1,597 research outputs found

    Evidence that implementation intentions reduce drivers' use of mobile phones while driving

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    Implementation intentions are IF-THEN plans that have the potential to reduce mobile phone use while driving and thus contribute towards the prevention of road traffic crashes. We tested whether an intervention, designed to promote the formation of implementation intentions, could reduce drivers’ use of mobile phones. A randomized controlled design was used. The participants (N = 136) were randomised to an implementation or a control condition. Self-report questionnaires were administered to all participants at both pre- and one-month post-intervention to measure the use of mobile phones while driving, goal intentions and the theoretically derived motivational pre-cursors of goal intentions (attitudes, subjective norm and perceived behavioural control). Immediately following the pre-intervention questionnaire, the participants in the implementation intention condition (n = 67) were given a volitional help sheet, which asked them to form implementation intentions by specifying target driving situations that tempted them the most to use a mobile phone and linking them with goal-directed responses that could be used to resist the temptation. The participants in the control condition (n = 69) were asked to specify target situations that tempted them the most to use a mobile phone while driving and to generally try to avoid using a mobile phone in those situations. One-month post-intervention, the participants in the implementation intention condition reported using a mobile phone less often while driving in their specified target driving situations than did the participants in the control condition. As expected, no differences were found between the conditions in the reported frequency of mobile phone use in unspecified driving situations, goal intentions or any motivational pre-cursor of goal intentions. The implementation intention intervention that was tested in this study is a potentially effective tool for reducing mobile phone use while driving in target driving situations where behaviour-change is most needed

    Incorporating façade-specific climatic factors to improve the ISO 15927-3 characterisation of wind-driven rain spells: Dutch and Spanish case studies

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    ISO standard 15927-3 characterise episodic exposures of wind-driven rain (WDR) on building façades by identifying wetting intervals, referred to as spells. Spells separated by 96 h or more without WDR are considered, assuming that this interval is sufficient for evaporative losses to exceed prior rainwater gains. This approach ignores variations in evaporation due to the façade orientation and local environmental factors, which cause diverse drying intervals even for the same material. This study proposes an estimation of potential evaporation losses in façades, considering their orientation and local climate. Representative drying intervals and enhanced façade-specific WDR spells are identified by combining potential evaporation losses with the directional WDR exposure. The results at locations in The Netherlands and Spain demonstrates that the drying intervals can vary significantly depending on these factors (regardless of the surface materials), which suggests reconsidering the current 96-h ISO model to minimise uncertainties when characterising episodic WDR exposures

    Results of investigations into the groundwater response and productivity of high water use agricultural systems 1990-1997 4. TKK Engineering\u27s Catchment (Williams)

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    High water use vegetation systems for salinity control were trialed on a 70 ha catchment located about 15 km north of Williams, Western Australia. The catchment receives about 545 mm annual rainfall and 1870 mm annual evaporation. Development of salinity is characterised by passive discharge upslope from a dolerite dyke. Because recharge exceeds the discharge capacity of current seeps, there is potential for new seeps to develop in the mid to lower slopes

    Results of investigations into the groundwater response and productivity of high water use agricultural systems 1990-1997 1. Wooldridge/Wright\u27s Catchment (Kojonup)

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    High water use vegetation systems for salinity control were trialed on a 170 ha catchment located 13 km north of Kojonup, Western Australia. The catchment receives about 470 mm annual rainfall and 1825 mm annual evaporation

    Results of investigations into the groundwater response and productivity of high water use agricultural systems 1990-1997 5 White/Beattys\u27 Catchment (Dinninup)

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    High water use vegetation systems for salinity control were trialed on a 250 ha catchment located three km north-west of Dinninup, Western Australia. The catchment receives about 620 mm annual rainfall and 1500 mm annual evaporation. The catchment is characterised by slopes with gradients in excess of 5%, deep weathering (15-25 m to bedrock), active seepage in the valley (piezometric heads 204 m above ground surface) and high recharge (water table fluctuations of 1-4 m)

