5,959 research outputs found
Constrictive pericarditis and rheumatoid nodules with severe aortic incompetence.
The case of a female patient presenting with constrictive rheumatoid pericarditis and aortic incompetence secondary to valvular rheumatoid nodules is described along with a review of the literature with the aim to highlight this rare cause of aortic insufficiency
Interpolatory Weighted-H2 Model Reduction
This paper introduces an interpolation framework for the weighted-H2 model
reduction problem. We obtain a new representation of the weighted-H2 norm of
SISO systems that provides new interpolatory first order necessary conditions
for an optimal reduced-order model. The H2 norm representation also provides an
error expression that motivates a new weighted-H2 model reduction algorithm.
Several numerical examples illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed
approach
A generalization of Gabriel's Galois covering functors II: 2-categorical Cohen-Montgomery duality
Given a group , we define suitable 2-categorical structures on the class
of all small categories with -actions and on the class of all small
-graded categories, and prove that 2-categorical extensions of the orbit
category construction and of the smash product construction turn out to be
2-equivalences (2-quasi-inverses to each other), which extends the
Cohen-Montgomery duality.Comment: 31 pages. I moved the Sec of G-GrCat into Sec 3, and added Lem 5.6. I
added more explanations in the proof of Cor 7.6 with (7.5). I added Def 7.7
and Lem 7.8 with the necessary additional assumptions in Props 7.9 and 7.11.
I added Lem 8.8 with a short proof, Rmk 8.9 and the proof of Lem 8.10. The
final publication is available at Springer via
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10485-015-9416-
Support for graphicacy: a review of textbooks available to accounting students
This Teaching Note reports on the support available in textbooks for graphicacy that will help students understand the complexities of graphical displays. Graphical displays play a significant role in financial reporting, and studies have found evidence of measurement distortion and selection bias. To understand the complexities of graphical displays, students need a sound understanding of graphicacy and support from the textbooks available to them to develop that understanding. The Teaching Note reports on a survey that examined the textbooks available to students attending two Scottish universities. The support of critical graphicacy skills was examined in conjunction with textbook characteristics. The survey, which was not restricted to textbooks designated as required reading, examined the textbooks for content on data measurement and graphical displays. The findings highlight a lack of support for graphicacy in the textbooks selected. The study concludes that accounting educators need to scrutinize more closely the selection of textbooks and calls for more extensive research into textbooks as a pedagogic tool
Violence against female sex workers in Karnataka state, south India: impact on health, and reductions in violence following an intervention program.
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Violence against female sex workers (FSWs) can impede HIV prevention efforts and contravenes their human rights. We developed a multi-layered violence intervention targeting policy makers, secondary stakeholders (police, lawyers, media), and primary stakeholders (FSWs), as part of wider HIV prevention programming involving >60,000 FSWs in Karnataka state. This study examined if violence against FSWs is associated with reduced condom use and increased STI/HIV risk, and if addressing violence against FSWs within a large-scale HIV prevention program can reduce levels of violence against them. METHODS: FSWs were randomly selected to participate in polling booth surveys (PBS 2006-2008; short behavioural questionnaires administered anonymously) and integrated behavioural-biological assessments (IBBAs 2005-2009; administered face-to-face). RESULTS: 3,852 FSWs participated in the IBBAs and 7,638 FSWs participated in the PBS. Overall, 11.0% of FSWs in the IBBAs and 26.4% of FSWs in the PBS reported being beaten or raped in the past year. FSWs who reported violence in the past year were significantly less likely to report condom use with clients (zero unprotected sex acts in previous month, 55.4% vs. 75.5%, adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 0.4, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.3 to 0.5, p < 0.001); to have accessed the HIV intervention program (ever contacted by peer educator, 84.9% vs. 89.6%, AOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.4 to 1.0, p = 0.04); or to have ever visited the project sexual health clinic (59.0% vs. 68.1%, AOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.6 to 1.0, p = 0.02); and were significantly more likely to be infected with gonorrhea (5.0% vs. 2.6%, AOR 1.9, 95% CI 1.1 to 3.3, p = 0.02). By the follow-up surveys, significant reductions were seen in the proportions of FSWs reporting violence compared with baseline (IBBA 13.0% vs. 9.0%, AOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.5 to 0.9 p = 0.01; PBS 27.3% vs. 18.9%, crude OR 0.5, 95% CI 0.4 to 0.5, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: This program demonstrates that a structural approach to addressing violence can be effectively delivered at scale. Addressing violence against FSWs is important for the success of HIV prevention programs, and for protecting their basic human rights
Interpolatory methods for model reduction of multi-input/multi-output systems
We develop here a computationally effective approach for producing
high-quality -approximations to large scale linear
dynamical systems having multiple inputs and multiple outputs (MIMO). We extend
an approach for model reduction introduced by Flagg,
Beattie, and Gugercin for the single-input/single-output (SISO) setting, which
combined ideas originating in interpolatory -optimal model
reduction with complex Chebyshev approximation. Retaining this framework, our
approach to the MIMO problem has its principal computational cost dominated by
(sparse) linear solves, and so it can remain an effective strategy in many
large-scale settings. We are able to avoid computationally demanding
norm calculations that are normally required to monitor
progress within each optimization cycle through the use of "data-driven"
rational approximations that are built upon previously computed function
samples. Numerical examples are included that illustrate our approach. We
produce high fidelity reduced models having consistently better
performance than models produced via balanced truncation;
these models often are as good as (and occasionally better than) models
produced using optimal Hankel norm approximation as well. In all cases
considered, the method described here produces reduced models at far lower cost
than is possible with either balanced truncation or optimal Hankel norm
approximation
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