4,428 research outputs found
Cultural Diversity in the News Media: A Democratic or a Commercial Need?
This paper distinguishes between laissez-faire and interventionist models used to justify and implement cultural diversity initiatives in the news media. The laissez-faire model is characteristic of U.S journalism. However, due to the convergence of media systems and the widespread adoption of diversity management, the laissez-fair model may also become the prevalent model throughout other Western democracies, in Europe and elsewhere. The paper argues that the problem with the laissez-fair approach to cultural diversity in the media is that it relies on commercial instea
Critical multiculturalism and deliberative democracy: Opening spaces for more inclusive communication
The discredit of multiculturalism in contemporary
discussions about cultural diversity and democracy is
problematic since allegations of multiculturalism’s failure
and undemocratic consequences are used to justify a
(re)turn to assimilation throughout Western societies.
Rejecting assimilationism as either desirable or inevitable,
this article challenges the alleged incompatibility between
multiculturalism and democracy. It makes the case for a
(re)conceptualisation of both multiculturalism and democracy
in ways that can provide the foundations for inclusive
communication. To this end, the article endorse
Journalism, Poverty, and the Marketing of Misery: News From Chile's “Largest Ghetto"
__Abstract__
Research on the news coverage of poverty has largely overlooked the agency of the actors involved. This study addressed this gap by combining ethnographic fieldwork in a poor neighborhood with an analysis of television news about the neighborhood and interviews with the journalists who produced this news. The analysis shows a relationship between journalists and poor people significantly more complex than the relationship described in previous research: Journalists and poor people marketed the neighborhood's misery collaboratively. They shaped news in ways that could be stigmatizing, but that served their converging interests. By acknowledging that structure and agency presuppose each other, this paper contributes to a more nuanced understanding of journalism, as well as to efforts to address poverty's symbolic injustice
Human-activity-centered measurement system:challenges from laboratory to the real environment in assistive gait wearable robotics
Assistive gait wearable robots (AGWR) have shown a great advancement in developing intelligent devices to assist human in their activities of daily living (ADLs). The rapid technological advancement in sensory technology, actuators, materials and computational intelligence has sped up this development process towards more practical and smart AGWR. However, most assistive gait wearable robots are still confined to be controlled, assessed indoor and within laboratory environments, limiting any potential to provide a real assistance and rehabilitation required to humans in the real environments. The gait assessment parameters play an important role not only in evaluating the patient progress and assistive device performance but also in controlling smart self-adaptable AGWR in real-time. The self-adaptable wearable robots must interactively conform to the changing environments and between users to provide optimal functionality and comfort. This paper discusses the performance parameters, such as comfortability, safety, adaptability, and energy consumption, which are required for the development of an intelligent AGWR for outdoor environments. The challenges to measuring the parameters using current systems for data collection and analysis using vision capture and wearable sensors are presented and discussed
First Law, Counterterms and Kerr-AdS_5 Black Holes
We apply the counterterm subtraction technique to calculate the action and
other quantities for the Kerr--AdS black hole in five dimensions using two
boundary metrics; the Einstein universe and rotating Einstein universe with
arbitrary angular velocity. In both cases, the resulting thermodynamic
quantities satisfy the first law of thermodynamics. We point out that the
reason for the violation of the first law in previous calculations is that the
rotating Einstein universe, used as a boundary metric, was rotating with an
angular velocity that depends on the black hole rotation parameter. Using a new
coordinate system with a boundary metric that has an arbitrary angular
velocity, one can show that the resulting physical quantities satisfy the first
law.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figur
Scale without Conformal Invariance at Three Loops
We carry out a three-loop computation that establishes the existence of scale
without conformal invariance in dimensional regularization with the MS scheme
in d=4-epsilon spacetime dimensions. We also comment on the effects of scheme
changes in theories with many couplings, as well as in theories that live on
non-conformal scale-invariant renormalization group trajectories. Stability
properties of such trajectories are analyzed, revealing both attractive and
repulsive directions in a specific example. We explain how our results are in
accord with those of Jack & Osborn on a c-theorem in d=4 (and d=4-epsilon)
dimensions. Finally, we point out that limit cycles with turning points are
unlike limit cycles with continuous scale invariance.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, Erratum adde
Dirigentas de campamento y actividad mediática: Más allá de internet
__RESUMEN__
El debate en torno al carácter activo de las audiencias
contemporáneas tiende a centrarse en las nuevas
tecnologías de comunicación y en las posibilidades
de producción de contenido que ellas ofrecen. Este
artículo propone, en cambio, atender al carácter
político de ciertas actividades mediáticas y a factores
no-tecnológicos. Específicamente, identificamos la
llamada cultura promocional como un impulso importante
para influir —y no directamente producir— los
contenidos en los medios. Ilustramos este enfoque a
través de un caso de estudio sobre la relación entre
dirigentas de campamentos y los medios de comunicación
en Chile. Estas mujeres interactúan con los
medios tradicionales, no digitales, motivadas por la
necesidad de reivindicar su imagen y promocionar
sus demandas. Argumentamos que el estudio de
las actividades de las audiencias en una sociedad
neoliberal como la chilena debe considerar que las
estrategias promocionales no son el privilegio de
ciertos grupos sociales, sino que están presentes de
un modo cada vez más generalizado en la sociedad.
