1,534 research outputs found
Striking a balance between culture and fun: 'Quality' meets hitman genre in 'In Bruges'
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in New Review of Film and Television Studies, 9(2), 132 - 151, 2011, copyright Taylor & Francis, available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/17400309.2011.556934.This paper gives an analysis of In Bruges (2008) that situates the film as a hybrid product offering a mixture of signifiers of cinematic ‘quality’ and ‘lower’ genre ingredients. This paper also considers the extent to which In Bruges offers a combination of tonal registers in which irony and detachment, as markers of distinction, are blended with a more mainstream-oriented appeal to emotional engagement on the part of the viewer, and considers how this might be related to the broader social and industrial contexts in which it appeared
Supporting Peer Help and Collaboration in Distributed Workplace Environments
Special Issue on Computer Supported Collaborative LearningIncreasingly, organizations are geographically distributed with activities coordinated and integrated through the use of information technology. Such organizations face constant change and the corresponding need for continual learning and renewal of their workers. In this paper we describe a prototype system called PHelpS (Peer Help System) that facilitates workers in carrying out such "life long learning". PHelpS supports workers as they perform their tasks, offers assistance in finding peer helpers when required, and mediates communication on task-related topics. When a worker runs into difficulty in carrying out a task, PHelpS provides a list of other workers who are ready, willing and able to help him or her. The worker then selects a particular helper with PHelpS supporting the subsequent help interaction. The PHelpS system acts as a facilitator to stimulate learning and collaboration, rather than as a directive agent imposing its perspectives on the workers. In this way PHelpS facilitates the creation of extensive informal peer help networks, where workers help one another with tasks and opens up new research avenues for further exploration of AI-based computer-supported collaborative learning. (http://aied.inf.ed.ac.uk/members98/archive/vol_9/greer/full.html
Intra-individual movement variability during skill transitions: A useful marker?
Applied research suggests athletes and coaches need to be challenged in knowing when and how much a movement should be consciously attended to. This is exacerbated when the skill is in transition between two more stable states, such as when an already well learnt skill is being refined. Using existing theory and research, this paper highlights the potential application of movement variability as a tool to inform a coach’s decision-making process when implementing a systematic approach to technical refinement. Of particular interest is the structure of co-variability between mechanical degrees-of-freedom (e.g., joints) within the movement system’s entirety when undergoing a skill transition. Exemplar data from golf are presented, demonstrating the link between movement variability and mental effort as an important feature of automaticity, and thus intervention design throughout the different stages of refinement. Movement variability was shown to reduce when mental effort directed towards an individual aspect of the skill was high (target variable). The opposite pattern was apparent for variables unrelated to the technical refinement. Therefore, two related indicators, movement variability and mental effort, are offered as a basis through which the evaluation of automaticity during technical refinements may be made
Dynamic Phase-Control of a Rising Sun Magnetron Using Modulated and Continuous Current
Phase-control of a magnetron is studied via simulation using a combination of a continuous current source and a modulated current source. The addressable, modulated current source is turned ON and OFF at the magnetron operating frequency in order to control the electron injection and the spoke phase. Prior simulation work using a 2D model of a Rising Sun magnetron showed that the use of 100% modulated current controlled the magnetron phase and allowed for dynamic phase control. In this work, the minimum fraction of modulated current source needed to achieve a phase control is studied. The current fractions (modulated versus continuous) were varied from 10% modulated current to 100% modulated current to study the effects on phase control. Dynamic phase-control, stability, and start up time of the device were studied for all these cases showing that with 10% modulated current and 90% continuous current, a phase shift of 180˚ can be achieved demonstrating dynamic phase control
The VISTA Science Archive
We describe the VISTA Science Archive (VSA) and its first public release of
data from five of the six VISTA Public Surveys. The VSA exists to support the
VISTA Surveys through their lifecycle: the VISTA Public Survey consortia can
use it during their quality control assessment of survey data products before
submission to the ESO Science Archive Facility (ESO SAF); it supports their
exploitation of survey data prior to its publication through the ESO SAF; and,
subsequently, it provides the wider community with survey science exploitation
tools that complement the data product repository functionality of the ESO SAF.
