678 research outputs found
TOURISM DEVELOPMENT PLANNING IN SELECTED EU COUNTRIES
Tourism development planning is now part of the regional policies of all Member States of the European Union. Strategic plans at national or regional level are specific instruments of regional management, which contain results of the planning process and ensure the development of tourism in the selected region. The paper analyzes the representatives of these plans from Great Britain, Germany, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania and Bulgaria. It evaluates their contents and form of processing according to suggested united methodology respecting main principles of current quality management. The paper tests the process of evaluation on a selected sample, compares different approaches to planning and identifies the best transferable practices as the first step of creating the complex system for evaluation and quality improvement of regional planning in tourism.regional management, tourism, strategic documents, evaluation.
Obecné požadavky kvality programových dokumentů
The systematic tourism promotion can be understood as a specific tool of a regional
policy of the Czech regions. At the present time almost all regions have disposed of a
particular programme document focused on a development of tourism in a given region.
Nevertheless these documents are considerably different in the case of their form and content.
That is why an evaluation of their quality is quite difficult. One of the reasons of this situation
is an absence of the requirements on a quality of these documents. This paper resulted from
the methodological concept which aim is to set the basic requirements on the form and
content of the programme documents
Communication Subsystems for Emerging Wireless Technologies
The paper describes a multi-disciplinary design of modern communication systems. The design starts with the analysis of a system in order to define requirements on its individual components. The design exploits proper models of communication channels to adapt the systems to expected transmission conditions. Input filtering of signals both in the frequency domain and in the spatial domain is ensured by a properly designed antenna. Further signal processing (amplification and further filtering) is done by electronics circuits. Finally, signal processing techniques are applied to yield information about current properties of frequency spectrum and to distribute the transmission over free subcarrier channels
The self-reported health of U.S. flight attendants compared to the general population
Background: Few studies have examined the broad health effects of occupational exposures in flight attendants apart from disease-specific morbidity and mortality studies. We describe the health status of flight attendants and compare it to the U.S. population. In addition, we explore whether the prevalence of major health conditions in flight attendants is associated with length of exposure to the aircraft environment using job tenure as a proxy. Methods: We surveyed flight attendants from two domestic U.S. airlines in 2007 and compared the prevalence of their health conditions to contemporaneous cohorts in the National Health and Nutrition Survey (NHANES), 2005-2006 and 2007-2008. We weighted the prevalence of flight attendant conditions to match the age distribution in the NHANES and compared the two populations stratified by gender using the Standardized Prevalence Ratio (SPR). For leading health conditions in flight attendants, we analyzed the association between job tenure and health outcomes in logistic regression models. Results: Compared to the NHANES population (n =5,713), flight attendants (n = 4,011) had about a 3-fold increase in the age-adjusted prevalence of chronic bronchitis despite considerably lower levels of smoking. In addition, the prevalence of cardiac disease in female flight attendants was 3.5 times greater than the general population while their prevalence of hypertension and being overweight was significantly lower. Flight attendants reported 2 to 5.7 times more sleep disorders, depression, and fatigue, than the general population. Female flight attendants reported 34% more reproductive cancers. Health conditions that increased with longer job tenure as a flight attendant were chronic bronchitis, heart disease in females, skin cancer, hearing loss, depression and anxiety, even after adjusting for age, gender, body mass index (BMI), education, and smoking. Conclusions: This study found higher rates of specific diseases in flight attendants than the general population. Longer tenure appears to explain some of the higher disease prevalence. Conclusions are limited by the cross-sectional design and recall bias. Further study is needed to determine the source of risk and to elucidate specific exposure-disease relationships over time
Methods for testing of analog circuits
Práce se zabývá metodami pro testování lineárních analogových obvodů v kmitočtové oblasti. Cílem je navrhnout efektivní metody pro automatické generování testovacího plánu. Snížením počtu měření a výpočetní náročnosti lze výrazně snížit náklady za testování. Práce se zabývá multifrekveční parametrickou poruchovou analýzou, která byla plně implementována do programu Matlab. Vhodnou volbou testovacích kmitočtů lze potlačit chyby měření a chyby způsobené výrobními tolerancemi obvodových prvků. Navržené metody pro optimální volbu kmitočtů byly statisticky ověřeny metodou MonteCarlo. Pro zvýšení přesnosti a snížení výpočetní náročnosti poruchové analýzy byly vyvinuty postupy založené na metodě nejmenších čtverců a přibližné symbolické analýze.The thesis deals with methods for testing of linear analog circuits in the frequency domain. The goal is to develop new efficient methods for automatic test plan generation. To reduce test costs a minimum number of measurements as well as less computational demands are the fundamental aims. The thesis is focused on the multi-frequency parametric fault diagnosis which was fully implemented in the Matlab program. The fundamental problem consists in selection of test frequencies which can reduce the influences of measurement errors and errors caused by tolerances of well-working components. The proposed methods for test frequency selection were statistically verified by the MonteCarlo method. To improve the accuracy and reduce the computational complexity of fault diagnosis, the methods based on least-square techniques and approximate symbolic analysis were presented.
