1,621 research outputs found
Transdiagnostic CBT treatment of co-morbid anxiety and depression in an older adult: Single case experimental design
Background: Despite the prevalence of co-morbid anxiety and depression in older adults, evaluation of suitable clinical models is rare. Aims: This study tested the acceptability and effectiveness of a transdiagnostic approach to treating co-morbid anxiety and depression in an older adults in a routine clinical setting. Method: In an A/B single case experimental design, a patient completed five daily ideographic measures of anxiety and depression across baseline and treatment and the HADS at five time points over time, including 3-month follow-up. The 8-session treatment was transdiagnostic CBT informed by the Unified Protocol. Results: All sessions were attended. Significant baseline-treatment improvements were found for daily structure, mood, confidence and worry, with large associated effect sizes. The HADS showed that the patient met recovery criteria by the end of treatment, with some evidence of anxious relapse at follow-up. Conclusion: Transdiagnostic CBT offers promise as a treatment approach to mixed anxiety and depression in older adults. The model needs to be further tested using more rigorous and suitably powered methodologies
Hole-depletion of ladders in SrCuO induced by correlation effects
The hole distribution in SrCuO is studied by low
temperature polarization dependent O K Near-Edge X-ray Absorption Fine
Structure measurements and state of the art electronic structure calculations
that include core-hole and correlation effects in a mean-field approach.
Contrary to all previous analysis, based on semi-empirical models, we show that
correlations and antiferromagnetic ordering favor the strong chain
hole-attraction. For the remaining small number of holes accommodated on
ladders, leg-sites are preferred to rung-sites. The small hole affinity of
rung-sites explains naturally the 1D - 2D cross-over in the phase diagram of
(La,Y,Sr,Ca)CuOComment: 6 pages, 8 figure
Unboundedness and downward closures of higher-order pushdown automata
We show the diagonal problem for higher-order pushdown automata (HOPDA), and
hence the simultaneous unboundedness problem, is decidable. From recent work by
Zetzsche this means that we can construct the downward closure of the set of
words accepted by a given HOPDA. This also means we can construct the downward
closure of the Parikh image of a HOPDA. Both of these consequences play an
important role in verifying concurrent higher-order programs expressed as HOPDA
or safe higher-order recursion schemes
Realization of an Inductance Scale Traceable to the Quantum Hall Effect Using an Automated Synchronous Sampling System
In this paper, the realization of an inductance scale from 1~H to 10~H
for frequencies ranging between 50~Hz to 20~kHz is presented. The scale is
realized directly from a series of resistance standards using a fully automated
synchronous sampling system. A careful systematic characterization of the
system shows that the lowest uncertainties, around 12~H/H, are obtained
for inductances in the range from 10~mH to 100~mH at frequencies in the kHz
range. This new measurement system which was successfully evaluated during an
international comparison, provides a primary realization of the henry, directly
traceable to the quantum Hall effect. An additional key feature of this system
is its versatility. In addition to resistance-inductance (R-L) comparison, any
kind of impedances can be compared: R-R, R-C, L-L or C-C, giving this sampling
system a great potential of use in many laboratories around the world
Metabolic labelling of cholesteryl glucosides in Helicobacter pylori reveals how the uptake of human lipids enhances bacterial virulence.
Helicobacter pylori infects approximately half of the human population and is the main cause of various gastric diseases. This pathogen is auxotrophic for cholesterol, which it converts upon uptake to various cholesteryl α-glucoside derivatives, including cholesteryl 6'-acyl and 6'-phosphatidyl α-glucosides (CAGs and CPGs). Owing to a lack of sensitive analytical methods, it is not known if CAGs and CPGs play distinct physiological roles or how the acyl chain component affects function. Herein we established a metabolite-labelling method for characterising these derivatives qualitatively and quantitatively with a femtomolar detection limit. The development generated an MS/MS database of CGds, allowing for profiling of all the cholesterol-derived metabolites. The subsequent analysis led to the unprecedented information that these bacteria acquire phospholipids from the membrane of epithelial cells for CAG biosynthesis. The resulting increase in longer or/and unsaturated CAG acyl chains helps to promote lipid raft formation and thus delivery of the virulence factor CagA into the host cell, supporting the idea that the host/pathogen interplay enhances bacterial virulence. These findings demonstrate an important connection between the chain length of CAGs and the bacterial pathogenicity
Effect of screening of the electron-phonon interaction on the temperature of Bose-Einstein condensation of intersite bipolarons
Here we consider an interacting electron-phonon system within the framework
of extended Holstein-Hubbard model at strong enough electron-phonon interaction
limit in which (bi)polarons are the essential quasiparticles of the system. It
is assumed that the electron-phonon interaction is screened and its potential
has Yukawa-type analytical form. An effect of screening of the electron-phonon
interaction on the temperature of Bose-Einstein condensation of the intersite
bipolarons is studied for the first time. It is revealed that the temperature
of Bose-Einstein condensation of intersite bipolarons is higher in the system
with the more screened electron-phonon interaction.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Testing of Instrument Transformers
The subject is examined under four principal headings. Part I deals with general introductory matters and a discussion of the apparatus necessary for making tests in the laboratory or on site. Methods for testing current transformers are dealt with in Part II, while Part III is concerned with the methods used for calibration of voltage transformers. In Part IV the various methods are critically reviewed in order to determine those best suited to meet different practical conditions. Full references to tecnical literature are given and it is believed that no paper of importance has been omitted
Observation of magnetic circular dichroism in Fe L_{2,3} x-ray-fluorescence spectra
We report experiments demonstrating circular dichroism in the x-ray-fluorescence spectra of magnetic systems, as predicted by a recent theory. The data, on the L_{2,3} edges of ferromagnetic iron, are compared with fully relativistic local spin density functional calculations, and the relationship between the dichroic spectra and the spin-resolved local density of occupied states is discussed
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