81,745 research outputs found
Dichromated-gelatin hologram process for improved optical quality
Optical distortions are eliminated by use of wetting agency followed by sequential immersion in several alcohol-water baths of increasing alcohol concentration. Dehydration proceeds uniformly over surface of gelatin. Dried plate is free of optically-distorting thickness variations
Apparatus for statistical time-series analysis of electrical signals
An apparatus for performing statistical time-series analysis of complex electrical signal waveforms, permitting prompt and accurate determination of statistical characteristics of the signal is presented
A real-time statistical time-series analyzer
Device extracts average frequency of human speech and produces second, third, and fourth moments of instantaneous frequency about this average. It operates on electrical time representation of input signal, performs statistical analysis on zero-crossing of almost any signal, and does not require specialized personnel to operate it
Occupation, mental illness and medium security: A study of occupational engagement in two forensic regional secure units
Research investigating occupational experience among people with mental
illness has highlighted their difficulties in selecting, organising, valuing, enjoying
and competently performing occupations. Although occupational therapy
literature consistently identifies environmental factors as key in facilitating
successful and valued engagement, few authors have studied the implications
of detention in secure mental health settings for this population.
This study investigated the occupational experiences of five people with
schizophrenia in two forensic regional secure units. Quantitative and qualitative
methodologies were used, with semi-structured interviews adding depth and
subjectivity to Occupational Questionnaire (Smith et al 1986) responses. The
quantitative data were analysed using non-parametric analysis, with content
analysis applied to the qualitative data.
Time-use was characterised predominantly by engagement in passive
leisure and rest occupations. This reflects the findings of both inpatient and
community-based studies elsewhere and suggests that mental illness is a common
factor influencing time-use. The participants chose occupations based on
expectations of enjoyment and success, and associations with independence
and normality. Significant correlations were found between perceived competence,
value and enjoyment (p<0.01), and the participants were more likely to enjoy
self-chosen occupations (p<0.05).
Forensic occupational therapists must use evidence to optimise resources
and deliver interventions that facilitate choice and autonomy and reflect
individual needs. Further research with larger samples and longitudinal
methodologies will facilitate generalisation and establish temporal perspective
Beyond safety to wellbeing: How local authorities can mitigate the mental health risks of living in houses in multiple occupation
The regulation of houses in multiple occupation (HMOs) by local authorities focuses on ensuring the physical safety of occupants through adequate standards of building quality, safety provision and management suitability. However, it has been suggested that HMOs may also pose a particular threat to the mental health of residents. In this paper we consider the suitability of current regulations to tackle the possible risks to the mental health of HMO residents and then outline how the current public health agenda may present an opportunity for environmental health professionals to tackle these issues in new ways. Using a framework which encompasses the psychosocial processes thought to link residents? mental health with their housing conditions, we describe how local authorities can address some of the mental health risks posed by HMOs but that the current enforcement culture, in which prosecution is seen as a last resort makes decisive action against landlords very difficult. In recognising the many vulnerable households living in HMOs, we argue that local authorities dealing with housing standards and environmental management are strategically placed to be more ambitious and proactive in protecting the health of local residents particularly through the developing public health and wellbeing partnerships. We call for empirical research to look at how local authorities actually use current legislation as well as other strategies to manage HMOs and protect the mental health of tenants
The Dynamo Effects in Laboratory Plasmas
A concise review of observations of the dynamo effect in laboratory
plasmas is given. Unlike many astrophysical systems, the laboratory pinch
plasmas are driven magnetically. When the system is overdriven, the resultant
instabilities cause magnetic and flow fields to fluctuate, and their
correlation induces electromotive forces along the mean magnetic field. This
-effect drives mean parallel electric current, which, in turn, modifies
the initial background mean magnetic structure towards the stable regime. This
drive-and-relax cycle, or the so-called self-organization process, happens in
magnetized plasmas in a time scale much shorter than resistive diffusion time,
thus it is a fast and unquenched dynamo process. The observed -effect
redistributes magnetic helicity (a measure of twistedness and knottedness of
magnetic field lines) but conserves its total value. It can be shown that fast
and unquenched dynamos are natural consequences of a driven system where
fluctuations are statistically either not stationary in time or not homogeneous
in space, or both. Implications to astrophysical phenomena will be discussed.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Magnetohydrodynamic
Industry structure and regulation
As private firms become increasingly involved in the development of key infrastructure, redefining the role of government from that of serviceprovider to regulator presents both challenges and opportunities. The factors that give rise to sector reforms color how much policymakers invest in regulatory design during the reform process. Nevertheless, two factors are essential to sustainable sector and regulatory reform. First, the right structure must be established for the industry concerned, a structure that allows competition appropriate for that industry. Second, the objectives of regulation must be well defined, with a clear distinction between policymaking, policy implementation, and operations. The extent to which competition can be harnessed to help make regulation efficient, effective, and sustainable depends on the intrinsic technical characteristics of the sector. Each decision affects the sustainability of the regulatory regime in the face of the threat of regulatory capture (both political and commercial). Careful regulatory design is crucial not only for successful sectoral reform but also to balance the interests of various actors (government, consumers, developers, investors, and financiers). One model that has been relatively successful combines new entry, unbundled services, and the unambiguous spelling out of the legal rights and duties for both public and private service providers, administered by an autonomous regulatory authority. Problems with regulation often result as much from inadequate attention to sector structure and fostering competition as from weaknesses in the regulatory authority's institutional capacity. As for the tools of regulation, despite differences in some details between licenses and concessions (and their many contractual variations), these are basically instruments that establish the rights and obligations of contracting parties. Choices about where these rights and obligations are located in the legal hierarchy are shaped by a country's institutional capacity and legal traditions. But the existence of instruments to establish those rights and obligations does not eliminate the need for institutionsto administer them, and thus carry out the regulatory function. Establishing effective sectorwide regulation can be difficult in a developing country, but it is necessary. Policymakers will be able to create effective regulatory regimes where adequate attention is given to sector structure, competition, and institution-building.Environmental Economics&Policies,Trade Finance and Investment,Knowledge Economy,ICT Policy and Strategies,Decentralization,Environmental Economics&Policies,Administrative&Regulatory Law,ICT Policy and Strategies,Water and Industry,Knowledge Economy
Portable, high intensity isotopic neutron source provides increased experimental accuracy
Small portable, high intensity isotopic neutron source combines twelve curium-americium beryllium sources. This high intensity of neutrons, with a flux which slowly decreases at a known rate, provides for increased experimental accuracy
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