Academic literature on the topic 'Stop time reasons'

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Journal articles on the topic "Stop time reasons"

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Meyer, Mary Hockenberry. "Why Master Gardeners Stop Volunteering: Lack of Time." HortTechnology 14, no. 3 (2004): 437–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/horttech.14.3.0437.

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Nearly 300 Master Gardeners (MGs) who stopped volunteering were surveyed as to why they did not continue in the program. The fivequestion survey was mailed to people who had not turned in volunteer hours for the previous two years. Forty-seven percent or 131 useable surveys were returned and tabulated. A majority of the respondents, 73 (56%), indicated “no time” as the primary reason for not volunteering. Illness or personal reasons accounted for 30 responses (23%), and 20 people (15%) indicated they were disappointed in the program. Eighty-one percent rated the program as excellent or good; 7
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Engel, J., A. Lebeau, H. Sauer, and D. Hölzel. "Are we wasting our time with the sentinel technique? Fifteen reasons to stop axilla dissection." Breast 15, no. 3 (2006): 451–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.breast.2005.05.009.

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Uceda, Julia, Loreto Carmona, Alejandro Muñoz, and Jose L Marenco. "A10.24 Switching Infliximab for New Alternatives: A Correspondence Analysis of Biologics, Reasons to Stop, and Time Periods." Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 72, Suppl 1 (2013): A80.3—A81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2013-203224.24.

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Millgram, Elijah. "Applied Ethics, Moral Skepticism, and Reasons with Expiration Dates." Canadian Journal of Philosophy Supplementary Volume 33 (2007): 263–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cjp.0.0078.

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The question “Why be moral?” has been on philosophers’ agendas at least since Plato, and the antiquity of the Question (which is what I'll call it from here on out) reasonably prompts the suspicion that moral skepticism may not in the end be rebuttable. Haven't we waited long enough? Isn't it time to discard the pretense that we have reason to do what morality demands? And shouldn't we finally stop wasting our time on it?Before buying into that conclusion, I want to point out a largely untapped source of reasons for being moral. It has been overlooked, I will suggest, in part because attention
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Latkin, Carl A., Wallace Mandell, David Vlahov, Amy R. Knowlton, Maria Oziemkowska, and David D. Celentano. "Self-Reported Reasons for Needle Sharing and Not Carrying Bleach among Injection Drug Users in Baltimore, Maryland." Journal of Drug Issues 25, no. 4 (1995): 865–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002204269502500413.

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Stated reasons for sharing needles and not intending to carry bleach for 413 injection drug users in the Stop AIDS for Everyone (SAFE) study in Baltimore, Maryland, were analyzed. Over two-thirds (69%) reported they knew individuals who had “gotten in trouble” by police for carrying needles. Of the injection drug users, 38% stated the main reason they shared needles without cleaning them first with bleach was a sense of time urgency, and 30% reported that clean needles were not available. The most common reason given by 24% of the participants for not intending to carry bleach was that they in
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Kasraian, Leila. "Causes of discontinuity of blood donation among donors in Shiraz, Iran: cross-sectional study." Sao Paulo Medical Journal 128, no. 5 (2010): 272–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s1516-31802010000500006.

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CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVE: The adequacy of blood depends on blood donation rates and numbers of blood donors. To prepare adequate blood supplies, it is essential to investigate the barriers and factors that stop individuals from donating. This study aimed to identify the causes of lapsed donation at our center. DESIGN AND SETTING: Cross-sectional study of volunteer blood donors in Shiraz, Iran. METHODS: We selected 850 donors who had donated between January 1, 2005 and June 1, 2005, but had not donated again by June 2008. The participants were recruited by letter and telephone, and were interviewe
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Bashar, T. M. Junaid, Md Sabbir Hossain, and Shah Istiaque. "Finding the Reasons for the Delay Time in a Highway by Analyzing the Travel Time, Delay Time and Traffic Flow Data." Journal of Engineering Advancements 01, no. 03 (2020): 76–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.38032/jea.2020.03.002.

