1,739 research outputs found
SimCrime: A Spatial Microsimulation Model for the Analysing of Crime in Leeds.
This Working Paper is a part of PhD thesis 'Modelling Crime: A Spatial Microsimulation Approach' which aims to investigate the potential of spatial microsimulation for modelling crime. This Working Paper presents SimCrime, a static spatial microsimulation model for crime in Leeds. It is designed to estimate the likelihood of being a victim of crime and crime rates at the small area level in Leeds and to answer what-if questions about the effects of changes in the demographic and socio-economic characteristics of the future population. The model is based on individual microdata. Specifically, SimCrime combines individual microdata from the British Crime Survey (BCS) for which location data is only at the scale of large areas, with census statistics for smaller areas to create synthetic microdata estimates for output areas ?(OAs) in Leeds using a simulated annealing method. The new microdata dataset includes all the attributes from the original datasets. This allows variables such as crime victimisation from the BCS to be directly estimated for OAs
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Excavations and survey at Coats Hill, near Moffat, 1990-1
This report describes the results of the survey and sample excavations of small cairns,
annular structures and other remains on Coats Hill, near Moffat. The difficulties of assessing
the dates and functions of certain of the structures are discussed. The project formed
part of the archaeological studies for the North Western Ethylene Pipeline (NWEP) Project
for Shell Chemicals UK Ltd, which wholly funded the archaeological work and the publication
of this report
Automated real time detection of solar wind shocks and consequences for the identification of SSC and SI events
Algorithms have been developed to automatically detect Earth bound shocks in the solar wind as measured by the ACE satellite. These involve simple threshold techniques and wavelet analysis.
One practical application of this shock detection is that it can provide power companies with advanced warning of the potential for geomagnetically induced currents. The automatically detected shocks have been tested against published lists of known shocks and accuracy statistics are presented. Another use for automated shock detection is an aid to the preparation of lists of rapid variations: SSC and SI events.
To contribute to the IAGA published list of rapid variations, as prepared by Ebro Observatory, BGS staff
routinely identify, scale and classify the events recorded at the three UK magnetic observatories. This is carried out using the criteria from the Atlas of Rapid Variations (1959) and subsequent IAGA instructions.
The usefulness of automated detection of solar wind shocks for this task is examined by testing these against lists of identified SSC and SI events
How Do Schr\"odinger's Cats Die?
Recent experiments with superconducting qubits are motivated by the goal of
fabricating a quantum computer, but at the same time they illuminate the more
fundamental aspects of quantum mechanics. In this paper we analyze the physics
of switching current measurements from the point of view of macroscopic quantum
mechanics.Comment: 4 figures, 12 page
The practice of the normative: the making of mothers, children and homes in North London
The thesis comprises ethnography of alternative provisioning in a range of households
on a street in North London. It considers the alternative (non-formal retail) means by
which goods are acquired and exchanged. The areas of inquiry include gift- giving, mail
order catalogues, network sales schemes, second-hand goods, nearly new 'jumble' sales
and self-provisioning. Challenging polarised models of the household and the market,
the gift and the commodity, the thesis reveals how alternative modes of consumption are
used to generate and contest value in everyday practice.
In particular, the study focuses on the activities of women and the ways in which social
networks are constituted around specific types of acquisition and material culture. These
activities include the swapping of second hand baby goods, the provisioning of
children's parties and gifts, the decorating of the home and the use of commercial
network sales schemes revolving around fashion, cosmetics and housewares. Aesthetic
practice and modes of acquisition are considered in the context of immediate social
relations and domestic settings.
