684 research outputs found
Fantastik und Möglichkeitssinn : zur literarischen Organisation des Wissens bei Kafka und Musil
Ich möchte mich im Folgenden mit Texten beschäftigen, die alle drei genannten Tendenzen aufweisen, ohne dass sie sich dem Genre der Utopie oder Dystopie zurechnen ließen. Diese literarischen Texte greifen die wissenschaftlichen, technischen, politischen, ökonomischen und verwaltungstechnischen Diskurse ihrer Zeit auf, deformieren sie aber gleichzeitig dadurch, dass sie sie mit poetischen überblenden. Indem die außerliterarischen Diskurse neu organisiert und arrangiert werden, werden sie gleichzeitig verfremdet: Sie erhalten Funktionen, die von ihren ursprünglichen radikal abweichen. Eben durch diese Verschiebungen und Verzerrungen können diese Diskurse überhaupt erst als solche erkannt und reflektiert werden. Franz Kafkas und Robert Musils Werke belegen dies auf ihre je eigene, aber in jedem Fall eindrucksvolle Weise. Sie zeichnen sich dadurch aus, dass sie das Wissen ihrer Zeit in seiner ganzen Vielfalt in sich geradezu aufsaugen, diese Wissenselemente aber auf eine sehr eigenwillige Art zueinander in Beziehung setzen. Wissensbestände dienen ihnen als Materialien für fundamentale Neukonstruktionen. Das soll im Folgenden an einigen markanten Beispielen demonstriert werden
The Role of the ‘Agrarian overpopulation’ in German Spatial and Economic Planning for South-East Europe before and during the Second World War
Measurement of radiation-pressure-induced optomechanical dynamics in a suspended Fabry-Perot cavity
We report on experimental observation of radiation-pressure induced effects
in a high-power optical cavity. These effects play an important role in next
generation gravitational wave (GW) detectors, as well as in quantum
non-demolition (QND) interferometers. We measure the properties of an optical
spring, created by coupling of an intense laser field to the pendulum mode of a
suspended mirror; and also the parametric instability (PI) that arises from the
nonlinear coupling between acoustic modes of the cavity mirrors and the cavity
optical mode. Specifically, we measure an optical rigidity of N/m, and PI value .Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
An all-optical trap for a gram-scale mirror
We report on a stable optical trap suitable for a macroscopic mirror, wherein
the dynamics of the mirror are fully dominated by radiation pressure. The
technique employs two frequency-offset laser fields to simultaneously create a
stiff optical restoring force and a viscous optical damping force. We show how
these forces may be used to optically trap a free mass without introducing
thermal noise; and we demonstrate the technique experimentally with a 1 gram
mirror. The observed optical spring has an inferred Young's modulus of 1.2 TPa,
20% stiffer than diamond. The trap is intrinsically cold and reaches an
effective temperature of 0.8 K, limited by technical noise in our apparatus.Comment: Major revision. Replacement is version that appears in Phy. Rev.
Lett. 98, 150802 (2007
Thromboelastometry (ROTEM®) in children: age-related reference ranges and correlations with standard coagulation tests
Background The small sample volume needed and the prompt availability of results make viscoelastic methods like rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM®) attractive for monitoring coagulation in small children. However, data on reference ranges for ROTEM® parameters in children are scarce. Methods Four hundred and seven children (ASA I and II) undergoing elective surgery were recruited for this prospective, two-centre, observational study. Subjects were grouped as follows: 0-3, 4-12, 13-24 months, 2-5, 6-10, and 11-16 yr. Study objectives were to establish age-dependent reference ranges for ROTEM® assays, analyse age dependence of parameters, and compare ROTEM® data with standard coagulation tests. Results Data from 359 subjects remained for final analysis. Except for extrinsically activated clot strength and lysis, parameters for ROTEM® assays were significantly different among all age groups. The most striking finding was that subjects aged 0-3 months exhibited accelerated initiation (ExTEM coagulation time: median 48 s, Q1-Q3 38-65 s; P=0.001) and propagation of coagulation (α angle: median 78o, Q1-Q3 69-84o; P<0.001) and maximum clot firmness (median 62 mm, Q1-Q3 54-74 mm), although standard plasma coagulation test results were prolonged (prothrombin time: median 13.2 s, Q1-Q3 12.6-13.6 s; activated partial thromboplastin time: median 42 s, Q1-Q3 40-46 s). Lysis indices of <85% were observed in nearly one-third of all children without increased bleeding tendency. Platelet count and fibrinogen levels correlated significantly with clot strength, and fibrinogen levels correlated with fibrin polymerization. Conclusions Reference ranges for ROTEM® assays were determined for all paediatric age groups. These values will be helpful when monitoring paediatric patients and in studies of perioperative coagulation in childre
