2,420 research outputs found
Activity Theory Analysis of Heart Failure Self-Care
The management of chronic health conditions such as heart failure is a complex process emerging from the activity of a network of individuals and artifacts. This article presents an Activity Theory-based secondary analysis of data from a geriatric heart failure management study. Twenty-one patients' interviews and clinic visit observations were analyzed to uncover eight configurations of roles and activities involving patients, clinicians, and others in the sociotechnical network. For each configuration or activity pattern, we identify points of tension and propose guidelines for developing interventions for future computer-supported healthcare systems
Constraining Gluon Shadowing Using Photoproduction in Ultraperipheral pA and AA Collisions
Photoproduction of heavy quarks and exclusive production of vector mesons in
ultraperipheral proton-nucleus and nucleus-nucleus collisions depend
significantly on nuclear gluon distributions. In the present study we
investigate quantitatively the extent of the applicability of these processes
at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in constraining the shadowing component of
nuclear gluon modifications.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1104.428
Nuclear effects in photoproduction of heavy quarks and vector mesons in ultraperipheral PbPb and pPb collisions at the LHC
The comparison of photoproduction cross sections for and b-b(bar)
in PbPb and pPb collisions can give sensitivity to nuclear shadowing effects.
The photoproduction of vector mesons is even more sensitive to the underlying
gluon distributions. In this study we present the cross sections and rapidity
dependence of the photoproduction of heavy quarks and exclusive production of
vector mesons in ultraperipheral pPb and PbPb collisions at the Large Hadron
Collider at sqrt(s_NN)=5 TeV and sqrt(s_NN)=2.76J/\psi\Upsilon$ in
PbPb collisions in particular exhibit very good sensitivity to gluon shadowing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Systematic review of smartphone-based passive sensing for health and wellbeing
OBJECTIVE:
To review published empirical literature on the use of smartphone-based passive sensing for health and wellbeing.
MATERIAL AND METHODS:
A systematic review of the English language literature was performed following PRISMA guidelines. Papers indexed in computing, technology, and medical databases were included if they were empirical, focused on health and/or wellbeing, involved the collection of data via smartphones, and described the utilized technology as passive or requiring minimal user interaction.
RESULTS:
Thirty-five papers were included in the review. Studies were performed around the world, with samples of up to 171 (median n = 15) representing individuals with bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, depression, older adults, and the general population. The majority of studies used the Android operating system and an array of smartphone sensors, most frequently capturing accelerometry, location, audio, and usage data. Captured data were usually sent to a remote server for processing but were shared with participants in only 40% of studies. Reported benefits of passive sensing included accurately detecting changes in status, behavior change through feedback, and increased accountability in participants. Studies reported facing technical, methodological, and privacy challenges.
DISCUSSION:
Studies in the nascent area of smartphone-based passive sensing for health and wellbeing demonstrate promise and invite continued research and investment. Existing studies suffer from weaknesses in research design, lack of feedback and clinical integration, and inadequate attention to privacy issues. Key recommendations relate to developing passive sensing strategies matching the problem at hand, using personalized interventions, and addressing methodological and privacy challenges.
CONCLUSION:
As evolving passive sensing technology presents new possibilities for health and wellbeing, additional research must address methodological, clinical integration, and privacy issues. Doing so depends on interdisciplinary collaboration between informatics and clinical experts
Contact terms in charged current processes at HERA
We obtain bounds on the mass scales characterizing four-fermion contact interactions in charged current processes. The bounds arise from the Q^2 and x distributions in the processes e p -> \nu X measured by the two HERA experiments, H1 and ZEUS
Photoproduction with a mini-jet model and Cosmic Ray showers
We present post-LHC updates of estimates of the total photo-production cross
section in a mini-jet model with infrared soft gluon resummation, and apply the
model to study Cosmic Ray shower development, comparing the results with those
obtained from other existing models.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, presented at Photon 2017, 22-26 May 2017 CER
Symmetry Constrained Two Higgs Doublet Models
We study Two-Higgs-Doublet Models (2HDM) where Abelian symmetries have been
introduced, leading to a drastic reduction in the number of free parameters in
the 2HDM. Our analysis is inspired in BGL models, where, as the result of a
symmetry of the Lagrangian, there are tree-level scalar mediated
Flavour-Changing-Neutral-Currents, with the flavour structure depending only on
the CKM matrix. A systematic analysis is done on the various possible schemes,
which are classified in different classes, depending on the way the extra
symmetries constrain the matrices of couplings defining the flavour structure
of the scalar mediated neutral currents. All the resulting flavour textures of
the Yukawa couplings are stable under renormalisation since they result from
symmetries imposed at the Lagrangian level. We also present a brief
phenomenological analysis of the most salient features of each class of
symmetry constrained 2HDM.Comment: 30 pages, 5 Table
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