4 resultados para Ecological self-consolidating concrete

em Archivo Digital para la Docencia y la Investigación - Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad del País Vasco


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The interest of HACFRA (self compacting concrete reinforced with steel fibers), is the combination of the residual strength increase and cracking decrease compared to plain concrete by the introduction of steel fibers in the mass with the advantages of the self-compacting. The paper presents an analysis of the influence of different components of the HACRFA and provides their selection, refered to the granular skeleton and to different steel fiber types and amount, in order to obtain an optimization of its features and structural behavior.

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[ES]El objetivo de este trabajo de fin de grado es analizar la influencia que tiene la cuantía y orientación de fibras metálicas presentes en el interior de probetas de hormigón autocompactante y cuyo objetivo es reforzar y aumentar la resistencia a tracción de este material. Se expondrán las propiedades que combina el HACRFA gracias a la autocompactación del hormigón y la inclusión de fibras en su interior y los beneficios que este nuevo material aporta. Por otro lado, se tratara de situar este estudio en un contexto, analizando a la vez cuál es el alcance y los objetivos más importantes que se han tenido en cuenta. A continuación, y a modo de complementación de su contexto, este trabajo tiene un estado del arte, en el que se mencionarán métodos y ensayos necesarios para llegar a un resultado que permita predecir cuál será la resistencia del material, y por tanto su tenacidad o capacidad de absorber energía, sin necesidad de emplear más que un método fácil y rápido, obviando el resto de ensayos destructivos utilizados en este trabajo. Para tal fin, se establece una metodología que, gracias a ensayos de laboratorio, permita establecer una relación entre el método sencillo que se ha mencionado, el método inductivo, y un resultado teórico de la tenacidad que presenta el HACRFA. Se observará cómo la desviación entre los ensayos experimentales y los resultados teóricos obtenidos es prácticamente nula, despreciando situaciones en las que se presenten comportamientos muy diferentes debido a fallos durante los ensayos.

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The notion of information processing has dominated the study of the mind for over six decades. However, before the advent of cognitivism, one of the most prominent theoretical ideas was that of Habit. This is a concept with a rich and complex history, which is again starting to awaken interest, following recent embodied, enactive critiques of computationalist frameworks. We offer here a very brief history of the concept of habit in the form of a genealogical network-map. This serves to provide an overview of the richness of this notion and as a guide for further re-appraisal. We identify 77 thinkers and their influences, and group them into seven schools of thought. Two major trends can be distinguished. One is the associationist trend, starting with the work of Locke and Hume, developed by Hartley, Bain, and Mill to be later absorbed into behaviorism through pioneering animal psychologists (Morgan and Thorndike). This tradition conceived of habits atomistically and as automatisms (a conception later debunked by cognitivism). Another historical trend we have called organicism inherits the legacy of Aristotle and develops along German idealism, French spiritualism, pragmatism, and phenomenology. It feeds into the work of continental psychologists in the early 20th century, influencing important figures such as Merleau-Ponty, Piaget, and Gibson. But it has not yet been taken up by mainstream cognitive neuroscience and psychology. Habits, in this tradition, are seen as ecological, self-organizing structures that relate to a web of predispositions and plastic dependencies both in the agent and in the environment. In addition, they are not conceptualized in opposition to rational, volitional processes, but as transversing a continuum from reflective to embodied intentionality. These are properties that make habit a particularly attractive idea for embodied, enactive perspectives, which can now re-evaluate it in light of dynamical systems theory and complexity research.

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In the recent history of psychology and cognitive neuroscience, the notion of habit has been reduced to a stimulus-triggered response probability correlation. In this paper we use a computational model to present an alternative theoretical view (with some philosophical implications), where habits are seen as self-maintaining patterns of behavior that share properties in common with self-maintaining biological processes, and that inhabit a complex ecological context, including the presence and influence of other habits. Far from mechanical automatisms, this organismic and self-organizing concept of habit can overcome the dominating atomistic and statistical conceptions, and the high temporal resolution effects of situatedness, embodiment and sensorimotor loops emerge as playing a more central, subtle and complex role in the organization of behavior. The model is based on a novel "iterant deformable sensorimotor medium (IDSM)," designed such that trajectories taken through sensorimotor-space increase the likelihood that in the future, similar trajectories will be taken. We couple the IDSM to sensors and motors of a simulated robot, and show that under certain conditions, the IDSM conditions, the IDSM forms self-maintaining patterns of activity that operate across the IDSM, the robot's body, and the environment. We present various environments and the resulting habits that form in them. The model acts as an abstraction of habits at a much needed sensorimotor "meso-scale" between microscopic neuron-based models and macroscopic descriptions of behavior. Finally, we discuss how this model and extensions of it can help us understand aspects of behavioral self-organization, historicity and autonomy that remain out of the scope of contemporary representationalist frameworks.