6,417 research outputs found
Mechanical testing of polyurethane foams to cover lower limb prostheses
Despite the aesthetic and functional importance of foam cosmeses, the foam mechanical behaviour has not been quantified in the literature. This paper reports the results of testing two commonly used foams to determine their material properties. The works aims to enable the FEA modelling of cosmeses
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A Simple Approach to Project Extreme Old Age Mortality Rates and Value Mortality-Related Financial Instruments
This article shows how mortality models that involve age effects can be fitted to ages beyond the sample range using projections of age effects as replacements for age effects that might not be in the sample. This ‘projected age effect’ approach allows insurers to use age-effect mortality models to obtain valuations of financial instruments such as annuities that depend on projections of extreme old ag
Bridging the Gap between Ornithology and Fisheries Science: Use of Seabird Data in Stock Assessment Models
Seabirds and marine fish share habitats and food webs, but there is too little contact between the disciplines that study them. Fish stock assessment models, designed for use on teleost fishes with high fecundity, high recruitment variability, and continued growth throughout life, may be strengthened by inclusion of seabird data. In some circumstances seabird-based indices of prey abundance could assist in calibration of sequential population analysis of fish stocks. Seabird energy acquisition rates, equivalent to fisheries catch per unit effort, are the most promising avian indicators of stock size. Seabird data may be useful in predicting recruitment of commercial fisheries and in improving estimates of natural fish mortality. The impact of seabird predation on fish stocks depends on the age of targeted fish and their subsequent growth and mortality. Yield-per-recruit analyses, derived from fisheries science, suggest that under plausible conditions the impact of seabird predation on fish stocks may be amplified by avian preference for small prey. Increased collaboration between seabird biology and fisheries science will benefit conservation of both birds and fish
“I always need my mum”: social capital, social learning and student housing transitions in Northern Ireland
This article provides an overview of outcomes from recent research on student housing transitions in Northern Ireland.The study reveals that almost three quarters of respondents in this undergraduate survey were living in the parental home, a finding in line with broader European trends. Statistical analysis using SPSS revealed that there were differences according to socio-economic background in housing behaviour. Social capital, represented by proxy indicators of family and friendship ties, helps further explain how those at home manage living with their parents and throws light on what enables a successful transition to independent living for those who have left home. Using terminology associated with Putnam (2000), living independently relates to possession of bridging social capital, while those living at home tend to have strong ties with their immediate family. Many of these home-stayers also lack affinity with local or broader European identities, while those living independently are not only more spatially dislocated but also more open towards trans-national identities
Simultaneous multi-frequency single-pulse properties of AXP XTE J1810-197
We have used the 76-m Lovell, 94-m equivalent WSRT and 100-m Effelsberg radio
telescopes to investigate the simultaneous single-pulse properties of the radio
emitting magnetar AXP XTE J1810-197 at frequencies of 1.4, 4.8 and 8.35 GHz
during May and July 2006. We study the magnetar's pulse-energy distributions
which are found to be very peculiar as they are changing on time-scales of days
and cannot be fit by a single statistical model. The magnetar exhibits strong
spiky single giant-pulse-like subpulses, but they do not fit the definition of
the giant pulse or giant micropulse phenomena. Measurements of the
longitude-resolved modulation index reveal a high degree of intensity
fluctuations on day-to-day time-scales and dramatic changes across pulse phase.
We find the frequency evolution of the modulation index values differs
significantly from what is observed in normal radio pulsars. We find that no
regular drifting subpulse phenomenon is present at any of the observed
frequencies at any observing epoch. However, we find a quasi-periodicity of the
subpulses present in the majority of the observing sessions. A correlation
analysis indicates a relationship between components from different
frequencies. We discuss the results of our analysis in light of the emission
properties of normal radio pulsars and a recently proposed model which takes
radio emission from magnetars into consideration.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
Solar coronal electron heating by short-wavelength dispersive shear Alfvén waves
This work was partially supported by the STFC through the Centre for Fundamental Physics (CfFP) at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Chilton, Didcot, UK. BE acknowledges support by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), UK, Grant no EP/M009386/1.The electron heating of the solar coronal plasma has remained one of the most important problems in solar physics. An explanation of the electron heating rests on the identification of the energy source and appropriate physical mechanisms via which the energy can be channelled to the electrons. Our objective here is to present an estimate for the electron heating rate in the presence of finite amplitude short-wavelength (in comparison with the ion gyroradius) dispersive shear Alfven (SWDSA) waves that propagate obliquely to the ambient magnetic field direction in the solar corona. Specifically, it is demonstrated that SWDSA waves can significantly contribute to the solar coronal electron heating via collisionless heating involving SWDSA wave-electron interactions.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Reported frequency of physical activity in a large epidemiological study: relationship to specific activities and repeatability over time
BACKGROUND How overall physical activity relates to specific activities and how reported activity changes over time may influence interpretation of observed associations between physical activity and health. We examine the relationships between various physical activities self-reported at different times in a large cohort study of middle-aged UK women. METHODS At recruitment, Million Women Study participants completed a baseline questionnaire including questions on frequency of strenuous and of any physical activity. About 3 years later 589,896 women also completed a follow-up questionnaire reporting the hours they spent on a range of specific activities. Time spent on each activity was used to estimate the associated excess metabolic equivalent hours (MET-hours) and this value was compared across categories of physical activity reported at recruitment. Additionally, 18,655 women completed the baseline questionnaire twice, at intervals of up to 4 years; repeatability over time was assessed using the weighted kappa coefficient (κweighted) and absolute percentage agreement. RESULTS The average number of hours per week women reported doing specific activities was 14.0 for housework, 4.5 for walking, 3.0 for gardening, 0.2 for cycling, and 1.4 for all strenuous activity. Time spent and the estimated excess MET-hours associated with each activity increased with increasing frequency of any or strenuous physical activity reported at baseline (tests for trend, P < 0.003), although the associations for housework were by far the weakest (Spearman correlations, 0.01 and -0.03 respectively for housework, and 0.11-0.37 for all other activities). Repeatability of responses to physical activity questions on the baseline questionnaire declined significantly over time. For strenuous activity, absolute agreement was 64% (κweighted = 0.71) for questionnaires administered less than 6 months apart, and 52% (κweighted = 0.51) for questionnaires more than 2 years apart. Corresponding values for any physical activity were 57% (κweighted = 0.67) and 47% (κweighted = 0.58). CONCLUSIONS In this cohort, responses to simple questions on the frequency of any physical activity and of strenuous activity asked at baseline were associated with hours spent on specific activities and the associated estimated excess MET-hours expended, reported 3 years later. The weakest associations were with housework. Agreement for identical questions asked on two occasions about the frequency of physical activity decreased over time.This work was supported by public funds from Cancer
Research UK and the UK Medical Research Council
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