627 research outputs found
Magnetic field generated resistivity maximum in graphite
In zero magnetic field, B, the electrical resistivity, rho(O,T) of highly oriented pyrolytic (polycrystalline) graphite drops smoothly with decreasing T, becoming constant below 4 K. However, in a fixed applied magnetic field B, the resistivity rho(B,T) goes through a maximum as a function of T, with larger maximum for larger B. The temperature of the maximum increases with B, but saturates to a constant value near 25 K (exact T depends on sample) at high B. In single crystal graphite a maximum in rho(B,T) as a function of T is also present, but has the effects of Landau level quantization superimposed. Several possible explanations for the rho(B,T) maximum are proposed, but a complete explanation awaits detailed calculations involving the energy band structure of graphite, and the particular scattering mechanisms involved
Flipped gaming-testing three simulation games
© 2018 IEEE. At the Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences 'flipped gaming' has been tested with two student groups (in 2017). This paper will present a newer version of the 'flipping' and also how a total of eight groups utilized tree different types of simulators to play the scenarios. The scenarios were developed by the student themselves as this was their mandatory assignment. The mandatory assignment was handed out in January. The assignment was about making a playable script for an incident, in addition to conduct the planning, execution and evaluation of a complete exercise in crisis management. They were given feedback once before the workshop where they presented and played the script. The tools that were used was Rayvn (https://rayvn.global/), Microsoft HoloLens (https://www.microsoft.com/nb-no/hololens) and a simulator based on a platform from Bohemia Interactive Solutions (https://bisimulations.com/)-the same platform as Virtual Battle Space 3 uses. Rayvn is an incident management tool, mainly for communication. The written messages can then be logged and stored for later reflections. Microsoft HoloLens is a tool for 3D vision, a tool that can show environments in 3D and allow the player to carry out operations using movements that are recorded and executed. This was a prototype. The game based simulator is computer based. The different views are 2D maps and 3D environments. The players use the keyboard and mouse to move the vehicles and avatars around. This in a 'disaster town', called 'Lyngvik', a very poor planned city centre with a large accident/crisis potential. The study is based on the previous study of the learning outcome from assignment that is based on student input. The mandatory assignment was to develop a playable scenario and they could choose in which of the three different simulation tools they were to play their scenario. Two by two, the groups are to play each other's scenario. They have received some supervision and the lecturers have remarked on that the students may lack insight in what a 'playable scenario' require. One of the groups operates as the exercise management staff(the ones that makes the incidents happen and 'play out') and the other group is the ones who man the different roles in handling the scenario e.g.,-different call out services. This group is also calledmain training audience (MTA). The students are in their 6th and last semester in their Bachelor in Crisis Management. The students have been subjected to diverse teaching methods, but this is the first time they have a simulation tool to work with in order to enhance their learning outcome. The preliminary reports from the reflections after the simulating are very positive. The students report on a learning outcome, both from making the scenarios and from simulating. There is also a final report to be written where the students are to reflect on their learning outcome from the simulation and the work on the assignment. The paper shows the results from the whole undertaking and presents further details from the different phases. We also present the theoretical backdrop and the methodological reasoning behind the data collection and analysis
Using games for teaching crisis communication in higher education and training
© 2016 IEEE. Terror actions and catastrophes are frequently described in media. As more and more countries experience terror actions and natural disasters, there has been a greater focus on learning how to handle and to manage them. In Norway on the 22nd of July 2011, Anders Behring Breivik placed a bomb in a car that exploded near the Governmental Offices killing 8 persons. He went on to an island where there was a political camp for youths killing another 67. The rescue operations unveiled an unprepared task force. The Gjrv-report provide a massive critique towards the call out services [1]. This kicked off a major work on updating safety routines in all municipalities. The municipalities are now obliged to have a plan for crisis preparedness [2]. This again triggered the need for education within the area of crisis preparedness, crisis training and crisis management. Hedmark University of Applied Science now offers different study programs, including a BA within these areas. It is, however, very expensive to train realistically and the need for different approaches regarding training has been discussed. One of the solutions that the University is currently working on, is the use of games. Game based learning, also called 'serious games', has become an academic genre and using games for learning and training has proven fruitful [3-12]. In the military, games have been used for simulation purposes [13] and spin offs from these have also reached a commercial market [14, 15]. Using games in education opens up a range of opportunities. One of them is within the area of Crisis Communication. Crisis Communication as a curriculum is about how to approach the area of crisis communication, understanding the key concepts and develop skills within the curriculum. Games that support communication between the gamers can for instance contribute towards a greater understanding of communication in a crisis situation. What is needed to communicate and how messages are received, in order to support handling a crisis, are amongst the concrete learning objectives one can attribute towards this type of training. To use games to support the hands on training can thus provide the learners with valuable know how, and support their learning outcome. The learning from this will be beneficial to the organizations they work in as they will have an experience that will aid them in the work on planning for and preparing for crisis in their own organizations
