1,097 research outputs found
Teachers developing assessment for learning: impact on student achievement
While it is generally acknowledged that increased use of formative assessment (or assessment for learning) leads to higher quality learning, it is often claimed that the pressure in schools to improve the results achieved by students in externally-set tests and examinations precludes its use. This paper reports on the achievement of secondary school students who worked in classrooms where teachers made time to develop formative assessment strategies. A total of 24 teachers (2 science and 2 mathematics teachers, in each of six schools in two LEAs) were supported over a six-month period in exploring and planning their approach to formative assessment, and then, beginning in September 1999, the teachers put these plans into action with selected classes. In order to compute effect sizes, a measure of prior attainment and at least one comparison group was established for each class (typically either an equivalent class taught in the previous year by the same teacher, or a parallel class taught by another teacher). The mean effect size was 0.32
Duloxetine versus routine care in the long-term management of diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain
Dynamic compartmentalization of bacteria: accurate division in E. coli
Positioning of the midcell division plane within the bacterium E. coli is
controlled by the min system of proteins: MinC, MinD and MinE. These proteins
coherently oscillate from end to end of the bacterium. We present a
reaction--diffusion model describing the diffusion of min proteins along the
bacterium and their transfer between the cytoplasmic membrane and cytoplasm.
Our model spontaneously generates protein oscillations in good agreement with
experiments. We explore the oscillation stability, frequency and wavelength as
a function of protein concentration and bacterial length.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Latex2e, Revtex
Renal (Uremic) Encephalopathy in a Goat
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72407/1/j.1439-0442.2005.00752.x.pd
Mightyl: A compositional translation from mitl to timed automata
Metric Interval Temporal Logic (MITL) was first proposed in the early 1990s as a specification formalism for real-time systems. Apart from its appealing intuitive syntax, there are also theoretical evidences that make MITL a prime real-time counterpart of Linear Temporal Logic (LTL). Unfortunately, the tool support for MITL verification is still lacking to this day. In this paper, we propose a new construction from MITL to timed automata via very-weak one-clock alternating timed automata. Our construction subsumes the well-known construction from LTL to Büchi automata by Gastin and Oddoux and yet has the additional benefits of being compositional and integrating easily with existing tools. We implement the construction in our new tool MightyL and report on experiments using Uppaal and LTSmin as back-ends
WASOS: An Ontology for Modelling Traditional Knowledge of Sustainable Water Stewardship
Recent work and publications concerning sustainable water stewardship in Rajasthan (India) highlight how contemporary challenges are eroding traditional, communal approaches to water stewardship through mechanised extraction beyond the renewable capacities of ecosystems. Our work is focused on developing a formal ontology for modelling the knowledge of traditional water stewardship in India’s drylands by capturing the key constitutional elements of regenerative methods. Our method follows an iterative evolving prototype process for delivering the first version of the Ontology for Sustainable Water Stewardship (WASOS). The ontology contains a moderate number of high-level classes and properties that represent the water management decisionmaking process. By making key relationships visible, we aim to support decision-making in complex catchments particularly where there are contested urban and rural claims on water
On the complexity of resource-bounded logics
We revisit decidability results for resource-bounded logics and use decision problems for vector addition systems with states (VASS) to characterise the complexity of (decidable) model-checking problems.
We show that the model-checking problem for the logic RB+-ATL is 2EXPTIME-complete by using recent results on alternating VASS.
In addition, we establish that the model-checking problem for RBTL is decidable and has the same complexity as for RBTL* (the extension of RBTL with arbitrary path formulae), namely EXPSPACE-complete, proving a new decidability result as a by-product of the approach. Finally, we establish that the model-checking problem for RB+-ATL* is decidable by a reduction to parity games, and show how to synthesise values for resource parameters
Subluminous Type Ia Supernovae at High Redshift from the Supernova Legacy Survey
The rate evolution of subluminous Type Ia Supernovae is presented using data
from the Supernova Legacy Survey. This sub-sample represents the faint and
rapidly-declining light-curves of the observed supernova Ia (SN Ia) population
here defined by low stretch values (s<0.8). Up to redshift z=0.6, we find 18
photometrically-identified subluminous SNe Ia, of which six have spectroscopic
redshift (and three are spectroscopically-confirmed SNe Ia). The evolution of
the subluminous volumetric rate is constant or slightly decreasing with
redshift, in contrast to the increasing SN Ia rate found for the normal stretch
population, although a rising behaviour is not conclusively ruled out. The
subluminous sample is mainly found in early-type galaxies with little or no
star formation, so that the rate evolution is consistent with a galactic mass
dependent behavior: , with SNe
per year and solar mass.Comment: 19 pages, 27 figure
Are timed automata bad for a specification language? Language inclusion checking for timed automata
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