941 research outputs found

    An evaluation of earcons for use in auditory human-computer interfaces

    Get PDF
    An evaluation of earcons was carried out to seee whether they are an effective means of communicating information in sound. An initial experiment showed that earcons were better than unstructured bursts of sound and that musical timbres were more effective than simple tones. A second experiment was then carried out which improved upon some of the weaknesses shown up in Experiment 1 to give a significant improvement in recognition. From the results of these experiments some guidelines were drawn up for use in the creation of earcons. Earcons have been shown to be an effective method for communicating information in a human-computer interface

    Parallel earcons: reducing the length of audio messages

    Get PDF
    This paper describes a method of presenting structured audio messages, earcons, in parallel so that they take less time to play and can better keep pace with interactions in a human-computer interface. The two component parts of a compound earcon are played in parallel so that the time taken is only that of a single part. An experiment was conducted to test the recall and recognition of parallel compound earcons as compared to serial compound earcons. Results showed that there are no differences in the rates of recognition between the two groups. Non-musicians are also shown to be equal in performance to musicians. Some extensions to the earcon creation guidelines of Brewster, Wright and Edwards are put forward based upon research into auditory stream segregation. Parallel earcons are shown to be an effective means of increasing the presentation rates of audio messages without compromising recognition rates

    The design and evaluation of an auditory-enhanced scrollbar

    Get PDF
    A structured method is described for the analysis of interactions to identify situations where hidden information may exist and where non-speech sound might be used to overcome the associated problems. Interactions are considered in terms of events, status and modes to find any hidden information. This is then categorised in terms of the feedback needed to present it. An auditory-enhanced scrollbar, based on the method described, was then experimentally tested. Timing and error rates were used along with subjective measures of workload. Results from the experiment show a significant reduction in time to complete one task, a decrease in the mental effort required and an overall preference for the auditory-enhanced scrollbar

    A scaled fundamental equation for the thermodynamic properties of carbon dioxide in the critical region

    Get PDF
    A scaled fundamental equation is presented for the thermodynamic properties of carbon dioxide in the critical region. The equation is constructed by combining earlier experimental pressure data of Michels and co‐workers with new specific heat data obtained by one of the authors and represents the thermodynamic properties of carbon dioxide in the critical region at temperatures from 301.15 to 323 K and at densities from 290 to 595 kg/m3

    Book review of 'the people make the place: dynamic linkages between individuals and organizations edited by D. Brent Smith'

    Get PDF
    The People Make the Place is a festschrift celebrating the work of industrial/organizational psychologist Benjamin Schneider. It contains 11 specially written chapters each addressing a different element of Schneider’s work. The twelfth chapter, written by the honored scholar, summarizes the contributions and uses the opportunity to clarify many of the ideas surrounding attraction-selection-attrition (ASA) theory

    A particle-number-conserving Bogoliubov method which demonstrates the validity of the time-dependent Gross-Pitaevskii equation for a highly condensed Bose gas

    Get PDF
    The Bogoliubov method for the excitation spectrum of a Bose-condensed gas is generalized to apply to a gas with an exact large number N N of particles. This generalization yields a description of the Schr\"odinger picture field operators as the product of an annihilation operator AA for the total number of particles and the sum of a ``condensate wavefunction'' ξ(x)\xi(x) and a phonon field operator χ(x)\chi(x) in the form ψ(x)A{ξ(x)+χ(x)/N}\psi(x) \approx A\{\xi(x) + \chi(x)/\sqrt{N}\} when the field operator acts on the N particle subspace. It is then possible to expand the Hamiltonian in decreasing powers of N\sqrt{N}, an thus obtain solutions for eigenvalues and eigenstates as an asymptotic expansion of the same kind. It is also possible to compute all matrix elements of field operators between states of different N.Comment: RevTeX, 11 page

    Short-time scaling behavior of growing interfaces

    Full text link
    The short-time evolution of a growing interface is studied within the framework of the dynamic renormalization group approach for the Kadar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) equation and for an idealized continuum model of molecular beam epitaxy (MBE). The scaling behavior of response and correlation functions is reminiscent of the ``initial slip'' behavior found in purely dissipative critical relaxation (model A) and critical relaxation with conserved order parameter (model B), respectively. Unlike model A the initial slip exponent for the KPZ equation can be expressed by the dynamical exponent z. In 1+1 dimensions, for which z is known exactly, the analytical theory for the KPZ equation is confirmed by a Monte-Carlo simulation of a simple ballistic deposition model. In 2+1 dimensions z is estimated from the short-time evolution of the correlation function.Comment: 27 pages LaTeX with epsf style, 4 figures in eps format, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Aspects of the Noisy Burgers Equation

    Full text link
    The noisy Burgers equation describing for example the growth of an interface subject to noise is one of the simplest model governing an intrinsically nonequilibrium problem. In one dimension this equation is analyzed by means of the Martin-Siggia-Rose technique. In a canonical formulation the morphology and scaling behavior are accessed by a principle of least action in the weak noise limit. The growth morphology is characterized by a dilute gas of nonlinear soliton modes with gapless dispersion law with exponent z=3/2 and a superposed gas of diffusive modes with a gap. The scaling exponents and a heuristic expression for the scaling function follow from a spectral representation.Comment: 23 pages,LAMUPHYS LaTeX-file (Springer), 13 figures, and 1 table, to appear in the Proceedings of the XI Max Born Symposium on "Anomalous Diffusion: From Basics to Applications", May 20-24, 1998, Ladek Zdroj, Polan

    Kidney injury molecule-1 is an early biomarker of cadmium nephrotoxicity

    Get PDF
    Cadmium (Cd) exposure results in injury to the proximal tubule characterized by polyuria and proteinuria. Kidney injury molecule-1 (Kim-1) is a transmembrane glycoprotein not normally detected in the mature kidney, but is upregulated and shed into the urine following nephrotoxic injury. In this study, we determine if Kim-1 might be a useful early biomarker of Cd nephrotoxicity. Male Sprague–Dawley rats were given daily injections of Cd for up to 12 weeks. Weekly urine samples were analyzed for Kim-1, protein, creatinine, metallothionein, and Clara cell protein CC-16. Significant levels of Kim-1 were detected in the urine by 6 weeks and continued to increase throughout the treatment period. This appearance of Kim-1 occurred 4–5 weeks before the onset of proteinuria, and 1–3 weeks before the appearance of metallothionein and CC-16. Higher doses of Cd gave rise to higher Kim-1 excretion. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) expression analysis showed that Kim-1 transcript levels were increased after 6 weeks at the low dose of Cd. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that Kim-1 was present in proximal tubule cells of the Cd-treated rats. Our results suggest that Kim-1 may be a useful biomarker of early stages of Cd-induced proximal tubule injury
    corecore