    Results of investigations into the groundwater response and productivity of high water use agricultural systems 1990-1997. 2. Souths\u27 Catchment (Darkan)

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    High water use vegetation systems for salinity control were trialed on a 90 ha catchment located 12 km north north-west of Darkan, Western Australia. The catchment receives about 560 mm annual rainfall and 1895 mm annual evaporation. The catchment is characterised by a number of actively expanding seeps which are developing under the strong geological control of quartz and dolerite dykes. Development of salinity is also influenced by high recharge rates in the free draining gravel soils of the upper slope

    Review: The Journal of Dramaturgy, volume 25, issue 1

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    Contents include: Editors\u27 Note: Dramaturgical Snapshots of the Americas; Breaks in the Common Good: Dramaturging MayDay within the Heart of the Beast; I Fight With My Blood // Battle With My Tongue: A Dramaturgy of Survival in the Southwest; More Makes More: Indigenous Theatre in Canada; The Impact of Involvement: Peoplmovr\u27s Creative Director; Three Confessions of a Dramaturg: Staging Marguerite Duran\u27s India Song; Thebes in Utah: Translating in Ali Salim\u27s Egyptian The Comedy of Oedipushttps://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/lmdareview/1053/thumbnail.jp

    Results of investigations into the groundwater response and productivity of high water use agricultural systems 1990-1997 3 Hunts\u27 Catchment (Frankland)

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    High water use vegetation systems for salinity control were trialed on an 80 ha catchment located 12 km east of Frankland, Western Australia. The catchment receives about 510 mm annual rainfall and 1525 mm annual evaporation. Development of salinity in the catchment is concentrated in the valley floor. Here the groundwater is extremely saline (3000-4000 mS/m) and piezometric levels are between 1 m below and 1 m above the surface

    Quasars and the Big Blue Bump

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    We investigate the ultraviolet-to-optical spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of 17 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) using quasi-simultaneous spectrophotometry spanning 900-9000 Angstrom (rest frame). We employ data from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE), the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and the 2.1-meter telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO). Taking advantage of the short-wavelength coverage, we are able to study the so-called "big blue bump," the region where the energy output peaks, in detail. Most objects exhibit a spectral break around 1100 Angstrom. Although this result is formally associated with large uncertainty for some objects, there is strong evidence in the data that the far-ultraviolet spectral region is below the extrapolation of the near-ultraviolet-optical slope, indicating a spectral break around 1100 Angstrom. We compare the behavior of our sample to those of non-LTE thin-disk models covering a range in black-hole mass, Eddington ratio, disk inclination, and other parameters. The distribution of ultraviolet-optical spectral indices redward of the break, and far-ultraviolet indices shortward of the break, are in rough agreement with the models. However, we do not see a correlation between the far-ultraviolet spectral index and the black hole mass, as seen in some accretion disk models. We argue that the observed spectral break is intrinsic to AGNs, although intrinsic reddening as well as Comptonization can strongly affect the far-ultraviolet spectral index. We make our data available online in digital format.Comment: 32 pages (10pt), 12 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap

    Top Quark Physics at the Tevatron

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    The discovery of the top quark in 1995, by the CDF and D0 collaborations at the Fermilab Tevatron, marked the dawn of a new era in particle physics. Since then, enormous efforts have been made to study the properties of this remarkable particle, especially its mass and production cross section. In this article, we review the status of top quark physics as studied by the two collaborations using the p-pbar collider data at sqrt(s) = 1.8 TeV. The combined measurement of the top quark mass, m_t = 173.8 +- 5.0 GeV/c^2, makes it known to a fractional precision better than any other quark mass. The production cross sections are measured as sigma (t-tbar) = 7.6 -1.5 +1.8 pb by CDF and sigma (t-tbar) = 5.5 +- 1.8 pb by D0. Further investigations of t-tbar decays and future prospects are briefly discussed.Comment: 119 pages, 59 figures, 17 tables Submitted to Int. J. Mod. Phys. A Fixed some minor error
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