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The objectives of this study are to show a comparison among travel time, running time, delay in peak and off-peak hours on different days of a week, and reasons behind the delay time. Moving car observer method has been carried out to count the traffic flow, journey time, running time, and delay time. Total vehicle flow, and comparative vehicle flow during the peak hour and off-peak hour for workdays and weekend days were surveyed to show a relationship between delay time and traffic flow. As the traffic flow increases the delay time also will increase. To measure the reasons behind the delay
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Kolesnyk, Inna, Friedo W. Dekker, Elisabeth W. Boeschoten, and Raymond T. Krediet. "Time-Dependent Reasons for Peritoneal Dialysis Technique Failure and Mortality." Peritoneal Dialysis International: Journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis 30, no. 2 (2010): 170–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.3747/pdi.2008.00277.

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BackgroundPeritoneal dialysis (PD) technique failure is high compared to hemodialysis (HD). There is a lack of data on the impact of duration of PD treatment on technique survival and on whether there is a difference in risk factors with respect to early and late failure. The aim of this study was to clarify these issues by performing a time-dependent analysis of PD technique and patient survival in a large cohort of incident PD patients.MethodsWe analyzed 709 incident PD patients participating in the Netherlands Cooperative Study on the Adequacy of Dialysis (NECOSAD), who started their treatm
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Santori, Claudia, Michael B. Thompson, James U. Van Dyke, Camilla M. Whittington, and Ricky-John Spencer. "Smartphone citizen science for turtles: identifying motives, usage patterns and reasons why citizens stop participating." Australian Zoologist 40, no. 3 (2020): 438–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.7882/az.2020.006.

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ABSTRACT Citizen science has become popular for data collection in ecology and environmental management. However, most participants in citizen science projects are only involved for a short period of time. Understanding the reasons behind this dropout rate is important for improving long term participation. Here we investigated participation rates in TurtleSAT, an Australian turtle mapping app aimed at collecting data useful for conservation efforts. First, we looked at the TurtleSAT database to examine the number of participants and how many sightings each had uploaded. Then, we distributed a
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Lerner, Neil. "Age and Driver Time Requirements at Intersections." Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting 38, no. 14 (1994): 842–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/154193129403801410.

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Current highway design models for required sight distance at stop-sign controlled intersections assume that the perception-reaction time (PRT) required is 2.0 seconds. That is, a 2.0 second interval to perceive, evaluate, decide, and initiate a response, is adequate to cover the range of time it takes real drivers to do this. This experiment evaluated the adequacy of the 2.0 second PRT assumption, including specific consideration of older drivers, who are known to experience relatively greater difficulty at intersections. Subjects in three age groups (20–40; 65–69; and 70+ years old) drove the
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Stop time reasons"

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Isaksson, Eddie, and Robert Klitsch. "Stopptidsanalys i hyvelanläggningen vid VIDA Vislanda." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Institutionen för skog och träteknik (SOT), 2015. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-25240.

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VIDA Vislanda har ett behov av att veta hur effektiv produktionen är på deras nya hyvleri. Därför är arbetets syfte att undersöka stopptidslängder samt bakomliggande orsaker till stoppen på företaget. Det ingår även i arbetet att lämna förslag på åtgärder som kan leda till förbättringar i verksamhetsgrad samt reduktion av stopptid. VIDA Vislanda vill veta vilken verkningsgrad, verklig löpmeter ut och verkligt stycketal ut för varje enskild dimension och längd. Resultatet presenteras efter detta önskemål men den totala verkningsgraden för hela mätperioden har också beräknats, till 52 %. Om VIDA
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Books on the topic "Stop time reasons"

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Rakow, Donald, and Gregory T. Eells. Nature Rx. Cornell University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501715280.001.0001.

