181 research outputs found

    Living in historic cities:Intensification and increasing density gradients

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    In this paper we analyze the urban density development of Dutch cities during 2000 and 2012. The urban density trends observed in the country are in contradiction with the observations in several parts of the world: Most urban areas in the Netherlands are experiencing an increasing residential density, and, to a lesser extent, increasing population density

    La enseñanza de las matemáticas en aulas plurigrado como objeto de estudio en la formación docente

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    La escuela primaria en nuestro país se ha conformado históricamente como una institución organizada en grados. Los grupos-clase están integrados por niños de la misma edad 1 a quienes se les brinda una enseñanza simultánea. La modalidad de un docente frente a un grupo de alumnos que cursan diferentes grados de escolaridad ha sido una de las respuestas a la baja matrícula rural que dificulta, por razones económicas, la organización graduada de sección única. Actualmente en la República argentina casi la mitad de las escuelas primarias del país son escuelas primarias rurales (aproximadamente 12 000), y de ellas 45% son escuelas pluriaño con un solo docente o dos (Ministerio de Educación, Ciencia y Tecnología de la Nación, 2009).Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educació

    La enseñanza de las matemáticas en aulas plurigrado como objeto de estudio en la formación docente

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    La escuela primaria en nuestro país se ha conformado históricamente como una institución organizada en grados. Los grupos-clase están integrados por niños de la misma edad 1 a quienes se les brinda una enseñanza simultánea. La modalidad de un docente frente a un grupo de alumnos que cursan diferentes grados de escolaridad ha sido una de las respuestas a la baja matrícula rural que dificulta, por razones económicas, la organización graduada de sección única. Actualmente en la República argentina casi la mitad de las escuelas primarias del país son escuelas primarias rurales (aproximadamente 12 000), y de ellas 45% son escuelas pluriaño con un solo docente o dos (Ministerio de Educación, Ciencia y Tecnología de la Nación, 2009).Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educació

    La enseñanza de las matemáticas en aulas plurigrado como objeto de estudio en la formación docente

    Get PDF
    La escuela primaria en nuestro país se ha conformado históricamente como una institución organizada en grados. Los grupos-clase están integrados por niños de la misma edad 1 a quienes se les brinda una enseñanza simultánea. La modalidad de un docente frente a un grupo de alumnos que cursan diferentes grados de escolaridad ha sido una de las respuestas a la baja matrícula rural que dificulta, por razones económicas, la organización graduada de sección única. Actualmente en la República argentina casi la mitad de las escuelas primarias del país son escuelas primarias rurales (aproximadamente 12 000), y de ellas 45% son escuelas pluriaño con un solo docente o dos (Ministerio de Educación, Ciencia y Tecnología de la Nación, 2009).Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educació

    Adaptive hard and tough mechanical response in single-crystal B1 VNx ceramics via control of anion vacancies

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    High hardness and toughness are generally considered mutually exclusive properties for single-crystal ceramics. Combining experiments and ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) atomistic simulations at room temperature, we demonstrate that both the hardness and toughness of single-crystal NaCl-structure VNx/MgO(001) thin films are simultaneously enhanced through the incorporation of anion vacancies. Nanoindentation results show that VN0.8, here considered as representative understoichiometric VNx system, is ~20% harder, as well as more resistant to fracture than stoichiometric VN samples. AIMD modeling of VN and VN0.8 supercells subjected to [001] and [110] elongation reveal that the tensile strengths of the two materials are similar. Nevertheless, while the stoichiometric VN phase systematically cleaves in a brittle manner at tensile yield points, the understoichiometric compound activates transformation-toughening mechanisms that dissipate accumulated stresses. AIMD simulations also show that VN0.8 exhibits an initially greater resistance to both {110} and {111} shear deformation than VN. However, for progressively increasing shear strains, the VN0.8 mechanical behavior gradually evolves from harder to more ductile than VN. The transition is mediated by anion vacancies, which facilitate {110} and {111} lattice slip by reducing activation shear stresses by as much as 35%. Electronic-structure analyses show that the two-regime hard/tough mechanical response of VN0.8 primarily stems from its intrinsic ability to transfer d electrons between 2nd-neighbor and 4th-neighbor (i.e., across vacancy sites) V-V metallic states. Our work offers a route for electronic-structure design of hard materials in which a plastic mechanical response is triggered with loading

    Síndrome Cornelia de Lange

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    Geographical variation of multiplex ecological networks in marine intertidal communities