This paper has been written in conjunction with the first public release of
public survey data through the VSA and is designed to help its users understand
the data products available and how the functionality of the VSA supports their
varied science goals. We describe the design of the database and outline the
database-driven curation processes that take data from nightly
pipeline-processed and calibrated FITS files to create science-ready survey
datasets. Much of this design, and the codebase implementing it, derives from
our earlier WFCAM Science Archive (WSA), so this paper concentrates on the
VISTA-specific aspects and on improvements made to the system in the light of
experience gained in operating the WSA.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figures. Minor edits to fonts and typos after
sub-editting. Published in A&
Energy resources from the food bowl: an uneasy co-existence. Identifying and managing cumulative impacts of mining and agriculture
Light hadron spectrum---MILC results with the Kogut-Susskind and Wilson actions
We present the current status of our ongoing calculations of the light hadron
spectrum with both Kogut-Susskind (KS) and Wilson quarks in the valence or
quenched approximation. We discuss KS quarks first and find that the chiral
extrapolation is potentially the biggest source of systematic error. For the
Wilson case, we focus on finite volume and source size effects at 6/g^2=5.7. We
find no evidence to support the claim that there is a finite volume effect
between N_s=16 and 24 of approximately 5%.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, LaTeX, uses espcrs2, epsf, Invited talk
presented by S. Gottlieb at Lattice QCD on Parallel Computers, University of
Tsukuba, March, 1997, to appear in the proceeding
Subtle Geochemical Adjustments in Native Aquifer Soils – In Situ Groundwater Treatment Strategies for Cobalt at Coal Combustion Residual Sites
Subtle Geochemical Adjustments in Native Aquifer Soils – In Situ Groundwater Treatment Strategies for Cobalt at Coal Combustion Residual Sites Authors Mr. David Collins - United States - Stantec Mr. Jim Finley - United States - Stantec Abstract Cobalt is frequently observed above the groundwater protection standard (GWPS) downgradient of CCR units. Native aquifer soils have the capacity to influence groundwater geochemistry and play an important role in attenuation of cobalt and other CCR constituents. Geochemical modeling confirmed by bench-scale treatability testing has shown cobalt responds favorably to enhanced attenuation by relatively minor in situ adjustments of geochemical conditions in these soils. This presentation will summarize geochemical modeling and treatability testing results for multiple reagents to reduce dissolved cobalt below the GWPS and minimize mobilization of other constituents. Remedial evaluations identified treatment of groundwater downgradient of CCR units is most effective via a permeable reactive barrier (PRB). As such, cost-effective and industry accepted deployment methods to establish a PRB for in situ adjustment of groundwater will be presented. This alternatives analysis will focus specifically on design considerations particular to CCR sites, advantages and challenges associated with each, relative cost, and schedule implications. A case study will be presented to summarize the site-specific treatability testing results, deployment method alternatives analysis process, the selected site-specific technology including a preliminary conceptual design, and results of pilot testing that was conducted to confirm bench-scale treatability testing and evaluate parameters for full-scale design
Recommended from our members
Balancing act: exploring the tone of The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
This paper provides an analysis of The Life Aquatic in the context of debates around tone, irony, the Smart Film, the New Sincerity and the Quirky. It argues that Anderson is one of a small but significant number of filmmakers to escape from the indiscriminate irony of fin de sie`cle cinema, and finds The Life Aquatic Aquatic a particularly interesting film in which to explore such matters because of its ready artifice, strong elements of pastiche and measuredly preposterous excesses. Offering a critical analysis, the paper balances an engagement with some of the systemic elements of the film’s tone with the detailed organisation of tonal elements in particular sequences
- …
