81 research outputs found

    Size Does Matter: Implied Object Size is Mentally Simulated During Language Comprehension

    Get PDF
    Embodied theories of language comprehension propose that readers construct a mental simulation of described objects that contains perceptual characteristics of their real-world referents. The present study is the first to investigate directly whether implied object size is mentally simulated during sentence comprehension and to study the potential influence of developmental factors on mental simulation by comparing adults' and children's mental simulation processing. Participants performed a sentence-picture verification task in which they read a sentence that implied a large or a small size for an object and then saw a picture of the object that matched or mismatched the implied size. Responses to pictures were faster when implied size and pictured size matched, suggesting that readers activated perceptual information on object size during sentence comprehension. The magnitude of the match effect was equal across age groups. The results contribute to refining and advancing knowledge with respect to the nature of mental simulations

    PQ.V.ALU.E: Post-Quantum RISC-V Custom ALU Extensions on Dilithium and Kyber

    Get PDF
    This paper explores the challenges and potential solutions of implementing the recommended upcoming post-quantum cryptography standards (the CRYSTALS-Dilithium and CRYSTALS-Kyber algorithms) on resource constrained devices. The high computational cost of polynomial operations, fundamental to cryptography based on ideal lattices, presents significant challenges in an efficient implementation. This paper proposes a hardware/software co-design strategy using RISC-V extensions to optimize resource utilization and speed up the number-theoretic transformations (NTTs). The primary contributions include a lightweight custom arithmetic logic unit (ALU), integrated into a 4-stage pipeline 32-bit RISC-V processor. This ALU is tailored towards the NTT computations and supports modular arithmetic as well as NTT butterfly operations. Furthermore, an extension to the RISC-V instruction set is introduced, with ten new instructions accessing the custom ALU to perform the necessary operations. The new instructions reduce the cycle count of the Kyber and Dilithium NTTs by more than 80% compared to optimized assembly, while being more lightweight than other works that exist in the literature

    Is emergency endovascular aneurysm repair associated with higher secondary intervention risk at mid-term follow-up?

    Get PDF
    ObjectiveThe study assessed mid-term outcome of emergency endovascular repair for acute infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysms, with special attention to secondary interventions.MethodsBetween May 1998 and August 2005, 56 patients underwent emergent endovascular repair for a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (n = 34) or an acute nonruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (n = 22). During the same period, 322 consecutive patients underwent elective endovascular aneurysm repair and were used as control group. Five types of stent grafts were used: Vanguard, Talent, Excluder, Zenith, and Quantum. Follow-up included abdominal radiograph, duplex ultrasound scanning, and computed tomographic angiography. Outcome measures included all-cause and aneurysm-related mortality, complications, and secondary interventions.ResultsMortality at 30 days was 18%, 5%, and 1% in the ruptured, acute nonruptured, and elective aneurysm groups, respectively. Overall mean follow-up was 38 ± 26 months. In the ruptured aneurysm group, survival was 67.8% ± 8.6% at 1 year and 62.1% ± 9.5% at 2 and 3 years. Seven secondary interventions (4 early and 3 late) were required in five patients (15%), with a cumulative risk of 9.2% ± 5.1% at 1 year and 16.2% ± 8.2% at 2 and 3 years. In the acute nonruptured aneurysm group, survival was 90.9% ± 6.1% at 1 year, 84.8% ± 8.2% at 2 years, and 76.4% ± 10.9% at 3 years. Four secondary interventions (1 early and 3 late) were required in four patients (18%), with a cumulative risk of 9.6% ± 6.5% at 1 and 2 years and 20.9% ± 12.0% at 3 years. In the elective aneurysm (control) group, survival was 95.2% ± 1.2% at 1 year, 89.9% ± 1.8% at 2 years, and 86.2% ± 2.1% at 3 years. A total of 51 secondary interventions (4 early, 47 late) were required in 38 patients (12%), with a cumulative risk of 4.2% ± 1.1% at 1 year, 7.6% ± 1.6% at 2 years, and 12.9% ± 2.2% at 3 years.ConclusionsTo our surprise, emergency endovascular aneurysm repair did not present with higher secondary intervention rate at mid-term follow-up

    Evaluating The Effectiveness of the Texas Medicaid First Dental Home Program Regarding Parental Knowledge and Practice of Oral Health Care for Children

    Get PDF
    Early childhood caries (ECC) is a problematic disease that has been on the rise in young pre-school age children within the last decade. Children who have untreated dental disease early in life, are at increased risk of having poor oral health throughout their lifetimes. Approximately 70% of dental disease is found in only 20% of the nation’s high-risk children. Professional organizations and governing bodies have formed several initiatives in order to help lower the prevalence of ECC in children. One such initiative, early preventive dental visits, i.e. dental home, has proven to be successful; yet, the evidence is limited in documenting its effectiveness. First Dental Home (FDH) is the state of Texas Medicaid initiative to improve access to care for children. FDH was initiated to improve oral healthcare for children aged 6 months to 35 months of age by providing simple, consistent messages regarding proper oral healthcare to the parents/caregivers of the children. Despite the large fiscal budget allocated towards the success of FDH, no studies regarding the program’s effectiveness have been published to date. This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of the FDH by comparing the knowledge, practice and opinions of participating vs. non-participating parents regarding their young children. A 29-question survey was given to mostly low-income parents who visited qualifying Medicaid clinics in North Texas (Dallas/Fort Worth) and South Texas (Harlingen). A total of 165 parents completed the survey. Several significant results emerged between the knowledge and practices responses of the parents sampled. On the knowledge section, FDH parents responded correctly more often than the non-FDH parents when asked about the recommended amount of toothpaste recommended for toddlers (p=0.023). In addition, 79.6% of FDH parents vs. 21.1% of non-FDH parents knew that tap water is a potential source of fluoride (p< 0.001). Regarding oral health practices, 80 % of FDH parents did not let their child go to sleep with anything such as a bottle, sippy cup or pacifier (p=0.01). Furthermore, FDH parents scored higher on the overall knowledge score (p<0.001) and practice score (p<0.001). Based on our preliminary findings, FDH visits are having a positive impact on parents by not only increasing their oral healthcare knowledge, but also helping them implement what they have learned