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College students today display disturbing levels of stress, depression, and other psychological conditions. The reasons for this rise in mental health problems are many, from increased reliance on electronic technology, the related prevalence of social isolation, and anxiety regarding societal ills. College and university counselling centers are challenged to address student demand for psychological services, with many counseling directors having to reduce the number of visits for non-crisis patients to cope with the increasing number of clients. While more serious mental health problems will
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Stanescu, Nina, Maxim Marian Vlad, and Florentina Olimpia Avram. Who Cares? Social Phenomena with Global impact. Editura Universitara, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5682/9786062812560.

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This volume presents a series of issues or even social phenomena that were presented within the international conference organized on 19th of March 2021 in the online environment by specialists in the field. A social phenomenon more and more worrying is the abortion and, therefore, it should be a topic at this conference. Considering that there is a declining birth rate at global level and the legislations are more and more permissive concerning the abortion, there are more than enough reasons for this topic be approached at the conference. By analysing this global phenomenon, were identified
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Callard, Agnes. Intrinsic and Extrinsic Conflict. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190639488.003.0004.

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In an “extrinsic” conflict, an agent’s desires pull her toward incompatible actions. As a matter of contingent fact, nothing she does will get her everything she wants. Intrinsically conflicted agents are conflicted at the level of value, and this means that the conflict fractures the agent’s evaluative point of view: in order to get the appeal of one of the things she wants fully in view, she must step out of the point of view from which the other appears attractive. For this reason, the conflict cannot be resolved by deliberation as to which side is better overall. Harry Frankfurt is wrong t
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Armstrong, Sarah L., and Gary M. Stocks. Postoperative analgesia after caesarean delivery. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198713333.003.0024.

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Caesarean delivery (CD) is one of the most common operations in the world and providing effective pain relief is important not only for humanitarian reasons but also to speed up recovery and reduce postoperative complications. An understanding of the anatomy and physiology of pain transmission after CD has led to a multimodal approach to analgesia. This involves combining analgesics which work by different mechanisms resulting in an additive effect whilst at the same time reducing side effects. In contemporary practice, most CDs are carried out under neuraxial anaesthesia and neuraxial techniq
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Book chapters on the topic "Stop time reasons"

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Reuber, Markus, Gregg H. Rawlings, and Steven C. Schachter. "Neurologist, 15 years’ experience, UK." In Non-Epileptic Seizures in Our Experience, edited by Markus Reuber, Gregg H. Rawlings, and Steven C. Schachter. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190927752.003.0034.

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This chapter describes the experience of a neurologist in the UK. Patients would often inform the neurologist that Accident and Emergency (A&E) staff had directly told them that they knew they were “making it up” and to “stop wasting our time.” When the neurologist saw how A&E staff routinely dealt with vulnerable, fragile people with Non-Epileptic Attacks (NEAs), the neurologist found it hard to square this blatant if unintentional cruelty with a job whose raison d’être is meant to be to care, heal, and comfort. And when doctors, nurses, and family members still ask, “Why do you bother with these conditions? Why not focus on more deserving patients?,” the neurologist finds their logic perverse for two reasons. First, many people with NEAs were traumatized in childhood, often abused. Having been doubted and abandoned once, surely they need to be believed and supported the second time around? Second, NEA disorder is a condition where the main predisposing factors are beyond the sufferer’s control.
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Rosenstein, Donald L., and Justin M. Yopp. "Winding Down." In The Group. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190649562.003.0024.

