961 resultados para Landmark
Resumo:
Recent landmark experiments have demonstrated how quantum mechanical impurities can be created within strongly correlated quantum gases and used to probe the coherence properties of these systems. Here we present a theoretical model to simulate such an output coupler for a Tonks- Girardeau gas that shows excellent agreement with the experimental results for atom transport and output coupling. The solid theoretical basis our model provides allows us to explore non-equilibrium transport phenomena in ultra-cold quantum gases and leads us to predict a regime of atom blockade, where the impurity component becomes localised in the parent cloud despite the presence of gravity. We show that this provides a stable mixed-species quantum gas in the strongly correlated limit.
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The megachiropteran fruit bat Rousettus aegyptiacus is able to orient and navigate using both vision and echolocation. These two sensory systems have different environmental constraints however, echolocation being relatively short range when compared with vision. Despite this difference, an experiment testing their memory of a perch location demonstrates that once the location of a perch is learned R. aegyptiacus is not influenced by the movement of local landmark cues in the vicinity of the perch under either light or dark conditions. Thus despite the differing constraints of vision and echolocation, this suggests a place is remembered as a location in space and not by associations with landmarks in the vicinity. A decrease in initial performance when the task was repeated in the dark suggested the possibility that a memory of a location learned using vision does not generalize to echolocation.
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On 21 July 2011 the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights issued its much awaited decision in the case of Jessica Lenahan (Gonzales) v United States. In a landmark decision the Commission found the United States of America to be in violation of the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man 1948 due to the failure of the state to protect a victim of domestic violence and her children. This paper analyses the Lenahan decision and its significance for the United States. In particular, the substantial influence of the case law of the European Court of Human Rights on the Commission’s reasoning is examined.
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In 2004 nineteen scientists from fourteen institutions in seven countries
collaborated in the landmark study described in chapter 2 (Thomas et al., 2004a). This chapter provides an overview of results of studies published subsequently and assesses how much, and why, new results differ from those of Thomas et al.
Some species distribution modeling (SDM) studies are directly comparable to the Thomas et al. estimates. Others using somewhat different methods nonetheless illuminate whether the original estimates were of the right order of magnitude. Climate similarity models (Williams et al., 2007; Williams and Jackson, 2007), biome, and vegetation dynamic models (Perry and Enright, 2006) have also been
applied in the context of climate change, providing interesting opportunities
for comparison and cross-validation with results from SDMs.
This chapter concludes with an assessment of whether the range of extinction risk estimates presented in 2004 can be narrowed, and whether the mean estimate should be revised upward or downward. To set the stage for these analyses, the chapter begins with brief reviews of advances in climate modeling and species modeling since 2004.
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The adequacy of provisions for young people leaving care and in aftercare in the Republic of Ireland have been the subject of recent policy attention. A landmark report, the Ryan Report (2009), into historic abuse in state institutions recommended strengthening provisions in this area. However, the legislative basis for aftercare remains relatively weak and services for young people leaving care remain ad hoc and regionally variable. This article outlines the current context of leaving and aftercare provision in the Republic of Ireland and traces some of the recent policy debates and recommendations in this area. A genealogical analysis of leaving care and aftercare provision highlights that this issue has historically only emerged as a concern in the context in which young people leaving the care system are perceived as a ‘threat’ to social order. It is argued that the failure to adequately reform leaving and aftercare provision is reflective of wider social inequality and of a context in which young people in care are largely invisible from view.
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The sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912 represents one of the most infamous maritime disasters in the history of shipping. Yet despite it entering the public imagination in the decades after its sinking, until recently it has all but been erased from the collective memory of the people of Belfast, the city in which it was built. In a post-conflict context, however, Belfast has begun to re-imagine the role of the ship in the city’s history, most particularly in the re-development of the docklands area and its designation as the Titanic Quarter, and through its landmark project the Titanic Belfast museum. This paper will trace the economic, social and political context from which the Titanic was built, and the role that this played in silencing any very public commemoration of its sinking until after the signing of the Belfast Agreement. The ‘story’ told in the new museum will be analysed from this perspective and will illustrate how the wounds of the Troubles continue to inform the interpretation of the city’s divided past.