Intermediate Phases, structural variance and network demixing in chalcogenides: the unusual case of group V sulfides
We review Intermediate Phases (IPs) in chalcogenide glasses and provide a
structural interpretation of these phases. In binary group IV selenides, IPs
reside in the 2.40 < r < 2.54 range, and in binary group V selenides they shift
to a lower r, in the 2.29< r < 2.40 range. Here r represents the mean
coordination number of glasses. In ternary alloys containing equal proportions
of group IV and V selenides, IPs are wider and encompass ranges of respective
binary glasses. These data suggest that the local structural variance
contributing to IP widths largely derives from four isostatic local structures
of varying connectivity r; two include group V based quasi-tetrahedral (r =
2.29) and pyramidal (r = 2.40) units, and the other two are group IV based
corner-sharing (r = 2.40) and edge-sharing (r = 2.67) tetrahedral units.
Remarkably, binary group V (P, As) sulfides exhibit IPs that are shifted to
even a lower r than their selenide counterparts; a result that we trace to
excess Sn chains either partially (As-S) or completely (P-S) demixing from
network backbone, in contrast to excess Sen chains forming part of the backbone
in corresponding selenide glasses. In ternary chalcogenides of Ge with the
group V elements (As, P), IPs of the sulfides are similar to their selenide
counterparts, suggesting that presence of Ge serves to reign in the excess Sn
chain fragments back in the backbone as in their selenide counterparts
Globally time-reversible fluid simulations with smoothed particle hydrodynamics
This paper describes an energy-preserving and globally time-reversible code
for weakly compressible smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH). We do not add
any additional dynamics to the Monaghan's original SPH scheme at the level of
ordinary differential equation, but we show how to discretize the equations by
using a corrected expression for density and by invoking a symplectic
integrator. Moreover, to achieve the global-in-time reversibility, we have to
correct the initial state, implement a conservative fluid-wall interaction, and
use the fixed-point arithmetic. Although the numerical scheme is reversible
globally in time (solvable backwards in time while recovering the initial
conditions), we observe thermalization of the particle velocities and growth of
the Boltzmann entropy. In other words, when we do not see all the possible
details, as in the Boltzmann entropy, which depends only on the one-particle
distribution function, we observe the emergence of the second law of
thermodynamics (irreversible behavior) from purely reversible dynamics.Comment: Submitted to a journa
Approaches to conservative Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics with entropy
Smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) is typically used for barotropic
fluids, where the pressure depends only on the local mass density. Here, we
show how to incorporate the entropy into the SPH, so that the pressure can also
depend on the temperature, while keeping the growth of the total entropy,
conservation of the total energy, and symplecticity of the reversible part of
the SPH equations. The SPH system of ordinary differential equations with
entropy is derived by means of the Poisson reduction and the Lagrange-Euler
transformation. We present several approaches towards SPH with entropy, which
are then illustrated on systems with discontinuities, on adiabatic and
nonadiabatic expansion, and on the Rayleigh-Beenard convection without the
Boussinesq approximation. Finally, we show how to model hyperbolic heat
conduction within the SPH, extending the SPH variables with not only entropy
but also a heat-flux-related vector field
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