531 research outputs found

    Vegetative propagation studies of gum arabic trees : 2. The vegetative propagation of adult Acacia senegal

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    Le bouturage d'Acacia senegal est possible à partir de fragments de rameaux prélevés dans le houppier d'arbres adultes (13 ans). Le matériel végétal le plus réactif est constitué par des boutures de 15 cm de long (12 à 15 nouds) et de 10 +/- 6 mm de diamètre. L'ablation des feuilles avant mise en culture est un facteur favorable à l'enracinement des boutures. Celui-ci est aussi très influencé par la date de prélèvement des boutures et il varie de 10% en saison sèche à plus de 70% en saison des pluies. La collecte de boutures peut se faire sous forme de fragments de rameaux de 50 cm de long. Il est alors possible de conserver ce matériel pendant huit jours dans une toile maintenue humide et d'y découper les boutures au moment de la mise en place en pépinière. Les boutures présentent des caractères de maturité (croissance lente, plagiotropie, fructification). Il est cependant possible de conserver les génotypes ainsi mobilisés au champ, ou dans des pots en pépinière, afin d'amplifier le processus de rajeunissement physiologique en vue de leur clonage in vitr

    Mean first-passage time of surface-mediated diffusion in spherical domains

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    We present an exact calculation of the mean first-passage time to a target on the surface of a 2D or 3D spherical domain, for a molecule alternating phases of surface diffusion on the domain boundary and phases of bulk diffusion. The presented approach is based on an integral equation which can be solved analytically. Numerically validated approximation schemes, which provide more tractable expressions of the mean first-passage time are also proposed. In the framework of this minimal model of surface-mediated reactions, we show analytically that the mean reaction time can be minimized as a function of the desorption rate from the surface.Comment: to appear in J. Stat. Phy

    Escape from textured adsorbing surfaces

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    The escape dynamics of sticky particles from textured surfaces is poorly understood despite importance to various scientific and technological domains. In this work, we address this challenge by investigating the escape time of adsorbates from prevalent surface topographies, including holes/pits, pillars, and grooves. Analytical expressions for the probability density function and the mean of the escape time are derived. A particularly interesting scenario is that of very deep and narrow confining spaces within the surface. In this case, the joint effect of the entrapment and stickiness prolongs the escape time, resulting in an effective desorption rate that is dramatically lower than that of the untextured surface. This rate is shown to abide a universal scaling law, which couples the equilibrium constants of adsorption with the relevant confining length scales. While our results are analytical and exact, we also present an approximation for deep and narrow cavities based on an effective description of one dimensional diffusion that is punctuated by motionless adsorption events. This simple and physically motivated approximation provides high-accuracy predictions within its range of validity and works relatively well even for cavities of intermediate depth. All theoretical results are corroborated with extensive Monte-Carlo simulations.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure

    Prescription Patterns of Antidepressants: The Effect of the Black Box Warning among Pediatric Patients

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    Introduction: Our aim was to investigate the prescription patterns of antidepressant in the southern Israel during the years 2000 to 2005, before and after the FDA black box warning issued regarding the prescription of antidepressants in children. Patients and methods: A cross sectional study. Data regarding prescription of anti-depressant drugs was examined retrospectively. All information was obtained from the computerized databases of the Clalit Health care services, southern county. Data was analyzed by using descriptive statistics, and analytical statistics. Multi-variate analysis was performed when applicable.Results: When comparing the prescription rate of fluoxetine and fluvoxamine versus other SSRI’s included in the health agencies warnings during the years mentioned, there was a gradual increase in the percentage of the other SSRI’s until 2003 from 12.2% in 2000 to 64.2% in 2003 and then a reversal of this trend from 51.9% in 2004 to 47.8% in 2005.Discussion and conclusions: This study shows that the CSM advice has not had a significant effect in reversing the rising prevalence of antidepressant prescribed to children and adolescents in primary care. It has however changed the choice of antidepressant medication chosen within the group of SSRI’s