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New, automated forms of data-analysis are required in order to understand the high-dimensional trajectories that are obtained from molecular dynamics simulations on proteins. Dimensionality reduction algorithms are particularly appealing in this regard as they allow one to construct unbiased, low-dimensional representations of the trajectory using only the information encoded in the trajectory. The downside of this approach is that different sets of coordinates are required for each different chemical systems under study precisely because the coordinates are constructed using information from the trajectory. In this paper we show how one can resolve this problem by using the sketch-map algorithm that we recently proposed to construct a low-dimensional representation of the structures contained in the protein data bank (PDB). We show that the resulting coordinates are as useful for analysing trajectory data as coordinates constructed using landmark configurations taken from the trajectory and that these coordinates can thus be used for understanding protein folding across a range of systems.
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Experience continuously imprints on the brain at all stages of life. The traces it leaves behind can produce perceptual learning [1], which drives adaptive behavior to previously encountered stimuli. Recently, it has been shown that even random noise, a type of sound devoid of acoustic structure, can trigger fast and robust perceptual learning after repeated exposure [2]. Here, by combining psychophysics, electroencephalography (EEG), and modeling, we show that the perceptual learning of noise is associated with evoked potentials, without any salient physical discontinuity or obvious acoustic landmark in the sound. Rather, the potentials appeared whenever a memory trace was observed behaviorally. Such memory-evoked potentials were characterized by early latencies and auditory topographies, consistent with a sensory origin. Furthermore, they were generated even on conditions of diverted attention. The EEG waveforms could be modeled as standard evoked responses to auditory events (N1-P2) [3], triggered by idiosyncratic perceptual features acquired through learning. Thus, we argue that the learning of noise is accompanied by the rapid formation of sharp neural selectivity to arbitrary and complex acoustic patterns, within sensory regions. Such a mechanism bridges the gap between the short-term and longer-term plasticity observed in the learning of noise [2, 4-6]. It could also be key to the processing of natural sounds within auditory cortices [7], suggesting that the neural code for sound source identification will be shaped by experience as well as by acoustics.
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Religion is a funny thing, because it always seems to be riding two horses at once. One could describe these horses in a number of different ways, using all sorts of familiar dichotomies; practice and belief, body and soul, earthly and heavenly, here and hereafter. “Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses”. Here, food and forgiveness, or, perhaps more accurately, ingestion and salvation, are claimed, simultaneously – even seamlessly – by religion. This list could (and does) go on, being inclusive of, for example, immanence and transcendence – but more on this below. Yet these binary pairs can clearly be observed bleeding into one another. Ingesting pork, for example, often appears to be religiously more troublesome than does ingesting bread. This is because matter matters. We may ask, then, is religion really riding two horses, or are these ‘familiar dichotomies’ so familiar because they are false? Rephrasing the question in terms that partially echo the title and subtitle of Morgan’s (2010) landmark edited volume Religion and Material Culture: The Matter of Belief, is, I think, helpfully clarifying. What, then, is the matter with religion? The answer presented below is that, very often, the matter with religion is the matter of religion. Put more simply still, the problem with religion is its materiality. This chapter examines the whys and wherefores of this problem for the anthropology of religion – its ethnographic puzzles and methodological opportunities, as well as its conceptual impasses and theoretical insights.