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From the beginning the men had known, better than we did, that six sessions would not be enough. Changing the group to an open-ended format had been the right move, but we hadn’t resolved the question of when the group should end. The fathers were clearly piecing their lives back together and the reasons for continuing to meet were becoming less clear. As the group approached the three-year mark, attendance lagged. We wondered if it had run its course. One evening, we asked the men whether they wanted to keep meeting or if it was time to stop. We acknowledged that our work together had become increasingly collaborative but wanted them to know that they were not beholden to us. We never intended for the group to continue in perpetuity. Our focus had been to help them grieve and move forward. If they had reached that point, then they should to feel free to leave. The fathers seemed surprised when we raised this topic. They quickly dismissed the idea that they felt obligated to remain in the group. Uncharacteristically, Russ spoke first, “I’ve never felt pressured. I come because it helps.” The topic of discussion during that session was whether it was time to stop meeting. Each father knew that he would eventually leave but up until that moment Steve’s departure had been the only other occasion on which we discussed endings. Bruce reframed the issue: “Unless getting engaged and moving across state lines is the only ticket out the door, I guess we need to figure this out.” Karl approached the subject with his typical analytical style. “It sounds like there are two issues on the table. First, how does any one of us know when it’s time to stop coming? For Steve, it was easy: He got married and moved away. For the rest of us, the decision comes down to whether coming here is still helpful. Obviously, each of us has to answer that for ourselves. The second question is whether it’s time for the group as a whole to end.
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Firpo, Christina Elizabeth. "Unfree Labor." In Black Market Business. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501752650.003.0003.

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This chapter examines two forms of unfree labor — debt-bondage and human trafficking — in which sex workers were not recompensed for their labor and, for a variety of reasons, remained stuck in their place of employment. Women involved in debt-bondage arrangements exchanged work for room, board, and a cash loan. Under debt-bondage agreements, the indebted paid off a monetary debt through labor for a definitive period of time. The chapter discusses how unscrupulous managers used debt-bondage to exploit sex workers. It also talks about trafficked women and how they were typically tricked or abducted and sold against their will to brothels in Tonkin or China, linking the sex industries of both countries. The chapter discusses how the prevalence of trafficking became a thorn in the side of the colonial government as France had already completely abolished slavery and slave trade in its terriroties since 1848. Finally, it discusses the colonial efforts to stop abuses of unfree labor.
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Crawford, Timothy W. "Germany Divides the USSR from Britain and France, 1939." In The Power to Divide. Cornell University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501754715.003.0008.

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This chapter describes Germany's successful attempt to stop the USSR from allying with Britain and France in 1939. Adolf Hitler's policy was informed by two beliefs about Soviet strategic weight. The first was that Soviet neutrality was necessary for victory in a war against Poland that included British and French intervention. Soviet neutrality would diminish the effects of the allied strategy of economic blockade and punishment. The second was that the shock of Moscow's neutralization would likely compel Britain and France to abandon their commitments to Poland and thus allow Germany to attack it isolated. As German leaders foresaw, despite the apparent long odds, their policy to accommodate the Soviet Union might work because they could extend strategic benefits to Moscow that the Allies' alliance plans could not. Other conditions, captured in the theory, strongly favored success. First, Germany's policy tried to induce a low degree of alignment change. The Soviet Union was uncommitted; the German goal was to solidify this in a formal arrangement. Second, Germany faced low alliance constraints at the time. Its closest (and only formal) military ally, Italy, was weak relative to Germany and had little direct influence or interests at stake in the elements of the bargain, and it favored compromise with USSR for the same general reasons Germany did.
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"Memory, Reason, and Time: The Step-Logic Approach." In Philosophy and AI. The MIT Press, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/5352.003.0006.

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Bennett, Peggy D. "Pitfalls of assuming." In Teaching with Vitality. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190673987.003.0051.

