608 research outputs found
Increasing access to healthy food at a cooperative grocery store
A variety of approaches, including public and private food assistance and community-based models, are being used to address food insecurity. In this participatory project, I worked with representatives of a grocery cooperative and interviewed social services staff and low-income residents from the surrounding community in order to develop programming and policy suggestions for the co-op that could make it more inclusive and affordable, thereby helping to increase community members\u27 food security. In the process, I learned a great deal about the challenges faced by people with low incomes, their resourcefulness, the values that shape the people and organizations included in this study, and the ways that knowledge and power influence the lives of the interviewees. These individual responses lead to structural questions about the food system, especially concerning how people with low incomes experience it. This project demonstrates that social change agents ought to continually reflect upon the values and assumptions that guide their work to persist in making their approaches more just, and that social change is best instigated and carried out from within a community and sustained as part of a larger movement to improve the system and the lives of those most adversely affected by it
Synthesis of Copolymers Based on Benzene and Biphenyl and their Characterization by XRD and DSC
In this work the crystalinity and the thermal transitions of soluble and insoluble in chlorobenzene polyphenylene copolymers (synthesized by oxidative cationic polymerization) were studied. All copolymers had a degree of crystallinity between 44.6 and 66.7 %. With Differential Scanning Calorimentry (DSC) measurements it was found that the copolymers exhibited endothermic peaks in the region 268 up to 286 oC. These peaks in the case of soluble polyphenylenes were attributed to the melting of their crystallites, whereas in the case of insoluble polyphenylenes were attributed to liquid crystal transitions
Shadowing unstable orbits of the Sitnikov elliptic 3-body problem
Errors in numerical simulations of gravitating systems can be magnified
exponentially over short periods of time. Numerical shadowing provides a way of
demonstrating that the dynamics represented by numerical simulations are
representative of true dynamics. Using the Sitnikov Problem as an example, it
is demonstrated that unstable orbits of the 3-body problem can be shadowed for
long periods of time. In addition, it is shown that the stretching of phase
space near escape and capture regions is a cause for the failure of the
shadowing refinement procedure.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figures, accepted in MNRA
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Oscillating shear index, wall shear stress and low density lipoprotein accumulation in human RCAs
This paper was presented at the 3rd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2011), which was held at the Makedonia Palace Hotel, Thessaloniki in Greece. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Italian Union of Thermofluiddynamics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, University of Thessaly, IPEM, the Process Intensification Network, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Heat Transfer Society, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group, and the Energy Institute.Atherosclerosis shows predilection in regions of coronary arteries with hemodynamic
particularities as, local disturbances of Wall Shear Stress (WSS) in space and time, and locally high concentrations of lipoprotein. Six, image-based human deceased, Right Coronary Arteries (RCA) are used to elucidate, a) Low Density Lipoprotein (LDL) transport under steady flow and b) oscillating flow (no mass
transfer). A semi-permeable nature of the arterial wall computational model is incorporated with hydraulic conductivity and permeability treated as WSS dependent. The 3D reconstruction technique is a combination
of angiography and IVUS. LDL is elevated at locations where WSS is low. Under steady flow conditions the area-averaged normalized LDL concentration over the RCAs, using shear dependent water infiltration and endothelial permeability is 9.6 % higher than at entrance. However, under constant water infiltration and endothelial permeability this value is only 3.2 %. High Oscillating Shear Index (OSI) and low average WSS nearly co-locate. Approximately 630000 grid nodes proved to be sufficient enough to accurately describe the oscillating flow and the LDL concentration within the RCAs
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Severity parameter and global importance factor of non-newtonian models in 3D reconstructed human left coronary artery
This paper was presented at the 3rd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2011), which was held at the Makedonia Palace Hotel, Thessaloniki in Greece. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Italian Union of Thermofluiddynamics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, University of Thessaly, IPEM, the Process Intensification Network, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Heat Transfer Society, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group, and the Energy Institute.The capabilities and limitations of various molecular viscosity models, when testing Left Coronary Artery (LCA) tree, were analyzed via: molecular viscosity, local and global non-Newtonian importance factors, Wall Shear Stress (WSS) and Wall Shear Stress Gradient (WSSG). Seven non-Newtonian molecular viscosity models, plus the Newtonian one, were compared. Dense grid of 620000 nodes located, mostly, at near to low WSS flow regions (endothelium regions) is needed for current LCA application. The WSS
distribution yields a consistent LCA pattern for nearly all non-Newtonian models. High molecular viscosity, low WSS low WSSG values appear at proximal LCA regions at the outer walls of the major bifurcation. The global importance factor for the non-Newtonian power law model yields 76.7% (non-Newtonian flow), while for the Generalized power law model this value is 6.1% (Newtonian flow). The capabilities of the applied non-Newtonian law models appear at low strain rates. The Newtonian blood flow treatment is considered to be a good approximation at mid-and high-strain rates. In general, the non-Newtonian power law and the Generalized power law blood viscosity models are considered to approximate the molecular viscosity and WSS calculations in a more satisfactory way
TEACHERS’ BELIEFS ABOUT EFFECTIVE FOREIGN LANGUAGE TEACHING OF STUDENTS WITH INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY IN A GREEK EFL CONTEXT
Teachers’ beliefs are a central construct in education as they influence their teaching attitude, methods and practices, thus, their exploration becomes particularly important. The aim of the present study is to examine teachers’ beliefs regarding foreign language teaching of students with intellectual disability. The sample consisted of ten English as Foreign Language (EFL) teachers who teach at Greek special/vocational schools in secondary education. Semi-structured interviews were used as a tool for data collection. The research findings suggest a lack of training of EFL teachers regarding specialized foreign language teaching methods for students with intellectual disability. Furthermore, there is a notable lack of training in using digital technology. As a result, further training of EFL teachers in teaching methods and use of digital technology is deemed necessary.
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