156 research outputs found
Scale-freeness for networks as a degenerate ground state: A Hamiltonian formulation
The origin of scale-free degree distributions in the context of networks is
addressed through an analogous non-network model in which the node degree
corresponds to the number of balls in a box and the rewiring of links to balls
moving between the boxes. A statistical mechanical formulation is presented and
the corresponding Hamiltonian is derived. The energy, the entropy, as well as
the degree distribution and its fluctuations are investigated at various
temperatures. The scale-free distribution is shown to correspond to the
degenerate ground state, which has small fluctuations in the degree
distribution and yet a large entropy. We suggest an implication of our results
from the viewpoint of the stability in evolution of networks.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. To appear in Europhysics lette
Neutral theory of chemical reaction networks
To what extent do the characteristic features of a chemical reaction network
reflect its purpose and function? In general, one argues that correlations
between specific features and specific functions are key to understanding a
complex structure. However, specific features may sometimes be neutral and
uncorrelated with any system-specific purpose, function or causal chain. Such
neutral features are caused by chance and randomness. Here we compare two
classes of chemical networks: one that has been subjected to biological
evolution (the chemical reaction network of metabolism in living cells) and one
that has not (the atmospheric planetary chemical reaction networks). Their
degree distributions are shown to share the very same neutral
system-independent features. The shape of the broad distributions is to a large
extent controlled by a single parameter, the network size. From this
perspective, there is little difference between atmospheric and metabolic
networks; they are just different sizes of the same random assembling network.
In other words, the shape of the degree distribution is a neutral
characteristic feature and has no functional or evolutionary implications in
itself; it is not a matter of life and death.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Symmetry-allowed phase transitions realized by the two-dimensional fully frustrated XY class
A 2D Fully Frustrated XY(FFXY) class of models is shown to contain a new
groundstate in addition to the checkerboard groundstates of the standard 2D
FFXY model. The spin configuration of this additional groundstate is obtained.
Associated with this groundstate there are additional phase transitions. An
order parameter accounting for these new transitions is proposed. The
transitions associated with the new order parameter are suggested to be similar
to a 2D liquid-gas transition which implies Z_2-Ising like transitions. This
suggests that the class of 2D FFXY models belongs within a U(1) x Z_2 x
Z_2-designation of possible transitions, which implies that there are seven
different possible single and combined transitions. MC-simulations for the
generalized fully frustrated XY (GFFXY) model on a square lattice are used to
investigate which of these possibilities can be realized in practice: five of
the seven are encountered. Four critical points are deduced from the
MC-simulations, three consistent with central charge c=3/2 and one with c=1.
The implications for the standard 2D FFXY-model are discussed in particular
with respect to the long standing controversy concerning the characteristics of
its phase transitions.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Determinants of guideline use in primary care physical therapy: a cross-sectional survey of attitudes, knowledge, and behavior
Background
Understanding of attitudes, knowledge, and behavior related to evidence-based practice (EBP) and use of evidence-based clinical practice guidelines in primary care physical therapy is limited.
Objectives
The objectives of this study were: (1) to investigate self-reported attitudes, knowledge, behavior, prerequisites, and barriers related to EBP and guideline use among physical therapists in primary care and (2) to explore associations of self-reported use of guidelines with these social cognitive factors along with demographic and workplace characteristics.
Design
This was a cross-sectional survey.
Methods
A web-based survey of 419 physical therapists in primary care in western Sweden was performed. Multiple logistic regression analysis was performed to examine factors associated with guideline use.
Results
The response rate was 64.7%. Most respondents had positive attitudes toward EBP and guidelines: 90% considered EBP necessary, and 96% considered guidelines important. Approximately two thirds reported confidence in finding and using evidence. One third reported being aware of guidelines. Thirteen percent knew where to find guidelines, and only 9% reported having easy access to guidelines. Fewer than half reported using guidelines frequently. The most important barriers to using guidelines were lack of time, poor availability, and limited access to guidelines. Young age and brief work experience were associated with positive attitudes toward EBP. A postgraduate degree was associated with higher application of EBP. Positive attitudes, awareness of guidelines, considering guidelines to facilitate practice, and knowing how to integrate patient preferences with guideline use were associated with frequent use of guidelines.
Limitations
Data were self-reported, which may have increased the risk of social desirability bias.