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    Understanding the drivers of geographical variation in species distributions, and the resulting community structure, constitutes one of the grandest challenges in ecology. Geographical patterns of species richness and composition have been relatively well studied. Less is known about how the entire set of trophic and non‐trophic ecological interactions, and the complex networks that they create by gluing species together in complex communities, change across geographical extents. Here, we compiled data of species composition and three types of ecological interactions occurring between species in rocky intertidal communities across a large spatial extent (~970 km of shoreline) of central Chile, and analyzed the geographical variability in these multiplex networks (i.e., comprising several interaction types) of ecological interactions. We calculated nine network summary statistics common across interaction types, and additional network attributes specific to each of the different types of interactions. We then investigated potential environmental drivers of this multivariate network organization. These included variation in sea surface temperature and coastal upwelling, the main drivers of productivity in nearshore waters. Our results suggest that structural properties of multiplex ecological networks are affected by local species richness and modulated by factors influencing productivity and environmental predictability. Our results show that non‐trophic negative interactions are more sensitive to spatially structured temporal environmental variation than feeding relationships, with non‐trophic positive interactions being the least labile to it. We also show that environmental effects are partly mediated through changes in species richness and partly through direct influences on species interactions, probably associated to changes in environmental predictability and to bottom‐up nutrient availability. Our findings highlight the need for a comprehensive picture of ecological interactions and their geographical variability if we are to predict potential effects of environmental changes on ecological communities

    Indentation Hardness Measurements at Macro-, Micro-, and Nanoscale: A Critical Overview

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    The Brinell, Vickers, Meyer, Rockwell, Shore, IHRD, Knoop, Buchholz, and nanoindentation methods used to measure the indentation hardness of materials at different scales are compared, and main issues and misconceptions in the understanding of these methods are comprehensively reviewed and discussed. Basic equations and parameters employed to calculate hardness are clearly explained, and the different international standards for each method are summarized. The limits for each scale are explored, and the different forms to calculate hardness in each method are compared and established. The influence of elasticity and plasticity of the material in each measurement method is reviewed, and the impact of the surface deformation around the indenter on hardness values is examined. The difficulties for practical conversions of hardness values measured by different methods are explained. Finally, main issues in the hardness interpretation at different scales are carefully discussed, like the influence of grain size in polycrystalline materials, indentation size effects at micro-and nanoscale, and the effect of the substrate when calculating thin films hardness. The paper improves the understanding of what hardness means and what hardness measurements imply at different scales.Funding Agencies|Swedish Government Strategic Research Area in Materials Science on Functional Materials at Linkoping University ((Faculty Grant SFO Mat LiU) [2009 00971]</p

    Cross-cultural invariances in the architecture of shame

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    This set of experiments shows that in 15 traditional small-scale societies there is an extraordinarily close correspondence between (i) the intensity of shame felt if one exhibited specific acts or traits and (ii) the magnitude of devaluation expressed in response to those acts or traits by local audiences, and even foreign audiences. Three important and widely acknowledged sources of cultural variation between communities—}geographic proximity, linguistic similarity, and religious similarity{—}all failed to account for the strength of between-community correlations in the shame{–}devaluation link. This supplies a parallel line of evidence that shame is a universal system, part of our species{’} cooperative biology, rather than a product of cultural evolution.Human foragers are obligately group-living, and their high dependence on mutual aid is believed to have characterized our species{’} social evolution. It was therefore a central adaptive problem for our ancestors to avoid damaging the willingness of other group members to render them assistance. Cognitively, this requires a predictive map of the degree to which others would devalue the individual based on each of various possible acts. With such a map, an individual can avoid socially costly behaviors by anticipating how much audience devaluation a potential action (e.g., stealing) would cause and weigh this against the action{’}s direct payoff (e.g., acquiring). The shame system manifests all of the functional properties required to solve this adaptive problem, with the aversive intensity of shame encoding the social cost. Previous data from three Western(ized) societies indicated that the shame evoked when the individual anticipates committing various acts closely tracks the magnitude of devaluation expressed by audiences in response to those acts. Here we report data supporting the broader claim that shame is a basic part of human biology. We conducted an experiment among 899 participants in 15 small-scale communities scattered around the world. Despite widely varying languages, cultures, and subsistence modes, shame in each community closely tracked the devaluation of local audiences (mean r = +0.84). The fact that the same pattern is encountered in such mutually remote communities suggests that shame{’s match to audience devaluation is a design feature crafted by selection and not a product of cultural contact or convergent cultural evolution
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