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Assumptions we make multiple times a day about others in our schools are necessary. Yet they also warrant a caveat. Assumptions can create a world of misjudgments and misery. When we make ourselves vulnerable to others’ behaviors, and when we believe our interpretations of what happened and why, we can become victims of our own suspicions . . . espe­cially when our conclusions are not accurate. Such oppressive assumptions cause us unrest and snuff out our vitality for being the teacher we want to be. 1. Team members laugh and talk as a group, but don’t include us. “They don’t invite me to join them. I don’t belong.” 2. A parent of our student is especially friendly with a co- worker. “He prefers that teacher over me.” 3. Our principal frequently asks the opinion of a co- worker, but never us. “She doesn’t see me as a leader in this school.” Have you noticed how easy it is to create an entire scenario based on one brief, chance encounter? Some of us are experts at story- making when we see others behaving in ways that we think reflect on us. If we do not stop this kind of assuming, we live at the whim of others’ behaviors and our own imaginations. And when we are in this mode of assuming, we often compare our insides to others’ outsides. Our imaginations and suppositions can rule us. And we can get so mixed up in assuming we know another’s intentions that we forget to question our own. Develop a propensity for ponder­ing. Placing a membrane of wisdom between us and others in schools can be a gift to us and to them. The next time we make an assumption about a person’s mood, intent, word choice, or friendliness, we can stop and think of two reasons our assumption could be wrong. • “They didn’t know that we wanted to be included in the shared, lighthearted moment.” • “We didn’t know that the parent and teacher work together on a neighborhood project.” • “We didn’t know that the principal and teacher took a course together about the issue being addressed.”
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Smith, Robert B., and Lee J. Siegel. "Yellowstone Tour." In Windows into the Earth. Oxford University Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195105964.003.0013.

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This tour of Yellowstone National Park and the Hebgen Lake earthquake area begins at Yellowstone’s south entrance, just north of Grand Teton National Park. Those entering Yellowstone from other directions may start this tour at any stop that is convenient. For that reason, we have not shown cumulative mileage for this trip from start to finish. Instead, we provide cumulative mileage only from one stop to the next, and for points of interest between them. (Figure 9.1. See also Figure 1.4 for a view of the region’s topography.) Two long days or three less hectic days are required for this 251-mile tour. For those with limited time, some time-saving options are included, such as skipping West Yellowstone, Montana, and the Hebgen Lake earthquake area (Stops 7—12) or omitting Mammoth Hot Springs and other stops on the northern end of the park (Stops 14—16). If you want to spend only two days in Yellowstone and its environs, start early the first day (136 miles) and continue to Stop 12, West Yellowstone, Montana, where overnight accommodations are available. During the second day, visit Stops 13—20 (115 miles). If you wish to divide this chapter’s tour into three days, begin at Stop 1 and proceed through Stop 7, also West Yellowstone (79 miles). Spend the night there. Tour the Hebgen Lake area, Stops 8—11, the second day and return to West Yellowstone, Stop 12, the second night (57 miles). Cover Stops 13—20 the third day (115 miles). The tour ends inside Yellowstone, so you may want to spend the night in the area if you have a long drive home. The driving tour of Yellowstone is passable only from late spring to fall, when park roads are open. West Yellowstone, Montana, and the Hebgen Lake area, Stops 7—12, are accessible year-round, although winter snow covers most geological features. Vehicle odometers vary, sometimes significantly, so mileages should be taken as approximate. Some visitors may choose to drive part or all of these tours in a direction opposite to the one we use.
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Hafeez, Jibran, Rameez Khalid, and Shahid Mir. "SCOR Implementation in Oil and Gas Company from an Emerging Market." In Supply Chain and Logistics Management. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-0945-6.ch041.

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Measuring supply chain performance is an important business success factor in today's competitive environment and continuous improvement culture. Several models have been developed for this purpose, however, such models lack standardized language and are not well known in the developing countries. Supply Chain Council (SCC) developed Supply Chain Operations Reference (SCOR) model. This paper presents a case-based action-research for a step-by-step implementation of SCOR model. The case company belongs to oil and gas sector in a developing country. As-Is model was developed and analyzed for gaps. Reasons were identified using company documents and semi-structured interviews. To-Be model was then developed along with recommendations keeping into account the challenges faced by companies operating in emerging markets. The step-by-step SCOR implementation was found to be effective. It is further found that adapting the SCOR model for developing countries is a time-intensive effort and adapting the best practices can be a better option.
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Kalyuga, Slava. "Assessment of Task-Specific Expertise." In Managing Cognitive Load in Adaptive Multimedia Learning. IGI Global, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60566-048-6.ch004.

