17,420 research outputs found
From the Shadows: Setting as an Expression of Character Development in the Epic Fantasy Genre
Epic fantasy is a genre defined by its setting. It offers writers the opportunity to be incredibly specific with the way setting contributes to the overall story, specifically as an aid character development. In order to successfully use setting to support character development, the writer must understand what preconceptions with which the reader enters the epic fantasy genre and what purpose setting plays in the overarching story world. The writer must determine what setting elements to include and, just as importantly, which to leave out. Finally, because setting is such an abstract component of writing, it is useful not only to discuss generalities that apply to all writers but to examine a specific example in order to better understand how worldbuilding can be implemented in a way that feels natural to the reader
Serial order in short-term memory
How do we maintain a novel sequence of items in the correct order? For example, how do we remember the car number plate at the scene of a crime? Or how do we remember an unfamiliar telephone number during the few seconds between putting down the telephone directory and picking up the telephone? This immediate serial recall or ‘memory-span’ task has fascinated psychologists for decades; it has remained the dominant empirical tool behind contemporary theories of short-term memory, such as Alan Baddeley’s working-memory theory (Baddeley, 1986). However, like many questions in cognitive psychology, the apparent ease with which we perform such a simple task (providing the telephone number is not too long!) masks a rich and complex host of issues
Constructing an interval of Minkowski space from a causal set
A criticism sometimes made of the causal set quantum gravity program is that
there is no practical scheme for identifying manifoldlike causal sets and
finding embeddings of them into manifolds. A computational method for
constructing an approximate embedding of a small manifoldlike causal set into
Minkowski space (or any spacetime that is approximately flat at short scales)
is given, and tested in the 2 dimensional case. This method can also be used to
determine how manifoldlike a causal set is, and conversely to define scales of
manifoldlikeness.Comment: latex; 8 pages, one figure; accepted for publication in Classical and
Quantum Gravity Letter
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