249 research outputs found

    Review: The Journal of Dramaturgy, volume 23, issue 1

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    Contents include: Editor\u27s Note; Dramaturgy and Risk in Pakistan; A conversation about The Process of Dramaturgy; Emancipating Dramaturgy: From Pedagogy to Psychagogy; Directing Like a Dramaturg: The Art of Being a Whale. Issue editors: Sydney Cheek-O\u27Donnell, Debra Cardona, Janine Sobeckhttps://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/lmdareview/1045/thumbnail.jp

    Using binary stars to bound the mass of the graviton

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    Interacting white dwarf binary star systems, including helium cataclysmic variable (HeCV) systems, are expected to be strong sources of gravitational radiation, and should be detectable by proposed space-based laser interferometer gravitational wave observatories such as LISA. Several HeCV star systems are presently known and can be studied optically, which will allow electromagnetic and gravitational wave observations to be correlated. Comparisons of the phases of a gravitational wave signal and the orbital light curve from an interacting binary white dwarf star system can be used to bound the mass of the graviton. Observations of typical HeCV systems by LISA could potentially yield an upper bound on the inverse mass of the graviton as strong as h/mg=λg>1×1015h/m_{g} = \lambda_{g} > 1 \times 10^{15} km (mg<1×1024m_{g} < 1 \times 10^{-24} eV), more than two orders of magnitude better than present solar system derived bounds.Comment: 21 pages plus 4 figures; ReVTe

    Concert recording 2015-12-03

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    [Track 01]. Cello concerto in C major / Joseph Haydn -- [Track 02]. Orientale, Spanish dance no. 2 / Enrique Granados -- [Track 03]. March from Music for children / Sergei Prokofiev -- [Track 04]. Kol Nidrei / Max Bruch -- [Track 05]. Quartet for 4 cellos, op. 6 / Josef Werner -- [Track 06]. Suite no. 5 in C minor, BWV 1011 / J.S. Bach -- [Track 07]. Sonata no. 2 in G minor, op. 5, no. 2 / Ludwig van Beethoven -- [Track 08]. Requiem for three cellos and piano, op. 66 / David Popper -- [Track 09]. Concerto for cello in D minor / Edouard Lalo

    In the dedicated pursuit of dedicated capital: restoring an indigenous investment ethic to British capitalism

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    Tony Blair’s landslide electoral victory on May 1 (New Labour Day?) presents the party in power with a rare, perhaps even unprecedented, opportunity to revitalise and modernise Britain’s ailing and antiquated manufacturing economy.* If it is to do so, it must remain true to its long-standing (indeed, historic) commitment to restore an indigenous investment ethic to British capitalism. In this paper we argue that this in turn requires that the party reject the very neo-liberal orthodoxies which it offered to the electorate as evidence of its competence, moderation and ‘modernisation’, which is has internalised, and which it apparently now views as circumscribing the parameters of the politically and economically possible

    Cognitive performance, quality and quantity of movement reflect unhealthy psychological symptoms in adolescents

