Home About us Contact | |||
One Term (one + term)
Selected AbstractsSelf-reported changes in clinical behaviour by undergraduate dental students after video-based teaching in paediatric dentistryEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF DENTAL EDUCATION, Issue 3 2005M. Kalwitzki Abstract, Four cohorts of undergraduate students (n = 113) were filmed on video tapes whilst performing paediatric treatments. Selected parts of these tapes were shown the day after. Thus, within one term each student was able to view his performance on a videotape as well as those of fellow students. After completion of the clinical course in paediatric dentistry students were asked by means of a questionnaire about behavioural changes in their clinical work regarding different topics. Considerable changes in behaviour were reported for various topics. Most of the students emphasised the viable role of the video for changing their behaviour. This was especially true for aspects of verbal and non-verbal communication where mainly female students benefited. Moreover, video was thought to have been useful for improving capacities to deal with patients in fear or pain and for ergonomics. About two-thirds of the students (64.6%) thought that watching the video had made it easier for them to put theoretical knowledge into action. Video does not seem to play an important role for confirmation and maintenance of behaviour patterns. In conclusion however, it can be stated that video has a high impact on the modification of behaviour patterns of undergraduate students for many aspects of clinical work. The use of video can thus attribute to dental education in an effective way. [source] Explicit calculation of smoothed sensitivity coefficients for linear problemsINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN ENGINEERING, Issue 2 2003R. A. Bia, ecki Abstract A technique of explicit calculation of sensitivity coefficients based on the approximation of the retrieved function by a linear combination of trial functions of compact support is presented. The method is applicable to steady state and transient linear inverse problems where unknown distributions of boundary fluxes, temperatures, initial conditions or source terms are retrieved. The sensitivity coefficients are obtained by solving a sequence of boundary value problems with boundary conditions and source term being homogeneous except for one term. This inhomogeneous term is taken as subsequent trial functions. Depending on the type of the retrieved function, it may appear on boundary conditions (Dirichlet or Neumann), initial conditions or the source term. Commercial software and analytic techniques can be used to solve this sequence of boundary value problems producing the required sensitivity coefficients. The choice of the approximating functions guarantees a filtration of the high frequency errors. Several numerical examples are included where the sensitivity coefficients are used to retrieve the unknown values of boundary fluxes in transient state and volumetric sources. Analytic, boundary-element and finite-element techniques are employed in the study. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Global patterns in plant heightJOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 5 2009Angela T. Moles Summary 1. ,Plant height is a central part of plant ecological strategy. It is strongly correlated with life span, seed mass and time to maturity, and is a major determinant of a species' ability to compete for light. Plant height is also related to critical ecosystem variables such as animal diversity and carbon storage capacity. However, remarkably little is known about global patterns in plant height. Here, we use maximum height data for 7084 plant Species × Site combinations to provide the first global, cross-species quantification of the latitudinal gradient in plant height. 2. ,The mean maximum height of species growing within 15° of the equator (7.8 m) was 29 times greater than the height of species between 60° and 75° N (27 cm), and 31 times greater than the height of species between 45° and 60° S (25 cm). There was no evidence that the latitudinal gradient in plant height was different in the northern hemisphere than in the southern hemisphere (P = 0.29). A 2.4-fold drop in plant height at the edge of the tropics (P = 0.006) supports the idea that there might be a switch in plant strategy between temperate and tropical zones. 3. ,We investigated 22 environmental variables to determine which factors underlie the latitudinal gradient in plant height. We found that species with a wide range of height strategies were present in cold, dry, low productivity systems, but there was a noticeable lack of very short species in wetter, warmer, more productive sites. Variables that capture information about growing conditions during the harsh times of the year were relatively poor predictors of height. The best model for global patterns in plant height included only one term: precipitation in the wettest month (R2 = 0.256). 4. ,Synthesis. We found a remarkably steep relationship between latitude and height, indicating a major difference in plant strategy between high and low latitude systems. We also provide new, surprising information about the correlations between plant height and environmental variables. [source] A turbulence dissipation model for particle laden flowAICHE JOURNAL, Issue 6 2009John D. Schwarzkopf Abstract A dissipation transport equation for the carrier phase turbulence in particle-laden flow is derived from fundamental principles. The equation is obtained by volume averaging, which inherently includes the effects of the particle surfaces. Three additional terms appear that reveal the effect of the particles; these terms are evaluated using Stokes drag law. Two of the terms reduce to zero and only one term remains which is identified as the production of dissipation due to the particles. The dissipation equation is then applied to cases where particles generate homogeneous turbulence, and experimental data are used to evaluate the empirical coefficients. The ratio of the coefficient of the production of dissipation (due to the presence of particles) to the coefficient of the dissipation of dissipation is found to correlate well with the relative Reynolds number. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers AIChE J, 2009 [source] Inductive effect of uncharged groups: dependence on electronegativityJOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Issue 7 2006Otto Exner Abstract Substituent effects in rigid non-conjugated systems were followed on the series of 3-substituted 1-fluoro-bicyclo[1.1.1]pentanes and 2-substituted 1-fluoroethanes in the fixed ap conformation. Their energies were calculated within the framework of the density functional theory at the B3LYP/6-311++G(3df,3pd)//B3LYP/6-311++G(3df,3pd) level and the substituent effects were expressed in terms of isodesmic homodesmotic reactions. The results were confirmed by the energies of 1,4-disubstituted bicyclo[2.2.2]octanes reported in the literature and calculated at a lower level. Interaction of two common substituents of low or medium polarity cannot be described as the classical inductive effect by one term, proportional in all series, but an additional parameter is necessary, which depends only on the first atom of the substituent and may be identified with its electronegativity. The second term decreases with the distance more steeply than the first term and is always much less important. Nevertheless its statistical significance was proved by several sensitive tests at the highest level used in statistics. When one of the substituents is charged (or at least strongly polar as NO2 or CN), the first term is much increased and the second becomes less significant or insignificant. Therefore, the standard definition of the inductive effect with a uniform, universally valid constant can be retained as far as one treats only the ionization equilibria, both in solution and in the gas phase, or kinetics with a strongly polar transition state. In contrast to the firm statistical proofs, the physical meaning of the electronegativity term was not established. Any relation to various group electronegativities does not exist, similarity to the 13C NMR shifts is merely qualitative. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Grounding Providence in the Theology of the Creator: The Exemplarity of Thomas AquinasTHE HEYTHROP JOURNAL, Issue 1 2002Michael A. Hoonhout Discussion of divine providence was traditionally grounded in the wisdom and benevolence of the Creator, until the impact of nominalism which narrowed the theological focus upon the absolute power and freedom of the divine will. An exemplary approach for discussing providence which predates nominalism and which has surprising contemporary relevance is the one developed by Thomas Aquinas in his Summa Theologiae. It is exemplary both for how it discusses providence and for what is says about it. Methodologically, Aquinas explains providence in two contexts, one theological, the other cosmological, in order to avoid misconstruing the reality of one term because of the dynamics pertinent to the other. Substantively, this understanding of providence rests upon the theological foundation of the Creator's wisdom and benevolence, which in the world find expression as a comprehensive order oriented towards emergent goodness. Through this order God is provident by the genuine and contingent causal actions of creatures, a natural and non-deterministic means that makes it highly compatible with modern science. [source] |