314 research outputs found
Aspects of Type 0 String Theory
A construction of compact tachyon-free orientifolds of the non-supersymmetric
Type 0B string theory is presented. Moreover, we study effective
non-supersymmetric gauge theories arising on self-dual D3-branes in Type 0B
orbifolds and orientifolds.Comment: 9 pages, LATEX; submitted to Proceedings of Strings '9
Anomaly Free Non-Supersymmetric Large Gauge Theories from Orientifolds
We construct anomaly free non-supersymmetric large N gauge theories from
orientifolds of Type IIB on C^3/G orbifolds. In particular, massless as well as
tachyonic one-loop tadpoles are cancelled in these models. This is achieved by
starting with supersymmetric orientifolds with well defined
world-sheet description and including discrete torsion (which breaks
supersymmetry) in the orbifold action. In this way we obtain non-trivial
non-chiral as well as anomaly free chiral large N gauge theories. We point out
certain subtleties arising in the chiral cases. Subject to certain assumptions,
these theories are shown to have the property that computation of any M-point
correlation function in these theories reduces to the corresponding computation
in the parent oriented theory. This generalizes the analogous
results recently obtained in supersymmetric large N gauge theories from
orientifolds, as well as in (non)supersymmetric large N gauge theories without
orientifold planes.Comment: 18 pages, revtex, minor misprints corrected, a clarifying footnote
added (to appear in Phys. Rev. D
World-sheet duality for D-branes with travelling waves
We study D-branes with plane waves of arbitrary profiles as examples of
time-dependent backgrounds in string theory. We show how to reproduce the
quantum mechanical (one-to-one) open-string S-matrix starting from the
closed-string boundary state for the D-branes, thereby establishing the channel
duality of this calculation. The required Wick rotation to a Lorentzian
worldsheet singles out as 'prefered' time coordinate the open-string light-cone
time.Comment: 17 pages, Latex file, uses JHEP3.cls, two figures. Added references
and corrected two typo
Safety outcomes during pediatric GH therapy: final results from the prospective GeNeSIS observational program
CONTEXT: Safety concerns regarding premature mortality, diabetes, neoplasia and cerebrovascular disease in association with growth hormone (GH) therapy have been raised.
OBJECTIVE: To assess incidence of key safety outcomes.
DESIGN: Prospective, multinational, observational study (1999-2015).
SETTING: 22,311 GH-treated children from 827 investigative sites in 30 countries.
PATIENTS: Children with growth disorders.
INTERVENTIONS: GH treatment.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Standardized mortality (SMR) and incidence (SIR) ratios with 95% confidence intervals (CI) for mortality, diabetes, and primary cancer, using general population registries.
RESULTS: Predominant short stature diagnoses were GH deficiency (63%), idiopathic short stature (13%), and Turner syndrome (8%), with mean±SD follow-up of 4.2±3.2 years (âŒ92,000 person-years [PY]). Forty-two deaths occurred in patients with follow-up, with SMR (95% CI) of 0.61 (0.44-0.82); the SMR was elevated for patients with cancer-related organic GH deficiency (5.87 [3.21-9.85]). Based on 18 cases, Type 2 diabetes (T2DM) risk was elevated (SIR 3.77 [2.24-5.96]), but 72% had risk factors. In patients without cancer history, 14 primary cancers were observed (SIR 0.71 [0.39-1.20]). Second neoplasms occurred in 31/622 (5.0%) cancer survivors (10.7 [7.5-15.2] cases/1000 PY), and intracranial tumor recurrences in 67/823 (8.1%) tumor survivors (16.9 [13.3-21.5] cases/1000 PY). All 3 hemorrhagic stroke cases had risk factors.
CONCLUSIONS: GeNeSIS data support the favourable safety profile of pediatric GH treatment. Overall risk for death or primary cancer was not elevated in GH-treated children, and no hemorrhagic strokes occurred in patients without risk factors. T2DM incidence was elevated compared to the general population, but most cases had diabetes risk factors
Educational Attainment at Age 10â11Â Years Predicts Health Risk Behaviors and Injury Risk During Adolescence
Purpose: To examine the effect of educational attainment in primary school on later adolescent
health.
Methods: Education data attainments at age 7 and 11 were linked with (1) primary and secondary
care injury consultation/admissions and (2) the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children survey.
Cox regression was carried out to examine if attainment in primary school predicts time to injury
in adolescence.
Results: Pupils that achieve attainment at age 7 but not at age 11 (i.e., declining attainment over
time in primary school) are more likely to have an injury during adolescence. These children are
also more likely to self-report drinking in adolescence.
Conclusions: Interventions aimed at children with declining attainment in primary school could
help to improve adolescent health
Semi-supervised prediction of protein subcellular localization using abstraction augmented Markov models
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Determination of protein subcellular localization plays an important role in understanding protein function. Knowledge of the subcellular localization is also essential for genome annotation and drug discovery. Supervised machine learning methods for predicting the localization of a protein in a cell rely on the availability of large amounts of labeled data. However, because of the high cost and effort involved in labeling the data, the amount of labeled data is quite small compared to the amount of unlabeled data. Hence, there is a growing interest in developing <it>semi-supervised methods</it> for predicting protein subcellular localization from large amounts of unlabeled data together with small amounts of labeled data.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this paper, we present an Abstraction Augmented Markov Model (AAMM) based approach to semi-supervised protein subcellular localization prediction problem. We investigate the effectiveness of AAMMs in exploiting <it>unlabeled</it> data. We compare semi-supervised AAMMs with: (i) Markov models (MMs) (which do not take advantage of unlabeled data); (ii) an expectation maximization (EM); and (iii) a co-training based approaches to semi-supervised training of MMs (that make use of unlabeled data).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The results of our experiments on three protein subcellular localization data sets show that semi-supervised AAMMs: (i) can effectively exploit unlabeled data; (ii) are more accurate than both the MMs and the EM based semi-supervised MMs; and (iii) are comparable in performance, and in some cases outperform, the co-training based semi-supervised MMs.</p
The CardioMetabolic Health Alliance Working Toward a New Care Model for the Metabolic Syndrome
AbstractThe Cardiometabolic Think Tank was convened on June 20, 2014, in Washington, DC, as a âcall to actionâ activity focused on defining new patient care models and approaches to address contemporary issues of cardiometabolic risk and disease. Individual experts representing >20 professional organizations participated in this roundtable discussion. The Think Tank consensus was that the metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a complex pathophysiological state comprised of a cluster of clinically measured and typically unmeasured risk factors, is progressive in its course, and is associated with serious and extensive comorbidity, but tends to be clinically under-recognized. The ideal patient care model for MetS must accurately identify those at risk before MetS develops and must recognize subtypes and stages of MetS to more effectively direct prevention and therapies. This new MetS care model introduces both affirmed and emerging concepts that will require consensus development, validation, and optimization in the future
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