3,089 research outputs found
Recent Gypsum Exploration in Iowa
Until recently all interest in gypsum in Iowa, with the exception of brief activity at Centerville, was centered around the shallow deposits in the Fort Dodge area. During the past five years, however, interest in deeper gypsum has developed in the southern part of the State and both industry and civic groups have participated in exploratory drilling programs. With the exception of the Centerville area, this interest started with information obtained from the files of the Iowa Geological Survey
Resolving Discrepancies Between Surface and Subsurface Studies of the Maquoketa Formation of Northeast Iowa
The Maquoketa formation in the outcrop area has been assigned a maximum thickness of 257 feet by earlier surface workers. Recent subsurface study in the same area reveals a thickness of 300-320 feet of Maquoketa sediments. Until now the correlation of subsurface units to recognized surface members has been hampered by this discrepancy. The recognition and identification of a new unit in the Elgin member of the Maquoketa formation, and a greater measured thickness of the Isotelus zone has resolved this difference
The Canadian Neuromuscular Disease Registry 2010-2019: A Decade of Facilitating Clinical Research Througha Nationwide, Pan-NeuromuscularDisease Registry
We report the recruitment activities and outcomes of a multi-disease neuromuscular patient registry in Canada. The Canadian Neuromuscular Disease Registry (CNDR) registers individuals across Canada with a confirmed diagnosis of a neuromuscular disease. Diagnosis and contact information are collected across all diseases and detailed prospective data is collected for 5 specific diseases: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), Myotonic Dystrophy (DM), Limb Girdle Muscular Dystrophy (LGMD), and Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA). Since 2010, the CNDR has registered 4306 patients (1154 pediatric and 3148 adult) with 91 different neuromuscular diagnoses and has facilitated 125 projects (73 academic, 3 not-for-profit, 3 government, and 46 commercial) using registry data. In conclusion, the CNDR is an effective and productive pan-neuromuscular registry that has successfully facilitated a substantial number of studies over the past 10 years
Report of the Astronomy Committee
The present report relates only to the scientific needs of Astronomy. Its applications to the possible services that astronomers can render in the war, as a part of the work done by the National Research Council in connection with the Council of National Defense, will be made the subject of a separate study
Leptophobic U(1)'s and the R_b - R_c Crisis
In this paper, we investigate the possibility of explaining both the R_b
excess and the R_c deficit reported by the LEP experiments through Z-Z' mixing
effects. We have constructed a set of models consistent with a restrictive set
of principles: unification of the Standard Model (SM) gauge couplings, vector-
like additional matter, and couplings which are both generation-independent and
leptophobic. These models are anomaly-free, perturbative up to the GUT scale,
and contain realistic mass spectra. Out of this class of models, we find three
explicit realizations which fit the LEP data to a far better extent than the
unmodified SM or MSSM and satisfy all other phenomenological constraints which
we have investigated. One realization, the \eta-model coming from E_6, is
particularly attractive, arising naturally from geometrical compactifications
of heterotic string theory. This conclusion depends crucially on the inclusion
of a U(1) kinetic mixing term, whose value is correctly predicted by
renormalization group running in the E_6 model given one discrete choice of
spectra.Comment: LaTeX, 26 pages, 5 embedded EPSF figures. Version to be published in
Phys. Rev.
Access to specialist cancer care: is it equitable?
