27,840 research outputs found

    Can small be beautiful? assessing image resolution requirements for mobile TV

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    Mobile TV services are now being offered in several countries, but for cost reasons, most of these services offer material directly recoded for mobile consumption (i.e. without additional editing). The experiment reported in this paper, aims to assess the image resolution and bitrate requirements for displaying this type of material on mobile devices. The study, with 128 participants, examined responses to four different image resolutions, seven video encoding bitrates, two audio bitrates and four content types. The results show that acceptability is significantly lower for images smaller than 168×126, regardless of content type. The effect is more pronounced when bandwidth is abundant, and is due to important detail being lost in the smaller screens. In contrast to previous studies, participants are more likely to rate image quality as unacceptable when the audio quality is high

    Tracing the integration trajectories of diverse Spanish citizens in the UK

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    This thesis investigates the integration experiences of Spanish citizens who have arrived in the UK in the last decade. That period saw an increase in migration from Spain and a diversification of the flow. Among Spanish citizens coming to the UK there is a variety of class, ethnic and national backgrounds, including many individuals on their second migration. However, studies have tended to overlook this diversity and rarely look at immigration from Western Europe through the lens of integration. The concept of integration has received much merited criticism but new conceptualisations, grounded in empirical realities, have highlighted the dynamic, multi-directional and processual nature of the phenomenon. Drawing on these ideas, the project’s aim was to explore to what extent these conceptualisations were effective in accounting for the integration trajectories of diverse Spanish citizens. Building on the new conceptualisations that have framed the study, I propose thinking of ‘interactional integration’: a series of multi-directional, interactional processes that constitute a continual renegotiation of identity and belonging. The study adopted a mixed-methods design based on the pragmatism paradigm, and used an online, self-administered survey and in-depth, semi-structured interviews to explore integration in three main domains: employment, social life, and language. The findings revealed a range of integration trajectories as well as a large number of interactions between the domains. Language, in particular, with its dual role as both a medium of communication and a marker of social identity, mediated experiences in the other areas. Different forms of capital – economic, social and cultural – played an important role in configuring how integration trajectories unfolded. These trajectories were also shaped by past migration history and the ways that citizenship was accessed, highlighting that citizens do not all start in the same positions. Legal status, and the rights that underpin it, is thus key to integration, but remains contingent – as the ongoing Brexit process has revealed. This contingency can foster feelings of ontological insecurity highlighting the multi-directionality of integration processes. I conclude by developing a conceptual map of ‘interactional integration’ and arguing that integration is a concept that still has a place for capturing the full range of experiences across multiple domains

    International Transmission under Floating Exchange Rates

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    International Transmission under Floating Exchange Rates

    Quantifying mixing using magnetic resonance imaging.

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    Mixing is a unit operation that combines two or more components into a homogeneous mixture. This work involves mixing two viscous liquid streams using an in-line static mixer. The mixer is a split-and-recombine design that employs shear and extensional flow to increase the interfacial contact between the components. A prototype split-and-recombine (SAR) mixer was constructed by aligning a series of thin laser-cut Poly (methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) plates held in place in a PVC pipe. Mixing in this device is illustrated in the photograph in Fig. 1. Red dye was added to a portion of the test fluid and used as the minor component being mixed into the major (undyed) component. At the inlet of the mixer, the injected layer of tracer fluid is split into two layers as it flows through the mixing section. On each subsequent mixing section, the number of horizontal layers is duplicated. Ultimately, the single stream of dye is uniformly dispersed throughout the cross section of the device. Using a non-Newtonian test fluid of 0.2% Carbopol and a doped tracer fluid of similar composition, mixing in the unit is visualized using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MRI is a very powerful experimental probe of molecular chemical and physical environment as well as sample structure on the length scales from microns to centimeters. This sensitivity has resulted in broad application of these techniques to characterize physical, chemical and/or biological properties of materials ranging from humans to foods to porous media (1, 2). The equipment and conditions used here are suitable for imaging liquids containing substantial amounts of NMR mobile (1)H such as ordinary water and organic liquids including oils. Traditionally MRI has utilized super conducting magnets which are not suitable for industrial environments and not portable within a laboratory (Fig. 2). Recent advances in magnet technology have permitted the construction of large volume industrially compatible magnets suitable for imaging process flows. Here, MRI provides spatially resolved component concentrations at different axial locations during the mixing process. This work documents real-time mixing of highly viscous fluids via distributive mixing with an application to personal care products

    Peeling Back the Onion of Cyber Espionage after Tallinn 2.0

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    Tallinn 2.0 represents an important advancement in the understanding of international law’s application to cyber operations below the threshold of force. Its provisions on cyber espionage will be instrumental to states in grappling with complex legal problems in the area of digital spying. The law of cyber espionage as outlined by Tallinn 2.0, however, is substantially based on rules that have evolved outside of the digital context, and there exist serious ambiguities and limitations in its framework. This Article will explore gaps in the legal structure and consider future options available to states in light of this underlying mismatch

    Real Exchange Rate Behavior Under Floating and Fixed Regimes

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    In this paper we examine the stability of the real exchange rate and the macroeconomic effects of alternative exchange-rate regimes, including currency union, on real exchange-rate behaviour. We focus on the Irish punt in order to exploit its diversity of experience over different nominal exchange rate regimes. We make both temporal and cross-country comparisons of real-exchange-rate stability for the Irish punt with sterling, the US dollar and the German mark. We reach two conclusions on the basis of our results. The first is that for Ireland, as for most other countries, purchasing power parity provides a reasonably good description of actual exchange rate behaviour over the long run. Our second principal conclusion concerns regime effects. Currency union appears to matter. The real exchange rates we analyse are unambiguously less variable under currency union than under alternative exchange-rate systems. Otherwise, however, we find no clear-cut differences in behaviour across regimes.Exchange Rates, purchasing power parity, exchange-rate regimes, currency union

    Equity Returns and Inflation: The Puzzlingly Long Lags

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    This paper examines data for stock prices and price levels of 14 developed countries during the post-WWII era and compares their behavior in that sample with behavior over the past two centuries in the UK and the US. Contrary to much of the literature of the past several decades, we find that nominal equity prices do, in fact, keep pace with movements in the overall price level. Our results suggest, however, that this is only the case over long periods. The puzzle therefore is not that equities fail the test as inflation hedges, as had been quite widely believed, but that they take so long to pass.Stock prices, inflation, Fisher effect, neutrality, cointegration,Equity Returns,Inflation ,Long Lags

    Currency Union and Real Exchange Rate Behavior

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    In this paper we study the behavior of the real exchange rate of three North American currencies vis-a-vis the U.S. dollar: the Canadian dollar the Mexican peso, and the Panamanian Balboa. Our principal object is to design an experiment in which meaningful comparisons of behavior across regimes would be possible. In the main we were unable to find any. The allegation of problems created due to aggregating data across regimes therefore receives no support at all in these data. A second criterion for choosing the countries in our sample was differences in level of economic development. The object here was to provide ample leeway for real variables to operate. For Mexico such factors do not appear to matter. For Panama they might be of some importance, but a modified form of PPP nevertheless continues to perform well.Real exchange rates, purchasing power parity, exchange rate regimes, currency unions.

    The inferior caval vein draining into the left atrial cavity : a rare case

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    The inferior vena cava (IVC) draining into the left atrium (LA) is exceedingly rare in the setting of the usual atrial arrangement (situs solitus). This article describes a patient with this unique anomaly, and its repair.peer-reviewe
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