7,074 research outputs found
Data types
A Mathematical
interpretation is given to the notion of a data type.
The main novelty is in the generality of the mathematical treatment
which allows procedural data types and circularly defined data types.
What is meant by data type is pretty close to what any computer
scientist would understand by this term or by data structure, type,
mode, cluster, class. The mathematical treatment is the conjunction
of the ideas of D. Scott on the solution of domain equations (Scott
(71), (72) and (76)) and the initiality property noticed by the
ADJ group (ADJ (75), ADJ (77)). The present work adds operations
to the data types proposed by Scott and generalizes the data types
of ADJ to procedural types and arbitrary circular type definitions.
The advantages of a mathematical interpretation of data types are
those of mathematical semantics in general : throwing light on some
ill-understood constructs in high-level programming languages, easing
the task of writing correct programs and making possible proofs of
correctness for programs or implementations"
Nível crítico de potássio para feijão-caupi em latossolo amarelo textura média do Nordeste paraense.
Potassium management in Humid Tropical Oxisols.
bitstream/item/210624/1/Potassium-Management-in-Humid-Tropical-Oxisols.pd
Soil nutrient dynamics and fertility management for sustained crop production on Oxisols in the Brazilian Amazon.
bitstream/item/210622/1/Soil-Nutrient-Dynamics-and....pd
Two-Level Atom in an Optical Parametric Oscillator: Spectra of Transmitted and Fluorescent Fields in the Weak Driving Field Limit
We consider the interaction of a two-level atom inside an optical parametric
oscillator. In the weak driving field limit, we essentially have an atom-cavity
system driven by the occasional pair of correlated photons, or weakly squeezed
light. We find that we may have holes, or dips, in the spectrum of the
fluorescent and transmitted light. This occurs even in the strong-coupling
limit when we find holes in the vacuum-Rabi doublet. Also, spectra with a
sub-natural linewidth may occur. These effects disappear for larger driving
fields, unlike the spectral narrowing obtained in resonance fluorescence in a
squeezed vacuum; here it is important that the squeezing parameter tends to
zero so that the system interacts with only one correlated pair of photons at a
time. We show that a previous explanation for spectral narrowing and spectral
holes for incoherent scattering is not applicable in the present case, and
propose a new explanation. We attribute these anomalous effects to quantum
interference in the two-photon scattering of the system.Comment: 10 pages, 17 figures, submitted to Phys Rev
ADRIC: Adverse Drug Reactions In Children - a programme of research using mixed methods
Aims
To comprehensively investigate the incidence, nature and risk factors of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) in a hospital-based population of children, with rigorous assessment of causality, severity and avoidability, and to assess the consequent impact on children and families. We aimed to improve the assessment of ADRs by development of new tools to assess causality and avoidability, and to minimise the impact on families by developing better strategies for communication.
Review methods
Two prospective observational studies, each over 1 year, were conducted to assess ADRs in children associated with admission to hospital, and those occurring in children who were in hospital for longer than 48 hours. We conducted a comprehensive systematic review of ADRs in children. We used the findings from these studies to develop and validate tools to assess causality and avoidability of ADRs, and conducted interviews with parents and children who had experienced ADRs, using these findings to develop a leaflet for parents to inform a communication strategy about ADRs.
