429 research outputs found

    Five minutes with Mark Blyth: “Turn it into things people can understand, let go of the academese, and people will engage”

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    Mark Blyth became the accidental star of the political blogosphere last year when he appeared in a video promoting the key message behind his upcoming book ‘Austerity: The History of a Dangerous Idea’. Here he explains why being unreadable helps economists get their message across, how fan and hate mail have become part of his professional life and how his latest project illustrates that there is a market for academic ideas

    Steady free-surface flow over spatially periodic topography

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    Two-dimensional free-surface flow over a spatially periodic channel bed topography is examined using a steady periodically forced Korteweg-de Vries equation. The existence of new forced solitary-type waves with periodic tails is demonstrated using recently developed non-autonomous dynamical-systems theory. Bound states with two or more co-existing solitary waves are also identified. The solution space for varying amplitude of forcing is explored using a numerical method. A rich bifurcation structure is uncovered and shown to be consistent with an asymptotic theory based on small forcing amplitude..J. Binder, M.G. Blyth and S. Balasuriy

    Constructivism and Political Economy: Blissful Union or Shotgun Wedding?

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    Streaming video requires RealPlayer to view.The University Archives has determined that this item is of continuing value to OSU's history.Mark Blyth is a political economist who is at the forefront of studies on the role of ideas and uncertainty in politics. He is particularly interested in the recent turn to ideas and constructivist theory in various fields of political science. In his talk at the Mershon Center , he focused on economics and the subfield of international political economy and explored the possibilities and promises of utilizing a constructivist approach in them.Ohio State University. Mershon Center for International Security StudiesEvent webpage, streaming vide

    Secondary resurfacing of the patella in total knee arthroplasty

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    Anterior knee pain following primary total knee arthroplasty is common and can be difficult to treat satisfactorily. We reviewed 28 consecutive patients (29 knees) who underwent secondary resurfacing of the patella for persistent anterior knee pain and report on the results. Mean follow-up was 28 months (range12-61) with no cases lost to follow-up. Oxford knee scores, range of motion, the patient's assessment of outcome and overall satisfaction were recorded. Seventeen out of 19 (59%) felt their knee was better following patellar resurfacing, 10 out of 29 (34%) felt it was the same and two out of 29 (7%) felt it was worse. There was a significant improvement in Oxford knee scores (p < 0.001) and significant increase in patient satisfaction (p < 0.001) following secondary resurfacing. While secondary resurfacing of the patella does not provide the solution for every case of anterior knee pain following total knee joint replacement, in greater than 50% of cases it can be effective at relieving symptoms and in this series carries a low risk of worsening symptoms or complications

    Shear-enhanced dispersion of a wound substance as a candidate mechanism for variation potential transmission

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    A variation potential (VP) is an electrical signal unique to plants that occurs in response to wounding or flaming. The propagation mechanism itself, however, is known not to be electrical. Here we examine the hypothesis that VP transmission occurs via the transport of a chemical agent in the xylem. We assume the electrical signal is generated locally by the activation of an ion channel at the plasma membrane of cells adjacent to the xylem. We work on the assumption that the ion channels are triggered when the chemical concentration exceeds a threshold value. We use numerical computations to demonstrate the combined effect of advection and diffusion on chemical transport in a tube flow, and propose shear-enhance

    The non-local AFM water-wave method for cylindrical geometry

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    We develop an AFM (Ablowitz-Fokas-Musslimani) method applicable to studying water waves in a cylindrical geometry. As with the established AFM method for two-dimensional and three-dimensional water waves, the formulation involves only surface variables and is amenable to numerical computation. The method is developed for a general cylindrical surface, and we demonstrate its use for numerically computing fully nonlinear axisymmetric periodic and solitary waves on a ferrofluid column

    The role of soluble surfactants in the linear stability of two-layer flow in a channel

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    The linear stability of Couette-Poiseuille flow of two superposed fluid layers in a horizontal channel is considered. The lower fluid layer is populated with surfactants that appear either in the form of monomers or micelles and can also get adsorbed at the interface between the fluids. A mathematical model is formulated which combines the Navier- Stokes equations in each fluid layer, convection-diffusion equations for the concentration of monomers (at the interface and in the bulk fluid) and micelles (in the bulk), together with appropriate coupling conditions at the interface. The primary aim of this study is to investigate when the system is unstable to arbitrary wavelength perturbations, and in particular, to determine the influence of surfactant solubility and/or sorption kinetics on the instability. A linear stability analysis is performed and the growth rates are obtained by solving an eigenvalue problem for Stokes flow, both numerically for disturbances of arbitrary wavelength and analytically using long-wave approximations. It is found that the system is stable when the surfactant is sufficiently soluble in the bulk and if the fluid viscosity ratio m and thickness ratio n satisfy the condition m < n2. On the other hand, the effect of surfactant solubility is found to be destabilising if m n2. Both of the aforementioned results are manifested for low bulk concentrations below the critical micelle concentration; however when the equilibrium bulk concentration is sufficiently high (and above the critical micelle concentration) so that micelles are formed in the bulk fluid, the system is stable if m < n2 in all cases examined

    A frame signature matrix for analysing and comparing interaction design behaviour

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    Protocol studies are an established method to investigate design behaviour. In the context of a project to investigate novice interaction design (ID) behaviour across protocols and cultures, we found that existing design behaviour analysis frameworks did not provide reliable results. This paper describes the development of a new approach to analyse and compare ID behaviour using verbal protocols. We augment Schön’s basic design and reflection cycle with construction of a frame signature matrix and analogical categorisation coding. We demonstrate this approach by comparing two protocols of novice interaction designers in Botswana. The initial findings indicate that this approach increases consistency and accuracy of coding, and that there are different degrees of reframing for the design problem and solutions
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