As well as providing empirical data regarding a range of consumption practices in
contemporary Britain, the thesis goes on to argue that it is within these forms of
provisioning that the practice of normativity is most evident. While a major theoretical
pretext of anthropological enquiry is the question of how culture operates cohesively in
the context of modernity, what arises from this ethnography is the extent to which goods
and the values made around them, through exchange, are used in the making of the
normative. This thesis examines the role of everyday alternative provisioning in
constituting and contesting moral and social pressures to determine a basis of
conformity and having made these conditions, facilitate the relationships that depend
upon them
Estimating the long-term historic evolution of exposure to flooding of coastal populations
Coastal managers face the task of assessing and managing flood risk. This requires knowledge of the area of land, the number of people, properties and other infrastructure potentially affected by floods. Such analyses are usually static; i.e. they only consider a snapshot of the current situation. This misses the opportunity to learn about the role of key drivers of historical changes in flood risk, such as development and population rise in the coastal flood plain and sea-level rise.In this paper, we develop and apply a method to analyse the temporal evolution of residential population exposure to coastal flooding. It uses readily available data in a GIS environment. We examine how population and sea level change modify exposure over two centuries in two neighbouring coastal sites: Portsea and Hayling Islands on the UK south coast. The analysis shows that flood exposure changes as a result of increases in population, changes in coastal population density and sea level rise. The results indicate that to date, population change is the dominant driver of the increase in exposure to flooding in the study sites, but climate change may outweigh this in the future. A full analysis of flood risk is not possible as data on historic defences and wider vulnerability are not available. Hence, the historic evolution of flood exposure is as close as we can get to a historic evolution of flood risk.The method is applicable anywhere that suitable floodplain geometry, sea level and population datasets are available and could be widely applied, and will help inform coastal managers of the time evolution in coastal flood drivers<br/
Increasing eigenstructure assignment design degree of freedom using lifting
This paper presents the exposition of an output-lifting eigenstructure assignment (EA) design framework, wherein the available EA design degrees of freedom (DoF) is significantly increased, and the desired eigenstructure of a single-rate full state feedback solution can be achieved within an output feedback system. A structural mapping is introduced to release the output-lifting causality constraint. Additionally, the available design DoF can be further enlarged via involving the input-lifting into the output-lifting EA framework. The newly induced design DoF can be utilised to calculate a structurally constrained, causal gain matrix which will maintain the same assignment capability. In this paper, the robustification of the output-lifting EA is also proposed, which allows a trade-off between performance and robustness in the presence of structured model uncertainties to be established. A lateral flight control benchmark in the EA literature and a numerical example are used to demonstrate the effectiveness of the design framework
Decoherence of a Superposition of Macroscopic Current States in a SQUID
We show that fundamental conservation laws mandate parameter-free mechanisms
of decoherence of quantum oscillations of the superconducting current between
opposite directions in a SQUID -- emission of phonons and photons at the
oscillation frequency. The corresponding rates are computed and compared with
experimental findings. The decohering effects of external mechanical and
magnetic noise are investigated
Free-living and laboratory gait characteristics in patients with multiple sclerosis.
BACKGROUND: Wearable sensors offer the potential to bring new knowledge to inform interventions in patients affected by multiple sclerosis (MS) by thoroughly quantifying gait characteristics and gait deficits from prolonged daily living measurements. The aim of this study was to characterise gait in both laboratory and daily life conditions for a group of patients with moderate to severe ambulatory impairment due to MS. To this purpose, algorithms to detect and characterise gait from wearable inertial sensors data were also validated. METHODS: Fourteen patients with MS were divided into two groups according to their disability level (EDSS 6.5-6.0 and EDSS 5.5-5.0, respectively). They performed both intermittent and continuous walking bouts (WBs) in a gait laboratory wearing waist and shank mounted inertial sensors. An algorithm (W-CWT) to estimate gait events and temporal parameters (mean and variability values) using data recorded from the waist mounted sensor (Dynaport, Mc Roberts) was tested against a reference algorithm (S-REF) based on the shank-worn sensors (OPAL, APDM). Subsequently, the accuracy of another algorithm (W-PAM) to detect and classify WBs was also tested. The validated algorithms were then used to quantify gait characteristics during short (sWB, 5-50 steps), intermediate (iWB, 51-100 steps) and long (lWB, >100 steps) daily living WBs and laboratory walking. Group means were compared using a two-way ANOVA. RESULTS: W-CWT compared to S-REF showed good gait event accuracy (0.05-0.10 s absolute error) and was not influenced by disability level. It slightly overestimated stride time in intermittent walking (0.012 s) and overestimated highly variability of temporal parameters in both intermittent (17.5%-58.2%) and continuous walking (11.2%-76.7%). The accuracy of W-PAM was speed-dependent and decreased with increasing disability. The ANOVA analysis showed that patients walked at a slower pace in daily living than in the laboratory. In daily living gait, all mean temporal parameters decreased as the WB duration increased. In the sWB, the patients with a lower disability score showed, on average, lower values of the temporal parameters. Variability decreased as the WB duration increased. CONCLUSIONS: This study validated a method to quantify walking in real life in people with MS and showed how gait characteristics estimated from short walking bouts during daily living may be the most informative to quantify level of disability and effects of interventions in patients moderately affected by MS. The study provides a robust approach for the quantification of recognised clinically relevant outcomes and an innovative perspective in the study of real life walking
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