319 research outputs found

    Managing stress through the Stress Free app: Practices of self-care in digitally mediated spaces

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    In this paper we are concerned with the question of how we feel when living in concert with multiple technologies. More specifically, we are focused on the influx of digital apps designed to manage psychological wellbeing. We draw on empirical work exploring one such app, Stress Free, and focus on the experiences of stress and technological tools designed to lessen stress. Our concern is with the way that technologies become part of the experience of stress as opposed to solely understanding the app as a tool aimed to reduce the occurrence and severity of stress. This involves taking a theoretical journey through philosophies of technology that provide valuable resources for conceptualising the relational characteristics of digitally mediated stress. Our wider interest is to speak to broader concerns with the movement to ‘digital care’ and the implications for how we conceptualise technology, self and care therein

    Philosophy as political technē: The tradition of invention in Simondon’s political thought

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    Gilbert Simondon has recently attracted the interest of political philosophers and theorists, despite he is rather renowned as a philosopher of technics – as the author of Of the Mode of Existence of Technical Objects – who also elaborated a general theory of complex systems in Individuation in the Light of the Notions of Form and Information. A group of scholars has developed Gilles Deleuze’s early suggestion that Simondon’s social ontology might offer the basis for a re-theorisation of radical democracy. Others, following Herbert Marcuse, have instead focused on Simondon’s analysis of the relationship between technology and society. However, only a joint study of Simondon’s two major works can reveal their implicit political stakes. As I will argue, Simondon’s anti-Aristotelianism and his anti-Heideggerian understanding of the Greek origins of philosophy, allow us to conceive philosophical thought as a ‘tradition of invention’, that is, a pedagogical technē endowed with the political task of maintaining the openness of the social system and allowing normative invention to emerge from within

    Impact of materials technology on the breeding blanket design – Recent progress and case studies in materials technology

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    A major part in the EUROfusion materials research program is dedicated to characterize and quantify nuclear fusion specific neutron damage in structural materials. While the majority of irradiation data gives a relatively clear view on the displacement damage, the effect of transmutation – i.e. especially hydrogen and helium production in steels – is not yet explored very well. However, few available results indicate that EUROFER-type steels will reach their operating limit as soon as the formation of helium bubbles reaches a critical amount or size. At that point, the material would fail due to embrittlement at the considered load. This paper presents a strategy for the mitigation of the before-mentioned problem using the following facts: • the neutron dose and related transmutation rate decreases quickly inside the first wall, that is, only a plasma-near area is extremely loaded • nanostructured oxide dispersion strengthened (ODS) steels may have an enormous trapping effect on helium and hydrogen, which would suppress the formation of large helium bubbles • compared to conventional steels, ODS steels show improved irradiation tensile ductility and creep strength In summary, producing the plasma facing, highly neutron and heat loaded part of blankets by an ODS steel, while using EUROFER97 for everything else, would allow a higher heat flux as well as a longer operating period. Consequently, we (1) developed and produced 14 % Cr ferritic ODS steel plates. (2) We fabricated a mockup with 5 cooling channels and a plated first wall of ODS steel, using the same production processes as for a real component. And finally, (3) we performed high heat flux tests in the HELOKA facility (Helium Loop Karlsruhe at KIT) applying short and up to 2 h long pulses, in which the operating temperature limit for EUROFER97 (i.e., 550 °C) was finally exceeded by 100 K. Thereafter, microstructure and defect analyses did not reveal defects or recognizable damage. Only a heat affected zone in the EUROFER/ODS steel interface could be detected. This demonstrates that the use of ODS steel could make a decisive difference in the future design and performance of breeding blankets

    Fabrication routes for advanced first wall design alternatives

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    In future nuclear fusion reactors, plasma facing components have to sustain specific neutron damage. While the majority of irradiation data provides a relatively clear picture of the displacement damage, the effect of helium transmutation is not yet explored in detail. Nevertheless, available results from simulation experiments indicate that 9%-chromium steels will reach their operating limit as soon as the growing helium bubbles extent a critical size. At that point, the material would most probably fail due to grain boundary embrittlement. In this contribution, we present a strategy for the mitigation of the before-mentioned problem using the following facts. (1) The neutron dose and related transmutation rate decreases quickly inside the first wall of the breeding blankets, that is, only a plasma-near area is extremely loaded. (2) Nanostructured oxide dispersion strengthened (ODS) steels may have an enormous trapping effect on helium, which would suppress the formation of large helium bubbles for a much longer period. (3) Compared to conventional steels, ODS steels also provide improved irradiation tensile ductility and creep strength. Therefore, a design, based on the fabrication of the plasma facing and highly neutron and heat loaded parts of blankets by an ODS steel, while using EUROFER97 for everything else, would extend the operating time and enable a higher heat flux. Consequently, we (i) developed and produced 14%Cr ferritic ODS steel plates and (ii) optimized and demonstrated a scalable industrial production route. (iii) We fabricated a mock-up with five cooling channels and a plated first wall of ODS steel, using the same production processes as for a real component. (iv) Finally, we performed high heat flux tests in the Helium Loop Karlsruhe, applying a few hundred short and a few 2 h long pulses, in which the operating temperature limit for EUROFER97 (i.e. 550 â—¦C) was finally exceeded by 100 K. (v) Thereafter, microstructure and defect analyses did not reveal critical defects or recognizable damage. Only a heat affected zone in the EUROFER/ODS steel interface could be detected. However, a solution to prohibit the formation of such heat affected zones is given. These research contributions demonstrate that the use of ODS steel is not only feasible and affordable but could make a decisive difference in the future design and performance of breeding blankets

