3,223 research outputs found
Efficient oxide phosphors for light upconversion; green emission from Yb3+ and Ho3+ co-doped Ln(2)BaZnO(5) (Ln = Y, Gd)
This is the author's accepted version of the article. The final published article can be found here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C0JM01652
A longitudinal, observational study examining the relationships of patient satisfaction with services and mental well-being to their clinical course in young people with Type 1 diabetes mellitus during transition from child to adult health services
AIM: We hypothesized that participant well-being and satisfaction with services would be positively associated with a satisfactory clinical course during transition from child to adult health care.
METHODS: Some 150 young people with Type 1 diabetes mellitus from five diabetes units in England were recruited to a longitudinal study of transition. Each young person was visited at home four times by a research assistant; each visit was 1 year apart. Satisfaction with services (Mind the Gap; MTG) and mental well-being (Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale; WEMWBS) were captured. Change in HbA1c , episodes of ketoacidosis, clinic and retinal screening attendance were used to assess clinical course. In total, 108 of 150 (72%) young people had sufficient data for analysis at visit 4.
RESULTS: Mean age at entry was 16 years. By visit 4, 81.5% had left paediatric healthcare services. Median HbA1c increased significantly (P = 0.01) from 69 mmol/mol (8.5%) at baseline to 75 mmol/mol (9.0%) at visit 4. WEMWBS scores were comparable with those in the general population at baseline and were stable over the study period. MTG scores were also stable. By visit 4, some 32 individuals had a 'satisfactory' and 76 a 'suboptimal' clinical course. There were no significant differences in average WEMWBS and MTG scores between the clinical course groups (P = 0.96, 0.52 respectively); nor was there a significant difference in transfer status between the clinical course groups.
CONCLUSIONS: The well-being of young people with diabetes and their satisfaction with transition services are not closely related to their clinical course. Investigating whether innovative psycho-educational interventions can improve the clinical course is a research priority
Towards Work-Efficient Parallel Parameterized Algorithms
Parallel parameterized complexity theory studies how fixed-parameter
tractable (fpt) problems can be solved in parallel. Previous theoretical work
focused on parallel algorithms that are very fast in principle, but did not
take into account that when we only have a small number of processors (between
2 and, say, 1024), it is more important that the parallel algorithms are
work-efficient. In the present paper we investigate how work-efficient fpt
algorithms can be designed. We review standard methods from fpt theory, like
kernelization, search trees, and interleaving, and prove trade-offs for them
between work efficiency and runtime improvements. This results in a toolbox for
developing work-efficient parallel fpt algorithms.Comment: Prior full version of the paper that will appear in Proceedings of
the 13th International Conference and Workshops on Algorithms and Computation
(WALCOM 2019), February 27 - March 02, 2019, Guwahati, India. The final
authenticated version is available online at
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-10564-8_2
A new approximation method for time-dependent problems in quantum mechanics
We propose an approximate solution of the time-dependent Schr\"odinger
equation using the method of stationary states combined with a variational
matrix method for finding the energies and eigenstates. We illustrate the
effectiveness of the method by applying it to the time development of the
wave-function in the quantum-mechanical version of the inflationary slow-roll
transition.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, accepted on Physics Letters
The role of the ER stress response protein PERK in rhodopsin retinitis pigmentosa
Mutations in rhodopsin, the light sensitive protein of rod cells, are the most common cause of dominant retinitis pigmentosa (RP), a type of inherited blindness caused by the dysfunction and death of photoreceptor cells. The P23H mutation, the most frequent single cause of RP in the USA, causes rhodopsin misfolding and induction of the unfolded protein response (UPR), an adaptive ER stress response and signalling network that aims to enhance the folding and degradation of misfolded proteins to restore proteostasis. Prolonged UPR activation, and in particular the PERK branch, can reduce protein synthesis and initiate cell death through induction of pro-apoptotic pathways. Here, we investigated the effect of pharmacological PERK inhibition on retinal disease process in the P23H-1 transgenic rat model of retinal degeneration. PERK inhibition with GSK2606414A led to an inhibition of eIF2α phosphorylation, which correlated with reduced ERG function and decreased photoreceptor survival at both high and low doses of PERK inhibitor. Additionally, PERK inhibition increased the incidence of inclusion formation in cultured cells overexpressing P23H rod opsin, and increased rhodopsin aggregation in the P23H-1 rat retina, suggesting enhanced P23H misfolding and aggregation. In contrast, treatment of P23H-1 rats with an inhibitor of eIF2α phosphatase, salubrinal, led to improved photoreceptor survival. Collectively, these data suggest the activation of PERK is part of a protective response to mutant rhodopsin that ultimately limits photoreceptor cell death
Educational Virtual Reality Visualisations of Heritage Sites.
This paper discusses the use of games engines to create virtual heritage applications. The use of 3D software for cultural or heritage applications is discussed with reference to the capabilities and potential of games engines. The contribution of students from Bournemouth University to the New Forest Heritage Mapping project through the creation of interactive virtual reality visualisations of historic landscapes is described. The creation and evaluation of three different applications representing three alternative interaction styles are discussed. The first does not indicate where information can be found, the second uses visible cues and the third implements an objective marker system
Zero mode in the time-dependent symmetry breaking of theory
We apply the quartic exponential variational approximation to the symmetry
breaking phenomena of scalar field in three and four dimensions. We calculate
effective potential and effective action for the time-dependent system by
separating the zero mode from other non-zero modes of the scalar field and
treating the zero mode quantum mechanically. It is shown that the quantum
mechanical properties of the zero mode play a non-trivial role in the symmetry
breaking of the scalar theory.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Quantum field dynamics of the slow rollover in the linear delta expansion
We show how the linear delta expansion, as applied to the slow-roll
transition in quantum mechanics, can be recast in the closed time-path
formalism. This results in simpler, explicit expressions than were obtained in
the Schr\"odinger formulation and allows for a straightforward generalization
to higher dimensions. Motivated by the success of the method in the
quantum-mechanical problem, where it has been shown to give more accurate
results for longer than existing alternatives, we apply the linear delta
expansion to four-dimensional field theory.
At small times all methods agree. At later times, the first-order linear
delta expansion is consistently higher that Hartree-Fock, but does not show any
sign of a turnover. A turnover emerges in second-order of the method, but the
value of at the
turnover. In subsequent applications of the method we hope to implement the
calculation in the context of an expanding universe, following the line of
earlier calculations by Boyanovsky {\sl et al.}, who used the Hartree-Fock and
large-N methods. It seems clear, however, that the method will become
unreliable as the system enters the reheating stage.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, revised version with extra section 4.2 including
second order calculatio
Anomalous electric conductions in KSbO3-type metallic rhenium oxides
Single crystals of KSbO3-type rhenium oxides, La4Re6Orho(T)=\rho_{0}+AT^{n}(n \approx 1.6)$ in
a wide temperature range between 5 K and 300 K, which is extraordinary for
three-dimensional metals without strong electron correlations. The resistivity
of Bi3Re3O11 shows an anomaly around at 50 K, where the magnetic susceptibility
also detects a deviation from ordinary Pauli paramagnetism.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures. J. Phys. Soc. Japan, in pres
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