889 research outputs found
Investigation of the starting transients of high performance solid-propellant motors
The starting transients of solid propellant engines were investigated to develop design principles for predicting transients in high performance igniter and engine configurations. Research and diagnosis were conducted on the processes affecting ignition transients, such as heat flux, igniter, flame spreading over the surface, and nonsteady combustion gas dynamics. Abstracts of published reports related to this research are presented. Topics discussed include: development of an analytical model, analytical prediction of the entire ignition transient, transient behavior of pressure and regression rate during reignition after shut-down, and problems associated with restarting hybrid rocket engines
The starting transient of solid propellant rocket motors with high internal gas velocities
A comprehensive analytical model which considers time and space development of the flow field in solid propellant rocket motors with high volumetric loading density is described. The gas dynamics in the motor chamber is governed by a set of hyperbolic partial differential equations, that are coupled with the ignition and flame spreading events, and with the axial variation of mass addition. The flame spreading rate is calculated by successive heating-to-ignition along the propellant surface. Experimental diagnostic studies have been performed with a rectangular window motor (50 cm grain length, 5 cm burning perimeter and 1 cm hydraulic port diameter), using a controllable head-end gaseous igniter. Tests were conducted with AP composite propellant at port-to-throat area ratios of 2.0, 1.5, 1.2, and 1.06, and head-end pressures from 35 to 70 atm. Calculated pressure transients and flame spreading rates are in very good agreement with those measured in the experimental system
A literature review of the use of gamification in accounting education
[EN] Gamification is a tool that is increasingly used in the field of teaching at all levels of education, from
primary to university. Despite the fact that Business Management and Accounting have not remained
on the sidelines in studies on the use of game-based learning, the scarcity of such work in this field
provides us with only a limited vision of the research that is being carried out in the area. In order to fill
this research gap, this paper analyses the academic literature in detail on the use of gamification in
accounting education. To this end, an in-depth review of scientific documents retrieved from academic
databases has been carried out with the aim of: a) identifying the methodologies used in the research,
b) examining the types of games used by researchers, c) establishing the different educational stages
where this research is being carried out, d) analysing the samples used, and e) analysing the results
obtained in the studies. The results obtained from this review have made it possible to recognise some
of the most recurrent work and other research areas in which further exploration can be undertaken
within the field of gamification and accounting.Queiro-Ameijieras, CM.; Martí-Parreño, J.; Seguí-Mas, E.; Summerfield, L. (2019). A literature review of the use of gamification in accounting education. IATED. 7662-7667. https://doi.org/10.21125/iceri.2019.1822S7662766
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The UK WTC 9/11 evacuation study: methodologies used in the elicitation and storage of human factors data
This paper describes the methodologies employed in the collection and storage of first-hand accounts of evacuation experiences derived from face-to-face interviews with evacuees from the World Trade Center (WTC) Twin Towers complex on 11 September 2001. In particular the paper describes the development of the High-rise Evacuation Evaluation Database (HEED). This is a flexible qualitative research tool which contains the full transcribed interview accounts and coded evacuee experiences extracted from those transcripts. The data and information captured and stored in the HEED database is not only unique, but it provides a means to address current and emerging issues relating to human factors associated with the evacuation of high-rise buildings
Differential electrophysiological response during rest, self-referential, and non-self-referential tasks in human posteromedial cortex
The electrophysiological basis for higher brain activity during rest and internally directed cognition within the human default mode network
(DMN) remains largely unknown. Here we use intracranial recordings in
the human posteromedial cortex (PMC), a core node within the DMN,
during conditions of cued rest, autobiographical judgments, and
arithmetic processing. We found a heterogeneous profile of PMC
responses in functional, spatial, and temporal domains. Although the
majority of PMC sites showed increased broad gamma band activity
(30-180 Hz) during rest, some PMC sites, proximal to the retrosplenial
cortex, responded selectively to autobiographical stimuli. However, no
site responded to both conditions, even though they were located within
the boundaries of the DMN identified with resting-state functional
imaging and similarly deactivated during arithmetic processing. These
findings, which provide electrophysiological evidence for heterogeneity
within the core of the DMN, will have important implications for
neuroimaging studies of the DMN
Effective one-dimensionality of AC hopping conduction in the extreme disorder limit
It is argued that in the limit of extreme disorder AC hopping is dominated by
"percolation paths". Modelling a percolation path as a one-dimensional path
with a sharp jump rate cut-off leads to an expression for the universal AC
conductivity, that fits computer simulations in two and three dimensions better
than the effective medium approximation.Comment: 6 postscript figure
No more, no less - A formal model for serverless computing
Serverless computing, also known as Functions-as-a-Service, is a recent
paradigm aimed at simplifying the programming of cloud applications. The idea
is that developers design applications in terms of functions, which are then
deployed on a cloud infrastructure. The infrastructure takes care of executing
the functions whenever requested by remote clients, dealing automatically with
distribution and scaling with respect to inbound traffic.
