231 research outputs found

    Public criminology in an acute setting and the development of an academic criminological career

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    This chapter reflects how participation in public criminological practice influenced my journey from undergraduate to doctoral study at Swansea University. As Burawo (2008) observes, students are the first public we face. My research has led to a process of self-reflection around notions of participation in the classroom, of shared experiences and a willingness to learn. Hearing young people talk openly about their futures, passions and dreams is powerful. It opens the door to a shared community, one in which Public Criminology offers added value. The chapter concludes by focusing on the dialogical nature of Public Criminology; the potential for the academy to drive social change; how Public Criminology can empower and transform the lives; and, how Criminology as a discipline is about much more than crime or criminal justiceā€”it is about foundational social values and hope for better policy and practice

    A study of time concepts found in primary reading materials

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    Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit

    A study of time concepts found in primary reading materials

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    Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit

    Question Negotiation and the Technological Environment

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    The information world is a very different place in 2003 than it was a few years ago. It is possible, for example, to find information more quickly and easily than ever before, using new tools, and drawing on sources of information unavailable or even nonexistent not so very long ago. People seeking answers or providing them now have many more options for question negotiation , in the broadest Tayloresque sense [1]. Consulting an information professional continues to be one of those options. In fact, such professionals can now be much more accessible via these new tools and technologies

    Relevance judgments and the incremental presentation of document representations

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    A new approach to the solicitation and measurement of relevance judgments is presented, which attempts to resolve some of the difficulties inherent in the nature of relevance and human judgment, and which further seeks to examine how users' judgments of document representations change as more information about documents is revealed to them. Subjects (university faculty and doctoral students) viewed three incremental versions of documents, and recorded ratio-level relevance judgments for each version. These judgments were analyzed by a variety of methods, including graphical inspection and examination of the number and degree of changes of judgments as new information is seen. A post questionnaire was also administered to obtain subjects' perceptions of the process and the individual fields of information presented. A consistent pattern of perception and importance of these fields is seen: Abstracts are by far the most important field and have the greatest impact, followed by titles, bibliographic information, and indexing.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/29634/1/0000723.pd

    Automated airway quantification associates with mortality in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

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    OBJECTIVES: The study examined whether quantified airway metrics associate with mortality in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). METHODS: In an observational cohort study (nā€‰=ā€‰90) of IPF patients from Ege University Hospital, an airway analysis tool AirQuant calculated median airway intersegmental tapering and segmental tortuosity across the 2nd to 6th airway generations. Intersegmental tapering measures the difference in median diameter between adjacent airway segments. Tortuosity evaluates the ratio of measured segmental length against direct end-to-end segmental length. Univariable linear regression analyses examined relationships between AirQuant variables, clinical variables, and lung function tests. Univariable and multivariable Cox proportional hazards models estimated mortality risk with the latter adjusted for patient age, gender, smoking status, antifibrotic use, CT usual interstitial pneumonia (UIP) pattern, and either forced vital capacity (FVC) or diffusion capacity of carbon monoxide (DLco) if obtained within 3Ā months of the CT. RESULTS: No significant collinearity existed between AirQuant variables and clinical or functional variables. On univariable Cox analyses, male gender, smoking history, no antifibrotic use, reduced DLco, reduced intersegmental tapering, and increased segmental tortuosity associated with increased risk of death. On multivariable Cox analyses (adjusted using FVC), intersegmental tapering (hazard ratio (HR)ā€‰=ā€‰0.75, 95% CIā€‰=ā€‰0.66-0.85, pā€‰<ā€‰0.001) and segmental tortuosity (HRā€‰=ā€‰1.74, 95% CIā€‰=ā€‰1.22-2.47, pā€‰=ā€‰0.002) independently associated with mortality. Results were maintained with adjustment using DLco. CONCLUSIONS: AirQuant generated measures of intersegmental tapering and segmental tortuosity independently associate with mortality in IPF patients. Abnormalities in proximal airway generations, which are not typically considered to be abnormal in IPF, have prognostic value. CLINICAL RELEVANCE STATEMENT: Quantitative measurements of intersegmental tapering and segmental tortuosity, in proximal (second to sixth) generation airway segments, independently associate with mortality in IPF. Automated airway analysis can estimate disease severity, which in IPF is not restricted to the distal airway tree. KEY POINTS: ā€¢ AirQuant generates measures of intersegmental tapering and segmental tortuosity. ā€¢ Automated airway quantification associates with mortality in IPF independent of established measures of disease severity. ā€¢ Automated airway analysis could be used to refine patient selection for therapeutic trials in IPF

    Rotation of planet-harbouring stars

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    The rotation rate of a star has important implications for the detectability, characterisation and stability of any planets that may be orbiting it. This chapter gives a brief overview of stellar rotation before describing the methods used to measure the rotation periods of planet host stars, the factors affecting the evolution of a star's rotation rate, stellar age estimates based on rotation, and an overview of the observed trends in the rotation properties of stars with planets.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures: Invited review to appear in 'Handbook of Exoplanets', Springer Reference Works, edited by Hans J. Deeg and Juan Antonio Belmont
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