7,835 research outputs found
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Learners' strategies with multiple representations
This empirical study investigated how varied instantiations of mathematical representations influenced learners' strategies. The analysis took into account gazes, utterances, actions and writings of 18 learners performing 3 tasks using static, dynamic, and interactive instantiations. Results show a variation in frequencies of strategies that the participants of the study employed for using multiple representations. This indicates that varying instantiations of multiple representations influences learners' strategies
An experimental and computational analysis of buoyancy driven flows by laser sheet tomography, particle image velocimetry and computational fluid dynamics
This paper contains details of a three pronged investigation into the development of a buoyant jet impinging on a wall in a closed vessel. The development of the flow was measured experimentally by particle image velocimetry (PIV) and laser sheet tomography. The experimental results are compared with a computational model of the flow calculated by the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) package PHOENICS
A CFD technique for estimating the flow distortion effects on LiDAR measurements when made in complex flow fields
The effect of flow distortion on the measurements produced by a LiDAR or SoDAR in close proximity to either complex terrain or a structure creating localised flow distortion is difficult to determine by analytical means. Also, as LiDARs and SoDARs are not point measurement devices, the techniques they employ for velocity measurements leads to complexities in the estimation of the effect of flow distortion on the accuracy of the measurements they make. This paper presents a method by which the effect of flow distortion on measurements made by a LiDAR in a distorted flow field may be determined using computational fluid dynamics. The results show that the error created by the flow distortion will cause the vector measured by a LiDAR to differ significantly from an equivalent point measurement. However, the results of the simulation show that, if the LiDAR is being used to measure the undisturbed flow field above a structure which creates highly localised flow distortion, the LiDAR results are less affected by the distortion of the local flow field than data acquired by a point measurement technique such as a cup anemometer
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Using Broad Phonetic Group Experts for Improved Speech Recognition
In phoneme recognition experiments, it was found that approximately 75% of misclassified frames were assigned labels within the same broad phonetic group (BPG). While the phoneme can be described as the smallest distinguishable unit of speech, phonemes within BPGs contain very similar characteristics and can be easily confused. However, different BPGs, such as vowels and stops, possess very different spectral and temporal characteristics. In order to accommodate the full range of phonemes, acoustic models of speech recognition systems calculate input features from all frequencies over a large temporal context window. A new phoneme classifier is proposed consisting of a modular arrangement of experts, with one expert assigned to each BPG and focused on discriminating between phonemes within that BPG. Due to the different temporal and spectral structure of each BPG, novel feature sets are extracted using mutual information, to select a relevant time-frequency (TF) feature set for each expert. To construct a phone recognition system, the output of each expert is combined with a baseline classifier under the guidance of a separate BPG detector. Considering phoneme recognition experiments using the TIMIT continuous speech corpus, the proposed architecture afforded significant error rate reductions up to 5% relative
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Factors influencing the utilisation of free-standing and alongside midwifery units in England: a qualitative research study
OBJECTIVE: To identify factors influencing the provision, utilisation and sustainability of midwifery units (MUs) in England.
DESIGN: Case studies, using individual interviews and focus groups, in six National Health Service (NHS) Trust maternity services in England.
SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: NHS maternity services in different geographical areas of England Maternity care staff and service users from six NHS Trusts: two Trusts where more than 20% of all women gave birth in MUs, two Trusts where less than 10% of all women gave birth in MUs and two Trusts without MUs. Obstetric, midwifery and neonatal clinical leaders, managers, service user representatives and commissioners were individually interviewed (n=57). Twenty-six focus groups were undertaken with midwives (n=60) and service users (n=52).
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Factors influencing MU use.
FINDINGS: The study findings identify several barriers to the uptake of MUs. Within a context of a history of obstetric-led provision and lack of decision-maker awareness of the clinical and economic evidence, most Trust managers and clinicians do not regard their MU provision as being as important as their obstetric unit (OU) provision. Therefore, it does not get embedded as an equal and parallel component in the Trust's overall maternity package of care. The analysis illuminates how implementation of complex interventions in health services is influenced by a range of factors including the medicalisation of childbirth, perceived financial constraints, adequate leadership and institutional norms protecting the status quo.
CONCLUSIONS: There are significant obstacles to MUs reaching their full potential, especially free-standing midwifery units. These include the lack of commitment by providers to embed MUs as an essential service provision alongside their OUs, an absence of leadership to drive through these changes and the capacity and willingness of providers to address women's information needs. If these remain unaddressed, childbearing women's access to MUs will continue to be restricted
Influence of positional correlations on the propagation of waves in a complex medium with polydisperse resonant scatterers
We present experimental results on a model system for studying wave
propagation in a complex medium exhibiting low frequency resonances. These
experiments enable us to investigate a fundamental question that is relevant
for many materials, such as metamaterials, where low-frequency scattering
resonances strongly influence the effective medium properties. This question
concerns the effect of correlations in the positions of the scatterers on the
coupling between their resonances, and hence on wave transport through the
medium. To examine this question experimentally, we measure the effective
medium wave number of acoustic waves in a sample made of bubbles embedded in an
elastic matrix over a frequency range that includes the resonance frequency of
the bubbles. The effective medium is highly dispersive, showing peaks in the
attenuation and the phase velocity as functions of the frequency, which cannot
be accurately described using the Independent Scattering Approximation (ISA).
This discrepancy may be explained by the effects of the positional correlations
of the scatterers, which we show to be dependent on the size of the scatterers.
We propose a self-consistent approach for taking this "polydisperse
correlation" into account and show that our model better describes the
experimental results than the ISA
The Challenges of Capacity Building in the Aligning Forces for Quality Alliances
Summarizes the challenges and trade-offs in infrastructure and governance as well as stakeholder relations and participation, such as inclusive versus efficient decision making, in an alliance to coordinate regional healthcare improvement activities
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Tablet PCs in schools: Case study report: A report for Becta by the Open University
The publication provides an analysis of twelve case studies involving schools in England that were using Tablet PCs. The analysis is complemented by brief individual reports describing aspects of how each of these schools was using Tablet PCs
Antiferromagnetism at T > 500 K in the Layered Hexagonal Ruthenate SrRu2O6
We report an experimental and computational study of magnetic and electronic
properties of the layered Ru(V) oxide SrRu2O6 (hexagonal, P-3 1m), which shows
antiferromagnetic order with a N\'eel temperature of 563(2) K, among the
highest for 4d oxides. Magnetic order occurs both within edge-shared octahedral
sheets and between layers and is accompanied by anisotropic thermal expansivity
that implies strong magnetoelastic coupling of Ru(V) centers. Electrical
transport measurements using focused ion beam induced deposited contacts on a
micron-scale crystallite as a function of temperature show p-type
semiconductivity. The calculated electronic structure using hybrid density
functional theory successfully accounts for the experimentally observed
magnetic and electronic structure and Monte Carlo simulations reveals how
strong intralayer as well as weaker interlayer interactions are a defining
feature of the high temperature magnetic order in the material.Comment: Physical Review B 2015 accepted for publicatio
Investigation of lunar surface chemical contamination by LEM descent engine and associated equipment Final report
Lunar surface contamination from LEM rocket exhaust - methods of minimizing sample contaminatio
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