Results
The estimated incidence of ADRs detected in children on admission to hospital was 2.9% [95% confidence interval (CI) 2.5% to 3.3%]. Of the reactions, 22.1% (95% CI 17% to 28%) were either definitely or possibly avoidable. Prescriptions originating in the community accounted for 44 out of 249 (17.7%) of ADRs, the remainder originating from hospital. A total of 120 out of 249 (48.2%) reactions resulted from treatment for malignancies. Off-label and/or unlicensed (OLUL) medicines were more likely to be implicated in an ADR than authorised medicines [relative risk (RR) 1.67, 95% CI 1.38 to 2.02; p 48 hours, the overall incidence of definite and probable ADRs based on all admissions was 15.9% (95% CI 15.0 to 16.8). Opiate analgesic drugs and drugs used in general anaesthesia (GA) accounted for > 50% of all drugs implicated in ADRs. The odds ratio of an OLUL drug being implicated in an ADR compared with an authorised drug was 2.25 (95% CI 1.95 to 2.59; p < 0.001). Risk factors identified were exposure to a GA, age, oncology treatment and number of medicines. The systematic review estimated that the incidence rates for ADRs causing hospital admission ranged from 0.4% to 10.3% of all children [pooled estimate of 2.9% (95% CI 2.6% to 3.1%)] and from 0.6% to 16.8% of all children exposed to a drug during hospital stay. New tools to assess causality and avoidability of ADRs have been developed and validated. Many parents described being dissatisfied with clinician communication about ADRs, whereas parents of children with cancer emphasised confidence in clinician management of ADRs and the way clinicians communicated about medicines. The accounts of children and young people largely reflected parents’ accounts. Clinicians described using all of the features of communication that parents wanted to see, but made active decisions about when and what to communicate to families about suspected ADRs, which meant that communication may not always match families’ needs and expectations. We developed a leaflet to assist clinicians in communicating ADRs to parents.
Conclusion
The Adverse Drug Reactions In Children (ADRIC) programme has provided the most comprehensive assessment, to date, of the size and nature of ADRs in children presenting to, and cared for in, hospital, and the outputs that have resulted will improve the management and understanding of ADRs in children and adults within the NHS. Recommendations for future research: assess the values that parents and children place on the use of different medicines and the risks that they will find acceptable within these contexts; focusing on high-risk drugs identified in ADRIC, determine the optimum drug dose for children through the development of a gold standard practice for the extrapolation of adult drug doses, alongside targeted pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic studies; assess the research and clinical applications of the Liverpool Causality Assessment Tool and the Liverpool Avoidability Assessment Tool; evaluate, in more detail, morbidities associated with anaesthesia and surgery in children, including follow-up in the community and in the home setting and an assessment of the most appropriate treatment regimens to prevent pain, vomiting and other postoperative complications; further evaluate strategies for communication with families, children and young people about ADRs; and quantify ADRs in other settings, for example critical care and neonatology
Small animal disease surveillance: respiratory disease 2017
This report focuses on surveillance for respiratory disease in companion animals. It begins with an analysis of data from 392 veterinary practices contributing to the Small Animal Veterinary Surveillance Network (SAVSNET) between January and December 2017.
The following section describes canine respiratory coronavirus infections in dogs, presenting results from laboratory-confirmed cases across the country between January 2010 and December 2017. This is followed by an update on the temporal trends of three important syndromes in companion animals, namely gastroenteritis, pruritus and respiratory disease, from 2014 to 2017.
A fourth section presents a brief update on Streptococcus equi subspecies zooepidemicus in companion animals. The final section summarises some recent developments pertinent to companion animal health, namely eyeworm (Thelazzia callipaeda) infestations in dogs imported to the UK and canine influenza virus in the USA and Canada
Phosphorus management in Humid Tropical Oxisols.
bitstream/item/210623/1/Phosphorus-Management....pd
Bridging recommendation and adaptation:generic adaptation framework - twittomender compliance study
In this paper we consider Recommender System (RS) modeling in terms of Adaptive Hypermedia Systems (AHS) and investigate AHS and RS functionality compliance in terms of common features, functionality, building blocks and composition of the system. We bring up complementary aspects of adaptation, personalization and recommendation in a context of a generic framework which provides properties of information fusion and heterogeneity and could serve as a reference model. We show major recommendation functionality in terms of the reference structure and recommendation process by presenting a conceptual generic ‘adaptation-recommendation’ sequence chart which overlays and combines properties of adaptation and recommendations taking advantages of both. In fact we show that RS if implemented on the web can be considered as AHS, in this wise a generic framework should be capable of describing virtually any RS. In the case study we scrutinize the Twittomender3 RS. We decompose the system in building blocks, outline and highlight its properties along with the advantages and possible enhancements. We conclude by summarizing framework advantages and AH recommendation compliant features as well as lessons learned from this study
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