    Inspecting a picture before reading affects attentional processing but not comprehension

    Get PDF
    This study investigated whether presenting a picture before reading can encourage situation-model construction. We compared two conditions (n = 30) which differed in whether a picture of the initial situation described in a narrative text was presented before reading (i.e. pictorial-support condition) or not (i.e. no-picture condition). Situation-model construction was measured using both process- and product-oriented measures. Eye-tracking data indicated online resource allocation to the different levels of text representation: surface, textbase, and situation model. Literal text questions and inference questions were used as an offline indication of textbase and situation-model processing, respectively. The results showed that a picture presented before reading led to a redistribution of processing resources during reading, evidenced by a shift from textbase to situation-model processing. This attentional shift did not translate into higher comprehension scores. The results were interpreted in line with multimedia learning theories suggesting pictures can serve as a mental scaffold for situation-model construction

    Warm summers and rich biotic communities during N-Hemisphere deglaciation

    Get PDF
    Detailed studies on fossil remains of plants or animals in glacial lake sediments are rare. As a result, environmental conditions right at the moment of deglaciation of the large N-Hemisphere ice-sheets remain largely unknown. Here we study three deglacial phases of the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet as a unique, repeated element in a long sediment record preserved at Sokli in northern Finland. We summarize extensive multi-proxy data (diatoms, phytoliths, chironomids, pollen, spores, non-pollen palynomorphs, macrofossils, lithology, loss-on-ignition, C/N) obtained on glacial lake sediments dated to the early Holocene (ca. 10 kyr BP), early MIS 3 (ca. 50 kyr BP) and early MIS 5a (ca. 80 kyr BP). In contrast to the common view of an unproductive ice-marginal environment, our study reconstructs rich ecosystems both in the glacial lake and along the shores with forest on recently deglaciated land. Higher than present-day summer temperatures are reconstructed based on a large variety of aquatic taxa. Rich biota developed due to the insolation-induced postglacial warming and high nutrient levels, the latter resulting from erosion of fresh bedrock and sediment, leaching of surface soils, decay of plant material under shallow water conditions, and sudden decreases in lake volume. Aquatic communities responded quickly to deglaciation and warm summers and reflect boreal conditions, in contrast to the terrestrial ecosystem which responded with some delay probably due to time required for slow soil formation processes. Birch forest is reconstructed upon deglaciation of the large LGM ice-sheet and shrub tundra following the probably faster melting smaller MIS 4 and MIS 5b ice-sheets. Our study shows that glacial lake sediments can provide valuable palaeo-environmental data, that aquatic biota and terrestrial vegetation rapidly accommodated to new environmental conditions during deglaciation, and that glacial lake ecosystems, and the carbon stored in their sediments, should be included in earth system modeling.Peer reviewe

    Associations between depressive symptoms and disease progression in older patients with chronic kidney disease: results of the EQUAL study

    Get PDF
    Background Depressive symptoms are associated with adverse clinical outcomes in patients with end-stage kidney disease; however, few small studies have examined this association in patients with earlier phases of chronic kidney disease (CKD). We studied associations between baseline depressive symptoms and clinical outcomes in older patients with advanced CKD and examined whether these associations differed depending on sex. Methods CKD patients (&gt;= 65 years; estimated glomerular filtration rate &lt;= 20 mL/min/1.73 m(2)) were included from a European multicentre prospective cohort between 2012 and 2019. Depressive symptoms were measured by the five-item Mental Health Inventory (cut-off &lt;= 70; 0-100 scale). Cox proportional hazard analysis was used to study associations between depressive symptoms and time to dialysis initiation, all-cause mortality and these outcomes combined. A joint model was used to study the association between depressive symptoms and kidney function over time. Analyses were adjusted for potential baseline confounders. Results Overall kidney function decline in 1326 patients was -0.12 mL/min/1.73 m(2)/month. A total of 515 patients showed depressive symptoms. No significant association was found between depressive symptoms and kidney function over time (P = 0.08). Unlike women, men with depressive symptoms had an increased mortality rate compared with those without symptoms [adjusted hazard ratio 1.41 (95% confidence interval 1.03-1.93)]. Depressive symptoms were not significantly associated with a higher hazard of dialysis initiation, or with the combined outcome (i.e. dialysis initiation and all-cause mortality). Conclusions There was no significant association between depressive symptoms at baseline and decline in kidney function over time in older patients with advanced CKD. Depressive symptoms at baseline were associated with a higher mortality rate in men
    corecore