    ‘Mind the gap’: Responding to the indeterminable in migration

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    Prompted by the paper by Miriam Tedeschi, this commentary attempts to unsettle the dominant understanding of a relation in migration research that prioritises linkages between people, places and organisations while treating boundaries as limits to overcome. Building on geographers’ earlier engagements with Adorno, Levinas and extending this conversation to include Blanchot, the analysis attempts to move beyond the hold of mastery on a relation with alterity. The paper argues for an interruptive non-relation that resists the appropriation and affirms the dispersion of the self by the alterity it cannot internalise. It offers an alternative response to difference in migration that avoids bringing it to unifying continuity. Instead of treating interruptions in migration as gaps to be resolved through language, the paper considers the possibility of a neutral writing that reflects the powerlessness to say the unspeakable. In a movement of inscription and effacement, neutral writing invokes the unspeakable pain and affliction that exceeds the concepts to which it gives rise. The neuter answers for the non-subject of loss and trauma, the nothing often haunting international migrants

    A Trial of the Efficacy, Safety and Impact on Drug Resistance of Four Drug Regimens for Seasonal Intermittent Preventive Treatment for Malaria in Senegalese Children

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    UNLABELLED: In the Sahel, most malaria deaths occur among children 1-4 years old during a short transmission season. A trial of seasonal intermittent preventive treatment (IPT) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine (SP) and a single dose of artesunate (AS) showed an 86% reduction in the incidence of malaria in Senegal but this may not be the optimum regimen. We compared this regimen with three alternatives. METHODS: 2102 children aged 6-59 months received either one dose of SP plus one dose of AS (SP+1AS) (the previous regimen), one dose of SP plus 3 daily doses of AS (SP+3AS), one dose of SP plus three daily doses of amodiaquine (AQ) (SP+3AQ) or 3 daily doses of AQ and AS (3AQ+3AS). Treatments were given once a month on three occasions during the malaria transmission season. The primary end point was incidence of clinical malaria. Secondary end-points were incidence of adverse events, mean haemoglobin concentration and prevalence of parasites carrying markers of resistance to SP. FINDINGS: The incidence of malaria, and the prevalence of parasitaemia at the end of the transmission season, were lowest in the group that received SP+3AQ: 10% of children in the group that received SP+1AS had malaria, compared to 9% in the SP+3AS group (hazard ratio HR 0.90, 95%CI 0.60, 1.36); 11% in the 3AQ+3AS group, HR 1.1 (0.76-1.7); and 5% in the SP+3AQ group, HR 0.50 (0.30-0.81). Mutations associated with resistance to SP were present in almost all parasites detected at the end of the transmission season, but the prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum was very low in the SP+3AQ group. CONCLUSIONS: Monthly treatment with SP+3AQ is a highly effective regimen for seasonal IPT. Choice of this regimen would minimise the spread of drug resistance and allow artemisinins to be reserved for the treatment of acute clinical malaria

    Buber, educational technology, and the expansion of dialogic space

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    Buber’s distinction between the ‘I-It’ mode and the ‘I-Thou’ mode is seminal for dialogic education. While Buber introduces the idea of dialogic space, an idea which has proved useful for the analysis of dialogic education with technology, his account fails to engage adequately with the role of technology. This paper offers an introduction to the significance of the I-It/I-Thou duality of technology in relation to opening dialogic space. This is followed by a short schematic history of educational technology which reveals the role technology plays, not only in opening dialogic space, but also in expanding dialogic space. The expansion of dialogic space is an expansion of what it means to be ‘us’ as dialogic engagement facilitates the incorporation, into our shared sense of identity, of aspects of reality that are initially experienced as alien or ‘other’. Augmenting Buber with an alternative understanding of dialogic space enables us to see how dialogue mediated by technology, as well as dialogue with monologised fragments of technology (robots), can, through education, lead to an expansion of what it means to be human
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