4,548 research outputs found
Voice Compression and Communications: Principles and Applications for Fixes and Wireless Channels
Up-to-date, expert coverage of topics in wireless voice communications Voice communication is the most important facet of mobile radio service. Even when the predicted surge of wireless data and Internet services becomes a reality, voice will remain the most natural means of human communication. Voice Compression and Communications details issues in wireless voice communications and treats compression, channel coding, and wireless transmission as a joint subject. Part I covers background material, whereas Part II provides detailed information on both proprietary and standardized analysis-by-synthesis codecs, including the speech codecs of virtually all existing wireline-based and wireless systems. Parts III and IV discuss mainly research-based wideband, audio, as well as very low-rate schemes likely to find their way into future standards. Voice Compression and Communications describes fundamental concepts in a non-mathematical way early in the book for those with only a background knowledge of signal processing and communications. More advanced readers will find detailed discussions of theoretical principles, future concepts, and solutions to various specific wireless voice communications problems
Author reply to Hettiarachchi et al. (re Helicobacter pylori resistance in Australia…)
Letter to the EditorJonathon P. Schubert, Paul R. Ingram, Morgyn S. Warner, Christopher K. Rayner, Ian C. Roberts-Thomson, Samuel P. Costello and Robert V. Bryan
1973-10-25 Morehead State Concert and Lecture Series J.P. Donleavy
Renowned author J.P. Donleavy speaks on the plight of an author and the methods to write, recorded on October 25, 1973
Educationally Recovering Dewey in Curriculum
To educationally recover something (or somebody, as the title suggests vis-a-vis Dewey) invokes at least two assumptions: (1) that it has been covered before, thus, it can be recovered; and (2) that it somehow increases perspec-tive, insight, or understanding, and is therefore educational. Clearly, the work of John Dewey permeates the literature of curriculum studies. On numerous occasions (Schubert, 1980, 1982a, 1982c, 1986a) I have discussed an experientalist tradition in curriculum discourse that stems from writings of Francis W. Parker, William James, and principally John Dewey. It is developed through the writings of Boyd Bode, Harold Rugg, George S. Counts, William H. Kilpatrick, John Childs, and L. Thomas Hopkins. While the years from 1940 and onward saw the deterioration of a Deweyan brand of progressive education (and the demise of The Progressive Education Association), I submit that the spirit of the experientalist critique has emerged time and again (often without the progressive banner and even without Deweyan citation), challenging conventional theory and practice in curriculum
Entrainment and detrainment rates from the piv measurements at the top of laboratory analogs of stratocumulus and cumulus clouds
We analyze mixing at the top of laboratory analogs of convective clouds: stratocumulus and cumulus to investigate entrainment of environmental air into the cloud. We retrieve two components of air velocity using Particle Image Velocimetry technique. Suitable image processing allows to determine cloud–clear air interface. Using velocity differences between cloudy and clear sides of the interface we calculate entrainment / detrainment rates
Vortex Dynamics in The Transitional and Turbulent Wake of 6:1 Prolate Spheroid at 45-deg incidence angle
The incompressible flow past a 6:1 prolate spheroid with an inclination angle of 45o at Re = 3,000 has been studied by means of direct numerical simulations (DNS). The Reynolds number is based on the inflow velocity and minor-axis length. The preliminary results presented here are focused mainly on vortex dynamics and vortical structures in the wake. The wake behind this configuration starts almost symmetric but is soon strongly deflected and bent as it evolves to the intermediate wake. A pair of unequal-strength vortices dominates the intermediate wake, of which one exhibits the shape of a long vortex tube while the other rapidly breaks down into turbulent-like vortical structures
Experimental characterisation of large scale structures in a high Reynolds number turbulent boundary layer
A very large field of view (4δ x 1δ) with a good spatial resolution owing to the use of four 2k x 2k pixel cameras was conducted in a flat plate boundary layer at two Reynolds numbers (Reθ ≈7,500 and 20,000). Comparing the flow statistics with previously obtained hot-wire data under similar flow conditions show good agreement. The goal of this experiment is to detect and characterise the large scale motions which develop in the log region of a high Reynolds number turbulent boundary layer
Letter from J.P. Bradley to Mr. [William] S. Martin The Dominguez Estate Company, June 28, 1940
Regarding attached payment by Mr. K.L. Schaap settling his account
Optical fibre sensors, past, present and future - a personal view
The field of optical fibre sensors has been an attractive area of research, ever since the mid 1980s, at a time when optical fibre communications technology had already started to find commercial success. The area was of great academic interest because of the wide variety of direct and indirect interactions with these new optical waveguides, both physical and chemical, which were seen to be possible. Much of the early research, mostly by academics who had previously worked in fibre communications, was highly speculative, and initially found very little commercial application. Even then, however, many confidently believed it to have great future potential. The difficulty at that time was that most existing electrical sensors were relatively cheap, and of course this technology was far more mature, whereas the fibre sensor area lacked many of the simple building blocks necessary for simple, reliable and cost-effective production. Many of the early sensors therefore, quite naturally struggled to find a competitive position. Since then, the many years of research has resulted in an increasing variety of available low-cost optical fibre components becoming available and the research on the sensor technology has lead to many truly useful sensors for what are still niche areas, but ones having real commercial potential. As a result, prospects for wider application are becoming better each year. The paper will start in a tutorial manner, by discussing and classifying the types of optical fibre sensors, discuss the care that has to be taken in their design, and will include a few case studies of some of the very early sensors. It will then go on to describe where several types of sensors have found successful application in the last decade. Finally, the author will discuss the areas where he believes they are likely to find increasing commercial success in future. Please note that the paper will present a personal view of the area, by a research scientist/engineer who has worked in the optical fibre sensors field since 1986, initially as an industrial researcher and later returning as an academic, and who is now active as a freelance consultant in the area
Afrikaanse volksliedjies
17 pdf files of 17 articles published in Huisgenoot.17 articles published in Huisgenoot between 1921 and 1946, in which are discussed the nature, development, need of and place of folk songs in Afrikaans culture.Ons musiek -- Ons Werda-lied en ander sang en musiek -- Schubert en ons / M.L. de Villiers -- Iets oor ou Afrikaanse liedjies / J.F.W. Grosskopf -- Ons ou volksliedjies -- Kulturele betekenis van die volkslied -- FAK volksangbundel -- Die eeufeeslied -- Volksliedere -- Volksang in die skole -- Volksang en die volkskool / O. van Oostrum -- Ons volksang -- Afrikaanse liedere by Trek-herdenking / Jan Bouws -- Volksmusiek in Suid-Afrika / Willem van Warmelo -- Herkoms van beroemde lied / J.P. Toerien -- Nederlandse komponiste en die Afrikaanse lied / Jan Bouws.pm2013-
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