1,902 research outputs found
Delivering the business value of information technology: Evaluation practices of construction SME\u27s
With cal/sfrom the govemmentfor the construction industry to improve its peiformance and openly embrace information technology (IT), this research sought to examine the practices that organisations use to evaluate and justify their investments in IT. It was considered that this would enable those areas for improving the evaluation process to be identified and the business value of IT was maximised. A questionnaire survey was used to obtain information about the evaluation practices of 126 construction organisations. The analysis of their responses identified three key findings. First, different organisation types significantly differ in the amount they investment in IT and firm size (i.e. in terms of turnover and number of employees) does not influence investment levels in IT. Second, the evaluation process that is adopted by construction organisations is used as a both control and learning mechanism. Third, a major barrier to justifying IT investments was attributed to having no strategic vision in place. Thus, it is concluded that if construction organisations are to leverage the benefits of IT and deliver business value to customers and suppliers in their supply chain then IT should form an integral part of their business strategy
Observed behaviour of old railway embankments formed of ash and dumped clay fill
Many old railway embankments were originally formed from loose dumped clay fill on which ash fill was subsequently placed to maintain the track level. These have required considerable maintenance, primarily because of embankment movements. They are mostly covered by trees, and tree roots are present in both fills. As part of a London Underground Limited programme of stabilisation works in the 1990s, two embankments were instrumented to investigate the mechanisms and causes of movement. Lateral deformations, settlements and pore pressures were measured. This paper describes the instrumentation and monitoring techniques that were adopted and presents the findings from the study. It was found that non-recoverable seasonal movements occur in both the ash fill and the clay fill. The former occur in dry weather, particularly in the slopes of the embankments crests, due to ash particle mobility under train loading when the ash is dry. Clay fill deformations are exacerbated by the presence of tree roots. Movements correlate well with climate, as quantified by the soil moisture deficit determined from meteorological data. Establishing the mechanisms of movement within these ashâclay fill embankments helped to guide the design of stabilising measures
Predicting CD4 T-cell reconstitution following paediatric haematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation is an increasingly common treatment for children with a range of haematological disorders. Conditioning with cytotoxic chemotherapy and total body irradiation leaves patients severely immunocompromised. T-cell reconstitution can take several years due to delayed restoration of thymic output. Understanding T-cell reconstitution in children is complicated by normal immune system maturation, heterogeneous diagnoses, and sparse uneven sampling due to the long time spans involved. We describe here a mechanistic mathematical model for CD4 T-cell immune reconstitution following pediatric transplantation. Including relevant biology and using mixed-effects modelling allowed the factors affecting reconstitution to be identified. Bayesian predictions for the long-term reconstitution trajectories of individual children were then obtained using early post-transplant data. The model was developed using data from 288 children; its predictive ability validated on data from a further 75 children, with long-term reconstitution predicted accurately in 81% of patients. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved
Efficient preparation and detection of microwave dressed-state qubits and qutrits with trapped ions
We demonstrate a method for preparing and detecting all eigenstates of a three-level microwave dressed system with a single trapped ion. The method significantly reduces the experimental complexity of gate operations with dressed-state qubits, as well as allowing all three of the dressed states to be prepared and detected, thereby providing access to a qutrit that is well protected from magnetic field noise. In addition, we demonstrate individual addressing of the clock transitions in two ions using a strong static magnetic field gradient, showing that our method can be used to prepare and detect microwave dressed states in a string of ions when performing multi-ion quantum operations with microwave and radio frequency fields. The individual addressability of clock transitions could also allow for the control of pairwise interaction strengths between arbitrary ions in a string using lasers
The narratives of Hardship: : The new and the old poor in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis in Europe
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Hulya Dagdeviren, Matthew Donoghue, and Lars Meier, âThe narratives of hardship: the new and the old poor in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis in Europeâ, The Sociological Review, vol. 65 (2): 369-385, May 2017. The final, definitive version of record is available online at doi: https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-954X.12403. Published by SAGE.This paper examines poverty and hardship in Europe after the 2008 crisis, using household interviews in nine European countries. A number of findings deserve highlighting. First, making a distinction between âthe old poorâ (those who lived in poverty before as well as after the crisis) and âthe new poorâ (thosewho fell into hardship after the crisis), we show that hardship is experienced quite differently by these groups. Second, the household narratives showed that while material deprivations constitute an important aspect of hardship, the themes of insecurity and dependency also emerged as fundamental dimensions. In contrast to popular political discourse in countries such as the UK, dependency on welfare or family was experienced as a source of distress and manifested as a form of hardship by participants in all countries covered in this study.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
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On Visible Homelessness and the Micro-Aesthetics of Public Space
In this article, we investigate the circumstances that have produced the current municipal regulatory approach to homelessness in the City of Melbourne, Victoria, and the ways in which visibly homeless people are policed through a micro-aesthetics of their presence in public space, which involves the monitoring of their bodily demeanour and their physical possessions. Our study contributes to and draws from a range of debates, including studies of the governmental conjunction of poverty and crime, analysis of the co-implication of law and spatiality, research on the criminalisation of homelessness and homeless people, and the burgeoning criminological interest in the significance of the visual field for our understandings of crime and criminality. This article recounts how homelessness, public space and questions of aesthetics have recently coalesced in debates about the regulation of homelessness in the public space of Melbourneâs city centre. It approaches the issues through comparative consideration of genres of municipal management frameworks in other jurisdictions, detailed textual consideration of the Protocol on Homelessness in the City of Melbourne and an empirical study of visible homelessness in the public places of central Melbourne
Constraining the formation history of the TOI-1338/BEBOP-1 circumbinary planetary system
The recent discovery of multiple planets in the circumbinary system
TOI-1338/BEBOP-1 raises questions about how such a system formed. The formation
of the system was briefly explored in the discovery paper, but only to answer
the question do current pebble accretion models have the potential to explain
the origin of the system? We use a global model of circumbinary planet
formation that utilises N-body simulations, including prescriptions for planet
migration, gas and pebble accretion, and interactions with a circumbinary disc,
to explore the disc parameters that could have led to the formation of the
TOI-1338/BEBOP-1 system. With the disc lifetime being the main factor in
determining how planets form, we limit our parameter space to those that
determine the disc lifetime. These are: the strength of turbulence in the disc,
the initial disc mass, and the strength of the external radiation field that
launches photoevaporative winds. When comparing the simulated systems to
TOI-1338/BEBOP-1, we find that only discs with low levels of turbulence are
able to produce similar systems. The radiation environment has a large effect
on the types of planetary systems that form, whilst the initial disc mass only
has limited impact since the majority of planetary growth occurs early in the
disc lifetime. With the most TOI-1338/BEBOP-1 like systems all occupying
similar regions of parameter space, our study shows that observed circumbinary
planetary systems can potentially constrain the properties of planet forming
discs.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 15 pages, 10 figure
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