42,691 research outputs found
An Ontological Basis for Design Methods
This paper presents a view of design methods as process artefacts that can be represented using the function-behaviour-structure (FBS) ontology. This view allows identifying five fundamental approaches to methods: black-box, procedural, artefact-centric, formal and managerial approaches. They all describe method structure but emphasise different aspects of it. Capturing these differences addresses common terminological confusions relating to methods. The paper provides an overview of the use of the fundamental method approaches for different purposes in designing. In addition, the FBS ontology is used for developing a notion of prescriptiveness of design methods as an aggregate construct defined along four dimensions: certainty, granularity, flexibility and authority. The work presented in this paper provides an ontological basis for describing, understanding and managing design methods throughout their life cycle.
Keywords:
Design Methods; Function-Behaviour-Structure (FBS) Ontology; Prescriptive Design Knowledge</p
Stochastic thermodynamics of single enzymes and molecular motors
For a single enzyme or molecular motor operating in an aqueous solution of
non-equilibrated solute concentrations, a thermodynamic description is
developed on the level of an individual trajectory of transitions between
states. The concept of internal energy, intrinsic entropy and free energy for
states follows from a microscopic description using one assumption on
time-scale separation. A first law energy balance then allows the unique
identification of the heat dissipated in one transition. Consistency with the
second law on the ensemble level enforces both stochastic entropy as third
contribution to the entropy change involved in one transition and the local
detailed balance condition for the ratio between forward and backward rates for
any transition. These results follow without assuming weak coupling between the
enzyme and the solutes, ideal solution behavior or mass action law kinetics.
The present approach highlights both the crucial role of the intrinsic entropy
of each state and the physically questionable role of chemiostats for deriving
the first law for molecular motors subject to an external force under realistic
conditions.Comment: 11 page
Multi-terminal Thermoelectric Transport in a Magnetic Field: Bounds on Onsager Coefficients and Efficiency
Thermoelectric transport involving an arbitrary number of terminals is
discussed in the presence of a magnetic field breaking time-reversal symmetry
within the linear response regime using the Landauer-B\"uttiker formalism. We
derive a universal bound on the Onsager coefficients that depends only on the
number of terminals. This bound implies bounds on the efficiency and on
efficiency at maximum power for heat engines and refrigerators. For isothermal
engines pumping particles and for absorption refrigerators these bounds become
independent even of the number of terminals. On a technical level, these
results follow from an original algebraic analysis of the asymmetry index of
doubly substochastic matrices and their Schur complements.Comment: 31 pages, 9 figures, New J. Phys., in pres
Centering in-the-large: Computing referential discourse segments
We specify an algorithm that builds up a hierarchy of referential discourse
segments from local centering data. The spatial extension and nesting of these
discourse segments constrain the reachability of potential antecedents of an
anaphoric expression beyond the local level of adjacent center pairs. Thus, the
centering model is scaled up to the level of the global referential structure
of discourse. An empirical evaluation of the algorithm is supplied.Comment: LaTeX, 8 page
Fair Wages and Human Capital Accumulation in a Global Economy
This paper analyzes trade in an asymmetric 2×2×2 world, where the two countries, labelled America and Europe, differ in their attitudes towards wage inequality. In both America and Europe, fair wage considerations compress differentials between the wages for skilled and unskilled workers, leading to involuntary unemployment of unskilled workers in equilibrium. European workers are more averse to wage inequality than American workers though, and as a consequence Europe is characterised by lower wage differentials as well as higher unemployment. Allowing for endogenous skill formation in both countries, the effects of a globalization shock – modelled as the entry of newly industrializing countries into the trading world – on prices and employment levels are derived.globalization, globalisation, unemployment, fair wages, skill upgrading
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