18,327 research outputs found
Why can't every year be a National Year of Reading? An evaluation of the NYR in Yorkshire
An evaluation of the National Year of Reading in Yorkshire was conducted by Leeds Metropolitan University in response to a brief from Museums, Libraries and Archives, Yorkshire. This paper outlines the development and planning of phase one of this small scale qualitative research project and the analysis of the initial results which looks at the impact of NYR on the organisations that delivered the campaign and their work with target groups. The Generic Social Outcomes and the National Indicators were used to develop a theoretical framework. Data were gathered via in depth interviews and focus groups with NYR steering group partners in Calderdale and North Lincolnshire, selected as the two case study authorities. The use of MAXQDA computer-assisted qualitative data analysis software (CAQDAS) enabled data and coding structures to be stored and will facilitate comparison in this longitudinal study. This evaluation will provide material that local library authorities can use for advocacy with a range of audiences including local and central government
Heavy Quark Production at HERA
Heavy flavour production is one of the key components of the HERA II physics
programme. While most of the results presented use leptons or the
reconstruction of charmed mesons to identify heavy flavour production, both the
H1 and ZEUS experiments now have working microvertex detectors that are being
used more and more. In this talk I will summarise a selection of the recent
results obtained by the two collaborations.Comment: 10 pages, 18 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of the 8th
International Conference on Hyperons, Charm and Beauty Hadrons (BEACH2008),
22-28 June 2008, University of South Carolina, Columbi
The Timing and Nature of the Paleozoic Deformation in the Northern part of the Manhattan Prong, Southeast New York
Guidebook for field trips in Connecticut and adjacent areas of New York and Rhode Island: New England Intercollegiate Geological Conference 77th annual meeting, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, October 4-6, 1985: Trip B
The temporal binding deficit hypothesis of autism
Frith has argued that people with autism show “weak central coherence,” an unusual bias toward piecemeal rather than configurational processing and a reduction in the normal tendency to process information in context. However, the precise cognitive and neurological mechanisms underlying weak central coherence are still unknown. We propose the hypothesis that the features of autism associated with weak central coherence result from a reduction in the integration of specialized local neural networks in the brain caused by a deficit in temporal binding. The visuoperceptual anomalies associated with weak central coherence may be attributed to a reduction in synchronization of high-frequency gamma activity between local networks processing local features. The failure to utilize context in language processing in autism can be explained in similar terms. Temporal binding deficits could also contribute to executive dysfunction in autism and to some of the deficits in socialization and communication
Extension of gage calibration study in extreme high vacuum /orbitron and magnetron studies/
Orbitron and magnetron studies for gauge calibration in extreme high vacuu
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