1,460 research outputs found

    What is the problem to which interactive multimedia is the solution?

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    This is something of an unusual paper. It serves as both the reason for and the result of a small number of leading academics in the field, coming together to focus on the question that serves as the title to this paper: What is the problem to which interactive multimedia is the solution? Each of the authors addresses this question from their own viewpoint, offering informed insights into the development, implementation and evaluation of multimedia. The result of their collective work was also the focus of a Western Australian Institute of Educational Research seminar, convened at Edith Cowan University on 18 October, 1994. The question posed is deliberately rhetorical - it is asked to allow those represented here to consider what they think are the significant issues in the fast-growing field of multimedia. More directly, the question is also asked here because nobody else has considered it worth asking: for many multimedia is done because it is technically possible, not because it offers anything that is of value or provides the solution to a particular problem. The question, then, is answered in various ways by each of the authors involved and each, in their own way, consider a range of fundamental issues concerning the nature, place and use of multimedia - both in education and in society generally. By way of an introduction, the following provides a unifying context for the various contributions made here

    Proximity effect thermometer for local temperature measurements on mesoscopic samples

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    Using the strong temperature dependent resistance of a normal metal wire in proximity to a superconductor, we have been able to measure the local temperature of electrons heated by flowing a dc current in a metallic wire to within a few tens of millikelvin at low temperatures. By placing two such thermometers at different parts of a sample, we have been able to measure the temperature difference induced by a dc current flowing in the sample. This technique may provide a flexible means of making quantitative thermal and thermoelectric measurements on mesoscopic metallic samples

    Epidemiološki studij učinaka herbicida

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    A preliminary study of 324 Swedish railway workers exposed to herbicides between the years 1957-1971 showed 2 excess lung cancer cases, 1 adenocarcinoma and 1 oatcellcancer. Although the number of subjects was small, especially the number of cancers, the possibility that amitrole and combinations together with smoking might have caused the excess lung cancers cannot be ruled out.U ovom preliminarnom epidemiološkom istraživanju, autori su analizirali uzroke smrti među 324 radnika koji su u razdoblju od 1957. do 1971. godine bili izvrgnuti različitim herbicidima tijekom ukupno više od 46 dana. Autori su u račun uzimali incidenciju u općem i specifičnom mortalitetu švedske populacije pa su uspoređivali broj očekivanih i broj utvrđenih smrtnih slučajeva među eksponiranim radnicima. Premda su sveukupni brojevi maleni, ne može se isključiti mogućnost da je amitrol sam ili s pušenjem uvjetovao veći broj karcinoma pluća u eksponiranih radnika

    Complete Characterization of Quantum-Optical Processes

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    The technologies of quantum information and quantum control are rapidly improving, but full exploitation of their capabilities requires complete characterization and assessment of processes that occur within quantum devices. We present a method for characterizing, with arbitrarily high accuracy, any quantum optical process. Our protocol recovers complete knowledge of the process by studying, via homodyne tomography, its effect on a set of coherent states, i.e. classical fields produced by common laser sources. We demonstrate the capability of our protocol by evaluating and experimentally verifying the effect of a test process on squeezed vacuum.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Effect of Prehospital Red Blood Cell Transfusion on Mortality and Time of Death in Civilian Trauma Patients.

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    BACKGROUND: Current management principles of hemorrhagic shock after trauma emphasize earlier transfusion therapy to prevent dilution of clotting factors and correct coagulopathy. London's Air Ambulance (LAA) was the first UK civilian prehospital service to routinely offer prehospital red blood cell (RBC) transfusion (phRTx). We investigated the effect of phRTx on mortality. METHODS: Retrospective trauma database study comparing mortality before implementation with after implementation of phRTx in exsanguinating trauma patients. Univariate logistic regression was performed for the unadjusted association between phRTx and mortality was performed, and multiple logistic regression adjusting for potential confounders. RESULTS: We identified 623 subjects with suspected major hemorrhage. We excluded 84 (13.5%) patients due to missing data on survival status. Overall 187 (62.3%) patients died in the before phRTx period and 143 (59.8%) died in the after phRTx group. There was no significant improvement in overall survival after the introduction of phRTx (P = 0.554). Examination of prehospital mortality demonstrated 126 deaths in the pre-phRTx group (42.2%) and 66 deaths in the RBC administered group (27.6%). There was a significant reduction in prehospital mortality in the group who received RBC (P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: phRTx was associated with increased survival to hospital, but not overall survival. The "delay death" effect of phRTx carries an impetus to further develop inhospital strategies to improve survival in severely bleeding patients.The Norwegian Air Ambulance Foundation funded MR and JR expenses and publishing costs, but had no role in manuscript writing, study design, collection, analysis, or interpretation of data
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