9 resultados para Paper-based
em Universitätsbibliothek Kassel, Universität Kassel, Germany
Resumo:
Autistische Phänomene haben seit ihrer Entdeckung (Kanner 1943, Asperger 1944) Wissenschaftler verschiedener Disziplinen immer wieder beschäftigt: Psychiater, Neurowissenschaftler, kognitive Psychologen, Säuglingsforscher, Evolutionspsychologen und Psychoanalytiker haben sich sowohl mit der Beschreibung des Krankheitsbildes wie auch mit den psychischen Prozessen, die bei autistischen Phänomenen vorhanden sind, befasst. Wenn man von einem globalen interdisziplinären Ergebnis der Autismus-Forschung sprechen wollte, könnte man behaupten, dass diese sich als eine Möglichkeit anbot, ein umfassenderes Verständnis für psychische Vorgänge im Allgemeinen zu entwickeln. Die Psychoanalyse als eine „Wissenschaft der Subjektivität“ (Meissner 1983) hat eine lange Tradition in der Entwicklung von Theorie- und Behandlungsansätzen entwickelt. Die kognitiv-psychologischen Untersuchungen haben sich ebenfalls ausführlich mit autistischen Phänomenen befasst. Diese Arbeit stellt einen Versuch dar, eine Fragestellung zu entwickeln, die das psychoanalytische Verständnis autistischer Phänomene mit Auffassungen kognitions-psychologischer Autoren zu verbinden und zu vergleichen sucht. Aus der Sichtweise der Psychoanalyse ist das ein Versuch, die interne bzw. narrative Kohärenz (Leuzinger-Bohleber 1995) psychoanalytischen Verständnisses durch die externe Kohärenz des interdisziplinären Dialoges mit einer anderen Wissenschaft her zu stellen. Zugrunde liegt der Versuch einer Vernetzung verschiedener Erkenntnisse im Sinne verschiedener Modelle, die sich gegenseitig bereichern können. Dem Begriff der Theory of Mind, deren Beeinträchtigung von Kognitionswissenschaftlern (Baron-Cohen 1993, 1995; Baron-Cohen et.al. 1985; Hobson 1993, 2007; Frith 1989, 2003) in der Autismusforschung als grundlegendes Merkmal betrachtet wird, werde ich die psychodynamische Betrachtung (Tustin 1972, 1995; 1981, 1989; 1991; Meltzer 1975; Bion 1962, 1992) gegenüber stellen, die eher von einer Dysfunktion projektiv-identifikatorischer Prozesse (-PI) ausgeht, die sich in einem scheinbaren Mangel an diesen Prozessen äußert. Den von Baron-Cohen entwickelten Parametern, die eine phänomenologische Betrachtung autistischer Phänomene ermöglichen, werde ich die intrapsychische und objektbezogene psychoanalytische Betrachtungsweise gegenüberstellen, die postuliert, dass die Projektive Identifizierung als psychisches Phänomen, das der unbewussten averbalen Kommunikation zugrunde liegt, in autistischen Manifestationen beeinträchtig zu sein scheint. Da die Fähigkeit, psychische Phänomene in sich selbst und in anderen wahrzunehmen, der Psyche immanenteste Eigenschaft und gerade in autistischen Phänomenen beeinträchtigt ist, kann die psychoanalytische Konzeptbildung, die sich mit der Struktur des Psychischen und deren prozesshaftem Charakter befasst, den verschiedenen Disziplinen und auch der Autismus Forschung wichtige Anregungen geben. Anhand einer Einzelfalldarstellung, aus der sich psychodynamische Hypothesen entwickelten, die zu einem psychoanalytischen Verständnis führten, versuche ich, eine gewisse Korrespondenz mit Hypothesen aus der „embodied“ kognitiven Psychologie, wie z.B. die Rolle der Projektiven Identifizierung in der Bildung einer „Theory of Mind“ und ihre Beeinträchtigung (-PI) bei autistischen Phänomenen (Mindblindness, Baron-Cohen) herzustellen.
