590,282 research outputs found

    Fearless: Immersion Projects

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    Students on an Immersion Project in New Orleans are definitely doing some great work this week! The students spent part of the week working with Grow Dat Youth Farm in New Orleans City Park, an organization that hires youth from the city to work at the farm. They sell 60% of their organically grown food at whole food markets and restaurants and they donate the rest to their student workers. The organization strives to teach their volunteers responsibility, team work and commitment. [excerpt

    The Lived Experience of Cultural Immersion

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    This article presents the findings of a grounded theory study of 3 graduate students\u27 lived experience of cultural immersion. Results indicated that participants experienced 3 phases (goal setting, interaction, and evaluation) and 4 themes (bias, gender, barriers, and self-awareness) during immersion. Recommendations for the implementation of immersion experiences are discussed

    Pathogenesis of sudden death following water immersion (immersion syndrome)

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    Sympathetic activity under cold stress is investigated. Predominantly vagal cardio-depressive reflexes are discussed besides currently known mechanisms of sudden death after water immersion. Pronounced circulatory centralization in diving animals as well as following exposure in cold water indicates additional sympathetic activity. In cold water baths of 15 C, measurements indicate an increase in plasma catecholamine levels by more than 300 percent. This may lead to cardiac arrhythmias by the following mechanisms: cold water essentially induces sinus bradycardia; brady-and tachycardiarrhythmias may supervene as secondary complications; sinusbradycardia may be enhanced by sympathetic hypertonus. Furthermore, ectopic dysrhythmias are liable to be induced by the strictly sympathetic innervation of the ventricle. Myocardial ischemia following a rise in peripheral blood pressure constitutes another arrhythmogenic factor. Some of these reactions are enhanced by alcohol intoxication

    Immersion and Gameplay Experience: A Contingency Framework

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    The nature of the relationship between immersion and gameplay experience is investigated, focusing primarily on the literature related to flow. In particular, this paper proposes that immersion and gameplay experience are conceptually different, but empirically positively related through mechanisms related to flow. Furthermore, this study examines gamers' characteristics to determine the influence between immersion and gameplay experiences. The study involves 48 observations in one game setting. Regression analyses including tests for moderation and simple slope analysis are used to reveal gamers' age, experience, and understanding of the game, which moderate the relationship between immersion and gameplay experience. The results suggest that immersion is more positive for gameplay experience when the gamer lacks experience and understanding of the game as well as when the gamer is relatively older. Implications and recommendations for future research are discussed at length in the paper

    Total immersion crystal growth

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    Crystals of wide band gap materials are produced by positioning a holder receiving a seed crystal at the interface between a body of molten wide band gap material and an overlying layer of temperature-controlled, encapsulating liquid. The temperature of the layer decreases from the crystallization temperature of the crystal at the interface with the melt to a substantially lower temperature at which formation of crystal defects does not occur, suitably a temperature of 200 to 600 C. After initiation of crystal growth, the leading edge of the crystal is pulled through the layer until the leading edge of the crystal enters the ambient gas headspace which may also be temperature controlled. The length of the column of liquid encapsulant may exceed the length of the crystal such that the leading edge and trailing edge of the crystal are both simultaneously with the column of the crystal. The crystal can be pulled vertically by means of a pulling-rotation assembly or horizontally by means of a low-angle withdrawal mechanism

    Wedge immersed thermistor bolometers

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    An immersed thermistor bolometer for the detection of ultraviolet, visible, and infrared radiation is described. Two types of immersed bolometers are discussed. The immersion of thermistor flakes in a lens, or half immersed by optical contact on a lens, is examined. Lens materials are evaluated for optimum immersion including fused aluminum oxide, beryllium oxide, and germanium. The application of the bolometer to instruments in which the entrance pupil of the immersion optics has a high aspect ratio is considered

    Immersion microscopy based on photonic crystal materials

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    Theoretical model of the enhanced optical resolution of the surface plasmon immersion microscope is developed, which is based on the optics of surface plasmon Bloch waves in the tightly bound approximation. It is shown that a similar resolution enhancement may occur in a more general case of an immersion microscope based on photonic crystal materials with either positive or negative effective refractive index. Both signs of the effective refractive index have been observed in our experiments with surface plasmon immersion microscope, which is also shown to be capable of individual virus imaging.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure

    Constructing graphs with no immersion of large complete graphs

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    In 1989, Lescure and Meyniel proved, for d=5,6d=5, 6, that every dd-chromatic graph contains an immersion of KdK_d, and in 2003 Abu-Khzam and Langston conjectured that this holds for all dd. In 2010, DeVos, Kawarabayashi, Mohar, and Okamura proved this conjecture for d=7d = 7. In each proof, the dd-chromatic assumption was not fully utilized, as the proofs only use the fact that a dd-critical graph has minimum degree at least d1d - 1. DeVos, Dvo\v{r}\'ak, Fox, McDonald, Mohar, and Scheide show the stronger conjecture that a graph with minimum degree d1d-1 has an immersion of KdK_d fails for d=10d=10 and d12d\geq 12 with a finite number of examples for each value of dd, and small chromatic number relative to dd, but it is shown that a minimum degree of 200d200d does guarantee an immersion of KdK_d. In this paper we show that the stronger conjecture is false for d=8,9,11d=8,9,11 and give infinite families of examples with minimum degree d1d-1 and chromatic number d3d-3 or d2d-2 that do not contain an immersion of KdK_d. Our examples can be up to (d2)(d-2)-edge-connected. We show, using Haj\'os' Construction, that there is an infinite class of non-(d1)(d-1)-colorable graphs that contain an immersion of KdK_d. We conclude with some open questions, and the conjecture that a graph GG with minimum degree d1d - 1 and more than V(G)1+m(d+1)\frac{|V(G)|}{1+m(d+1)} vertices of degree at least mdmd has an immersion of KdK_d
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