the mean Hubble rate and its variance depend on both the definition of the Hubble rate and the spatial surface on which the average is performed. We quantitatively study different definitions of the averaged Hubble rate encountered in the literature by consistently calculating the backreaction effect at second order in perturbation theory, and compare the results. We employ for the first time a recently developed gauge-invariant definition of an averaged scalar. We also discuss the variance of the Hubble rate for the different definitions.Comment: 12 pages, 25 figures, references added, clarity improved, frame switching subtlety fixed, results unchanged, v3 minor typos fixe

    η−ηâ€Č\eta-\eta^\prime mixing and the next-to-leading-order power correction

    Full text link
    The next-to-leading-order O(1/Q4)O(1/Q^4) power correction for ηγ\eta\gamma and ηâ€ČÎł\eta^\prime\gamma form factors are evaluated and employed to explore the η−ηâ€Č\eta-\eta^\prime mixing. The parameters of the two mixing angle scheme are extracted from the data for form factors, two photon decay widths and radiative J/ψJ/\psi decays. The χ2\chi^2 analysis gives the result: fη1=(1.16±0.06)fπ,fη8=(1.33±0.23)fπ,Ξ1=−9∘±3∘,Ξ8=−21.3∘±2.3∘f_{\eta_1}=(1.16\pm0.06)f_\pi, f_{\eta_8}=(1.33\pm0.23)f_\pi, \theta_1=-9^\circ\pm 3^\circ, \theta_8=-21.3^\circ\pm 2.3^\circ, where fη1(8)f_{\eta_{1(8)}} and Ξ1(8)\theta_{1(8)} are the decay constants and the mixing angles for the singlet (octet) state. In addition, we arrive at a stringent range for fηâ€Čc:−10f_{\eta^\prime}^c:-10 MeV≀fηâ€Čc≀−4\le f_{\eta^\prime}^c\le -4 MeV.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, To be publshied in Phys. Rev.
    • 

    corecore