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Technology in Irish Literature and Culture shows how such significant technologies—typewriters, gramophones, print, radio, television, computers—have influenced Irish literary practices and cultural production, while also examining how technology has been embraced as a theme in Irish writing. Once a largely rural and agrarian society, contemporary Ireland has embraced the communicative, performative and consumption habits of a culture utterly reliant on the digital. This text plumbs the origins of the present moment, examining the longer history of literature's interactions with the technological and exploring how the transformative capacity of modern technology has been mediated throughout a diverse national canon. Comprising essays from some of the major figures of Irish literary and cultural studies, this volume offers a wide-ranging, comprehensive account of how Irish literature and culture have interacted with technology.
Electrical conductivity and resistance obey Ohm’s law. Specific resistance may be measured in two- or four-electrode schemes. Mechanisms of electrical conductivity in rocks are ionic, electronic, anionic and protonic. Some mantle minerals, i.e. olivine, possess polaron conductivity. Conduction bands and density of states are considered for some minerals. Effective conductivity in heterogeneous rocks can be estimated from Wiener or Hashin–Shtrikman bounds, effective medium approximation (EMA) and resistor network models. The electrical conductivity of mineral aggregates can be effectively described by brick and percolation models. Diluted electrolytes and Kohlrausch’s law of independent movement of ions are considered in fluid-bearing rocks, whose electric conductivity obeys Archie’s law. Formation factor and cementation exponent are analyzed for sedimentary rocks. The relationship between rock conductivity and pore saturation is described by the Waxman–Smith model. Focus Box 8.1: Calculations of density of states (Fermi gas model). Focus Box 8.2: Reciprocal lattice and band gaps. Focus Box 8.3: Olivine structure.
This chapter is an examination of the various ways senses of place have been changed by the development of electronic media since the invention of the telegraph, with particular attention to developments since the invention of the World Wide Web in 1990. Impacts of electronic communications on five aspects of sense of place are considered. Neurological and ontological aspects are largely immune, but individual, social and public aspects are affected in ways that have been variously interpreted as diminishing sense of place by distracting us from our surroundings, or alternatively as enhancing it with rich data about places and increased global awareness. However, as electronic media have become increasingly pervasive, concerns have been raised about their role as agents of corporate power and their role in surveillance of places.
The updated common rule, for human subjects research, requires that consents “begin with a ‘concise and focused’ presentation of the key information that will most likely help someone make a decision about whether to participate in a study” (Menikoff, Kaneshiro, Pritchard. The New England Journal of Medicine. 2017; 376(7): 613–615.). We utilized a community-engaged technology development approach to inform feature options within the REDCap software platform centered around collection and storage of electronic consent (eConsent) to address issues of transparency, clinical trial efficiency, and regulatory compliance for informed consent (Harris, et al. Journal of Biomedical Informatics 2009; 42(2): 377–381.). eConsent may also improve recruitment and retention in clinical research studies by addressing: (1) barriers for accessing rural populations by facilitating remote consent and (2) cultural and literacy barriers by including optional explanatory material (e.g., defining terms by hovering over them with the cursor) or the choice of displaying different videos/images based on participant’s race, ethnicity, or educational level (Phillippi, et al. Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, & Neonatal Nursing. 2018; 47(4): 529–534.).
Methods:
We developed and pilot tested our eConsent framework to provide a personalized consent experience whereby users are guided through a consent document that utilizes avatars, contextual glossary information supplements, and videos, to facilitate communication of information.
Results:
The eConsent framework includes a portfolio of eight features, reviewed by community stakeholders, and tested at two academic medical centers.
Conclusions:
Early adoption and utilization of this eConsent framework have demonstrated acceptability. Next steps will emphasize testing efficacy of features to improve participant engagement with the consent process.
Fiona Hum, Monash University, Victoria,Bronwen Jackman, University of New England, Australia,Ottavio Quirico, University of New England, Australia,Gregor Urbas, Australian National University, Canberra,Kip Werren, University of New England, Australia
Computerized provider order entry (CPOE) has been established as a method to improve patient safety by avoiding medication errors; however, its effect on emergency department (ED) flow remains undefined. We examined the impact of CPOE implementation on three measures of ED throughput: wait time (WT), length of stay (LOS), and the proportion of patients that left without being seen (LWBS).