Resumo:
In the elite domain of interactive sports, athletes who demonstrate a left preference (e.g., holding a weapon with the left hand in fencing or boxing in a ‘southpaw’ stance) seem overrepresented. Such excess indicates a performance advantage and was also interpreted as evidence in favour of frequency-dependent selection mechanisms to explain the maintenance of left-handedness in humans. To test for an overrepresentation, the incidence of athletes’ lateral preferences is typically compared with an expected ratio of left- to right-handedness in the normal population. However, the normal population reference values did not always relate to the sport-specific tasks of interest, which may limit the validity of reports of an excess of ‘left-oriented’ athletes. Here we sought to determine lateral preferences for various sport-specific tasks (e.g., baseball batting, boxing) in the normal population and to examine the relationship between these preferences and handedness. To this end, we asked 903 participants to indicate their lateral preferences for sport-specific and common tasks using a paper-based questionnaire. Lateral preferences varied considerably across the different sport tasks and we found high variation in the relationship between those preferences and handedness. In contrast to unimanual tasks (e.g., fencing or throwing), for bimanually controlled actions such as baseball batting, shooting in ice hockey or boxing the incidence of left preferences was considerably higher than expected from the proportion of left-handedness in the normal population and the relationship with handedness was relatively low. We conclude that (i) task-specific reference values are mandatory for reliably testing for an excess of athletes with a left preference, (ii) the term ‘handedness’ should be more cautiously used within the context of sport-related laterality research and (iii) observation of lateral preferences in sports may be of limited suitability for the verification of evolutionary theories of handedness.
Resumo:
Topics in education are changing with an ever faster pace. E-Learning resources tend to be more and more decentralised. Users need increasingly to be able to use the resources of the web. For this, they should have tools for finding and organizing information in a decentral way. In this, paper, we show how an ontology-based tool suite allows to make the most of the resources available on the web.
Resumo:
The principal objective of this paper is to develop a methodology for the formulation of a master plan for renewable energy based electricity generation in The Gambia, Africa. Such a master plan aims to develop and promote renewable sources of energy as an alternative to conventional forms of energy for generating electricity in the country. A tailor-made methodology for the preparation of a 20-year renewable energy master plan focussed on electricity generation is proposed in order to be followed and verified throughout the present dissertation, as it is applied for The Gambia. The main input data for the proposed master plan are (i) energy demand analysis and forecast over 20 years and (ii) resource assessment for different renewable energy alternatives including their related power supply options. The energy demand forecast is based on a mix between Top-Down and Bottom-Up methodologies. The results are important data for future requirements of (primary) energy sources. The electricity forecast is separated in projections at sent-out level and at end-user level. On the supply side, Solar, Wind and Biomass, as sources of energy, are investigated in terms of technical potential and economic benefits for The Gambia. Other criteria i.e. environmental and social are not considered in the evaluation. Diverse supply options are proposed and technically designed based on the assessed renewable energy potential. This process includes the evaluation of the different available conversion technologies and finalizes with the dimensioning of power supply solutions, taking into consideration technologies which are applicable and appropriate under the special conditions of The Gambia. The balance of these two input data (demand and supply) gives a quantitative indication of the substitution potential of renewable energy generation alternatives in primarily fossil-fuel-based electricity generation systems, as well as fuel savings due to the deployment of renewable resources. Afterwards, the identified renewable energy supply options are ranked according to the outcomes of an economic analysis. Based on this ranking, and other considerations, a 20-year investment plan, broken down into five-year investment periods, is prepared and consists of individual renewable energy projects for electricity generation. These projects included basically on-grid renewable energy applications. Finally, a priority project from the master plan portfolio is selected for further deeper analysis. Since solar PV is the most relevant proposed technology, a PV power plant integrated to the fossil-fuel powered main electrical system in The Gambia is considered as priority project. This project is analysed by economic competitiveness under the current conditions in addition to sensitivity analysis with regard to oil and new-technology market conditions in the future.