Student input-A case of an extended flipped classroom
© 2017 IEEE. The idea from Socrates about the knowledge being a part of the students' knowledge base or ability of combining accessible knowledge forms the backdrop for how the most recent course in Knowledge Management (spring of 2017) was conducted. The course is 7,5 ECTS and the students are primarily adults in a worklife. The course is net and seminar based, with three seminars per semester. During the seminars the concept of Flipped Classroom is used. This means that the students are provided with a recorded lecture in beforehand and only highlights are presented. The rest of the time during the seminar is used to activate the students through tasks and problem solving. However, the tasks are not predefined and prefabricated. The way this course is structured, the students themselves are giving the input to the tasks and assignments. This is based on the idea that the students themselves, coming from a worklife where knowledge management is a part of their every day worklife, should reflect upon their own practice. Also, it is important to share knowledge and by utilizing each students own experiences it is possible to enrich the 'database' of cases or tasks for the students to solve and work with in order to incorporate the new theory from the course curriculum. Basing the problem solving on student input provide the lecturer AND the students with a richer knowledge base and case portfolio. This does, however, require some effort from the lecturers side. The input from the students are generally key words and fragments. The session is facilitated by the lecturer, encouraging the students to bring forward own experiences or situations they would like resolved, either real or fiction. The key words and fragments are discussed amongst the students and the lecturer makes notes on a blackboard or on a digital canvas (MS PowerPoint or similar). The students are given a break and the lecturer collects the key words and synthesizes this into a case. Upon the return of the students, they solve the cases in groups and discuss possible solutions and what theory that apply to the different aspects of the case. Then a plenary session is facilitated where a suggested solution is developed. During a one-day seminar three to four cases are developed as a 'joint venture' amongst the students and the lecturer. The feedback from the students is very positive. They claim that this way of working strongly contributes to an enhanced learning outcome. Some students also report on utilizing knowledge acquired at these seminars back at their workplace. These are some results from the survey and interviews. This research will be presented in detail in the paper. We will also elaborate on how this way of flipping the classroom can be utilized in different courses and areas
Estimation of the Prevalence of Progressive Fibrosing Interstitial Lung Diseases: Systematic Literature Review and Data from a Physician Survey
Some patients with interstitial lung diseases (ILDs) other than idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis exhibit a progressive clinical phenotype. These chronic progressive fibrosing ILDs have a variety of underlying diseases, and their prevalence is currently unknown. Here we carry out the first systematic review of literature on the prevalence of fibrosing ILDs and progressive fibrosing ILDs using data from physician surveys to estimate frequency of progression among different ILDs. We searched MEDLINE and Embase for studies assessing prevalence of ILD, individual ILDs associated with fibrosis and progressive fibrosing ILDs. These were combined with data from previously published physician surveys to obtain prevalence estimates of each chronic fibrosing ILD with a progressive phenotype and of progressive fibrosing ILDs overall. We identified 16 publications, including five reporting overall ILD prevalence, estimated at 6.3\u201376.0 per 100,000 people in Europe (four studies) and 74.3 per 100,000 in the USA (one study). In total, 13\u201340% of ILDs were estimated to develop a progressive fibrosing phenotype, with overall prevalence estimates for progressive fibrosing ILDs of 2.2\u201320.0 per 100,000 in Europe and 28.0 per 100,000 in the USA. Prevalence estimates for individual progressive fibrosing ILDs varied up to 16.7 per 100,000 people. These conditions represent a sizeable fraction of chronic respiratory disorders and have a high unmet need
An Anisotropic Ballistic Deposition Model with Links to the Ulam Problem and the Tracy-Widom Distribution
We compute exactly the asymptotic distribution of scaled height in a
(1+1)--dimensional anisotropic ballistic deposition model by mapping it to the
Ulam problem of finding the longest nondecreasing subsequence in a random
sequence of integers. Using the known results for the Ulam problem, we show
that the scaled height in our model has the Tracy-Widom distribution appearing
in the theory of random matrices near the edges of the spectrum. Our result
supports the hypothesis that various growth models in dimensions that
belong to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang universality class perhaps all share the same
