2,042 research outputs found
A model for cross-cultural reciprocal interactions through mass media
We investigate the problem of cross-cultural interactions through mass media
in a model where two populations of social agents, each with its own internal
dynamics, get information about each other through reciprocal global
interactions. As the agent dynamics, we employ Axelrod's model for social
influence. The global interaction fields correspond to the statistical mode of
the states of the agents and represent mass media messages on the cultural
trend originating in each population. Several phases are found in the
collective behavior of either population depending on parameter values: two
homogeneous phases, one having the state of the global field acting on that
population, and the other consisting of a state different from that reached by
the applied global field; and a disordered phase. In addition, the system
displays nontrivial effects: (i) the emergence of a largest minority group of
appreciable size sharing a state different from that of the applied global
field; (ii) the appearance of localized ordered states for some values of
parameters when the entire system is observed, consisting of one population in
a homogeneous state and the other in a disordered state. This last situation
can be considered as a social analogue to a chimera state arising in globally
coupled populations of oscillators.Comment: 8 pages and 7 figure
Clinical expectations: What facilitators expect from ESL students on clinical placement
Many nursing students for whom English is a second language (ESL) face challenges related to communication on clinical placement and although clinical facilitators are not usually trained language assessors, they are often in a position of needing to assess ESL students' clinical language performance. Little is known, however, about the particular areas of clinical performance facilitators focus on when they are assessing ESL students. This paper discusses the results of a study of facilitators' written assessment comments about the clinical performance of a small group of ESL nursing students over a two and a half year period. These comments were documented on students' clinical assessment forms at the end of each placement. The results provide a more detailed insight into facilitators' expectations of students' language performance and the particular challenges faced by ESL students and indicate that facilitators have clear expectations of ESL students regarding communication, learning styles and professional demeanour. These findings may help both ESL students and their facilitators better prepare for clinical placement. © 2011 Elsevier Ltd
Assessing students' English language proficiency during clinical placement: A qualitative evaluation of a language framework
© 2015 Elsevier Ltd. The increase in nursing students for whom English is an additional language requires clinical facilitators to assess students' performance regarding clinical skills, nursing communication and English language. However, assessing language proficiency is a complex process that is often conflated with cultural norms and clinical skills, and facilitators may lack confidence in assessing English language. This paper discusses an evaluation of a set of guidelines developed in a large metropolitan Australian university to help clinical facilitators make decisions about students' English language proficiency. The study found that the guidelines were useful in helping facilitators assess English language. However, strategies to address identified language problems needed to be incorporated to enable the guidelines to also be used as a teaching tool. The study concludes that to be effective, such guidelines need embedding within a systematic approach that identifies and responds to students who may be underperforming due to a low level of English language proficiency
Time scale competition leading to fragmentation and recombination transitions in the coevolution of network and states
We study the co-evolution of network structure and node states in a model of
multiple state interacting agents. The system displays two transitions, network
recombination and fragmentation, governed by time scales that emerge from the
dynamics. The recombination transition separates a frozen configuration,
composed by disconnected network components whose agents share the same state,
from an active configuration, with a fraction of links that are continuously
being rewired. The nature of this transition is explained analytically as the
maximum of a characteristic time. The fragmentation transition, that appears
between two absorbing frozen phases, is an anomalous order-disorder transition,
governed by a crossover between the time scales that control the structure and
state dynamics.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, figures 2 and 4 changed, tile changed, to be
published in PR
Neighborhood models of minority opinion spreading
We study the effect of finite size population in Galam's model [Eur. Phys. J.
B 25 (2002) 403] of minority opinion spreading and introduce neighborhood
models that account for local spatial effects. For systems of different sizes
N, the time to reach consensus is shown to scale as ln N in the original
version, while the evolution is much slower in the new neighborhood models. The
threshold value of the initial concentration of minority supporters for the
defeat of the initial majority, which is independent of N in Galam's model,
goes to zero with growing system size in the neighborhood models. This is a
consequence of the existence of a critical size for the growth of a local
domain of minority supporters
Phase Synchronization and Polarization Ordering of Globally-Coupled Oscillators
We introduce a prototype model for globally-coupled oscillators in which each
element is given an oscillation frequency and a preferential oscillation
direction (polarization), both randomly distributed. We found two collective
transitions: to phase synchronization and to polarization ordering. Introducing
a global-phase and a polarization order parameters, we show that the transition
to global-phase synchrony is found when the coupling overcomes a critical value
and that polarization order enhancement can not take place before global-phase
synchrony. We develop a self-consistent theory to determine both order
parameters in good agreement with numerical results
Information feedback and mass media effects in cultural dynamics
We study the effects of different forms of information feedback associated
with mass media on an agent-agent based model of the dynamics of cultural
dissemination. In addition to some processes previously considered, we also
examine a model of local mass media influence in cultural dynamics. Two
mechanisms of information feedback are investigated: (i) direct mass media
influence, where local or global mass media act as an additional element in the
network of interactions of each agent, and (ii) indirect mass media influence,
where global media acts as a filter of the influence of the existing network of
interactions of each agent. Our results generalize previous findings showing
that cultural diversity builds-up by increasing the strength of the mass media
influence. We find that this occurs independently of the mechanisms of action
(direct or indirect) of the mass media message. However, through an analysis of
the full range of parameters measuring cultural diversity, we establish that
the enhancement of cultural diversity produced by interaction with mass media
only occurs for strong enough mass media messages. In comparison with previous
studies a main different result is that weak mass media messages, in
combination with agent-agent interaction, are efficient in producing cultural
homogeneity. Moreover, the homogenizing effect of weak mass media messages are
more efficient for direct local mass media messages than for global mass media
messages or indirect global mass media influences.Comment: 20n pages, 10 figure
Frequency dynamics of gain-switched injection-locked semiconductor lasers
The frequency dynamics of gain-switched singlemode semiconductor lasers subject to optical injection is investigated. The requirements for low time jitter and reduced frequency chirp operation are studied as a function of the frequency mismatch between the master and slave lasers. Suppression of the power overshoot, typical during gain-switched operation, can be achieved for selected frequency detunings
Selfsimilar Domain Growth, Localized Structures and Labyrinthine Patterns in Vectorial Kerr Resonators
We study domain growth in a nonlinear optical system useful to explore
different scenarios that might occur in systems which do not relax to
thermodynamic equilibrium. Domains correspond to equivalent states of different
circular polarization of light. We describe three dynamical regimes: a
coarsening regime in which dynamical scaling holds with a growth law dictated
by curvature effects, a regime in which localized structures form, and a regime
in which polarization domain walls are modulationally unstable and the system
freezes in a labyrinthine pattern.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
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