Resumo:
In this paper, we describe an interdisciplinary project in which visualization techniques were developed for and applied to scholarly work from literary studies. The aim was to bring Christof Schöch's electronic edition of Bérardier de Bataut's Essai sur le récit (1776) to the web. This edition is based on the Text Encoding Initiative's XML-based encoding scheme (TEI P5, subset TEI-Lite). This now de facto standard applies to machine-readable texts used chiefly in the humanities and social sciences. The intention of this edition is to make the edited text freely available on the web, to allow for alternative text views (here original and modern/corrected text), to ensure reader-friendly annotation and navigation, to permit on-line collaboration in encoding and annotation as well as user comments, all in an open source, generically usable, lightweight package. These aims were attained by relying on a GPL-based, public domain CMS (Drupal) and combining it with XSL-Stylesheets and Java Script.
Resumo:
Enterprise Modeling (EM) is currently in operation either as a technique to represent and understand the structure and behavior of the enterprise, or as a technique to analyze business processes, and in many cases as support technique for business process reengineering. However, EM architectures and methods for Enterprise Engineering can also used to support new management techniques like SIX SIGMA, because these new techniques need a clear, transparent and integrated definition and description of the business activities of the enterprise to be able to build up, optimize and operate an successful enterprise. The main goal of SIX SIGMA is to optimize the performance of processes. A still open question is: "What are the adequate Quality criteria and methods to ensure such performance? What must we do to get Quality governance?" This paper describes a method including an Enterprise Engineering method and SIX SIGMA strategy to reach Quality Governance
Resumo:
This paper introduces a framework that supports users to implement enterprise modelling within collaborative companies. These enterprise models are the basis for a holistic interoperability measurement and management methodology which will be presented in the second part of the paper. The discipline of enterprise modelling aims at capturing all dimensions of an enterprise in a simplified model. Thus enterprise models are the appropriate basis for managing collaborative enterprise as they reduce the complexity of interoperability problems. Therefore, a first objective of this paper is to present an approach that enables companies to get the most effect out of enterprise modelling in a collaborative environment based on the maturity of their organisation relative to modelling. Within this first step, the user will get recommendations e.g. for the correct modelling language as well as the right level of detail.
Resumo:
The right to food has become a pillar of international humanitarian and human rights law. The increasing number of food-related emergencies and the evolution of the international order brought the more precise notion of food security and made a potential right to receive food aid emerge. Despite this apparent centrality, recent statistics show that a life free from hunger is for many people all over the world still a utopian idea. The paper will explore nature and content of the right to food, food security and food aid under international law in order to understand the reasons behind the substantial failure of this right-centred approach, emphasising the lack of legal effects of many food-related provisions because of excessive moral connotations of the right to be free from hunger. Bearing in mind the three-dimensional nature of food security, the paper will also suggest that all attention has been focused on the availability of food, while real difficulties arise in terms of accessibility and adequacy. Emergency situations provide an excellent example of this unbalance, as the emerging right to receive food aid focus itself on the availability of food, without improving local production and adequacy. Looking at other evolving sectors of international law, such as the protection of the environment, and particularly the safeguard of biological diversity, alternative solutions will be envisaged in order to “feed” the right to food.
Resumo:
Sweden’s recent report on Urban Sustainable Development calls out a missing link between the urban design process and citizens. This paper investigates if engaging citizens as design agents by providing a platform for alternate participation can bridge this gap, through the transfer of spatial agency and new modes of critical cartography. To assess whether this is the case, the approaches are applied to Stockholm’s urban agriculture movement in a staged intervention. The aim of the intervention was to engage citizens in locating existing and potential places for growing food and in gathering information from these sites to inform design in urban agriculture. The design-based methodologies incorporated digital and bodily interfaces for this cartography to take place. The Urban CoMapper, a smartphone digital app, captured real-time perspectives through crowd-sourced mapping. In the bodily cartography, participant’s used their bodies to trace the site and reveal their sensorial perceptions. The data gathered from these approaches gave way to a mode of artistic research for exploring urban agriculture, along with inviting artists to be engaged in the dialogues. In sum, results showed that a combination of digital and bodily approaches was necessary for a critical cartography if we want to engage citizens holistically into the urban design process as spatial agents informing urban policy. Such methodologies formed a reflective interrogation and encouraged a new intimacy with nature, in this instance, one that can transform our urban conduct by questioning our eating habits: where we get our food from and how we eat it seasonally.