    Inference from gated first-passage times

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    First-passage times provide invaluable insight into fundamental properties of stochastic processes. Yet, various forms of gating mask first-passage times and differentiate them from actual detection times. For instance, imperfect conditions may intermittently gate our ability to observe a system of interest, such that exact first-passage instances might be missed. In other cases, e.g., certain chemical reactions, direct observation of the molecules involved is virtually impossible, but the reaction event itself can be detected. However, this instance need not coincide with the first collision time since some molecular encounters are infertile and hence gated. Motivated by the challenge posed by such real-life situations we develop a universal -- model-free -- framework for the inference of first-passage times from the detection times of gated first-passage processes. In addition, when the underlying laws of motions are known, our framework also provides a way to infer physically meaningful parameters, e.g. diffusion coefficients. Finally, we show how to infer the gating rates themselves via the hitherto overlooked short-time regime of the measured detection times. The robustness of our approach and its insensitivity to underlying details are illustrated in several settings of physical relevance

    Incidência do míldio em cebola sob adubação mineral e orgânica.

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    Analisou-se a relação entre adubação mineral e orgânica sobre a incidência de míldio (Peronospora destructor) em cebola (Allium cepa). O trabalho constituiu-se de dois experimentos localizados em Ituporanga, conduzidos entre agosto e dezembro de 1998. O experimento 1, com fontes orgânicas, constou dos tratamentos: esterco de suínos, esterco de aves, composto, esterco de peru e húmus, na dosagem de 75 kg/ha de N; esterco de suínos, na dosagem de 37,5 kg/ha de N; adubação mineral, 30-120-60 kg/ha de N-P2O5-K2O; 60-240-120 kg/ha de N-P2O5-K2O e testemunha sem adubação. O experimento 2 constou dos tratamentos: fontes minerais, 30-120-60 kg/ha de N-P2O5-K2O; 90-360-180 kg/ha de N-P2O5-K2O; 75 kg/ha de N; 225 kg/ha de N; 80 kg/ha de P2O5; 240 kg/ha de P2O5; 60 kg/ha de K2O; 180 kg/ha de K2O; esterco de suínos + fosfato natural, em três combinações, 7,9+0,1, 15,7+0,2 e 47,2+0,6 t/ha, respectivamente; testemunha sem adubação. Não houve diferença entre as fontes mineral e orgânica sobre a incidência de míldio. A relação entre nutrientes e doença foi variável entre datas de amostragem e distinta para fontes minerais e orgânicas

    Defining localities of inadequate treatment for childhood asthma: A GIS approach

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    BACKGROUND: The use of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) has great potential for the management of chronic disease and the analysis of clinical and administrative health care data. Asthma is a chronic disease associated with substantial morbidity, mortality, and health care use. Epidemiologic data from all over the world show an increasing prevalence of asthma morbidity and mortality despite the availability of effective treatment. These facts led to the emergence of strategies developed to improve the quality of asthma care. THE OBJECTIVE: To develop an efficient tool for quality assurance and chronic disease management using a Geographic Information System (GIS). GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION: The southern region of Israel. January 1998 – October 2000. DATABASES: Administrative claims data of the largest HMO in Israel: drug dispensing registry, demographic data, Emergency Room visits, and hospitalization data bases. METHODS: We created a list of six markers for inadequate pharmaceutical treatment of childhood asthma from the Israeli clinical guidelines. We used this list to search the drug dispensing registry to identify asthmatic children who received inadequate treatment and to assess their health care utilization and bad outcomes: emergency room visits and hospitalizations. Using GIS we created thematic maps on which we located the clinics with a high percentage of children for whom the treatment provided was not in adherence with the clinical guidelines. RESULTS: 81% of the children were found to have at least one marker for inadequate treatment; 17.5% were found to have more than one marker. Children with markers were found to have statistically significant higher rates of Emergency Room visits, hospitalizations and longer length of stay in hospital compared with children without markers. The maps show in a robust way which clinics provided treatment not in accord with the clinical guidelines. Those clinics have high rates of Emergency Room visits, hospitalizations and length of stay. CONCLUSION: Integration of clinical guidelines, administrative data and GIS can create an efficient interface between administrative and clinical information. This tool can be used for allocating sites for quality assurance interventions
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