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Main implication of the expertise reversal effect is the need to tailor instructional techniques and procedures to changing levels of learner expertise in a specific task domain. In order to design adaptive procedures capable of tailoring instruction in real-time, it is necessary to have online measures of learner expertise. Such measures should be rapid enough to be used in real time. At the same time, they need to have sufficient diagnostic power to detect different levels of task-specific expertise. One of the previously mentioned reasons for low practical applicability of the results of studies in Aptitude-Treatment Interactions were inadequate aptitude measures. Most of the assessment methods used in those studies were psychometric instruments designed for selection purposes (e.g., large batteries of aptitude tests based on artificially simplified tasks administered mostly in laboratory conditions). Another suggested reason was unsuitability of those methods for dynamic, real-time applications while learners proceeded through a single learning session. This chapter describes a rapid diagnostic approach to the assessment of learner task-specific expertise that has been intentionally designed for rapid online application in adaptive learning environments. The method was developed using an analogy to experimental procedures applied in classical studies of chess expertise mentioned in Chapter I. In those studies, realistic board configurations were briefly presented for subsequent replications. With the described diagnostic approach, learners are briefly presented with a problem situation and required to indicate their first solution step in this problem situation or to rapidly verify suggested steps at various stages of a problem solution procedure.
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Smith, Robert B., and Lee J. Siegel. "Grand Teton Tour." In Windows into the Earth. Oxford University Press, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195105964.003.0012.

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Because winter snows close roads in both Grand Teton and Yellowstone national parks, the driving tours in this chapter and the next are intended for use only from late spring through early fall. You may wish to do only parts of each tour and so we have not shown cumulative trip mileage in these tour guides. Instead, we provide cumulative mileage only from one stop to the next, and for points of interest between them. This chapter’s tour of Grand Teton National Park totals 82 miles, excluding mileage to the optional aerial tramway ride. The intent of these two chapters is to provide a three-day driving tour, including one day in Grand Teton and two in Yellowstone. However, you easily may extend the tour to five days or even longer if you choose a leisurely pace or decide to make optional hikes and stops. The three-day tour outlined in these chapters starts in the town of Jackson, Wyoming. Our tour includes the following suggestions: • On day I, make the Teton tour, perhaps beginning or ending with the optional tramway ride detailed at the end of this chapter. Spend the night either in Jackson or find accommodations closer to Yellowstone, such as at Colter Bay Village or other campgrounds and lodgings in northern Grand Teton National Park. • On day 2, enter Yellowstone’s south entrance and drive the loop road clockwise to Madison Junction, then spend the night at West Yellowstone, Montana. If you arrive at West Yellowstone by early to mid-afternoon, you still will have time to make the optional tour to the Hebgen Lake earthquake area, although the visitor center there closes in the late afternoon. • On day 3, either start with the optional side trip to the Hebgen Lake earthquake area, or proceed from West Yellowstone, Montana, back into Yellowstone National Park, continuing the tour at Madison Junction. Some visitors may choose to drive part or all of these tours in a direction opposite to the one we use here. For that reason, we also provide reverse mileage between each stop and the sights between stops.
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Conference papers on the topic "Stop time reasons"

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Kadiyala, Sampath, Phani Gubbala, and Steven D. Schrock. "Human Behavior at Railroad Grade Crossings." In 2016 Joint Rail Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/jrc2016-5786.

