199 research outputs found
Instructor College Virtual Swap Meet: A Model for Developing an Instruction Community
Many educators, newbies and veterans alike, find themselves facing the same problems as their students; there is an overabundance of helpful information available, and getting started can be overwhelming and disorienting. In an effort to fill the need for constant professional development in the area of instruction, the University of Michigan Libraries have created the Instructor College. The Instructor College has attempted several versions of an institutionally-curated repository of resources to support library instruction.
This year the Instructor College Steering Committee is working with a School of Information University Library Associate to create a more flexible repository for these materials. In addition to including strong content such as visual teacher prep materials, scholarly articles, interesting handouts & lesson plans, and assessment ideas, this repository has many other features making the repository easy to use. Characteristics include the following features:
âą a streamlined submission and retrieval interface
âą categorical organization of materials in diverse formats
âą custom tagging, user rating and reviewing
The Instructor College would like to present the pilot version of this repository at LOEX in order to receive feedback on the design and content. The planning and development behind the creation of Instructor Collegeâs repository will be discussed in brief to illustrate the feasibility of implementation of similar systems at other institutions. We are also interested in generating interest within the library community in order to solicit librarian participation and to encourage the grassroots development of similar repositories at other libraries
Motivating social distancing during the Covid-19 pandemic: An online experiment. ESRI Working Paper No. 658 April 2020
Social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic will save lives. We tested communication strategies to promote social
distancing via an online experiment (N = 500) commissioned by Irelandâs Department of Health. A control group saw a current
informational poster. Two treatment groups saw similar posters with messages that highlighted: (i) the risk of transmission to
identifiable persons vulnerable to COVID-19; (ii) the exponential nature of transmission. We then measured judgements of
behaviours previously identified by focus groups as âmarginalâ (meaning that people were not sure whether they were
advisable, such meeting others outdoors, or visiting parents). We recorded intention to undertake behaviours and stated
acceptability of behaviours. Our hypotheses, that both treatments would increase participantsâ caution about marginal
behaviours, were preregistered (i.e. lodged with an international organisation for open science before data collection). Results
confirmed the hypotheses. The findings suggest that the thought of infecting vulnerable people or large numbers of people can
motivate social distancing. This has implications for communications strategies. The stud
An experiment for regulatory policy on broadband speed advertising. ESRI WP641, November 2019
Identifying whether hyperbolic advertising claims influence consumers is important for consumer protection, but differentiating mere âpufferyâ from misleading advertising is not straightforward. We conducted a pre-registered experiment to determine whether pseudo-technical advertising claims about broadband speed bias consumer choice. We tested whether these claims lead consumers to (i) make suboptimal choices and (ii) choose faster, more expensive broadband packages than they otherwise would. We also tested a potential policy response, consisting of consumer information on broadband speeds and how they are advertised. One-in-five consumers chose a provider advertising âlightning fastâ broadband over another offering the same speed at a cheaper price. Puffery also led consumers to choose faster, more expensive packages than consumers who saw no such claims. The information intervention (i) decreased the proportion of suboptimal decisions, (ii) increased the likelihood that consumers switched package, and (iii) improved understanding of speed descriptions. The findings suggest that a relatively soft regulatory intervention may benefit broadband consumers
Electron irradiation effects on superconductivity in PdTe: an application of a generalized Anderson theorem
Low temperature ( 20~K) electron irradiation with 2.5 MeV relativistic
electrons was used to study the effect of controlled non-magnetic disorder on
the normal and superconducting properties of the type-II Dirac semimetal
PdTe. We report measurements of longitudinal and Hall resistivity, thermal
conductivity and London penetration depth using tunnel-diode resonator
technique for various irradiation doses. The normal state electrical
resistivity follows Matthiessen rule with an increase of the residual
resistivity at a rate of 0.77cm/. London penetration depth and thermal
conductivity results show that the superconducting state remains fully gapped.