Resumo:
À medida que a supervisão, associada a lógicas de interação com a atividade docente e com outros intervenientes nos contextos educativos, adquiriu uma dimensão reflexiva e passou a ser entendida como instrumento de transformação do desenvolvimento humano e da qualidade do processo de ensino e aprendizagem na organização escolar inclusiva, tem vindo a conquistar o interesse de numerosos investigadores. Considerando que a intenção de oferecer uma escola de qualidade a todos e a cada um dos alunos (um dos princípios fundamentais da educação inclusiva), não está amplamente atingido, impõe-se uma nova atitude pessoal e institucional: um entendimento sistémico (envolvendo profissionais, alunos, pais e comunidade) sobre as respostas a oferecer aos alunos, capaz de atender às necessidades e especificidades de cada um, otimizando as suas oportunidades de aprendizagem e desenvolvimento. Na verdade, a intervenção na complexidade das diferentes situações-problema emergentes numa organização escola que se pretende inclusiva pode ser altamente potenciada se existir supervisão dos processos educacionais em curso. A especificidade do sistema de Educação Especial preconiza uma estrutura de coordenação e supervisão; uma estrutura capaz de viabilizar recursos e gerar dinâmicas de mediação à intervenção, bem como de acionar mecanismos de avaliação de processos e produtos, tornando-os consequentes ao nível das práticas e objetivando a aproximação a níveis superiores de funcionamento. Tendo como principal objetivo construir conhecimento sobre o perfil de competências profissionais do Coordenador da Educação Especial, com particular relevo na dimensão supervisiva inerente à respetiva ação, o estudo que se apresenta baseou-se numa abordagem de natureza mista para recolha e tratamento de dados de tipo quantitativo e qualitativo. Numa primeira fase, incluiu a aplicação dum inquérito por questionário a três grupos de informantes-chave: 105 professores de Educação Especial, 47 coordenadores da Educação Especial e 37 diretores de agrupamentos de escolas/escolas não agrupadas, do ensino público, da área de influência da Direção de Serviços da Região Centro, Direção-Geral dos Estabelecimentos Escolares. A segunda fase, em que se buscou vislumbrar insights passíveis de clarificar e aprofundar os dados recolhidos através dos inquéritos por questionário, compreendeu a realização de entrevistas a 10 especialistas em Educação Especial e/ou em Supervisão. Os dados apontam para um enquadramento organizacional /supervisivo em Educação Especial dissemelhante, podendo, todavia, identificar-se em comum, uma satisfatória ação liderante do Coordenador da Educação Especial, baseada em atividades de diálogo e reflexão, e respeitando princípios de colaboração e solidariedade. Há, no entanto, indicadores de que a prática deste coordenador se concentra bastante na gestão burocrática e administrativa do departamento/equipa, podendo isto explicar-se pelo facto de o Coordenador da Educação Especial servir mais de intermediário do que de interveniente entre órgãos de direção e gestão, nomeadamente, entre o diretor e o conselho pedagógico, e os docentes/profissionais do departamento/equipa. Os dados evidenciam também, a falta de formação dos coordenadores da Educação Especial em supervisão e salientam a importância do fator tempo para o eficaz exercício desse cargo, de modo a promover interações ricas e estimulantes, centradas nas reflexões sobre as práticas inclusivas. Podendo este coordenador contribuir de forma significativa para a dinamização e estímulo dos profissionais do agrupamento/escola, apoiando-os nos seus esforços e iniciativas para uma organização mais inclusiva, identificam-se alguns aspetos considerados determinantes no seu perfil de competências profissionais: experiência, conhecimentos, capacidades, valores e particularidades da personalidade.
Resumo:
Ultrasonic, infrared, laser and other sensors are being applied in robotics. Although combinations of these have allowed robots to navigate, they are only suited for specific scenarios, depending on their limitations. Recent advances in computer vision are turning cameras into useful low-cost sensors that can operate in most types of environments. Cameras enable robots to detect obstacles, recognize objects, obtain visual odometry, detect and recognize people and gestures, among other possibilities. In this paper we present a completely biologically inspired vision system for robot navigation. It comprises stereo vision for obstacle detection, and object recognition for landmark-based navigation. We employ a novel keypoint descriptor which codes responses of cortical complex cells. We also present a biologically inspired saliency component, based on disparity and colour.
Resumo:
Tese de mestrado, Ciências da Educação (Formação de Professores), Universidade de Lisboa, Instituto de Educação, 2010
Resumo:
Tese de mestrado, Ciências da Educação (Formação de Professores), Universidade de Lisboa, Instituto de Educação, 2010