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    Purpose: The presentation of unhealthy psychological symptoms are rising sharply in adolescents. Detrimental lifestyle behaviours are proposed as both possible causes and consequences. This study set out to compare selected measures of quality and quantity of movement between adolescents with and without unhealthy psychological symptoms.   Methods: Using a cross sectional design, 96 participants completed the study from a whole year group of 166, age (13.36 ± 0.48) male 50.6% from a secondary school in Oxfordshire, England as a part of a larger study (EPIC) between January and April 2017. Measures were taken of quality and quantity of movement: reaction/movement time, gait pattern & physical activity, alongside psychological symptoms. Differences in movement behaviour in relation to psychological symptom and emotional problem presentation were determined using ANOVA. In the event of a significant result for the main factor of each parameter, a Bonferroni -corrected post hoc test was conducted to show the difference between categories in each group. Results for both unhealthy psychological symptoms and emotional problems were grouped into four categories (‘Close to average’, ‘slightly raised’, ‘high’ and ‘very high’).  Results: Early adolescents with very high unhealthy psychological symptoms had 16.79% slower reaction times (p = .003, ηp2 = .170), 13.43% smaller walk ratio (p = .007, ηp2 = .152), 7.13% faster cadence (p = .005, ηp2 = .149), 6.95% less step time (p = .007, ηp2 = .153) and 1.4% less vigorous physical activity (p = .04, ηp2 = .102) than children with close to average psychological symptoms. Early adolescents with very high emotional problems had 12.25% slower reaction times (p = .05, ηp2 = .081), 10.61% smaller walk ratio (p = .02, ηp2 = .108), 6.03% faster cadence (p = .01, ηp2 = .134), 6.07% shorter step time (p = .007, ηp2 = .141) and 1.78% less vigorous physical activity (p = .009, ηp2 = .136) than children with close to average emotional problems.    Conclusions:  Different movement quality and quantity of was present in adolescents with unhealthy psychological symptoms and emotional problems. We propose movement may be used to both monitor symptoms, and as a novel therapeutic behavioural approach. Further studies are required to confirm our findings.

    The effect of breaking sitting time with physical activity breaks on cognitive performance in young people with cerebral palsy : an exposure response cross-over feasibility design

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    Objectives. To assess the feasibility of methods and estimate the potential effect of interrupting sedentary behaviour, with intermittent or continuous physical activity breaks, on cognitive performance in young people with Cerebral Palsy. Methods. A randomised three-arm exposure response cross-over design with process evaluation. Participants were recruited throughout the Thames Valley, UK between 01/11/2018 to 31/03/2020. The three 2 h activity exposure visits included: (i) sitting only (controls), (ii) sitting plus 20 min of moderate-to-vigorous activity burst, or (iii) 4×5 min of moderate-to-vigorous activity bursts, during a 2.5 h sedentary session. Measures of feasibility were sought. Cognitive performance outcomes (using the Eriksen Flanker task and Forward and Backward Digit Span) were delivered before and after the 2 h testing period. Results. 36 participants were randomised (age 13.2±2.7, Gross-Motor Functional Classification System 1–3). Study retention was 83 % across all three interventions and overall missing data for measures was 4 %. A small intervention effect was found in reaction time in the 4×5 min physical activity exposure session compared to the sedentary control condition (0.42; 95 % CI 0.40 to 0.79). There were two research-related minor adverse effects, an allergic reaction to the FreeStyle Libre and feeling faint and vomiting after consumption of glucose solution. Both events were resolved and participants continued with the study. Conclusions. The study design and intervention implementing short bursts of physical activity was feasible and indicated a potential effect on reaction time as a measure of cognitive performance in young people with cerebral palsy

    Implementation and testing of the first prompt search for gravitational wave transients with electromagnetic counterparts

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    Aims. A transient astrophysical event observed in both gravitational wave (GW) and electromagnetic (EM) channels would yield rich scientific rewards. A first program initiating EM follow-ups to possible transient GW events has been developed and exercised by the LIGO and Virgo community in association with several partners. In this paper, we describe and evaluate the methods used to promptly identify and localize GW event candidates and to request images of targeted sky locations. Methods. During two observing periods (Dec 17 2009 to Jan 8 2010 and Sep 2 to Oct 20 2010), a low-latency analysis pipeline was used to identify GW event candidates and to reconstruct maps of possible sky locations. A catalog of nearby galaxies and Milky Way globular clusters was used to select the most promising sky positions to be imaged, and this directional information was delivered to EM observatories with time lags of about thirty minutes. A Monte Carlo simulation has been used to evaluate the low-latency GW pipeline's ability to reconstruct source positions correctly. Results. For signals near the detection threshold, our low-latency algorithms often localized simulated GW burst signals to tens of square degrees, while neutron star/neutron star inspirals and neutron star/black hole inspirals were localized to a few hundred square degrees. Localization precision improves for moderately stronger signals. The correct sky location of signals well above threshold and originating from nearby galaxies may be observed with ~50% or better probability with a few pointings of wide-field telescopes.Comment: 17 pages. This version (v2) includes two tables and 1 section not included in v1. Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    Diagnostic Tests and their Application in the Management of Soil- and Water-borne Oomycete Pathogen Species