The superconducting transition temperature is suppressed at a non-zero rate
that is about sixteen times slower than described by the Abrikosov-Gor'kov
dependence, applicable to magnetic impurity scattering in isotropic,
single-band -wave superconductors. To gain information about the gap
structure and symmetry of the pairing state, we perform a detailed analysis of
these experimental results based on insight from a generalized Anderson theorem
for multi-band superconductors. This imposes quantitative constraints on the
gap anisotropies for each of the possible pairing candidate states. We conclude
that the most likely pairing candidate is an unconventional
state. While we cannot exclude the conventional and the triplet
, we demonstrate that these states require additional assumptions about
the orbital structure of the disorder potential to be consistent with our
experimental results, e.g., a ratio of inter- to intra-band scattering for the
singlet state significantly larger than one. Due to the generality of our
theoretical framework, we think that it will also be useful for irradiation
studies in other spin-orbit-coupled multi-orbital systems.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figure
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Why equity is fundamental in climate change policy research
The editorial article rebuts the common assertions that equity is irrelevant in a post Paris climate research and argue that analyses of equity and justice are essential for our ability to understand climate politics and contribute to concrete efforts to achieve adequate, fair and enduring climate action for present and future generations
What works to increase charitable donations? A meta-review with meta-meta-analysis
Many charities rely on donations to support their work addressing some of the worldâs most pressing problems. We conducted a meta-review to determine what interventions work to increase charitable donations. We found 21 systematic reviews incorporating 1339 primary studies and over 2,139,938 participants. Our meta-meta-analysis estimated the average effect of an intervention on charitable donation size and incidence: r = 0.08 (95% CI [0.03, 0.12]). Due to limitations in the included systematic reviews, we are not certain this estimate reflects the true overall effect size. The most robust evidence found suggests charities could increase donations by (1) emphasising individual beneficiaries, (2) increasing the visibility of donations, (3) describing the impact of the donation, and (4) enacting or promoting tax-deductibility of the charity. We make recommendations for improving primary research and reviews about charitable donations, and how to apply the meta-review findings to increase charitable donations
The G-77, BASIC, and global climate governance: a new era in multilateral environmental negotiations
Ethical choices behind quantifications of fair contributions under the Paris Agreement
The Parties to the UNFCCC and Paris Agreement agreed to act on the basis of equity to protect the climate system. Equitable effort sharing is an irreducibly normative matter, yet some influential studies have sought to create quantitative indicators of equitable effort that claim to be value-neutral (despite evident biases). Many of these studies fail to clarify the ethical principles underlying their indicators, some mislabel approaches that favour wealthy nations as âequity approachesâ and some combine contradictory indicators into composites we call derivative benchmarks. This Perspective reviews influential climate effort-sharing assessments and presents guidelines for developing and adjudicating policy-relevant (but not ethically neutral) equity research
No effect of glutamine ingestion on indices of oxidative metabolism in stable COPD
COPD patients have reduced muscle glutamate which may contribute to an impaired response of oxidative metabolism to exercise. We hypothesised that prior glutamine supplementation would enhance View the MathML source peak, View the MathML source at lactate threshold and speed pulmonary oxygen uptake kinetics in COPD. 13 patients (9 males, age 66 ± 5 years, mean ± SD) with severe COPD (mean FEV1 0.88 ± 0.23 l, 33 ± 7% predicted) performed on separate days ramp cycle-ergometry (5â10 W minâ1) to volitional exhaustion and subsequently square-wave transitions to 80% estimated lactate threshold (LT) following consumption of either placebo (CON) or 0.125 g kg bmâ1 of glutamine (GLN) in 5 ml kg bmâ1 placebo. Oral glutamine had no effect on peak or View the MathML source at LT, {View the MathML source peak: CON = 0.70 ± 0.1 l minâ1 vs. GLN = 0.73 ± 0.2 l minâ1; LT: CON = 0.57 ± 0.1 l minâ1 vs. GLN = 0.54 ± 0.1 l minâ1} or View the MathML source kinetics {tau: CON = 68 ± 22 s vs. GLN = 68 ± 16 s}. Ingestion of glutamine before exercise did not improve indices of oxidative metabolism in this patient group
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