4,199 research outputs found
Next Generation User Skills
The world is awash with statistics on the impact of the web on 21st century living, learning and working. They are accompanied by the pronouncements and predictions of experts from every camp, from those heralding a new brave new world of co-creation and choice, to warnings from the dark side in terms of ethics and educational standards, tempered by increasing recognition that ‘we’ may no longer be in control of such matters. Meanwhile, surveys report that around 80% of businesses have invested in IT and 60% have websites. Whilst the extent and value of adoption differs significantly across businesses and sectors, the foundations for new ways of working and doing business are broadly in place, with older and static businesses typifying the laggards. It would not be unsafe to project that, by 2013, even more people will be required to use ICT in the workplace and in their everyday lives, increasingly involving online communication and web-based applications. This represents a scenario to which those responsible for developing curricula and awards must respond – in the primary and secondary phases, vocational and applied learning, work based and adult community provision and higher education. To ensure the relevance of and to influence the ongoing enhancement of user ICT provision and the associated awards, Digital 2020 and the Scottish Qualifications Authority jointly commissioned Sero Consulting to develop a vision for ICT user skills in 2013 – ‘Next Generation User Skills’ – taking account of: • Skills that all employers will need, which they may not currently recognise. • Skills that people (especially young people) will already have, but which may not be accredited. • Essential skills for living and learning in a digital age. This paper is drawn from the resulting public report, ‘Next Generation User Skills – Working, Learning & Living Online in 2013’ (September 2008), which provides: • An overview of the current ICT user skills landscape. • A model representing digital activities and competencies that might constitute the ‘Next Generation User Skillscape’. • A mapping of that activity space onto tools and awards, with a gap analysis identifying weaknesses in provision. • An overview of the recommendations to the report sponsors
Glass transitions in 1, 2, 3, and 4 dimensional binary Lennard-Jones systems
We investigate the calorimetric liquid-glass transition by performing
simulations of a binary Lennard-Jones mixture in one through four dimensions.
Starting at a high temperature, the systems are cooled to T=0 and heated back
to the ergodic liquid state at constant rates. Glass transitions are observed
in two, three and four dimensions as a hysteresis between the cooling and
heating curves. This hysteresis appears in the energy and pressure diagrams,
and the scanning-rate dependence of the area and height of the hysteresis can
be described by power laws. The one dimensional system does not experience a
glass transition but its specific heat curve resembles the shape of the results in the supercooled liquid regime above the glass transition. As
increases, the radial distribution functions reflect reduced geometric
constraints. Nearest-neighbor distances become smaller with increasing due
to interactions between nearest and next-nearest neighbors. Simulation data for
the glasses are compared with crystal and melting data obtained with a
Lennard-Jones system with only one type of particle and we find that with
increasing crystallization becomes increasingly more difficult.Comment: 26 pages, 13 figure
Radial Pressure Gradient In Turbulent Pipe Flow
Measurements made with a Prandtl static pressure probe have demonstrated that a radial pressure gradient does exist in turbulent pipe flow with approximately the magnitude predicted by Sandborn from hot-wire anemometry measurements
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Laminated Object Manufacturing of Si3N4 With Enhanced Properties
The potential to fabricate near net-shape ceramic components of intricate shape is attractive
and offers considerable savings in cost and time. The laminated architecture inherent in many
Rapid Prototyping techniques can be utilized to enhance material properties by providing weak
interfaces at regular intervals, oriented microstructures, and functionally graded compositions. By
design and control of these variables it is possible to enhance the strength, toughness and
performance of components fabricated from structural ceramics. A range of oriented
microstructural features have been investigated in Laminated Object Manufacturing of Si3N4
materials. Changes in the mechanical properties can be related to specific architectures and
microstructural developments which took place during sintering.Mechanical Engineerin
The Pathophysiology of Respiratory Failure in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
The most important pathophysiologic aspects of chronic and acute obstructive pulmonary disease involve disturbances in ventilation with resulting derangement of gas exchange in the lung. There is considerable variability in the type of abnormality, the time of its appearance in relationship to the history of the disease, and in the progression of the abnormality in blood gases
Isolation, characterization, and substrate properties of the external limiting membrane from the avian embryonic optic tectum
The external limiting membrane of the avian embryonic optic tectum is isolated by mechanically separating the neuronal mesencephalon from the overlying mesenchymal tissue. The preparation consists of a basal lamina which is covered on its neural side by endfeet of neuroepithelial cells and has attached to it on its meningeal side a collageneous stroma, containing blood vessels. The external limiting membrane can be flat-mounted on a piece of nitrocellulose filter as mechanical support. It covers an area between 0.3 and 1 the cm2, depending on the age of me donor embryo. The endfeet can be removed together with all cellular components of the meninges by treatment with 2% Triton-X-100 or with distilled water. The basal lamina itself is approximately 80 nm thick and consists of two laminae rarae and a central lamina densa. Immunohistochemical staining reveals that the basal lamina in the embryo, after isolation and after detergent extraction of the isolated preparation, contains type IV collagen, nidogen, laminin, and low density heparan sulfate proteoglycan as do other basement membranes. Antibodies against the neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM), chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan, and fibronectin fail to stain the external limiting membrane, but these proteins were clearly identified in the blood vessel-containing meninges or in the optic tectum.
The flat-mounted external limiting membrane preparation was used as substrate to culture several different neural tissues of central and peripheral origin. Explants of neural crest cells, dorsal root ganglia, and sympathetic ganglia can be cultured on the external limiting membrane. All explants grow well on the basal lamina preparations whether the endfeet are attached or detergent-extracted prior to explantation; however, neurite outgrowth from sympathetic ganglia is reduced in the presence of the endfeet. Although the endfoot-lined external limiting membrane represents at least part of the immediate environment encountered by retinal axons as they invade the optic tectum and despite its excellent properties as a substrate for retinal axons in vitro, cues guiding the orientation of axons were not detected in the flat-mounted preparation
The Stony Brook / SMARTS Atlas of mostly Southern Novae
We introduce the Stony Brook / SMARTS Atlas of (mostly) Southern Novae. This
atlas contains both spectra and photometry obtained since 2003. The data
archived in this atlas will facilitate systematic studies of the nova
phenomenon and correlative studies with other comprehensive data sets. It will
also enable detailed investigations of individual objects. In making the data
public we hope to engender more interest on the part of the community in the
physics of novae. The atlas is on-line at
\url{http://www.astro.sunysb.edu/fwalter/SMARTS/NovaAtlas/} .Comment: 11 figures; 5 table
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