128 research outputs found
Random close packing of granular matter
We propose an interpretation of the random close packing of granular
materials as a phase transition, and discuss the possibility of experimental
verification.Comment: 6 page
CASSETTE—clindamycin adjunctive therapy for severe Staphylococcus aureus treatment evaluation: Study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
Background
Exotoxins are important virulence factors in Staphylococcus aureus. Clindamycin, a protein synthesis inhibitor antibiotic, is thought to limit exotoxin production and improve outcomes in severe S. aureus infections. However, randomised prospective data to support this are lacking.
Methods
An open-label, multicentre, randomised controlled trial (RCT) will compare outcome differences in severe S. aureus infection between standard treatment (flucloxacillin/cefazolin in methicillin-susceptible S. aureus; and vancomycin/daptomycin in methicillin-resistant S. aureus) and standard treatment plus an additional clindamycin given for 7 days. We will include a minimum of 60 participants (both adult and children) in the pilot study. Participants will be enrolled within 72 h of an index culture. Severe infections will include septic shock, necrotising pneumonia, or multifocal and non-contiguous skin and soft tissue/osteoarticular infections. Individuals who are immunosuppressed, moribund, with current severe diarrhoea or Clostridiodes difficile infection, pregnant, and those with anaphylaxis to β-lactams or lincosamides will be excluded.
The primary outcomes measure is the number of days alive and free (1 or 0) of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) within the first 14 days post randomisation. The secondary outcomes measure will include all-cause mortality at 14, 42, and 90 days, time to resolution of SIRS, proportion with microbiological treatment failure, and rate of change of C-reactive protein over time. Impacts of inducible clindamycin resistance, strain types, methicillin susceptibility, and presence of various exotoxins will also be analysed.
Discussion
This study will assess the effect of adjunctive clindamycin on patient-centred outcomes in severe, toxin-mediated S. aureus infections. The pilot study will provide feasibility for a much larger RCT.
Trial registration
Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry, ACTRN12617001416381p. Registered on 6 October 2017
Sequential, successive, and simultaneous decoders for entanglement-assisted classical communication
Bennett et al. showed that allowing shared entanglement between a sender and
receiver before communication begins dramatically simplifies the theory of
quantum channels, and these results suggest that it would be worthwhile to
study other scenarios for entanglement-assisted classical communication. In
this vein, the present paper makes several contributions to the theory of
entanglement-assisted classical communication. First, we rephrase the
Giovannetti-Lloyd-Maccone sequential decoding argument as a more general
"packing lemma" and show that it gives an alternate way of achieving the
entanglement-assisted classical capacity. Next, we show that a similar
sequential decoder can achieve the Hsieh-Devetak-Winter region for
entanglement-assisted classical communication over a multiple access channel.
Third, we prove the existence of a quantum simultaneous decoder for
entanglement-assisted classical communication over a multiple access channel
with two senders. This result implies a solution of the quantum simultaneous
decoding conjecture for unassisted classical communication over quantum
multiple access channels with two senders, but the three-sender case still
remains open (Sen recently and independently solved this unassisted two-sender
case with a different technique). We then leverage this result to recover the
known regions for unassisted and assisted quantum communication over a quantum
multiple access channel, though our proof exploits a coherent quantum
simultaneous decoder. Finally, we determine an achievable rate region for
communication over an entanglement-assisted bosonic multiple access channel and
compare it with the Yen-Shapiro outer bound for unassisted communication over
the same channel.Comment: 33 pages, 2 figures; v2 contains a proof of the quantum simultaneous
decoding conjecture for two-sender quantum multiple access channels; v3 shows
how to recover the known unassisted and assisted quantum communication
regions with a coherent quantum simultaneous decode
Horizontal Branch Stars: The Interplay between Observations and Theory, and Insights into the Formation of the Galaxy
We review HB stars in a broad astrophysical context, including both variable
and non-variable stars. A reassessment of the Oosterhoff dichotomy is
presented, which provides unprecedented detail regarding its origin and
systematics. We show that the Oosterhoff dichotomy and the distribution of
globular clusters (GCs) in the HB morphology-metallicity plane both exclude,
with high statistical significance, the possibility that the Galactic halo may
have formed from the accretion of dwarf galaxies resembling present-day Milky
Way satellites such as Fornax, Sagittarius, and the LMC. A rediscussion of the
second-parameter problem is presented. A technique is proposed to estimate the
