7,912 research outputs found
Standards for CHERG reviews of intervention effects on child survival
Background The Lives Saved Tool (LiST) uses estimates of the effects of interventions on cause-specific child mortality as a basis for generating projections of child lives that could be saved by increasing coverage of effective interventions. Estimates of intervention effects are an essential element of LiST, and need to reflect the best available scientific evidence. This article describes the guidelines developed by the Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group (CHERG) that are applied by scientists conducting reviews of intervention effects for use in LiST
Practice Makes Imperfect: Restorative Effects of Sleep on Motor Learning
Emerging evidence suggests that sleep plays a key role in procedural learning, particularly in the continued development of motor skill learning following initial acquisition. We argue that a detailed examination of the time course of performance across sleep on the finger-tapping task, established as the paradigm for studying the effect of sleep on motor learning, will help distinguish a restorative role of sleep in motor skill learning from a proactive one. Healthy subjects rehearsed for 12 trials and, following a night of sleep, were tested. Early training rapidly improved speed as well as accuracy on pre-sleep training. Additional rehearsal caused a marked slow-down in further improvement or partial reversal in performance to observed levels below theoretical upper limits derived on the basis of early pre-sleep rehearsal. This decrement in learning efficacy does not occur always, but if and only if it does, overnight sleep has an effect in fully or partly restoring the efficacy and actual performance to the optimal theoretically achieveable level. Our findings re-interpret the sleep-dependent memory enhancement in motor learning reported in the literature as a restoration of fatigued circuitry specialized for the skill. In providing restitution to the fatigued brain, sleep eliminates the rehearsal-induced synaptic fatigue of the circuitry specialized for the task and restores the benefit of early pre-sleep rehearsal. The present findings lend support to the notion that latent sleep-dependent enhancement of performance is a behavioral expression of the brain's restitution in sleep
Starspot Jitter in Photometry, Astrometry and Radial Velocity Measurements
Analytical relations are derived for the amplitude of astrometric,
photometric and radial velocity perturbations caused by a single rotating spot.
The relative power of the star spot jitter is estimated and compared with the
available data for Ceti and HD 166435, as well as with numerical
simulations for Ceti and the Sun. A Sun-like star inclined at
i=90\degr at 10 pc is predicted to have a RMS jitter of 0.087 \uas in its
astrometric position along the equator, and 0.38 m s in radial
velocities. If the presence of spots due to stellar activity is the ultimate
limiting factor for planet detection, the sensitivity of SIM Lite to Earth-like
planets in habitable zones is about an order of magnitude higher that the
sensitivity of prospective ultra-precise radial velocity observations of nearby
stars.Comment: accepted in ApJ Letters, Nov. 200
Zinc for the treatment of diarrhoea: effect on diarrhoea morbidity, mortality and incidence of future episodes
Background Zinc supplementation for the treatment of diarrhoea has been shown to decrease the duration and severity of the diarrhoeal episode, diarrhoea hospitalization rates and, in some studies, all-cause mortality. Using multiple outcome measures, we sought to estimate the effect of zinc for the treatment of diarrhoea on diarrhoea mortality and subsequent pneumonia mortality
Rotation periods of exoplanet host stars
The stellar rotation periods of ten exoplanet host stars have been determined
using newly analysed Ca II H & K flux records from Mount Wilson Observatory and
Stromgren b, y photometric measurements from Tennessee State University's
automatic photometric telescopes (APTs) at Fairborn Observatory. Five of the
rotation periods have not previously been reported, with that of HD 130322 very
strongly detected at Prot = 26.1 \pm 3.5 d. The rotation periods of five other
stars have been updated using new data. We use the rotation periods to derive
the line-of-sight inclinations of the stellar rotation axes, which may be used
to probe theories of planet formation and evolution when combined with the
planetary orbital inclination found from other methods. Finally, we estimate
the masses of fourteen exoplanets under the assumption that the stellar
rotation axis is aligned with the orbital axis. We calculate the mass of HD
92788 b (28 MJ) to be within the low-mass brown dwarf regime and suggest that
