666 research outputs found
A review on substances and processes relevant for optical remote sensing of extremely turbid marine areas, with a focus on the Wadden Sea
The interpretation of optical remote sensing data of estuaries and tidal flat areas is hampered by optical complexity and often extreme turbidity. Extremely high concentrations of suspended matter, chlorophyll and dissolved organic matter, local differences, seasonal and tidal variations and resuspension are important factors influencing the optical properties in such areas. This review gives an overview of the processes in estuaries and tidal flat areas and the implications of these for remote sensing in such areas, using the Wadden Sea as a case study area. Results show that remote sensing research in extremely turbid estuaries and tidal areas is possible. However, this requires sensors with a large ground resolution, algorithms tuned for high concentrations of various substances and the local specific optical properties of these substances, a simultaneous detection of water colour and land-water boundaries, a very short time lag between acquisition of remote sensing and in situ data used for validation and sufficient geophysical and ecological knowledge of the area. © 2010 The Author(s)
Jumping to conclusions, general intelligence, and psychosis liability: Findings from the multi-centre EU-GEI case-control study
This study was funded by the Medical Research
Council, the European Community’s Seventh Framework Program grant [agreement HEALTH-F2-2009-241909 (Project EU-GEI)], São Paulo Research Foundation (grant 2012/0417-0), the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) at South London and
Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London, the NIHR BRC at University College London and the Wellcome Trust (grant 101272/Z/12/Z).Tripoli, G., Quattrone, D., Ferraro, L., Gayer-Anderson, C., Rodriguez, V., La Cascia, C., La Barbera, D., Sartorio, C., Seminerio, F., Tarricone, I., Berardi, D., Szöke, A., Arango, C., Tortelli, A., Llorca, P.-M., De Haan, L., Velthorst, E., Bobes, J., Bernardo, M., Sanjuán, J., Santos, J.L., Arrojo, M., Del-Ben, C.M., Menezes, P.R., Selten, J.-P., Jones, P.B., Jongsma, H.E., Kirkbride, J.B., Lasalvia, A., Tosato, S., Richards, A., O'donovan, M., Rutten, B.P.F., Os, J.V., Morgan, C., Sham, P.C., Murray, R.M., Murray, G.K., Di Forti, M
Daily use of high-potency cannabis is associated with more positive symptoms in first-episode psychosis patients: The EU-GEI case-control study
The work was supported by: Clinician Scientist Medical
Research Council fellowship (project reference MR/M008436/1) to MDF; the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care South London at King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust to DQ; DFG Heisenberg professorship (no. 389624707) to UR. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)
Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London. The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NHS,
the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care. The EU-GEI Project is funded by the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme under grant agreement No. HEALTH-F2-2010-241909 (Project
EU-GEI). The Brazilian study was funded by the São Paulo Research Foundation under grant number 2012/0417-0.Quattrone, D., Ferraro, L., Tripoli, G., La Cascia, C., Quigley, H., Quattrone, A., Jongsma, H.E., Del Peschio, S., Gatto, G., Gayer-Anderson, C., Jones, P.B., Kirkbride, J.B., La Barbera, D., Tarricone, I., Berardi, D., Tosato, S., Lasalvia, A., Szöke, A., Arango, C., Bernardo, M., Bobes, J., Del Ben, C.M., Menezes, P.R., Llorca, P.-M., Santos, J.L., Sanjuán, J., Tortelli, A., Velthorst, E., De Haan, L., Rutten, B.P.F., Lynskey, M.T., Freeman, T.P., Sham, P.C., Cardno, A.G., Vassos, E., Van Os, J., Morgan, C., Reininghaus, U., Lewis, C.M., Murray, R.M., Di Forti, M
Gamma decay of the Sm Isovector Giant Dipole Resonance: Smekal-Raman Scattering as a Novel Probe of Nuclear Ground-State Deformation
The decays of the Isovector Giant Dipole Resonance (GDR) of the
deformed nucleus Sm from -Smekal-Raman and elastic scattering
were measured using linearly polarized, quasi-monochromatic photon beams. The
two scattering processes were disentangled through their distinct angular
distributions. Their branching ratio and cross sections were determined at six
excitation energies covering the Sm GDR. Both agree with the
predictions of the geometrical model for the GDR and establish decay
as an observable sensitive to the structure of the resonance. Consequently, the
data place strong constraints on the nuclear shape, including the degree of
triaxiality. The derived Sm shape parameters and
agree well with other measurements and recent Monte Carlo
Shell-Model calculations.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 3 table
Deviations from the Porter-Thomas Distribution due to Nonstatistical γ Decay below the <sup>150</sup>Nd Neutron Separation Threshold
We introduce a new method for the study of fluctuations of partial transition widths based on nuclear resonance fluorescence experiments with quasimonochromatic linearly polarized photon beams below particle separation thresholds. It is based on the average branching of decays of =1 states of an even-even nucleus to the 2+1 state in comparison to the ground state. Between 5 and 7 MeV, a constant average branching ratio for decays from 1− states of 0.490(16) is observed for the nuclide 150Nd . Assuming 2-distributed partial transition widths, this average branching ratio is related to a degree of freedom of =1.93(12), rejecting the validity of the Porter-Thomas distribution, requiring =1. The observed deviation can be explained by nonstatistical effects in the -decay behavior with contributions in the range of 9.4(10)% up to 94(10)%