HB types of extragalactic GCs on the basis of integrated far-UV photometry. The
relationship between the absolute V magnitude of the HB at the RR Lyrae level
and metallicity, as obtained on the basis of trigonometric parallax
measurements for the star RR Lyrae, is also revisited, giving a distance
modulus to the LMC of (m-M)_0 = 18.44+/-0.11. RR Lyrae period change rates are
studied. Finally, the conductive opacities used in evolutionary calculations of
low-mass stars are investigated. [ABRIDGED]Comment: 56 pages, 22 figures. Invited review, to appear in Astrophysics and
Space Scienc
Multilab EcoFAB study shows highly reproducible physiology and depletion of soil metabolites by a model grass
There is a dynamic reciprocity between plants and their environment: soil physiochemical properties influence plant morphology and metabolism, and root morphology and exudates shape the environment surrounding roots. Here, we investigate the reproducibility of plant trait changes in response to three growth environments. We utilized fabricated ecosystem (EcoFAB) devices to grow the model grass Brachypodium distachyon in three distinct media across four laboratories: phosphate-sufficient and -deficient mineral media allowed assessment of the effects of phosphate starvation, and a complex, sterile soil extract represented a more natural environment with yet uncharacterized effects on plant growth and metabolism. Tissue weight and phosphate content, total root length, and root tissue and exudate metabolic profiles were consistent across laboratories and distinct between experimental treatments. Plants grown in soil extract were morphologically and metabolically distinct, with root hairs four times longer than with other growth conditions. Further, plants depleted half of the metabolites investigated from the soil extract. To interact with their environment, plants not only adapt morphology and release complex metabolite mixtures, but also selectively deplete a range of soil-derived metabolites. The EcoFABs utilized here generated high interlaboratory reproducibility, demonstrating their value in standardized investigations of plant traits
Effects of watershed land use on nitrogen concentrations and δ15 Nitrogen in groundwater
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2005. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Springer for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Biogeochemistry 77 (2006): 199-215, doi:10.1007/s10533-005-1036-2.Eutrophication is a major agent of change affecting freshwater, estuarine, and marine
systems. It is largely driven by transportation of nitrogen from natural and anthropogenic
sources. Research is needed to quantify this nitrogen delivery and to link the delivery to
specific land-derived sources. In this study we measured nitrogen concentrations and δ15N
values in seepage water entering three freshwater ponds and six estuaries on Cape Cod,
Massachusetts and assessed how they varied with different types of land use. Nitrate
concentrations and δ15N values in groundwater reflected land use in developed and pristine
watersheds. In particular, watersheds with larger populations delivered larger nitrate loads with
higher δ15N values to receiving waters. The enriched δ15N values confirmed nitrogen loading
model results identifying wastewater contributions from septic tanks as the major N source.
Furthermore, it was apparent that N coastal sources had a relatively larger impact on the N
loads and isotopic signatures than did inland N sources further upstream in the watersheds.
This finding suggests that management priorities could focus on coastal sources as a first
course of action. This would require management constraints on a much smaller population.This work was supported
by funds from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Sea Grant Program, from the
Cooperative Institute for Coastal and Estuarine Environmental Technology, from
Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection to Applied Science Associates,
Narragansett, RI, as well as from Palmer/McLeod and NOAA National Estuarine Research
Reserve Fellowships to Kevin Kroeger. This work is the result of research sponsored by NOAA
National Sea Grant College Program Office, Department of Commerce, under Grant No.
NA86RG0075, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Sea Grant Project No. R/M-40
Linking Distributive and Procedural Justice to Employee Engagement Through Social Exchange: A Field Study in India
Research linking justice perceptions to employee outcomes has referred to social exchange as its central theoretical premise. We tested a conceptual model linking distributive and procedural justice to employee engagement through social exchange mediators, namely, perceived organizational support and psychological contract, among 238 managers and executives from manufacturing and service sector firms in India. Findings suggest that perceived organizational support mediated the relationship between distributive justice and employee engagement, and both perceived organizational support and psychological contract mediated the relationship between procedural justice and employee engagement. Theoretical and practical implications with respect to organizational functions are discussed
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