10,934 research outputs found
Notes on \u3ci\u3eTaeniogonalos Gundlachii\u3c/i\u3e (Hymenoptera: Trigonalidae) From Wisconsin
This is the first report of Taeniogonalos gundlachii (Cresson) (Hymenoptera: Trigonalidae) from Wisconsin and of this hyperparasitoid reared from the initial host Euchaetes egle (Drury) (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae). Data are provided from 30 Malaise trap specimens and from a single reared specimen
Living in sin? : religion and cohabitation in Britain 1985-2005
Frequency of cohabitation among 13,703 adults from the British Social Attitudes dataset for 1985-2005 peaked at around 26-30 years of age, and increased significantly over the period of study. Cohabitation frequency was compared between those of no religious affiliation and Christian affiliates who (a) attended church at least once a month, (b) attended church, but less than once a month, and (c) never attended church. Active Christians were 3.2 times less likely to cohabit than non-affiliates, and rates of cohabitation have remained stable over time in this group. Christian affiliates who never attended church were 1.2 times less likely to cohabit than non-affiliates, suggesting that even affiliation without attendance may indicate greater affinity to Christian moral attitudes compared with non-affiliates
What next for the CMSSM and the NUHM: Improved prospects for superpartner and dark matter detection
We present an updated analysis of the CMSSM and the NUHM using the latest
experimental data and numerical tools. We map out favored regions of Bayesian
posterior probability in light of data from the LHC, flavor observables, the
relic density and dark matter searches. We present some updated features with
respect to our previous analyses: we include the effects of corrections to the
light Higgs mass beyond the 2-loop order using FeynHiggs v2.10.0; we include in
the likelihood the latest limits from direct searches for squarks and gluinos
at ATLAS with ~20/fb; the latest constraints on the spin-independent scattering
cross section of the neutralino from LUX are applied taking into account
uncertainties in the nuclear form factors. We find that in the CMSSM the
posterior distribution now tends to favor smaller values of Msusy than in the
previous analyses. As a consequence, the statistical weight of the A-resonance
region increases to about 30% of the total probability, with interesting new
prospects for the 14 TeV run at the LHC. The most favored region, on the other
hand, still features multi-TeV squarks and gluinos, and ~1TeV higgsino dark
matter whose detection prospects by current and one-tonne detectors look very
promising. The same region is predominant in the NUHM, although the A-resonance
region is also present there as well as a new solution, of neutralino-stau
coannihilation through the channel stau stau -> hh at very large \mu. We derive
the expected sensitivity of the future CTA experiment to ~1 TeV higgsino dark
matter for both models and show that the prospects for probing both models are
realistically good. We comment on the complementarity of this search to planned
direct detection one-tonne experiments.Comment: 37 pages, 15 figures. Appendix added showing the future constraints
on the CMSSM, including an updated calculation of the sensitivity of CTA
presented in arXiv:1411.521
Changing patterns of religious affiliation, church attendance and marriage across five areas of Europe since the early 1980s: trends and associations
This study draws on three waves of the European Values Survey (conducted between 1981 and 1984, between 1989 and 1993, and between 1999 and 2004) across five countries for which full data are available (Great Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Northern Ireland, Spain, and Sweden) in order to address five research questions. Question one examined changes in religious affiliation. Across all five countries, the proportions of the non-affiliated increased. Question two examined changes in church attendance. Across all five countries, the proportions of the non-attenders increased. Question three examined changes in marital status. Across all five countries the proportions of the population checking the category 'married' declined, although in Spain the decline was marginal. Question four examined the association between religious affiliation and being married. The religious affiliated were more likely to be married than the non-affiliated. Question five examined the association between church attendance and being married. Weekly attenders were more likely to be married than the non-attenders. Overall these data support the close association between religion and marriage across five European countries (where there are very different religious climates) and support the hypothesis that changing religious values and changing family values go hand-in-hand
Feeding Records of Aphids (Hemiptera: Aphididae) From Wisconsin
Basic to our understanding of any animal and its habitat requirements is knowing what it eats. Reported here are observations of feeding by 27 species of aphids encountered in Wisconsin over 1992-2002
The usefulness of Visitor Expectations Type Scales (VETS) for tourist segmentation : the case of cathedral visitors
This study applies Jungian psychological type theory to assess and to interpret the expectations of cathedral visitors. The Visitor Expectations Type Scales were developed among 35 individuals trained and qualified as type practitioners and then tested among a sample of 157 visitors who also completed the Francis Psychological Type Scales. The data demonstrated: the coherence and internal consistency reliability of the Visitor Expectations Type Scales; the particular emphases placed by cathedral visitors on introverted expectations, feeling expectations, and perceiving expectations; and the complex relationship between visitor expectations (conceptualised in psychological type categories) and their personal psychological type profile. The Visitor Expectations Type Scales are commended as providing a more valid assessment of the psychographic segmentation of cathedral visitors than could be provided simply by the administration of a recognised measure of psychological type. Such assessment has implications for the marketing and management of cathedrals within the tourism industry
Weak values and the Leggett-Garg inequality in solid-state qubits
An implementation of weak values is investigated in solid-state qubits. We
demonstrate that a weak value can be non-classical if and only if a
Leggett-Garg inequality can also be violated. Generalized weak values are
described, where post-selection on a range of weak measurement results.
Imposing classical weak values permits the derivation of Leggett-Garg
inequalities for bounded operators. Our analysis is presented in terms of
kicked quantum nondemolition measurements on a quantum double-dot charge qubit.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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Phytocannabinoids as novel therapeutic agents in CNS disorders
The Cannabis sativa herb contains over 100 phytocannabinoid (pCB) compounds and has been used for thousands of years for both recreational and medicinal purposes. In the past two decades, characterisation of the body's endogenous cannabinoid (CB) (endocannabinoid, eCB) system (ECS) has highlighted activation of central CB1 receptors by the major pCB, Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC) as the primary mediator of the psychoactive, hyperphagic and some of the potentially therapeutic properties of ingested cannabis. Whilst Δ9-THC is the most prevalent and widely studied pCB, it is also the predominant psychotropic component of cannabis, a property that likely limits its widespread therapeutic use as an isolated agent. In this regard,
research focus has recently widened to include other pCBs including cannabidiol (CBD), cannabigerol (CBG), Δ9tetrahydrocannabivarin (Δ9-THCV) and cannabidivarin (CBDV), some of which show potential as therapeutic agents in preclinical models of CNS disease. Moreover, it is becoming evident that these non-Δ9-THC pCBs act at a wide range of pharmacological targets, not solely limited to CB receptors. Disorders that could be targeted include epilepsy, neurodegenerative diseases, affective disorders and the central modulation of feeding behaviour. Here, we review pCB effects in preclinical models of CNS disease and, where available, clinical trial data that support therapeutic effects. Such developments may soon yield the first non-Δ9-THC pCB-based medicines
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