universal Tracy-Widom distribution for the suitably scaled height variables.Comment: 5 pages Revtex, 3 .eps figures included, new references adde
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Integration of computational modeling for the Los Alamos National Laboratory low level radioactive waste disposal performance assessment
The preliminary Performance Assessment for the Los Alamos National Laboratory Low Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Facility at Area G is drawing to completion. The disposal site is located on the top of a finger mesa in the complex terrain of a semi-arid region which leads to considerable complications in the atmospheric and subsurface transport and in the requisite modeling. Infiltration and run-off are evaluated for the proposed disposal unit closure configuration. A new analytic source release model characterizes the disposal unit performance utilizing detailed source term characterization from the inventory data base. This analysis provides input to the subsurface modeling done by the sophisticated finite element transport code, FEHM, using realistic 2-D cross-sections of the geologic units stratigraphies and the disposal units. Subsurface transport via lateral flow to intermittent alluvial waters in adjacent canyons is evaluated in addition to the usual deep aquifer. Vapor phase flow has been treated separately and calibrated to field data for tritium migration. Atmospheric transport is based on Gaussian dispersion with a correction for complex canyon terrain evaluated from on-going 3-D atmospheric transport studies. Indications to date are that the Performance Assessment objectives are met for all migration pathways
The Parallel Complexity of Growth Models
This paper investigates the parallel complexity of several non-equilibrium
growth models. Invasion percolation, Eden growth, ballistic deposition and
solid-on-solid growth are all seemingly highly sequential processes that yield
self-similar or self-affine random clusters. Nonetheless, we present fast
parallel randomized algorithms for generating these clusters. The running times
of the algorithms scale as , where is the system size, and the
number of processors required scale as a polynomial in . The algorithms are
based on fast parallel procedures for finding minimum weight paths; they
illuminate the close connection between growth models and self-avoiding paths
in random environments. In addition to their potential practical value, our
algorithms serve to classify these growth models as less complex than other
growth models, such as diffusion-limited aggregation, for which fast parallel
algorithms probably do not exist.Comment: 20 pages, latex, submitted to J. Stat. Phys., UNH-TR94-0
POS0321 USE OF HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE AND SYSTEMIC SCLEROSIS: RESULTS FROM A PROSPECTIVE OBSERVATIONAL STUDY ON THE EUSTAR COHORT
Background:Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) is a well-tolerated drug that contributes to downregulating the immune response against autoantigens and it has been used in several autoimmune diseases. In systemic sclerosis (SSc) it is used to treat inflammatory arthritis without proof of efficacy.Objectives:Our aim was to evaluate the use of HCQ and its impact on Health Assessment Questionnaire disability index (HAQ-DI) and the Cochin Hand Function Status (CHFS). in a large SSc cohort compared to a propensity matched group of SSc patients not using HCQ.Methods:SSc patients from the European Scleroderma Trials and Research (EUSTAR) data base treated with HCQ for at least 6 months were evaluated. Demographic and clinical data, concomitant drugs, duration of HCQ treatment and reasons for its discontinuation, HAQ-DI and CHFS (at least 2 evaluation) were recorded and were the outcome variables of interest. Statistical analysis was performed using propensity score matching for age, gender, disease duration, corticosteroids, immunosuppressives, vasoactive drugs, DMARDs in a 3:1 control:HCQ ratio. Standard descriptive statistics and Student's t-test and Chi-square test were used to assess the propensity-matched groups.Results:1,636 of 17,805 SSc patients (9.2%) were treated with HCQ for at least 6 months; out of these 3% (50/1636). had at least a baseline and follow-up HAQ-DI evaluation, (and 44/1636 (2.7%) had at least a baseline and follow-up CHFS evaluation. Propensity matching assured that pts were matched for demographic variables such as gender (mean on HCQ vs no HCQ:femals:92.0 vs 85.3), age(49.8 vs 49.97yrs) disease duration(8.3 vs 9.1 yrs), limited disease(55.3 vs 62.6%) as well as background medications (P>0.1-0.9). We did not find any significant changes in HAQ or CHFS (difference in slope) over 365 days of treatment, comparing the HCQ-treated group to the non-HCQ treated patients (p=0.240 for both (Figure 1).Conclusion:Results from the EUSTAR registry showed that HCQ was used by 9.2% of SSc patients. HCQ use did not improve the HAQ or CHFS, comparing HCQ users to non-HCQ users.Disclosure of Interests:Silvia Bellando Randone: None declared, Holly Wilhalme: None declared, Cosimo Bruni: None declared, Elise Siegert: None declared, Paolo Airò: None declared, Rosaria Irace: None declared, Oliver Distler: None declared, Andrea Doria: None declared, Lidia P. Ananieva: None declared, László Czirják: None declared, Christopher Denton: None declared, Yannick Allanore: None declared, Valeria Riccieri: None declared, ALESSANDRA VACCA: None declared, Ivan Foeldvari Consultant of: Gilead, Novartis, Pfizer, Hexal, BMS, Sanofi, MEDAC, Anna-Maria Hoffmann-Vold Speakers bureau: Actelion, Boehringer Ingelheim, Roche, Merck Sharp & Dohme, Lilly and Medscape, Consultant of: Actelion, Boehringer Ingelheim, Roche, Bayer, ARXX, and Medscape, Grant/research support from: Boehringer Ingelheim, Armando Gabrielli: None declared, Marco Matucci-Cerinic: None declared, Daniel Furst: None declare
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