Room temperature femtosecond optical parametric generation in MgO-doped stoichiometric LiTaO3
We demonstrate room temperature femtosecond optical parametric generation with high average output power in periodically poled MgO-doped stoichiometric LiTaO3. Direct pumping with 725-fs pulses from a passively mode-locked thin disk laser at 1030nm resulted in stable 1.5W average signal power at 1484nm at the full laser repetition rate of 59MHz. With this demonstration we achieved a significant simplification of our recently presented red-green-blue laser source because no temperature stabilization of any nonlinear crystal is require
Patient satisfaction with anaesthesia care: development of a psychometric questionnaire and benchmarking among six hospitals in Switzerland and Austria†‡
Background. We describe the development and comparison of a psychometric questionnaire on patient satisfaction with anaesthesia care among six hospitals. Methods. We used a rigorous protocol: generation of items, construction of the pilot questionnaire, pilot study, statistical analysis (construct validity, factor analysis, reliability analysis), compilation of the final questionnaire, main study, repeated analysis of construct validity and reliability. We compared the mean total problem score and the scores for the dimensions: ‘Information/Involvement in decision‐making', and ‘Continuity of personal care by anaesthetist'. The influence of potential confounding variables was tested (multiple linear regression). Results. The average problem score from all hospitals was 18.6%. Most problems are mentioned in the dimensions ‘Information/Involvement in decision‐making' (mean problem score: 30.9%) and ‘Continuity of personal care by anaesthetist' (mean problem score: 32.2%). The overall assessment of the quality of anaesthesia care was good to excellent in 98.7% of cases. The most important dimension was ‘Information/Involvement in decision‐making'. The mean total problem score was significantly lower for two hospitals than the total mean for all hospitals (significantly higher at two hospitals) (P<0.05). Amongst the confounding variables considered, age, sex, subjective state of health, type of anaesthesia and level of education had an influence on the total problem score and the two dimensions mentioned. There were only marginal differences with and without the influence of the confounding variables for the different hospitals. Conclusions. A psychometric questionnaire on patient satisfaction with anaesthesia care must cover areas such as patient information, involvement in decision‐making, and contact with the anaesthetist. The assessment using summed scores for dimensions is more informative than a global summed rating. There were significant differences between hospitals. Moreover, the high problem scores indicate a great potential for improvement at all hospitals. Br J Anaesth 2002; 89: 863-7
BMC Gastroenterology / Follow-up of pediatric celiac disease: value of antibodies in predicting mucosal healing, a prospective cohort study
Background:
In diagnosing celiac disease (CD), serological tests are highly valuable. However, their role in following up children with CD after prescription of a gluten-free diet is unclear. This study aimed to compare the performance of antibody tests in predicting small-intestinal mucosal status in diagnosis vs. follow-up of pediatric CD.
Methods:
We conducted a prospective cohort study at a tertiary-care center. 148 children underwent esophohagogastroduodenoscopy with biopsies either for symptoms \ub1 positive CD antibodies (group A; n = 95) or following up CD diagnosed 65 1 year before study enrollment (group B; n = 53). Using biopsy (Marsh 65 2) as the criterion standard, areas under ROC curves (AUCs) and likelihood-ratios were calculated to estimate the performance of antibody tests against tissue transglutaminase (TG2), deamidated gliadin peptide (DGP) and endomysium (EMA).
Results:
AUCs were higher when tests were used for CD diagnosis vs. follow-up: 1 vs. 0.86 (P = 0.100) for TG2-IgA, 0.85 vs. 0.74 (P = 0.421) for TG2-IgG, 0.97 vs. 0.61 (P = 0.004) for DPG-IgA, and 0.99 vs. 0.88 (P = 0.053) for DPG-IgG, respectively. Empirical power was 85% for the DPG-IgA comparison, and on average 33% (range 13\u201343) for the non-significant comparisons. Among group B children, 88.7% showed mucosal healing (median 2.2 years after primary diagnosis). Only the negative likelihood-ratio of EMA was low enough (0.097) to effectively rule out persistent mucosal injury. However, out of 12 EMA-positive children with mucosal healing, 9 subsequently turned EMA-negative.
Conclusions:
Among the CD antibodies examined, negative EMA most reliably predict mucosal healing. In general, however, antibody tests, especially DPG-IgA, are of limited value in predicting the mucosal status in the early years post-diagnosis but may be sufficient after a longer period of time
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