Methods
We conducted a retrospective cohort study of all ED patients of 18 years and older presenting to London Health Sciences Centre during July and August 2013 and 2014, before and after implementation of a CPOE system. The three primary variables were compared between time periods. Subgroup analyses were also conducted within each Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS) level (1–5) individually, as well as for admitted patients only.
Results
A significant increase in WT of 5 minutes (p=0.036) and LOS of 10 minutes (p=0.001), and an increase in LWBS from 7.2% to 8.1% (p=0.002) was seen after CPOE implementation. Admitted patients’ LOS increased by 63 minutes (p<0.001), the WT of CTAS 3 and 5 patients increased by 6 minutes (p=0.001) and 39 minutes (p=0.005), and LWBS proportion increased significantly for CTAS 3–5 patients, from 24.3% to 42.0% (p<0.001) for CTAS 5 patients specifically.
Conclusions
CPOE implementation detrimentally impacted all patient flow throughput measures that we examined. The most striking clinically relevant result was the increase in LOS of 63 minutes for admitted patients. This raises the question as to whether the potential detrimental effects to patient safety of CPOE implementation outweigh its benefits.
Cette étude traite de la simulation numérique desécoulements à haute enthalpie en non-équilibrethermochimique. La résolution des équations2D-axisymétrique de Navier-Stokes permet de prévoirnumériquement la structure d'un écoulement réactif,partiellement ionisé. La méthode numérique repose surune formulation de type volume fini couplée à l'approcheMUSCL-TVD et est associée à un solveur de Riemann.L'intérêt est porté sur la contribution desdifférents phénomènes de non-équilibre sur le fluxde chaleur et les paramètres thermodynamiques.L'écoulement est externe et s'effectue autour du nez d'unsphère-cylindre se déplaçant avec des nombres de Machcompris entre 15 et 18. Les résultats obtenus sont en bonaccord avec lesvaleurs prédites par d'autres simulations et les données expérimentales.
Computer programming is ideal for the identification of ticks. This is due to the ability of computers to make rapid, repeated and complete searches of a large database of features in answer to a series of questions which lead to a single species. The program can allow the search to start in any order and to avoid difficult questions. It enables illustrations to be displayed when a question is asked. In contrast, classical dichotomous keys need to be used in a fixed sequence in which it is difficult to avoid questions, and often use vaguely defined characters and obscure language. To program an electronic key a character state matrix is constructed of rows of precisely defined characters with the two or more states in which they may occur and of columns in which the species are placed. Each state is recorded as being positive or negative. This corresponds to the binary system needed for computing and this need enforces a discipline on the identification method that has to define in illustrations and precise standardized language the characters and their states. These concepts are illustrated by the development of ‘Multikey’ program for the identification of ticks of domestic animals in Africa. The advantages of Multikey are its ease of use, its compatibility with comprehensive tick guides on compact discs and the ability to expand it with more information. The disadvantages are the requirement for a computer next to the laboratory microscope and the difficulty in browsing the contents. These disadvantages can be overcome by a printed version and there is use for both the printed and the electronic versions of such guides.
There is still fierce debate in the international
community regarding the use and standards of
electronic chart data and equipment. Whilst the standards for
ecdis are now virtually complete
and type-approved equipment will be entering the market during 1998, there
is currently no
IMO/IHO compliant enc data service from any national hydrographic
office. It is expected that
it will be 1 to 2 years before there is any appreciable quantity
of enc data supported by a proper
update service. It will be many more years before enc
data becomes available to match the
present coverage of paper charts, but we can expect that most major routes
and the port
entries of the majority of the world's trading nations will be
available within a few years. This
situation is examined, together with the ideas that IMO is considering
to improve the
availability of official electronic chart data. In addition, the
distribution of electronic charts
is discussed and the future trends in navigation that will occur with the
availability
of ecdis equipment and related data are explored.
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