Foot and mouth disease (FMD) is a major threat, not only to countries whose economies rely on agricultural exports, but also to industrialised countries that maintain a healthy domestic livestock industry by eliminating major infectious diseases from their livestock populations. Traditional methods of controlling diseases such as FMD require the rapid detection and slaughter of infected animals, and any susceptible animals with which they may have been in contact, either directly or indirectly. During the 2001 epidemic of FMD in the United Kingdom (UK), this approach was supplemented by a culling policy driven by unvalidated predictive models. The epidemic and its control resulted in the death of approximately ten million animals, public disgust with the magnitude of the slaughter, and political resolve to adopt alternative options, notably including vaccination, to control any future epidemics. The UK experience provides a salutary warning of how models can be abused in the interests of scientific opportunism.
The proliferation of digital signage systems has prompted a wealth of research that attempts to use public displays for more than just advertisement or transport schedules, such as their use for supporting communities. However, deploying and maintaining display systems “in the wild” that can support communities is challenging. Based on the authors’ experiences in designing and fielding a diverse range of community-supporting public display deployments, we identify a large set of challenges and issues that researchers working in this area are likely to encounter. Grouping them into five distinct layers -- (1) hardware, (2) system architecture, (3) content, (4) system interaction, and (5) community interaction design -- we draw up the P-LAYERS framework to enable a more systematic appreciation of the diverse range of issues associated with the development, the deployment, and the maintenance of such systems. Using three of our own deployments as illustrative examples, we will describe both our experiences within each individual layer, as well as point out interactions between the layers. We believe our framework provides a valuable aid for researchers looking to work in this space, alerting them to the issues they are likely to encounter during their deployments, and help them plan accordingly.
Public displays of photographs are a common sight in community spaces, yet while much attention has been given recently to the use of digital photography in the home, the community domain remains underexplored. We describe the Wray Photo Display, a public situated display for community-generated photography in an English rural village, which aims to understand the community's use of photos for social purposes and the ways in which public display technology may support these social interactions. This article presents the techniques used in designing and evaluating the display as well as understanding the community and its use of photos, and our discussion of the issues and challenges presented by this study.
There is an urgent need for detection technologies that enable accurate and precise quantification of solutions containing small organic molecules in a manner that is rapid, cheap, non-labor-intensive, readily automated, and without a requirement for specific analyte standards. We provide a theoretical analysis that predicts that the logarithmic nature of the working domain of the evaporative light-scattering detector (ELSD) will normally bias toward underestimation of chromatographically resolved impurities, resulting in an overestimation of analyte purity. This analysis is confirmed by experiments with flow injection analysis (FIA) and gradient reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC). Quantification is further compromised by the dependence of response parameters on the matrix composition and hence on the retention time of the analyte. Attempts were made to ameliorate these problems by using the response surface of a single compound to calibrate throughout the HPLC gradient. A chemiluminescent nitrogen detector (CLND) was also used in a similar manner, and the performance of the two techniques were compared against those of each other and that of a reference standard technique. A protocol for this purpose was developed using proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) and the ERETIC method to enable quantification by integrating proton signals. The double-blind comparison exercise confirmed molar nitrogen CLND response to be sufficiently stable and robust across a methanol gradient to be used with a single external nitrogenous calibrant to quantify nitrogen-containing compounds of known molecular formula. The performance of HPLC-CLND was very similar to that of NMR, while that of HPLC-ELSD was seen to be significantly worse, showing it to be unsuitable for the purpose of single-calibrant quantification. We report details and experience of our use of RP-HPLC-CLND-MS to characterize and quantify small amounts of solutions of novel compounds at nominal levels of 10mM in microtiter plate (MTP) format.
Makerspaces-public workshops where makers can share tools and knowledge-are a growing resource for amateurs and professionals alike. While the role of makerspaces in innovation and peer learning is widely discussed, we attempt to look at the wider roles that makerspaces play in public life. Through site visits and interviews at makerspaces and similar facilities across the UK, we have identified additional roles that these spaces play: as social spaces, in supporting wellbeing, by serving the needs of the communities they are located in and by reaching out to excluded groups. Based on these findings, we suggest implications and future directions for both makerspace organisers and community researchers.
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