7,090 research outputs found

    Repository as a service (RaaS)

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    In his oft-quoted seminal paper ‘Institutional Repositories: Essential Infrastructure For Scholarship In The Digital Age’ Clifford Lynch (2003) described the Institutional Repository as “a set of services that a university offers to the members of its community for the management and dissemination of digital materials created by the institution and its community members.” This paper seeks instead to define the repository service at a more primitive level, without the specialism of being an ‘Institutional Repository’, and looks at how it can viewed as providing a service within appropriate boundaries, and what that could mean for the future development of repositories, our expectations of what repositories should be, and how they could fit into the set of services required to deliver an Institutional Repository service as describe by Lynch.<br/

    I don’t like it because it eats sprouts: Conditioning preferences in children

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    Although little is known about how preferences develop in childhood, work in adults suggests that evaluative responses to stimuli can be acquired through classical conditioning. In two experiments children were exposed to novel cartoon characters, that were either consistently paired with a picture of a disliked food (Brussels sprouts) or a liked food (ice cream). Relative preferences for these stimuli (and others) were measured before and after these paired presentations (Experiment 1): preferences for the cartoon character paired with Brussels sprouts decreased, whereas preferences for the character paired with ice cream increased. These preferences persisted after 10 un-reinforced trials. Experiment 2 replicated this finding using affective priming as an index of preference for the cartoon characters. These findings demonstrate that preferences to novel stimuli can be conditioned in children and result from associations formed between the stimulus and a stimulus possessing positive or negative valence

    Critical behavior of the Hall conductivity at the metal-insulator transition

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    We measure the low-temperature longitudinal and Hall conductivities in a series of Ge:Sb samples at the approach to the metal-insulator transition. Both conductivities critically vanish with the same exponent of 1, in contradiction to the ratio of 2 predicted by the scaling theory of localization

    Compact large‐range cryogenic scanner

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    We describe the construction and operation of a large‐range piezoelectric scanner, suitable for various scanning probe microscopies such as magnetic force, atomic force, and Hall probe microscopies. The instrument is compact and inherently thermally compensated. At room temperature, it has a range of over 2 mm; this range is reduced to 275 μm at 4.2 K. © 1995 American Institute of Physics.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70275/2/RSINAK-66-3-2520-1.pd

    Collisional depolarization of state selected (J,M J ) BaO A 1Σ+ measured by optical–optical double resonance

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    The optical–optical double resonance (OODR) technique is used to investigate the change in magnetic quantum number (M) a state selected molecule undergoes on collision with other molecules. A first linearly polarized dye laser prepares A  1Σ+BaO(v = 1) in the J = 1, M = 0 sublevel. The extent of collisional transfer to other M sublevels of both J = 1 and J = 2 is then probed by a second polarized dye laser which induces fluorescence from the C  1Σ+ state. Elastic collisions (ΔJ = 0) between BaO (A  1Σ+) and CO2 are observed to change M from 0 to ±1 leaving J unchanged. The total elasticM‐changing cross section is σΔM CO2 = 8.4±2.4 Å2. Inelastic collisions (ΔJ = +1’ which transfer molecules to j = 2 also cause M changes. with both Ar and CO2 as collision partners. M, the s p a c e‐f i x e d projection of J, is found to be neither conserved nor randomized. Quantum atom–diatom collision models with quantization axis along the relative velocity vector are considered. Transition amplitudes in this system are evaluated using the l‐dominant and CS approximations

    Plastic Flow, Voltage Bursts, and Vortex Avalanches in Superconductors

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    We use large-scale parallel simulations to compute the motion of superconducting magnetic vortices during avalanches triggered by small field increases. We find that experimentally observable voltage bursts correspond to pulsing vortex movement along branched channels or winding chains, and relate vortex flow images to features of statistical distributions. As pin density is increased, a crossover occurs from interstitial motion in narrow easy-flow winding channels with typical avalanche sizes, to pin-to-pin motion in broad channels, characterized by a very broad distribution of sizes. Our results are consistent with recent experiments.Comment: 4 pages, Latex, 4 figures included. Movies available at http://www-personal.engin.umich.edu/~nor

    Magnetic-Field-Induced Localization Transition in HgCdTe

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    We have performed magnetoresistance and Hall-resistance measurements on low-carrier-concentration n-type samples of Hg_(0.76)Cd_(0.24)Te at millikelvin temperatures. We observe an abrupt rise in the Hall resistance and magnetoresistance at a characteristic field H_c which is a significant function of temperature and which allows us to reject magnetic freezeout or localization by disorder as possible mechanisms. We believe our data provide compelling evidence for a model where the magnetic field induces localization of the electrons into a three-dimensional Wigner lattice
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