233 research outputs found
Microbiota of De-Novo Pediatric IBD : Increased Faecalibacterium Prausnitzii and Reduced Bacterial Diversity in Crohn's But Not in Ulcerative Colitis
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We are grateful for the expertise of our sequencing provider NewGene and in particular for the support and help of Dr Jonathan Coxhead.Mrs Karen McIntyre and Dr Dagmar Kastner were invaluable in identifying patients for recruitment in Dundee. Mrs Ann Morrice provided administrative support in Aberdeen. Dr Paul Henderson gave helpful comments on the manuscript. We appreciate the generosity of the families who freely gave their time and samples to make this study possible and the theatre staff of all centers who allowed time for sample collection during busy endoscopy lists.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Optimizing the fMRI data-processing pipeline using prediction and reproducibility performance metrics: I. A preliminary group analysis
Crowd-Patronage – Intermediaries, Geographies and Relationships in Patronage Networks
This article introduces a new mode of patronage of the arts: crowd-patronage. In so doing the article illustrates the plural roles of intermediaries in patronage networks which go beyond Bourdieuian cultural intermediaries to include regulatory and financial actors. A brief history of patronage is presented which outlines different modes and eras of patronage for the arts since the 12th century. Particular attention is paid to the geographies of patronage networks, the mobility of artists, the plurality of roles played by intermediaries and the relations between patrons and artists. These themes then structure the analysis of crowd-patronage through a case study of the patronage platform Patreon in the remainder of the paper. Crowd-patronage is distinctive because of the scale and geographical scope of patronage networks, its focus on funding practice rather than outputs, a shift in the power relationships between patron and artist, and processes of re-intermediation
Library Analytics Investigation Team Recommendations
The University of Michigan Library’s Technology Alignment and Stewardship Committee charged the Library Analytics Investigation Team in the Winter 2016 cycle. The team met from April through September of 2016 to investigate processes to provide library-generated data to library staff for service improvement and/or research investigations.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/134406/1/Library Analytics Investigation Team Report.pdfDescription of Library Analytics Investigation Team Report.pdf : Investigation Team Repor
Surgical site infection after gastrointestinal surgery in high-income, middle-income, and low-income countries: a prospective, international, multicentre cohort study
Background: Surgical site infection (SSI) is one of the most common infections associated with health care, but its importance as a global health priority is not fully understood. We quantified the burden of SSI after gastrointestinal surgery in countries in all parts of the world.
Methods: This international, prospective, multicentre cohort study included consecutive patients undergoing elective or emergency gastrointestinal resection within 2-week time periods at any health-care facility in any country. Countries with participating centres were stratified into high-income, middle-income, and low-income groups according to the UN's Human Development Index (HDI). Data variables from the GlobalSurg 1 study and other studies that have been found to affect the likelihood of SSI were entered into risk adjustment models. The primary outcome measure was the 30-day SSI incidence (defined by US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention criteria for superficial and deep incisional SSI). Relationships with explanatory variables were examined using Bayesian multilevel logistic regression models. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT02662231.
Findings: Between Jan 4, 2016, and July 31, 2016, 13 265 records were submitted for analysis. 12 539 patients from 343 hospitals in 66 countries were included. 7339 (58·5%) patient were from high-HDI countries (193 hospitals in 30 countries), 3918 (31·2%) patients were from middle-HDI countries (82 hospitals in 18 countries), and 1282 (10·2%) patients were from low-HDI countries (68 hospitals in 18 countries). In total, 1538 (12·3%) patients had SSI within 30 days of surgery. The incidence of SSI varied between countries with high (691 [9·4%] of 7339 patients), middle (549 [14·0%] of 3918 patients), and low (298 [23·2%] of 1282) HDI (p < 0·001). The highest SSI incidence in each HDI group was after dirty surgery (102 [17·8%] of 574 patients in high-HDI countries; 74 [31·4%] of 236 patients in middle-HDI countries; 72 [39·8%] of 181 patients in low-HDI countries). Following risk factor adjustment, patients in low-HDI countries were at greatest risk of SSI (adjusted odds ratio 1·60, 95% credible interval 1·05–2·37; p=0·030). 132 (21·6%) of 610 patients with an SSI and a microbiology culture result had an infection that was resistant to the prophylactic antibiotic used. Resistant infections were detected in 49 (16·6%) of 295 patients in high-HDI countries, in 37 (19·8%) of 187 patients in middle-HDI countries, and in 46 (35·9%) of 128 patients in low-HDI countries (p < 0·001).
Interpretation: Countries with a low HDI carry a disproportionately greater burden of SSI than countries with a middle or high HDI and might have higher rates of antibiotic resistance. In view of WHO recommendations on SSI prevention that highlight the absence of high-quality interventional research, urgent, pragmatic, randomised trials based in LMICs are needed to assess measures aiming to reduce this preventable complication
Picosecond Spin Orbit Torque Switching
Reducing energy dissipation while increasing speed in computation and memory
is a long-standing challenge for spintronics research. In the last 20 years,
femtosecond lasers have emerged as a tool to control the magnetization in
specific magnetic materials at the picosecond timescale. However, the use of
ultrafast optics in integrated circuits and memories would require a major
paradigm shift. An ultrafast electrical control of the magnetization is far
preferable for integrated systems. Here we demonstrate reliable and
deterministic control of the out-of-plane magnetization of a 1 nm-thick Co
layer with single 6 ps-wide electrical pulses that induce spin-orbit torques on
the magnetization. We can monitor the ultrafast magnetization dynamics due to
the spin-orbit torques on sub-picosecond timescales, thus far accessible only
by numerical simulations. Due to the short duration of our pulses, we enter a
counter-intuitive regime of switching where heat dissipation assists the
reversal. Moreover, we estimate a low energy cost to switch the magnetization,
projecting to below 1fJ for a (20 nm)^3 cell. These experiments prove that
spintronic phenomena can be exploited on picosecond time-scales for full
magnetic control and should launch a new regime of ultrafast spin torque
studies and applications.Comment: Includes article + supplementary information. Latest version uses
full name of the first author. Nature Electronics (2020
Muslim Profiles Post-9/11: Is Racial Profiling an Effective Counterterrorist Measure and Does it Violate the Right to be Free from Discrimination?
A Novel Tool for the Absolute End-to-End Calibration of Fluorescence Telescopes -The XY-Scanner
A new cross-check and review of aerosol attenuation measurements at the Pierre Auger Observatory
Reconstruction of muon number of air showers with the surface detector of the Pierre Auger Observatory using neural networks
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