The first principle of the CalmanâHine report's recommendations on cancer services was that all patients should have access to a uniformly high quality of care wherever they may live. This study aimed to assess whether the uptake of chemotherapy for colorectal cancer varied by hospital type in Scotland. Hospitals were classified according to cancer specialisation rather than volume of patients. To indicate cancer specialisation, hospitals were classified as âcancer centresâ, âcancer unitsâ and ânon-cancerâ hospitals. Colorectal cancer cases were obtained from cancer registrations linked to hospital discharge data for the period January 1992 to December 1996. Multilevel logistic regression was used to model the binary outcome, namely whether or not a patient received chemotherapy within 6 months of first admission to any hospital. The results showed that patients admitted first to a ânon-cancerâ hospital were less than half as likely to go on to receive chemotherapy as those first admitted to a cancer unit or centre (OR=0.28). This result was not explained by distance between hospital of first admission and nearest cancer centre, nor by increasing age or severity of illness. The study covers the period immediately preceding the introduction of the CalmanâHine report in Scotland and should serve as a baseline for future monitoring of access to specialist care
Ethnicity, voter alignment and political party affiliation - an African case: Zambia
Conventional wisdom holds that ethnicity provides the social cleavage for voting behav-iour and party affiliation in Africa. Because this is usually inferred from aggregate data of national election results, it might prove to be an ecological fallacy. The evidence based on individual data from an opinion survey in Zambia suggests that ethnicity matters for voter alignment and even more so for party affiliation, but it is certainly not the only factor. The analysis also points to a number of qualifications which are partly methodology-related. One is that the degree of ethnic voting can differ from one ethno-political group to the other depending on various degrees of ethnic mobilisation. Another is that if smaller eth-nic groups or subgroups do not identify with one particular party, it is difficult to find a significant statistical correlation between party affiliation and ethnicity - but that does not prove that they do not affiliate along ethnic lines.Wahlverhalten und Mitgliedschaft in politischen Parteien Afrikas ist nur wenig untersucht worden. Gewöhnlich wird argumentiert, dass EthnizitĂ€t als soziale Konfliktlinie das Wahlverhalten und die Parteienmitgliedschaft strukturiert. Da dieses Argument auf hoch aggregierten Wahldaten beruht, kann hier ein ökologischer Fehlschuss vorliegen. Die vorliegende Analyse beruht deshalb auf individuellen Umfragedaten aus Sambia. Das Ergebnis ist, dass EthnizitĂ€t tatsĂ€chlich eine Rolle fĂŒr das Wahlverhalten und die Parteienmitgliedschaft spielt, aber keineswegs den einzigen ErklĂ€rungsfaktor darstellt. Die Analyse offenbart zudem eine Reihe von EinschrĂ€nkungen und Qualifizierungen, die teilweise methodischer Natur sind. Eine ist, dass ethnisches Wahlverhalten und Parteienmitgliedschaft von einer ethnischen Gruppe zur anderen unterschiedlich ist, dass, wenn sich kleinere ethnische Gruppen oder Untergruppen mit keiner Partei identifizieren, es schwierig wird, statistisch signifikante Korrelationen zu finden - was indessen noch nicht beweist, dass EthnizitĂ€t keine Rolle spielt
Are people who participate in cultural activities more satisfied with life?
The influence of various aspects of life on wellbeing has been extensively researched. However, despite little empirical evidence, participation in leisure activities has been assumed to increase subjective wellbeing. Leisure is important because it is more under personal control than other sources of life satisfaction. This study asked whether people who participate in cultural leisure activities have higher life satisfaction than people who do not, if different types of leisure have the same influence on life satisfaction and if satisfaction is dependent on the frequency of participation or the number of activities undertaken. It used data from UKHLS Survey to establish associations between type, number and frequency of participation in leisure activities and life satisfaction. Results showed an independent and positive association of participation in sport, heritage and active-creative leisure activities and life satisfaction but not for participation in popular entertainment, theatre hobbies and museum/galleries. The association of reading hobbies and sedentary-creative activities and life satisfaction was negative. High life satisfaction was associated with engaging in a number of different activities rather than the frequency of participation in each of them. The results have implications for policy makers and leisure services providers, in particular those associated with heritage recreation. Subjective wellbeing measures, such as life satisfaction, and not economic measures alone should be considered in the evaluation of services. The promotion of leisure activities which are active and promote social interaction should be considered in programmes aimed at improving the quality of life
Dark Matter from Minimal Flavor Violation
We consider theories of flavored dark matter, in which the dark matter
particle is part of a multiplet transforming nontrivially under the flavor
group of the Standard Model in a manner consistent with the principle of
Minimal Flavor Violation (MFV). MFV automatically leads to the stability of the
lightest state for a large number of flavor multiplets. If neutral, this
particle is an excellent dark matter candidate. Furthermore, MFV implies
specific patterns of mass splittings among the flavors of dark matter and
governs the structure of the couplings between dark matter and ordinary
particles, leading to a rich and predictive cosmology and phenomenology. We
present an illustrative phenomenological study of an effective theory of a
flavor SU(3)_Q triplet, gauge singlet scalar.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures; v2: references added, minor changes to collider
analysis, conclusions unchange
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