1,547 research outputs found
Cadmium plated steel caps seal anodized aluminum fittings
Cadmium prevents fracturing of hard anodic coating under torquing to system specification requirements, prevents galvanic coupling, and eliminates need for crush washers, which, though commonly used in industry, do not correct leakage problem experienced when anodized aluminum fittings and anodized aluminum cap assemblies are joined
Discourses Of Prejudice In The professions: The Case Of Sign Languages
There is no evidence that learning a natural human language is cognitively harmful to children. To the contrary, multilingualism has been argued to be beneficial to all. Nevertheless, many professionals advise the parents of deaf children that their children should not learn a sign language during their early years, despite strong evidence across many research disciplines that sign languages are natural human languages. Their recommendations are based on a combination of misperceptions about (1) the difficulty of learning a sign language, (2) the effects of bilingualism, and particularly bimodalism, (3) the bona fide status of languages that lack a written form, (4) the effects of a sign language on acquiring literacy, (5) the ability of technologies to address the needs of deaf children and (6) the effects that use of a sign language will have on family cohesion. We expose these misperceptions as based in prejudice and urge institutions involved in educating professionals concerned with the healthcare, raising and educating of deaf children to include appropriate information about first language acquisition and the importance of a sign language for deaf children. We further urge such professionals to advise the parents of deaf children properly, which means to strongly advise the introduction of a sign language as soon as hearing loss is detected
Seeing is believing: primary generalist pre-service teachers’ observations of physical education lessons in Ireland and Switzerland.
Primary generalist pre-service teachers (PSTs) rarely have opportunity to observe teachers
teaching authentic physical education lessons let alone reflect with the teachers, their lecturer
or their peers following the lesson. Observation of, and reflection on, quality lessons can
have a powerful influence on shaping the PSTs’ soon-to-be-teachers’ professional identities
and can also help them to develop reflective and critical thinking skills. A qualitative
framework utilising critical incidents, described as ‘events identified by student teachers as
significant in making progress toward becoming a better teacher’ (Schempp, 1985: p.159)
guided the PSTs’ observations in this study. One primary physical education initial teacher
educator (PEITE) and four PSTs, from Ireland, participated in the study and data comprised
of a planning discussion, 40 critical incident observations of ten lessons in two European
countries and two reflective discussions. Each set of observations was followed by a group
discussion to provide opportunity for reflection-on-action (Schön, 1983). Examination of the
data showed that PSTs extended their understanding of professional practice in: questioning
and demonstrating; inclusion; organisation and management; and feedback and were
surprised that practice in both countries was more similar than different. Critical incidents
were a useful method of focusing reflections for the PSTs and the opportunity to engage in
the process of observing, and reflecting on, quality lessons impacted the PSTs’ perceptions
towards becoming better teachers.
Keywords: Critical incidents; reflection
Morphology of Spherulites in Rapidly Solidified Ni3Ge Droplets
The congruently melting, single phase, L12 intermetallic β-Ni3Ge has been subject to rapid solidification via drop-tube processing. Four different cooling rates are used in this process, at very low cooling rates (≥850 μm diameter particles, ≥700 K s−1) and slightly higher cooling rates (850–500 μm diameter particles, 700–1386 K s−1) the dominant solidification morphology, revealed after etching, is that of isolated spherulites in an otherwise featureless matrix. At higher cooling rates, (500–300 μm diameter particles, 1386–2790 K s−1 and (300–212 μm diameter particles, 2790–4600 K s−1) mixed spherulite and dendritic morphologies are observed. Indeed, at the higher cooling rate dendrites with side-branches composed of numerous small spherulites are observed. Selected area diffraction analysis in the TEM indicate that the formation of spherulites is due to an order-disorder transformation. Dark-field TEM imaging has confirmed that the spherulites appear to consist of lamellae of the ordered phase, with disordered material in the space between the lamellae. The lamellar width within a given spherulite is constant, but the width is a function of cooling rate, with higher cooling rates giving finer lamellae. As such, there are many parallels with spherulite growth in polymers
Analyses of space environment effects on active fiber optic links orbited aboard the LDEF
The results of the 'Preliminary Analysis of WL Experiment no. 701, Space Environment Effects on Operating Fiber Optic Systems,' is correlated with space simulated post retrieval terrestrial studies performed on the M0004 experiment. Temperature cycling measurements were performed on the active optical data links for the purpose of assessing link signal to noise ratio and bit error rate performance some 69 months following the experiment deployment in low Earth orbit. The early results indicate a high correlation between pre-orbit, orbit, and post-orbit functionality of the first known and longest space demonstration of operating fiber optic systems
Too much of too little: xylitol, an unusual trigger of a chronic metabolic hyperchloremic acidosis
Homeopathic globules are frequently used in children as a first-line treatment. Most of these globules are coated with sugar substitutes like xylitol; these substitutes are known for their laxative effect. Our patient shows that consumption of globules coated with xylitol does not have only laxative effects. It may cause indeed considerable weight loss and life-threatening enteral bicarbonate loss by diarrhea when overdosed in an infan
Avoiding Linguistic Neglect Of Deaf Children
