1,345 research outputs found

    Electronic educational resources: how to estimate quality?

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    Article is devoted to questions of an assessment of quality of electronic educational resources. Authors provide the list of innovative qualities which electronic educational resources, the principles of an assessment of these qualities, and also the main stages of carrying out technical and technological, psychology and pedagogical and design ergonomic examination of an assessment of quality have to possessСтатья посвящена вопросам оценки качества электронных образовательных ресурсов. Авторы приводят перечень инновационных качеств, которыми должны обладать электронные образовательные ресурсы, принципы оценки данных качеств, а также основные этапы проведения технико-технологической, психолого-педагогической и дизайн-эргономической экспертизы оценки качеств

    What are the challenges and resilience resources identified by informal carers during the first UK COVID-19 lockdown? A longitudinal qualitative study using naturalistic data

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    COVID-19 has posed serious challenges for informal carers living in the UK. This article examines some of the specific challenges facing carers and the resources they used to manage them throughout the first UK lockdown. We used a framework approach to analyse naturalistic, longitudinal data from 30 carers taking part in 96 of Mobilise’s daily Virtual Cuppas between March and July 2020. We found that lack of information and social restrictions cumulatively impacted carers’ sense of certainty, control and motivation. This took an emotional toll on the carers, leading to exhaustion and burden. However, carers quickly established new routines and used humour and self-care to actively manage their wellbeing. Carers received support but also provided it to those in need, including fellow members of the caregiving community, supporting an ecological approach to carer resilience. Our findings may be used to anticipate challenges and promote protective resilience resources in future lockdowns

    Chemoprevention of BBN-Induced Bladder Carcinogenesis by the Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulator Tamoxifen

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    AbstractBladder cancer is the fifth most frequent tumor in men and ninth in women in the United States. Due to a high likelihood of recurrence, effective chemoprevention is a significant unmet need. Estrogen receptors (ERs), primarily ERβ, are expressed in normal urothelium and urothelial carcinoma, and blocking ER function with selective ER modulators such as tamoxifen inhibits bladder cancer cell proliferation in vitro. Herein, the chemoprotective potential of tamoxifen was evaluated in female mice exposed to the bladder-specific carcinogen, N-butyl-N-(4-hydroxybutyl) nitrosamine (BBN). Carcinogen treatment resulted in a 76% tumor incidence and increased mean bladder weights in comparison to controls. In contrast, mice receiving tamoxifen concurrent (8–20 weeks) or concurrent and subsequent (8–32 weeks) to BBN administration had no change in bladder weight and only 10% to 14% incidence of tumors. Non-muscle-invasive disease was present in animals treated with tamoxifen before (5–8 weeks) or after (20–32 weeks) BBN exposure, while incidence of muscle-invasive bladder carcinoma was reduced. ERβ was present in all mice and thus is a potential mediator of the tamoxifen chemoprotective effect. Surprisingly, ERα expression, which was detected in 74% of the mice exposed to BBN alone but not in any controlmice, was correlated with tumor incidence, indicating a possible role for this receptor in carcinogen-induced urothelial tumorigenesis. Thus, these data argue that both ERα and ERβ play a role in modulating carcinogen-induced bladder tumorigenesis. Administration of tamoxifen should be tested as a chemopreventive strategy for patients at high risk for bladder cancer recurrence

    Accuracy of Trace Formulas

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    Using quantum maps we study the accuracy of semiclassical trace formulas. The role of chaos in improving the semiclassical accuracy, in some systems, is demonstrated quantitatively. However, our study of the standard map cautions that this may not be most general. While studying a sawtooth map we demonstrate the rather remarkable fact that at the level of the time one trace even in the presence of fixed points on singularities the trace formula may be exact, and in any case has no logarithmic divergences observed for the quantum bakers map. As a byproduct we introduce fantastic periodic curves akin to curlicues.Comment: 20 pages, uuencoded and gzipped, 1 LaTex text file and 9 PS files for figure

    Semiclassical analysis of the quantum interference corrections to the conductance of mesoscopic systems

