30,711 research outputs found
Missed opportunities: Module design to meet the learning and access needs of practitioners - A work based learning pilot in the rehabilitation setting
It is with great pleasure that this report is presented as a result of an exciting project that truly exemplified partnership working. For a Higher Education Institution to come together with an NHS organisation to negotiate and tailor an education initiative in direct response to the needs of both the organisation and its staff is a very positive direction of travel. The project has been possible through the enthusiasm and commitment of its partners, their contribution of resources including time and funding, and the support of others who have played a part in enabling it to happen. The willingness of the students taking part in the pilot module should be recognised as much of what we have learnt from the process and the evaluation of it, will more directly benefit future students rather than the participating students themselves. As with any pilot, there are risks and where challenges have not been foreseen they have been addressed along the way, flexibly and promptly. Whilst a relatively small project, it has generated much interest from others interested in work based learning approaches and potential students from across the health care professions wanting to take part in future courses. On behalf of the Project Team, I hope you find the report useful and encourage you to make contact if you require further information, wish to explore work based learning opportunities (uni-discipline or multi-professional) here at the University or would like to discuss research or evaluation
Emissions of Volatile Organic Compounds Inferred From Airborne Flux Measurements over a Megacity
Toluene and benzene are used for assessing the ability to measure disjunct eddy covariance (DEC) fluxes of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) using Proton Transfer Reaction Mass Spectrometry (PTR-MS) on aircraft. Statistically significant correlation between vertical wind speed and mixing ratios suggests that airborne VOC eddy covariance (EC) flux measurements using PTR-MS are feasible. City-median midday toluene and benzene fluxes are calculated to be on the order of 14.1&plusmn;4.0 mg/m<sup>2</sup>/h and 4.7&plusmn;2.3 mg/m<sup>2</sup>/h, respectively. For comparison the adjusted CAM2004 emission inventory estimates toluene fluxes of 10 mg/m<sup>2</sup>/h along the footprint of the flight-track. Wavelet analysis of instantaneous toluene and benzene measurements during city overpasses is tested as a tool to assess surface emission heterogeneity. High toluene to benzene flux ratios above an industrial district (e.g. 10–15 g/g) including the International airport (e.g. 3–5 g/g) and a mean flux (concentration) ratio of 3.2&plusmn;0.5 g/g (3.9&plusmn;0.3 g/g) across Mexico City indicate that evaporative fuel and industrial emissions play an important role for the prevalence of aromatic compounds. Based on a tracer model, which was constrained by BTEX (BTEX– Benzene/Toluene/Ethylbenzene/m, p, o-Xylenes) compound concentration ratios, the fuel marker methyl-tertiary-butyl-ether (MTBE) and the biomass burning marker acetonitrile (CH<sub>3</sub>CN), we show that a combination of industrial, evaporative fuel, and exhaust emissions account for >87% of all BTEX sources. Our observations suggest that biomass burning emissions play a minor role for the abundance of BTEX compounds in the MCMA (2–13%)
Recommended from our members
Methane emissions inventory verification in southern California
Methane (CH4) and carbon monoxide (CO) mixing ratios were measured at an air quality monitoring station near the Mt. Wilson (MW) Observatory in southern California starting in the spring of 2007. Diurnal variation and mixing ratio correlation (R2 = 0.81) were observed. The correlation results observed agree with previous aircraft measurements collected over the greater Los Angeles (LA) metropolitan area. The consistent agreement between CH4 and CO indicates these gases are well-mixed before reaching the sampling site and the emission source contributions of both compounds are reasonably constant. Since CH4 and CO are considered non-reactive on the time scale of dispersion within the LA urban area and their emission sources are likely to be similarly distributed (e.g., associated with human activities) they are subject to similar scales of atmospheric transport and dilution. This behavior allows the relationship of CH4 and CO to be applied for estimation of CH4 emissions using well-documented CO emissions. Applying this relationship a "top-down" CH4 inventory was calculated for LA County based on the measurements observed at MW and compared with the California Air Resources Board (CARB) "bottom-up" CH4 emissions inventory based on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recommended methodologies. The "top-down" CH4 emissions inventory is approximately one-third greater than CARB's "bottom-up" inventory for LA County. Considering the uncertainties in both methodologies, the different CH4 emissions inventory approaches are in good agreement, although some under and/or uninventoried CH4 sources may exist
