3,033 research outputs found
Stringent Phenomenological Investigation into Heterotic String Optical Unification
For the weakly coupled heterotic string (WCHS) there is a well-known factor
of twenty conflict between the minimum string coupling unification scale,
Lambda_H ~5x10^(17) GeV, and the projected MSSM unification scale, Lambda_U ~
2.5x10^(16) GeV, assuming an intermediate scale desert (ISD). Renormalization
effects of intermediate scale MSSM-charged exotics (ISME) (endemic to
quasi-realistic string models) can resolve this issue, pushing the MSSM scale
up to the string scale. However, for a generic string model, this implies that
the projected Lambda_U unification under ISD is accidental. If the true
unification scale is 5.0x10^(17) GeV, is it possible that illusionary
unification at 2.5x10^(17) GeV in the ISD scenario is not accidental? If it is
not, then under what conditions would the assumption of ISME in a WCHS model
imply apparent unification at Lambda_U when ISD is falsely assumed? Geidt's
"optical unification" suggests that Lambda_U is not accidental, by offering a
mechanism whereby a generic MSSM scale Lambda_U < Lambda_H is guaranteed. A
WCHS model was constructed that offers the possibility of optical unification,
depending on the availability of anomaly-cancelling flat directions meeting
certain requirements. This paper reports on the systematic investigation of the
optical unification properties of the set of stringent flat directions of this
model. Stringent flat directions can be guaranteed to be F-flat to all finite
order (or to at least a given finite order consistent with electroweak scale
supersymmetry breaking) and can be viewed as the likely roots of more general
flat directions. Analysis of the phenomenology of stringent flat directions
gives an indication of the remaining optical unification phenomenology that
must be garnered by flat directions developed from them.Comment: standard latex, 18 pages of tex
A dynamic network approach for the study of human phenotypes
The use of networks to integrate different genetic, proteomic, and metabolic
datasets has been proposed as a viable path toward elucidating the origins of
specific diseases. Here we introduce a new phenotypic database summarizing
correlations obtained from the disease history of more than 30 million patients
in a Phenotypic Disease Network (PDN). We present evidence that the structure
of the PDN is relevant to the understanding of illness progression by showing
that (1) patients develop diseases close in the network to those they already
have; (2) the progression of disease along the links of the network is
different for patients of different genders and ethnicities; (3) patients
diagnosed with diseases which are more highly connected in the PDN tend to die
sooner than those affected by less connected diseases; and (4) diseases that
tend to be preceded by others in the PDN tend to be more connected than
diseases that precede other illnesses, and are associated with higher degrees
of mortality. Our findings show that disease progression can be represented and
studied using network methods, offering the potential to enhance our
understanding of the origin and evolution of human diseases. The dataset
introduced here, released concurrently with this publication, represents the
largest relational phenotypic resource publicly available to the research
community.Comment: 28 pages (double space), 6 figure
Physical Therapy and Depression: A Pilot Study on Screening for Depressive Symptoms
The current paper presents a pilot study of mental health screening in a physical therapy clinic. It aimed to determine the feasibility of integrating simple, scientifically-sound methods of capturing symptoms of depression, anxiety, stress, sleep patterns, and physical pain. A total of 10 patients recruited from University of Mississippi Physical Therapy Clinic participated in the study. Participants were given the DASS-21 with additional questions on pain ratings, hours ofsleep, and reason for physical therapy. The measure was administered twice with a three-week interval of time in between. Data were analyzed by conducting individual ttests for change in the variables of interest over the course oftherapy. Significant changes were only noted in the category of stress, although limitations in interpreting this finding were notable due to a lack of reliability in the measure ofstress and diminished power due to small sample size. Graphical analyses of patterns of symptoms change, however, indicated positive change in almost all constructs measured over time. The study demonstrated that it may be possible to implement depression screening in a physical therapy clinic. Conclusions, limitations, future directions, and the implications ofthis project on my career path are discussed
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