162 research outputs found

    Kosten van technologie en infrastructuur kunnen lager (1) 'verwarrende omgevingsfactoren' elimineren

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    Industriele ondernemingen hebben vaak moeite om hun produkten af te zetten tegen een prijs die de continuiteit kan garanderen. De vraag rijst of dit komt doordat de prijs van de toegepaste technologie te hoog is, of de prijs van de infrastructuur die het bedrijf nodig heeft om zijn technologie aan te wenden. In ieder geval herkennen we een aantal acties die er op gericht zijn om de kosten die gepaard gaan met de technologie en met de infrastuctuur te verminderen. Industriele ondernemingen hebben vaak moeite om hun produkten af te zetten tegen een prijs die de continuiteit kan garanderen. De vraag rijst of dit komt doordat de prijs van de toegepaste technologie te hoog is, of de prijs van de infrastructuur die het bedrijf nodig heeft om zijn technieken aan te wenden. In ieder geval herkennen we een aantal acties die er op gericht zijn om de kosten die gepaard gaan met de technologie en met de infrastructuur te verminderen

    Het inkomen van de onderneming

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    Расчет потерь давления воздуха в горных выработках с учетом равномерных и неравномерных утечек

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    Охарактеризовано метод розрахунку втрат тиску повітря у гірничих виробках за наявності витоків (притоків), який може бути використано під час проектування системи провітрювання шахти з метою вибору засобів місцевого керування повітряних потоків, розрахунку конфігурації ліній витоку у виробленому просторі та при оцінці зміни витоків у аварійній ситуації і розробці методів керування ними.The method of calculation losses of pressure of air in the mining workings at presence of leakages (inflows), which can be used for planning of the ventilation system of mine with the purpose of choice facilities of the local control of air blast, calculation of configuration lines of leakages in the worked out goaf and at estimation change of leakages in an emergency situation and development methods of control by them

    EEG Microstate Analysis in Drug-Naive Patients with Panic Disorder

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    Patients with panic disorder (PD) have a bias to respond to normal stimuli in a fearful way. This may be due to the preactivation of fear-associated networks prior to stimulus perception. Based on EEG, we investigated the difference between patients with PD and normal controls in resting state activity using features of transiently stable brain states (microstates). EEGs from 18 drug-naive patients and 18 healthy controls were analyzed. Microstate analysis showed that one class of microstates (with a right-anterior to left-posterior orientation of the mapped field) displayed longer durations and covered more of the total time in the patients than controls. Another microstate class (with a symmetric, anterior-posterior orientation) was observed less frequently in the patients compared to controls. The observation that selected microstate classes differ between patients with PD and controls suggests that specific brain functions are altered already during resting condition. The altered resting state may be the starting point of the observed dysfunctional processing of phobic stimuli

    The Netherlands study of depression in older persons (NESDO); a prospective cohort study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>To study late-life depression and its unfavourable course and co morbidities in The Netherlands.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We designed the Netherlands Study of Depression in Older Persons (NESDO), a multi-site naturalistic prospective cohort study which makes it possible to examine the determinants, the course and the consequences of depressive disorders in older persons over a period of six years, and to compare these with those of depression earlier in adulthood.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>From 2007 until 2010, the NESDO consortium has recruited 510 depressed and non depressed older persons (≥ 60 years) at 5 locations throughout the Netherlands. Depressed persons were recruited from both mental health care institutes and general practices in order to include persons with late-life depression in various developmental and severity stages. Non-depressed persons were recruited from general practices. The baseline assessment included written questionnaires, interviews, a medical examination, cognitive tests and collection of blood and saliva samples. Information was gathered about mental health outcomes and demographic, psychosocial, biological, cognitive and genetic determinants. The baseline NESDO sample consists of 378 depressed (according to DSM-IV criteria) and 132 non-depressed persons aged 60 through 93 years. 95% had a major depression and 26.5% had dysthymia. Mean age of onset of the depressive disorder was around 49 year. For 33.1% of the depressed persons it was their first episode. 41.0% of the depressed persons had a co morbid anxiety disorder. Follow up assessments are currently going on with 6 monthly written questionnaires and face-to-face interviews after 2 and 6 years.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The NESDO sample offers the opportunity to study the neurobiological, psychosocial and physical determinants of depression and its long-term course in older persons. Since largely similar measures were used as in the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA; age range 18-65 years), data can be pooled thus creating a large longitudinal database of clinically depressed persons with adequate power and a large set of neurobiological, psychosocial and physical variables from both younger and older depressed persons.</p

    Neuroimaging in anxiety disorders

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    Neuroimaging studies have gained increasing importance in validating neurobiological network hypotheses for anxiety disorders. Functional imaging procedures and radioligand binding studies in healthy subjects and in patients with anxiety disorders provide growing evidence of the existence of a complex anxiety network, including limbic, brainstem, temporal, and prefrontal cortical regions. Obviously, “normal anxiety” does not equal “pathological anxiety” although many phenomena are evident in healthy subjects, however to a lower extent. Differential effects of distinct brain regions and lateralization phenomena in different anxiety disorders are mentioned. An overview of neuroimaging investigations in anxiety disorders is given after a brief summary of results from healthy volunteers. Concluding implications for future research are made by the authors
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