96 research outputs found

    Educational inequalities in aging-related declines in fluid cognition and the onset of cognitive pathology

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    AbstractBackgroundEducation has been robustly associated with cognitive reserve and dementia, but not with the rate of cognitive aging, resulting in some confusion about the mechanisms of cognitive aging. This study uses longitudinal data to differentiate between trajectories indicative of healthy versus pathologic cognitive aging.MethodsParticipants included 9401 Health and Retirement Study respondents aged ≄55 years who completed cognitive testing regularly over 17.3 years until most recently in 2012. Individual-specific random change-point modeling was used to identify age of incident pathologic decline; acceleration is interpreted as indicating likely onset of pathologic decline when it is significant and negative.ResultsThese methods detect incident dementia diagnoses with specificity/sensitivity of 89.3%/44.3%, 5.6 years before diagnosis. Each year of education was associated with 0.09 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.087–0.096; P < .001) standard deviation higher baseline cognition and delayed onset of cognitive pathology (hazard ratio, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.96–0.99; P = .006).ConclusionsLongitudinal random change-point modeling was able to reliably identify incident dementia. Accounting for incident cognitive pathology, we find that education predicts cognitive capability and delayed onset pathologic declines

    Evidence for a narrow dip structure at 1.9 GeV/c2^2 in 3π+3π−3\pi^+ 3\pi^- diffractive photoproduction

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    A narrow dip structure has been observed at 1.9 GeV/c2^2 in a study of diffractive photoproduction of the  3π+3π−~3\pi^+3\pi^- final state performed by the Fermilab experiment E687.Comment: The data of Figure 6 can be obtained by downloading the raw data file e687_6pi.txt. v5 (2nov2018): added Fig. 7, the 6 pion energy distribution as requested by a reade

    Disability differentials in educational attainment in England: primary and secondary effects

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    Childhood disability has been largely overlooked in social stratification and life course research. As a result, we know remarkably little about mechanisms behind well-documented disability differentials in educational outcomes. This study investigates educational transitions of disabled youth using data from the Longitudinal Study of Young People in England. We draw on social stratification literature on primary and secondary effects as well as that on stigma and labeling in order to explain disabled young people’s educational outcomes. We find that disability differentials in transition rates to full-time academic upper secondary education and to university are largely the result of primary effects, reflected in differences in school performance between disabled and non-disabled young people. However, we also find evidence for secondary effects, with similarly achieving disabled young people less likely to pursue full-time academic upper secondary education compared to their non-disabled peers. We examine the extent to which these effects can be explained by disabled youth’s suppressed educational expectations as well as their experiences of being bullied at school, which we link to the stigma experienced by disabled young people and their families. We find that educational expectations play an important role at crucial transitions in the English school system, while the effect of bullying is considerably smaller. By drawing attention to different social processes contributing to disability differentials in attainment, our study moves beyond medical models that implicitly assume a naturalized association of disability with poor educational outcomes, and demonstrates the parallels of disability with other ascriptive inequalities

    Study of \Omega_c^0 and \Omega_c^{*0} Baryons at Belle

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    We report results from a study of the charmed double strange baryons \Omega_c^0 and \Omega_c^{*0} at Belle. The \Omega_c^0 is reconstructed using the \Omega_c^0 --> \Omega^- \pi^+ decay mode, and its mass is measured to be (2693.6 \pm 0.3 {+1.8 \atop -1.5}) MeV/c^2. The \Omega_c^{*0} baryon is reconstructed in the \Omega_c^0 \gamma mode. The mass difference M_{\Omega_c^{*0}} - M_{\Omega_c^0} is measured to be (70.7 \pm 0.9 {+0.1 \atop -0.9}) MeV/c^2. The analysis is performed using 673 fb^{-1} of data on and near the \Upsilon(4S) collected with the Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric-energy e^+e^- collider.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, prepared for 34th International Conference on High Energy Physics (ICHEP 08), Philadelphia, PA, 29 Jul - 5 Aug 200

    Physics with the KLOE-2 experiment at the upgraded DAϕ\phiNE

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    Investigation at a ϕ\phi--factory can shed light on several debated issues in particle physics. We discuss: i) recent theoretical development and experimental progress in kaon physics relevant for the Standard Model tests in the flavor sector, ii) the sensitivity we can reach in probing CPT and Quantum Mechanics from time evolution of entangled kaon states, iii) the interest for improving on the present measurements of non-leptonic and radiative decays of kaons and eta/etaâ€Č^\prime mesons, iv) the contribution to understand the nature of light scalar mesons, and v) the opportunity to search for narrow di-lepton resonances suggested by recent models proposing a hidden dark-matter sector. We also report on the e+e−e^+ e^- physics in the continuum with the measurements of (multi)hadronic cross sections and the study of gamma gamma processes.Comment: 60 pages, 41 figures; added affiliation for one of the authors; added reference to section

    Search for CPCP violation in the phase space of D0→π+π−π+π−D^0\rightarrow\pi^+\pi^-\pi^+\pi^- decays

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    A search for time-integrated CPCP violation in the Cabibbo-suppressed decay \mbox{D^0\rightarrow\pi^+\pi^-\pi^+\pi^-} is performed using an unbinned, model-independent technique known as the energy test. This is the first application of the energy test in four-body decays. The search is performed for PP-even CPCP asymmetries and, for the first time, is extended to probe the PP-odd case. Using proton-proton collision data corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 3.0 fb−1^{-1} collected by the LHCb detector at centre-of-mass energies of s=\sqrt{s}=7 TeV and 8 TeV, the world's best sensitivity to CPCP violation in this decay is obtained. The data are found to be consistent with the hypothesis of CPCP symmetry with a pp-value of (4.6±0.5)%(4.6\pm0.5)\% in the PP-even case, and marginally consistent with a pp-value of (0.6±0.2)%(0.6\pm0.2)\% in the PP-odd case, corresponding to a significance for CPCP non-conservation of 2.7 standard deviations.Comment: All figures and tables, along with any supplementary material and additional information, are available at https://lhcbproject.web.cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/LHCbProjectPublic/LHCb-PAPER-2016-044.htm
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