101,295 research outputs found

    The Library's Place in the Junior College

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    published or submitted for publicatio

    Limited tactile stimulus for prosthetic hands

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    Heat and pressure transducers mounted in prosthetic hand permit wearer to sense temperature and pressure to which hand is subjected

    Bonding titanium to Rene 41 alloy

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    Pair of intermediate materials joined by electron beam welding method welds titanium to Rene 41 alloy. Bond is necessary for combining into one structure high strength-to-density ratio titanium fan blades and temperature resistant nickel-base alloy turbine-buckets in VTOL aircraft lift-fan rotor

    The Constitution and Capital Sentencing: Pursuing Justice and Equality

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    Equal Justice and The Death Penalty: A Legal and Empirical Analysis. By David C. Baldus, George Woodworth and Charles Pulaski, Jr. Boston: Northeastern University Press. 1990. Pp. Vii, 689. $65.0

    Tactile sensing means for prosthetic limbs

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    An improved prosthetic device characterized by a frame and a socket for mounting on the stump of a truncated human appendage is described. Flexible digits extend from the distal end and transducers located within the digits act as sensing devices for detecting tactile stimuli. The transducers are connected through a power circuit with a slave unit supported by a strap and fixed to the stump. The tactile stimuli detected at the sensing devices are reproduced and applied to the skin of the appendage in order to stimulate the sensory organs located therein

    Estimates of primary and secondary particle doses behind aluminum and polyethylene slabs due to incident solar-flare and Van Allen belt protons

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    Primary and secondary particle radiation doses shielded from solar flare and Van Allen belt protons by aluminum and polyethylene slab

    Active engagement with assessment and feedback can improve group-work outcomes and boost student confidence

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    This study involves evaluation of a novel iterative group-based learning task developed to enable students to actively engage with assessment and feedback in order to improve the quality of their written work. The students were all in the final semester of their final year of study and enrolled on either BSc Zoology or BSc Marine and Freshwater Biology at a mainstream UK university, but the findings of this research can be generalised to a wider student body. The main findings are that in a group work context, individual students can use provided assessment criteria to accurately assess the work produced by their group and that their ability to produce and recognise work of a higher quality improves as a result of a social dialogue around self/peer assessment and self/tutor generated feedback. The study also reveals that producing poorer work over-assess and those achieving the highest marks under-assess. Over-assessing students focus to a greater extent upon the superficial deficiencies in their work, whereas under assessing students are more likely to focus on more significant issues. High-achieving under-assessing students lack confidence in their own abilities, but believe feedback provides a confidence boost
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