• Title/Summary/Keyword: jini Technology

Search Result 22, Processing Time 0.019 seconds

Photocatalytic Activities of Titania Deposited Beads by FB-CVD as Operation Variables (유동층 화학기상증착(FB-CVD)으로 제조한 광촉매 박막증착 비드의 조업변수에 따른 반응성)

  • Lim, Nam-Yun;Lee, Seung Yong;Park, Jaehyeon;Kwak, Jini;Park, Hai Woong
    • Korean Chemical Engineering Research
    • /
    • v.44 no.3
    • /
    • pp.300-306
    • /
    • 2006
  • Photocatalyst deposited beads were prepared by fluidized bed chemical vapor deposition (FB-CVD) under various operating conditions of substrates, bed temperature, pressure, and oxygen concentration. Photocatalytic degradation of acetaldehyde was carried out to determine the optimum operating condition of prepared photocatalysts. They were characterized by using FE-SEM, XRD, and XPS. From the FE-SEM photographs, it was found that the surfaces of titania-coated beads were covered with crystal form, particle form, and slick form of titania on alumina, silica-gel, and glass beads, respectively. From the result of photocatalytic degradation of acetaldehyde, it was found that prepared titania/ alumina beads at $600^{\circ}C$, 5 torr showed superior performance to others, and oxygen flow rate has no significant effect.

How facial emotion affects switching cost: Eastern and Western cultural differences (얼굴 표정 정서가 전환 과제 수행에 미치는 영향: 동서양 문화차)

  • Jini Tae;Yeeun Nam;Yoonhyoung Lee;Myeong-ho Sohn;Tae-hoon Kim
    • Korean Journal of Cognitive Science
    • /
    • v.34 no.3
    • /
    • pp.227-241
    • /
    • 2023
  • This study aimed to examine the influence of emotional information on task switching performance from a cross-cultural perspective. Specifically we investigated whether the impact of affective information differs between Koreans and Caucasian when they perform a switching task using pictures that express positive and negative emotions. In this study, Korean and Caucasian college students were presented with either positive or negative faces and asked to perform either an emotion or a gender judgment task based on the color of the picture frame. The results showed that the switching cost from the gender judgment task to the emotion task was significantly larger than the switching cost from the gender task to the emotion task for both Koreans and Caucasians. This asymmetric switching cost was maintained when the previous and current pictures showed the same emotion but disappeared when two images presented different emotions. Regardless of the participant's cultural background, switching costs were greater for emotional tasks where the emotion was directly related to the task than for gender tasks. However, the effect of emotional switching on switching costs varied by the individual's background. Koreans were less sensitive to whether poser's emotion was changed than Americans. These results demonstrate that emotional information affects cognitive task performance and suggest that the effects of emotion may differ depending on the individual's cultural background.