1,471 research outputs found

    Engaging youth in post-disaster research: Lessons learned from a creative methods approach

    Get PDF
    Children and youth often demonstrate resilience and capacity in the face of disasters. Yet, they are typically not given the opportunities to engage in youth-driven research and lack access to official channels through which to contribute their perspectives to policy and practice during the recovery process. To begin to fill this void in research and action, this multi-site research project engaged youth from disaster-affected communities in Canada and the United States. This article presents a flexible youth-centric workshop methodology that uses participatory and arts-based methods to elicit and explore youth’s disaster and recovery experiences. The opportunities and challenges associated with initiating and maintaining partnerships, reciprocity and youth-adult power differentials using arts-based methods, and sustaining engagement in post-disaster settings, are discussed. Ultimately, this work contributes to further understanding of the methods being used to conduct research for, with, and about youth.Keywords: youth, disaster recovery, engagement, resilience, arts-based methods, participatory researc

    Kinetic instabilities that limit {\beta} in the edge of a tokamak plasma: a picture of an H-mode pedestal

    Full text link
    Plasma equilibria reconstructed from the Mega-Amp Spherical Tokamak (MAST) have sufficient resolution to capture plasma evolution during the short period between edge-localized modes (ELMs). Immediately after the ELM steep gradients in pressure, P, and density, ne, form pedestals close to the separatrix, and they then expand into the core. Local gyrokinetic analysis over the ELM cycle reveals the dominant microinstabilities at perpendicular wavelengths of the order of the ion Larmor radius. These are kinetic ballooning modes (KBMs) in the pedestal and microtearing modes (MTMs) in the core close to the pedestal top. The evolving growth rate spectra, supported by gyrokinetic analysis using artificial local equilibrium scans, suggest a new physical picture for the formation and arrest of this pedestal.Comment: Final version as it appeared in PRL (March 2012). Minor improvements include: shortened abstract, and better colour table for figures. 4 pages, 6 figure

    Comment on "Drip Paintings and Fractal Analysis", arXiv:0710.4917v2, by K. Jones-Smith, H. Mathur and L.M. Krauss

    Full text link
    In a recent manuscript (arXiv:0710.4917v2), Jones-Smith et al. attempt to use the well-established box-counting technique for fractal analysis to "demonstrate conclusively that fractal criteria are not useful for authentication". Here, in response to what we view to be an extremely simplistic misrepresentation of our earlier work by Jones-Smith et al., we reiterate our position regarding the potential of fractal analysis for artwork authentication. We also point out some of the flaws in the analysis presented in by Jones-Smith et al.Comment: Comment on arXiv:0710.4917v2 [cond-mat.stat-mech

    3-manifolds which are spacelike slices of flat spacetimes

    Full text link
    We continue work initiated in a 1990 preprint of Mess giving a geometric parameterization of the moduli space of classical solutions to Einstein's equations in 2+1 dimensions with cosmological constant 0 or -1 (the case +1 has been worked out in the interim by the present author). In this paper we make a first step toward the 3+1-dimensional case by determining exactly which closed 3-manifolds M^3 arise as spacelike slices of flat spacetimes, and by finding all possible holonomy homomorphisms pi_1(M^3) to ISO(3,1).Comment: 10 page

    Characterisation of the L-mode Scrape Off Layer in MAST: decay lengths

    Full text link
    This work presents a detailed characterisation of the MAST Scrape Off Layer in L-mode. Scans in line averaged density, plasma current and toroidal magnetic field were performed. A comprehensive and integrated study of the SOL was allowed by the use of a wide range of diagnostics. In agreement with previous results, an increase of the line averaged density induced a broadening of the midplane density profile.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figure

    (G)hosting television: Ghostwatch and its medium

    Get PDF
    This article’s subject is Ghostwatch (BBC, 1992), a drama broadcast on Halloween night of 1992 which adopted the rhetoric of live non-fiction programming, and attracted controversy and ultimately censure from the Broadcasting Standards Council. In what follows, we argue that Ghostwatch must be understood as a televisually-specific artwork and artefact. We discuss the programme’s ludic relationship with some key features of television during what Ellis (2000) has termed its era of ‘availability’, principally liveness, mass simultaneous viewing, and the flow of the television super-text. We trace the programme’s television-specific historicity whilst acknowledging its allusions and debts to other media (most notably film and radio). We explore the sophisticated ways in which Ghostwatch’s visual grammar and vocabulary and deployment of ‘broadcast talk’ (Scannell 1991) variously ape, comment upon and subvert the rhetoric of factual programming, and the ends to which these strategies are put. We hope that these arguments collectively demonstrate the aesthetic and historical significance of Ghostwatch and identify its relationship to its medium and that medium’s history. We offer the programme as an historically-reflexive artefact, and as an exemplary instance of the work of art in television’s age of broadcasting, liveness and co-presence

    The human factor in an effective structure management system

    Get PDF
    This paper demonstrates that while an effective structure monitoring system benefits strongly from the integration of modern technologies, human experience and oversight remain the essential component. The myriad of technologies available for structure monitoring and management are improving at a great rate. These technologies provide analysis and oversight at levels which historically have been uneconomical or unachievable. A single instance of the DamWatch application is providing real-time, always-on monitoring of 12,000 dam structures for 3,000 users in the United States (Caldwell, Scannell, & Herbert, 2014). Automated systems can tirelessly monitor data feeds, rapidly perform complex calculations and dispatch notifications. However, this paper argues that the impacts of this growing role for technology, while powerful, is still superseded by the impacts of the human input in structure management systems. An optimal structure management system should be designed with this in mind. This includes ensuring data is complete and accurate, easily accessible and understandable for users. User contribution and involvement in structure management systems should not be limited by an individual’s computer literacy. Users should be trained and supported to ensure they are able to react to and leverage data provided by information systems. Clearly defined protocols allow individuals to make informed decisions and organizations to respond promptly to developing situations. To assess these arguments we will examine a number of case studies. These case studies will focus on hydrologic events which affected bridge and dam structures in the care of multiple, unrelated managing authorities. By exploring the incidents, the responses and the eventual outcomes, we will weigh the role of human data in the effective management of structures exposed to the natural environment
    corecore