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A comprehensive study is needed to address the human behavior at railroad grade crossings. Human behavior at different signs changes and it may lead to crashes. No guidance is provided in the recommendations provided by Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices where and when different type of signs and different combination of signs are appropriate. Crashes occur mostly when the drivers try to go through the gate or around the gate when a train is approaching. Drivers come to a complete stop at stop signs and then proceed only if a train is not coming, this may lead to a crash when they canno
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Hoernig, T., H. W. Kopfer, and C. Friedrich. "Torque Vibrations in Automatized Screw Assembly: Reasons, Elimination and Virtual Testing." In ASME 2013 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2013-62347.

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Today the torque controlled tightening method for screw assembly is an established process in industries undertaking large scale productions [12]. In this tightening method an instability of friction during the tightening procedure leads to an imprecise stop of the electronic tightening tool affecting the preload. Besides this heavy noise emission occurs due to vibrations. Because of shorter and shorter cycle times in automated screw assembly, higher precision requirements, new surface pairings (e.g. Cr(VI)-free) with changed coefficients of friction and more complex assemblies with difficult
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Woodward, Jay, and Michelle Kwok. "CREATING A VIRTUAL STUDY ABROAD EXPERIENCE TO RUSSIA." In International Conference on Education and New Developments. inScience Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.36315/2021end141.

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COVID-19 has drastically altered our world. Though travel is halted, global education does not have to stop. We used this time to reconceive the notion of study abroad and designed a study abroad program that could be facilitated virtually and enhanced with face-to-face classroom interaction. We were inspired to embark on this journey for several reasons. First, the realities of the pandemic create risks associated with international travel. Second, international experiences need to be more accessible–more students should be able to participate in global education, even if they do not have the
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Munari, Enrico, Mirko Morini, Michele Pinelli, Klaus Brun, Sarah Simons, and Rainer Kurz. "A New Index to Evaluate the Potential Damage of a Surge Event: The Surge Severity Coefficient." In ASME Turbo Expo 2018: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2018-76185.

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Industrial compressors suffer from strong aerodynamic instability that arises when low ranges of flow rate are achieved; this instability is called surge. This phenomenon creates strong vibrations and forces acting on the compressor and system components due to the fact that it produces variable time averaged mass flow and pressure. Therefore, surge is dangerous not only for aerodynamic structures but also for mechanical parts. Surge is usually prevented in industrial plants by means of anti-surge systems which act as soon as surge occurs, however some rapid transients or system upsets can lea
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Neises, Martina, Heike Simon, Martin Roeb, Martin Schmu¨cker, Christian Sattler, and Robert Pitz-Paal. "Investigations of the Regeneration Step of a Thermochemical Cycle Using Mixed Iron Oxides Coated on SiSiC Substrates." In ASME 2011 5th International Conference on Energy Sustainability. ASMEDC, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/es2011-54193.

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A two-step thermochemical cycle for hydrogen production using mixed iron oxides coated on silicon carbide substrates has been investigated. The water-splitting step proceeds at temperatures between 800 and 1000 °C while for the regeneration step temperatures around 1200 °C are needed. A deactivation of the material resulting in a decrease of the hydrogen production within the first couple of cycles was observed in preceding tests. For detailed investigations of the system composed of the redox-material and the substrate small scale samples were tested in a laboratory test-rig. For identificati
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Jang, Seung Eon, Jin Park, Sang Hyeon Han, Hong Jip Kim, Ki Sung Jung, and Chun Sang Yoo. "A Numerical Study on the Low Limit Auto-Ignition Temperature of Syngas and Modification of Chemical Kinetic Mechanism." In ASME-JSME-KSME 2019 8th Joint Fluids Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/ajkfluids2019-5432.