Holographic Conformal Window - A Bottom Up Approach
We propose a five-dimensional framework for modeling the background geometry
associated to ordinary Yang-Mills (YM) as well as to nonsupersymmetric gauge
theories possessing an infrared fixed point with fermions in various
representations of the underlying gauge group. The model is based on the
improved holographic approach, on the string theory side, and on the
conjectured all-orders beta function for the gauge theory one. We first analyze
the YM gauge theory. We then investigate the effects of adding flavors and show
that, in the holographic description of the conformal window, the geometry
becomes AdS when approaching the ultraviolet and the infrared regimes. As the
number of flavors increases within the conformal window we observe that the
geometry becomes more and more of AdS type over the entire energy range.Comment: 20 Pages, 3 Figures. v2: references adde
Molecular modelling of the heat capacity and anisotropic thermal expansion of nanoporous hydroxyapatite
International audienceHydroxyapatite, which is the main mineral phase of mammalian bone, occurs in the form of small bricks of colloidal size organized in a way that leaves room to micro-and mesopores. These pores are filled with an electrolyte and confined fluids are recognized for manifesting different dynamical and structural behaviors when compared to bulk fluids. Research on other nanoporous materials reported that confinement may have repercussions on the effective the thermal properties of these materials. Understanding the physical origin of thermal expansion and heat capacity as a function of the hydroxyapatite porosity is, therefore, crucial to predict the thermo-mechanical behavior of bone. Molecular dynamics simulations of hydroxyapatite nanopores (2 nm ≤ H ≤ 16 nm, where H is the size of the nanopore) in contact with liquid water have been used to determine the effect nanoporosity and water confinement on the heat capacity and thermal expansion of this important biomaterial. At temperatures corresponding to in vivo conditions, the thermal expansion of water confined in nanopores smaller than 6 nm was is solid-like but becomes liquid-like in larger nanopores. The heat capacity of confined water exhibits a maximum at pore sizes of approximately 7 nm. An up-scaling strategy taking into account the anomalous behaviour of nanoconfined water is then proposed to determine the effective heat capacity and the effective heat of hydroxyapatite expansion as a function of its porosity, and to predict regions of variability, compared with the bulk, in the thermal properties of porous hydroxyapatite
A Linked Data Approach to Sharing Workflows and Workflow Results
A bioinformatics analysis pipeline is often highly elaborate, due to the inherent complexity of biological systems and the variety and size of datasets. A digital equivalent of the ‘Materials and Methods’ section in wet laboratory publications would be highly beneficial to bioinformatics, for evaluating evidence and examining data across related experiments, while introducing the potential to find associated resources and integrate them as data and services. We present initial steps towards preserving bioinformatics ‘materials and methods’ by exploiting the workflow paradigm for capturing the design of a data analysis pipeline, and RDF to link the workflow, its component services, run-time provenance, and a personalized biological interpretation of the results. An example shows the reproduction of the unique graph of an analysis procedure, its results, provenance, and personal interpretation of a text mining experiment. It links data from Taverna, myExperiment.org, BioCatalogue.org, and ConceptWiki.org. The approach is relatively ‘light-weight’ and unobtrusive to bioinformatics users
Linear confinement without dilaton in bottom-up holography for walking technicolour
In PRD78(2008)055005 [arXiv:0805.1503 [hep-ph]] and PRD79(2009)075004
[arXiv:0809.1324 [hep-ph]], we constructed a holographic description of walking
technicolour theories using both a hard- and a soft-wall model. Here, we show
that the dilaton field becomes phenomenologically irrelevant for the spectrum
of spin-one resonances once a term is included in the Lagrangian that mixes the
Goldstone bosons and the longitudinal components of the axial vector mesons. We
show how this mixing affects our previous results and we make predictions about
how this description of technicolour can be tested.Comment: 7 pages, no figure
Bagging evolutionary feature extraction algorithm for classification
Author name used in this publication: David ZhangBiometrics Research Centre, Department of ComputingVersion of RecordPublishe
New block-based motion estimation for sequences with brightness variation and its application to static sprite generation for video compression
Author name used in this publication: Dagan FengCentre for Multimedia Signal Processing, Department of Electronic and Information Engineering2007-2008 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalVersion of RecordPublishe
- …