Low-lying dipole response of 64Ni
Two complementary real-photon scattering experiments were conducted on the proton-magic 64 Ni nucleus to study the dipole response up to its neutron-separation energy of S n = 9.7 MeV . By combining both measurements, 87 E 1 and 23 M 1 transitions were identified above 4.3 MeV. The results of the observed M 1 transitions were compared to shell-model calculations using two different model spaces. It was found that the inclusion of excitations across the Z = 28 shell gap in the calculations has a large impact. Furthermore, average cross sections for decays to the ground state (elastic transitions) as well as to lower-lying excited states (inelastic decays) were determined. The corresponding E 1 channel was compared to calculations within the relativistic equation of motion (REOM) framework. Whereas the calculations of highest possible complexity reproduce the fragmentation and overall behavior of the E 1 average elastic cross section well, the predicted absolute cross sections are approximately twice as high as the experimental upper limits even though the latter also include an estimate of the inelastic-decay channel
Migration history and risk of psychosis: results from the multinational EU-GEI study
The European Network of National Schizophrenia
Networks Studying Gene-Environment Interactions (EU-GEI) Project was
funded by grant agreement Health-F2-2010-241909 (Project EU-GEI) from
the European Community’s Seventh Framework programme.Tarricone, I., D'Andrea, G., Jongsma, H.E., Tosato, S., Gayer-Anderson, C., Stilo, S.A., Suprani, F., Iyegbe, C., Van Der Ven, E., Quattrone, D., Di Forti, M., Velthorst, E., Rossi Menezes, P., Arango, C., Parellada, M., Lasalvia, A., La Cascia, C., Ferraro, L., Bobes, J., Bernardo, M., Sanjuán, I., Santos, J.L., Arrojo, M., Del-Ben, C.M., Tripoli, G., Llorca, P.-M., De Haan, L., Selten, J.-P., Tortelli, A., Szöke, A., Muratori, R., Rutten, B.P., Van Os, J., Jones, P.B., Kirkbride, J.B., Berardi, D., Murray, R.M., Morgan, C
Gamma Decay of the 154Sm Isovector Giant Dipole Resonance: Smekal-Raman Scattering as a Novel Probe of Nuclear Ground-State Deformation
The γ decays of the isovector giant dipole resonance (IVGDR) of the deformed nucleus Sm154 were measured using 21+-Smekal-Raman and elastic scattering of linearly polarized, quasimonochromatic photon beams. The two scattering processes were disentangled through their distinct angular distributions. Their branching ratio and cross sections were determined at six excitation energies covering the Sm154 IVGDR. Both agree with the predictions of the geometrical model for the IVGDR and confirm γ decay as an observable sensitive to the structure of the resonance. Consequently, the data place strong constraints on the nuclear shape, including the degree of triaxiality. The derived Sm154 shape parameters β=0.2925(25) and γ=5.0(15)° agree well with other measurements and recent Monte Carlo shell-model calculations
Social disadvantage, linguistic distance, ethnic minority status and first-episode psychosis: Results from the EU-GEI case-control study
BackgroundEthnic minority groups in Western countries face an increased risk of psychotic disorders. Causes of this long-standing public health inequality remain poorly understood. We investigated whether social disadvantage, linguistic distance and discrimination contributed to these patterns.MethodsWe used case-control data from the EUropean network of national schizophrenia networks studying Gene-Environment Interactions (EU-GEI) study, carried out in 16 centres in six countries. We recruited 1130 cases and 1497 population-based controls. Our main outcome measure was first-episode ICD-10 psychotic disorder (F20-F33), and exposures were ethnicity (white majority, black, mixed, Asian, North-African, white minority and other), generational status, social disadvantage, linguistic distance and discrimination. Age, sex, paternal age, cannabis use, childhood trauma and parental history of psychosis were included as a priori confounders. Exposures and confounders were added sequentially to multivariable logistic models, following multiple imputation for missing data.ResultsParticipants from any ethnic minority background had crude excess odds of psychosis [odds ratio (OR) 2.03, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.69-2.43], which remained after adjustment for confounders (OR 1.61, 95% CI 1.31-1.98). This was progressively attenuated following further adjustment for social disadvantage (OR 1.52, 95% CI 1.22-1.89) and linguistic distance (OR 1.22, 95% CI 0.95-1.57), a pattern mirrored in several specific ethnic groups. Linguistic distance and social disadvantage had stronger effects for first- A nd later-generation groups, respectively.ConclusionSocial disadvantage and linguistic distance, two potential markers of sociocultural exclusion, were associated with increased odds of psychotic disorder, and adjusting for these led to equivocal risk between several ethnic minority groups and the white majority
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