While vendors already support a variety of programming languages for
serverless computing (e.g. Go, Java, Javascript, Python), as far as we know
there is no reference model yet to formally reason on this paradigm. In this
paper, we propose the first formal programming model for serverless computing,
which combines ideas from both the -calculus (for functions) and the
-calculus (for communication). To illustrate our proposal, we model a
real-world serverless system. Thanks to our model, we are also able to capture
and pinpoint the limitations of current vendor technologies, proposing possible
amendments
Patterns of cortical activity during the observation of Public Service Announcements and commercial advertisings
Background: In the present research we were interested to study the cerebral activity of a group of healthy subjects during the observation a documentary intermingled by a series of TV advertisements. In particular, we desired to examine whether Public Service Announcements (PSAs) are able to elicit a different pattern of activity, when compared with a different class of commercials, and correlate it with the memorization of the showed stimuli, as resulted from a following subject's verbal interview.Methods: We recorded the EEG signals from a group of 15 healthy subjects and applied the High Resolution EEG techniques in order to estimate and map their Power Spectral Density (PSD) on a realistic cortical model. The single subjects' activities have been z-score transformed and then grouped to define four different datasets, related to subjects who remembered and forgotten the PSAs and to subjects who remembered and forgotten cars commercials (CAR) respectively, which we contrasted to investigate cortical areas involved in this encoding process. . Results: The results we here present show that the cortical activity elicited during the observation of the TV commercials that were remembered (RMB) is higher and localized in the left frontal brain areas when compared to the activity elicited during the vision of the TV commercials that were forgotten (FRG) in theta and gamma bands for both categories of advertisements (PSAs and CAR). Moreover, the cortical maps associated with the PSAs also show an increase of activity in the alpha and beta band.Conclusions: In conclusion, the TV advertisements that will be remembered by the experimental population have increased their cerebral activity, mainly in the left hemisphere. These results seem to be congruent with and well inserted in the already existing literature, on this topic, related to the HERA model. The different pattern of activity in different frequency bands elicited by the observation of PSAs may be justified by the existence of additional cortical networks processing these kind of audiovisual stimuli. Further research with an extended set of subjects will be necessary to further validate the observations reported in this paper. © 2010 Babiloni et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd
Activation and modulation of antiviral and apoptotic genes in pigs infected with classical swine fever viruses of high, moderate or low virulence
The immune response to CSFV and the strategies of this virus to evade and suppress the pigs’ immune system are still poorly understood. Therefore, we investigated the transcriptional response in the tonsils, median retropharyngeal lymph node (MRLN), and spleen of pigs infected with CSFV strains of similar origin with high, moderate, and low virulence. Using a porcine spleen/intestinal cDNA microarray, expression levels in RNA pools prepared from infected tissue at 3 dpi (three pigs per virus strain) were compared to levels in pools prepared from uninfected homologue tissues (nine pigs). A total of 44 genes were found to be differentially expressed. The genes were functionally clustered in six groups: innate and adaptive immune response, interferon-regulated genes, apoptosis, ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis, oxidative phosphorylation and cytoskeleton. Significant up-regulation of three IFN-γ-induced genes in the MRLNs of pigs infected with the low virulence strain was the only clear qualitative difference in gene expression observed between the strains with high, moderate and low virulence. Real-time PCR analysis of four response genes in all individual samples largely confirmed the microarray data at 3 dpi. Additional PCR analysis of infected tonsil, MRLN, and spleen samples collected at 7 and 10 dpi indicated that the strong induction of expression of the antiviral response genes chemokine CXCL10 and 2′–5′ oligoadenylate synthetase 2, and of the TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) gene at 3 dpi, decreased to lower levels at 7 and 10 dpi. For the highly and moderately virulent strains, this decrease in antiviral and apoptotic gene expression coincided with higher levels of virus in these immune tissues
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