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Abstract In this study, the auto ignition with low limit temperature of syngas has been numerically investigated using a 2-D numerical analysis. Previous study showed that auto ignition was observed at above 860 K in co-flow jet experiments using syngas and dry air. However, the auto ignition at this low temperature range could not be predicted with existing chemical mechanisms. Inconsistency of the auto ignition temperature between the experimental and numerical results is thought to be due to the inaccuracy of the chemical kinetic mechanism. The prediction of ignition delay time and sensitiv
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Jurčić, Margareta, Branka Remenarić, and Ivana Kenfelja. "THE EFFECT OF FRAUD TRIANGLE ON UNETHICAL BEHAVIOUR OF STUDENTS IN ACCOUNTING COURSES." In 4th International Scientific Conference – EMAN 2020 – Economics and Management: How to Cope With Disrupted Times. Association of Economists and Managers of the Balkans, Belgrade, Serbia, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.31410/eman.2020.265.

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Cheating behaviour on exams has generally become deep-rooted social problem. Current political and social examples in Croatia where corruption, criminal acts and nepotism are not punished adequately are just a quite good base for dishonest behaviour to become acceptable. The development of Internet and new technologies certainly open a door to a new dimension of unethical behaviour, and therefore represent a challenge in the fraud prevention. At the same time, teachers have to be one step ahead of students to minimize non-acceptable behaviour.This paper seeks to link the Fraud Triangle concept
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Telci, Ilker T., and Shesh R. Koirala. "Transient Impact of Valve Closure Times: Disagreements Between Design and Application." In ASME 2017 Pressure Vessels and Piping Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/pvp2017-65728.

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Many pressurized liquid systems require emergency shut down procedures in order to prevent damage to the piping and components, environmental contamination and fire hazard. The emergency shutdowns (ESDs) are facilitated by fast closing on-off valves installed at various locations along the piping system. When these valves close they create transient pressure waves traveling through the pipe network. These waves can be reflected at the dead-ends or closed valves. At locations where the pressure decreases below the vapor pressure, liquid column separation followed by a rejoining can cause creati
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Howard, Kyle T., and Blanca A. Ramirez. "Fast Degas Carbon Dioxide Evaporator." In ASME 2009 Power Conference. ASMEDC, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/power2009-81198.

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Two reasons exist for the rapid degassing of Hydrogen cooled generators. The first is an upset condition which could cause an unsafe condition or generator failure if the Hydrogen is not removed. The second is the time savings that can be recognized by reducing the time required to fully purge the generator and refill during an unplanned or planned outage. A generator bearing fire is an example of the first condition where the ability to remove the Hydrogen and purge with Carbon Dioxide rapidly would result in a significant reduction in the risk of a catastrophic situation. Current purge opera
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Lee, Daniel, Paul D. Orkwis, Fu-Lin Tsung, William Magnuszewski, and Christopher Noll. "Effect of Temporal Accuracy on the Numerical Prediction of an Isolated Transonic Rotor at Near Stall Conditions." In ASME Turbo Expo 2008: Power for Land, Sea, and Air. ASMEDC, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2008-51486.

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A numerical investigation of the NASA Rotor 35 transonic compressor rotor at near stall conditions was conducted with an unsteady RANS technique. A series of time-step size and inner iterations were chosen to create a design-of-experiment matrix to study their impact on the unsteady flow field. Solution accuracy is determined by comparisons with LDV, and pressure and temperature profiles. Results obtained showed that for this near stall unsteady flow field unsteady analysis is required. However, an asymptotic relationship does not exist between increased numerical temporal accuracy and improve
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Reports on the topic "Stop time reasons"

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Veland, Siri, and Christine Merk. Lay person perceptions of marine carbon dioxide removal (CDR) – Working paper. OceanNETs, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3289/oceannets_d3.3.

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This working paper presents first insights on lay public perceptions of marine carbon dioxide removal (CDR) approaches. In seven focus groups, three in Germany and four in Norway (including one pilot) the researchers asked members of the lay public to share their views of the ocean and the effects of climate change, four CDR approaches, as well as their reflections on responsible research and innovation (RRI) of marine CDR. The four CDR methods were ocean iron fertilization, ocean alkalinity enhancement, artificial upwelling, and blue carbon management through restoration of coastal and marine
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