7,937 research outputs found
Results of the 1995 Illinois Groundhog (Woodchuck) Hunter Survey
ID: 875; Administrative Report, PR Project W-112-RReport issued on: June 27, 199
Hunter Activities, Conflicts, and Opinions Following Implementation of a Controlled Waterfowl Hunting Program on the Rend Lake Public Hunting Area in 1995-96
Waterfowl Program Periodic Report no. 90Report issued on: 2 December 199
Evaluation of a high-torque backlash-free roller actuator
The results are presented of a test program that evaluated the stiffness, accuracy, torque ripple, frictional losses, and torque holding capability of a 16:1 ratio, 430 N-m (320 ft-lb) planetary roller drive for a potential space vehicle actuator application. The drive's planet roller supporting structure and bearings were found to be the largest contributors to overall drive compliance, accounting for more than half of the total. In comparison, the traction roller contacts themselves contributed only 9 percent of the drive's compliance based on an experimentally verified stiffness model. The drive exhibited no backlash although 8 arc sec of hysteresis deflection were recorded due to microcreep within the contact under torque load. Because of these load-dependent displacements, some form of feedback control would be required for arc second positioning applications. Torque ripple tests showed the drive to be extremely smooth, actually providing some damping of input torsional oscillations. The drive also demonstrated the ability to hold static torque with drifts of 7 arc sec or less over a 24 hr period at 35 percent of full load
Gender Politics and Secure Services For Women: Reflections on a study of staff understandings of challenging behaviour.
This paper discusses the findings of a Q methodological study that investigated the complexity of professional understandings of (attitudes towards) residents in a secure unit for women with learning disabilities and challenging behaviours. Particular attention is afforded to the critical debate regarding women in psychiatric and secure care, including the significant contribution made to this literature by feminist perspectives. A multiprofessional group of staff (n = 38) participated in the study and nine distinct accounts of women's challenging behaviour are described. Despite a considerable amount of recent policy concern with the position of women in psychiatric services, the findings of this research suggest that many front line staff are reluctant to highlight gender in their explanations of women's behaviour. This supports the assertion by Williams et al. (2001), who were involved in the National Gender Training Initiative (NGTI), that most critical theorizing about women's mental health has had minimal impact at the level of individuals’ understandings of these important issues. This state of affairs suggests a powerful case for the expansion of staff training as provided in the NGTI, which makes gender central to understanding and emphasizes feminist perspectives
Sensitivity to Timing and Order in Human Visual Cortex
Visual recognition takes a small fraction of a second and relies on the
cascade of signals along the ventral visual stream. Given the rapid path
through multiple processing steps between photoreceptors and higher visual
areas, information must progress from stage to stage very quickly. This rapid
progression of information suggests that fine temporal details of the neural
response may be important to the how the brain encodes visual signals. We
investigated how changes in the relative timing of incoming visual stimulation
affect the representation of object information by recording intracranial field
potentials along the human ventral visual stream while subjects recognized
objects whose parts were presented with varying asynchrony. Visual responses
along the ventral stream were sensitive to timing differences between parts as
small as 17 ms. In particular, there was a strong dependency on the temporal
order of stimulus presentation, even at short asynchronies. This sensitivity to
the order of stimulus presentation provides evidence that the brain may use
differences in relative timing as a means of representing information.Comment: 10 figures, 1 tabl
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