Deaf children who are not provided with a sign language early in their development are at risk of linguistic deprivation; they may never be fluent in any language, and they may have deficits in cognitive activities that rely on a firm foundation in a first language. These children are socially and emotionally isolated. Deafness makes a child vulnerable to abuse, and linguistic deprivation compounds the abuse because the child is less able to report it. Parents rely on professionals as guides in making responsible choices in raising and educating their deaf children. But lack of expertise on language acquisition and overreliance on access to speech often result in professionals not recommending that the child be taught a sign language or, worse, that the child be denied sign language. We recommend action that those in the social welfare services can implement immediately to help protect the health of deaf children
What Medical Education Can Do To Ensure Robust Language Development In Deaf Children
The typical medical education curriculum does not address language development for deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH) children. However, this issue is medical because of the frequency with which DHH children as a population face health complications due to linguistic deprivation. The critical period for language development is early; if a child does not acquire an intact language before age five, the child is unlikely to ever have native-like use of any language. Such linguistic deprivation carries risks of cognitive delay and psycho-social health difficulties. Spoken language is inaccessible for many DHH children despite assistive-technology developments. But sign languages, because they are visual, are accessible to most DHH children. To ensure language development, DHH children should have exposure to a sign language in their early years, starting at birth. If they also receive successful training in processing and producing a spoken language, they will have the many benefits of bimodal bilingualism. Undergraduate medical education curricula should include information about early language acquisition so that physicians can advise families of deaf newborns and newly deafened young children how to protect their cognitive health. Graduate medical education in primary care, pediatrics, and otolaryngology should include extensive information about amplification/cochlear implants, language modality, and the latest research/practices to promote the development and education of DHH children. Training in how to establish connections with local authorities and services that can support parents and child should be included as well. Further, students need to learn how to work with sign language interpreters in caring for DHH patients. We offer suggestions as to how medical curricula can be appropriately enriched and point to existing programs and initiatives that can serve as resources
Out of the Frying Pan and into the Fire: Food as Community Archives in Ireland
Food permeates every aspect of life; there is no class or culture that does not eat, no society that has not developed its own cuisine. Since 2010, twenty-nine entries related to food have been added to the UNESCO Representative list of Intangible Cultural Heritage, designating food as a complex marker of cultural heritage. This paper argues that as archives seek to preserve and steward culture, they must consider how that includes food records. Food records in Ireland are decentralized, and few in number, leaving a gap in cultural repositories. Through semi-structured interviews, this thesis analyses the interactions between archivists and archive users involving food records, while exploring what can be considered a record, and how ephemeralness in cultural collections creates issues of access and preservation. Connecting food records to cultural heritage, under the umbrella of community archives, increases community engagement as barriers to the access and preservation of food records decrease. The findings demonstrated that food collections prove essential in highlighting the voices of community members when utilizing a community archive paradigm. The archivists and archive users were concerned with themes of access, education, and preservation as a means to steward cultural heritage through food records for future generations, while shifting outdated perceptions of what records have archival value. Food records and archives are at a pivotal moment in Ireland; culturally, the preservation and continued use of food records for community education and identity is an essential step for archives to take
IIR modeling of interpositional transfer functions with a genetic algorithm aided by an adaptive filter for the purpose of altering free-field sound localization
The psychoacoustic process of sound localization is a system of complex analysis. Scientists have found evidence that both binaural and monaural cues are responsible for determining the angles of elevation and azimuth which represent a sound source. Engineers have successfully used these cues to build mathematical localization systems. Research has indicated that spectral cues play an important role in 3-d localization. Therefore, it seems conceivable to design a filtering system which can alter the localization of a sound source, either for correctional purposes or listener preference. Such filters, known as Interpositional Transfer Functions, can be formed from division in the z-domain of Head-related Transfer Functions. HRTF’s represent the free-field response of the human body to sound processed by the ears. In filtering applications, the use of IIR filters is often favored over that of FIR filters due to their preservation of resolution while minimizing the number of required coefficients. Several methods exist for creating IIR filters from their representative FIR counterparts. For complicated filters, genetic algorithms (GAs) have proven effective. The research summarized in this thesis combines the past efforts of researchers in the fields of sound localization, genetic algorithms, and adaptive filtering. It represents the initial stage in the development of a practical system for future hardware implementation which uses a genetic algorithm as a driving engine. Under ideal conditions, an IIR filter design system has been demonstrated to successfully model several IPTF pairs which alter sound localization when applied to non-minimum phase HRTF’s obtained from free-field measurement
- …