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    Oomycete diseases cause significant losses across a broad range of crop and aquaculture commodities worldwide. These losses can be greatly reduced by disease management practices steered by accurate and early diagnoses of pathogen presence. Determinations of disease potential can help guide optimal crop rotation regimes, varietal selections, targeted control measures, harvest timings and crop post-harvest handling. Pathogen detection prior to infection can also reduce the incidence of disease epidemics. Classical methods for the isolation of oomycete pathogens are normally deployed only after disease symptom appearance. These processes are often-time consuming, relying on culturing the putative pathogen(s) and the availability of expert taxonomic skills for accurate identification; a situation that frequently results in either delayed application, or routine ‘blanket’ over-application of control measures. Increasing concerns about pesticides in the environment and the food chain, removal or restriction of their usage combined with rising costs have focussed interest in the development and improvement of disease management systems. To be effective, these require timely, accurate and preferably quantitatve diagnoses. A wide range of rapid diagnostic tools, from point of care immunodiagnostic kits to next generation nucleotide sequencing have potential application in oomycete disease management. Here we review currently-available as well as promising new technologies in the context of commercial agricultural production systems, considering the impacts of specific biotic and abiotic and other important factors such as speed and ease of access to information and cost effectivenes

    Rethinking capital mobility, re‐regulating financial markets

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    The globalisation hypothesis has altered many of the common-sense ‘truths’ around which the social world is organised.* In particular, globalisation is thought to restrict the parameters of the politically and economically possible. Indeed, the notion of constrained choice is so pronounced that we are increasingly confronted with the image of globalisation’s ‘logic of no alternative’; an image which is predicated on the assumption of perfect capital mobility. Capital is considered to be sufficiently rational to take advantage of enhanced exit options from the national economy in circumstances in which its interests are served by moving off-shore. Moreover, global markets are also assumed to have exploited contemporary technological developments to such an extent that they now clear instantaneously; consequently, allowing capital to further its interests wherever in the world new profit opportunities arise. Thus, we are presented with the fundamental ‘reality’ of globalisation as currently narrated throughout much of the west: unless the market can be allowed to restore a competitive global equilibrium, capital will exit high-wage, high-cost western economies and re-locate in lower-wage, lower-cost, newly industrialising economies. Under the auspices of ever more hostile wage competition from the newly industrialising economies, globalisation is commonly presumed to act as a trigger for an ‘inevitable’ job displacement effect as capital deserts the advanced industrialised economies

    Search for dark matter produced in association with bottom or top quarks in √s = 13 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector

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    A search for weakly interacting massive particle dark matter produced in association with bottom or top quarks is presented. Final states containing third-generation quarks and miss- ing transverse momentum are considered. The analysis uses 36.1 fb−1 of proton–proton collision data recorded by the ATLAS experiment at √s = 13 TeV in 2015 and 2016. No significant excess of events above the estimated backgrounds is observed. The results are in- terpreted in the framework of simplified models of spin-0 dark-matter mediators. For colour- neutral spin-0 mediators produced in association with top quarks and decaying into a pair of dark-matter particles, mediator masses below 50 GeV are excluded assuming a dark-matter candidate mass of 1 GeV and unitary couplings. For scalar and pseudoscalar mediators produced in association with bottom quarks, the search sets limits on the production cross- section of 300 times the predicted rate for mediators with masses between 10 and 50 GeV and assuming a dark-matter mass of 1 GeV and unitary coupling. Constraints on colour- charged scalar simplified models are also presented. Assuming a dark-matter particle mass of 35 GeV, mediator particles with mass below 1.1 TeV are excluded for couplings yielding a dark-matter relic density consistent with measurements
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