50,999 research outputs found
Commentary on session II: The politics of migration and trade
Summary and discussion of the two papers in this session: "U.S.-Mexican migration cooperation: obstacles and opportunities" by Marc R. Rosenblum; "Political implications of U.S. public attitudes toward immigration on the immigration policymaking process" by Valerie F. HuntEmigration and immigration ; International trade ; Public policy
Forest resource information system
Remote sensing technology providing St. Regis with an independent operational system and having LANDSAT data as a significant and viable contributor was documented and transferred. Primary emphasis was placed on documenting developmental LARSYS (LARSYSDV) software modules. Timelines and a short description of the software documentation process is given
Offshore rectenna feasbility
A preliminary study of the feasibility and cost of an offshore rectenna to serve the upper metropolitan east coast was performed. A candidate site at which to build a 5 GW rectenna was selected on the basis of proximity to load centers, avoidance of shipping lanes, sea floor terrain, and relocated conditions. Several types of support structures were selected for study based initially on the reference system rectenna concept of a wire mesh ground screen and dipoles each with its own rectifier and filter circuits. Possible secondary uses of an offshore rectenna were examined and are evaluated
Commuting quantities and exceptional W-algebras
Sets of commuting charges constructed from the current of a U(1) Kac-Moody
algebra are found. There exists a set S_n of such charges for each positive
integer n > 1; the corresponding value of the central charge in the
Feigin-Fuchs realization of the stress tensor is c = 13-6n-6/n. The charges in
each series can be written in terms of the generators of an exceptional
W-algebra.Comment: 27 pages, KCL-TH-92-
Mind-reading versus neuromarketing: how does a product make an impact on the consumer?
Purpose
– This research study aims to illustrate the mapping of each consumer’s mental processes in a market-relevant context. This paper shows how such maps deliver operational insights that cannot be gained by physical methods such as brain imaging.
Design/methodology/approach
– A marketed conceptual attribute and a sensed material characteristic of a popular product were varied across presentations in a common use. The relative acceptability of each proposition was rated together with analytical descriptors. The mental interaction that determined each consumer’s preferences was calculated from the individual’s performance at discriminating each viewed sample from a personal norm. These personal cognitive characteristics were aggregated into maps of demand in the market for subpanels who bought these for the senses or for the attribute.
Findings
– Each of 18 hypothesized mental processes dominated acceptance in at least a few individuals among both sensory and conceptual purchasers. Consumers using their own descriptive vocabulary processed the factors in appeal of the product more centrally. The sensory and conceptual factors tested were most often processed separately, but a minority of consumers treated them as identical. The personal ideal points used in the integration of information showed that consumers wished for extremes of the marketed concept that are technologically challenging or even impossible. None of this evidence could be obtained from brain imaging, casting in question its usefulness in marketing.
Research limitations/implications
– Panel mapping of multiple discriminations from a personal norm fills three major gaps in consumer marketing research. First, preference scores are related to major influences on choices and their cognitive interactions in the mind. Second, the calculations are completed on the individual’s data and the cognitive parameters of each consumer’s behavior are aggregated – never the raw scores. Third, discrimination scaling puts marketed symbolic attributes and sensed material characteristics on the same footing, hence measuring their causal interactions for the first time.
Practical implications
– Neuromarketing is an unworkable proposition because brain imaging does not distinguish qualitative differences in behavior. Preference tests are operationally effective when designed and analyzed to relate behavioral scores to major influences from market concepts and sensory qualities in interaction. The particular interactions measured in the reported study relate to the major market for healthy eating.
Originality/value
– This is the first study to measure mental interactions among determinants of preference, as well as including both a marketed concept and a sensed characteristic. Such an approach could be of great value to consumer marketing, both defensively and creatively
Screening Program on Superalloys for Trisonic Transport. Report No. 2. Results for Cold-Worked N155 Alloy
N155 alloy sheet cold reduced 40 and 65 percent was subjected to a screening program in the as-rolled condition designed to rate materials for possible usefulness for the airframe of a trisonic transport plane, Cold reductions of 40 to 65 percent produced the following properties at room temperature in the as-rolled N155 sheet investigated
Power law burst and inter-burst interval distributions in the solar wind: turbulence or dissipative SOC ?
We calculate for the first time the probability density functions (PDFs) P of
burst energy e, duration T and inter-burst interval tau for a known turbulent
system in nature. Bursts in the earth-sun component of the Poynting flux at 1
AU in the solar wind were measured using the MFI and SWE experiments on the
NASA WIND spacecraft. We find P(e) and P(T) to be power laws, consistent with
self-organised criticality (SOC). We find also a power law form for P(tau) that
distinguishes this turbulent cascade from the exponential P(tau) of ideal SOC,
but not from some other SOC-like sandpile models. We discuss the implications
for the relation between SOC and turbulence.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure. Submitted to PRL on 25th February 2000. Revised
version re-submitted on 9th May 2000. Second revised version submitted Phys.
Rev. E on 26th June, 200
Dynamic stability characteristics of the combination space shuttle orbiter and ferry vehicle
Subsonic forced-oscillation tests of a 0.015 scale model of the space shuttle orbiter/747 ferry vehicle were conducted in the Langley high speed 7- by 10-foot tunnel at Mach numbers of 0.2, 0.4, and 0.5 for angles of attack up to 12 deg. Tests were made of the basic 747 airplane, of the modified 747 (tip fins and struts added), of the ferry configuration, (747 plus orbiter at an incidence angle of 3 deg), and of the approach and landing test configuration (747 plus orbiter at an incidence angle of 6 deg)
Broadband optomechanical transduction of nanomagnetic spin modes
The stable vortex state that occurs in micron-scale magnetic disks is one of
the most interesting and potentially useful phenomenon in nanomagnetism. A
variety of tools have been applied to study the vortex state, and collective
spin excitations corresponding to harmonic motion of the vortex, but to-date
these tools have measured either strongly driven vortex resonances or have been
unable to simultaneously measure static properties such as the magnetization.
Here we show that by combining the sensitivity of cavity optomechanics with the
technique of torque mixing resonance spectroscopy, we are able to measure the
magnetization, in-plane susceptibility, and spin resonances of individual
vortices in the low-drive limit. These measurements elucidate the complex
behavior of the vortex as it moves through the pinning landscape of the disk.
Furthermore, we observe gyrotropic resonances as high as 1.1 GHz, suggesting
the use of engineering defects for applications such as microwave-to-optical
wavelength conversion.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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