2,973 research outputs found
Syntactic Control of Interference Revisited
In Syntactic Control of Interference (POPL, 1978), J. C. Reynolds proposes three design principles intended to constrain the scope of imperative state effects in Algol-like languages. The resulting linguistic framework seems to be a very satisfactory way of combining functional and imperative concepts, having the desirable attributes of both purely functional languages (such as pcf) and simple imperative languages (such as the language of while programs). However, Reynolds points out that the obvious syntax for interference control has the unfortunate property that fi-reductions do not always preserve typings. Reynolds has subsequently presented a solution to this problem (ICALP, 1989), but it is fairly complicated and requires intersection types in the type system. Here, we present a much simpler solution which does not require intersection types. We first describe a new type system inspired in part by linear logic and verify that reductions preserve typings. We then define a class of bireflective models, which provide a categorical analysis of structure underlying the new typing rules; a companion paper Bireflectivity, in this volume, exposes wider ramifications of this structure. Finally, we describe a concrete model for an illustrative programming language based on the new type system; this improves on earlier such efforts in that states are not assumed to be structured using locations
Extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation in the management of 2009 influenza A (H1N1) refractory respiratory failure.
Rapidly progressive acute respiratory failure attributed to 2009 H1N1 influenza A infection has been reported worldwide-3. Refractory hypoxaemia despite conventional mechanical ventilation and lung protective strategies has resulted in the use a combination of rescue therapies, such as conservative fluid management, prone positioning, inhaled nitric oxide, high frequency oscillatory ventilation and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO)4. ECMO allows for pulmonary or cardiopulmonary support as an adjunct to respiratory and cardiac failure, minimising ventilator-associated lung injury (VALI). This permits treatment of the underlying disease process, while concurrently allowing for recovery of the acute lung injury. This case documents a previously healthy twenty-two year old Asian male patient with confirmed pandemic (H 1N1) 2009 influenza A who was successfully managed with ECMO in the setting of severe refractory hypoxaemia and progressive hypercapnia
Study of fuel cells using storable rocket propellants Final report, 28 Jan. 1964 - 29 Jan. 1965
Fuel cells using storable rocket propellants for reactant
CV19022
This report provides the main results of the 2019 underwater television survey on the ‘Labadie, Jones and Cockburn Banks’ ICES assessment area; Functional Unit 20-21. The 2019 survey was multi-disciplinary in nature collecting UWTV, and other ecosystem data. A total of 95 UWTV stations were completed at 6 nm intervals over a randomised isometric grid design. The mean burrow density was 0.06 burrows/m2 compared with 0.27 burrows/m2 in 2018. The 2019 geostatistical abundance estimate was 617 million, a 77% decrease on the abundance for 2018, with a CV of 5% which is well below the upper limit of 20% recommended by SGNEPS 2012. Low densities were observed throughout the ground. Using the 2019 estimate of abundance and updated stock data implies catch in 2020 that correspond to the F ranges in the EU multi annual plan for Western Waters are between 1131 and 1150 tonnes (assuming that discard rates and fishery selection patterns do not change from the average of 2016–2018). One species of sea-pen (Virgularia mirabilis) were recorded as present at the stations surveyed. Trawl marks were observed at 32% of the stations surveyed
DC-electric-field-induced and low-frequency electromodulation second-harmonic generation spectroscopy of Si(001)-SiO interfaces
The mechanism of DC-Electric-Field-Induced Second-Harmonic (EFISH) generation
at weakly nonlinear buried Si(001)-SiO interfaces is studied experimentally
in planar Si(001)-SiO-Cr MOS structures by optical second-harmonic
generation (SHG) spectroscopy with a tunable Ti:sapphire femtosecond laser. The
spectral dependence of the EFISH contribution near the direct two-photon
transition of silicon is extracted. A systematic phenomenological model of the
EFISH phenomenon, including a detailed description of the space charge region
(SCR) at the semiconductor-dielectric interface in accumulation, depletion, and
inversion regimes, has been developed. The influence of surface quantization
effects, interface states, charge traps in the oxide layer, doping
concentration and oxide thickness on nonlocal screening of the DC-electric
field and on breaking of inversion symmetry in the SCR is considered. The model
describes EFISH generation in the SCR using a Green function formalism which
takes into account all retardation and absorption effects of the fundamental
and second harmonic (SH) waves, optical interference between field-dependent
and field-independent contributions to the SH field and multiple reflection
interference in the SiO layer. Good agreement between the phenomenological
model and our recent and new EFISH spectroscopic results is demonstrated.
Finally, low-frequency electromodulated EFISH is demonstrated as a useful
differential spectroscopic technique for studies of the Si-SiO interface in
silicon-based MOS structures.Comment: 31 pages, 14 figures, 1 table, figures are also available at
http://kali.ilc.msu.su/articles/50/efish.ht
Risk management challenges of shared public services: a comparative analysis of Scotland and Finland
Sociomateriality: A Theoretical Framework for Studying Distributed Medical Education
Distributed medical education (DME) is a type of distance learning in which students participate in medical education from diverse geographic locations using Web conferencing, videoconferencing, e-learning, and similar tools. DME is becoming increasingly widespread in North America and around the world. Although relatively new to medical education, distance learning has a long history in the broader field of education and a related body of literature that speaks to the importance of engaging in rigorous and theoretically informed studies of distance learning. The existing DME literature is helpful, but it has been largely descriptive and lacks a critical "lens"-that is, a theoretical perspective from which to rigorously conceptualize and interrogate DME's social (relationships, people) and material (technologies, tools) aspects. The authors describe DME and theories about distance learning and show that such theories focus on social, pedagogical, and cognitive considerations without adequately taking into account material factors. They address this gap by proposing sociomateriality as a theoretical framework allowing researchers and educators to study DME and (1) understand and consider previously obscured actors, infrastructure, and other factors that, on the surface, seem unrelated and even unimportant; (2) see clearly how the social and material components of learning are intertwined in fluid, messy, and often uncertain ways; and (3) perhaps think differently, even in ways that disrupt traditional approaches, as they explore DME. The authors conclude that DME brings with it substantial investments of social and material resources, and therefore needs careful study, using approaches that embrace its complexity
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