1,078 research outputs found

    Community Engagement, Report 2: The Findings

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    On a Dynamical Origin for Fermion Generations

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    We investigate a proposal to address several outstanding shortcomings of the perturbative Standard Model (SM) of particle physics. The appeal of this proposal is that these features are a manifestation of the non-perturbative sector of the SM, requiring no assumptions about new physics beyond presently attainable experimental limits. In this thesis we apply non-perturbative techniques to two complementary models: a toy 4-fermion model containing explicit chiral symmetry-breaking terms and the quenched hypercharge gauge interaction. Understanding of how fermion mass, generations and CP-violation might arise is first investigated in the toy 4-fermion model. It is shown that different scale-invariant 4-fermion operators are present for the three subspaces of the full theory, enabling self-consistent introduction of three fermion generations. The second part of the thesis is concerned with dynamical fermion mass generation in the quenched hypercharge interaction. In particular we follow the successful procedure developed for QED, developing a 1-loop renormalisable vertex {\it ansatz} for solution of the fermion self-energy Dyson-Schwinger equation. We find two mass "gaps", possibly corresponding to two types of scalar 4-fermion pairing. These "gaps" cannot, however, be interpreted as physical fermion mass. An alternative possibility, that of a rearrangement of fermionic degrees of freedom analogous to spin-charge separation in condensed matter physics, is also briefly outlined.Comment: PhD thesis, accepted 24/09/03. 108 pages, 11 figures (ps and eps

    Enabling Real-Time Ultrasound Imaging of Soft Tissue Mechanical Properties by Simplification of the Shear Wave Motion Equation

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    Ultrasound based shear wave elastography (SWE) is a technique used for non-invasive characterization and imaging of soft tissue mechanical properties. Robust estimation of shear wave propagation speed is essential for imaging of soft tissue mechanical properties. In this study we propose to estimate shear wave speed by inversion of the firstorder wave equation following directional filtering. This approach relies on estimation of first-order derivatives which allows for accurate estimations using smaller smoothing filters than when estimating second-order derivatives. The performance was compared to three current methods used to estimate shear wave propagation speed: direct inversion of the wave equation (DIWE), time-to-peak (TTP) and crosscorrelation (CC). The shear wave speed of three homogeneous phantoms of different elastic moduli (gelatin by weight of 5%, 7%, and 9%) were measured with each method. The proposed method was shown to produce shear speed estimates comparable to the conventional methods (standard deviation of measurements being 0.13 m/s, 0.05 m/s, and 0.12 m/s), but with simpler processing and usually less time (by a factor of 1, 13, and 20 for DIWE, CC, and TTP respectively). The proposed method was able to produce a 2-D speed estimate from a single direction of wave propagation in about four seconds using an off-the-shelf PC, showing the feasibility of performing real-time or near real-time elasticity imaging with dedicated hardware

    Effects of Local Blood Flow on Muscle Stiffness

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    Muscle injuries, in the form of strains or even tears, affect millions of people each year through undue tension on muscles during everyday activities, work tasks, or physical activity including sports or working out. These injuries can take from a few weeks to even months to heal, with patients having to deal with inflammation, swelling, and pain throughout the healing process. Scar tissue also forms when the muscle is injured, which regenerates throughout the healing process, but never fully recovers to its state prior to injury. This scar tissue is thought to make the muscle more prone to subsequent injury, making it important to avoid muscle injuries to begin with so as to not lose overall strength and range of motion. Although there are currently certain activities identified to increase the probability of muscle injury, there is limited evidence as to what physiological components may make an individual more susceptible to injury. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to look at the association between two measures; blood flow velocity through muscle using Doppler ultrasound and the muscle\u27s stiffness, or Young\u27s modulus, using ultrasound elastography. A notable correlation between the two factors could allow clinicians to know if patients have a predisposition to muscle injury due to their rate of blood flow

    Cannabis use and disorder transitions among a mixed community sample of at-risk adolescents and adults: A prospective New Zealand study

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    Introduction and Aims: The trajectories of cannabis use disorder (CUD) require more comprehensive delineation to expedite recognition of incubating dependence among high-risk users. This study examined baseline cannabis use and CUD over 12 months using DSM-IV/ICD10 diagnoses to distinguish transition groups. Design and Methods: In a prospective naturalistic design, 194 heterogeneous cannabis users (128 adolescents, 66 adults) aged 13-61 years were voluntarily recruited and assessed at baseline, and then re-assessed 12-months later. Results: Most participants met criteria for a baseline CUD (70% dependence, 20% abuse), 12 adolescents were 'diagnostic orphans', and 5 symptom-free. At follow-up, 25% adolescents reported using less, 6% the same level, and 69% using more cannabis. Significantly increased symptoms and dependence severity were reported, with no adolescent/adult differences evident. Three diagnostic transition groups were identified. While 84% adolescents (n=108) remained stable, 5% (n=7) had improved, 10% (n=13) had deteriorated. ‘Deteriorators’ scored significantly higher than ‘improvers’ on cannabis use, symptoms, and dependence severity measures. A subjective loss of control over cannabis use was among the earliest DSM-IV features among younger users on a trajectory towards dependence. Most participants (79%) anticipated difficulty trying to reduce/quit their use. Discussion and Conclusions: Younger adolescents can rapidly develop cannabis dependence, reporting similar and equally severe symptoms as longer-term adult users. Impaired control over use occurs early in trajectories towards dependence. The seeming intractability of problematic cannabis use calls for concerted cannabis screening and early intervention (SEI) efforts at an earlier age to avert or reduce harmful consequences of cannabis use in the community.falsefals
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