2,449 research outputs found
Trayectorias: a new model for online task-based learning
This paper discusses a framework for designing online tasks that capitalizes on the possibilities that the Internet and the Web offer for language learning. To present such a framework, we draw from constructivist theories (Brooks and Brooks, 1993) and their application to educational technology (Newby, Stepich, Lehman and Russell, 1996; Jonassen, Mayes and McAleese, 1993); second language learning and learning autonomy (Benson and Voller, 1997); and distance education (Race, 1989; White, 1999). On the one hand our model balances the requirements of the need for control and learning autonomy by the independent language learner; and on the other, the possibilities that online task-based learning offer for new reading processes by taking into account new literacy models (Schetzer and Warschauer, 2000), and the effect that the new media have on students’ knowledge construction and understanding of texts. We explain how this model works in the design of reading tasks within the specific distance learning context of the Open University, UK. Trayectorias is a tool that consists of an open problem-solving Web-quest and provides students with ‘scaffolding’ that guides their navigation around the Web whilst modelling learning approaches and new learning paradigms triggered by the medium. We then discuss a small-scale trial with a cohort of students (n = 23). This trial had a double purpose: (a) to evaluate to what extent the writing task fulfilled the investigators’ intentions; and (b) to obtain some information about the students’ perceptions of the task
Porqpine: a peer-to-peer search engine
In this paper, we present a fully distributed and collaborative search
engine for web pages: Porqpine. This system uses a novel query-based model
and collaborative filtering techniques in order to obtain user-customized
results. All knowledge about users and profiles is stored in each user
node?s application. Overall the system is a multi-agent system that runs on
the computers of the user community. The nodes interact in a peer-to-peer
fashion in order to create a real distributed search engine where
information is completely distributed among all the nodes in the network.
Moreover, the system preserves the privacy of user queries and results by
maintaining the anonymity of the queries? consumers and results? producers.
The knowledge required by the system to work is implicitly caught through
the monitoring of users actions, not only within the system?s interface but
also within one of the most popular web browsers. Thus, users are not
required to explicitly feed knowledge about their interests into the system
since this process is done automatically. In this manner, users obtain the
benefits of a personalized search engine just by installing the application
on their computer. Porqpine does not intend to shun completely conventional
centralized search engines but to complement them by issuing more accurate
and personalized results.Postprint (published version
On classification of Poisson vertex algebras
We describe a conjectural classification of Poisson vertex algebras of CFT
type and of Poisson vertex algebras in one differential variable (= scalar
Hamiltonian operators)
Seasonal variations in Greenland Ice Sheet motion : Inland extent and behaviour at higher elevations
Peer reviewedPreprin
Lagrangian phase transitions in nonequilibrium thermodynamic systems
In previous papers we have introduced a natural nonequilibrium free energy by
considering the functional describing the large fluctuations of stationary
nonequilibrium states. While in equilibrium this functional is always convex,
in nonequilibrium this is not necessarily the case. We show that in
nonequilibrium a new type of singularities can appear that are interpreted as
phase transitions. In particular, this phenomenon occurs for the
one-dimensional boundary driven weakly asymmetric exclusion process when the
drift due to the external field is opposite to the one due to the external
reservoirs, and strong enough.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Lie conformal algebra cohomology and the variational complex
We find an interpretation of the complex of variational calculus in terms of
the Lie conformal algebra cohomology theory. This leads to a better
understanding of both theories. In particular, we give an explicit construction
of the Lie conformal algebra cohomology complex, and endow it with a structure
of a g-complex. On the other hand, we give an explicit construction of the
complex of variational calculus in terms of skew-symmetric poly-differential
operators.Comment: 56 page
On the multiplicity of ALMA Compact Array counterparts of far-infrared bright quasars
We present ALMA Atacama Compact Array (ACA) 870 micron continuum maps of 28
infrared-bright SDSS quasars with Herschel/SPIRE detections at redshifts 2-4,
the largest such sample ever observed with ALMA. The ACA detections are centred
on the SDSS coordinates to within 1 arcsec for about 80 per cent of the sample.
Larger offsets indicate that the far-infrared (FIR) emission detected by
Herschel might come from a companion source. The majority of the objects (about
70 per cent) have unique ACA counterparts within the SPIRE beam down to 3-4
arcsec resolution. Only 30 per cent of the sample shows clear evidence for
multiple sources with secondary counterparts contributing to the total 870
micron flux within the SPIRE beam to at least 25 per cent. We discuss the
limitations of the data based on simulated pairs of point-like sources at the
resolution of the ACA and present an extensive comparison of our findings with
recent works on the multiplicities of sub-millimetre galaxies. We conclude
that, despite the coarse resolution of the ACA, our data support the idea that,
for a large fraction of FIR-bright quasars, the sub-mm emission comes from
single sources. Our results suggest that, on average, optically bright quasars
with strong FIR emission are not triggered by early-stage mergers but are,
instead, together with their associated star formation rates, the outcome of
either late-stage mergers or secular processes.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
Ab initio optical properties of Si(100)
We compute the linear optical properties of different reconstructions of the
clean and hydrogenated Si(100) surface within DFT-LDA, using norm-conserving
pseudopotentials. The equilibrium atomic geometries of the surfaces, determined
from self-consistent total energy calculations within the Car-Parrinello
scheme, strongly influence Reflectance Anisotropy Spectra (RAS), showing
differences between the p(2x2) and c(4x2)reconstructions. The Differential
Reflectivity spectrum for the c(4x2) reconstruction shows a positive peak at
energies < 1 eV, in agreement with experimental results.Comment: fig. 2 correcte
Theoretical Characterization of the Interface in a Nonequilibrium Lattice System
The influence of nonequilibrium bulk conditions on the properties of the
interfaces exhibited by a kinetic Ising--like model system with nonequilibrium
steady states is studied. The system is maintained out of equilibrium by
perturbing the familiar spin--flip dynamics at temperature T with
completely--random flips; one may interpret these as ideally simulating some
(dynamic) impurities. We find evidence that, in the present case, the
nonequilibrium mechanism adds to the basic thermal one resulting on a
renormalization of microscopic parameters such as the probability of
interfacial broken bonds. On this assumption, we develop theory for the
nonequilibrium "surface tension", which happens to show a non--monotonous
behavior with a maximum at some finite T. It ensues, in full agreement with
Monte Carlo simulations, that interface fluctuations differ qualitatively from
the equilibrium case, e.g., the interface remains rough at zero--T. We discuss
on some consequences of these facts for nucleation theory, and make some
explicit predictions concerning the nonequilibrium droplet structure.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Re
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