1,187 research outputs found
A view of canonical extension
This is a short survey illustrating some of the essential aspects of the
theory of canonical extensions. In addition some topological results about
canonical extensions of lattices with additional operations in finitely
generated varieties are given. In particular, they are doubly algebraic
lattices and their interval topologies agree with their double Scott topologies
and make them Priestley topological algebras.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figures. Presented at the Eighth International Tbilisi
Symposium on Language, Logic and Computation Bakuriani, Georgia, September
21-25 200
PROFILES OF RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING (RADL) IN PATIENTS WITH MENTAL DISORDERS
Background: Activities of daily living, play a key role in the measurement of functional health as defined by the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and in prevention and treatment of mental or somatic illnesses. From a clinical context it is important to discriminate between basic
âactivities of daily living, ADLâ, âintentional activities of daily living, IADLâ, and ârecreational activities of daily living, RADLâ. While ADL and IADL have gained much attention in dementia, the elderly, or severe somatic illnesses, there is a lack of research on RADL, which are important in depression, anxiety, or other neurotic disorders.
Subjects and methods: 154 unselected inpatients of a department of behavioral and psychosomatic medicine filled in the âCheck List of Recreational Activitiesâ to assess the rates and profiles of RADL.
Results: Patients reported on average 19.3 (s.d. 7.0) activities (range 4 â 40), i.e. males 21.3 (s.d. 6.5, 9 â 34) and females 18.9 (s.d. 7.1, 4 â 40). Most frequent RADL were passive and unspecific activities like âwatching tvâ (93.4%). Least frequent were activities which need special skills or preparation like âhorse back ridingâ (0.7%). Low rates were also found for activities which are in the centre of inpatient occupational therapy like âceramicsâ (4.7%) or âsilk-paintingâ (2.6%). There are differences between sexes but not in respect to age (18 to 60), sick leave and unemployment, or diagnostic status. When patients were asked what they would
like to do in the future, the same activity profile emerged as when looking at what they had done in the last month
Conclusion: The data give a reference profile for recreational activities, help to define what can be considered a normal frequency and spectrum of RADL, and, by this, can guide therapeutic interventions
Monotonic Distributive Semilattices
In the study of algebras related to non-classical logics, (distributive) semilattices are always present in the background. For example, the algebraic semantic of the {â, â§, â€}-fragment of intuitionistic logic is the variety of implicative meet-semilattices (Chellas 1980; Hansen 2003). In this paper we introduce and study the class of distributive meet-semilattices endowed with a monotonic modal operator m. We study the representation theory of these algebras using the theory of canonical extensions and we give a topological duality for them. Also, we show how our new duality extends to some particular subclasses.Fil: Celani, Sergio Arturo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Departamento de MatemĂĄtica; ArgentinaFil: MenchĂłn, MarĂa Paula. Universidad Nacional del Centro de la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Departamento de MatemĂĄtica; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas; Argentin
Nerio: Leader Election and Edict Ordering
Coordination in a distributed system is facilitated if there is a unique
process, the leader, to manage the other processes. The leader creates edicts
and sends them to other processes for execution or forwarding to other
processes. The leader may fail, and when this occurs a leader election protocol
selects a replacement. This paper describes Nerio, a class of such leader
election protocols
Can the palatability of healthy, satiety-promoting foods increase with repeated exposure during weight loss?
Repeated exposure to sugary, fatty, and salty foods often enhances their appeal. However, it is unknown if exposure influences learned palatability of foods typically promoted as part of a healthy diet. We tested whether the palatability of pulse containing foods provided during a weight loss intervention which were particularly high in fiber and low in energy density would increase with repeated exposure. At weeks 0, 3, and 6, participants (n = 42; body mass index (BMI) 31.2 ± 4.3 kg/mÂČ) were given a test battery of 28 foods, approximately half which had been provided as part of the intervention, while the remaining half were not foods provided as part of the intervention. In addition, about half of each of the foods (provided as part or not provided as part of the intervention) contained pulses. Participants rated the taste, appearance, odor, and texture pleasantness of each food, and an overall flavor pleasantness score was calculated as the mean of these four scores. Linear mixed model analyses showed an exposure type by week interaction effect for taste, texture and overall flavor pleasantness indicating statistically significant increases in ratings of provided foods in taste and texture from weeks 0 to 3 and 0 to 6, and overall flavor from weeks 0 to 6. Repeated exposure to these foods, whether they contained pulses or not, resulted in a ~4% increase in pleasantness ratings. The long-term clinical relevance of this small increase requires further study.T32 AT000815 - NCCIH NIH HH
2,2âČ-[(E,E)-cis-(CycloÂhexane-1,4-diÂyl)bisÂ(nitriloÂmethanylylÂidene)]diphenol
In the title compound, C20H22N2O2, the asymmetric unit contains two independent half-molÂecules, which are both completed by crystallographic inversion symmetry. The cycloÂhexane rings of both molÂecules adopt chair conformations; the N atoms are in equatorial orientations in one molÂecule and in axial orientations in the other. Both molÂecules feature two intraÂmolecular OâHâŻN hydrogen bonds, which generate S(6) rings
Chapter 19: Vulnerability of coastal and estuarine habitats in the Great Barrier Reef to climate change
This chapter attempts to address the vulnerability of the CEM in the Great Barrier Reef region to global
climate change. It does not consider individual habitats (eg reefs or seagrasses) but goes beyond
the individual species and habitat assessments, to consider impacts on the whole coastal marine
community complex, and the ecological processes that support its functioning.This is Chapter 19 of Climate change and the Great Barrier Reef: a vulnerability assessment. The entire book can be found at http://hdl.handle.net/11017/13
Enabling Surgical Placement of Hydrogels through Achieving Paste-Like Rheological Behavior in Hydrogel Precursor Solutions
Hydrogels are a promising class of materials for tissue regeneration, but they lack the ability to be molded into a defect site by a surgeon because hydrogel precursors are liquid solutions that are prone to leaking during placement. Therefore, although the main focus of hydrogel technology and developments are on hydrogels in their crosslinked form, our primary focus is on improving the fluid behavior of hydrogel precursor solutions. In this work, we introduce a method to achieve paste-like hydrogel precursor solutions by combining hyaluronic acid nanoparticles with traditional crosslinked hyaluronic acid hydrogels. Prior to crosslinking, the samples underwent rheological testing to assess yield stress and recovery using linear hyaluronic acid as a control. The experimental groups containing nanoparticles were the only solutions that exhibited a yield stress, demonstrating that the nanoparticulate rather than the linear form of hyaluronic acid was necessary to achieve paste-like behavior. The gels were also photocrosslinked and further characterized as solids, where it was demonstrated that the inclusion of nanoparticles did not adversely affect the compressive modulus and that encapsulated bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells remained viable. Overall, this nanoparticle-based approach provides a platform hydrogel system that exhibits a yield stress prior to crosslinking, and can then be crosslinked into a hydrogel that is capable of encapsulating cells that remain viable. This behavior may hold significant impact for hydrogel applications where a paste-like behavior is desired in the hydrogel precursor solution
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