20,398 research outputs found
Mom, Dad Itâs Only a Game! Perceived Gambling and Gaming Behaviors among Adolescents and Young Adults: an Exploratory Study
Gambling and gaming are increasingly popular activities among adolescents. Although gambling is illegal in Portugal for youth under the age of 18 years, gambling opportunities are growing, mainly due to similarity between gambling and other technology-based games. Given the relationship between gambling and gaming activities, the paucity of research on gambling and gaming behaviors in Portugal, and the potential negative consequences in the lives of young people, the goal of this study was to explore and compare the perceptions of these two behaviors between Portuguese adolescents and young adults. Results from six focus groups (three with adolescents and three with young adults, comprising 37 participants aged between 13 and 26 years) indicated different perceptions for the two age groups. For adolescents, gaming was associated with addiction whereas for young adults it was perceived a tool for increasing personal and social skills. With regard to gambling, adolescents associated it with luck and financial rewards, whereas young adults perceived it as an activity with more risks than benefits. These results suggest developmental differences that have implications for intervention programs and future research
Multistatic human micro-Doppler classification of armed/unarmed personnel
Classification of different human activities using multistatic micro-Doppler data and features is considered in this paper, focusing on the distinction between unarmed and potentially armed personnel. A database of real radar data with more than 550 recordings from 7 different human subjects has been collected in a series of experiments in the field with a multistatic radar system. Four key features were extracted from the micro-Doppler signature after Short Time Fourier Transform analysis. The resulting feature vectors were then used as individual, pairs, triplets, and all together before inputting to different types of classifiers based on the discriminant analysis method. The performance of different classifiers and different feature combinations is discussed aiming at identifying the most appropriate features for the unarmed vs armed personnel classification, as well as the benefit of combining multistatic data rather than using monostatic data only
Personnel recognition based on multistatic micro-Doppler and singular value decomposition features
The use of micro-Doppler signatures experimentally collected by a multistatic radar system to recognise and classify different people walking is discussed. A suitable feature based on singular value decomposition of the spectrograms is proposed and tested with different types of classifiers. It is shown that high accuracy of between 97 and 99% can be achieved when multistatic data are used to perform the classification
Choice of Consistent Family, and Quantum Incompatibility
In consistent history quantum theory, a description of the time development
of a quantum system requires choosing a framework or consistent family, and
then calculating probabilities for the different histories which it contains.
It is argued that the framework is chosen by the physicist constructing a
description of a quantum system on the basis of questions he wishes to address,
in a manner analogous to choosing a coarse graining of the phase space in
classical statistical mechanics. The choice of framework is not determined by
some law of nature, though it is limited by quantum incompatibility, a concept
which is discussed using a two-dimensional Hilbert space (spin half particle).
Thus certain questions of physical interest can only be addressed using
frameworks in which they make (quantum mechanical) sense. The physicist's
choice does not influence reality, nor does the presence of choices render the
theory subjective. On the contrary, predictions of the theory can, in
principle, be verified by experimental measurements. These considerations are
used to address various criticisms and possible misunderstandings of the
consistent history approach, including its predictive power, whether it
requires a new logic, whether it can be interpreted realistically, the nature
of ``quasiclassicality'', and the possibility of ``contrary'' inferences.Comment: Minor revisions to bring into conformity with published version.