Conclusions
Use of guidelines was not as frequent as could be expected in view of the positive attitudes toward EBP and guidelines among physical therapists. Awareness of and perceived access to guidelines were limited. The identified determinants can be addressed when developing guideline implementation strategies
Perceptions of facilitators, barriers and solutions when preparing to implement a home visiting program in Sweden: a mixed-methods study
BackgroundAlthough there is growing awareness that early childhood development programs are important for a sustainable society, there is a knowledge gap about how to implement such programs. Successful implementation requires attention to implementation drivers (competency, organization, and leadership) during all phases of the implementation. The purpose of this study was to describe cross-sectoral operational workgroupsâ perceptions of facilitators, barriers and solutions related to implementation drivers in the preparationphase of implementing an evidence-based early childhood home visiting program.MethodsQuantitative and qualitative data were collected from twenty-four participants, divided into 5 groups, during implementation planning workshops. The workshops were guided by a structured method informed by the principles of Motivational Interviewing and within a framework of implementation drivers. Groups sorted cards with statements representing implementation drivers according to perceptions of facilitators and barriers, and percentages were calculated for each type of implementation determinant, for each type of driver. The groups discussed their card sorting and wrote action plans to address barriers, yielding documentation that was analyzed using deductive qualitative content analysis.ResultsA mixed-methods analysis resulted identification of facilitators, barriers, unknowns and solutions in two to three subcategories under each main category of implementation driver. A competent and confident workforce, and enthusiasm and commitment were key facilitators. Key barriers were unclear roles and responsibilities, and insufficient articulation of local vision and goals. Many factors were described as yet unknown. Specific solutions were generated to support the implementation.ConclusionsOur study furthers the scientific understanding of how to take evidence-based early childhood programs from research to practice within an implementation drivers framework. Facilitators, barriers and solutions in key areas during the preparation phase were identified with the help of a novel tool. The results provide useful knowledge for decision makers and organizations preparing similar initiatives in communities striving to attain sustainable development goals
The meta book and size-dependent properties of written language
Evidence is given for a systematic text-length dependence of the power-law
index gamma of a single book. The estimated gamma values are consistent with a
monotonic decrease from 2 to 1 with increasing length of a text. A direct
connection to an extended Heap's law is explored. The infinite book limit is,
as a consequence, proposed to be given by gamma = 1 instead of the value
gamma=2 expected if the Zipf's law was ubiquitously applicable. In addition we
explore the idea that the systematic text-length dependence can be described by
a meta book concept, which is an abstract representation reflecting the
word-frequency structure of a text. According to this concept the
word-frequency distribution of a text, with a certain length written by a
single author, has the same characteristics as a text of the same length pulled
out from an imaginary complete infinite corpus written by the same author.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
The Blind Watchmaker Network: Scale-freeness and Evolution
It is suggested that the degree distribution for networks of the
cell-metabolism for simple organisms reflects an ubiquitous randomness. This
implies that natural selection has exerted no or very little pressure on the
network degree distribution during evolution. The corresponding random network,
here termed the blind watchmaker network has a power-law degree distribution
with an exponent gamma >= 2. It is random with respect to a complete set of
network states characterized by a description of which links are attached to a
node as well as a time-ordering of these links. No a priory assumption of any
growth mechanism or evolution process is made. It is found that the degree
distribution of the blind watchmaker network agrees very precisely with that of
the metabolic networks. This implies that the evolutionary pathway of the
cell-metabolism, when projected onto a metabolic network representation, has
remained statistically random with respect to a complete set of network states.
This suggests that even a biological system, which due to natural selection has
developed an enormous specificity like the cellular metabolism, nevertheless
can, at the same time, display well defined characteristics emanating from the
ubiquitous inherent random element of Darwinian evolution. The fact that also
completely random networks may have scale-free node distributions gives a new
perspective on the origin of scale-free networks in general.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Languages cool as they expand: Allometric scaling and the decreasing need for new words
We analyze the occurrence frequencies of over 15 million words recorded in millions of books published during the past two centuries in seven different languages. For all languages and chronological subsets of the data we confirm that two scaling regimes characterize the word frequency distributions, with only the more common words obeying the classic Zipf law. Using corpora of unprecedented size, we test the allometric scaling relation between the corpus size and the vocabulary size of growing languages to demonstrate a decreasing marginal need for new words, a feature that is likely related to the underlying correlations between words. We calculate the annual growth fluctuations of word use which has a decreasing trend as the corpus size increases, indicating a slowdown in linguistic evolution following language expansion. This ââcooling patternââ forms the basis of a third statistical regularity, which unlike the Zipf and the Heaps law, is dynamical in nature
CFT description of the Fully Frustrated XY model and phase diagram analysis
Following a suggestion given in Nucl. Phys. B 300 (1988)611,we show how the
U(1)*Z_{2} symmetry of the fully frustrated XY (FFXY) model on a square lattice
can be accounted for in the framework of the m-reduction procedure developed
for a Quantum Hall system at "paired states" fillings nu =1 (cfr. Cristofano et
al.,Mod. Phys. Lett. A 15 (2000)1679;Nucl. Phys. B 641 (2002)547). The
resulting twisted conformal field theory (CFT) with central charge c=2 is shown
to well describe the physical properties of the FFXY model. In particular the
whole phase diagram is recovered by analyzing the flow from the Z_{2}
degenerate vacuum of the c=2 CFT to the infrared fixed point unique vacuum of
the c=3/2 CFT. The last theory is known to successfully describe the critical
behavior of the system at the overlap temperature for the Ising and
vortex-unbinding transitions.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure, to appear in JSTA
Statistical Laws Governing Fluctuations in Word Use from Word Birth to Word Death
We analyze the dynamic properties of 10^7 words recorded in English, Spanish
and Hebrew over the period 1800--2008 in order to gain insight into the
coevolution of language and culture. We report language independent patterns
useful as benchmarks for theoretical models of language evolution. A
significantly decreasing (increasing) trend in the birth (death) rate of words
indicates a recent shift in the selection laws governing word use. For new
words, we observe a peak in the growth-rate fluctuations around 40 years after
introduction, consistent with the typical entry time into standard dictionaries
and the human generational timescale. Pronounced changes in the dynamics of
language during periods of war shows that word correlations, occurring across
time and between words, are largely influenced by coevolutionary social,
technological, and political factors. We quantify cultural memory by analyzing
the long-term correlations in the use of individual words using detrended
fluctuation analysis.Comment: Version 1: 31 pages, 17 figures, 3 tables. Version 2 is streamlined,
eliminates substantial material and incorporates referee comments: 19 pages,
14 figures, 3 table
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