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    The Kubo formula for the conductance of a mesoscopic system is analyzed semiclassically, yielding simple expressions for both weak localization and universal conductance fluctuations. In contrast to earlier work which dealt with times shorter than O(log1)O(\log \hbar^{-1}), here longer times are taken to give the dominant contributions. For such long times, many distinct classical orbits may obey essentially the same initial and final conditions on positions and momenta, and the interference between pairs of such orbits is analyzed. Application to a chain of kk classically ergodic scatterers connected in series gives the following results: 13[1(k+1)2]-{1 \over 3} [ 1 - (k+1)^{-2} ] for the weak localization correction to the zero--temperature dimensionless conductance, and 215[1(k+1)4]{2 \over 15} [ 1 - (k+1)^{-4} ] for the variance of its fluctuations. These results interpolate between the well known ones of random scattering matrices for k=1k=1, and those of the one--dimensional diffusive wire for kk \rightarrow \infty.Comment: 53 pages, using RevTeX, plus 3 postscript figures mailed separately. A short version of this work is available as cond-mat/950207

    Determinants of Acceptance of Cervical Cancer Screening in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

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    To describe how demographic characteristics and knowledge of cervical cancer influence screening acceptance among women living in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Multistage cluster sampling was carried out in 45 randomly selected streets in Dar es Salaam. Women between the ages of 25-59 who lived in the sampled streets were invited to a cervical cancer screening; 804 women accepted and 313 rejected the invitation. Information on demographic characteristics and knowledge of cervical cancer were obtained through structured questionnaire interviews. Women aged 35-44 and women aged 45-59 had increased ORs of 3.52 and 7.09, respectively, for accepting screening. Increased accepting rates were also found among single women (OR 2.43) and among women who had attended primary or secondary school (ORs of 1.81 and 1.94). Women who had 0-2 children were also more prone to accept screening in comparison with women who had five or more children (OR 3.21). Finally, knowledge of cervical cancer and awareness of the existing screening program were also associated with increased acceptance rates (ORs of 5.90 and 4.20). There are identifiable subgroups where cervical cancer screening can be increased in Dar es Salaam. Special attention should be paid to women of low education and women of high parity. In addition, knowledge and awareness raising campaigns that goes hand in hand with culturally acceptable screening services will likely lead to an increased uptake of cervical cancer screening

    Aperture, A Large Telescope Using Magnetostriction For Post Deployment Corrections: Final Technical Report of NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) Phase I

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    In summary, astronomical as well as Earth observing applications of the future are counting on larger aperture telescopes than are currently available. Several groups have been working on the topic of enabling large (about 16-m diameter) UV-Vis telescopes for many years. The unique feature of our concept is that magnetic films are used rather than electrostatic films or piezo-electrostatic pads. Our magnetic film concept allows for contiguous correction along the surface, does not require a hard wire connection, and does not require continuous external application of the field. There are many unknowns related to the initial accuracy of the deployed figure prior to the magnetic write head corrections. The length scale over which the corrections need to be applied is also of concern. For, although approximately mm length scale corrections can be made with the MSM plus write head technology, the number of 1 mm patches in a 16 m diameter mirror is too large to contemplate applying individual corrections to each individual patch. However, deployment strategies and the materials available continue to evolve, in particular shape memory composites (SMCs) [34] or alloys (SMAs) [41], such that at this time we see no show-stoppers for this concept. Furthermore, the ability to tune deformations down to much (factors of 10-100) smaller (m) scale opens the futuristic possibility of improving the figure well beyond Strehl values of 90%

    The potential of trading activity income to fund third sector organisations operating in deprived areas

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    In the United Kingdom, as in other countries, Third Sector Organisations (TSOs) have been drawn towards income sources associated with trading activities (Teasdale, 2010), but many remain reliant on grant funding to support such activities (Chell, 2007). Using a multivariate analysis approach and data from the National Survey of Charities and Social Enterprises (NSCSE), it is found that trading activities are used relatively commonly in deprived areas. These organisations are also more likely to attempt to access public sector funds. This suggests policy-makers need to consider the impact of funding cuts on TSOs in the most deprived areas as TSOs are unlikely achieve their objectives without continuing support
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