this object warrants further investigation to confirm its true nature.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 15 pages, 11 figure
Oscillations of a solid sphere falling through a wormlike micellar fluid
We present an experimental study of the motion of a solid sphere falling
through a wormlike micellar fluid. While smaller or lighter spheres quickly
reach a terminal velocity, larger or heavier spheres are found to oscillate in
the direction of their falling motion. The onset of this instability correlates
with a critical value of the velocity gradient scale
s. We relate this condition to the known complex rheology of wormlike
micellar fluids, and suggest that the unsteady motion of the sphere is caused
by the formation and breaking of flow-induced structures.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Daytime Naps, Motor Memory Consolidation and Regionally Specific Sleep Spindles
BACKGROUND: Increasing evidence demonstrates that motor-skill memories improve across a night of sleep, and that non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep commonly plays a role in orchestrating these consolidation enhancements. Here we show the benefit of a daytime nap on motor memory consolidation and its relationship not simply with global sleep-stage measures, but unique characteristics of sleep spindles at regionally specific locations; mapping to the corresponding memory representation. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Two groups of subjects trained on a motor-skill task using their left hand – a paradigm known to result in overnight plastic changes in the contralateral, right motor cortex. Both groups trained in the morning and were tested 8 hr later, with one group obtaining a 60–90 minute intervening midday nap, while the other group remained awake. At testing, subjects that did not nap showed no significant performance improvement, yet those that did nap expressed a highly significant consolidation enhancement. Within the nap group, the amount of offline improvement showed a significant correlation with the global measure of stage-2 NREM sleep. However, topographical sleep spindle analysis revealed more precise correlations. Specifically, when spindle activity at the central electrode of the non-learning hemisphere (left) was subtracted from that in the learning hemisphere (right), representing the homeostatic difference following learning, strong positive relationships with offline memory improvement emerged–correlations that were not evident for either hemisphere alone. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results demonstrate that motor memories are dynamically facilitated across daytime naps, enhancements that are uniquely associated with electrophysiological events expressed at local, anatomically discrete locations of the brain
Citizen Science Provides Valuable Data for Monitoring Global Night Sky Luminance
The skyglow produced by artificial lights at night is one of the most dramatic
anthropogenic modifications of Earth’s biosphere. The GLOBE at Night citizen
science project allows individual observers to quantify skyglow using star
maps showing different levels of light pollution. We show that aggregated
GLOBE at Night data depend strongly on artificial skyglow, and could be used
to track lighting changes worldwide. Naked eye time series can be expected to
be very stable, due to the slow pace of human eye evolution. The standard
deviation of an individual GLOBE at Night observation is found to be 1.2
stellar magnitudes. Zenith skyglow estimates from the ‘‘First World Atlas of
Artificial Night Sky Brightness’’ are tested using a subset of the GLOBE at
Night data. Although we find the World Atlas overestimates sky brightness in
the very center of large cities, its predictions for Milky Way visibility are
accurate
Single photon emission from silicon-vacancy centres in CVD-nano-diamonds on iridium
We introduce a process for the fabrication of high quality, spatially
isolated nano-diamonds on iridium via microwave plasma assisted CVD-growth. We
perform spectroscopy of single silicon-vacancy (SiV)-centres produced during
the growth of the nano-diamonds. The colour centres exhibit extraordinary
narrow zero-phonon-lines down to 0.7 nm at room temperature. Single photon
count rates up to 4.8 Mcps at saturation make these SiV-centres the brightest
diamond based single photon sources to date. We measure for the first time the
fine structure of a single SiV-centre thus confirming the atomic composition of
the investigated colour centres.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures, accepted by New Journal of Physic
Linguistics
Contains research objectives and reports on five research projects.National Institutes of Health (Grant 1 P01 MH-13390-02
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