9,751 research outputs found
Systematic Review Of The Published Literature On Success And Failure Rates Of Nonsurgical Endodontic Treatment
Purpose: The aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review of the literature on treatment results in non-surgical Endodontic therapy. This included researching and defining inclusion and exclusion criteria and applying these criteria to identified relevant publications. The overall goal was to analyze the available literature and synthesize these results in an effort to inform the profession on the success and failure rates in non-surgical root canal therapy.
Materials and Methods: Inclusion and exclusion criteria were established in an effort to systemically review and formulate an evidence-based understanding of treatment results in non-surgical root canal therapy. A comprehensive literature search was conducted using using PubMed and the Cochrane database using the search terms root canal therapy, apical periodontitis, success, failure, and treatment outcome and was restricted to January 2009 through December 2011. Articles were reviewed and analyzed according to the inclusion/exclusion criteria.
Results: A review of the abstracts for these 330 publications resulted in 51 publications articles to be examined more closely for relevance and inclusion. From this, no publication met all defined inclusion/exclusion criteria.
Discussion: Defining a set of criteria for how success is defined in practice is vital to the field of Endodontics. It is important to define, establish and incorporate a standardized methodology in the way research is conducted on Endodontic treatment results. This is necessary for the application of research to the practice of evidence-based Endodontics
Public Policy and the Economic Wellbeing of Elderly Immigrants
In this paper we document the economic outcomes of elderly immigrants to Canada. Our objective is to describe the extent to which elderly immigrants may have low income (are “in povertyâ€) and their interactions with the Canadian income transfer system. The study has two main parts. First, using a combination of administrative and survey data, we describe the age dimensions of immigration to Canada since 1980, and the evolution of policies directed towards older immigrants (i.e., immigration selection, and eligibility for age-related social security programs). Second, using the SCF and SLID surveys spanning 1981 through 2006, we document the composition and levels of income for immigrants to Canada. We estimate the degree to which older immigrants support themselves, either through working, or living with relatives, as well as the degree that they rely on various income transfer programs, especially OAS, GIS, and Social Assistance (SA). We also summarize their overall living standards, and the extent to which they live in poverty (have “low incomes.â€) Throughout the paper, we also explore the family dimensions to the outcomes of older immigrants: distinguishing between individual and family sources of income, as well as outlining differences in the living arrangements (family structure) of older immigrants, and the implications for measures of their well-beingImmigration; Retirement; Public Pensions; Living arrangements and family structure
The political economy of technological capabilities and global production networks in South Africa’s wind and solar photovoltaic (PV) industries
We examine underlying conflicts between technological capabilities and global production networks in South Africa’s solar photovoltaic (PV) and wind energy industries. This includes an analysis of the complex and multi-scalar relationships that exist between international and local institutions, as well as the embedded nature of renewable electricity technology within a national and international political economy. In South Africa’s case, this encompasses endogenous factors such as the introduction of a regulatory framework for renewable energy independent power producers as well as international dynamics such as rapidly evolving trends in renewable energy investment, trade, and technology development. While South Africa’s wind and solar industries have been celebrated internationally, tensions exist within national government between commercial priorities and requirements for economic development including local content. We provide an empirically rich description to explore how competition and manipulation have posed obstacles to localisation of renewable energy technologies nationally
Quantum cascade lasers in biomedical infrared imaging
Technological advances, namely the integration of quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) within an infrared (IR) microscope, are enabling the development of valuable label-free biomedical-imaging tools capable of targeting and detecting salient chemical species within practical clinical timeframes
The Nonlinear Asymptotic Stage of the Rayleigh-Taylor Instability with Wide Bubbles and Narrowing Spikes
The potential flow of an incompressible inviscid heavy fluid over a light one
is considered. The integral version of the method of matched asymptotic
expansion is applied to the construction of the solution over long intervals of
time. The asymptotic solution describes the flow in which a bubble rises with
constant speed and the "tongue" is in free fall. The outer expansion is
stationary, but the inner one depends on time. It is shown that the solution
exists within the same range of Froude number obtained previously by
Vanden-Broeck (1984a,b). The Froude number and the solution depend on the
initial energy of the disturbance. At the top of the bubble, the derivative of
the free-surface curvature has a discontinuity when the Froude number is not
equal to 0.23. This makes it possible to identify the choice of the solution
obtained in a number of studies with the presence of an artificial numerical
surface tension. The first correction term in the neighborhood of the tongue is
obtained when large surface tension is included
Improved Time-Domain Accuracy Standards for Model Gravitational Waveforms
Model gravitational waveforms must be accurate enough to be useful for
detection of signals and measurement of their parameters, so appropriate
accuracy standards are needed. Yet these standards should not be unnecessarily
restrictive, making them impractical for the numerical and analytical modelers
to meet. The work of Lindblom, Owen, and Brown [Phys. Rev. D 78, 124020 (2008)]
is extended by deriving new waveform accuracy standards which are significantly
less restrictive while still ensuring the quality needed for gravitational-wave
data analysis. These new standards are formulated as bounds on certain norms of
the time-domain waveform errors, which makes it possible to enforce them in
situations where frequency-domain errors may be difficult or impossible to
estimate reliably. These standards are less restrictive by about a factor of 20
than the previously published time-domain standards for detection, and up to a
factor of 60 for measurement. These new standards should therefore be much
easier to use effectively.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
NightLife : A cheap, robust, LED based light trap for collecting aquatic insects in remote areas
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. The attached file is the published version of the article.NHM Repositor
Complexity as Process: Complexity Inspired Approaches to Composition
This article examines the use of Complexity Theory as an inspiration for the creation of new musical works, and highlights problems and possible solutions associated with its application as a compositional tool. In particular it explores how the philosophy behind Complexity Theory affects notions of process-based composition, indeterminacy in music and the performer/listener/environment relationship, culminating in providing a basis for the understanding of music creation as an active process within a context. The author presents one of his own sound installations, Cross-Pollination, as an example of a composition inspired and best understood from the philosophical position as described in Complexity Theory
A modified Oster-Murray-Harris mechanical model of morphogenesis
There are two main modeling paradigms for biological pattern formation in developmental biology: chemical prepattern models and cell aggregation models. This paper focuses on an example of a cell aggregation model, the mechanical model developed by Oster, Murray, and Harris [Development, 78 (1983), pp. 83--125]. We revisit the Oster--Murray--Harris model and find that, due to the infinitesimal displacement assumption made in the original version of this model, there is a restriction on the types of boundary conditions that can be prescribed. We derive a modified form of the model which relaxes the infinitesimal displacement assumption. We analyze the dynamics of this model using linear and multiscale nonlinear analysis and show that it has the same linear behavior as the original Oster--Murray--Harris model. Nonlinear analysis, however, predicts that the modified model will allow for a wider range of parameters where the solution evolves to a bounded steady state. The results from both analyses are verified through numerical simulations of the full nonlinear model in one and two dimensions. The increased range of boundary conditions that are well-posed, as well as a wider range of parameters that yield bounded steady states, renders the modified model more applicable to, and more robust for, comparisons with experiments
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