Revtex 29 pages including 1 page with figure
The Nature and Location of Quantum Information
Quantum information is defined by applying the concepts of ordinary (Shannon)
information theory to a quantum sample space consisting of a single framework
or consistent family. A classical analogy for a spin-half particle and other
arguments show that the infinite amount of information needed to specify a
precise vector in its Hilbert space is not a measure of the information carried
by a quantum entity with a -dimensional Hilbert space; the latter is,
instead, bounded by log d bits (1 bit per qubit). The two bits of information
transmitted in dense coding are located not in one but in the correlation
between two qubits, consistent with this bound. A quantum channel can be
thought of as a "structure" or collection of frameworks, and the physical
location of the information in the individual frameworks can be used to
identify the location of the channel. Analysis of a quantum circuit used as a
model of teleportation shows that the location of the channel depends upon
which structure is employed; for ordinary teleportation it is not (contrary to
Deutsch and Hayden) present in the two bits resulting from the Bell-basis
measurement, but in correlations of these with a distant qubit. In neither
teleportation nor dense coding does information travel backwards in time, nor
is it transmitted by nonlocal (superluminal) influences. It is (tentatively)
proposed that all aspects of quantum information can in principle be understood
in terms of the (basically classical) behavior of information in a particular
framework, along with the framework dependence of this information.Comment: Latex 29 pages, uses PSTricks for figure
Experimental analysis of multistatic multiband radar signatures of wind turbines
This study presents the analysis of recent experimental data acquired using two radar systems at S-band and X-band to measure simultaneous monostatic and bistatic signatures of operational wind turbines near Shrivenham, UK. Bistatic and multistatic radars are a potential approach to mitigate the adverse effects of wind farm clutter on the performance of radar systems, which is a well-known problem for air traffic control and air defence radar. This analysis compares the simultaneous monostatic and bistatic micro-Doppler signatures of two operational turbines and investigates the key differences at bistatic angles up to 23°. The variations of the signature with different polarisations, namely vertical transmitted and vertical received and horizontal transmitted and horizontal received, are also discussed
Investigation into the variations of moisture content of two buildings constructed with light earth walls
This paper briefly describes the background to light earth buildings and details a series of moisture measurements undertaken upon the clay and straw, (light earth) constructed walls of two UK based buildings. The methodology of measurement that was based upon previous studies undertaken on walls made from straw bales is described. A novel âin-wallâ wet heating system used in one of the two buildings allows the investigation of the effects of direct wall heating upon the distribution of moisture in the walls. The influence of exterior and interior temperature and humidity are described as are the variations in moisture migration introduced by the in-wall heating system. It was concluded that both buildings have exterior wall moisture content readings that indicate little risk of degradation due to interior wall moisture levels (although the Studio walls do exhibit higher and if suffered over long time periods, dangerous moisture readings for part of the measurement period)
Measurement and Analysis of Multiband Bistatic and Monostatic Radar Signatures of Wind Turbines
This paper presents the results of recent measurements taken with two radar systems to measure the simultaneous monostatic and bistatic signature of wind turbines, at S-band and X-band. Coherent monostatic and bistatic data was collected with the University College London (UCL) NetRAD 2.4 GHz radar, and the Cranfield University CW radar operating at X-band. This initial analysis shows the bistatic Doppler signature of wind turbines and informs on the key differences seen at modest bistatic angles. Polarimetric variations are also analysed via data gathered using co-polarised VV and HH and cross-polarised VH components
Family health narratives : midlife womenâs concepts of vulnerability to illness
Perceptions of vulnerability to illness are strongly influenced by the salience given to personal experience of illness in the family. This article proposes that this salience is created through autobiographical narrative, both as individual life story and collectively shaped family history. The paper focuses on responses related to health in the family drawn from semi-structured interviews with women in a qualitative study exploring midlife womenâs health. Uncertainty about the future was a major emergent theme. Most respondents were worried about a specified condition such as heart disease or breast cancer. Many women were uncertain about whether illness in the family was inherited. Some felt certain that illness in the family meant that they were more vulnerable to illness or that their relativesâ ageing would be mirrored in their own inevitable decline, while a few expressed cautious optimism about the future. In order to elucidate these responses, we focused on narratives in which family membersâ appearance was discussed and compared to that of others in the family. The visualisation of both kinship and the effects of illness, led to strong similarities being seen as grounds for worry. This led to some women distancing themselves from the legacies of illness in their families. Women tended to look at the whole family as the context for their perceptions of vulnerability, developing complex patterns of resemblance or difference within their families
Limits of stakeholder participation in sustainable development : "where facts are few, experts are many"
Extract from: The Mediterranean coastal areas from watershed to the sea : interactions and changes / by L.F. Cassar ... [et al.]. Proceedings of the MEDCORE International conference, Florence, 10th-14th November 2005The notion of including stakeholders, those affected (positively or negatively)
by a sustainable development programme in both its design and implementation,
has become a central concern for those implementing such programmes.
Such an approach is often referred to as âstakeholder participationâ, as âparticipatory
developmentâ or more simply still as âparticipationâ. How best to
achieve this has been the topic of a substantial literature, with a host of different
methodologies presented and promoted. Each has its own advantages
and disadvantages, but there has been surprisingly little discussion in the
sustainable development literature as to the limits and dangers of participation
irrespective of the approach employed to âbestâ facilitate it. Inter-linked
with the limits of participation is the role of specialists and expert opinion
in sustainable development. This paper discusses the results of participatory
exercises conducted in Gozo (Malta) between 2003 and 2005. On the positive
side, participation yielded many useful and interesting insights and invoked
a sense of âinvolvementâ in sustainable development, but there were
problems and these are discussed in this paper. For example, the outcome of
the exercise crucially depends upon representation, and a simplified vision of
âcommunityâ often employed in participation to make it practicable can load
the process in favour of certain stakeholder groups at the expense of others.peer-reviewe
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