313 research outputs found
Manifestation of one- and two-body currents in longitudinal and transverse response functions of the 12C nucleus at q = 300 MeV/c
The experimental values of longitudinal and transverse response functions of
the 12C nucleus have been obtained at the 3-momentum transfer q = 300 MeV/c.
The data are compared with the calculations made with due regard to the
dynamics of all the nucleons constituting the 12C nucleus, and also, to the
contributions of both the one-body currents only, and their combination with
two-body currents.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Saturation of Coulomb sum rules in the 6^Li case
The Coulomb sums S_L(q) of the 6^Li nucleus have been obtained from electron
scattering measurements at 3-momentum transfers q = 1.125 - 1.625 fm^{-1}. It
is found that at q > 1.35 fm^{-1} the Coulomb sum of the nucleus becomes
saturated: S_L(q) = 1.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
The Coulomb sum of 7Li
The experimental values of longitudinal response function of the 7Li nucleus have been obtained and these results have been used as the basis to find the Coulomb sum values at momentum transfers ranging from 0.55 to 1.625 fm-1. The obtained experimental Coulomb sum values have been used to determine the total Coulomb energy of the 7Li nucleus. The result of the comparison of the Coulomb energy for the 7Li nucleus with the Coulomb energies for the 6Li and 4He nuclei a) is consistent with the paradox (revealed in the elastic electron scattering experiment) that the 7Li rms charge radius is smaller than the one of the 6Li nucleus; b) leads to the conclusion that, within the framework of the two-cluster model of the 7Li nucleus (α + t), the size of the α-cluster should be larger than the one of the 4He nucleus
Brain biomarkers and brain tissue oxygenation: changes and correlations following severe head injury
A new approach to evidence synthesis in traumatic brain injury: a living systematic review
Living systematic reviews (LSRs) are online summaries of health care research that are updated as new research becomes available. This new development in evidence synthesis is being trialled as part of the Collaborative European NeuroTrauma Effectiveness Research in Traumatic Brain Injury (CENTER-TBI) project. We will develop and sustain an international TBI knowledge community that maintains up-to-date, high quality LSRs of the current state of knowledge in the most important questions in TBI. Automatic search updates will be run three-monthly, and newly identified studies incorporated into the review. Review teams will seek to publish journal updates at regular intervals, with abridged updates available more frequently online. Future project stages include the integration of LSR and other study findings into "living" clinical practice guidance. It is hoped these efforts will go some way to bridging current temporal disconnects between evidence, guidelines, and practice in TBI.Development and application of statistical models for medical scientific researc
Ecological and cultural factors underlying the global distribution of prejudice
Prejudiced attitudes and political nationalism vary widely around the world, but there has
been little research on what predicts this variation. Here we examine the ecological and cultural factors underlying the worldwide distribution of prejudice. We suggest that cultures
grow more prejudiced when they tighten cultural norms in response to destabilizing ecological threats. A set of seven archival analyses, surveys, and experiments (∑N = 3,986,402)
find that nations, American states, and pre-industrial societies with tighter cultural norms
show the most prejudice based on skin color, religion, nationality, and sexuality, and that
tightness predicts why prejudice is often highest in areas of the world with histories of ecological threat. People’s support for cultural tightness also mediates the link between perceived ecological threat and intentions to vote for nationalist politicians. Results replicate
when controlling for economic development, inequality, conservatism, residential mobility,
and shared cultural heritage. These findings offer a cultural evolutionary perspective on prejudice, with implications for immigration, intercultural conflict, and radicalization.publishedVersio
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