3,189 research outputs found
The Massachusetts Commonwealth Health Insurance Connector: Structure and Functions
Describes the role and financing of the Commonwealth Health Insurance Connector Authority, an agency created to help small businesses and individuals buy affordable, high-quality insurance. Considers its potential as a model for national reform
Adolescent Perceptions of Nutrition: Identifying Memorable Messages
Research is necessary to uncover ways to improve adolescent nutrition and reduce obesity rates, particularly in the Appalachian region, which has high rates of food insecurity and adolescent obesity. The current study examines rural cultural norms about food, memorable messages adolescents received about nutrition, and the sources of identified memorable messages. Adolescents shared memorable messages during comprehensive, semi-structured, small group interviews in which participants revealed their individual experiences. Thematic framework analysis is used to present the range and nature of memorable messages about nutrition and to develop strategies for future health campaigns and interventions. This qualitative method of sequential inductive analysis provides transparency of data and resulting interpretations through thematic identification and indexing. Analysis revealed themes of messages that featured critical pieces of the rule-structure of memorable messages – specifically, adherence and consequence regarding nutritional behaviors. Prominent memorable messages of adherence included topics of balance (e.g., MyPlate), type (e.g., junk food), and timing (e.g., “don’t eat after 7 p.m.”). Messages with elements of consequence included communication of short-term (e.g., “breakfast gets your blood flowing) and long-term consequence (e.g., obesity, etc.). Adolescents identified family members, educators, and media as salient sources of memorable messages
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Investigating the Role of Social Return on the Understanding of Craft Brewery Visitors in British Columbia, Canada
Contributing to the Conference Theme: The role of social media in the development of Canada as a destination has been widely discussed locally, regionally, provincially, and federally. This research examines the role of using social media using a newly developed mechanism by which to consider how the use of social media relates to social involvement, memories, loyalty, place attachment, and authenticity. The context for this research is craft brewery tourism, one of the fastest growing aspects of tourism in many provinces. This abstract directly relates to multiple themes and sub-themes of the conference, including “Visitor experience design and measurement,” “Marketing and place promotion strategies and techniques,” and “Consumer demand for authentic places and experiences.
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Understanding the Impacts of Festivals on Resident Attendees Before and During COVID-19: A First Look at the Vancouver Queer Film Festival
Although festivals and events have been identified as a growth segment within tourism, smaller cultural festivals have received much less attention. These smaller cultural festivals aim to bring cultural contributions and increased well-being to attendees and the host community in addition to their economic value. More specifically, queer film festivals have increased in number and size within the last decade and have an important history and purpose within the LGBT2Q+ community. As such, the current study investigated the attendees of the 2019 & 2020 Vancouver Queer Film Festival (VQFF), Western Canada’s largest queer film festival. The survey instrument asked attendees questions about subjective well-being, cultural/educational impacts, community benefits, future programming, and demographics. Preliminary results comparing demographic, behavioural, perceived benefit, and outcome characteristics between the 2019 in-person version and the 2020 virtual pandemic version of VQFF are discussed. Industry and academic implications and areas for future study are also considered
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Comparing Millennial Visitors to Wineries and Breweries in British Columbia: An Examination of Social Involvement, Social Return, and Self-Image Congruency
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Understanding Millennial Interest in Participating in Wine Tourism - A Case Study on the Kamloops Wine Trail, British Columbia, Canada
Youth smoking and anti-smoking policies in North Dakota: a system dynamics simulation study
Background: The current study utilizes system dynamics to model the determinants of youth smoking and simulate effects of anti-smoking policies in the context of North Dakota, a state with one of the lowest cigarette tax rates in the USA. Methods: An explanatory model was built to replicate historical trends in the youth smoking rate. Three different policies were simulated: 1) an increase in cigarette excise taxes; 2) increased funding for CDC-recommended comprehensive tobacco control programs; and 3) enforcement of increased retailer compliance with age restrictions on cigarette sales. Results: The explanatory model successfully replicated historical trends in adolescent smoking behavior in North Dakota from 1992 to 2014. The policy model showed that increasing taxes to $2.20 per pack starting in 2015 was the most effective of the three policies, producing a 32.6% reduction in youth smoking rate by 2032. Other policies reduced smoking by a much lesser degree (7.0 and 3.2% for comprehensive tobacco control program funding and retailer compliance, respectively). The effects of each policy were additive. Conclusions: System dynamics modeling suggests that increasing cigarette excise taxes are particularly effective at reducing adolescent smoking rates. More generally, system dynamics offers an important complement to conventional analysis of observational data.publishedVersio
Apollo experience report guidance and control systems: Primary guidance, navigation, and control system development
The primary guidance, navigation, and control systems for both the lunar module and the command module are described. Development of the Apollo primary guidance systems is traced from adaptation of the Polaris Mark II system through evolution from Block I to Block II configurations; the discussion includes design concepts used, test and qualification programs performed, and major problems encountered. The major subsystems (inertial, computer, and optical) are covered. Separate sections on the inertial components (gyroscopes and accelerometers) are presented because these components represent a major contribution to the success of the primary guidance, navigation, and control system
Thermodynamic graph-rewriting
We develop a new thermodynamic approach to stochastic graph-rewriting. The
ingredients are a finite set of reversible graph-rewriting rules called
generating rules, a finite set of connected graphs P called energy patterns and
an energy cost function. The idea is that the generators define the qualitative
dynamics, by showing which transformations are possible, while the energy
patterns and cost function specify the long-term probability of any
reachable graph. Given the generators and energy patterns, we construct a
finite set of rules which (i) has the same qualitative transition system as the
generators; and (ii) when equipped with suitable rates, defines a
continuous-time Markov chain of which is the unique fixed point. The
construction relies on the use of site graphs and a technique of `growth
policy' for quantitative rule refinement which is of independent interest. This
division of labour between the qualitative and long-term quantitative aspects
of the dynamics leads to intuitive and concise descriptions for realistic
models (see the examples in S4 and S5). It also guarantees thermodynamical
consistency (AKA detailed balance), otherwise known to be undecidable, which is
important for some applications. Finally, it leads to parsimonious
parameterizations of models, again an important point in some applications
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