__ABSTRACT__
Discussions about the active character of contemporary
audiences tend to be centered on new communication
technologies and on the possibilities of content
production offered by these technologies. This article,
in contrast, proposes that we pay attention to the
political character of certain media activities and to
non-technological factors that influence the changing
relation between audiences and media. Specifically,
we focus on promotional culture as an important
drive for activities aimed at influencing—and not
directly producing—media content. This approach is
illustrated through a case study about the relationship
between female slum community leaders and the
media in Chile. These women interact largely with
traditional rather than digital media, motivated by
the need to challenge the image of them proposed by
those media, and promote their demands. We argue
that the study of audience participation in a neoliberal
society like Chile must recognize promotional
strategies as not exclusive of certain social groups,
but as increasingly widespread throughout society
Photodesorption of CO ice
At the high densities and low temperatures found in star forming regions, all
molecules other than H2 should stick on dust grains on timescales shorter than
the cloud lifetimes. Yet these clouds are detected in the millimeter lines of
gaseous CO. At these temperatures, thermal desorption is negligible and hence a
non-thermal desorption mechanism is necessary to maintain molecules in the gas
phase. Here, the first laboratory study of the photodesorption of pure CO ice
under ultra high vacuum is presented, which gives a desorption rate of 3E-3 CO
molecules per UV (7-10.5 eV) photon at 15 K. This rate is factors of 1E2-1E5
larger than previously estimated and is comparable to estimates of other
non-thermal desorption rates. The experiments constrains the mechanism to a
single photon desorption process of ice surface molecules. The measured
efficiency of this process shows that the role of CO photodesorption in
preventing total removal of molecules in the gas has been underestimated.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted by ApJ
By-Product Alcohol: Fusel Oil as an Alternative Fuel in Spark Ignition Engine
Fusel oil is a by-product obtained through the fermentation of some agricultural products. The fusel oil properties are closer to other alternative combustible types and the limited number of studies on the use of fusel oil as an alcohol derivative in SI engines constitutes to the base of this study. This paper experimentally examined the impacts of a by-product of alcohol, which is fusel oil by blending it with gasoline, on engine performance, combustion characteristics, and emissions in a 4-cylinder SI engine. The test was achieved at different engine speeds and a 60 % throttle valve (load). As results, brake power, BTE, and BSFC of F10 are higher at all engine speeds. Maximum engine BTE was 33.9%, at the lowest BSFC with F10. Moreover, it is worth seeing that the F10 under rich air-fuel ratio has less variation of COVIMEP compared to the F20 and gasoline. F10 represents shorter combustion duration, thereby, the engine power increased. NOx emission for F10 at 4500 rpm was lower than gasoline. The highest value of HC emission is obtained with F10 compared to gasoline and F20 with an average increase of 11% over the engine speed range. CO and CO2 emissions increased when using fusel oil blends
Prediction of gait events in walking activities with a Bayesian perception system
In this paper, a robust probabilistic formulation for prediction of gait events from human walking activities using wearable sensors is presented. This approach combines the output from a Bayesian perception system with observations from actions and decisions made over time. The perception system makes decisions about the current gait events, while observations from decisions and actions allow to predict the most probable gait event during walking activities. Furthermore, our proposed method is capable to evaluate the accuracy of its predictions, which permits to obtain a better performance and trade-off between accuracy and speed. In our work, we use data from wearable inertial measurement sensors attached to the thigh, shank and foot of human participants. The proposed perception system is validated with multiple experiments for recognition and prediction of gait events using angular velocity data from three walking activities; level-ground, ramp ascent and ramp descent. The results show that our method is fast, accurate and capable to evaluate and adapt its own performance. Overall, our Bayesian perception system demonstrates to be a suitable high-level method for the development of reliable and intelligent assistive and rehabilitation robots
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